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ADVENT OF EUROPEAN INVASION

Introduction:

Many of the foreign travelers, traders, missionaries and civil servants who came to
India in the 18th and 19th centuries have left accounts of their experiences and their
impressions of various parts of the country. To know the events of modern period, we
have abundant sources at the international, national, and regional level.

Sources of Modern India

• The sources for the history of modern India help us to know the political, socio-
economic and cultural developments in the country. From the very beginning, the
Portuguese, the Dutch, the French, the Danes, and the English recorded their
official transactions in India on state papers.
• Well preserved records are very valuable to know about their relations in India. The
archives at Lisbon, Goa, Pondicherry and Madras were literally store houses of
precious historical information’s. All these sources must, however, be critically
evaluated before they are used for historical writing.

Kinds of Sources

We can write history with the help of sources like written sources and material sources.

Written Sources

• After the advent of the printing press, numerous books were published in different
languages. Hence, people began to acquire knowledge easily in the fields like art,
literature, history and science. The Europeans came to know about the immense
Wealth of India from the accounts of Marco Polo and similar sources. The wealth of
India attracted Europeans to this country. Ananda Rangam is a name to conjure
with in the annals of Tamil history. He was a Dubash (Translator) in Pondicherry to
assist French trade in India. He recorded the events that took place in French

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India. His diaries contain the daily events from 1736 to 1760, which are the only
written secular record available during that period.
• His diaries reveal his profound capacity for political judgment, and is a most
valuable source of history. Written sources include Literatures, Travel Accounts,
Diaries, Auto Biographies, Pamphlets, Government Documents and Manuscripts.

Archives

This is the place where historical documents are preserved. The National Archives
of India (NAI) is located in New Delhi. It is the chief storehouse of the records of the
government of India. It has main source of information for understanding past
administrative machinery as well as a guide to the present and future generations
related to all matters. It contains authentic evidence for knowing the political, social,
economic, cultural and scientific life and activities of the people of India. It is one of the
largest Archives in Asia.

Tamil Nadu Archives

▪ The Madras Record Office, presently known as Tamil Nadu Archives (TNA) is
located in Chennai. It is one of the oldest and largest document repositories in
Southern India. The most of the records in the Tamil Nadu archives are in English.
The collections include series of administrative records in Dutch, Danish, Persian
and Marathi. Few documents are in French, Portuguese, Tamil and Urdu.
▪ Tamil Nadu Archives has 1642 volumes of Dutch records which relate to Cochin
and Coromandel coast. These records cover the period from 1657 – 1845. The
Danian records cover the period from 1777 – 1845.
▪ Dodwell prepared with great effort and the first issue of the calendar of Madras
records was published in 1917. He was highly interested in encouraging historical
researches. He opened a new chapter in the History of Tamil Nadu Archives.

Material Sources

▪ Many paintings and statues are the main sources of modern Indian history. They
give us a lot of information and the achievement of national leaders and historical
personalities.

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▪ Historical buildings like St. Francis Church at Cochin, St. Louis Fort at
Pondicherry, St. George Fort in Madras, St. David fort in Cuddalore, India Gate,
Parliament House, President House in New Delhi, etc are different styles and
techniques of Indian architecture. Other objects and materials of religious, cultural
and historical value are collected and preserved in Museums. These museums help
to preserve and promote our cultural heritage.
▪ The national museum in Delhi is the largest museum in India which was
established in 1949. Coins are a good source to know about administrative history.
The first coinage in modern India under the crown was issued in 1862. Edward VII
ascended after Queen Victoria and the coins issued by him bore his model.
▪ The Reserve Bank of India was formally set up in 1935 and was empowered to issue
Government of India notes. The first paper currency issued by RBI in January 1938
was 5-rupee notes bearing the portrait of King George VI.

Advent of the Europeans

▪ After the capture of Constantinople by the Turks in A.D (CE) 1453, the land route
between India and Europe was closed. The Turks penetrated into North Africa and
the Balkan Peninsula. It became imperative on the part of the European nations to
discover new sea routes to the East.
▪ Amongst the entire European nations Portugal was the foremost to make a
dynamic attempt to discover a sea route to India. Their original intention was to
procure pepper, cinnamon, cloves and other spices for the European markets and
participate in the trade of the Indian Ocean.
▪ Prince Henry of Portugal, who is commonly known as the “Navigator”, encouraged
his countrymen to take up the adventurous life of exploring the unknown regions of
the world.
▪ Bartholomew Diaz, a Portuguese sailor reached the southern-most point of Africa
in 1487. He was patronized by the King John II.
▪ Vasco da Gama, another Portuguese sailor reached the southern-most point of
Africa and he continued his journey to Mozambique from where he sailed to India
with the help of an Indian pilot. In A.D (CE) 1498, he reached Calicut, where he
was cordially received by King Zamorin, the ruler of Calicut.

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▪ A second Portuguese navigator, Pedro Alvares Cabral, sailed towards India,
following the route discovered by Vasco da Gama with 13 ships and a few hundred
soldiers in 1500. On his arrival at Calicut, there arose conflicts between the
Portuguese and king Zamorin.
▪ Vasco da Gama came to India for the second time in 1501 with 20 ships and
founded a trading centre at Cannanore. One after another, they established
factories at Calicut and Cochin. King Zamorin attacked the Portuguese in Cochin,
but was defeated. Cochin was the first capital of the Portuguese East India
Company. Subsequently, the Portuguese conquered Goa on the west coast in 1510.
Goa then became the political headquarters for the Portuguese in India and further
east in Malacca and Java.
▪ The Portuguese perfected a pattern of controlling the Indian Ocean trade through a
combination of political aggressiveness and naval superiority. Their forts at Daman
and Diu enabled them to control the shipping in the Arabian Sea, using their well-
armed ships.
▪ The other European nations who came to India nearly a century later, especially the
Dutch and the English, modelled their activities on the Portuguese blueprint. Thus,
we need to understand the advent of the European trading companies as an
ongoing process of engagement with Indian political authorities, local merchants
and society, which culminated in the conquest of Bengal by the British in 1757.

Portuguese in India

On 29 October 1502 Gama visited Calicut for the second time with a fleet of 20
vessels. Gama moved from Calicut to Cochin as its harbor was better. He soon realized
that the monopolistic trade of the Arabs needed to be broken if European trade was to
thrive. He used the enmity between the two Hindu rulers of Cochin and Calicut for this
purpose. Before he returned to Portugal, he established a factory [warehouse] in
Cochin and a prison at Kannur. The Portuguese stopped yearly expeditions and instead
decided to appoint a Viceroy

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Francisco de Almeida (1505-1509)

▪ In 1505, Francisco de Almeida was sent as the first Viceroy for the Portuguese
possessions in India. Almeida had the aim of developing the naval power of the
Portuguese in India. His policy was known as the “Blue Water Policy”. As
Portuguese tried to break the Arab's monopoly on Indian Ocean trade, it negatively
impacted on the trade interests of Egypt and Turkey. Sultans of Bijapur and
Gujarat were also apprehensive of the expansion of Portuguese control of ports
which led to an alliance between Egypt, Turkey and Gujarat against Portuguese
invaders.
▪ In a naval battle fought near Chaul, the combined Muslim fleet won a victory over
the Portuguese fleet under Almeida’s son who was killed in the battle. Almeida
defeated the combined Muslim fleet in a naval battle near Diu, and by the year
1509, Portuguese claimed the naval supremacy in Asia.
▪ He befriended the ruler of Cochin and built fortrsses at Cochin, Kannur and other
places on the Malabar coast.

Alfonso de Albuquerque (1509-1515)

▪ The real founder of the Portuguese power in India was Alfonso de Albuquerque. He
defeated Yusuf Adil Khan, the ruler of Bijapur in 1510 and captured Goa. He
developed Goa into a centre of commerce by making all the ships sail on that route.
He encouraged people of all faiths to settle in Goa.
▪ His conquest of Malacca (in Malaysia) held by the Muslims, who commanded the
trade route between India China and Mecca and Cairo, extended the empire. He
attacked the Arabs and was successful in taking Aden
▪ In 1515, he established the Portuguese authority over Ormuz in Persian Gulf. He
encouraged the marriages of the Portuguese with Indian women. He attempted to
stop the practice of Sati. He maintained friendly relations with Vijayanagar Empire.
▪ Two more viceroys played a significant role in consolidating the Portuguese empire
in India. They are Nino da Cunha and Antonio de Noronha.

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Nino de Cunha (1529-1538)

Governor Nino de Cunha moved capital from Cochin to Goa in 1530. In 1534, he
acquired Bassein from Bahadur Shah of Gujarat. In 1537, the Portuguese occupied Diu.

Antonio de Noronha (1761-1763)

▪ During the period of De Noronha the Mughal ruler Akbar visited Cambay in
Gujarat and the first contacts between the Portuguese and the Mughal emperor
established.
▪ In 1580 Philip II, King of Spain, defeated Portugal and annexed it. In India the
Dutch defeated the Portuguese in Ceylon and later seized the Portuguese fort on
Malabar Coast. Thereafter rather than protecting their settlements in India,
Portuguese began to evince greater interest in Brazil

The Impact of Portuguese Presence


▪ For the first time in the political history of India the Europeans conquered and
seized territories from the Indian rulers. Indian rulers remained divided and
Europeans took advantage of it. The Europeans adopted new methods in the
warfare. Gun powder and superior artillery played a significant role. The
Portuguese could contain the monopolistic trade of the Arabs. But it did not really
help them. Instead, it benefited the British who removed pirates on the sea routes
and made the sea voyage safe.
▪ The marriages between Europeans and Indians, encouraged by the Portuguese in
the territories occupied by them, created a new Eurasian racial group. They were
the ones who were later taken to other Portuguese colonies in Africa and Asia. The
presence of Portuguese is very much evident in Chennai’s San Thome. Mylapore
was the Portuguese ‘Black Town’. (Black Town of the British period was George
Town).

Following the establishment of Portuguese settlements, Jesuit missionaries visited


India. Notable among them are:

• Fr. Roberto de Nobili, whose linguistic ability enabled him to write extensively in
Tamil and Sanskrit. He is considered the father of Tamil prose.

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• Fr. Henriques introduced printing in Tamil and is called the father of printing
press.
▪ Clashes occurred between the Portuguese and the Muslim groups on the pearl
fishery coast in the 1530’s over the control of fishing and pearl diving rights and a
delegation of Paravas complained to the Portuguese authorities at Cochin about the
atrocities inflicted on them by Arab fleets and sought protection.
▪ Seizing the opportunity, the Portuguese sent their Roman Catholic priests (Padres)
who converted thousands of fisher people to the Catholic religion. Following this St.
Francis Xavier, one of the founders of the Society of Jesus, arrived in Goa in 1542
and travelled as far as Thoothukudi and Punnakayal to baptize the converts.
▪ Xavier established a network of Jesuit mission centres. His visit is evident from the
shrines dedicated to St. Xavier and the towering churches that came up in the
fishing villages on the Coromandel Coast.
▪ The Portuguese threatened disruption of trade by violence unless their protection,
cartaz, was bought. Under the cartaz system, the Portuguese exacted money from
the traders as price for protection against what they termed as piracy. But much of
this was caused by Portuguese freebooters themselves and so the whole system was
a blatant protection racket.

The Dutch

▪ The Dutch followed the Portuguese into India. The first Dutch expedition to the
South East Asia was in 1595 by a trader (Jan Huyghen van Linschoten), a merchant
from Netherlands who lived in Lisbon. There were several companies floated by the
traders and individuals to trade with the East. The state intervened and
amalgamated them all and created a Dutch East India company in 1602 [known as
the United East Indies Company (in Dutch: Verenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie-
abbreviated to VOC).
▪ After their arrival in India, the Dutch founded their first factory in Masulipatnam,
(Andhra Pradesh) in 1605. This company captured Amboyna from the Portuguese
in 1605 and established its supremacy in the Spice Islands. They captured
Nagapattinam near Madras from the Portuguese and made this place as their
strong hold in South India.

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▪ At first, Pullicat was their headquarters. Later, they shifted it to Nagapattinam in
1690. The most important Indian commodities traded by the Dutch were silk,
cotton, indigo, rice and opium. They monopolized the trade in black pepper and
other spices. The important factories in India were Pullicat, Surat, Chinsura, Kasim
bazaar, Patna, Nagapattinam, Balasore and Cochin. The English East India
Company remained engaged in rivalry with the Portuguese and the Dutch
throughout the 17th century.
▪ In 1623, the Dutch cruelly killed ten English traders and nine Javanese in
Amboyna. This incident accelerated the rivalry between the two Europeans
companies. Their final collapse came with their defeat by the English in the Battle
of Bedara in 1759. The Dutch lost their settlements one by one to the English and
was completely wiped out by the year 1795.

Dutch in Tamil Nadu

▪ The Portuguese who established a control over Pullicat since 1502 were overthrown
by the Dutch. In Pulicat, located 60 km north of Chennai, the Dutch built the Castle
Geldria. The remains of this 400 year old fort can be seen even now. This fort was
once the seat of Dutch power. The Dutch established control of Masulipatnam in
1605 and they established their settlement at Pullicat in 1610.
▪ The other Dutch colonial forts and possessions include Nagapattinam, Punnakayal,
Porto Novo, Cuddalore (Thiruppathiripuliyur) and Devanampatinam.
▪ Pullicat served as the Coromandel headquarters of the Dutch East India Company.
Diamonds were exported from Pullicat to the western countries. Nutmeg, cloves,
and mace too were sent from here to Europe. A gun powder factory was also set up
by the Dutch to augment their military power.
▪ One less known fact about the Dutch is they were involved in slave trade. People
from Bengal and from settlements such as Thengapattanam and Karaikal were
brought to Pullicat. The Dutch employed brokers at Madras for catching and
shipping slaves. Famines, droughts and war that resulted in food shortage led to
the flourishing of the slave trade.
▪ A subsequent invasion of the Bijapur army led to the destruction of fertile
agricultural lands of Thanjavur pushing more people into slavery. This time (1646)

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around 2118 slaves, mostly drawn from places situated along the coasts like
Adirampattinam, Tondi and Kayalpattinam.

The Danes

▪ Denmark and Norway (together till 1813) possessed colonial settlements in India
and Tamil Nadu. Tarangambadi or Tranquebar in Tamil Nadu, Serampore in West
Bengal and Nicobar Islands were their possessions in India. On March 17, 1616 the
King of Denmark, Christian IV, issued a charter and created a Danish East India
Company. This Company did not get any positive response from the Danish
traders. Admiral Ove Gjedde led the first expedition to Ceylon in 1618. The Danes
could not get any trade contract in Ceylon. While they were returning in
disappointment their main vessel was sunk by the Portuguese at Karaikkal.
Thirteen stranded sailors with their trade director Robert Crappe were taken to the
Nayak ruler of Thanjavur. Robert Crappe ably negotiated with the Thanjavur King
and struck an agreement. According to the agreement signed on 20 November
1620, the Danes received the village of Tarangambadi or Tranquebar and the right
to construct a Fort there.
▪ The Danish fort at Tarangambadi was vulnerable to high tidal waves which
frequently damaged roads and houses. Despite their involvement in the Thirty
Years War and the financial loss they suffered, the Danish managed to set up a
factory at Masulipatnam. Small trading posts were established at Pipli (Hoogly
River) and Balasore. Investors in Denmark wanted to dissolve the Danish East
India Company, but King Christian IV resisted it. Finally, after his death in 1648
his son Frederick abolished it.
▪ A second Danish East India Company was started in 1696. Trade between Denmark
and Tarangambadi resumed and many new trade outposts were also established.
The Nayak king of Tanjore gifted three more villages surrounding Tarangambadi.
Two Danish Missionaries, the first protestant missionaries, arrived on 9 June 1706.
The Danish settled in Andaman and Nicobar in 1755, but due to the threat of
malaria they abandoned it in 1848. During the Napoleonic wars the British caused
heavy damage to their possessions. Serampore was sold to the British in 1839 and
Tranquebar and other settlements in 1845.

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The Danes in Tamil Nadu

The Danish Fort built in Tarangambadi is still intact. Bartholomaeus Ziegenbalg along
with Heinrich Pluetshau arrived in Tranquebar in September 1706, as the first
Lutheran missionaries in India. They began preaching, and baptized their first converts
within ten months of their stay. Their work was opposed both by Hindus and by the
local Danish authorities, and in 1707-08 Ziegenbalg had to spend four months in
prison on a charge that by converting the natives he was encouraging rebellion. The
Copenhagen Missionary Society wanted to encourage an indigenous Christian Church,
and accordingly instructed its missionaries simply to preach the Gospel, and not to
bother about other matters. Ziegenbalg, however, contended that a concern for the
physical welfare of “others” was implicit in the Gospel. Ziegenbalg set up a printing
press, and published studies of the Tamil language and of Indian religion and culture.
His translation of the New Testament into Tamil in 1715 was first in any Indian
language. The church building that he and his associates constructed in
1718 is still in use today. He succeeded in establishing a seminary for the training of
local clergy. When he died on 23 February 1719, he left behind a full Tamil translation
of the complete Bible and of Genesis to Ruth (Bible Story book series), many brief
writings in Tamil, two church buildings, the seminary, and 250 baptized Christians.

The French

▪ The French attempted to establish a trade link with India as early as 1527. Taking a
cue from the Portuguese and the Dutch, the French commenced their commercial
operations through the French East India Company, established in 1664. Unlike
other European powers which appeared in India through the private trading
companies, the French commercial enterprise was a project of King Louis XIV.
▪ His minister of finance, Colbert, was instrumental in establishing the French East
India Company. As the French effort was a government initiative, it did not attract
the general public of France who viewed it as yet another way to tax people.

Pondicherry through Madagascar

▪ The French traders arrived in Madagascar (in Africa) in 1602. Though the French
colonized Madagascar, they had to abandon it in 1674, excepting a small coastal

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trading post. Berber, a French agent in India obtained a firman [a royal command
or authorization] on September 4, 1666 from Aurangzeb and the first French
factory was established at Surat in December 1668, much against the opposition of
the Dutch. Within a year the French established another factory at Masulipatnam.
▪ Realizing the need for a stronger foothold in India, Colbert sent a fleet to India, led
by Haye (Jacob Blanquet de la Haye). The French were able to remove the Dutch
from San Thome in Mylapore in 1672. The French sought the support of Sher Khan
Lodi, the local Governor, who represented the Sultan of Bijapur, against the Dutch.
▪ The Dutch befriended the King of Golkonda who was a traditional foe of Bijapur. It
was Sher Khan Lodi who offered Pondicherry (Puducherry) as a suitable site for
their settlement.
▪ Pondicherry in 1673 was a small fishing village. Francis Martin who became the
Governor of Pondicherry later had spent four years in Madagascar before arriving
Surat. He made Pondicherry the strategic centre of French settlements in India.

Rivalry and Wars with the Dutch

▪ French attempts to capture Pondicherry were not easy. They had to deal with their
main rivals, the Dutch. From 1672 France and Holland were continuously at war. In
India the French lacked men, money and arms, as they had diverted them to
Chandannagar, another French settlement in Bengal. Therefore, the Dutch could
capture Pondicherry easily in 1693. It remained with the Dutch for six years.
▪ In 1697, according to the treaty of Ryswick, Pondicherry was once again restored to
the French. However, it was handed over to the French only in 1699. Francis
Martin remained as its governor till his death in 1706. The French secured Mahe in
1725 and Karaikal in 1739. The French were also successful in establishing and
extending their settlements in Qasim Bazaar, Chandannagar and Balasore in the
Bengal region. Pierre Benoit Dumas (1668–1745) was another able French
governor in Pondicherry.
▪ However, the French had to face the threat of the English who proved too strong for
them. Eventually they lost out on their hard-earned fortunes to the English.
▪ The influence of the French can still be seen in present day Pondicherry, Mahe,
Karaikkal, and Chandannagar.

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The British
The English East India Company
▪ A group of wealthy merchants of Leadenhall Street in London secured a royal
charter from Queen Elizabeth I to have a share in the lucrative spice trade with the
East. The Company, headed by a governor, was managed by a court of 24 Directors.
In 1611, King James I obtained from Mughal Emperor Jahangir through William
Hawkins, permission for regular trade.
▪ The English obtained some trading privileges in Surat. In 1615–19 Sir Thomas Roe
was sent as an Ambassador of the English King James I. The Viceroy of Gujarat,
Prince Khurram granted trading privileges, but the British could not operate freely
because the Portuguese exercised a powerful influence in the region.
▪ Madras was ceded to East India Company in 1639 by the Raja of Chandragiri with
permission to build a fortified factory which was named Fort St. George. This was
the first land holding recorded by the Company on Indian soil.
▪ In 1645, the ruler of Golkonda overran the territories under the Company’s control
in Madras. Aurangzeb conquered Golkonda in 1687 and brought the Company
territories under Mughal rule. But the privileges granted to the English continued.
Within a short time, Madras replaced Masulipatinam as the headquarters of the
English on the Coromandel Coast.
▪ The island of Bombay, which Charles II had inherited as dowry, was transferred to
the Company in 1668.The Charter of 1683 empowered the Company to raise
military forces and the right to declare war or make peace with the powers in
America, Africa and Asia.
▪ In 1688 Madras had a municipal government with a Mayor. In 1693 the Company
obtained another grant of three villages surrounding Madras and in 1702 five more
villages were granted.

Bengal

In Bengal it was a long-drawn struggle for the British to obtain trading rights. The
Company obtained trading privileges from Shah Shuja, the second son of Shajahan and
the Governor of Bengal, but there was no royal confirmation of such privileges. The
trading rights for the British in Bengal were obtained only in 1680. Local officials

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interfered with the trading rights of the British and this resulted in the Company
declaring war with the ruler representing the Mughals. Peace was restored in 1690 and
the Company established its first settlement at Sutanuti, a site which became the future
Calcutta. The factory was fortified in 1696 and in 1698 the Company secured the
zamindari rights over three villages, Sutanuti, Kalikata and Gobindpur in return for a
payment of 1200 rupees a year. The fortified factory was called Fort St. William which
became the headquarters of the Presidency in 1770.

Question :

1. Give on account of the various sources of Modern India.


2. During the Advent of European – Explain how to Portuguese Presence impact to
India.
3. Discuss about the Dance possessed colonial settlements in India and Tamilnadu.

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EXPANSION AND CONSOLIDATION OF
BRITISH RULE

The rule of East India Company in India became effective after the conquest of Bengal.
The main interest of the company in India was territorial and commercial expansions.

The Carnatic Wars

The Carnatic is a region in South India lying between the Eastern Ghats and the
Coromandel Coast. This region constitutes the present-day Tamil Nadu, eastern
Karnataka, north-eastern Kerala and southern Andhra Pradesh. The British had to
fight three wars (1746- 1763) with the French to establish their supremacy, which in
history are called the Carnatic wars.

First Carnatic War 1746-48

▪ The Austrian War of Succession and Seven Years War fought in Europe had their
repercussions in India. The Austrian ruler Charles VI died in 1740 and was
succeeded by his daughter Maria Teresa. France did not support her succession and
joined hands with German-speaking territories of Austria such as Bavaria, Saxony
and Spain. Frederick II (known as Frederick the Great of Prussia) taking advantage
of the emerging political situation invaded and annexed Silesia, an Austrian
province, with the support of France.
▪ The wars fought between Britain and France in Europe also led to clashes between
these two countries over their colonial possessions in North America and India.
When the war broke out, the new Governor of Pondicherry, Dupleix appealed to
Morse, the Governor of Madras, to remain neutral. But a British squadron under
Commodore Barnett captured some of the French vessels with Indian goods and
precipitated the situation.
▪ Dupleix, shocked by this incident, appealed to Anwar-ud-din, the Nawab of
Carnatic, to help him to avoid war with the English. Calm prevailed for some time.
Meanwhile Dupleix contacted La Bourdonnais, the French Governor of Isle of
France, who appeared in the Indian waters with eight warships. Peyton, who led

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the English squadron with his four ships, intercepted the French squadron and in
the battle on 6 July 1746 Peyton suffered reverses and retreated to Hooghly,
Calcutta expecting some more ships from Britain.

Fall of Madras

▪ The French squadron succeeded in capturing the undefended Madras on 15


September 1746. Governor Morse was asked to surrender but the Madras Governor
turned to Anwar-ud-din for help. Dupleix was clever in convincing the Nawab that
he was securing Madras from the British to be handed over to him.
▪ On 21 September 1746 the English were forced to part with Madras. But when the
Nawab of Carnatic asked the French to hand over Madras to him as promised, the
French dodged. Thereupon the Nawab sent a force of 10,000 men under the
command of his son Mahfuz Khan.

The Battle of San Thome and Adyar

Nawab’s forces blockaded Fort St. George but the French forces pushed the
Nawab’s forces to San Thome. The French received reinforcement and Mahfuz Khan
attempted to halt the progress of the French on the banks of river Adyar. The French
forces were able to wade through the water and inflict a severe attack on the Nawab’s
forces resulting in heavy losses. Dupleix then set his eyes on Fort St. David at
Cuddalore which was in British possession.

The English, with the help of the Nawab of Arcot, was trying to regain the places
lost but Dupleix again played a diplomatic game by promising that he would hoist the
flag of the Nawab in the Fort St. George for a week and after that he requested the
Nawab to hand over the town to the French. The Nawab agreed to withdraw his
proposed help to the British. Two attempts of the British under Rear Admiral
Boscawen to take Pondicherry failed. By this time, in 1748, France and the English had
signed the Treaty of Aix La Chapelle. Under this treaty the British and the French
ceased their hostilities in India. It was agreed that the French would hand over Madras
to the British in return for Louisburg in North America.

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The Second Carnatic War: 1749-54

▪ In Europe peace prevailed between the British and the French. But the two colonial
powers could not live in peace in India. They played one native ruler against the
other. Dupleix wanted to enhance the French influence by involving in the wars of
succession in both Hyderabad and Arcot. Dupleix supported the claims of Muzzafar
Jung, the grandson of Asaf Jah, who died in 1748 in Hyderabad, as the Nizam of
Hyderabad.
▪ In the Carnatic, he supported the claim of Chanda Sahib. A triple alliance was
formed amongst the French, Nizam and the Nawab of Carnatic. The English, after
losing Madras, a precious possession, had only Fort St. David under their control.
▪ In order to reduce the influence of the French, the English supported the rival
candidates Nasir Jung for the throne of Nizam of Hyderabad and that of
Muhammad Ali after the death of Anwar-ud-din in the Battle of Ambur in 1749.
▪ The battle of Ambur was followed by the entry of victorious forces to Deccan. Nazir
Jung was killed by the French Army and Muzaffar Jung was made the Nizam of
Hyderabad in December 1750.
▪ Dupleix’s dream of establishing a French empire appeared good for some time.
Dupleix received huge money and territories both from the Nizam and the Nawab
of Arcot. When Muzaffar Jung required French protection, Dupleix sent Bussy, the
French general, with a large French force. Muzaffar Jung did not live long and the
same people who killed Nasir Jung also killed him. Bussy promptly placed Salabat
Jung, brother of Nazir Jung, on the throne.
▪ In order to reduce the influence of British and also with a view to capturing
Mohammad Ali (who fled to Tiruchirappalli after Anwar-ud-din was killed) Chanda
Sahib decided to take Tiruchirappalli, with the help of the French and the Nizam.

Clive in the Second Carnatic War

▪ Dupleix was also determined to take over Tiruchirappalli with the help of Chanda
Sahib. Chanda Sahib’s troops were joined by 900 Frenchmen. Muhammad Ali had
only 5000 soldiers and not more than 600 Englishmen to help him. Robert Clive’s
idea changed the course of history.

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▪ He suggested the idea of storming Arcot when the French and the Nawab were busy
concentrating on Tiruchirappalli. Clive moved from Fort St. David on 26 August
1752 with only 200 English and 300 Indian soldiers. As expected the English
received help from many rulers from small territories. The Raja of Mysore and the
ruler of Thanjavur rallied to support Muhammad Ali. Chanda Sahib dispatched a
force of 3000 under his son Raja Sahib to take Arcot. Clive seized Arcot on August
31st and then successfully withstood a 53-day siege by Chanda Sahib’s son, Raja
Sahib, who was helped by the French forces.
▪ In the battle of Arni the English and the Maratha ruler Murari Rao faced an
unequal number of French and the forces of Nawab of Arcot. In several battles that
followed, including one at Kaveripakkam, Chanda Sahib was captured and
executed. Muhammed Ali became the undisputed ruler of Carnatic.
▪ In Europe Britain and France were not involved in any war and so neither of them
approved the policy of their Companies fighting in India. The French government
recalled Governor Dupleix. The Treaty of Pondicherry was signed in 1755 with the
English; both countries agreed not to interfere in the quarrels of the Indian princes.
The Treaty also defined their mutual territorial possessions in India, a situation
that was maintained for nearly two centuries until Indian independence.

