people of Salsette () The word
Sasashti (also shortened to
Sashti) is Maharashtri Konkani term for "sixty-six", referring to the original "sixty-six villages" on the island. It was inhabited by (Aagri, Kunbi) farmers, agriculturists, (Bhandaris)
toddy tappers, (Sutar, Malis) artisans and (Kolis) fisherfolk who trace their conversion to Christianity back to 55
AD with the arrival of Christ's disciple,
Bartholomew the Apostle, in north
Konkan region. They were later converted to the
Latin Church in India by four
religious orders—the
Dominicans,
Franciscans,
Augustinians and
Jesuits— who arrived in the 15th century with the Portuguese. These original inhabitants of Salsette are the
Bombay East Indian Catholics, the Aagris &
Kolis. 109
Buddhist caves, including those at Kanheri, can be found on the island, and date from the end of the 2nd century. Salsette was ruled by a succession of Hindu kingdoms, the last of which were the
Silharas and later the
Marathas. In 1343, the islands were annexed by the
Sultan of Guzerat. In 1534, the
Portuguese Empire seized the islands from Sultan
Bahadur Shah. Sashti became part of the northern province of
Portuguese India, which was governed from
Vasai (Bassein) on the north shore of Bassein Creek. It was leased to the explorer
Diogo Rodrigues from 25 October, 1535 to 1548. In 1554, the islands were handed over to
Garcia de Orta, a renowned physician and botanist and the author of
Colloquies on the Simples Drugs and Medical Matter of India, a seminal work on Indian
Eastern medicine of its time. Nine churches were built on Salsette island by the Portuguese; Nirmal (1557), Nossa Senhora dos Remédios (1557), Sandor (1566), Agashi (1568), Nandakal (1573), Papdy (1574), Pale (1595), Manickpur (1606), and Nossa Senhora das Mercês (1606). The
St Andrews Church and the
Mount St Mary's Church in Bandra, the Cross at
Cross Maidan,
Gloria Church (1632) in Mazagaon and the remnants of a church in Santa Cruz are the sole places of worship that have survived to the 21st century. In 1661, the seven Bombay (Mumbai) islets were ceded to
Britain as part of the
dowry of
Catherine de Braganza to
Charles II of England; while Salsette remained in Portuguese hands. Charles II in turn, leased the Bombay islets to the
English East India Company in 1668 for £10 per year. The company found the deep harbour at
Mumbai (Bombay) eminently apposite, and the population rose from 10,000 in 1661 to 60,000 by 1675. In 1687, the East India Company transferred their headquarters there from
Surat. In 1737, the island was captured by Mahratta violence, all of the Portuguese northern province in India, except
Damaon, Diu & Silvassa, as it was frequently invaded by the Mahratta forces until 1739.
Marquis de Pombal formally ceded what would become Greater Bombay, to
Peshwa Balaji Bajirao of the
Mahratta Confederacy in the 1750s. The British occupied Salsette in 1774, and it was formally ceded to the East India Company in the 1782
Treaty of Salbai. In 1782,
William Hornby, then Governor of
Bombay Province, initiated the project of connecting the islets of Bombay. By 1845, the seven southern islands had been connected to form
South Bombay, with an area of 435 km². Railway viaducts and causeways were built in the 19th century to connect Bombay Island to the mainland via Salsette. The channels separating Mumbai from Salsette and Trombay were bridged by the
Sion Causeway in 1803. Accessibility considerably increased after construction of this causeway. Mahim and Bandra were connected by the
Mahim Causeway in 1845. These railway lines and roads encouraged wealthier merchants to build villas on Salsette. By 1901, the population of Salsette had increased to 146,993 and the area began to be referred to as
Greater Bombay. ==Geography==