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Manockjee Cursetjee (also Manakji Kharshedji Shroff) (1808–1887) was a Parsi businessman and judge from Bombay, remembered as a reformer and proponent of female education. ==Life== Cursetjee was the son of Cursetjee Manockjee Shroff, and had an English education, under a Mr. Mackay at Joliffe's school, near St. Thomas's Church.〔James Douglas, ''Glimpses of old Bombay and western India, with other papers'' (1900), p. 21; (archive.org. )〕 In the 1830s, he knew John Wilson, whom he met socially in 1829.〔James Douglas, ''Bombay and Western India, a series of stray papers'' vol. 2 (1893) p. 131–2; (archive.org. )〕 He obtained a government post in the Bombay Presidency, and became a member of the Royal Asiatic Society. In 1843 he became a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society. Cursetjee was a noted Anglophile, and came into conflict with the local Parsi ''Panchayat''. He began to criticise them, in the ''Bombay Times'', in 1844–5. He visited the United Kingdom three times. On one visit to London, he met Arthur Wellesley, 2nd Duke of Wellington, whose father Arthur Wellesley had been entertained by his own father in Bombay at a garden party.〔 In 1859 Cursetjee started the first English school for Indian girls. Initially it was in his house, "Villa Byculla", with an English governess and his daughters as staff. The initiative gained the support of Kharshedji Nasarwanji Cama and John Elliot Drinkwater Bethune. In 1863, with a land grant and a donation from Cursetjee, the Alexandra Native Girls' English Institution set up in its own premises. In 1863, also, Cursetjee joined the Faculty of Law of Bombay University. In 1866 he addressed the Social Science Congress in Sheffield, England, on education in India. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Manockjee Cursetjee」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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