Kabiraj Haracharan Sen was born in Bangladesh. He was born in a village named Bidga, in Bikrampur, Dhaka. He was the last surviving disciple of Gangadgar Sen Roy in Baharampur, Murshidabad. [1]
Early Life
Kabiraj Haracharan Sen was born on 18th August,1844 Bangladesh. He was born in a village named Bidga, in Bikrampur, Dhaka. His father's name was Abhoychandra Sen. He got married to 10 year old Nityatara Devi, daughter of Bisweswar Dasgupta. They had five sosn and 2 daughters together. [2]
Nityatara Devi was born in Bharakar in Bikrampur, Dhaka. Their residence was famouly known as Daroga Bari or residence of police inspector. One of the most famous personality from this family was Indian freedom fighter Chittaranjan Das, popularly called as Desbandhu.[3] Another famous personality was Pradosh Dasgupta, famous bengali scluptor.
Education
He was trained in Sanskrit and Ayurved under the guidance of none other than Gangadhar Sen Roy, doctor of Shri Ramkrishna Paramhangsa. He was also known as Rishi Gangadhar due to his excellence in this field. He was also the author of various famous books at that time named Lokalokpurushiyo, Durgabodhkabyo etc. He received title Kaviraj in recognition of his magnanimous work in ayurved. Later he travelled to Syedabad in Murshidabad and got appointed as the chief doctor of Maharani Swarnamoyee. Along with, he brought his desciple, young Haracharan to Murshidabad.
Career
He was a supporter of using both western and indian ayurvedic medical expertise side by side to achieve the best outcome in medical field. for example in 1881, it was found that he used to treat venereal diseases with both western as well as Ayurvedic prescriptions.[4]
Death
He died on 19th of June, 1917 in Baharampur, Murshidabad. His obituary was published in Ayurved Patrika O Somalochok published by Ayurved Vidyalay, Kolkata. [1]
References
- ^ a b Gupta, Birajā Caraṇ; Rāy, Yāminī Bhūṣaṇ; Satyacaraṇ, Sengupta (1917). Āyurvved, Māsik Patra o Samālocak. Ayurved Vidyalay, Calcutta.
- ^ Gupta, Birajā Caraṇ; Rāy, Yāminī Bhūṣaṇ; Satyacaraṇ, Sengupta (1917). Āyurvved, Māsik Patra o Samālocak. Ayurved Vidyalay, Calcutta.
- ^ mondal, sarada (09/03/2023). "pakshalar guruchandali".
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(help)CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ Mukharji, Projit Bihari (2007). "Structuring Plurality: Locality, Caste, Class and Ethnicity in Nineteenth-Century Bengali Dispensaries". Health and History. 9 (1): 80–105. doi:10.2307/40111559. ISSN 1442-1771.