The Third Carnatic War: 1756-1763

The third Carnatic War was an echo of the Seven Years War (1756-1763) which
broke out in Europe in 1756. It was a global conflict and was fought between the two
arch-rivals Britain and France. The war was fought in North America (resulting in the
American War of Independence), and West Africa (which later became the French
West Africa). In India it manifested itself in the Third Carnatic war. Before turning our
attention to the Third Carnatic War, let us see what happened in Bengal in the
meantime.

Battle of Plassey (1757)

▪ The East India Company abused the trade permits (dastaks) granted by the Mughal
Emperor by not paying taxes to the Nawab of Bengal, and by involving itself in
internal trade.

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▪ This apart, the Company had given asylum to the son of the Nawab Siraj ud-daula’s
hostile aunt. As the Company refused to oblige the Nawab, who demanded the
return of his nephew, Fort St. William was captured and Europeans imprisoned.
▪ Responding to this situation, the Company at Fort St. George despatched a strong
contingent under Robert Clive and Watson. The battle that ensued is called the
Battle of Plassey.
▪ The battle of Plassey (1757) changed the position of the British from being a
commercial power to that of a territorial power. It confirmed the privileges
obtained by the Company and replaced Siraj-ud-daula with the betrayer Mir Jaffar.
▪ The Company’s sovereignty over Calcutta was recognized and it was given sufficient
land to maintain a military force. Mir Jaffar also agreed for a Company’s resident in
the court. Mir Jaffar was replaced by Mir Qasim and the latter tried to assert his
independence, which was not to the liking of the Company officials.

Battle of Buxar (1764)

▪ After fleeing from Bengal Mir Qasim aligned with the Mughal Emperor Shah Alam
II and the Nawab of Oudh, Shuja-ud-daulah, who were equally aggrieved by the
interference of the Company in their internal affairs. They declared war against the
British. The battle was fought at Buxar (1764). By virtue of its superior armed the
Company forces won the battle.
▪ The victory of the British led to the signing of the Treaty of Allahabad (1765) by
Robert Clive with Shah Alam II. By this treaty the Company got the Diwani right to
collect land revenue from the princely states of Bengal, Bihar and Orissa. Besides,
the Company obtained three districts, Burdwan, Chittagong and Midnapur, in
Bengal and sovereignty over Calcutta. British virtually became the rulers of Bengal.

Outbreak of Third Carnatic War

▪ With the outbreak of the Seven Years War, Clive captured Chandannagar, the
French settlement in Bengal. With this the French influence ended in Bengal. But
they retained their power in the south.
▪ The French government sent Count de Lally as the Supreme Commander of the
French forces in India. As the British were active in Bengal, Lally promptly secured

Page 5
Fort St. David after a short siege. Lally’s next move was Tanjore but the French
were after money from the Raja which he could not give. Without a penny the siege
of Tanjore was lifted because there was a threat of British attack on Pondicherry.
▪ Lally wanted Bussy to come from Hyderabad to help him to defend Pondicherry in
the case of attack. Bussy left Hyderabad and joined Lally. In Deccan the political
situation changed quickly and the French lost both Rajahmundry (1758) and
Masulipatam (1759). Salabat Jung, the Nizam of Hyderabad, without fighting a
battle signed an agreement with the British. The Nizam transferred Masulipatam
and Northern Circars from the French to the English. The combined forces of Bussy
and Lally captured Kanchipuram and proceeded to take Madras. As the British
were busy in Bengal, Madras had only about 800 Englishmen and 2500 Indian
soldiers. The Siege of Madras began on 12 December 1758. The French could not
progress till February 1759, but both sides suffered casualties. The French,
however, could not continue with the siege as supplies were dwindling. Meanwhile
General Pocock brought a fleet to the relief of Madras. Lally was forced to lift the
siege and fall back on Kanchipuram.

The Battle of Wandiwash and the Fall of Pondicherry

▪ Lally retired to Pondicherry leaving a French contingent in Arcot. The British


moved towards Wandiwash but suddenly fell upon Kanchipuram and captured it. A
fresh detachment of British forces arrived under the command of Sir Eyre Coote.
The last ditch battle was fought between Eyre Coote and Lally at Wandawashi
(Wandiwash) in January 1760. Bussy was defeated and taken prisoner. Lally
retreated to Pondicherry but it was not besieged immediately.
▪ Meanwhile the British captured Senji and proceeded to Pondicherry and laid siege
to it. Lally had reorganized the defences and put up a heroic resistance to the
British. The siege of Pondicherry continued for several months and finally on 4th
February 1761 Pondicherry fell.
▪ In the same year the British took control of Mahe, another French possession in the
west coast. All French possessions were now lost. Finally, the hostilities came to an
end with the signing of the Treaty of Paris (1763) at the end of the Seven Years War.
Pondicherry and Chandannagar were restored to the French.

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▪ The French had to henceforth be content with Pondicherry, Karaikal and Yanaon
(Yanam) (all in Union Territory of Puducherry), Mahe (Kannur district in Kerala),
and Chandannagar (Chandannagar in Bengal).
▪ The English emerged as the undisputed colonial power in India, changing from a
trading company into that of a territorial power.

Effects of British Rule


Introduction
▪ The general breakdown of the central authority, in the wake of Mughal’s fall,
resulted in a English trading company taking over India. Initially, the English East
India Company’s focus was not on administration. Its aim was ensuring smooth
trade. However, after the terrible Bengal famine of 1770, they began to exercise
power with some responsibility. Not with standing their exploitative economic
policy, their professed objective was the safety of the people they governed and
administration of justice.
▪ The justification for their expansionist policy was the extermination of tyranny of
the local rulers and the harassment by robbers and marauders in the country.
Railways and telegraph, introduced for easier communication, also served the
purpose of curbing resistance and the control of the local population. However,
their agrarian and commercial policies had a ruinous impact on the economy.
India’s wealth was drained in several forms. By the 1830’s there was large scale
emigration of ruined peasants and weavers to plantations in the British Empire
countries.

Establishment of British Raj

▪ Buxar was the real foundation battle for British dominion in India. Not only the
Nawab of Bengal and Oudh, but the Mughal emperor Shah Alam II and his prime
minister were also opposed to the British.
▪ As a result of the Battle of Buxar, the Company ceased to be a company of
merchants and became a formidable political force. Under the pretext of corruption
in Bengal administration.
▪ Clive was appointed Governor of Fort William. Clive did not like his predecessor
Vansittart’s decision restoring Oudh to Shah Alam. So he called for fresh

Page 7
negotiation with Shuja-ud-daula. As a result of this, two treaties of Allahabad were
signed.
▪ The emperor granted the Diwani (revenue administration) of Bengal, Bihar and
Orissa to the Company. The emperor Shah Alam II was to get the districts of
Allahabad and Kora, besides an annual allowance of 26 lakhs of rupees from the
revenues of Bengal, Bihar and Orissa.
▪ The province of Oudh was restored to Shuja-ud-daula on the payment of war
indemnity. The treaties held the Nawab of Bengal responsible for the governance of
Bengal, Bihar and Orissa.
▪ Before the emperor granted the Diwani to Clive, the Nawab of Bengal, successor of
Mir Jafar, had practically transferred the Nizamat (civil administration) to the
Company. So the Company had to function as Diwan and the Nizam. The Diwan’s
duty included the collection of revenue and the control of civil justice. The Nizam’s
function was to exercise military power and to dispense criminal justice. Thus the
Company acquired the real power, while the responsibility of administration was
with the Nawab.This arrangement is called Dual System or Double government or
Dyarchy.
▪ But soon the dual system began to break down. Governance without responsibility
led to the outbreak of a terrible famine in 1770. Nearly one third of Bengal's
population perished.
▪ The miseries of the province were intensified by the Company servants who had
monopolized the sale of rice and realized huge profits. Finally, the Company
realized its responsibility and passed the Regulating Act of 1773. Warren Hastings
was appointed the Governor General of Bengal.

Tenures:
Permanent Settlement and Ryotwari Settlement

▪ The Regulating Act of 1773 imposed on the court of Directors the legal obligation of
informing all revenue transactions of the Company servants to the British Treasury.
The Governor and Council consisting of the Commander-in-Chief and two
counsellors sat as a Board of Revenue which discussed revenue matters. The Pitt
India Act of 1784 separated the civil and military establishments in India.
▪ Governor-General Cornwallis, himself a big landlord, wanted to create landlords
after the British model in India. Cornwallis came to a settlement with the revenue

Page 8
farmers. This resulted in the creation of a new type of middlemen, called
zamindars, reducing the cultivators to the position of mere tenants.
▪ This settlement that Cornwallis made with the zamindars of Bengal, Bihar and
Orissa in 1793, in pursuance of the instruction from the Directors, is called the
Permanent Settlement.
▪ ‘Settlement’ refers to the assessment and fixing of the quantum of land revenue to
be paid by each zamindar to the government. For Bengal, Bihar and Orissa, this
was fixed permanently.
▪ Thus the zamindars who were originally tax collectors acquired hereditary rights
over the land assigned by the government. The zamindars pocketed whatever they
collected over and above the settlement.
▪ The first quarter of the nineteenth century was a formative period in the land
revenue history of the Madras Province. First after a great deal of deliberations
Permanent Settlement was adopted.
▪ The districts of Chengalpattu, Salem and Dindigul were divided into a number of
mittahs and sold to the highest bidders. Most of the purchasers, after fleecing the
peasants, failed in the course of a year or two. The experiment was therefore
abandoned. Then the Board of Revenue tried a system of village leases.
▪ Under the Village Lease system the assessment of each village was to be fixed for a
period of three years based on the actual collections over a series of past years. In
districts where mirasi rights existed, the mirasdar was made responsible for the
rent collections. In districts where the mirasi rights did not exist, an arrangement
was made with the village headman.
▪ This system failed due to various reasons such as bad monsoons, low price of grains
and the short period of lease. When crops failed entire villages defaulted and fled
without paying the revenue. The government had to seek the help of the district
collectors to bring back the peasants to the village.
▪ By 1814 the Court of Directors had decided to introduce the ryotwari system. This
was a system formulated by Governor Thomas Munro. Under this system the ryot,
an Anglicization by the British in India of the Arabic word rayah, meaning a
peasant or cultivator, was the proprietor and tax payer of the land. The government
dealt with him directly without the intervention of any middlemen. The peasant

Page 9
was entitled to possession of land so long as he paid the land revenue. Apart from
eviction, default could result in attachment of livestock, household property and
personal belongings.
▪ The government assessed the revenue of each cultivated field. The revenue
assessment was reviewed once in thirty years, taking into account the changes in
grain prices, marketing opportunities, irrigation facilities and the like.
▪ The ryotwari system introduced the concept of private property in land. The
individual holders were registered and issued pattas. They were permitted to sell,
lease, and mortgage or transfer the right over land.

Subsidiary Alliance and Doctrine of Lapse:

▪ Governor General Wellesley (1798-1805) pursued a forward policy to establish


British supremacy in India. His annexation of territories was not a result of victory
in war. It was by assumption of the entire administration of an Indian State, with
its rulers retaining his title and receiving a fixed allowance.
▪ Before Wellesley, the company concluded alliances with Indian princes. The Nizam
and the Nawab of Oudh received subsidies for the maintenance of British
contingents. Such forces were generally stationed outside the State concerned.
Payment was made in cash.
▪ Difficulties arose when the payments were not promptly paid. Wellesley broadened
the scope of this arrangement by his Subsidiary Alliance System, bringing under it
Hyderabad, Mysore, Lucknow, the Maratha Peshwa, the Bhonsle (Kolhapur) and
Sindhia (Gwalior).

The provisions of the Subsidiary Treaty are:

▪ An Indian ruler entering into Subsidiary Alliance with the British had to dissolve
his own armed forces and accept British forces and a British Resident in his
territory.
▪ He had to pay for the British army’s maintenance. If he failed, a portion of his
territory would be taken away and ceded to the British.
▪ The protected prince was to sever all connections with European powers other than
the British, especially the French.

Page 10
▪ No European should be employed without the permission of the British.
▪ No negotiation with any Indian power should be held without the Company’s
permission and
▪ No other Indian power to interfere in its internal affairs.
Thus the states brought under the system became dependent on the Company in
political and military matters, sacrificing their own sovereignty and status. The
Subsidiary System increased the military resources and efficiency of the Company
government.
The immediate result of this system was the discharge of thousands of
professional soldiers by the political powers. The disbanded soldiers indulged in
freebooting activities. Pindaris (marauders) began to swell on account of the
Subsidiary System.

In view of the guaranteed support to the Princes by the Company, the protective States
mal-administered and paved the way for the annexation.

Doctrine of Lapse

▪ Traditionally Hindu custom allowed the adoption of a son in the absence of male
heirs. The adopted son had the right to inherit property. In this context the
question raised was whether such an adopted prince holding the state subordinate
to the Paramount Power (England) could succeed without the consent of the latter.
Before Dalhousie’s arrival, the custom was to obtain the sanction of the Company
government before or after adoption.
▪ Governor General Dalhousie held that the paramount power could legally refuse to
sanction adoption in the case of rulers of States dependent on it. This meant that
dependent States could be regarded as lapsed to the paramount power, by its
refusal to sanction the succession of adopted sons.
▪ By applying this policy known as Doctrine of Lapse, the first state to fall was Satara.
Shahji of Satara died (1848) and the son he adopted on the eve of his death was not
recognized by Dalhousie.
▪ Gangadhar Rao, Raja of Jhansi died in November 1853 and Dalhousie annexed that
state immediately. (His widow, Rani Lakshmi Bai, played a prominent role in the

Page 11
Great Rebellion of 1857.) Raghuji Bhonsle III died in 1853 without a child. Nagpur
was immediately annexed.
▪ In 1851, the last Peshwa died. He had been a pensioner of the Company for thirty-
three years, but Dalhousie refused to continue paying the pension to his son, the
Nana Sahib. The Doctrine of Lapse, thus, served as an instrument for the pursuit of
its annexation policy. When the Crown took over India in 1858 Doctrine of Lapse
was withdrawn.

Native States and British Paramountcy

▪ In the aftermath of the Battle of Plassey (Palashi) (1757), when the Company
embarked on its career of expansion, it established the system of dual government.
Under this system, everything was sought to be done by the Company’s servants in
the name of some powerless and dependent prince.
▪ In theory the Company was only the diwan (the collector of revenue), but in
practice it exercised full authority. This authority was asserted by the refusal to
continue the payment of annual tribute to the Mughal emperor Shah Alam
promised by Clive.
▪ Cornwallis even stopped affirming obedience in letters to the emperor. Wellesley
carried matters further with his objective of establishing British predominance
through his Subsidiary Alliance System. Wellesley made subsidiary alliances with
the three of the major States of India: Hyderabad, Poona and Mysore.
▪ Hastings (Moira) who became Governor General in 1813 ordered the removal of the
phrase denoting the imperial supremacy from his seal. He refused to meet Emperor
Akbar II, unless he waived all authority over the Company’s possessions. But
Hastings laid down a policy that the Company was in no way responsible for the
administration of the Indian States. Thus, under the Subsidiary System, each
Prince was secure on his throne, notwithstanding the discontent of his people or by
his jealous neighbours.
▪ In regions such as Kathiawar and Central India, divided among a great number of
petty chiefs, the Company’s close supervision became indispensable for prompt
action. The Company army helped the Indian rulers under the Subsidiary system to
quell any rebellion or disturbance within the State. In Hyderabad, the authority of

Page 12
the Nizam did not prevail in certain areas, as the Arab troops lived without any
control.
▪ The assistance of British troops helped reduce the Arabs to obedience. In Mysore
state the financial management of the raja provoked a rebellion in 1830 and the
treaty of Wellesley only provided authority for the Company to interfere.
▪ William Bentinck, as Governor General, relieved the raja of all his powers and
appointed Mark Cubbon to administer Mysore. In Gwalior, during a minority, the
parties at the durbar quarrelled bitterly among themselves. The army of the State
passed out of control. Ellenborough moved with a strong army, but the State army
resisted. At the battle of Maharajpur, the State army was defeated and new terms of
conditions including the limitation of the military forces maintained by it were
imposed in 1843.
▪ Dalhousie’s new method of annexing territories, Doctrine of Lapse, as we have
seen, increased the territories under British domain. Every accession of territory
also increased the influence of the Company over the governments of the Indian
princes.

Questions

1. Write a note on the Third Carnatic War (1756-63).


2. Describe the Permanent Settlement and Ryotwari Settlement
3. Discuss about the Subsidiary Alliance and Doctrine and Lapse.

Page 13
EARLY UPRISING AGAINST
BRITISH RULE

Introduction

• The conquest of territories and the expansionist policy of the British East India
Company led to a series of rebellions of deposed kings, or their descendants,
uprooted zamindars, and palayakarars. Historians describe this as primary
resistance. Independent of such revolts were the uprisings of the dispossessed
peasants and tribal.
• The rapid changes introduced by the British in the agrarian relations, land
revenue system, and judicial administration, elaborated in the previous lesson,
greatly disrupted the agrarian economy, resulting in widespread misery among
various sections of the society.
• Therefore, when the aggrieved erstwhile ruling class raised a standard of revolt,
the support of the mass of peasants and artisans was not lacking.

Mysore Sultans and their Resistance


Rise of Haider Ali

• Mysore was a small feudatory kingdom under the Vijayanagar Empire. After
Vijayanagar fell in 1565, the ruling dynasty of Wodeyars asserted their
independence and the Raja Wodeyar ascended the throne in 1578. The capital
moved from Mysore to Srirangapatnam in 1610.
• Wodeyar dynasty continued to reign until 1760, when the real power changed
hands to Haider Ali who was appointed Dalwai or prime minister. Haider’s
father Fateh Muhammad was the Faujdar (garrison commander) of Kolar. After
his death Haider’s soldierly qualities helped him to rise through the military
ranks.
• By 1755 he had secured a powerful position, commanding 100 horsemen and
2000 infantry men. Haider suppressed an army mutiny in Mysore and restored

Page 1
the places of the Mysore kingdom occupied by Marathas. He received the title of
“Fateh Haider Bahadur” or “the brave and victorious Lion”.
• In 1760 Haider allied himself with the French at Pondicherry against the
English, but his position at home was endangered by the plot engineered by the
Marathas. As Haider successfully handled the situation and there after he
became not only Dalawai but the de facto ruler of Mysore.
• In 1770 the Mysore king Nanjaraja was poisoned to death and Haider’s hand was
suspected. Thereafter Wodeyar kings functioned only as nominal rulers. The real
royal authority vested in Haider.

Haider Ali and the British

• After obtaining Diwani right (right to collect taxes on behalf of the Mughal
emperor from Bengal, Bihar and Orissa), the Company had to safeguard its
territories. As the Company was not strong enough, it avoided interfering in the
internal affairs of the Indian states.
• Warren Hastings maintained buffer states to live within a “Ring Fence”. The
Company was, however, drawn towards the affairs of the Carnatic, due to the
successive struggles for its Nawabship.
• The English traders saw in this a great opportunity to directly interfere in Indian
politics. However, there were threats from two strong powers represented by
Haider Ali and the Nizam of Hyderabad.

First Mysore War (1767-69)

• In the third Carnatic War Colonel Forde while conducting the forces from Bengal
captured Masulipatnam in 1759. This led to a treaty with Salabad Jung, who
ceded the Northern Sarkars to the British (districts of Ganjam, Vizagapatnam,
Godavari, Krishna and Guntur).
• English acquisition of the Northern Sarkars was legalized by the Mughal
emperor in 1765 by the treaty of Allahabad. In 1766, trouble arose when the
English occupied those districts. Yet a treaty was signed with Nizam Ali who
acquiesced in the session. In return the English promised to help out in case of

Page 2
any danger from the enemies. This promise meant English help to the Nizam
against Haider Ali. Here lay the genesis of the later Subsidiary System.
• Despite the treaty, Nizam came to an understanding with Haider in 1767 and the
British therefore declared a war against Haider. This is called First Anglo Mysore
War or First Mysore War.
• An English army from Bombay captured Mangalore and other surrounding
places on the West Coast. But Haider succeeded in recovering both. The English
made an attempt to capture Bangalore but to no avail.
• In 1768 Haider pounced on Baramahal (Salem district) and marched on Karur
and then Erode and took over both by defeating Captain Nixon. Meanwhile, his
general Fazlullah Khan marched on Madurai and Tirunelveli. Haider advanced
to Thanjavur and from there to Cuddalore. Though Haider did not want stop his
offensive against the English, the threat of Maratha invasion forced him to
negotiate peace with the English.

The terms of Treaty of Madras were as follows:

▪ the conquered territories to be restored to each,


▪ excepting Karur which was to be retained by Haider.
▪ Mutual assistance was to be rendered in wars of defence.
▪ This meant the English were under obligation to help Haider against the Marathas.

But when assistance from English was not forthcoming, Haider turned against the
English.

Haider and the Second Mysore War (1780)

• After the American War of Independence, France had signed a treaty of


friendship with America (1778) and so Britain declared war against France. In a
similar context of Spain reaching an agreement with America, and thereby being
dragged into the war against England (1779) England remained isolated.
• In India the coming together of the Nizam and the Marathas, supported by the
French aggravated the situation further. Haider Ali wanted to turn England’s
difficulty to its advantage and marched on Karnataka. Colonel Baillie, who was

Page 3
to join the force led by Hector Munro, was badly wounded in a sudden attack by
Haider.
• This forced Munro to move Madras. Haider captured Arcot (1780). Now on
request from Madras government Sir Eyre Coote, the victor of the Battle of
Wandawash, was sent from Calcutta to besiege Madras by sea. Having scored a
victory against Haider, Coote proceeded to Pondicherry.
• Haider in the meantime overran the kingdom of Thanjavur. Coote reached Porto
Novo and won a decisive victory over Haider. Haider narrowly escaped capture.
Colonel Braithwaite was thoroughly defeated near Kumbakonam by Haider’s son
Tipu and taken prisoner.
• In order to divert the attention of the Mysore Sultan, an expedition was
undertaken by General Mathews to capture Mangalore. Expectedly Tipu
abandoned Karnataka
and moved to West Coast. The death of Haider due to cancer in 1782, the signing
of Treaty of Paris (1783) at the end of American War of Independence, and the
protracted siege of Mangalore enabled the English to be aggressive against Tipu.
• Karur and Dindigul were captured by Colonel Lang, Colonel Fullerton seized
Palghat and Coimbatore but this advance on Srirangapatnam was pre-empted by
Tipu with his proposal for peace. The Treaty of Mangalore was signed in March
1784, according to which both parties agreed to give up their conquests and
release the prisoners.

Third Mysore War (1790-92)

• In the meantime Lord Cornwallis had become governor general. Cornwallis


wanted to deal with Tipu in a revengeful manner. The two great southern
powers, the Nizam of Hyderabad and the Maratha confederacy, supported the
British as its allies. The Nizam of Hyderabad supplied resources and even troops
for the British.
• The Marathas, who had signed the Treaty of Salbai with the English after the
First Anglo-Maratha war in 1782, also joined the British. The British position
was thus greatly strengthened.

Page 4
• Tipu sent an embassy to Constantinople and another in 1787 to Paris. These
diplomatic efforts of Tipu were intended to strengthen him against the English.
The French Monarch Louis XVI was hospitable, but could give only vague
promises of support to the Sultan.
• Tipu’s attack on Travancore which was an ally of the British and his capture of
Cranganore was treated as a declaration of war on the Company government.
Hence the third Anglo-Mysore War broke out.
• Colonel Hartley defeated Tipu’s general Husain Ali at Calicut. In response Tipu
captured Tiruvannamalai. His effort to get the support of French Pondicherry
Governor did not materialise. Cornwallis himself marched from Vellore and
reached Bangalore. On his way he encountered Tipu and defeated him near
Srirangapatnam. But lack of provisions compelled Cornwallis to retreat.
• At this juncture the Marathas helped the British in supplying the required
provisions. The reinforced army of the English marched on Srirangapatnam
again and besieged it. Unable to withstand the onslaught of the British forces
Tipu offered peace and accepted the terms imposed by Cornwallis.
• According to the treaty of Srirangapatnam, the Tipu was to give up half of his
dominions, pay three crores of rupees as indemnity, and pledge two of his sons
as hostages. The allies were given equal shares of the indemnity and of the ceded
territories. The English got Malabar, Dindigul and Barmahal. Tipu lost Coorg
(Kudagu), whose raja became a feudatory to the Company.
• Tipu’s power was greatly reduced. And after their stay at Madras as hostages the
boys returned to Srirangapatnam on 29 May 1794 when their father had paid all
the dues to the English. Tipu could hardly forget his humiliation and the heavy
territorial and monetary losses suffered.
• The Mysore king Chamaraj IX died in 1796. Tipu resolved not to observe the
formality of appointing a king. Synchronizing with this resolve came the
announcement of the French colonial Governor of Mauritius General Malartic
that, after obtaining French help, he would declare war on the English.
• In July 1798 Tipu’s correspondence with the French Directory and later with
Napoleon and his evasiveness in his correspondence with Wellesley led to his
declaration of war against Tipu.

Page 5
Fourth Mysore War (1799)

• Tipu made all out efforts to strengthen his military and financial resources. In
1796 Tipu sent emissaries to Paris again. In 1797 he received a French emissary
to confirm French support from Mauritius. A Jacobin club was started in
Srirangapatinam and the flag of the French Republic was hoisted to mark the
cordiality established between the French and the Sultan of Mysore. Irked by
Tipu’s alliance with the French Wellesley, now the new Governor General,
insisted on a standing army at Mysore under the Subsidiary System. Tipu turned
down Wellesley’s proposal and the British declared the fourth Anglo-Mysore war
in 1799.
• General David Baird stormed Srirangapatnam. Tipu’s offer of peace was rejected
and in the eventual battle Tipu was wounded and soon after shot dead by a
European Soldier. The elimination of Tipu and the restoration of the old
Wodeyar dynasty to the Mysore kingdom marked the real beginning of Company
rule in south India.
• The sons of the slain Tipu were interned first at Vellore, and later, after the
Vellore Revolt of 1806, shifted to Calcutta. Thus, ended the valiant fight of
Mysore Sultans against the British.

Early Resistance of Southern Palayakkarars against the British:

• After the decline of Vijayanagara Empire, Nagama Nayak who arrived as a


viceroy to Madurai and his son Viswanatha Nayak asserted themselves as
independent rulers of Madurai and Tirunelveli. Under the able guidance of
prime minister Ariyanayaga Mudaliyar, all the little kingdoms of the former
Pandian Empire were classified and converted into 72 palayams.
• Viswanatha Nayak constructed a formidable fort around Madurai city, which
consisted of seventy-two bastions. Each of them was placed under a chief. A
Palayakkarar was bound to pay a fixed annual tribute or supply troops to the
king and to keep order and peace over a particular area. In order to enable him
to perform these duties and attend to other services, a certain number of villages
were granted for revenue collection. In addition, he was presented with several

Page 6
titles and privileges. Palayakkarars had judicial powers and dispensed justice
over civil and criminal cases.
• Based on the topographical distribution they are classified as western palayams
and eastern palayams. The palayams held by Maravar chieftains were mostly in
the western parts of Tirunelveli. The settlement of Telugu migrants in the black
soil tracts, lying in the eastern part of Tirunelveli, left those parts under Nayak
Palayakkarars.

Revolt of Palyakkarars

• The Nawab of Arcot, who had borrowed heavily by pledging the villages in
several parts of Tamilnadu, entrusted the task of collecting land revenue arrears
to the Company administration. Yusuf Khan, remembered as Khan Sahib, had
been employed as commander of the Company’s Indian troops.
• He was entrusted not only with the command of the forces, but also with the
collection of revenue. At the request of the Nawab, a force of 500 Europeans and
200 sepoys was (1755), ordered to proceed into the “countries of Madurai and
Tirunelveli” to assist him.
• The encroachment of East Indian Company administration into palayakkarar’s
authority aroused stiff resistance. Mafuzkhan (Arcot Nawab’s elder brother) was
appointed by the Nawab as his representative in those territories.
• Mafuskhan along with Colonel Heron proceeded towards Tirunelveli. They easily
took Madurai. An expedition was sent to reduce Kattabomman, the palayakkarar
of Panchalamkurichi but had to be recalled.
• While returning Colonel Heron was urged to storm the fort of Nel-Kattum-Seval.
Its palayakkarar Puli Thevar wielded enormous influence over the western
palayakkarars. For want of cannon and of supplies and pay to soldiers, the attack
of Colonel Heron had to be abandoned and the force retired to Madurai.
• Three Pathan officers, Nawab Chanda Sahib’s agents, named Mianah, Mudimiah
and Nabikhan Kattak, commanded the Madurai and Tirunelveli regions. They
supported Tamil palayakkarars against Arcot Nawab Mohamed Ali. Puli Thevar
had established close relationships with them.

