Government Hazi Mohammad Mohsin College | |
Native Name: | Bengali: সরকারি হাজী মুহাম্মদ মহসিন কলেজ, চট্টগ্রাম |
Other Names: | HMMC, GHMMC, MC |
Motto: | জ্ঞানই আলো |
Motto Lang: | Bn |
Mottoeng: | Knowledge for enlightenment |
Address: | College Road |
Country: | Bangladesh |
Coordinates: | 22.3536°N 91.8358°W |
Founder: | Mir Abdur Rashid |
Head: | Professor Banu Ara Begum |
Principal: | Mohammed Quamrul Islam |
Enrollment: | 20,000 |
Faculty: | 87 |
Language: | Bengali & English |
Campus Size: | Urban, |
Colors: | Yellow, green, red and purple |
Government Hazi Mohammad Mohsin College (Bengali: সরকারি হাজী মুহাম্মদ মহসিন কলেজ ) is one of the renowned colleges of Bangladesh located in Chittagong, Bangladesh. Named after Muhammad Mohsin, a 19th-century philanthropist, it is one of the oldest educational institutions in the country, originally established in British India in 1874 as the Chittagong Madrasha. It offers Higher Secondary Certificate (HSC) (classes 11–12) in the national curriculum of Bangladesh coupled with bachelor's degree and master's degree in various disciplines in association with University of Chittagong
Chittagong Madrasha was established in 1874 using a waqf donated by Muhammad Mohsin. In 1918, plans to improve education at the institution were developed and by 1927 it had gradually evolved into Islamic Intermediate College. Forty years later, a government-run higher secondary college was founded at the foot of the hill on which Islamic Intermediate College stood. On 20 July 1979, Hazi Muhammad Mohsin College came into existence when the two institutions merged.[1] In 1996, the attached high school was relocated as Mohsin School.
The college has eight buildings which cover almost 31acres of land. Two hostels situated to the west of the Administrative Building offer housing for one hundred students. Another hostel and the dean's residence are situated south of the Commerce Department Building. On top of a hill stands the college mosque.
One of the buildings is almost a century old. It is called Darul Adalat, and it was the first court of Chittagong under British colonial rule; the site may also have been fortified by Portuguese pirates in the 16th century. The locals refer to it the Portuguese Building due to its architectural style. Mohsin College (then Chittagong Madrasa) bought the hill, along with the building, for 30,000 Taka in 1879, and it remained central to the institution for many years, though by 2013 it had fallen into disrepair and was in danger of being demolished to make way for a library.[2] The Mohsin School was previously located in this campus.
The college teaches honours and offers master's degrees in 14 subjects. It has the faculties :
The faculty comprises the following departments:
The faculty comprises the following departments:
The faculty comprises the following departments:
There are two male and one female student dormitories.
The college has a large ground known. n this ground students from the college and from other colleges play cricket, football, and volleyball.