Strolling through Kolkata’s colonial past

This Dec. 18, 2017 photo shows a Queen Victoria bust in Kolkata, India. Shown here she is sculpted with the body of a sphinx. Kolkata is full of relics of Britain’s Victorian age. (Denis D. Gray via AP)

This Dec. 18, 2017 photo shows a popular café in Kolkata, India, which draws a steady flow of customers for its famed ”chai,” or spiced tea, and buttered toast. Kolkata is a paradise for lovers of local street food. (Denis D. Gray via AP)

This Dec. 18, 2017 photo shows a street vendor in Kolkata, India. One can buy almost anything on the streets of Kolkata, a chaotic but vibrant city of 15 million people where the old and new co-exist. (Denis D. Gray via AP)

This Dec. 18, 2017 photo shows one of Kolkata, India’s most historic churches, St. John’s which was built in 1787, its ground becoming the city’s first foreign cemetery. Christian, Hindu, Moslem and Jewish places of worship abound in the metropolis. (Denis D. Gray via AP)

This Dec. 18, 2017 photo shows the once home of the British viceroy who ruled over India, the vast early 19th century mansion and grounds now house the government of West Bengal State, in Kolkata, India. The building was modeled after a stately home in England. (Denis D. Gray via AP)

KOLKATA, India — The British left footprints across their far-flung colonial empire from Toronto to Yangon. But nowhere is there as vast and varied a collection of heritage architecture than in Kolkata.