Page 7
• The palayakkarars of Uthumalai, Surandai, Thalaivankottai, Naduvakurichi,
Singampatti, Urkad, Seithur, Kollamkondan and Wadakarai joined Puli Thevar’s
confederacy. With the promise of restoring Kalakkadu, Puli Thevar had already
won over the ruler of Tranvancore to his confederacy. Nawab, on his side, sent
an additional contingent of sepoys to Mahfuz khan and the reinforced army
proceeded to Tirunelveli.
• Besides the 1000 sepoys of the Company, Mahfuz khan received 600 more sent
by the Nawab. He also had the support of cavalry and foot soldiers from the
Carnatic. Before Mahfuz khan could station his troops near Kalakadu, 2000
soldiers from Travancore joined the forces of Puli Tevar.
• In the battle of Kalakadu, Mahfuz khan's troops were trounced. The organized
resistance of the palayakkarars under Puli Thevar gave an opportunity to the
British to interfere directly in the affairs of Tirunelveli.
• From 1756 to 1763, aided frequently by Travancore, the palyakkarars of
Tirunelveli led by Puli Thevar were in a constant state of rebellion against the
authority of the Nawab. Yusuf Khan who had been sent by the Company would
not venture to attack Puli Thevar unless the big guns and ammunition from
Tiruchirappalli arrived.
• As the English were involved in a war with the French, as well as with Haider Ali
and Marathas, big guns arrived only in September 1760. Yusuf Khan began to
batter the Nerkattumseval fort and this attack continued for about two months.
• On 16th May 1761 Puli Thevar’s three major forts namely Nerkattumseval,
Vasudevanallur and Panayur came under the control of Yusuf Khan. After taking
Pondicherry the English commanded respect, as they had eliminated the French
from the picture.
• Consequently, the unity of palyakkarars began to break up as French support
was not forthcoming. Travancore, Seithur, Uthumalai and Surandai switched
their loyalty. Yusuf Khan, who was negotiating with the palayakkarars without
informing the Company administration, was charged with treachery and hanged
in 1764.
• Puli Thevar, who had taken asylum elsewhere after the forts were taken over by
Yusuf Khan, returned and began to organize against the British. Captain

Page 8
Campbell who was sent this time by the British, laid siege and captured
Nerkattumseval in 1767. Nothing is definitely known about the last days of Puli
Thevar.

Velu Nachiyar

• The Sethupathys ruled the area that covered Ramanathapuram, Sivagangai,


Virudhunagar, and Pudukkottai districts of the present day. Velu Nachiyar was
the daughter of Chellamuthu Sethupathy, the raja of Ramanathapuram. She
married Muthu Vadugar Periyaudayar, the Raja of Sivagangai, and had a
daughter named Vellachi Nachiar. When her husband was killed by the Nawab’s
forces, Velu Nachiyar escaped with her daughter and lived under the protection
of Haider Ali at Virupachi near Dindigul for eight years.
• During this period she organized an army and succeeded in securing an alliance
with Gopala Nayaker and Haider Ali. In 1780 Rani Velu Nachiyar fought the
British with military assistance from Gopala Nayaker and Haider Ali and won
the battle.
• The Nawab of Arcot placed many obstacles to the advancement of the Rani’s
troops. However she overcame all the hurdles and entered Sivagangai. The
Nawab of Arcot was defeated and taken captive. Velu Nachiyar recaptured
Sivagangai and was again crowned queen with the help of Marudu brothers.
• After ascending the throne Velu Nachiar appointed Chinna Marudu as her
adviser and Periya Marudu as commander. In 1783 the English forces invaded
Sivaganagai again. This time the Marudu Pandiyan saved the place by some
diplomatic moves.
• In 1790, Vellachi Nachiyar, daughter of Velu Nachiyar who was married to
Vengan Periya Udaya Tevar who became the king of Sivagangai state due to
compromise formula of the Englishmen, died under mysterious circumstances.
Velu Nachiyar became sick and died in three years later in 1796.

Veera Pandiya Kattabomman

▪ While Velu Nachiyar was fighting the British and engaging their complete
attention on Ramanathapruam and Sivagangai, Veera Pandiya Kattabomman’s

Page 9
resistance against the British was on progress. Kattabomma Nayak was the
playakkarar of Panchalamkurichi. Kattabomman Nayak was a family title.
▪ The chieftain of the Colonel Heron’s time was Jagaveera Kattabomman Nayak,
the grandfather of Veera Pandiya Kattabomman. This Veera Pandiya
Kattabomman, born in 1761, became the palayakkarar on the death of his father,
Jagaveera Pandiya Kattabomman. The collection of tribute continued to be a
problem as there was a constant tussle between the Company and the southern
palayakkarars.
▪ In September 1798 as the tribute from Panchalamkuriuchi fell into arrears,
Collector Jackson wrote to Veera Pandiyan in his characteristic arrogance. The
country experienced a severe drought, in consequence of which the
palayakkarars found it difficult to collect taxes.
▪ Collector Jackson wanted to send an expedition to punish Veera Pandiyan but
the Madras administration did not agree. The Company had already withdrawn
its forces from Tirunelveli to be employed in the war against Tipu Sultan of
Mysore, and did not desire to risk a conflict in the far south at this juncture.
▪ It directed the collector to summon the Palayakkarar at Ramanathapuram and
hold a discussion. Accordingly, on the 18 August 1798 Jackson despatched an
order directing Veera Pandiyan to meet him at Ramanathapuram within two
weeks. After sending the summons, the collector started on a tour of Tirunelveli.
▪ When Jackson halted at Chokkampatti, Sivagiri, Sattur and Srivilliputhur to
receive tribute from the Palayakkarars, Veera Pandiyan sought an interview but
was told that he could meet the collector only at Ramanathapuram.
▪ Despite this humiliation, Kattabomman followed the Englishman for twenty
three days over 400 miles through the latter’s route and reached
Ramanathapuram on 19th September. An interview was granted the same day
and the collector expressed his satisfaction that the Palayakkarar had behaved
properly and thereby “saved himself from ruin”. Upon a verification of accounts
Jackson was convinced that Kattabomman had cleared most of the arrears,
leaving only 1080 pagodas as balance to be settled.
▪ Denied of courtesy, the palayakkarar and his minister Sivasubramania Pillai had
to stand before the arrogant collector. Finally, he directed them to stay inside the

Page 10
Ramanathapuram fort. Now a few sepoys appeared, apparently to arrest
Kattabomman. But they escaped. At the gate of the fort a clash occurred, in
which some including Lieutenant Clarke were killed. Siva Subramania Pilai was
taken prisoner but Kattabomman made his escape.
▪ After his return to Panchalamkurichi, Kattabomman wrote to the Madras
Council blaming the attitude of Jackson for the scuffle. In the meantime
Governor Edward Clive had issued a proclamation, inviting the palayakkarar to
submit to the authority of the Company.
▪ In the event of surrender he assured a fair investigation into the
Ramanathapuram incident. If he refused, he threatened Kattabomman with dire
consequences. In response Kattabomman appeared before the committee which
acquitted him of the charges of rebellion and condemned the conduct of the
collector. S.R. Lushington was appointed collector in the place of Jackson, who
was eventually dismissed from service.
▪ However, Kattabomman remained irreconciled. At this time Marudu Pandiyan
of Sivaganga along with Gopala Nayak of Dindigul and Yadul Nayak of
Anamalai, was engaged in organising a Confederacy against the British.
▪ In view of the identity of interests Kattabomman and Marudu Pandiyan came
closer. Kattabomman also established contact with the Sivagiri palayakkarar.
While Panchalamkurichi was situated in an open plain and appeared vulnerable,
the strategic location of the fort of Sivagiri at the foot of the Western Ghats and
the formidable barriers around it rendered it eminently suited both for offensive
and defensive operations.
▪ Thus in a bold attempt to strengthen his position an armed column consisting of
the followers of Veera Pandiyan, the son of the Palayakkarar of Sivagiri and
other allied chiefs, led by Dalawai Kumaraswami Nayak, moved towards the
west. As the Palayakkarar of Sivagiri was a tributary to the Company, the Madras
Governor’s Council considered this as a challenge to its own authority and
ordered the march of the army.
▪ In May 1799 Lord Wellesley issued orders from for the advance of forces from
Trichirapalli, Thanjavur and Madurai to Tirunelveli. The Travancore troops
joined the British. Major Bannerman, armed with extensive powers, effectively

Page 11
commanded the expedition. On 1 June 1799 Kattabomman, attended by 500
men, proceeded to Sivaganga. At Palayanur Kattabomman held deliberations
with Marudu. Subsequently, joined by 500 armed men of Sivaganga,
Kattabomman returned to Panjalamkurichi.
▪ The Palayakkarars of Nagalapuram, Mannarkottai, Powalli, Kolarpatti and
Chennulgudi had already formed themselves into a combination due to the
efforts of Marudu brothers. They asserted their rights to collect taxes from
certain villages in the Company’s territory. Kattabomman proceeded to join this
league to take up its leadership by virtue of the influence that he wielded and the
resources he possessed.
▪ Determined to strengthen this league, he persuaded the chieftains of Satur,
Yezhayirampannai, Kadalgudi and Kulathoor to join it. On 1 September 1799
Major Bannerman served an ultimatum directing Kattabomman to see him at
Palayamkottai. As Kattabomman dodged Bannerman decided on military action.
The Company army reached Panchalamkurichi on 5 September.
▪ Kattabomman’s fort, 500 feet long and 300 feet broad, was constructed entirely
of mud. The Company forces cut off the communications of the fort.
Kattabomman’s forces fought gallantly and successive attacks were repulsed.
Colonel Welsh recorded in his memoirs the gallantry of Kattabomman's soldiers.
▪ The English ordered for the arrival of more troops. On 16 September
reinforcements arrived from Palayamkottai. As the broken walls appeared
vulnerable, the garrison evacuated and reached Kadalgudi. In a clash at
Kalarpatti, Kattabomman’s minister Sivasubramonia Pillai was taken prisoner.
▪ The British forces followed up their victory with the reduction of Nagalapuram
and other strongholds of the defiant chiefs to submission. On the appearance of
the army the western Palayakkarars too surrendered. Vijaya Ragunatha
Tondaiman, Raja of Pudukottai, captured Kattabomman from the jungles of
Kalapore and handed him over to the enemy.
▪ Upon the fall of the Palayakkarar into the hands of the enemy, his followers fled
to Sivaganga and from there to the hills of Dindigul for taking service with
Marudu Pandiyan and Gopala Nayak.

Page 12
▪ Bannerman brought the prisoners to an assembly of the Palayakkarars and after
a mockery of trial sentenced them to death. On 16 October Veera Pandiya
Kattabomman was tried before an assembly of Palayakkarars at Kayatar.
Unmindful of impending death Kattabomman admitted all the charges levelled
against him.
▪ He declared that he did send his armed men against Sivagiri and that he did
fight the British troops in the battle at Panchalamkurichi. On 17 October
Kattabomman was hanged to death at a conspicuous spot near the old fort of
Kayatar. Kattabomman’s heroic exploits were the subject of many folk ballads
which kept his memory alive among the people.

Marudu Brothers and the South Indian Rebellion of 1801


▪ By the treaty of 1772 the Arcot Nawab had authorized the Company to collect the
Stalam Kaval and Desakaval. This affected the Kaval chiefs in both the
Palayakkarar and non-palaykkarar territories. The aggrieved kavalkarars and
their chiefs had joined the palayakkarars in their fight against the Nawab and the
Company.
▪ In Sivagangai, Vella Marudu and Chinna Marudu, who had taken over the
administration from Periya Udaya Thevar, who died in battle against the
Nawab’s forces, expelled the forces of the Nawab and proclaimed Vellachi,
daughter of Periya Udaya Tevar and Velu Nachiyar, as the queen of Sivagangai.
▪ The Marudus assumed the charge of the ministers. The temple of Kalayarkoil in
the heart of the then Sivagangai forest became the rallying point of the rebels.
When Umathurai reached Kamudhi after the execution of his brother Veera
Pandiya Kattabomman, Chinna Marudu took him to Siruvayal, his capital.
▪ Now, Nawab Mohammad Ali released Muthuramalinga Thevar from jail and
enthroned him as the Setupati of Ramanathapuram. But the rebels proclaimed
Muthu Karuppa Thevar as their ruler. They occupied the southern and northern
regions of the kingdom. The soldiers made their entry into Madurai too.
▪ In July Umathurai led his followers to Palayanad in Madurai and captured it. In
1801 both the Sivagangai and Ramanathapuram forces joined together under the
command of Shevatha Thambi, the son of Chinna Marudu, and marchedalong
the coast towards Thanjavur.
Page 13
▪ Thereupon the distressed peasants in Thanjavur also joined the force of
Shevatha Thambi. Captain William Blackburne, the resident of Thanjaur
collected a force and defeated Shevatha Thambi near Mangudi. Serfoji, the raja
of Thanjavur stood firmly by the British. Yet the fighters could elude the pursuit
of the British troops by rapid movements, while laying the entire region waste.

South Indian Rebellion 1801

▪ The victory over Tipu and Kattabomman had released British forces from several
fronts to target the fighting forces in Ramanathapuram and Sivagangai.
Thondaiman of Pudukottai had already joined the side of the Company. The
Company had also succeeded in winning the support of the descendent of the
former ruler of Sivagangai named Padmattur Woya Thevar.
▪ Woya Thevar was recognised by the Company as the legitimate ruler of
Sivagangai. This divisive strategy split the royalist group, eventually
demoralizing the fighting forces against the British. In May 1801 a strong
detachment under the command of P.A. Agnew commenced its operations.
▪ Marching through Manamadurai and Partibanur the Company forces occupied
the rebel strongholds of Paramakudi. In the clashes that followed both sides
suffered heavy losses. But the fighters’ stubborn resistance and the Marudu
brothers’ heroic battles made the task of the British formidable.
▪ In the end the superior military strength and the able commanders of the British
army won the day. Following Umathurai’s arrest Marudu brothers were captured
from the Singampunary hills, and Shevathiah from Batlagundu and
Doraiswamy, the son of Vellai Marudu from a village near Madurai.
▪ Chinna Marudu and his brother Vellai Marudu were executed at the fort of
Tiruppatthur on 24 October 1801. Umathurai and Shevathiah, with several of
their followers, were taken to Panchalamkurichi and beheaded on 16 November
1801. Seventy three rebels were banished to Penang in Malaya in April 1802.

Theeran Chinnamalai

▪ The Kongu country comprising Salem, Coimbatore, Karur and Dindigul formed
part of the Nayak kingdom of Madurai but had been annexed by the Wodayars of

Page 14
Mysore. After the fall of the Wodayars, these territories together with Mysore
were controlled by the Mysore Sultans.
▪ As a result of the Third and Fourth Mysore wars the entire Kongu region passed
into the hands of the English. Theeran Chinnamalai was a palayakkarar of
Kongu country who fought the British East India Company. He was trained by
the French and Tipu. In his bid to launch an attack on the Company’s fort in
Coimbatore (1800), Chinnamalai tried taking the help of the Marudu brothers
from Sivagangai.
▪ He also forged alliances with Gopal Nayak of Virupatchi; Appachi Gounder of
Paramathi Velur; Joni Jon Kahan of Attur Salem; Kumaral Vellai of Perundurai
and Varanavasi of Erode in fighting the Company.
▪ Chinnamalai’s plans did not succeed as the Company stopped the
reinforcements from the Marudu brothers. Also, Chinnamalai changed his plan
and attacked the fort a day earlier. This led to the Company army executing 49
people. However, Chinnamalai escaped. Between 1800 and July 31, 1805 when
he was hanged, Chinnamalai continued to fight against the Company.
▪ Three of his battles are important: the 1801 battle on Cauvery banks, the 1802
battle in Odanilai and the 1804 battle in Arachalur. The last and the final one
was in 1805. During the final battle, Chinnamalai was betrayed by his cook
Chinnamalai and was hanged in Sivagiri fort.

Vellore Revolt (1806)

▪ Vellore Revolt 1806 was the culmination of the attempts of the descendents of
the dethroned kings and chieftains in south India to throw of the yoke of the
British rule. After the suppression of revolt of Marudu brothers, they made
Vellore the centre of their activity.
▪ The organizers of an Anti-British Confederacy continued their secret moves, as a
result of which no fewer than 3,000 loyalists of Mysore sultans had settled either
in the town of Vellore or in its vicinity.
▪ The garrison of Vellore itself consisted of many aggrieved persons, who had been
reduced to dire straits as a sequel to loss of positions or whose properties had
been confiscated or whose relatives were slain by the English.

Page 15
▪ Thus the Vellore Fort became the meeting ground of the rebel forces of south
India. The sepoys and the migrants to Vellore held frequent deliberations,
attended by the representatives of the sons of Tipu.

Immediate Cause

▪ In the meantime, the English enforced certain innovations in the administration


of the sepoy establishments. They prohibited all markings on the forehead which
were intended to denote caste and religious, and directed the sepoys to cut their
moustaches to a set pattern.
▪ Added to these, Adjutant General Agnew designed and introduced under his
direct supervision a new model turban for the sepoys. The most obnoxious
innovation in the new turban, from the Indian point of view, was the leather
cockade.
▪ The cockade was made of animal skin. Pig skin was anathema to Muslims, while
upper caste Hindus shunned anything to do with the cow’s hide. To make
matters worse the front part of the uniform had been converted into a cross.
▪ The order regarding whiskers, caste marks and earrings, which infringed the
religious customs of both Hindu and Muslim soldiers, was justified on the
grounds that, although they had not been prohibited previously by any formal
order, it had never been the practice in any well regulated corps for the men to
appear with them on parade.
▪ The first incident occurred in May 1806. The men in the 2nd battalion of the 4th
regiment at Vellore refused to wear the new turban. When the matter was
reported to the Governor by Col. Fancourt, commandant of the garrison, he
ordered a band of the 19th Dragoons (Cavalry) to escort the rebels, against
whom charges had been framed, to the Presidency for a trial.
▪ The 2nd battalion of the 4th regiment was replaced by the 2nd battalion of the
23rd regiment of Wallajahbad. The Court Martial tried 21 privates (a soldier of
lower military rank)– 10 Muslims and 11 Hindus–, for defiance. In pursuance of
the Court Martial order two soldiers (a Muslim and a Hindu) were sentenced to
receive 900 lashes each and to be discharged from service.

Page 16
▪ Despite signals of protest the Government decided to go ahead with the change,
dismissing the grievance of Indian soldiers. Governor William Bentinck also
believed that the ‘disinclination to wear the turban was becoming more feeble.’
▪ Though it was initially claimed that the officers on duty observed nothing
unusual during the night of July 9, it was later known that the English officer on
duty did not go on his rounds and asked one of the Indian officers to do the duty
and Jameder Sheik Kasim, later one of the principal accused, had done it.
▪ The leaders of the regiment who were scheduled to have a field day on the
morning of 10 July, used it as a pretext to sleep in the Fort on the night of 9 July.
The Muslim native adjutant contrived to post as many of his followers as
possible as guards within the Fort.
▪ Jamal-ud-din, one of the twelve princes of Tipu family, who was suspected to
have played a key role in the revolt, kept telling them in secret parleys that the
prince only required them to keep the fort for eight days before which time ten
thousand would arrive to their support.
▪ He disclosed to them that letters had been written to dispossessed
palayakkarars seeking their assistance. He also informed that there were several
officers in the service of Purniah (Tipu’s erstwhile minister) who were formerly
in the Sultan’s service and would undoubtedly join the standard.

Outbreak of Revolt:

▪ At 2:00 a.m. on 10 July, the sentry at the main guard informed Corporal Piercy
saying that a shot or two had been fired somewhere near the English barracks.
Before Piercy could respond, the sepoys made a near simultaneous attack on the
British guards, the British barracks and the officers’ quarters in the Fort.
▪ In the European quarters the shutters were kept open, as they were the only
means of ventilation from the summer heat. The rebels could easily fire the gun
‘through the barred windows on the Europeans, lying unprotected in their beds.’
Fire was set to the European quarters.
▪ Detachments were posted to watch the dwellings of the European officers, ready
to shoot anyone who came out. A part of the 1st regiment took possession of the
magazines (place where gun powder and ball cartridges stored).

Page 17
▪ A select band of 1st Regiment was making their rounds to massacre the
European officers in their quarters. Thirteen officers were killed, in addition to
several European conductors of ordnance.
▪ In the barracks, 82 privates died, and 91 were wounded. Major Armstrong of the
16th native infantry was passing outside the Fort when he heard the firing. He
advanced to the glacis and asked what the firing meant.
▪ He was answered by a volley from the ramparts, killing him instantly. Major
Coates, an officer of the English regiment who was on duty outside the Fort, on
hearing of the revolt tried to enter the Fort.
▪ As he was unable to make it, he sent off an officer, Captain Stevenson of 23rd, to
Arcot with a letter addressed to Colonel Gillespie, who commanded the cavalry
cantonment there. The letter reached Arcot, some 25 km away, at 6 a.m. Colonel
Gillespie set out immediately, taking with him a squadron of the 19th dragoons
under Captain Young, supported by a strong troop of the 7th cavalry under
Lieutenant Woodhouse.
▪ He instructed Colonel Kennedy to follow him with the rest of the cavalry,
leaving a detachment to protect the cantonment and to keep up the
communication. When Colonel Gillespie arrived at the Vellore Fort at 9 a.m., he
thought it prudent to await the arrival of the guns, since there was continuous
firing.
▪ Soon the cavalry under Kennedy came from Arcot. It was about 10 o’Clock. The
gate was blown open with the galloper guns of the 19th dragoons under the
direction of Lieutenant Blakiston. The troops entered the place, headed by a
squadron of the cavalry under Captain Skelton. The Gillespie’s men were met by
a severe crossfire.
▪ In the ensuing battle, Colonel Gillespie himself suffered bruises. The sepoys
retreated. Hundreds escaped over the walls of the Fort, or threw down their
arms and pleaded for mercy. Then the cavalry regiment assembled on the parade
ground and resolved to pursue the fleeing soldiers, who were exiting towards the
narrow passage of escape afforded by the sally port.
▪ A troop of dragoons and some native horsemen were sent round to intercept the
fleeing soldiers. All the buildings in the Fort were searched, and mutineers found

Page 18
in them pitilessly slaughtered. Gillespie’s men wanted to enter the building and
take revenge on the princes, the instigators of the plot; but Lt. Colonel Marriott
resisted the attempt of the dragoons to kill Tipu’s sons.
▪ Colonel Gillespie is said to have brought the Fort under the possession of the
English in about 15 minutes. Col. Harcourt (Commanding Officer at
Wallajahbad) was appointed to the temporary command of Vellore on July 11.
Harcourt assumed command of the garrison on 13 July, 1806 and clamped
martial law. It was believed that the prompt and decisive action of Gillespie put
an end to ‘the dangerous confederacy, and had the fort remained in the
possession of the insurgents but a few days, they were certain of being joined by
fifty thousand men from Mysore.’
▪ But the obnoxious regulations to which the soldiers objected were withdrawn.
The Mysore princes were ordered to be sent to Calcutta, as according the
Commission of Inquiry, their complicity could not be established. They were
removed from Vellore, on 20 August 1806. The higher tribunals of the Home
Government held the chief authorities of Madras, namely the Governor, the
Commander-in-Chief, and the Deputy Adjutant General, responsible for the
bungling and ordered their recall.
▪ Vellore had its echoes in Hyderabad, Wallajahbad, Bangalore, Nandydurg,
Palayamkottai, Bellary and Sankaridurg. Vellore Revolt had all the forebodings
of Great Rebellion of 1857, if the word cartridge is substituted by cockade and
Bahadur Shah and Nana Sahib could be read for Mysore Princes.

Peasant and Tribal Revolts:

▪ In the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries the land tenures and
revenue settlements of the Company’s government had fundamentally disrupted
the Indian rural society and affected the peasantry in an unprecedented manner.
▪ In the early days of revenue farming system, the peasantry was oppressed by the
revenue contractors and company officials who imposed high revenue demands
and collected them forcibly.
▪ Initially the peasants sent a petition to the Company’s government asking for
redress. But when their appeal for justice went unheeded, they organized

Page 19
themselves and resorted to direct action. They attacked the local cutchery
(revenue collector’ office), looted gain stores and refused to pay revenue.
▪ A peasant movement of the 1840s and 1850s was the Malabar rebellion in
present day Kerala. The Mappillas were the descendents of Arab traders who had
settled in this region and had married the Malabar women. Gradually the
Mappillais became dependent on agriculture and turned into a community of
cultivating tenants, landless labourers, petty traders and fishermen.
▪ When the British took over Malabar in 1792, they sought to revamp the land
relations by creating individual ownership in land. The traditional system
provided for an equal sharing of the net produce of the land by the janmi (holder
of janmam tenure), the kanamdar (holder of kanam tenure), and the cultivator.
▪ The British system upset this arrangement by recognising the janmi as absolute
owners of land, with right to evict tenants, which did not exist earlier. Apart
from that, over-assessment, a huge burden of illegal cesses and a pro-landlord
attitude of the judiciary and the police led the peasants to live in conditions of
extreme poverty.
▪ A series of incidents therefore occurred in Malabar throughout the nineteenth
century. Three serious incidents occurred in Manjeri in August 1849, in Kulathur
in August 1851 – both in south Malabar – and in Mattannur in the north in
January 1852. British armed forces were deployed to suppress the revolt.
▪ The repressive measures restored peace for about twenty years, but then the
Mappillas rose again in 1870 and the events followed a similar course.
▪ Some of the rebellions in pre-1857 India were of the tribals whose autonomy and
control over local resources were threatened by the establishment of British rule
and the advent of its non-tribal agents.
▪ The tribal people, spread over a large part of India, rose up in hundreds of
insurrections during the 19th century. These uprisings were marked by immense
courage on their part and brutal suppression on the part of the rulers.

The Kol Uprising (1831-32)

▪ Kols as tribals inhabited in Chotanagpur and Singbhum region of Bihar and


Orissa. The immediate cause of their uprising was the action of the Raja of
Chotanagpur in leasing several villages to the nontribals. The Kols of Sonepur
Page 20
and Tamar took the initiative in organizing a revolt against the thikadars (tax
collectors).
▪ The forms of rebellion consisted of attacks on the properties of the outsiders, but
not their lives. Plunder and arson, were the chief modes of peasant protest.
Sonepur pargana of Chotanagpur was raided, plundered and burnt down by a
body of seven hundred insurgents on 20 December 1831.
▪ By 26 January 1832 the Kols had taken complete possession of the whole of
Chotanagpur. The revolt against the British had ended up in a war against the
Company government.
▪ Buddha Bhagat, the leader of Kol insurrection was killed in a pitched battle. A
sum of one thousand rupees was distributed among officers and soldiers as their
reward for delivering Bhagat’s severed head to the authorities. Bhindrai Manki
who inspired the revolt surrendered on 19 March 1832 and with his surrender
the revolt of Kols came to a tragic end.

Santhal Hool (rebellion), 1855-56

▪ Santhal, also called Manji, lived scattered in various forest regions of Bengal,
Bihar, and Orissa. Driven from their homeland, they cleared the area around the
Rajmahal Hills and called it Damin-i-koh (land of Santhals). They were
gradually driven to a desperate situation as tribal lands were leased out to non-
Santhal zamindars and moneylenders.
▪ To this was added the oppression of the local police and the European officials
engaged in railroad construction. This penetration of dikus (outsiders)
completely destroyed their familiar world, and forced them into action to take
possession of their lost territory.
▪ In July 1855, when their ultimatum to the zamindars and the government went
unheeded, several thousand Santhals, armed with bows and arrows, started an
open insurrection “against the unholy trinity of their oppressors-the zamindars,
the Mahajan’s and the government.”
▪ At the battle of Maheshpur, many of the Manjis were dressed in red clothes.
Later this garment became an assertion of authority. In the first week of the
rising a party of ten men attacked and burnt down the village of Monkaparrah.

Page 21
▪ The rebels included a number of women. Initially their leader was Sido. After his
arrest the revolt was led by Kanoo. At the later stage of the revolt, the peasants
also joined. Several thousand peasants raided on Charles Maseyk’s indigo factory
and pillaged.

