
Munshi
 Nawal Kishore (03 January 1836 – 19 February 1895) was a book publisher
 from India. He has been called Caxton of India. In 1858, at the age of 
22, he founded the Nawal Kishore Press at Lucknow. This institution 
today is the oldest printing and publishing concern in Asia.Mirza Ghalib
 was one of his admirers. 
Munshi Nawal Kishore was the second 
son of Munshi Jamuna Prasad Bhargava, a zamindar of Aligarh, and was 
born on 3 January 1836. At the age of six, he was admitted in a local 
school (maktab) to learn Arabic and Persian. At the age on 10, he was 
admitted in Agra College, but he never completed his education there for
 an unknown reason. During this time, he developed his interest in 
journalistic writing, and issued a short-lived weekly paper 
Safeer-e-Agra. He briefly served as an assistant editor and editor of 
Koh-i-Noor, a magazine of Koh-i-Noor Press owned by Munshi Harsukh Roy.
On
 23 November 1858, he founded a printing press known as Munshi Nawal 
Kishor Press. From 1859, he started publishing weekly newspaper Avadh 
Akhbar, also known as Oudh Akhbar.
He died on 19 February 1895 in
 Delhi. His body was buriedinstead of traditional cremation. The 
Government of India issued a postage stamp on him in his honour in 1970.
Munshi
 Nawal Kishore published more than 5000 books in Arabic, Bengali, Hindi,
 English, Marathi, Punjabi, Pashto, Persian, Sanskrit and Urdu during 
1858–1885.The Ram Kumar Press and Tej Kumar Press, started by his sons, 
are successors to the Nawal Kishore Press.
Munshi was a member of the Indian National Congress