Other names

Pandita Mary Saraswati Ramabai

Place of birth

Gangamul, near Mangalore, India

Date of arrival to Britain

Location(s)

Cheltenham Ladies College
GL50 3EP
United Kingdom
Wantage
OX12 8DZ
United Kingdom

Place of death

Mukti, India

Date of time spent in Britain

1883–6

About

Pandita Ramabai was born in 1858 and orphaned in the famine of 1876–7. She came from a Marathi Brahmin family and was married in 1880 to a Brahmo Samajist, Bipin Behari Das Medhavi. He died nineteen months later, leaving her widowed with a baby daughter. Ramabai lectured on Sanskrit and the position of women in India and hence the title 'Pandita' was conferred on her. Dr W. W. Hunter admired her work and spoke of her in lectures in Edinburgh, making her known in Britain. Ramabai was considering converting to Christianity and so the Society of St John the Evangelist at Poona made arrangements for her to go to England to answer her questions about the Christian faith.

In 1883 Ramabai arrived in Wantage to stay with the community of St Mary the Virgin. She also intended to study medicine. In September 1883 Ramabai and her daughter, Manorana, were baptized at Wantage. In 1884 Ramabai went to teach Sanskrit to women intending to become missionaries in India at Cheltenham Ladies' College, where she stayed until 1886. She then travelled to America and returned to India.

In March 1889 Ramabai opened a school in Bombay for women, and especially for widows. She received financial support from the Ramabai Association in America and from friends in England such as Dorothea Beale. In 1897 her daughter, Manorana, returned to Wantage to study medicine. Meanwhile, Ramabai moved her school to land she bought near Poona, now Pune. This place was known as Mukti Mission. Mukti was largely self-supporting with nearly 2,000 people living there and with American and European helpers. Ramabai publicized the plight of Hindu widows but also campaigned for Hindi to be the national language of India. Manorana died in 1921 and Ramabai died a year later in 1922.

Dorothea Beale, Sister Geraldine, Dr W. W. Hunter, Anandibai Joshi (cousin), Max MüllerKeshub Chunder Sen (in Calcutta).

The High-Caste Hindu Woman (London: Bell & Sons, 1888)

A Testimony (Kedgaon: Mukti Mission, 1917)

Burton, Antoinette, At the Heart of the Empire: Indians and the Colonial Encounter in Late-Victorian Britain (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998) 

Dyer, Helen S., Pandita Ramabai. The Story of Her Life (London: Morgan & Scott, 1900) 

Kosambi, Meera, Pandita Ramabai through Her Own Words (New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2000)

MacNicol, Nicol, Pandita Ramabai (Calcutta: Association Press, 1926) 

Sengupta, Padmini S., Pandita Ramabai Saraswati: Her Life and Work (Bombay: Asia Publishing House, 1970)

Shah, A. B. (ed.) The Letters and Correspondence of Pandita Ramabai, compiled by Sister Geraldine (Bombay: Maharashtra State, 1977)

Symonds, Richard, ‘Ramabai, Pandita Mary Saraswati (1858–1922)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 2004) [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/56710]

Tharu, Susie and Lalita, K. (eds) Women Writing in India, Volume 1: 600 BC to the Early Twentieth Century (Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1991)

Articles in Cheltenham Ladies' College Magazine and other material, Cheltenham Ladies' College Archive, Cheltenham

Image credit

Ramabai Sarasvati, Pandita, 1858–1922

Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Citation: ‘Pandita Ramabai’, South Asian Britain, https://southasianbritain-demo.rit.bris.ac.uk/people/pandita-ramabai/. Accessed: 6 July 2025.

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