▪ This invited brutal counter-insurgency measures; the army was mobilized and
Santhal villages were burnt one after another with vengeance. According to one
calculation, out of thirty to fifty thousand rebels, fifteen to twenty thousand were
killed before the insurrection was finally suppressed.

Munda Rebellion

▪ The rebellion (ulgulan) of the Munda tribesmen led by Birsa Munda, occurred
during 1899-1900. Mundas were a prominent tribe in the Bihar region. During
the British rule their system of common land holdings was destroyed.
▪ Jagirdars, thikadars (revenue farmers) and moneylenders grabbed the land
owned by them. Birsa, born in a poor share-cropper household in 1874, declared
himself a divine messenger to drive away the British and establish Munda rule in
the region.
▪ Under his influence the Mundas strongly opposed non-tribals occupying tribal
lands. He urged the Munda cultivators not to pay rent to the zamindars. Birsa
Munda led a revolt in the Chotta Nagpur region.
▪ The indiscriminate slaughter of Munda women at Sail Rakab did not deter the
followers of Birsa. The British authorities issued a warrant for Mirsa’s arrest and
put up a reward for his capture. Birsa became a martyr in Ranchi jail (9 June
1900). His name continues to inspire the tribals of the region.

Questions:

1. Write a note on Veera Pandiya Kattabomman.


2. Write on the causes and outbreak of Vellore Revolt.
3. Explain in detail about the Santhal Rebellion.

Page 22
1857 REVOLT

Introduction

1857 has been a subject of much debate among historians, both British and Indian.
British imperialist historians dismissed it a mutiny, an outbreak among soldiers.
Indian historians who explored the role of the people in converting a military outbreak
into a rebellion raised two questions to which the imperial historians have had no
answer.

If it was only a military outbreak how to explain the revolt of the people even before the
sepoys at those stations mutinied?

Why was it necessary to punish the people with fine and hanging for complicity in acts
of rebellion?

Col. Malleson, the Adjutant General of the Bengal army in a pamphlet titled The
Making of the Bengal Army remarked, ‘a military mutiny...speedily changed its
character and became a national insurrection’.

The historian Keene attributed the outbreak due to operation of variety of factors: to
the grievances of princes, soldiers and the people, produced largely by the annexation
and reforming zeal of Dalhousie. The greased cartridge affair merely ignited the
combustible matter which had already accumulated.

Edward John Thompson described the event ‘as largely a real war of independence’.
V.D. Savarkar, in his The War of Indian Independence, published in 1909, argued that
what the British had till then described as merely mutiny was, in fact, a war of
independence, much like the American War of Independence.

Despite the fact that the English-educated middle class played no role in the rebellion,
nationalist historians championed this argument as the First War of Indian
Independence.

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Causes of the Rebellion:
Territorial Aggrandisement
▪ The annexation of Oudh and Jhansi by Dalhousie employing the Doctrine of Lapse
and the humiliating treatment meted out to Nana Sahib, the last Peshwa’s adopted
son produced much dissatisfaction. In the wake of the Inam Commission (1852)
appointed by Bombay government to enquire into the cases of “land held rent-free
without authority,” more than 21,000 estates were confiscated.
▪ The land settlement in the annexed territories, particularly in Oudh, adversely
affected the interests of the talukdars, who turned against the British. Moreover, in
Oudh, thousands of inhabitants who depended on the royal patronage and traders
who were dealing in rich dresses and highly ornamented footwear and expensive
jewellery lost their livelihood.
▪ Thus Dalhousie through his expansionist policy created hardship to a number of
people.

Oppressive Land Revenue System:

▪ The rate of land revenue was heavy when compared with former settlements. Prior
to the British, Indian rulers collected revenue only when land was cultivated. The
British treated land revenue as a rent and not a tax. This meant that revenue was
extracted whether the land was cultivated or not, and at the same rate.
▪ The prices of agricultural commodities continued to crash throughout the first half
of nineteenth century and in the absence of any remission or relief from the
colonial state, small and marginal farmers as well as cultivating tenants were
subject to untold misery.

Alienation of Muslim Aristocracy and Intelligentsia

▪ Muslims depended largely on public service. Before the Company’s rule, they had
filled the most honourable posts in former governments. As commandants of
cavalry some of them received high incomes. But under the Company’s
administration, they suffered.
▪ English language and western education pushed the Muslim intelligentsia into
insignificance. The abolition of Persian language in the law courts and admission

Page 2
into public service by examination decreased the Muslim’s chances of official
employment.

Religious Sentiments

▪ The Act of 1856 providing for enrolment of high caste men as sepoys in the Bengal
army stipulated that future recruits give up martial careers or their caste scruples.
This apart, acts such as the abolition of sati, legalization of remarriage of Hindu
widows, prohibition of infanticide were viewed as interference in religious beliefs.
▪ In 1850, to the repugnance of orthodox Hindus, the Lex Loci Act was passed
permitting converts to Christianity to retain their patrimony (right to inherit
property from parents or ancestors). Further the religious sentiments of the sepoys
– Hindus and Muslims – were outraged when information spread that the fat of
cows and pigs was used in the greased cartridges.
▪ The Indian sepoys were to bite them before loading the new Enfield rifle. This was
viewed as a measure to convert people to Christianity. In every sense, therefore,
1857 was a climatic year. The cartridge affair turned out to be a trigger factor for
the rebellion.
▪ The dispossessed, discontented rajas, ranis, zamindars and tenants, artisans and
workers, the Muslim intelligentsia, priests, and the Hindu pandits saw the eruption
as an opportunity to redress their grievances.

Course of the Revolt

▪ The rebellion first began as a mutiny in Barrackpore (near Calcutta). Mangal


Pandey murdered his officer in January 1857 and a mutiny broke out there. In the
following month, at Meerut, of the 90 sepoys who were to receive their cartridges
only five obeyed orders.
▪ On 10th May three sepoy regiments revolted, killed their officers, and released those
who had been imprisoned. The next day they reached Delhi, murdered Europeans,
and seized that city. The rebels proclaimed Bahadur Shah II as emperor.
▪ By June the revolt had spread to Rohilkhand, where the whole countryside was in
rebellion. Khan Bahadur Khan proclaimed himself the viceroy of the Emperor of
India. Nearly all of Bundelkhand and the entire Doab region were up in arms

Page 3
against the British. At Jhansi, Europeans were massacred and Laxmi Bai, aged 22,
was enthroned.
▪ In Kanpur Nana Sahib led the rebels. About 125 English women and their children
along with English officers were killed and their bodies were thrown into a well.
Termed as the Kanpur massacre, this incident angered the British and General
Henry Havelock, who was sent to deal with the situation, defeated Nana Sahib the
day after the massacre. Neill, who was left there, took terrible vengeance and those
whom he regarded as guilty were executed. Towards the close of November Tantia
Tope seized Kanpur but it was soon recovered by Campbell. The Lucknow
residency, defended by Henry Lawrence fell into the hands of rebels.
▪ Havelock marched towards Lucknow after defeating Nana Sahib, but he had to
retire. By the close of July John Nicholson sent by John Lawrence to capture Delhi
succeeded in capturing Delhi. The Mughal emperor Bahadur Shah II now became a
prisoner and his two sons and grandson were shot dead after their surrender.
▪ Resistance in Oudh was prolonged because of the involvement of talukdars as well
as peasants in the revolt. Many of these taluqdars were loyal to the Nawab of
Awadh, and they joined Begum Hazrat Mahal (the wife of the Nawab Wajid Ali
Shah) in Lucknow to fight the British.
▪ Since a vast majority of the sepoys were from peasant families in the villages of
Oudh, the grievances of the peasants had affected them. Oudh was the nursery of
the Bengal Army for a long time. The sepoys from Oudh complained of low levels of
pay and the difficulty of getting leave.
▪ They all rallied behind Begum Hazrat Mahal. Led by Raja Jailal Singh, they fought
against the British forces and seized control of Lucknow and she declared her son,
Birjis Qadra, as the ruler (Wali) of Oudh. Neill who wreaked terrible vengeance in
Kanpur was shot dead in the street fighting at Lucknow. Lucknow could be finally
captured only in March 1858.
▪ Hugh Rose besieged Jhansi and defeated Tantia Tope early in April. Yet Lakshmi
Bai audaciously captured Gwalior forcing pro-British Scindia to flee. Rose with his
army directly confronted Lakshmi Bai.
▪ In this battle Lakshmi Bai died fighting admirably. Rose described Lakshmi Bai as
the best and bravest military leader of the rebels. Gwalior was recaptured soon. In

Page 4
July 1858 Canning announced the suppression of the “Mutiny” and restoration of
peace. Tantia Tope was captured and executed in April 1859. Bahadur Shah II,
captured in September 1857, was tried and declared guilty. He was exiled to
Rangoon (Myanmar), where he died in November 1862 at the age of 87. With his
death the Mughal dynasty came to an end.

Effects of the Great Rebellion


Queen’s Proclamation 1858

▪ A Royal Durbar was held at Allahabad on November 1, 1858. The proclamation


issued by Queen Victoria was read at the Durbar by Lord Canning, who was the last
Governor General and the first Viceroy of India.
▪ Hereafter India would be governed by and in the name of the British Monarch
through a Secretary of State. The Secretary of State was to be assisted by a Council
of India consisting of fifteen members. As a result, the Court of Directors and the
Board of Control of the East India Company were abolished and the Crown and
Parliament became constitutionally responsible for the governance of India. The
separate army of the East India Company was abolished and merged with that of
Crown.
▪ Proclamation endorsed the treaties made by the Company with Indian princes,
promised to respect their rights, dignity and honour, and disavowed any ambition
to extend the existing British possessions in India.
▪ The new council of 1861 was to have Indian nomination, since the Parliament
thought the Legislative Council of 1853 consisted of only Europeans who had never
bothered to consult Indian opinion and that led to the crisis.
▪ The Doctrine of Lapse and the policy of annexation to be given up. A general
amnesty (pardon) to be granted to the rebels except those who directly involved in
killing the British subjects.
▪ The educational and public works programmes (roads, railways, telegraphs, and
irrigation) were stimulated by the realization of their value for the movement of
troops in times of emergency.

Page 5
▪ Hopes of a revival of the past diminished and the traditional structure of Indian
society began to break down. A Westernized English-educated middle class soon
emerged with a heightened sense of nationalism.

Questions:

1. Discuss about the Causes of the Rebellion.


2. Explain in detail about the Course of the 1857 Revolt.
3. What are the effects of the Great Rebellion?

Page 6
INDIAN NATIONAL CONGRESS

Introduction:

The idea of forming a political organization that would raise issues and grievances
against the colonial rule did not emerge in a vacuum. Between 1875 and 1885 there
were many agitations against British policies in India.

▪ The Indian textile industry was campaigning for imposition of cotton import duties
in 1875. In 1877, demands for the Indianisation of Government services were made
vociferously. There were protests against the Vernacular Press Act of 1878. In 1883,
there was an agitation in favour of the Ilbert Bill.
▪ But these agitations and protests were sporadic and not coordinated. There was a
strong realisation that these protests would not impact on the policy makers unless
a national political organisation was formed.
▪ From this realisation was born the Indian National Congress. The concept of India
as a nation was reflected in the name of the organisation. It also introduced the
concept of nationalism.

In December 1884, Allan Octavian Hume, a retired English ICS officer, presided over a
meeting of the Theosophical Society in Madras. The formation of a political
organization. That would work on an all India basis was discussed and the idea of
forming the Indian National Congress emerged in this meeting.

The Indian National Congress was formed on 28 December 1885 in Bombay. Apart
from A.O. Hume, another important founding member was W.C.Bannerjee, who was
elected the first president.

▪ Though the activities of the INC then revolved around petitions and memoranda,
from the very beginning the founders of the INC worked to bring every section of
the society into its ambit.

Page 1
▪ One of the main missions of the INC was to weld the Indians into a nation. They
were convinced that the struggle against the colonial rule will be successful only if
Indians saw themselves as the members of a nation.
▪ To achieve this, the INC acted as a common political platform for all the
movements that were being organised in different parts of the country. The INC
provided the space where the political workers from different parts of the country
could gather and conduct their political activities under its banner.
▪ Even though the organization was small with less than a hundred members, it had
an all India character with representation from all regions of India. It was the
beginning of the mobilisation of people on an all-India basis.

The major objectives and demands of INC were:

Constitutional
Opportunity for participation in the government was one of the major demands of the
Indian National Congress. It demanded Indian representation in the government.

Economic
High land revenue was one of the major factors that contributed to the oppression of
the peasants. It demanded reduction in the land revenue and protection of peasants
against exploitation of the zamindars. The Congress also advocated the imposition of
heavy tax on the imported goods for the benefit of swadeshi goods.

Administrative
Higher officials who had responsibility of administration in India were selected
through civil services examinations conducted in Britain. This meant that educated
Indians who could not afford to go to London had no opportunity to get high
administrative jobs. Therefore, Indianisation of services through simultaneous Indian
Civil Services Examinations in England and India was a major demand of the Congress.

Judicial
Because of the partial treatment against the Indian political activists by English judges
it demanded the complete separation of the Executive and the Judiciary.

Page 2
Contributions of Early Nationalists (1885–1915)

▪ The early nationalists in the INC came from the elite sections of the society.
Lawyers, college and university teachers, doctors, journalists and such others
represented the Congress. However, they came from different regions of the
country and this made INC a truly a national political organisation.
▪ These leaders of the INC adopted the constitutional methods of presenting
petitions, prayers and memorandums and thereby earned the moniker of
“Moderates”. It was also the time some sort of an understanding about colonialism
was evolving in India.
▪ There was no ready-made anti colonial understanding available for reference in the
late nineteenth century when the INC was formed. It was the early nationalists who
helped the formulation of the idea of we as a nation.
▪ They were developing the indigenous anti-colonial ideology and a strategy on their
own which helped future mass leaders like M. K Gandhi. From the late 1890s there
were growing differences within the INC. Leaders like Bipin Chandra Pal, Bal
Gangadhar Tilak and Lala Lajpat Rai were advocating radical approaches instead of
merely writing petitions, prayers and memorandums. These advocates of radical
methods came to be called the “extremists” as against those who were identified as
moderates.
▪ Their objective became clear in 1897 when Tilak raised the clarion call “Swaraj is
my birth right and I shall have it”. Tilak and his militant followers were now
requesting Swaraj instead of economic or administrative reforms that the
moderates were requesting through their petitions and prayers.
▪ Though they criticised each other, it would be wrong to place them in the opposing
poles. Both moderates and militants, with their own methods, were significant
elements of the larger Indian nationalist movement. In fact, they contributed
towards the making of the swadeshi movement.
▪ The partition of Bengal in 1905, by the colonial government, which you will be
studying in the next lesson, was vehemently opposed by the Indians. The swadeshi
movement of 1905, directly opposed the British rule and encouraged the ideas of
swadeshi enterprise, national education, self-help and use of Indian languages.

Page 3
▪ The method of mass mobilization and boycott of British goods and institutions
suggested by the radicals was also accepted by the Moderates. Both the Moderates
and the Radicals were of the same view when it came to accepting the fact that they
needed to fulfil the role of educators.
▪ They tried to instil nationalist consciousness through various means including the
press. When the INC was founded in 1885, one third of the members were
journalists. Most stalwarts of the early freedom movement were involved in
journalism.
▪ Dadabhai Naoroji founded and edited two journals called Voice of India and
RastGofar. Surendranath Banerjea newspaper called Bengalese.
▪ Bal Gangadhar Tilak edited Kesari and Mahratta. This is the means that they used
to educate the common people about the colonial oppression and spread nationalist
ideas. News regarding the initiatives taken by the INC were taken to the masses
through these newspapers. For the first time, in the history of India, the press was
used to generate public opinion against the oppressive policies and acts of the
colonial government.
▪ Bal Gangadhar Tilak was a firm Believer lower middle classes, peasants, artisans
and workers could play a very important role in the national movement, He used
his newspapers to articulate the discontent among this section of the people against
the oppressive colonial rule. He called for national resistance against imperial
British rule in India.
▪ On 27 July 1897, Tilak was arrested and charged under Section 124 A of the Indian
Penal Code. Civil liberty, particularly in the form of freedom of expression and
press became the significant part of Indian freedom struggle.

Naoroji and his Drain Theory

Dadabhai Naoroji, known as the ‘Grand Old Man of Indian Nationalism’, was a
prominent early nationalist. He was elected to the Bombay Municipal Corporation and
Town Council during the 1870s. Elected to the British Parliament in 1892, he founded
the India Society (1865) and the East India Association (1866) in London. He was
elected thrice as the President of the INC.

Page 4
▪ His major contribution to the Indian nationalist movement was his book Poverty
and Un-British Rule of the British in India (1901).
▪ In this book, he put forward the concept of ‘drain of wealth’. He stated that in any
country the tax raised would have been spent for the wellbeing of the people of that
country.
▪ But in British India, taxes collected in India were spent for the welfare of England.
Naoroji argued that India had exported an average of 13 million pounds worth of
goods to Britain each year from 1835 to 1872 with no corresponding return.
▪ The goods were in lieu of payments for profits to Company shareholders living in
Britain, guaranteed interest to investors in railways, pensions to retired officials
and generals, interest for the money borrowed from England to meet war expenses
for the British conquest of territories in India as well as outside India. All these,
going in the name of Home Charges, Naoroji asserted, made up a loss of 30 million
pounds a year.

From its foundation on 28 December 1885 until the time of independence of India on
August 15, 1947, the Indian National Congress was the largest and most prominent
Indian public organization, and central and defining influence of the Indian
Independence Movement. Although initially and primarily a political body, the
Congress transformed itself into a national vehicle for social reform and human
upliftment. “The Congress was the strongest foundation and defining influence of
modern Indian nationalism.

Sessions of Indian National Congress before Independence


Year Place President
1885, Bombay, Allahabad W.C Bannerji
1882
1886 Calcutta Dadabhai Naoroji
1893 Lahore Dadabhai Naoroji
1906 Calcutta Dadabhai Naoroji
1887 Madras Badruddin Tyyabji (first Muslim President)
1888 Allahabad George Yule (first English President)
1889 Bombay Sir William Wedderburn
1890 Calcutta Sir Feroze S.Mehta

Page 5
1895, Poona, S.N Banerjee
1902 Ahmedabad
1905 Banaras G.K Gokhale
1907, Surat, Madras Rasbehari Ghosh
1908
1909 Lahore M.M Malviya
1916 Lucknow A.C Majumdar (Re-union of the Congress)
1917 Calcutta Annie Besant (first woman President)
1919 Amritsar Motilal Nehru
1920 Calcutta (Special Lala Lajpat Rai
Session)
1921,1922 Ahmadabad, Gaya C.R Das
1923 Delhi (Special Abdul Kalam Azad (youngest President)
session)
1924 Belgaon M.K Gandhi
1925 Kanpur Sarojini Naidu (first Indian woman President)
1928 Calcutta Motilal Nehru (first All India Youth Congress Formed)
1929 Lahore J.L. Nehru (Poorna Swaraj resolution was passed)
1931 Karachi Vallabhbhai Patel (Here, resolution on Fundamental
rights and the National Economic Program was passed)
1932, Delhi, Calcutta (Session Banned)
1933
1934 Bombay Rajendra Prasad
1936 Lucknow J.L. Nehru
1937 Faizpur J.L Nehru (first session in a village)
1938 Haripura S.C Bose (a National Planning Committed set-up under
J.L Nehru).
1939 Tripuri S.C.Bose was re-elected but had to resign due to protest
by Gandhiji (as Gandhiji supported Dr. Pattabhi
Sitaramayya). Rajendra Prasad was appointed in his
place.
1940 Ramgarh Abdul Kalam Azad
1946 Meerut Acharya J.B Kriplani
1948 Jaipur Dr. Pattabhi Sitaramayya.

Page 6
GROWTH OF MILITANT MOVEMENTS

Introduction

▪ By the last decade of the nineteenth century, there was conspicuous resentment
against moderate politics within the Indian National Congress. This feeling of
resentment eventually evolved into a new trend, referred to as the ‘Extremist’
trend. The extremist or what we may call radical or militant group was critical of
the moderates for their cautious approach and the “mendicant policy” of appealing
to the British by way of prayers and petitions.
▪ This form of militancy developed under the leadership of Bal Gangadhar Tilak in
Maharashtra, Bipin Chandra Pal in Bengal and Lala Lajpat Rai in the Punjab. The
primary reasons for the rise of this trend were: factionalism in the Congress,
frustration with the moderate politics, anger against Lord Curzon for dividing
Bengal.
▪ The partition of Bengal in 1905 – a prime example of the British divide and rule
policy – acted as the catalyst for the growth of anticolonial swadeshi nationalism.
The partition plan was first opposed by moderates but as the movement
progressed, different techniques were improvised for the Swadeshi campaign.
▪ Swadeshi constructive programme included boycott of foreign goods and
government administered educational institutions. The Swadeshi movement
(1905–1911) is the most important phase of the Indian National Movement in the
pre-Gandhian era, as, during the course of the movement, the character of the
Indian national movement changed significantly in terms of the stated objectives,
methods and in its social base.
▪ The mass base of the movement was expanded by exposing the problems of various
social groups under the British governance and the underlying commonality in
their lives – that is colonial exploitation. For the first time, in the history of Indian
national movement, women, workers, peasants, and marginalised groups were
exposed to modern nationalist ideas and politics. It was a period when the elite
made a conscious effort to address the common people, calling upon them to join
politics.

Page 1
▪ The other prominent development during the Swadeshi period was the growth of
the vernacular press (newspapers published in Indian languages) in various parts
of India. The nationalistic tone of the vernacular press became more pronounced
during this time. The role played by Swadesamitran in Tamil Nadu, Kesari in
Maharashtra, Yugantar in Bengal are a few examples.
▪ As the movement gained support among the people, the government passed a
series of repressive Acts such as the Public Meetings Act (1907), the Explosive
Substance Act (1908), the Newspaper (Incitement and Offence Act 1908) and the
Indian Press Act (1910) to crush the nationalistic activities of any nature.
▪ One such measure was recording and monitoring of public meetings which were
considered a matter of judicial scrutiny. (Shorthand was used by the police for the
first time to record political speeches.) In this lesson, while discussing the Bengal as
well as national scenarios, the Swadeshi Campaigns conducted in Tamilnadu with
particular focus on the role played by V.O. Chidambaram, V.V. Subramaniam,
Subramania Siva and Subramania Bharati.

Anti-Partition Movement

▪ Both the militants and the moderates were critical of the partition of Bengal ever
since it was announced in December 1903. But the antipartition response by
leaders like Surendranath Banerjee, K.K. Mitra, and Prithwishchandra Ray
remained restricted to prayers and petitions.
▪ The objective was limited to influencing public opinion in England against the
partition. However, despite this widespread resentment, partition of Bengal was
officially declared on 19 July 1905. With the failure to stop the partition of Bengal
and the pressure exerted by the radical leaders like Bipin Chandra Pal, Aswini
Kumar Dutta, and Aurobindo Ghose, the moderate leaders were forced to rethink
their strategy, and look for new techniques of protest.
▪ Boycott of British goods was one such method, which after much debate was
accepted by the moderate leadership of the Indian National Congress. So, for the
first time, the moderates went beyond their conventional political methods. It was
decided, at a meeting in Calcutta on 17 July 1905, to extend the protest to the
masses.

Page 2
▪ In the same meeting, Surendranath Banerjee gave a call for the boycott of British
goods and intuitions. On 7 August, at another meeting at the Calcutta Town Hall, a
formal proclamation of Swadeshi Movement was made.
▪ However, the agenda of Swadeshi movement was still restricted to securing an
annulment of the partition and the moderates were very much against utilizing the
campaign to start a full-scale passive resistance. The militant nationalists, on the
other hand, were in favour of extending the movement to other provinces too and
to launch a full-fledged mass struggle.

Spread of the Movement

▪ Besides the organized efforts of the leaders, there were spontaneous reactions
against the partition of Bengal. Students, in particular, came out in large numbers.
Reacting to the increased role of the students in the antipartition agitation, British
officials threatened to withdraw the scholarships and grants to those who
participated in programmes of direct action.
▪ In response to this, a call was given to boycott official educational institutions and
it was decided that efforts were to be made to open national schools. Thousands of
public meetings were organized in towns and villages across Bengal. Religious
festivals such as the Durga Pujas were utilized to invoke the idea of boycott.
▪ The day Bengal was officially partitioned – 16 Oct 1905 – was declared as a day of
mourning.
▪ Thousands of people took bath in the Ganga and marched on the streets of Calcutta
singing Bande Mataram.

Boycott and Swadeshi Movements in Bengal (1905–1911)

▪ Such efforts, both organized and spontaneous, laid the foundation for a sustained
campaign against the British. The boycott and swadeshi were always interlinked to
each other and part of a wider plan to make India self-sufficient. G. Subramaniam,
a nationalist leader from Madras, succinctly explained the aim of the swadeshi
movement as ‘a revolt against their state of dependence…in all branches of their
national life’.

Page 3
▪ In the words of Gopal Krishna Gokhale, ‘the swadeshi movement is not only for the
improvement of our industry but for an all round enhancement of our national life
....’ As the movement progressed, different definitions of Swadeshi appeared.
▪ However, for the larger part, the movement of Swadeshi and Boycott was practiced
as an anti-colonial political agitation and not as a viable method to achieve dignity
and freedom in life, a definition which would be later infused with the entry of
Mahatma Gandhi.

1. Constructive Swadeshi
• The constructive Swadeshi programmes largely stressed upon self-help. It
focused on building alternative institutions of self governance that would
operate entirely free from British control. It also laid emphasis on the need for
self strengthening of the people which would help in creating a worthy citizen
before the launch of political agitations.
• Rabindranath Tagore was one of the central figures who popularised such ideas
through his writings. He outlined the constructive programme of atmashakti
(self-help). Tagore called for economic self- development and insisted that
education should be provided in swadeshi languages.
• He also made the call for utilising melas, or fairs, to spread the message of
atmashakti. This became the creed of the whole of Bengal and swadeshi shops
sprang all over the place selling textiles, handlooms, soaps, earthenware,
matches and leather goods.
• On 5 November 1905, at the initiative of the Dawn Society, the National Council
of Education was formed. In August 1906, Bengal National College and a
School were founded. A passionate appeal was made by Satish Chandra to the
students to come out of ‘institutions of slavery.’ Such efforts, however, failed to
attract many due to the bleak job prospects.

2. Samitis
• The other successful method of mass mobilization was the formation of samitis
(corps of volunteers). The samitis were engaged in a range of activities such as
physical and moral training of members, philanthropic work during the

Page 4
famines, epidemics, propagation of Swadeshi message during festivals, and
organization of indigenous arbitration courts, and schools.
• By its very nature boycott was passive action and its aim was to refuse to
cooperate with the British administration. But these mass mobilization efforts
failed to flourish as they could not extend their base among the Muslim
peasantry and the “Depressed Classes”.
• Most of the samitis recruited from the educated middle class and other upper
caste Hindus. Besides this, the swadeshi campaigners often applied coercive
methods, both social and physical. For instance, social boycott of those
purchasing foreign goods was common and taken up through caste associations
and other nationalist organisations.

3. Passive Resistance
• From 1906, when the abrogation of partition was no longer in sight, the
Swadeshi Movement took a different turn. For many leaders, the movement
was to be utilized for propagating the idea of the political independence or
Swaraj across India.
• The constructive programmes came under heavy criticism from Aurobindo
Ghose, Bipin Chandra Pal, and other militant leaders. Under their new
direction, the swadeshi agenda included boycott of foreign goods; boycott of
government schools and colleges; boycott of courts; renouncing the titles and
relinquishing government services; and recourse to armed struggle if British
repression went beyond the limits of endurance.
• The programme of this nature required mass mobilization. Using religion,
combined with the invocation of a glorious past, became the essential features
of their programmes.

Militant Nationalism

▪ As pointed out earlier, thanks to the campaigns conducted by Bal Gangadhar Tilak
Bipin Chandra Pal and Lala Lajpat Rai, often referred to as the Lal–Bal–Pal
triumvirate, Maharashtra, Bengal, Punjab, emerged as the epicentres of militant
nationalism during the Swadeshi phase.

