The Calcutta High Court is one of the three High Courts in India established at the Presidency Towns by
Letters patent granted by
Queen Victoria, and is the oldest High Court in India. It was brought into existence as the
High Court of Judicature at Fort William by the Letters Patent dated 14 May 1862, issued under the
High Courts Act, 1861, which was preceded by the
Supreme Court of Judicature at Fort William. The court was formally opened on 1 July 1862. The building was designed by Walter Long Bozzi Granville, and loosely modelled on the
Ypres Cloth Hall in
Flanders,
Belgium, with a similar long facade of serried Gothic pointed arches, and a tall central tower with corner spires. It is constructed of red brick with stucco dressings above a vaulted cloister of Barakur sandstone. It has been described as the only significant secular Gothic building in the city, something of an aberration amid the neoclassical edifices of other government buildings, such as Granville's own earlier
General Post Office building in Dalhousie Square. The Bill called High Courts (Alteration of Names) Bill was introduced in the Lok Sabha on 19 July 2016 and is yet to be passed by both Houses of Parliament. Hence, the High Court still retains the old name. ==Principal seat and benches==