Jagat Seth family

In award, Farrukhsiyar conferred the title of Jagat Seth on Manik Chand,[9] the head of the family, meaning "banker or merchant of the world".

[11] Roben Orme, the official historian of the British East India Company described Jagat Seth as the greatest banker and money changer known in the world at that time.

[11][6] The Nawabs of Bengal such as Murshid Quli Khan used the credit networks of the Jagat Seth family to pay annual tribute to the Mughal Emperors in Delhi.

[6] Once a local businessman named Kantu borrowed money from Jagat Seth Fateh Chand and was interested in the purchase of silk.

[14] Siraj ud-Daulah, the new Nawab of Bengal, alienated figures important to the interest of his state- including the Jagat Seth Mehtab Chand.

[11][6] The Jagat Seth was[6] a co-conspirator of Robert Clive[4] against Siraj ud-Daulah, along with other alienated figures, among them prominent being- Mir Jafar, Krishnachandra Roy, Omichund, Ray Durlabh & other leading men.

[18] The house of the Jagat Seths, complete with a secret tunnel as well as an underground chamber, where illegal trade plans were hatched, has been converted into museum.

It contains personal possessions of the Jagat Seth family including coins of the bygone era, muslin and other extravagant clothes, Banarasi sarees embroidered with gold and silver threads.

House of Jagat Seth in Murshidabad
Kachari bari (office premises) of the Palace of Jagat Seth
The temple associated with memory of Jagat Sett's house at Mahimapur
House of Jagat Seth
Corridor of Jagat Seth's official residence
Garden bench at the house of Jagat Seth
Interior of the house of Jagat Seth
Gate (main entrance) of the house of Jagat Seth
Sculpture at the Jagat Seth's house in Mahimapur, Murshidabad
Jain foot marks inside the temple within Jagat Seth's palace
Middle building with pool