Page 5
▪ Aurobindo Ghose was another influential figure in the militant leadership. The
nationalism of this form was more assertive compared to the early Indian
nationalism. Both the groups, moderate and militant, were well aware of the evils
or the wrong doings of the British rule.
▪ The moderates, however, worked under the belief that the British rule in India
could be reformed by convincing the rulers through representation and petitioning.
The militant nationalist, on the other hand, was of the opinion that the colonial
rulers would never be amenable to reason, as they would not like to give up the
advantages of an empire.
▪ Militant nationalism also changed the nature of political pressure from the earlier
force of public opinion of educated Indians to the protesting masses. Despite these
changes, the militant nationalism phase retained a continuity from the moderate
phase. This continuity was evident in the inability to transcend the peaceful method
of struggle and for the most parts militant nationalism remained tied to the idea of
non-violence. However, they appealed to the patriotic sentiments of the people
using the religious symbols.

Swaraj or Political Independence

▪ One of the common goals of the militant leaders was to achieve Swaraj or Self Rule.
However, the leaders differed on the meaning of Swaraj. For Tilak, Swaraj was
restricted to the Indian control over the administration or rule by the natives, but
not total severance of relation with Britain. In Bipin Chandra Pal’s view, Swaraj was
the attainment of complete freedom from any foreign rule.
▪ The other point of departure of the militants from the moderates was over the
rising extremism in Bengal, Punjab, and Maharashtra. Unlike the moderates, who
were critical of the reckless revolutionaries, militant nationalists were sympathetic
towards them. However, the political murders and individual acts of terrorism were
not approved of by the militant leaders and they were cautious of associating
themselves with the cause of revolutionaries.
▪ The patriotism glued with the assertion of Hindu beliefs was not acceptable to the
Muslims. Also much like their predecessors the leaders of the swadeshi movement
failed to penetrate the larger section of the society. By 1908 militant nationalism

Page 6
was on the decline. The Surat split of 1907 was another contributing factor to this
decline.

Surat Split

▪ The tension between the militants and the moderates became more pronounced
with the appointment of Lord Minto as the new Secretary of State to India in 1906.
As the tension was rising between the two groups, a split was avoided, in the 1906
Calcutta session, by accepting demands of moderate leaders and electing Dadabhai
Naoroji as president.
▪ Most of the moderates, led by Pherozeshah Mehta, were defeated in the election.
The militants managed to pass four resolutions on Swadeshi, Boycott, National
Education, and Self Government. The next session of Congress was originally
planned to be held in Poona, considered to be a stronghold of the militants.
▪ Fearing a repeat of the Calcutta session, the moderates shifted the venue to Surat.
The militants proposed Lala Lajpat Rai’s name for the next Congress presidency
opposing the moderate’s candidate Rash Behari Ghosh. Lala Lajpat Rai, however,
turned down the offer to avoid the split. The matter finally boiled down to the
question of retaining the four resolutions that were passed in the Calcutta session
in 1906. The Pherozeshah Mehta group sought removal of those items from the
agenda.
▪ In order to counter Mehta’s manoeuvring, the militants decided to oppose the
election of Rash Behari Gosh as president. The session ended in chaos.
▪ The Indian National Congress, born in December 1885, was now split into two
groups – militant and moderate. The Congress which emerged after the Surat split
was more loyal to the British than they were before. The new Congress, minus the
militants, came to be known as Mehta Congress and the 1908 session of the
Congress was attended only by the moderates who reiterated their loyalty to the
Raj.
▪ The politics of militants, on the other hand, could not crystallize into a new political
organization. The primary reason was the repressive measures of the government
by putting all the prominent leaders in jail.

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Revolutionary Extremism

▪ Around 1908, the decline of the militant nationalists and the rise of revolutionary
activities marked an important shift from non-violent methods to violent action. It
also meant a shift from mass-based action to elite response to the British rule.
▪ In Bengal, revolutionary terrorism had developed even earlier; around the 1870s,
when the akharas or gymnasiums were setup in various places to develop what
Swami Vivekananda had described as strong muscles and nerves of steel.
▪ Bankim Chandra Chatterjee’s novel, Anandmath also had a significant impact.
Anandmath was widely read by the revolutionaries in Bengal. The Bande Mataram
song, which is part of the novel, became the anthem of the swadeshi movement.

During the Swadeshi movement three factors contributed to the upsurge in the
individual acts of violence:

1. “The apolitical constructive programmes had little acceptance among the


youth who was growing impatient under the repressive foreign rule.”
2. The failure of the militant nationalists to lead the young people into a long-
term mass movement also contributed to the growth of individual action.
3. The revolutionary action was part of an effort towards the symbolic recovery
of Indian manhood, which the revolutionaries believed was often challenged
and looked down upon by the British.

Such actions, however, did not lead to any organised revolutionary movement as was
the case in Russia. The revolutionary actions were mostly attempts to assassinate
specific oppressive British officers.

1. Alipore Bomb Case


▪ In Bengal, the story of revolutionary terrorism begins in 1902 with the
formation of many secret societies. Most notable among them all was the
Anushilan Samity of Calcutta, founded by Jatindernath Banerjee and
Barindarkumar Ghose, brother of Aurobindo Ghose.

Page 8
▪ Similarly, the Dhaka Anushilan Samity was born in 1906 through the initiative
of Pulin Behari Das. This was followed by the launch of the revolutionary
weekly Yugantar. The Calcutta Anushilan Samity soon started its activities and
the frst swadeshi dacoity, to raise funds, was organised in Rangpur in August
1906.
▪ In the same year, Hemchandra Kanungo went abroad to get military training in
Paris. After his return to India in 1908, he established a bomb factory along
with a religious school at a garden house in Maniktala.
▪ In the same garden house, young inmates underwent various forms of physical
training, reading classic Hindu text, and reading literature on revolutionary
movement across the world. A conspiracy was hatched there to kill Douglas
Kingsford, notorious for his cruel ways of dealing with the swadeshi agitators.
▪ Two young revolutionaries - 18-year-old Khudiram Bose and 19-year-old
Prafulla Chaki – were entrusted with the task of carrying out the killing. On 30
April 1908, they mistakenly threw a bomb on a carriage, that, instead of killing
Kingsford, killed two English women. Prafulla Chaki committed suicide and
Khudiram Bose was arrested and hanged for the murder.
▪ Aurobindo Ghose, along with his brother Barinder Kumar Ghose and thirty-five
other comrades, were arrested. Chittaranjan Das took up the case. It came to be
known as the Alipore Bomb case. The judgement observed that there was no
evidence to show that Aurobindo Ghose was involved in any conspiracy against
the British rule.
▪ Ghose was acquitted of all the charges. Barindra Ghose and Ullaskar Dutt were
given the death penalty (later commuted to the transportation of life), with the
rest being condemned to transportation for life. The year-long hearing of
Alipore Bomb case made a great impact and portrayed the nationalist
revolutionaries as heroes to the general public.

Trial and the Aftermath

▪ After his acquittal, Aurobindo Ghose took to a spiritual path and shifted his base to
Pondicherry, where he stayed until his death in 1950. The idea of bringing an
armed revolution, envisaged by Aurobindo Ghose, never materialized. The reason

Page 9
for the gradual decline in the revolutionary activities in Bengal was a combination
of government repression and alienation from the people.
▪ Beside this, revolutionary terrorism suffered from certain social limitations too as
most of the revolutionaries were drawn from the three upper castes – Brahmin,
Kayastha, and Vaishya.
2. British Repression
• In December 1908 the Morley-Minto constitutional reforms were announced.
The moderates welcomed the reforms. However, they soon realised that there
was hardly any shift of power. In fact, measures taken by Minto were highly
divisive as it institutionalized communal electorates creating Hindu-Muslim
divide.
• Beside this, the colonial government also introduced certain repressive laws
such as:
• The Newspapers (Incitement to Offence) Act, 1908. This act
empowered the magistrate to confiscate press property which
published objectionable material making it difficult to publish
anything critical of British rule.
• Indian Press Act 1910 made it mandatory for publishers and the
printers to deposit a security that could be seized in case they printed
‘obnoxious material’
• ‘The Indian Criminal Law Amendment Act allowed summary trails and
also imposed the prohibition of ‘association dangerous to the public
peace’.

Even with the widespread repression, the charm of revolutionary action never
disappeared from the Indian national movement. The centre of activities moved from
Bengal to Uttar Pradesh and Punjab.

Questions :

1. Describe the Boycott and Swadeshi Movement in Bengal


2. Write a note on Surate split

Page 10
DIFFERENT MODES OF AGITATIONS

All India Home Rule League:

We may recall that many foreigners such as A.O. Hume had played a pivotal role in our
freedom movement in the early stages. Dr Annie Besant played a similar role in the
early part of the twentieth century.

▪ Besant was Irish by birth and had been active in the Irish home rule, fabian socialist
and birth control movements while in Britain. She joined the Theosophical Society,
and came to India in 1893. She founded the Central Hindu College in Benaras (later
upgraded as Benaras Hindu University by Pandit Madan Mohan Malaviya in 1916).
▪ With the death of H. S. Olcott in 1907, Besant succeeded him as the international
president of the Theosophical Society. She was actively spreading the theosophical
ideas from its headquarters, Adyar in Chennai, and gained the support of a number
of educated followers such as Jamnadas Dwarkadas, George Arundale, Shankerlal
Banker, Indulal Yagnik, C.P. Ramaswamy and B.P. Wadia.
▪ In 1914 was when Britain announced its entry in First World War, it was claimed
that it fighting for freedom and democracy. Indian leaders believed and supported
the British war efforts. Soon they were disillusioned as there was no change in the
British attitude towards India.
▪ Moreover, split into moderate and extremist wings, the Indian National Congress
was not strong enough to press for further political reforms towards self-rule. The
Muslim League was looked upon suspiciously by the British once the Sultan of
Turkey entered the War supporting the Central powers. It was in this backdrop that
Besant entered into Indian Politics.
▪ She started a weekly The Commonweal in 1914. The weekly focused on religious
liberty, national education, social and political reforms. She published a book How
India Wrought for Freedom in 1915. In this book she asserted that the beginnings
of national consciousness are deeply embedded in its ancient past. She gave the
call, 'The moment of England's difficulty is the moment of India's opportunity' and
wanted Indian leaders to press for reforms.

Page 1
▪ She toured England and made many speeches in the cause of India's freedom. She
also tried to form an Indian party in the Parliament but was unsuccessful. Her visit,
however, aroused sympathy for India.
▪ On her return, she started a daily newspaper New India on July 14, 1915. She
revealed her concept of self-rule in a speech at Bombay: “I mean by self-
government that the country shall have a government by councils, elected by the
people, and responsible to the House”.
▪ She organized public meetings and conferences to spread the idea and demanded
that India be granted self-government on the lines of the White colonies after the
War. On September 28, 1915, Besant made a formal declaration that she would
start the Home Rule League Movement for India with objectives on the lines of the
Irish Home Rule League.
▪ The moderates did not like the idea of establishing another separate organisation.
She too realised that the sanction of the Congress party was necessary for her
movement to be successful.
▪ In December 1915 due to the efforts of Tilak and Besant, the Bombay session of
Congress suitably altered the constitution of the Congress party to admit the
members from the extremist section. In the session she insisted on the Congress
taking up the Home Rule League programme before September 1916, failing which
she would organize the Home Rule League on her own.
▪ In 1916, two Home Rule Movements were launched in the country: one under Tilak
and the other under Besant with their spheres of activity well demarcated. The twin
objectives of the Home Rule League were the establishment of Home Rule for India
in British Empire and arousing in the Indian masses a sense of pride for the
Motherland.

1. Tilak Home Rule League


▪ Tilak Home Rule League was set up at the Bombay Provincial conference held
at Belgaum in April 1916. It League was to work in Maharashtra (including
Bombay city), Karnataka, the Central Provinces and Berar. Tilak's League was
organised into six branches and Annie Besant's League was given the rest of
India.

Page 2
▪ Tilak popularised the demand for Home Rule through his lectures. The
popularity of his League was confined to Maharashtra and Karnataka but
claimed a membership of 14,000 in April 1917 and 32,000 by early 1918. On 23
July 1916 on his 60th birthday Tilak was arrested for propagating the idea of
Home Rule.

2. Besant's Home Rule League


• Finding no signs from the Congress, Besant herself inaugurated the Home Rule
League at Madras in September 1916. Its branches were established at Kanpur,
Allahabad, Benaras, Mathura, Calicut and Ahmednagar. She made an extensive
tour and spread the idea of Home Rule. She declared that "the price of India's
loyalty is India's Freedom".
• Moderate congressmen who were dissatisfied with the inactivity of the
Congress joined the Home Rule League. The popularity of the League can be
gauged from the fact that Jawaharlal Nehru, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, B.
Chakravarti and Jitendralal Banerji, Satyamurti and Khaliquzzaman were
taking up the membership of the League.
• As Besant’s Home Rule Movement became very popular in Madras, the
Government of Madras decided to suppress it. Students were barred from
attending its meetings. In June 1917 Besant and her associates, B.P. Wadia and
George Arundale were interred in Ootacamund. The government’s repression
strengthened the supporters, and with renewed determination they began to
resist.
• To support Besant, Sir S. Subramaniam renounced his knighthood. Many
leaders like Madan Mohan Malaviya, and Surendranath Banerjea who had
earlier stayed away from the movement enlisted themselves.
• At the AICC meeting convened on 28 July 1917 Tilak advocated the use of civil
disobedience if they were not released. Jamnadas Dwarkadas and Shankerlal
Banker, on the orders of Gandhi, collected one thousand signatures willing to
defy the interment orders and march to Besant’s place of detention.
• Due to the growing resistance the interned nationalists were released. On 20
August 1917 the new Secretary of State Montagu announced that 'self-governing

Page 3
institutions and responsible government' was the goal of the British rule in
India. Almost overnight this statement converted Besant into a near-loyalist. In
September 1917, when she was released, she was elected the President of
Calcutta session of the Indian National Congress in 1917.

3. Importance of the Home Rule Movement

The Home Rule Leagues prepared the ground for mass mobilization paving the way
for the launch of Gandhi’s satyagraha movements. Many of the early Gandhian
satyagrahis had been members of the Home Rule Leagues. They used the
organizational networks created by the Leagues to spread the Gandhian method of
agitation. Home Rule League was the first Indian political movement to cut across
sectarian lines and have members from the Congress, League, Theosophist and the
Laborites.

4. Decline of Home Rule Movement

Home Rule Movement declined after Besant accepted the proposed Montagu–
Chelmsford Reforms and Tilak went to Britain in September 1918 to pursue the
libel case that he had fled against Valentine Chirol, the author of Indian Unrest.

Impact of the War

▪ During the years prior to First World War the political condition of the India was in
disarray. In order to win over the “Moderates” and the Muslim League with a view
to isolating the “Extremists” the British passed the Minto– Morley Reforms in
1909. The Moderates observed a policy of wait and watch.
▪ The Muslim League welcomed the separate electorate accorded to them. In 1913 a
new group of leaders joined the League. The most prominent among them was
Muhammad Ali Jinnah who was already a member of the Congress and demanded
more reforms for the Muslims. The First World War provided the objective
conditions for the revolutionary activity in India.
▪ The revolutionaries wanted to make use of Britain's difficulty during the War to
their advantage. The Ghadar Movement was one of its outcomes. The First World
War had a major impact on the freedom movement. Initially, the British didn't care

Page 4
for Indian support. Once the war theatre moved to West Asia and Africa the British
were forced to look for Indian support.
▪ In this context Indian leaders decided to put pressure on the British Government
for reforms. The Congress and Muslim League had their annual session at Bombay
in 1915 and spoke on similar tones. In October 1916, the Hindu and Muslim elected
members of the Imperial Legislative Council addressed a memorandum to the
Viceroy on the post-War reforms.
▪ The British Government was unmoved. The Congress and the League met at
Calcutta in November 1916 and deliberated on the memorandum. It also agreed on
the composition of the legislatures and the number of representation to be allowed
to the two communities in the post-War reforms.
▪ Parallel to this, Tilak and Besant were advocating Home Rule. Due to their efforts
the Bombay session accepted to take back the extremist section and, consequently,
the constitution of the Congress was altered. 1916 was therefore a historic year
since the Congress, Muslim League and the Home Rule League held their annual
sessions at Lucknow. Ambika Charan Mazumdar, Congress president welcomed the
extremists: "… after ten years of painful separation …
▪ Indian National Party have come to realize the fact that united they stand, but
divided they fall, and brothers have at last met brothers..." The Congress got its old
vigour with extremists back into it. Besant and Tilak also played an important role
in bringing the Congress and the Muslim League together under what is popularly
known as the Congress–League Pact or the Lucknow Pact. Jinnah played a pivotal
role during the Pact. The agreements accepted at Calcutta in November 1916 were
confirmed by the annual sessions of the Congress and the League in December
1916.

Provisions of the Lucknow Pact

▪ Provinces should be freed as much as possible from Central control in


administration and finance.
▪ Four-fifths of the Central and Provincial Legislative Councils should be elected, and
one-fifth nominated.

Page 5
▪ Four-fifths of the provincial and central legislatures were to be elected on as broad
a franchise as possible.
▪ Half the executive council members, including those of the central executive
council were to be Indians elected by the councils themselves.
▪ The Congress also agreed to separate electorates for Muslims in provincial council
elections and for preferences in their favour (beyond the proportions indicated by
population) in all provinces except the Punjab and Bengal, where some ground was
given to the Hindu and Sikh minorities. This pact paved the way for Hindu–
Muslim cooperation in the Khilafat Movement and Gandhi’s Non–Cooperation
Movement.
▪ The Governments, Central and Provincial, should be bound to act in accordance
with resolutions passed by their Legislative Councils unless they were vetoed by the
Governor General or Governors–in– Council and, in that event, if the resolution
was passed again after an interval of not less than one year, it should be put into
effect;
▪ The relations of the Secretary of State with the Government of India should be
similar to those of the Colonial Secretary with the Governments of the Dominions,
and India should have an equal status with that of the Dominions in any body
concerned with imperial affairs.
▪ The Lucknow Pact paved the way for Hindu Muslim Unity. Sarojini Ammaiyar
called Jinnah, the chief architect of the Lucknow Pact, “the Ambassador of Hindu–
Muslim Unity”.
▪ The Lucknow Pact proved that the educated class both from the Congress and the
League could work together with a common goal. This unity reached its climax
during the Khilafat and the Non-Cooperation Movements.

Repressive Measures of the Colonial State

▪ Parallel to the Congress there emerged revolutionary groups who attempted to


overthrow away the British government through violence methods. The
revolutionary movements constituted an important landmark in India's freedom
struggle. It began in the end of the nineteenth century and gained its momentum
from the time of the partition of Bengal.

Page 6
▪ The revolutionaries were the first to demand complete freedom. Maharashtra,
Bengal, Punjab were the major centers of revolutionary activity. For a brief while
Madras presidency was also an active ground of the revolutionary activity. In order
to crush the growing nationalist movement, the government adopted many
measures.
▪ Lord Curzon created the Criminal Intelligence Department (CID) in 1903 to
secretly collect information on the activities of nationalists. The Newspapers
(Incitement to Offences) Act (1908) and the Explosives Substances Act (1908), and
shortly thereafter the Indian Press Act (1910), and the Prevention of Seditious
Meetings Act (1911) were passed.
▪ The British suspected that some Indian nationalists were in contact with
revolutionaries abroad. So the Foreigners Ordinance was promulgated in 1914
which restricted the entry of foreigners. A majority of these legislations were passed
in order to break the base of the revolutionary movements. The colonial state also
resorted to banning meetings, printing and circulation of seditious materials for
propaganda, and by detaining the suspects

The Defence of India Act, 1915

▪ Also referred to as the Defence of India Regulations Act, it was an emergency


criminal law enacted with the intention of curtailing the nationalist and
revolutionary activities during the First World War. The Act allowed suspects to be
tried by special tribunals each consisting of three Commissioners appointed by the
Local Government.
▪ The act empowered the tribunal to inflict sentences of death, transportation for life,
and imprisonment of up to ten years for the violation of rules or orders framed
under the act. The trail was to be in camera and the decisions were not subject to
appeal. The act was later applied during the First Lahore Conspiracy trial. This Act,
after the end of First World War, formed the basis of the Rowlett Act.

Page 7
Khilafat Movement

▪ In the First World War the Sultan of Turkey sided with the Triple Alliance against
the allied powers and attacked Russia. The Sultan was also the Caliph and was the
custodian of the Islamic sacred places. After the war, Britain decided to weaken the
position of Turkey and the Treaty of Sevres was signed.
▪ The eastern part of the Turkish Empire such as Syria and Lebanon were mandated
to France, while Palestine and Jordan became British protectorates. Thus the allied
powers decided to end the caliphate.
▪ The dismemberment of the Caliphate was seen as a blow to Islam. Muslims around
the world, sympathetic to the cause of the Caliph, decided to oppose the move.
Muslims in India also organised themselves under the leadership of the Ali
brothers – Maulana Muhammad Ali and Maulana Shaukat Ali started a movement
known as Khalifat Movement.
▪ The aim was to the support the Ottoman Empire and protest against the British
rule in India. Numerous Muslim leaders such as Maulana Abul Kalam Azad, M.A.
Ansari, Sheikh Shaukat Ali Siddiqui and Syed Ataullah Shah Bukhari joined the
movement.

The demands of the Khilafat Movement were presented by Mohammad Ali to the
diplomats in Paris in March 1920. They were:
1. The Sultan of Turkey's position of Caliph should not be disturbed.
2. The Muslim sacred places must be handed over to the Sultan and should be
controlled by him.
3. The Sultan must be left with sufficient territory to enable him to defend the Islamic
faith and
4. The Jazirat-ul-Arab (Arabia, Syria, Iraq, Palestine) must remain under his
sovereignty.
• The demands of the movement had nothing do to with India but the question of
Caliph was used as a symbol by the Khilafat leaders to unite the Indian Muslim
community who were divided along regional, linguistic, class and sectarian
lines.
• In Gail Minault's words: "A pan-Islamic symbol opened the way to pan Indian
Islamic political mobilization." It was anti-British, which inspired Gandhi to

Page 8
support this cause in a bid to bring the Muslims into the mainstream of Indian
nationalism.
• Gandhi also saw this as an opportunity to strengthen Hindu–Muslim unity. The
Khilafat issue was interpreted differently by different sections. Lower-class
Muslims in U.P. interpreted the Urdu word Khilafat (against) and used it as a
symbol of general revolt against authority, while the Mappillais of Malabar
converted it into a banner of anti landlord revolt.

Rise of Labour Movement :

▪ Introduction of machinery, new methods of production, concentration of factories


in certain big cities gave birth to a new class of wage earners called factory workers.
In India, the factory workers, mostly drawn from villages, initially remained
submissive and unorganised.
▪ Many leaders like Sorabjee Shapoorji and N.M. Lokhanday of Bombay and
Sasipada Banerjee of Bengal raised their voice for protecting the interests of the
industrial labourers. In the afermath of Swadeshi Movement (1905) Indian
industries began to thrive. During the War the British encouraged Indian industries
which manufactured war time goods. As the war progressed they wanted more
goods so more workers were recruited. Once the war ended workers were laid off
and production cut down.
▪ Further prices increased dramatically in the post-War situation. India was also in
the grip of a world-wide epidemic of influenza. In response labourers began to
organize to fight and trade unions were formed to protect the interests of the
workers. The success of the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 also had its effect on
Indian labour. A wave of ideas of class consciousness and enlightenment swept the
world of Indian labours.
▪ The Indian soldiers who had fought in Europe brought the news of good labour
conditions. The industrial unrest that grew up as a result of grave economic
difficulties created by War, and the widening gulf between the employers and the
employees, and the establishment of International Labour Organisation of the
League of Nations brought mass awakening among the labours.

Page 9
▪ Madras played a pivotal role in the history of labour movement of India. The first
trade union in the modern sense, the Madras Labour Union, was formed in 1918 by
B.P. Wadia. The union was formed mainly due to the ill-treatment of Indian worker
in the Buckingham and Carnatic Mills, Perambur. The working conditions was
poor. Short interval for mid-day meal, frequent assaults on workers by the
European assistants and inadequate wages led to the formation of this union.
▪ This union adopted collective bargaining and used trade unionism as a weapon for
class struggle.
▪ This wave spread to other parts of India and many unions were formed at this time
such as the Indian Seamen’s Union both at Calcutta and Bombay, the Punjab Press
Employers Association, the G.I.P. Railway Workers Union Bombay, M.S.M.
Railwaymen’s Union, Union of the Postmen and Port Trust Employees Union at
Bombay and Calcutta, the Jamshedpur Labour Association the Indian Colliery
Employees Association of Jharia and the Unions of employees of various railways.
▪ To suppress the labour movement the Government, with the help of the capitalists,
tried by all means to subdue the labourers. They imprisoned strikers, burnt their
houses, and fined the unions, but the labourers were determined in their demands.
▪ Nationalist leaders and intellectuals were moved by the plight of the workers, and
many of them worked towards organizing them into unions. Their involvement also
led to the politicization of the working class, and added to the strength of the
freedom movement as most of the mills were owned by Europeans who were
supported by the government.
▪ On 30 October 1920, representatives of 64 trade unions, with a membership of
140,854, met in Bombay and established the All India Trade Union Congress
(AITUC) under the Chairmanship of Lala Lajpat Rai. It was supported by national
leaders like Motilal Nehru, Jawaharlal Nehru, C.R. Das, Vallabhbhai Patel, Subhash
Chandra Bose and others from the Indian National Congress.
▪ The trade unions slowly involved themselves in the national movement. In April
1919 after the Jallianwala Bagh Massacre and Gandhi’s arrest, the working class in
Ahmedabad and other parts of Gujarat resorted to strikes, agitations and
demonstrations.

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▪ Trade unions were not recognised by the capitalists or the government in the
beginning. But the unity of the workers and the strength of their movement forced
the both to recognise them. From 1919–20 the number of registered trade unions
increased from 107 to 1833 in 1946–47.

Questions :

1. Analysis the importance of the Home Rule Movement.


2. Discuss the provisions of the Lucknow Fact.
3. Describe the Rise of Labour Movement of Indian Labours.

Page 11
ROLE OF TAMIL NADU IN
FREEDOM STRUGGLE
Introduction:

Tamil Nadu played an important role in the Indian National Movement. Even prior to
the Great Revolt of 1857, the rebellion in Panchalam Kuruchi, the 1801 “South Indian
Rebellion” of the Marudu brothers and the Vellore Mutiny of 1806 were the early anti-
colonial struggles in Tamil Nadu. During the nationalist era Tamil Nadu provided the
leaders like G. Subramania Iyer, V.O.C. Chidambaram Pillai, Subramania Bharathi,
C. Rajagopalachari and K. Kamaraj to the National Movement.

Besides, the nationalist movement in Tamil Nadu was as active as elsewhere.

1. Madras Native Association


• One of the first attempts to organise and vent the grievances against the British
came through the formation of the Madras Native Association (MNA) on 26
February 1852. An association of landed and business classes of the Madras
Presidency, they expressed their grievances against the Company’s
administration in the revenue, education and judicial spheres. Gajula
Lakshminarasu, who inspired the foundation of MNA, was a prominent
businessman in Madras city.
• The Association presented its grievances before British Parliament when it was
discussing the East India Company’s rule in India before the passing of the
Charter in 1853.
• In a petition submitted in December 1852, the MNA pointed out that the
ryotwari and zamindari systems had thrown agricultural classes into deep
distress. It urged the revival of the ancient village system to free the peasantry
from the oppressive interference of the zamindars and the Company officials.
• The petition also made a complaint about the judicial system which was slow,
complicated and imperfect. It pointed out that the appointment of judges
without assessing their judicial knowledge and competence in the local
languages affected the efficiency of the judiciary. The diversion of state funds to
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missionary schools, under the grants-in-aid system, was also objected to in the
petition.
• The MNA petition was discussed in the Parliament in March 1853. H. D.
Seymour, Chairman of the Indian Reform Society, came to Madras in October
1853. He visited places like Guntur, Cuddalore, Tiruchirappalli, Salem and
Tirunelveli. However, as the Charter Act of 1853 allowed British East India
Company to continue its rule in India, the MNA organised an agitation for the
transfer of British territories in India to the direct control of the Crown.
• MNA sent its second petition to British Parliament, signed by fourteen
thousand individuals, pleading the termination of Company rule in India. The
life of MNA was short. Lakshminarasu died in 1866 and by 1881, the
association ceased to exist. Though the MNA did not achieve much in terms of
reforms, it was the beginning of organised effort to articulate Indian opinion.
• In its lifetime, the MNA operated within the boundaries of Madras Presidency.
The grievances that the MNA raised through its petitions and the agitations it
launched were from the point of view of the elite, particularly the landed gentry
of Madras Presidency.
• What was lacking was a national political organization representing every
section of the society, an organisation that would raise the grievances and
agitate against the colonial power for their redress. The Indian National
Congress filled this void.

