Chitpur has existed for at least 400 years. It received its name from the goddess Chitteswari, who had a splendid temple here erected by
Gobindram Mitter, where human sacrifices used to be offered. The lofty
dome of the temple, which was known as Nabarutna or the shrine of nine jewels, fell during the
earthquake of 1737, and it is now in ruins. According to another source, the area was earlier named Chitrapur. It is referred to in
Bipradas Pipilai's poem
Manasamangal in 1495, but it could be a later interpolation. According to it, Chitpur was home to Chakrapani, Commander-in-Chief of the
Nawab of Bengal's army, and had a flourishing colony of artists. It refers to one Gobinda Ghosh as founder of the Chitteswari temple in 1610. The most notorious bandit of the region was Chitey Dakat, who offered human sacrifices at the temple. The area could also have acquired its name from him. The
East India Company obtained from the
Mughal emperor Farrukhsiyar, in 1717, the right to rent from 38 villages surrounding their settlement. Of these 5 lay across the
Hooghly in what is now Howrah district. The remaining 33 villages were on the Calcutta side. After the fall of
Siraj-ud-daulah, the last independent
Nawab of Bengal, it purchased these villages in 1758 from
Mir Jafar and reorganised them. These villages were known en-bloc as
Dihi Panchannagram and Chitpur was one of them. It was considered to be a suburb beyond the limits of the
Maratha Ditch. There was a house and garden of Mahmed Reza Khan, the Chitpur Nawab, to whom the administration of Bengal was assigned for several years after the
British East India Company acquired the
dewani of Bengal from the
Mughal emperors in
Delhi. The Chitpur Nawab lived on terms of intimacy with the 'powers' of the day and was accounted by them as a personage of first rank. The foreign governors—Danish, French and Dutch—on their visits to Kolkata from
Serampore,
Chandannagar and
Chinsurah, made it a practice to halt at Chitpur on their way to the Government House. The Circular Canal joins the
Hooghly River at Chitpur. Early in the 20th century a large lock and tidal basin had been constructed, at the mouth of the canal. ==Chitpur Road==