2. Madras Mahajana Sabha (MMS)


• After the Madras Native Association became defunct there was no such public
organisation in the Madras Presidency. As many educated Indians viewed this
situation with dismay, the necessity for a political organization was felt and in
May 1884 the Madras Mahajana Sabha was organised.
• In the inaugural meeting held on 16 May 1884 the prominent participants were:
G. Subramaniam, Viraraghavachari, Ananda Charlu, Rangiah, Balaji Rao and
Salem Ramaswamy.
• The Sabha functioned at the office of The Hindu', Ellis Road Junction, Mount
road. P.Rangaiah Naidu was elected first President of the Sabha. With the

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launch of the Indian National Congress, after the completion of the second
provincial conference of Madras Mahajana Sabha, the leaders after attending
the first session of the Indian National Congress (INC) in Bombay
amalgamated the MMS with the INC.
• Madras Mahajana Sabha was considered to be a unique one that paved the way
for our national freedom. The Sabha voiced out the fundamental rights of our
countrymen. It had developed very close relationship with the Indian National
Congress since 1920 onwards.
• Consequently in 1930, the Sabha organized the Salt Satyagraha movement on
April 22nd in Madras George town, Esplanade, the High court and beach areas.
The members were attacked savagely by the British Police. As the Sabha
insisted on a legal enquiry about the injustice done towards the participants of
the Sathyagraha, a three-men commission under the leadership of Justice T. R.
Ramachandra Iyer has enquired thirty people and submitted its report to the
government.
• When the British Government banned the Congress party, Madras Mahajana
Sabha conducted numerous exhibitions to instigate the patriotic feelings in the
hearts of our countrymen such as All India Khadi Exhibition and Swadeshi
Exhibition.
• In Dec 1895, on his visit to Madras, the Viceroy of India, Lord Elgin refused to
receive the welcome address from the Madras Mahajana Sabha, The father of
our nation- Mahatma Gandhiji had delivered a speech at the meeting of
Mahajana Sabha on Oct 24" 1896. Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru also had
participated in the golden Jubilee celebrations of the Sabha.

Subramaniya Siva

Subramaniya Siva was born Vathalagundu in Dindugal district. He was a freedom


fighter and a creative writer. He was arrested many times between 1908 and 1922 for
his anti-imperialist activities. While serving his last prison term, he was affected by
leprosy and was ordered to be shifted to Salem jail.

When Siva was unable to walk due to the severity of disease, the British Government
enacted a law for Siva, stating that leprosy patient should not travel by rail. As a result
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of this, Subramaniya Siva travelled the whole length of Madras province on foot though
his whole body was covered with sores. Then he eventually died of the disease on 23"
July 1925.

Vanchinathan

Vanchinathan was under the service of the State of Travancore. The activities of the
extremists greatly alarmed the British. The collector, Ashe, shot down and killed four
persons in Tirunelveli. So Vanchinathan wanted to take revenge against the Collector.

He secretly went to Maniyachi Railway Station and shot dead Ashe on 17 June 1911,
and he himself committed suicide. A letter was found in his pocket describing that the
act of murder of collector Ashe was the first rehearsal to assassinate King George V who
was expected to Madras.

Thiruppur Kumaran

Tiruppur Kumaran was born on 1904, In Chennimalai, Erode District in Tamilnadu.


He was a great revolutionary. He participated in the march against the ban on the
national flag and he died from injuries sustained from a police assault. Kumaran died
holding the flag of the Indian Nationalists. Kumaran is revered as a martyr in Tamil
Nadu, as is known by the epithet Kodi Kaththa Kumaran. The government has erected
his statue in a park near the railway station in Tiruppur.

Satyamurti

▪ Satyamurti was a politician and patriot. He was the political mentor of K.Kamaraj.
Rajagopalachari nominated Satyamurti to succeed him as the President of the
Indian National Congress in Tamil Nadu in 1930. He served as Mayor of Madras in
1939, leading a campaign to restore public education, improved water supply and
improve the life of the citizens.
▪ S.Satyamurti was born in Tirumayyam, Madras presidency on August 19,1887. He
started practising as an advocate prior to his initiation in the National Movement.
He plunged into politics at an early age and eventually emerging as one of the
foremost leaders of the Indian National Congress.

Page 4
▪ In 1919, the Congress selected him as its representative to the Joint parliamentary
committee to protest the Montagu-Chelmsford reforms and the Rowlatt Act.
▪ When Satyamurti became the Mayor of Madras in 1939, the city was in the grip of
an acute water scarcity and It was left to him to Impress upon the British Governor
for building Reservoir in Poondi about 50 Kms west of the city to augment the
water supply position. The reservoir was commissioned by Kamra and named it as
Satyamurti Sahar. To honour this great man, the Head Quarters of the Tamilnadu
Congress Committee was named after him as, Satyamurti Bhavan.
▪ He participated in the Swadeshi Movement and Quit India Movement and
imprisoned for several times. He was a highly regarded politician of rare abilities,
who had dedicated his life to bring freedom and justice to the people. He passed
away on 28" March 1943.

3. C. Rajogopalachari
• C. Rajaji was born on December 10th 1878 at Thorappalli. He became a lawyer
at Salem in 1898. Rajagopalachari joined the Indian National Congress and
participated in the Calcutta session in 1906. He became the staunch follower of
Gandhiji. He participated in the Surat session in 1907.
• In 1930, he broke the salt laws at Vedaranyam. He started his March to
Vedaranyam from Tiruchirappalli with hundreds of volunteers to break salt
laws. He won the 1937 Provincial elections and became the Chief Minister of
Madras Presidency. During his administration he introduced Prohibition,
passed several laws to uplift Adi Dravidar and other depressed classes. He also
made Hindi as compulsory subject but it was opposed by Periyar EVR. He
resigned his Chief Ministership in 1939 in protest against the use of Indian men
and materials in the second world war by the British Government without their
consent.
• He became the first Indian Governor General of free India. In 1952 he formed
the ministry In Tamilnadu. During that time he Introduced Kula Kalvi
Thittam'. But it was opposed by Kamaraj and Periyar EVR and at last Rajaji
resigned from Chief Ministership in 1954.

Page 5
• Later he resigned from Congress and founded Swatandra party in 1959, Rajaji
wrote many books. He wrote Sakkravarthi Thirumagal, Vyassar Virundu and
commentaries on Gita and Upanisad. In 1955, he was awarded 'Bharat Ratna'.
He died on Dec. 25, 1972. He was often referred as 'Chanakya' for his
diplomatic skills.

K.Kamaraj

▪ Kamaraj was born on July 15",1903 at Virudupatti now known as Virudhunagar. He


was one of the greatest freedom fighters of Tamil Nadu. He entered into the
freedom movement of India by taking part in Vaikam Sathyagraha in 1924. He
enrolled himself as a full time worker of the Congress party in 1929.
▪ When Gandhi announced Salt Sathyagraha he participated in the Vedaranyam
march along with C.Rajagopalachari in 1930. He was arrested and imprisoned for
two years in Alipore jail. As a result of Gandhi-Irwin Pact of 1931 he was released.
▪ In 1940, he went to Wardha to meet Gandhiji to get approval for the list of
Sathyagrahis. But he was arrested and sent to Vellore jail. Because of his active
participation in Quit India Movement in 1942 he was arrested and sentenced to
three years in the Amaravathi prison. He hoisted the Indian National flag in
Satyamurti's house in 1947.
▪ He served as the Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu for nine years and introduced
various welfare measures like opening of new schools, free education, mid-day
meals scheme, construction of dams and canals to improve agriculture, and
launching of new industries in Tamil Nadu.
▪ He played a significant role in the National politics also. He was called as 'King
Maker, as he made Lal Bahadur Sastri as the Prime Minister of India in 1964 and
Mrs. Indira Gandhi in 1966 after the death of Sastri.
▪ He died on October 2, 1975. Kamaraj was famous for his policy known as “K” Plan.
He was affectionately called by the people as 'Perum Thalaivar' means Great
Leader. Thus, Tamil Nadu played a vital role in the freedom struggle of our
Country.

Page 6
E.V.Ramasamy Periyar

▪ E.V.Ramasamy Periyar was the greatest social reformers of Tamil Nadu. He was the
first leader, the country had ever seen to inculcate self respect, rationalism, women
liberation and social equality in the minds of the people.
▪ E.V. Ramasamy was born on September 17, 1879 in Erode in a very rich Hindu
family. He got married at 13th year and renounced his life in his 19th year. By
wearing saintly dress, he went to many holy places. He went to Kasi where he
noticed that the Brahmins ill treated the Non-Brahmins. He condemned it and
returned to Tamilnadu. He joined the Congress in 1919 to realize his ideas. He was
elected as the Secretary of Madras State Congress Committee in 1921 and its
President in 1923.
▪ He Joined the non-cooperation movement. He led the famous Vaikam Sathya
Graha in 1924, where the people of downtrodden community were prohibited to
enter into the Temple. Finally, the Travancore government relaxed such
segregation and allowed the people to enter into the temple. Hence Periyar was
given the title of “Vaikam Hero”.
▪ Periyar visited a school on Gurukulam style run at Sheramandevi out of Congress
funds. He noticed the segregation of Non-Brahmin students from the Brahmins by
providing drinking water and food in separate places. He protested against this
antisocial practice and resigned the Secretaryship of Madras State Congress.
▪ He moved a resolution for reservation in government services for non-brahmins in
the state Congress conference held at Kanchipuram. But this was not allowed. So
Periyar left the Conference and started Self Respect Movement in 1925 to spread
and execute his ideas and policies.

Aims

▪ The self respect movement condemned and fought against Brahmin domination
over other castes, society, politics and religion.
▪ It fought to abolish traditionalism and superstitions

Page 7
▪ It advocated women education, " widow remarriage, intercaste marriages and
opposed child marriage

Achievements

▪ Periyar criticized the meaningless ideas, superstitious beliefs and unbelievable


puranic stories in the public meetings. He spread self respect principles through
Kudiarasu, " Puratchi, Viduthalai. He also published some books against social
evils.
▪ He visited many European countries and studied their way of life. He realized that
poverty was the cause for the social evils. After his return, he propagated 14 points
of the Socialists Manifesto. The Justice Party accepted the same and tried to
propagate it.
▪ In order to check the growing population and to keep good health, he suggested the
family planning. He also encouraged Tamil Script reform and suggested to adopt
Roman Script to ensure easy learning. He was given the title of Periyar" by Ladies
Conference held at Madras.
▪ In 1937 election, the Justice Party was defeated and its decline became Inevitable.
At Salem conference of 1944, the name of Justice Party was changed as Dravidar
Kazhagam'. Periyar's ambitions were fulfilled by DMK and AIADMK.

C.N.Annadurai

▪ C.N.Annadurai, who was affectionality called as ‘Peraringnar Anna’ by the people of


Tamil Nadu was born on 15th September, 1909 at Kancheepuram. He had his MA,
in the Pachaiyappa's College, Madras. He was the founder of the "Dravida
Munnetra Kazhagam".
▪ Anna's Inception into politics was through the Justice Party. The desire to work for
social cause made him to Join the Justice Party. Anna chose the Justice party to
work for the establishment of a casteless and classless society.
▪ Anna was a good orator. He was recognised as one of the foremost speakers of
those days. When Anna joined the Justice Party he had the privilege of working
under the leadership of Periyar E.V. Ramasamy. The party provided the right

Page 8
platform for him and so he joined the self respect movement which was started for
the elimination of social inequalities.
▪ In the anti-Hindi conference organized by Periyar at Kanjeewaram Anna quoted
that Hindi could never take the place of Tamil and make any road in well settled
Tamil culture.
▪ In the Salem Conference of 1944, Anna brought a resolution for changing the name
of Justice Party as Dravidar Kazhagam and became very close to Periyar. The
marriage of Periyar with Maniammai in 1947 gave severe blow to the party men.
▪ A new party called Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam was formed on 17th September
1949. Anna explained in his speech the purpose would and principles of the Party.
He became the General Secretary of the Party.
▪ In the election of 1967, his Party got victory and Anna became the Chief Minister of
Tamil Nadu in 1967. He introduced the scheme of 1kg rice for Re.1. Due to financial
strain he was not able to promulgate this system all over Tamil Nadu. He also
introduced Tamil Language Development Scheme.
▪ In 1967, Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu announced, the first day of Chittirai as Tamil
New Year day. Government under the leadership of Anna changed the official name
of the state from ‘Madras' to Tamizhaga Arasu' or Tamizhagam'.
▪ On 16th April In the Secretariat in Fort St. George, the Chief Minister Anna
ceremoniously switched on neon light in the form of State Emblem-a Temple
Gopuram, above the words Tamizhaga Arasu Talaimai Cheyalagam.
▪ At the same day he announced that the national motto 'Satyameva Jayate'
henceforth appear as ‘Vaimaye Vallum' and that Sanskrit forms of address
Sri/Srimathi/Kumari would replace the Tamil forms of Thiru/Thirumathi/Selvi.
He was conferred Doctorate by Annamalai University in 1968. He passed away on
3rd February 1969.

Contribution of Women Leaders for Social Reformation:

1. Reformation refers to eradication of some evil social practices which are deep
rooted in the society for centuries. These practices are of great hindrance to
the development of the country.

Page 9
2. To achieve the above not only men but also women have contributed a lot.
Among the women reformers some of them are worth mentioning.

Dr.Muthulakshmi Reddy

▪ Tamil Nadu was the forerunner in the transformation of society. In the great
cultured heritage of Tamil Nadu there are some black spots often found and
removed. One such a black spot was Devadasi system. One of the important leaders
who fought vigorously against this system was Dr. Muthulakshmi Reddy.
▪ Dr. Muthulakshmi Reddy was born on 30th July, 1886 In Pudukkottai. She was the
first woman in India to get a degree in medicine. In 1923 her sister died of cancer.
On that day she took a vow to eradicate cancer. So she started Cancer Relief
Hospital in 1949. The Cancer Institute at Adyar was started due to her good efforts.
Our first Prime Minister Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru laid the foundation for that
Institute.
▪ She was not only interested in medicine but also in politics and social reforms. She
dedicated herself to the cause of removing the cruel practice Devadasi system from
Tamil Nadu. She was personally praised by Gandhiji for her active propaganda
against Devadasi system.
▪ Appreciating her role in the agitation against Devadasi system she was nominated
to the Tamil Nadu Legislative Council in 1929. She was Vehemently supported in
her efforts by Thiru.V.Kalyana Sundaranar and Periyar. As a result the Justice
party Government enacted a law abolishing Devadasi System.
▪ In 1930, she organized All India Women Conference at Pune. She was the President
of Indian Women Association from 1933 to 1947. She also started Avvai llam an
orphanage at Santhome in Madras (Now at Adyar). Dr. Muthulakshmi through her
dedicated and untiring work proved the world, hard work never fails. She passed
away in 1968 at the age of82.

Dr.S.Dharmambal

▪ Many people became famous not because of wealth, power, education and status
but because of their dedication. One such a reformer who proved that service to the
people could be done through humanity and goodwill was Dr.S.Dharmambal. She

Page 10
had the instinct of social service, she studied Siddha medicine and started a
hospital in Chennai. Later she entered into the public service. Dr. Dharmambal was
born at Karun thattankudi near Thanjavur.
▪ As she was very much influenced by the ideas of Periyar, she showed great interest
in implementing widow remarriage, intercaste marriage and women education. She
had also great interest in the development of Tamil literature and Tamil music. She
participated in the Hindi agitation programme and went to Jail many times.
▪ Till 1940 the Tamil teachers had no due recognition in the society. They were not
paid equal salary like other teachers. So she started an agitation called Elavu Varam
As a result the Educational Minister Thiru. Avinasilingam Chettiar announced
equal pay to Tamil teachers like other teachers.
▪ To make the students improve their knowledge in Tamil and to score good marks in
Tamil "Chennai Manavar Mandram" was established. She was the President of this
association for more than 10 years. Appreciating her service to Tamil language and
literature she was conferred the title Veera Tamilannai" She gave the title Periyar"
to EV.Ramasamy Naicker and "Ealisa to M K. Thiyagarajai Bagavathar. The great
woman who sacrificed and dedicated her whole life for the Tamil people, Tamil
language and Tamil literature was died in 1959 at the age of 69.

Moovalur Ramamirdham

▪ Most of the women revolutionaries of the early twentieth century dedicated


themselves to the cause of freedom of our nation. Only a few revolutionaries alone
fought for the causes of both freedom and social reforms.
▪ Among them Moovalur Ramamirdham Ammaiyar was most important. she was
born in 1883 in Thiruvarur but was brought up in Moovalur, a village near
Mayiladudurai. Hence she was commonly known as Moovalur Ramamirdham
Ammaiyar.
▪ She belonged to Isai Vellalar caste. In olden days girls belonging to this particular
caste were sacrificed to temples to do service to God. Later they were illtreated and
humiliated by the landlords and zamindars in the name of caste.

Page 11
▪ On seeing this attrocities and cruelties, Moovalur Ramamirdham decided to fight
for their emancipation. She travelled all over the country and spoke about the
miseries of her own girls and won the support of many leaders.
▪ She Joined the Indian National Party and organized the conference of Isai Vellalar
at Mayiladudurai in 1925. This conference was attended by many great leaders like
Thiru Vi.Ka. Periyar, S. Ramanathan and Mayuramani Chinnaiah Pillai who raised
slogans against the cruel practice of Devadhasis. As a result the Government passed
"Dr. Muthu lakshmi Devadasi Abolition Act".
▪ Along with the social work she actively involved in the National Movement. She
inspired women to take part in the National movement on a large scale. With the
continuous moral support by Rajaj, Periyar and Thiru.Vi.Ka, she brought
awareness against Devadasi system and national awakening among the people of
Tamilnadu especially on women.
▪ In her memory, the Govermment of TamilNadu has instituted the Moovalur
Ramamirtham Ammal Ninaivu Marriage Assistance scheme" a social welfare
scheme to provide financial assistance to poor women. After seeing her dream
became true. She passed away on 27th June 1962.
▪ The tradition bound Tamil society was still clinging to the old values. The widows
were still forbidden from participating in auspicious and social functions, inspite of
the fact that the Widow Remarriage Act was passed in 1856.
▪ The forward and progressive social policies adopted by the Justice Party and the
Self Respect Movement in the 20" century supported by legislative measures, led to
the acceptance of the widow remarriage concept in Tamil Nadu. The abolition of
sati and the acceptance of an widow remarriage and the steps to prevent child
marriages were note worthy landmarks in the history of Tamil Nadu.
▪ Caste inequality was another significant short coming of the Tamil Society. Temple
Entry Movement could be cited as a suitable illustration. Temples were once the
monopoly of the upper caste where as the low caste people were denied the right to
enter the temple.
▪ Many social reformers like E.V.Ramasamy, Dr.Muthulakshmi Reddy, Vallalar,
Bharathi, Bharathidasan, Moovalur Ramamirthammal, Dr.S. Dharmambal fought

Page 12
for the eradication of these social evils. Thus women also contributed a lot for the
social transformation in Tamil Nadu History will not forget their selfless service.

Swadeshi Campaign in Tamil Nadu

Swadeshi movement in Tamil Nadu, notably in Tirunelveli district, generated a lot of


attention and support. While the Swadeshi movement in Tamil Nadu had an all India
flavour, with collective anger against the British rule remaining the common thread, it
was also underpinned by Tamil - pride and consciousness. There was a deep divide in
the Tamilnadu congress between the moderates and the extremists.

1. Development of Vernacular Oratory


• Initially, the movement was more of a reaction to the partition of Bengal and
regular meetings were held to protest the partition. The speakers, in such
meetings, spoke mostly in the vernacular language to an audience that included
students, lawyers, and labourers at that time. The shift from English oratory to
vernacular oratory was a significant development of this time, which had a huge
impact on the mass politics in Tamil Nadu.
• Swadeshi meetings at the Marina beach in Madras were a regular sight. The
Moore Market complex in Madras was another venue utilized for such
gatherings. During the period (1905- 1907) there are police reports calling
students dangerous and their activities as seditious. Europeans in public places
were greeted by the students with shouts of Vande Mataram. In 1907, Bipin
Chandra Pal came to Madras and his speeches on the Madras Beach electrified
the audience and won new converts to the nationalist cause.
• The visit had a profound impact all over Tamil Nadu. The public speeches in
the Tamil language created an audience which was absent during the formative
years of the political activities in Tamil Nadu.

2. V.O.C. and Swadeshi Steam Navigation Company (SSNC)


• The Swadeshi movement in Tamil Nadu came to national attention in 1906
when V.O.Chidambaram mooted the idea of launching a swadeshi shipping
venture in opposition to the monopoly of the British in navigation through the
coast.
Page 13
• In 1906, V.O.C. registered a joint stock company called The Swadeshi Steam
Navigation Company (SSNC) with a capital of Rs 10 Lakh, divided into 40,000
shares of Rs. 25 each. Shares were open only to Indians, Ceylonese and other
Asian nationals. V.O.C. purchased two steamships, S.S. Gallia and S.S. Lawoe.
When in the other parts of India, the response to Swadeshi was limited to
symbolic gestures of making candles and bangles, the idea of forging a
Swadeshi Steam Navigation Company was really spectacular. V.O.C invoked the
rich history of the region and the maritime glory of India’s past and used it as a
reference point to galvanize the public opinion in favour of a Swadeshi venture
in the sea.
• The initiative of V.O.C. was lauded by the national leaders. Lokmanya Tilak
wrote about the success of the Swadeshi Navigation Company in his papers
Kesari and Mahratta. Aurobindo Ghose also lauded the Swadeshi efforts and
helped to promote the sale of shares of the company.
• The major shareholders included Pandithurai Thevar and Haji Fakir Mohamed.
The initial response of the British administration was to ignore the Swadeshi
company. As patronage for Swadeshi Company increased, the European
officials exhibited blatant bias and racial partiality against the Swadeshi
steamship.

3. The Coral Mill Strike


• After attending the session of the Indian National Congress at Surat, V.O.C. on
his return decided to work on building a political organisation. While looking
for an able orator, he came across Subramania Siva, a swadeshi preacher. From
February to March 1907, both the leaders addressed meetings almost on a daily
basis at the beach in Tuticorin, educating the people about swadeshi and the
boycott campaign.
• The meetings were attended by thousands of people. These public gatherings
were closely monitored by the administration. In 1908, the abject working and
living conditions of the Coral Mill workers attracted the attention of V.O.C and
Siva. In the next few days, both the leaders addressed the mill workers.

Page 14
• In March 1908, the workers of the Coral Cotton Mills, inspired by the address
went on strike. It was one of the earliest organized labour agitations in India.
The strike of the mill workers was fully backed by the nationalist newspapers.
The mill owners, however, did not budge and was supported by the government
which had decided to suppress the strike.
• To further increase the pressure on the workers, the leaders were prohibited
from holding any meetings in Tuticorin. Finally, the mill owners decided to
negotiate with the workers and concede their demands.
• This victory of the workers generated excitement among the militants in Bengal
and it was hailed by the newspapers in Bengal. For instance, Aurobindo
Ghosh’s Bande Matram hailed the strike as “forging a bond between educated
class and the masses, which is the first great step towards swaraj…. Every
victory of Indian labour is a victory for the nation….”

4. Subramania Bharati: Poet and Nationalist


• The growth of newspapers, both in English and Tamil language, aided the
swadeshi movement in Tamil Nadu. G. Subramaniam was one of the first
among the leaders to use newspapers to spread the nationalist message across a
larger audience.
• Subramaniam, along with five others, founded The Hindu (in English) and
Swadesamitran (which was the first ever Tamil daily). In 1906 a book was
published by Subramaniam to condemn the British actions during the Congress
Conference in Barsal.
• Swadesamitran extensively reported nationalist activities, particularly the
news regarding V.O.C. and his speeches in Tuticorin. Subramania Bharati
became the subeditor of Swadesamitran around the time (1904) when Indian
nationalism was looking for a fresh direction. Bharati was also editing
Chakravartini, a Tamil monthly devoted to the cause of Indian women.
• Two events had a significant impact on Subramania Bharati. A meeting in 1905
with Sister Nivedita, an Irish woman and a disciple of Vivekananda, whom he
referred to as Gurumani (teacher), greatly inspired his nationalist ideals.

Page 15
• The churning within the Congress on the nature of engagement with the British
rule was also a contributory factor. As discussed earlier in this lesson, the
militants ridiculed the mendicancy of the moderates who wanted to follow the
constitutional methods. Bharati had little doubt, in his mind, that the British
rule had to be challenged with a fresh approach and methods applied by the
militant nationalists appealed to him more.
• For instance, his fascination with Tilak grew after the Surat session of the
Congress in 1907. He translated into Tamil Tilak’s Tenets of the New Party and
a booklet on the Madras militants’ trip to the Surat Congress in 1907. Bharati
edited a Tamil weekly India, which became the voice of the radicals.

5. Arrest and imprisonment of V.O.C. and Subramania Siva


• On March 9, 1907, Bipin Chandra Pal was released from prison after serving a
six month jail sentence. The swadeshi leaders in Tamil Nadu planned to
celebrate the day of his release as ‘Swarajya Day’ in Tirunelveli.
• The local administration refused permission. V.O.C., Subramania Siva and
Padmanabha Iyengar defied the ban and went ahead.
• They were arrested on March 12, 1908, on charges of sedition. The local public,
angered over the arrest of the prominent swadeshi leaders, reacted violently.
Shops were closed in a general show of defiance. The municipality building and
the police station in Tirunelveli were set on fire.
• More importantly, the mill workers came out in large numbers to protest the
arrest of swadeshi leaders. After a few incidents of confrontation with the
protesting crowd, the police open fired, and four people were killed.
• On 7 July 1908, V.O.C. and Subramania Siva were found guilty and imprisoned
on charges of sedition. Siva was awarded a sentence of 10 years of
transportation for his seditious speech whereas V.O.C. got a life term (20 years)
for abetting him. V.O.C. was given another life sentence for his own seditious
speech.
• This draconian sentence reveals how seriously the Tirunelveli agitation was
viewed by the government. In the aftermath of this incident, the repression of
the British administration was not limited to the arrest of a few leaders. In fact,

Page 16
people who had actively participated in the protest were also punished and a
punitive tax was imposed on the people of Tirunelveli and Tuticorin.

6. Ashe Murder
• Repression of the Swadeshi efforts in Tuticorin and the subsequent arrest and
humiliation of the swadeshi leaders generated anger among the youth. A plan
was hatched to avenge the Tirunelveli event. A sustained campaign in the
newspapers about the repressive measures of the British administration also
played a decisive role in building people’s anger against the administration.
• In June 1911, the collector of Tirunelveli, Robert Ashe, was shot dead at
Maniyachi Railway station by Vanchinathan. Born in the Travancore state in
1880, he was employed as a forest guard at Punalur in the then Travancore
state. He was one of the members of a radical group called Bharata Mata
Association.
• The aim of the association was to kill the European officers and inspire Indians
to revolt, which they believed would eventually lead to Swaraj. Vanchinathan
was trained in the use of a revolver, as part of the mission, by V.V.
Subramanianar in Pondicherry.
• After shooting Ashe at the Maniyachi Junction, Vanchinathan shot himself with
the same pistol. A letter was found in his pocket which helps to understand the
strands of inspiration for the revolutionaries like Vanchinathan.

The aftermath of the Assassination

▪ During the course of the trial, the British government was able to establish that
V.V.S and other political exiles in Pondicherry were in close and active association
with the accused in the Ashe murder conspiracy. The colonial administration grew
more suspicious with the Pondicherry groups and their activities. Such an
atmosphere further scuttled the possibility of nationalistic propaganda and their
activities in Tamil Nadu.
▪ As a fall-out of the repressive measure taken by the colonial government, the
nationalist movement in Tamil Nadu entered a period of lull and some sort of
revival happened only with the Home Rule Movement in 1916.

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POLITICAL PARTIES AND
WELFARE SCHEMES

The Justice Party

The Justice Party rule in the Madras Presidency constitutes an important chapter in
the history of South India. The ideology and objectives of the Justice Party had been
unique and somewhat different from those of the Congress Party. The Justice Party
represented the Non-Brahmin Movement and engineered a social revolution against
the domination of Brahmins in the sphere of public services and education.

Birth of the Justice Party

▪ Various factors had contributed to the formation of the Justice Party, which
represented the Non-Brahmin Movement. The social dominance of the Brahmins
was the main cause for the emergence of the Non-Brahmin Movement. Their high
proportion in the Civil Service, educational institutions and also their
predominance in the Madras Legislative Council caused a great worry among the
non- Brahmins.
▪ The Brahmins had also monopolized the Press. The rediscovery of the greatness of
the Tamil language and literature also provided a stimulus to the non-Brahmins.
Particularly, the publication of the book entitled A Comparative Grammar of the
Dravidian or South Indian Family of Languages by Rev. Robert Caldwell in 1856
gave birth to the Dravidian concept.
▪ Later the ancient Tamil literature had been rediscovered and printed by various
Tamil scholars including Arumuga Navalar, C.V. Damodaram Pillai and
U.V. Swaminatha Iyer.
▪ V. Kanakasabhai Pillai in his famous historical work, The Tamils 1800 Years Ago
pointed out that Tamils had attained a high degree of civilization before the Advent
of the Aryans. This led to the growth of Dravidian feelings among the non
Brahmins. These factors collectively contributed to the birth of the Non-Brahmin
Movement and the Justice Party.
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▪ The precursor of the Justice Party was the Madras United League which was
renamed as the Madras Dravidian Association in November 1912. Dr. C. Natesa
Mudaliar played a significant role in nurturing this organization. In 1916 the South
Indian Liberal Federation was formed for the purpose of ‘promoting the political
interests of non-Brahmin caste Hindus’.
▪ The leaders who stood behind the formation of this organization were Pitti
Theagaraya Chetti, Dr.T.M.Nair, P.Ramarayaninger (Raja of Panagal) and Dr. C.
Natesa Mudaliar.
▪ The South Indian Liberal Federation published an English newspaper called
Justice and hence this organization came to be called the Justice Party. The other
news paper which supported the Justice Party was Dravidan (in Tamil).
▪ Besides, the Justice Party organized a series of public meetings, conferences,
lectures to popularise Non Brahmin movement. Similarly, the Justice Party formed
District Associations, the Non-Brahmin Youth League.

Justice Party Rule

▪ The Justice Party came to power following the election of 1920 held according to
the Montague-Chelmsford Reforms. The Justice Party captured sixty three out of
ninety eight elected seats in the Madras Legislative Council. As P. Theagaraya
Chetti declined to lead the ministry, A. Subbarayalu Reddiar formed the ministry.
▪ In the election of 1923 it fought against the Swarajya Party. The Justice Party again
won the majority and the ministry was formed by Raja of Panagal. In the election of
1926 a divided Justice Party faced the opposition of a united Congress.
▪ Therefore, an independent, A. Subbarayan with the help of the Swarajya Party
formed the ministry. In 1930 when the next election was held the Justice Party won
the majority and formed a ministry with B. Muniswami Naidu as the leader.
▪ In 1932 Raja of Bobbili replaced him as Prime Minister of the Presidency. In 1934
Raja of Bobbili formed his second ministry, which continued in power until the
election of 1937.
Achievements of the Justice Party
• The Justice Party remained in power for a period of thirteen years. Its
administration was noted for social justice and social reform. Justice rule gave

Page 2
adequate representation to non-Brahman communities in the public services. It
improved the status of depressed classes through education reforms.

Justice Party introduced following reforms in the field of Education:


1. Free and compulsory education was introduced for the first time in Madras.
2. Nearly 3000 fisher boys and fisher girls were offered free special instruction by
the Department of Fisheries.
3. Midday Meals was given at selected corporation schools in Madras.
4. The Madras Elementary Education Act was amended in 1934 and in 1935 to
improve elementary education.
5. The Education of girls received encouragement during the Justice rule in
Madras.
6. Education of the Depressed Classes was entrusted with Labour Department
7. Encouragement was given to Ayurveda, Siddha and Unani medical education.
▪ The government took over the power of appointing district munsiffs out of the
control of the High Court. The Communal G.O.s (Government Orders) of 1921 and
1922 provided for the reservation of appointments in local bodies and educational
institutions for non-Brahmin communities in increased proportion.
▪ The Staff Selection Board, created by the Panagal Ministry in 1924, was made the
Public Service Commission in 1929. It was the first of its kind in India. The women
were granted the right to vote on the same basis as was given to men. The Hindu
Religious Endowment Act of 1921, enacted by the Panagal Ministry, tried to
eliminate corruption in the management of temples.
▪ Justice Party Government introduced economic reforms. To assist the growth of
industries State Aid to Industries Act, 1922 was passed. This led to the
establishment of new industries such as : sugar factories, engineering works,
tanneries, aluminum factories, cement factories and oil milling so on. This act
provided credits to industries, allotted land and water. This proved favourable for
industrial progress.
▪ Similarly, Justice Party Government introduced schemes for rural development to
help agrarian population, public health schemes to prevent diseases. To improve
village economy village road scheme was introduced. In the city of Madras the

Page 3
Town Improvement Committee of the Madras Corporation introduced Slum
Clearance and Housing Schemes. As a social welfare measures the Justice Party
Government gave waste lands in village to Depressed Classes.
▪ The devadasi system, a disgrace to women, was abolished. The Justice
administration reorganized the working of the University of Madras. During the
administration of Justice Party, the Andhra University was established in 1926 and
Annamalai University in 1929.

End of Justice Party Rule

The Government of India Act of 1935 provided for provincial autonomy and the
electoral victory meant the assumption of a major responsibility in the administration
of the province. K. V. Reddi Naidu led the Justice Party, while C. Rajagopalachari led
the Congress in the South. In the election of 1937, the Congress captured 152 out of 215
seats in the Legislative Assembly and 26 out of 46 in the Legislative Council. In July
1937 the Congress formed its ministry under C. Rajagopalachari. Thus, the rule of
Justice Party which introduced important social legislations came to an end. In 1944
the Justice party conference was held in Salem. There Peraringar Anna passed a
resolution thereby the name of justice party was changed as Dravidiar Kalagam.

Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam

Annadurai, on 17th September 1949 along with V.R. Nedunchezhiyan, K.A.


Mathiazhagan, K.Anbazhagan, N.V. Natarajan, E.V.K.Sampath and thousands of others
in Robinson park in Royapuram in Chennai announced the formation of the Dravida
Munnetra Kazhagam.

Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam holds the distinction of being the first party other
than the Indian National Congress to win state-level elections with clear majority on its
own in any state in India.

The Election Symbol of the DMK, as approved by the Election Commission of


India, is the "Rising Sun" with the sun rising between two mountains. This symbol is
very significant as people in Tamil Nadu and Puducherry immediately connect with the
symbol.

Page 4
In 1953, MGR joined the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, popularised the party
flag and symbol which at that time stood for secession from India by showing it in his
movies. Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam entered the electoral fray rather unsuccessfully
in 1957 with even senior leader V.R. Nedunchezhiyan losing from Salem although M.
Karunanidhi won after initially having opposed all Indian Government and later
supporting only those parties which promised to help its secession from India cause.

Annadurai wanted a separate Dravida Nadu but the Dravida Munnetra


Kazhagam changed its stance with the Chinese invasion in 1962 and suspended its
demand for the length of the war and supported India raising funds for the war. When
the war ended, nationalistic feelings were so strong that Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam
gave up the separate Dravida nation idea.

In 1967, Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam came to power in Madras province 18


years after its formation and 10 years after it had first entered electoral politics. This
began the Dravidian era in Madras province which later became Tamil Nadu.

In 1969, party general secretary and founder, C.N. Annadurai died. After his
death, there was a power tussle between M. Karunanidhi and Nendunchezhiyan and
the post of party president was created as a compromise with Karunanidhi becoming
the president and Nendunchediyan becoming general secretary.

Since 1969, Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam is headed by M. Karunanidhi, the


Former Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu. The political feud between MGR and the party
president Karunanidhi emerged as an aftermath of the latter calling himself "Mujib of
Tamil Nadu"

In 1972, MGR called for a boycott of the party's General Council. With the crisis
falling into call for corruption probe by MGR, he was eventually suspended from the
General Council. Thus emerged a new party All India Anna Dravida Munnetra
Kazhagam.

Page 5
Achievements

The DMK has initiated all-round development in the villages of Tamil Nadu, by
implementing the famous 'Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee
Scheme', which ensures employment to the youth in villages of Tamil Nadu.

• Impetus has been given to industrial growth in the state, by improving the condition of
roads, building four-lane and six-lane roads and constructing bridges across the state.

• Various projects, linking up rivers within the state have been implemented. Examples
of such projects are Cauvery-Gundaru Linking Project taken up at a cost of Rs.189
crores; Tamirabarani-Karumeniyaru-Nambiyaru Linking Project taken up at a cost of
Rs.369 crores.

• A historic food security scheme has been launched in the state, wherein lakhs of
beneficiaries have been given rice at rupees one per kilogram of rice. Also, distribution
of palm oil, red gram, black gram, suji, maida and fortified wheat flour under Special
Public Distribution system at subsidized rates have been initiated. Again, 5 Eggs or
Bananas per week as part of Nutritious Noon Meal, has been started by the DMK.

• Zero interest on agricultural loans has been implemented, to help farmers carry on
their agricultural activities more comfortably.

• More than one crore of people have been given free house sites in the state, for
construction of a proper shelter with government aid.

• In protest against Hindi being made the official language, the DMK has successfully
introduced Tamil as a compulsory language till 10th standard, in all schools in the state
of Tamil Nadu.

All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam

All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam is a state political party in the
states of Tamil Nadu and Puducherry, India. The party was founded in 1972 by M.G.
Ramachandran (popularly known as M.G. Ramachandran), a veteran star of the Tamil
film industry and a popular politician, as a breakaway from the Dravida Munnetra
Kazhagam.

Page 6
The party headquarters is in Royapettah, Chennai, and was gifted to the party in
1986 by its former leader Janaki Ramachandran, wife of M.G. Ramachandran. The
party came to power in 1977 after trouncing Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam in the next
elections to the legislative assembly in the state and M.G. Ramachandran was named
the Chief Minister. He was sworn in as chief minister of the State on June 30, 1977.

In 1979, All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam became the first Dravidian
and non-congress party to be part of the Union Cabinet, when two All India Anna
Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam Members of Parliament, Satyavani Muthu and Aravinda
Bala Pajanor, joined the short-lived Charan Singh Ministry which followed the Morarji
Desai-led Janata Party Government of 1977-79.

MGR continued to enjoy popular support in his third tenure, which ended with
his demise on December 24, 1987. MGR's wife Janaki Ramachandran subsequently
rose to the party's leadership and led the Government as the state's first woman chief
minister until the state assembly was suspended and President's rule imposed.

The Election Symbol of the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam is "two
leaves". This symbol has a prominent history. When MGR died in 1987 and the major
clash over taking-over the AIADMK began between Janaki Ramachandran and
Jayalalithaa,the Election Commission of India refused to recognize both these factions
of the AIADMK as a true successor of MGR.

As a result, separate electoral symbols were assigned to both these groups. The
Janaki Ramachandran faction was allotted the symbol of "two doves" and the
Jayalalithaa faction was allotted the symbol of "crowing cock".
However, with the party breaking up further and the DMK’s rise to power, the crisis
was resolved and Jayalalithaa restored the "two leaves" symbol of the AIADMK in 1989

The party, in the absence of a personality of MGR's calibre, began to crumble,


with infighting, and broke into two factions, one under Janaki Ramachandran and the
other under J. Jayalalithaa, a former film star and associate of MGR. The factions led
by Jayalalitha and Janaki merged in 1988 under the former's leadership. The All India
Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam swept to power in the elections of 1991.

Page 7
Achievements

• MGR involved himself in a number of philanthropic activities and initiations. He was


the first donor to donate a large sum of 75,000 rupees to Indian Army, during the
important Indo-China War in 1962. He also helped the distressed and needy in critical
times like floods, fires, riots etc.

• MGR built a number of educational institutes under his personal supervision. This he
did to spread the beautiful message of education, literacy and awareness to the under-
privileged sections of the society primarily.

• The AIADMK initiated a number of fiscal and general policies to help farmers,
SC/ST/OBCs, pregnant women, teachers, handloom weavers and physically challenged
individuals. For example, the AIADMK introduced the distribution of bio-pesticides,
certified seeds, soil health cards, and gypsum etc. to farmers. It has introduced urban
cooperative banks for self-help maternity loans during pregnancy of a woman as well as
the delivery of the child. It has very significantly introduced the Nutrition-integrated
Child Development Service Scheme.

• There is a fund called the National Teachers Welfare Fund, for teachers introduced by
AIADMK.

• During the December 2004 Tsunami, the Tamil Nadu government, headed by
Jayalalitha, introduced various schemes and financial policies to attract huge profit,
which was directed to help the tsunami victims.

Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam

Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam is a political party in the Indian


state of Tamil Nadu formed in 1994 by V. Gopalswamy (also known as Vaiko), a
member of Rajyasabha and a party activitist of Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam. Mr. V.
Gopalsamy grew in the party from his student days. He actively participated in the
party agitations and courted imprisonment several times.

He was detained under MISA during emergency with other party leaders and workers.
His sympathy for the cause of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam is widely known.
With the looming possibility of a vote of confidence in Parliament against the UPA,
Page 8
Two party MP's, L. Ganesan and Genjee N. Ramachandran, claimed that they enjoy the
support of the majority of party cadre, decided to pledge support to the UPA
Government

The Election Symbol of Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, as


approved by the Election Commission of India, is “Top”. It is usually drawn on a tri-
coloured party flag of the MDMK, which is coloured red in the top and bottom panels
and black in the middle panel.

They later withdrew their claim and joined Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam when it
was found that they had forged letters of support of Party executives.

Achievements of MDMK

• The MDMK has a number of frontal organizations under its banner. One of the most
competent and significant is its labour wing called Marumalarchi Labour Front (MLF)
which has actively protested for the rights and demands of the peasant and farmer
sections of the society in Tamil Nadu and Pondicherry. The MLF has ensured that
agricultural loans at lesser interest rates are given to the peasants and free electricity is
supplied for them to operate successfully in the fields.

• The MDMK newspaper Sangoli is a widely published daily in Tamil Nadu, voicing the
concerns of the marginalized and the downtrodden sections of the state, along with the
opinions of the elites and others. Sangoli represents the MDMK’s political objectives
and realities such that it can reach everybody.

• Vaiko has undertaken several foot walks (Padayatra) to highlight the protest agendas of
his party. The most prominent of his walks was the one from Kanyakumari to Chennai
which he undertook, at the time of the formation of the party. In this Padayatra, he
enlightened the people of the newly-formed party’s political visions, which earned him
respect from many people.

• The MDMK has put up a determined consistent fight against the imposition of Hindi in
the Tamil-speaking belt of India. The Hindi agitation, which the MDMK participated
in, raising its voice against making Hindi the official language of India is a famous
struggle.

Page 9
• In fact, the MDMK asserts that Tamil should be made one of the official languages as it
is one of the oldest languages in the country.

• The party observes that reservations for the socially minor communities should be
enhanced as this would lead to social justice movement, which is a primary aspect of
the MDMK.

• The MDMK believes that the rivers of Kerala should be re-directed to Tamil Nadu
through channels and tunnels, so that irrigation in the state can be carried out without
shortage of water.

Pattali Makkal Katchi

Pattali Makkal Katchi was founded by Dr. Ramdoss and the state president is
G.K. Mani. Ramdoss had earlier worked with the Vanniyar Sangham (Vanniyar Union)
founded by him in 1980. Pattali Makkal Katchi is based amongst the Other Backward
Classes community. Pattali Makkal Katchi has advocated the bifurcation of the state of
Tamil Nadu, a proposal that was seen as a casteist line. Pattali Makkal Katchi is
stronger in the northern half of the Tamil Nadu State.

Achievements of the Party

• The Pattali Makkal Katchi has under its banner, a number of frontal mass
organizations such as the PMK Minority Wing, the PMK Youth Wing and the PMK
Students Federation, each of which have fought for interests of the various sections it
caters to.

• One of the most phenomenal contributions of the PMK is in its Union Minister’s efforts
to improve the rural healthcare facilities of people across the country, especially
women and children. It was to this end that Anbumani Ramadoss as a Health Minister
established the famous National Rural Health Mission (NRHM) in 2005. This
government initiation brought massive development to the rural poor, in terms of
better medical facilities and enhanced treatments.

• Ramadoss has been a strong advocate of the anti-tobacco campaigns, and it was his
concerted efforts which made ads against the sale of tobacco mandatory in television or

Page 10
in movies. As a Health Minister, he implemented strict measures to control sale of
tobacco and alcohol in the country. His strong advocacy banned the drinking and
smoking of alcohol and tobacco, or their respective advertisements in and around
educational institutes or in the interest of the public

Questions:

1. Elaborate the services of the Justice Party for the upliftment of the society.
2. What are the Achievements made by various Political Parties in Tamil Nadu in
Various Periods?

Page 11
EMERGENCE OF NATIONAL LEADERS

Gandhi

• Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was born in the coastal town of Porbandar in 1869.
When he returned to India in 1915 he had a record of fighting against inequalities
imposed by the racist government of South Africa. Gandhi certainly wanted to be of
help to forces of nationalism in India. He was in touch with leaders India as he had
come into contact with Congress leaders while mobilizing support for the South
African Indian cause earlier. Impressed by activities and ideas of Gopala Krishna
Gokhale, he acknowledged him as his political Guru.
• On his return to India, following Gokhale’s advice, Gandhi, who was away from
India for over two decades, spent a year travelling all over the country acquainting
himself with the situation. He established his Sabarmati Ashram at Ahmedabad but
did not take active part in political movements including the Home Rule
movement.
• While in South Africa, Gandhi, gradually evolved the technique of ‘Satyagraha,’
based on ‘Satya’ and ‘Ahimsa’ i.e, truth and non-violence, to fight the racist South
African regime. Even while resisting evil and wrong a Satyagrahi had to be at peace
with himself and not hate the wrong doer.
• A Satyagrahi would willingly accept suffering in the course of resistance, and hatred
had no place in the exercise. Truth and nonviolence would be weapons of the brave
and fearless and not cowards. For Gandhi there was no difference between precept
and practice, faith and action.

Gandhi’s Experiments of Satyagraha:

1. Champaran Movement (1917)


• The first attempt at mobilizing the Indian masses was made by Gandhi on an
invitation by peasants of Champaran. Before launching the struggle, he made a
detailed study of the situation. Indigo cultivators of the district Champaran in
Bihar were severely exploited by the European planters who had bound the

Page 1
peasants to compulsorily grow indigo on lease on 3/20th of their fields and sell
it at the rates fixed by the planters.
• This system squeezed the peasants and eventually reduced them to penury.
Accompanied by local leaders such as Rajendra Prasad, Mazharul Huq, Acharya
Kripalani and Mahadeva Desai, Gandhi conducted a detailed enquiry. The
British officials ordered Gandhi to leave the district. But he refused and told the
administration that he would defy the order because it was unjust and face the
consequences.
• Subsequently an enquiry committee with Gandhi also as a member was formed.
It was not difficult for Gandhi to convince the committee of the difficulties of
the poor peasants. The report was accepted and implemented resulting in the
release of the indigo cultivators of the bondage of European planters who
gradually had to withdraw from Champaran itself.

2. Mill Workers’ Strike and Gandhi’s Fast at Ahmedabad (1918)

Thus Gandhi met with his first success in his homeland. The struggle also enabled
him to closely understand the condition of peasantry. The next step at mobilizing
the masses was the workers of the urban centre, Ahmedabad. There was a dispute
between the textile workers and the mill owners. He met both the parties and when
the owners refused to accept the demands of the low paid workers, Gandhi advised
them to go on strike demanding a 35 percent increase in their wages. To bolster the
morale of the workers he went on fast. The worker’s strike and Gandhi’s fast
ultimately forced the mill owners’ to concede the demand.

3. The Kheda Struggle (1918)


• The peasants of Kheda district, due to the failure of monsoon, were in distress.
They had appealed to the colonial authorities for remission of land revenue
during 1918. As per government’s famine code, in the event of crop yield being
under 25 percent of the average the cultivators were entitled for total remission.
• But the authorities refused and harassed them demanding full payment. The
Kheda peasants who were also battling the plague epidemic, high prices and

Page 2
famine approached the Servants of India Society, of which Gandhi was a
member, for help. Gandhi, along with Vithalbhai Patel, intervened on behalf of
the poor peasants and advised them to withhold payment and ‘fight unto death
against such a spirit of vindictiveness and tyranny.’
• Vallabhbhai Patel, a young lawyer and Indulal Yagnik joined Gandhi in the
movement and urged the ryots to be firm. The government repression included
attachment of crops, taking possession of the belongings of the ryots and their
cattle and in some cases auctioning them.
• The government authorities issued instructions that revenues shall be collected
only from those ryots who could afford to pay. On learning about the same,
Gandhi decided to withdraw the struggle.
• The three struggles led by Gandhi, demonstrated that he had understood where
the Indian nation lay. It was the poor peasants and workers of all classes and
castes, who constituted the pith and marrow of India, whose interests Gandhi
espoused in these struggles. He had confronted both the colonialist and Indian
exploiters and by entering into dialogue with them, he had demonstrated that
he was a leader who could mobilize the oppressed and at the same time
negotiate with the oppressors. These virtues made him the man of the masses
and soon he was hailed as the Mahatma.

Nehru

Jawaharlal Nehru was born into an affluent Kashmiri Brahman family in Allahabad on
November 14, 1889. Tutored at home until the age of 15, Nehru subsequently attended
Harrow in England and, later, Trinity College, Cambridge. After studying law at
London’s Inner Temple, he returned to India at the age of 22 where he practiced law
with his father and prominent barrister, Motilal Nehru.

Political Awakening

• Upon learning of esteemed theosophist Annie Besant’s arrest in 1917, Nehru was
moved to join the All India Home Rule League, an organization devoted to
obtaining self-government within the British Empire.

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• In April 1919, British troops opened fire on thousands of unarmed civilians who
had been protesting recently passed legislation that permitted the detainment of
suspected political foes without trial. The Massacre of Amritsar, in which 379
Indians were killed and more than a thousand others were wounded, outraged
Nehru and further solidified his resolve to win India’s independence.
• During the Non-Cooperation Movement (1920-22) led by Mahatma Gandhi, Nehru
was imprisoned for the first time for activities against the British government and,
over the course of the next two and a half decades, spent a total of nine years in jail.
• In 1929, Jawaharlal was elected president of the Indian National Congress—his
first leadership role in politics—whereby he promoted the goal of complete
independence from Britain as opposed to dominion status.
• In response to Britain’s declaration of India’s participation in the war against
Germany at the onset of World War II without consulting Indian leaders, members
of Congress passed the Quit India resolution on August 8, 1942, demanding
political freedom from Britain in exchange for support in the war effort. The
following day, the British government arrested all Congress leaders, including
Nehru and Gandhi.

Challenges and Legacy as Prime Minister:

▪ On August 15, 1947, India finally gained its independence and Nehru became the
nation’s first prime minister. Amid the celebration of newly acquired freedom,
there was also considerable turmoil. The mass displacement that followed partition
into the separate nations of Pakistan and India, along with disputes over control of
Kashmir, resulted in the loss of property and lives for several hundred thousand
Muslims and Hindus.
▪ Throughout his 17-year leadership, Nehru advocated democratic socialism and
secularism and encouraged India’s industrialization beginning with the
implementation of the first of his five-year plans in 1951, which emphasized the
importance of increasing agricultural production.
▪ He also promoted scientific and technological advancements through the
establishment of higher learning, and instituted various social reforms such as free
public education and meals for Indian children, legal rights for women—including

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the ability to inherit property and divorce their husbands—and laws to prohibit
discrimination based on caste.
▪ During the Cold War, Nehru adopted a policy of non-alignment in which he
professed neutrality, but was criticized when he refused to condemn the Soviet
invasion of Hungary in 1956 and later requested foreign aid after China invaded
India’s northern border in 1962.
▪ The conflict, known as the Sino-Indian War, had a deleterious effect on Nehru’s
health, resulting in a severe stroke in January of 1964 and his death a few months
later on May 27.

Tagore

1. Rabindranath and the Bengal Partition:

• On July 22, 1904, the Viceroy of India Lord Curzon announced that the Bengal
providence would be divided into two parts. The British government was
worried about the social integrity among different communities in Bengal and
wanted to divide and rule.
• The Bengal Partition took place on October 16 in 1905 and this sparked a
nationwide protest. The Indian National Congress had started the Swadeshi
Movement where Indians denounced all British items and use all native items.
• Rabindranath Tagore wrote the song Banglar Mati Banglar Jol (Soil of Bengal,
Water of Bengal) to unite the Bengali population. He started the Rakhi Utsav
where people from Hindu and Muslim communities tied colourful threads on
each other's wrists. In 1911, the two parts of Bengal were reunited.

Going against conventional Western education

▪ Tagore was against conventional classroom education. He believed that


interaction with nature is essential for learning. On December 29, 1918, Tagore
laid the foundation stone of Visva Bharati University.
▪ He remodelled education as a holistic development process where teachers
would be more like mentors guiding students towards emotional, intellectual
and spiritual upliftment.

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▪ He invested his Nobel Prize money in building the campus and a town in
Bolpur, West Bengal. He named the place as Shantiniketan, the abode of peace.
His educational reforms are included in many curricula across the world.

Politics and Tagore

▪ Rabindranath faced criticism from radical politicians and agitators for being an
upper-class author who did not connect to the public. This was the result of low
educational standards.
▪ A lot of Tagore's critics did not understand that revolution is not an overnight
phenomenon but a constructive, progressive movement through education.
▪ In his lecture, entitled "Swadeshi Samaj", he explained how the British control
of India is the "political symptom of our social disease" of self-subjugation. He
urged Indians to believe that "there can be no question of blind revolution, but
of steady and purposeful education"

Netaji

▪ Subash Chandra bose (1897-1945) revolutionized the freedom struggle with his
ideas. He was born in 1897, Jan 23 at Cuttack in Orissa. He pursued higher studies
in Calcutta and at the Cambridge University, after which he passed the Indian Civil
Service Examination in England. But he did not join the ICS. He returned home to
join the Non-Cooperation Movement.
▪ From then onwards, he became an active member of the Congress. He was made
the Chief Executive Officer of the Calcutta Corporation in 1924. It was during his
association with congress volunteers at the congress session in Calcutta that
communism had its impact on him.
▪ As a result, he developed thoughts and ideas of his own which were unsupportive of
Gandhi’s programmes. Inspite of Gandhi’s opposition, Subash Chandra Bose was
elected the Congress President in 1938 at Haripur and 1939 at Tripuri.

Removal of Bose from Congress

The August offer came too late for the Congress to even negotiate a settlement. The
Congress, at this time, was losing its sheen. Its membership had fallen from 4.5 million
in 1938–39 to 1.4 million in 1940-41. Subhas Chandra Bose was isolated within the
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Congress, as most leaders in the organisation’s top refused cooperation with him. Bose
resigned and the AICC session at Calcutta elected Rajendra Prasad as president. Bose
founded the Forward Bloc to function within the Congress and was eventually removed
from all positions in the organization in August 1939.

Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose and the INA

▪ After the Indian National Congress acted against Bose in August 1939, shunting
him out of all offices including as president of the Bengal Congress Committee,
Bose embarked upon a campaign trail, to mobilize support to his position, across
India. He was arrested by the British on July 3, 1940 under the Defence of India
Act and kept under constant surveillance.
▪ As the war progressed in Europe Bose believed that Germany was going to win.
He began to nurture the idea that Indian independence could be achieved by
joining hands with the Axis powers. In the midnight of January 16-17, 1941, Bose
slipped out of Calcutta, and reached Berlin by the end of March, travelling
through Kabul and the Soviet Union on an Italian passport.
▪ Bose met Hitler and Goebbels in Berlin. Both the Nazi leaders were cold and the
only concession they gave was to set up the Azad Hind Radio. Nothing more
came out of his rendezvous with Hitler and his aides. With Germany facing
reverses, Bose found his way to Singapore in July 1943.
▪ A considerably large contingent of the Indian Army was posted on the South
East Asian countries that were part of the British Empire. They were in Malaya,
Burma and elsewhere. The forces, however, could not stand up to the Japanese
army. The command of the British Indian Army in the South-East Asian front
simply retreated leaving the ranks behind as Prisoners of War (POWs).
▪ Mohan Singh, an officer of the British Indian Army in Malaya, approached the
Japanese for help and they found in this an opportunity. Japan’s interests lay in
colonizing China and not much India. The Indian POWs with the Japanese were
left under Mohan Singh’s command. The fall of Singapore to the Japanese forces
added to the strength of the POWs and Mohan Singh now had 45,000 POWs
under his command.

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▪ Of these, Mohan Singh had drafted about 40,000 men in the Indian National
Army by the end of 1942. Indians in the region saw the INA as saviours against
Japanese expansionism as much as the commander and other officers held out
that the army would march into India but only on invitation from the Indian
National Congress.
▪ On July 2, 1943, Subhas Chandra Bose, reached Singapore. From there he went
to Tokyo and after a meeting with Prime Minister Tojo, the Japanese leader
declared that his country did not desire territorial expansion into India. Bose
returned to Singapore and set up the Provisional Government of Free India on
October 21, 1943.
▪ This Provisional Government declared war against Britain and the other allied
nations. The Axis powers recognised Bose’s Provisional Government as its ally.
Bose enlisted civilians too into the INA and one of the regiments was made up of
women.
▪ The Rani of Jhansi regiment of the INA was commanded by a medical doctor
and daughter of freedom fighter Ammu Swaminathan from Madras, Dr
Lakshmi.
▪ On July 6, 1944, Subhas Bose addressed a message to Gandhi over the Azad
Hind Radio from Rangoon. Calling him the ‘Father of the Nation’, Bose appealed
to Gandhi for his blessing in what he described as ‘India’s last war of
independence.

Moulana Abulkalam Azad

Maulana Abul Kalam Azad was one of the most influential independence activists
during India’s freedom struggle. He was also a noted writer, poet and journalist. He
was a prominent political leader of the Indian National Congress and was elected as
Congress President in 1923 and 1940. Despite being a Muslim, Azad often stood against
the radicalizing policies of other prominent Muslims leaders like Muhammad Ali
Jinnah. Azad was the first education minister of independent India. Maulana Abul
Kalam Azad was posthumously awarded ‘Bharat Ratna’, India's highest civilian honor,
in 1992.

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Early Revolutionary Activities

▪ In Egypt, Azad came into contact with the followers of Mustafa Kemal Pasha who
were publishing a weekly from Cairo. In Turkey, Maulana Azad met the leaders of
the Young Turks Movement. After his return to India from an extensive visit of
Egypt, Turkey, Syria and France, Azad met prominent Hindu revolutionaries Sri
Aurobindo Ghosh and Shyam Sundar Chakraborty.
▪ They helped in developing radical political views and he began to participate in the
Indian nationalist movement. Azad fiercely criticized the Muslim politicians who
were more inclined towards the communal issues without focusing on the national
interest. He also rejected the theories of communal separatism advocated by the All
India Muslim League.
▪ Azad, inspired by the passion of Indian as well as foreign revolutionary leaders,
started publishing a weekly called "Al-Hilal" in 1912. The weekly was a platform to
attack the policies of the British Government and highlight the problems faced by
the common Indians. The paper became so popular that its circulation figures went
up to 26,000 copies. The unique message of patriotism and nationalism blended
with religious commitment gained its acceptance among the masses.
▪ But these developments disturbed the British Government and in 1914, the British
Government put a ban on the weekly. Unfazed by the move, Maulana Azad, few
months later, launched a new weekly, called "Al-Balagh". Failed to put a
prohibition on the writings of Maulana Azad, the British Government then finally
decided to deport him off Calcutta in 1916.
▪ When Maulana Azad reached Bihar, he was arrested and put under house arrest.
This detention continued till December 31, 1919. After his release on January 1,
1920, Azad returned to the political atmosphere and actively participated in the
movement. In fact, he continued to write provocative articles against the British
Government.

Pre-Independence Activities

As an activist demanding the reinstatement of the Caliph in Istanbul, Maulana Abul


Kalam Azad came onboard with the Khilafat movement during 1920. He became
involved with the Indian freedom struggle through the Non-cooperation movement

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initiated by Gandhi, of which the Khilafat issue was a big part of. He wholeheartedly
advocated the principles of the non-cooperation movement and in the process became
drawn to Gandhi and his philosophy.

Although initially skeptical of Gandhi’s proposal to launch an intensified drive against


the British Raj demanding independence, he later joined the efforts. He travelled all
over the country giving speeches and leading various programs of the movement. He
worked closely with Vallabhbahi Patel and Dr. Rajendra Prasad.

On August 9, 1942, Maulana Azad was arrested along with most of the Congress
leadership. Their incarceration lasted for four years and they were released in 1946.
During that time, the idea of an independent India had solidified and Maulana headed
the Constituent Assembly Elections within Congress as well as led the negotiations with
the British Cabinet mission to discuss the terms of independence. He vehemently
opposed the idea of partition based on religion and was deeply hurt when the idea went
forward to give rise to Pakistan.

Post-Independence Activities

▪ During the violence that erupted following partition of India, Maulana Azad
assured to take up the responsibility for the security of Muslims in India. Towards
this, Azad toured the violence-affected regions of borders of Bengal, Assam,
Punjab. He helped in establishing the refugee camps and ensured uninterrupted
supply of food and other basic materials. It was reported that in the crucial Cabinet
meetings both Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel and Maulana Azad clashed over the
security measures in Delhi and the Punjab.
▪ The role and contribution of Maulana Abul Kalam Azad could not be overlooked.
He was appointed as India's first Minister for Education and inducted in the
Constituent Assembly to draft India's constitution. Under Maulana Azad's tenure, a
number of measures were undertaken to promote primary and secondary
education, scientific education, establishment of universities and promotion of
avenues of research and higher studies.

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Association with the Indian National Congress

▪ While extending his support to Mahatma Gandhi and non-cooperation movement,


Maulana Azad joined the Indian National Congress in January 1920. He presided
over the special session of Congress in September 1923 and was said to be the
youngest man elected as the President of the Congress.
▪ Maulana Azad emerged as an important national leader of the Indian National
Congress Party. He also served as a member of the Congress Working Committee
(CWC) and in the offices of general secretary and president on numerous occasions.
▪ In 1928, Maulana Azad endorsed the Nehru Report, formulated by Motilal Nehru.
Interestingly, the Motilal Nehru Report was severely criticized by a number of
Muslim personalities involved with the freedom movement. As opposed to
Muhammad Ali Jinnah, Azad also advocated for the ending of separate electorates
based on religion and called for a single nation committed to secularism.
▪ In 1930, Maulana Azad was arrested for violation of the salt laws as part of
Gandhiji's Salt Satyagraha. He was put in Meerut jail for a year and a half.
▪ Maulana was a firm believer in the co-existence of religions. His dream was that of
a unified independent India where Hindu and Muslims co-habited peacefully.
Although this vision of Azad was shattered post partition of India, he remained a
believer.
▪ He was the founder of the Jamia Milia Islamia Institution in Delhi along with
fellow khilafat leaders which has blossomed into a renowned University today. His
birthday, November 11, is celebrated as National Education Day in India.

Ambedkar

Dr. B. R. Ambedkar’s personality was a multifaceted one. He emerged on the Indian


socio-political area in early 1920s and remained in the head of all social, economic,
political and religious efforts for upliftment of the lowest layer of the Indian society
called untouchables.

Babasaheb was a great researcher who made exceptional contributions as an


economist, sociologist, legal luminary, educationalist, journalist, Parliamentarian and
as a social reformer and supporter of human rights. Babasaheb organized, united and

Page 11
enthused the untouchables in India to effectively use political means towards their goal
of social fairness.

Movement for Rights of Marginalized community

▪ In 1919, in his testimony before the Southborough Committee in preparation of the


Government of India Act Ambedkar opined that there should be a separate
electoral system for the Untouchables and other marginalized communities.
▪ In 1920, Ambedkar launched a newspaper called “Mooknayaka” (leader of the
silent) with the assistance of Shahaji II, the Maharaja of Kolhapur. (other
periodicals- ‘Bahishkrit Bharat’ (1927), ‘Samatha’ (1929) and ‘Janata’ (1930))
▪ In 1923, he set up the ‘Bahishkrit Hitkarini Sabha (Outcastes Welfare Association)
▪ Ambedkar launched full-fledged movements for Dalit rights by 1927 and demanded
public drinking water sources open to all and right for all castes to enter temples.
▪ In 1932, Ambedkar signed the Poona Pact.

Contributions of Baba Saheb:

Education:

He said that “It is the education which is the right weapon to cut the social slavery and
it is the education which will enlighten the downtrodden masses to come up and gain
social status, economic betterment and political freedom” In 1923 Baba Saheb founded
‘Bahishkrit Hitkarni Sabha to spread education among marginalized and to improve
their economic conditions.

He gave the slogan: “Educate-Agitate-Organize”

Changing hierarchical structures of Indian society

Dr. Ambedkar devoted his whole life to fight for the annihilation of caste by
proliferating a movement against the evils of the caste system. Being himself a Dalit, he
made all his efforts to change the hierarchical structures of Indian society and
restoration of equal rights/justice to the marginalized and abolition of Untouchability.
He stood for a complete reorganization and reconstruction of the Hindu society on the
principle of equality free from castism. He advocated equality of opportunity. He opted

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for peaceful and constitutional methods for the sake of resolution of the social
problems.

He advocated a society based on three fundamental principles of liberty,


equality, and fraternity

Dr. Ambedkar was a remarkable liberal crusader who realized the ideological
hollowness of the Dalit Movement and provided necessary ideology to it. He created
awareness among depressed classes to have a graceful life.

Political party

He formed three political parties, viz. Independent Labor Party, the Republican Party
of India and All India Scheduled Caste Federation which were instrumental in
organizing Dalit community and raising voice in favour of Dalit community.

Reservation in the election

He represented the untouchables in the Round Table Conference in 1930. Due to his
consistent ceaseless efforts, the Harijans were granted reservation of seat in the
elections.

Bringing Untouchables to the mainstream of Indian society

His programs were focused on mainstreaming the Untouchables into Indian society.
He fought not only for equal status of Varna but for social, economic and political
equality as well as equal opportunity to all. His ideas & programs set forth concrete
proposals for the removal of untouchability and the empowerment of the downtrodden.
Dr. Ambedkar demanded justice to untouchables and other weaker sections of the
society via making provisions in the Indian Constitution.

His role in framing Constitution

In framing the constitution of independent India, he played a leading role. He was


appointed as the Chairman of the constitution drafting committee in 1947.

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▪ Ambedkar was a wise constitutional expert, he had studied the constitutions of
about 60 countries. Ambedkar is recognized as the “Father of the Constitution of
India”
▪ The text prepared by Ambedkar provided constitutional guarantees and protections
to individual citizens for a wide range of civil liberties, including freedom of
religion, the abolition of untouchability, and the outlawing of all forms of
discrimination.
▪ Ambedkar advocated extensive economic and social rights for women and won the
support of the Assembly to introduce a system of reservations for members of
scheduled castes and scheduled tribes and Other Backward Class in the civil
services, schools, and colleges.
▪ He laid emphasis on religious, gender and caste equality. Even Ambedkar
recommended the adoption of Uniform Civil code to bring reform in the Indian
society.

Patel

▪ Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel is a revered name in Indian politics. A lawyer and a


political activist, he played a leading role during the Indian Independence
Movement. After independence, he was crucial in the integration of over 500
princely states into the Indian Union. He was deeply influenced by Gandhi’s
ideology and principles, having worked very closely with leader.
▪ Despite being the choice of the people, on the request of Mahatma Gandhi, Sardar
Patel stepped down from the candidacy of Congress President, which ultimately
turned out to be the election to choose the first Prime Minister of independent
India. He was the first Home Minister of Independent India and his
uncompromising efforts towards consolidation of the country earned him the title
‘Iron Man of India’.

Role in the Indian National Movement

▪ In 1917, Sardar Vallabhbhai was elected as the Secretary of the Gujarat Sabha, the
Gujarat wing of the Indian National Congress. In 1918, he led a massive "No Tax

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Campaign" that urged the farmers not to pay taxes after the British insisted on tax
after the floods in Kaira.
▪ The peaceful movement forced the British authorities to return the land taken away
from the farmers. His effort to bring together the farmers of his area brought him
the title of 'Sardar'. He actively supported the non-cooperation Movement launched
by Gandhi. Patel toured the nation with him, recruited 300,000 members and
helped collect over Rs. 1.5 million.
▪ In 1928, the farmers of Bardoli again faced a problem of "tax-hike". After prolonged
summons, when the farmers refused to pay the extra tax, the government seized
their lands in retaliation. The agitation took on for more than six months. After
several rounds of negotiations by Patel, the lands were returned to farmers after a
deal was struck between the government and farmers’ representatives.
▪ In 1930, Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel was among the leaders imprisoned for
participating in the famous Salt Satyagraha movement initiated by Mahatma
Gandhi. His inspiring speeches during the "Salt Movement" transformed the
outlook of numerous people, who later played a major role in making the
movement successful. He led the Satyagraha movement across Gujarat when
Gandhi was under imprisonment, upon request from the congress members.
▪ Sardar Patel was freed in 1931, following an agreement signed between Mahatma
Gandhi and Lord Irwin, the then Viceroy of India. The treaty was popularly known
as the Gandhi-Irwin Pact. The same year, Patel was elected as the President of
Indian National Congress in its Karachi session where the party deliberated its
future path. Congress committed itself towards defence of fundamental and human
rights. It was in this session that the dream of a secular nation was conceived.
▪ During the legislative elections of 1934, Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel campaigned for
the Indian National Congress. Though he did not contest, Sardar Patel helped his
fellow party mates during the election.
▪ In the 1942 Quit India Movement, Patel continued his unwavering support to
Gandhi when several contemporary leaders criticized the latter’s decision. He
continued travelling throughout the country propagating the agenda of the
movement in a series of heart-felt speeches. He was arrested again in 1942 and was
imprisoned in the Ahmednagar fort till 1945 along with other Congress leaders.

Page 15
▪ Sardar Patel’s journey often saw a number of confrontations with other important
leaders of the congress. He voiced his annoyance at Jawaharlal Nehru openly when
the latter adopted socialism in 1936. Patel was also wary of Netaji Subhash Chandra
Bose and considered him to be "keen on more power within the party”.

Sardar Patel & the Partition of India

The separatist movement lead by Muslim League leader Mohammed Ali Jinnah led to a
series of violent Hindu-Muslim riots across the country just before the independence.
In Sardar Patel’s opinion, the open communal conflicts incited by the riots had the
potential to establish a weak Government at the Centre post-independence which will
be disastrous for consolidating a democratic nation. Patel went on to work on a
solution with V.P. Menon, a civil servant during December 1946 and accepted his
suggestion of creating a separate dominion based on religious inclination of states. He
represented India in the Partition Council.

Contributions to Post-independence India

▪ After India achieved independence, Patel became the first Home Minister and also
the Deputy Prime Minister. Patel played a very crucial role in post-independence
India by successfully integrating around 562 princely states under the Indian
Dominion.
▪ The British Government had presented these rulers with two alternatives - they
could join India or Pakistan; or they could stay independent. This clause magnified
the difficulty of process to mammoth proportions.
▪ Congress entrusted this intimidating task to Sardar Patel who started lobbying for
integration on August 6, 1947. He was successful in integrating all of them barring
Jammu and Kashmir, Junagarh and Hyderabad. He eventually dealt with the
situation with his sharp political acumen and secured their accession. The India
that we see today was a result of the efforts put in by Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel.
▪ Patel was a leading member of the Constituent Assembly of India and Dr. B.R.
Ambedkar was appointed on his recommendation. He was the key force in
establishing the Indian Administrative Service and the Indian Police Service. He

Page 16
took personal interest in initiating a restoration endeavour of the Somnath Temple
in Saurashtra, Gujarat.
▪ Patel dealt ruthlessly with the Pakistan’s efforts to invade Kashmir in September
1947. He oversaw immediate expansion of the army and marked improvement of
other infrastructural aspects. He often disagreed with Nehru’s policies, especially
about his dealings with Pakistan regarding the refugee issues. He organised
multiple refugee camps in Punjab and Delhi, and later in West Bengal.

Influence of Gandhi

Gandhi had profound effect on Patel’s politics and thoughts. He pledged unwavering
support to the Mahatma and stood by his principles all through his life. While leaders
including Jawaharlal Nehru, Chakravarthi Rajagopalachari and Maulana Azad
criticized Mahatma Gandhi's idea that the civil disobedience movement would compel
the British to leave the nation, Patel extended his support to Gandhi.

Despite the unwillingness of the Congress High Command, Mahatma Gandhi and
Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel strongly forced the All India Congress Committee to ratify the
civil disobedience movement and launch it without delaying further. Upon Gandhi’s
request he gave up his candidacy for the post of the Prime Minister of India. He
suffered a major heart attack after Gandhi’s death. Although he recovered, he
attributed it to having lamented silently for the loss of his mentor.

Questions

1. Discuss the Gandhi’s Experiment of Satyagraha to draw the participation of


mass in to National Movement.
2. Evaluate the contribution of Netaji in the India’s Independence.
3. Evaluate the role in the Indian National Movement by Sardar Vallabhai Patel.

Page 17
ERA OF DIFFERENT ACTS & PACTS

The Regulating Act of 1773

The Regulating Act of 1773 opened a new chapter in the constitutional history of the
Company. Previously, the Home government in England consisted of the Court of
Directors and the Court of Proprietors. The Court of Directors were elected annually
and practically managed the affairs of the Company.

In India, each of the three presidencies was independent and responsible only to the
Home Government. The government of the presidency was conducted by a Governor
and a Council.

The following conditions invited the Parliamentary intervention in the Company’s


affairs.

▪ The English East India Company became a territorial power when it acquired a
wide dominion in India and also the Diwani rights. Its early administration was not
only corrupt but notorious. When the Company was in financial trouble, its
servants were affluent.
▪ The disastrous famine which broke out in Bengal in 1770 affected the agriculturists.
As a result, the revenue collection was poor. In short, the Company was on the
brink of bankruptcy.
▪ In 1773, the Company approached the British government for an immediate loan. It
was under these circumstances that the Parliament of England resolved to regulate
the affairs of the Company.
▪ Lord North, the Prime Minister of England, appointed a select committee to
inquire into the affairs of the Company. The report submitted by the Committee
paved the way for the enactment of the Regulating Act.

Provisions of the Act


The Regulating Act reformed the Company’s Government at Home and in
India.
The important provisions of the Act were:

Page 1
▪ The term of office of the members of the Court of Directors was extended from one
year to four years. One-fourth of them were to retire every year and the retiring
Directors were not eligible for re-election.
▪ The Governor of Bengal was styled the Governor-General of Fort William whose
tenure of office was for a period of five years.
▪ A council of four members was appointed to assist the Governor-General. The
government was to be conducted in accordance with the decision of the majority.
▪ The Governor - General had a casting vote in case of a tie. The Governor-General in
Council was made supreme over the other Presidencies in matters of war and
peace.
▪ Provision was made in the Act for the establishment of a Supreme Court at Calcutta
consisting of a Chief Justice and three junior judges. It was to be independent of
the Governor- General in Council.
▪ In 1774, the Supreme Court was established by a Royal Charter. This Act prevented
the servants of the Company including the Governor General, members of his
council and the judges of the Supreme Court from receiving directly or indirectly
any gifts in kind or cash.

Merits and Demerits of the Act:

▪ The significance of the Regulating Act is that it brought the affairs of the Company
under the control of the Parliament. Besides, it proved that the Parliament of
England was concerned about the welfare of Indians.
▪ The greatest merit of this Act is that it put an end to the arbitrary rule of the
Company and provided a framework for all future enactments relating to the
governing of India.
▪ The main defect of the Act was that the Governor-General was made powerless
because the council which was given supreme power often created deadlocks by
over-ruling his decision.
▪ However, many of these defects were rectified by the Pitt’s India Act of 1784.

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Charter Act of 1833

The Regulating Act of 1773 made it compulsory to renew the Company’s Charter after
twenty years. Hence, the Charter Act of 1793 was passed by the Parliament. It extended
the life of Company for another twenty years and introduced minor changes in the
existing set up. The Charter Act of 1813 provided one lakh of rupees annually for the
promotion of Indian education. It also extended the Company’s charter for another
twenty years.

The Charter Act of 1833 was a significant constitutional instrument defining the scope
and authority of the East India Company. The liberal and utilitarian philosophy of
Bentham was made popular by the provisions of this Act.

Following were the important provisions:

1. The English East India Company ceased to be a commercial agency in India. In


other words, it would function hereafter as the political agent for the Crown.
2. The Governor-General of Fort William was hereafter called ‘the Governor -
General of India’. Thus, Bentinck was the first Governor-General of India’.
3. A Law Member was appointed to the Governor-General’s Council.
T.B. Macaulay was the first Law Member of the Governor- General-in-Council.
4. The Act categorically stated ‘that no native of India, nor any natural born
subject of His Majesty, should be disabled from holding any place, office, or
employment, by reason of his religion, place of birth, descent or colour”.
5. It was this enactment which laid the foundation for the Indianisation of public
services.

After twenty years, the Charter Act of 1853 was passed and it was the last in the series
of Charter Acts.

The Revolt of 1857 brought about important changes in the British administration in
India. The rule of the East India Company came to an end. The administration of India
came under the direct control of the British Crown. These changes were announced in
the Government of India Act of 1858.

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The ‘Proclamation of Queen Victoria’ assured the Indians a benevolent administration.
Thereafter, important development had taken place in constitutional history of India as
a result of the Indian National Movement.

Government of India Act of 1858


The Government of India Act of 1858 was passed by the Parliament of
England and received royal assent on 2nd August 1858.

Following are the main provisions of the Act:


• East India Company’s rule came to an end and the Indian administration came
under the direct control of the Crown.
• In England, the Court of Directors and Board of Control were abolished. In
their place came the Secretary of State for India and India Council were
established.
• The Secretary of State would be a member of the British cabinet. Sir Charles
Wood was made the first Secretary of State for India. India Council consisting
of 15 members would assist him.
• The Governor General of India was also made the Viceroy of India. The first
Viceroy of India was Lord Canning.
• All the previous treaties were accepted and honoured by the Act.

Queen Victoria’s Proclamation

▪ On 1st November 1858 the Proclamation of Queen Victoria was announced by Lord
Canning at Allahabad. This royal Proclamation was translated into Indian
languages and publicly read in many important places. It announced the end of
Company’s rule in India.
▪ It endorsed the treaty made by the Company with Indian princes and promised to
respect their rights, dignity and honour. It assured the Indian people equal and
impartial protection of law and freedom of religion and social practices. The
Proclamation of Queen Victoria gave a practical shape to the Act of 1858.

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Indian Councils Act of 1861

▪ The Indian Councils Act of 1861 increased the number of members in the
Governor-General’s executive Council from 4 to 5. Further the Governor-General’s
Executive Council was enlarged into a Central Legislative Council.
▪ Six to twelve “additional members” were to be nominated by the Governor-General.
Not less than half of these members were to be non-officials.
▪ Thus a provision was made for the inclusion of Indians in the Legislative Council.
▪ The functions of these members were strictly limited to making legislation and
they were forbidden from interfering in the matters of the Executive Council. They
did not possess powers of administration and finance.
▪ Legislative Councils were also established in the provinces. The number of
additional members in the provinces was fixed between four to eight.
▪ So, this Act was an important constitutional development and the people of India
came to be involved in the law-making process.
▪ The mechanism of Indian legislation developed slowly and reinforced further by
the Acts of 1892 and 1909.

Indian Councils Act of 1892

▪ The Indian Councils Act of 1892 was the first achievement of the Indian National
Congress. It had increased the number of “additional members” in the Central
Legislative Council.
▪ They were to be not less than 10 and not more than 16. It had also increased the
proportion of non-officials – 6 officials and 10 non-officials.
▪ The members were allowed to discuss the budget and criticize the financial policy
of the government. In the provinces also the number of additional members was
increased with additional powers.

Minto- Morley Reforms of 1909

The Indian Councils Act of 1909 was also known as Minto-Morley Reforms in the
names of Lord Morley, the Secretary of State for India and Lord Minto, the Governor-
General of India.

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Both were responsible for the passing of this Act. It was passed to win the support of
the Moderates in the Congress.

The important provisions of this Act were:

1. The number of “additional members” of the Central Legislative Council was


increased to a maximum of 60. Elected members were to be 27 and among the
remaining 33 nominated members not more than 28 were to be officials.
2. The principle of election to the councils was legally recognized. But communal
representation was for the first time introduced in the interests of Muslims.
Separate electorates were provided for the Muslims.
3. The number of members in provincial legislative councils of major provinces
was raised to 50.
4. The Councils were given right to discuss and pass resolutions on the Budget
and on all matters of public interest. However, the Governor-General had the
power to disallow discussion on the budget.
5. An Indian member was appointed for the first time to the Governor-General’s
Executive Council. Sir S. P. Sinha was- the first Indian to be appointed thus.
6. In Bombay and Madras, the number of members of the Executive Councils was
raised from 2 to 4. The practice of appointing Indians to these Councils began.
7. Two Indians were also appointed to the India Council [in England].

The Minto- Morley reforms never desired to set up a parliamentary form of


government in India. However, the Moderates welcomed the reforms as fairly
liberal measures. The principle of separate electorates had ultimately led to the
partition of India in 1947.

Montague-Chelmsford Reforms of 1919

The political developments in India during the First World War such as the Home Rule
Movement led to the August Declaration. On 20th August, 1917 Montague, the Secretary
of State for India made a momentous declaration in the House of Commons.

His declaration assured the introduction of responsible government in India in


different stages. As a first measure the Government of India Act of 1919 was passed by
the Parliament of England.
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This Act is popularly known as Montague-Chelmsford Reforms. At that time Lord
Chelmsford was the Viceroy of India.

The main features of the Act were:

1. Dyarchy was introduced in the provinces. Provincial subjects were divided into
“Reserved Subjects” such as police, jails, land revenue, irrigation and forests and
“Transferred Subjects” such as education, local self government, public health,
sanitation, agriculture and industries.
2. The Reserved subjects were to be administered by the Governor and his
Executive Council. The Transferred subjects by the Governor and his ministers.
3. A bicameral (Two Chambers) legislature was set up at the centre. It consisted of
the Council of States and the Legislative Assembly. The total member in the
Legislative Assembly was to be a maximum of 145, out of which 105 were to be
elected and the remaining nominated.
4. In the Council of States there would be a maximum of 60 members out of which
34 were elected and the remaining nominated.
5. The salaries of the Secretary of State for India and his assistants were to be paid
out of the British revenues. So far, they were paid out of the Indian revenues.
6. A High Commissioner for India at London was appointed. The most important
defect in this Act was the division of powers under the system of Dyarchy in the
provinces.

The Government of India Act of 1935

The Government of India Act of 1935 was passed on the basis of the report of the
Simon Commission, the outcome of the Round Table Conferences and the White Paper
issued by the British Government in 1933. This Act contained many important changes
over the previous Act of 1919.

Following were the salient features of this Act

1. Provision for the establishment of an All India Federation at the Centre,


consisting of the Provinces of British India and the Princely States. (It did not

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come into existence since the Princely States refused to give their consent for
the union.)
2. Division of powers into three lists: Federal, Provincial and Concurrent.
3. Introduction of Dyarchy at the Centre. The Governor-General and his
councillors administered the “Reserved subjects”. The Council of Ministers
were responsible for the “Transferred” subjects.
4. Abolition of Dyarchy and the introduction of Provincial Autonomy in the
provinces. The Governor was made the head of the Provincial Executive but he
was expected to run the administration on the advice of the Council of
Ministers.
5. Thus provincial government was entrusted to the elected Ministers. They were
responsible to the popularly elected Legislative Assemblies.
6. Provincial Legislatures of Bengal, Madras, Bombay, United Provinces, Bihar
and Assam were made bicameral.
7. Extension of the principle of Separate Electorates to Sikhs, Europeans, Indian
Christians and Anglo Indians.
8. Establishment of a Federal Court at Delhi with a Chief Justice and 6 judges.

The Vernacular Press Act and the Arms Act (1878)

▪ In 1878, the Vernacular Press Act was passed. This Act empowered a Magistrate to
secure an undertaking from the editor, publisher and printer of a vernacular
newspaper that nothing would be published against the English Government.
▪ The equipment of the press could be seized if the offence was committed. This Act
crushed the freedom of the Indian press. This created adverse public opinion
against the British Government.
▪ In the same year, the Arms Act was passed. This Act prevented the Indians to keep
arms without appropriate license. Its violation would be a criminal offence.
▪ The Europeans and the Anglo- Indians were exempted from the operation of these
legislations.

First Factory Act (1881)

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Lord Ripon introduced the Factory Act of 1881 to improve the service condition of the
factory workers in India. The Act banned the appointment of children below the age of
seven in factories. It reduced the working hours for children. It made compulsory for
all dangerous machines in the factories to be properly fenced to ensure security to the
workers.

The Lucknow Pact (1916)

During the 1916 Congress session at Lucknow two major events occurred. The divided
Congress became united. An understanding for joint action against the British was
reached between the Congress and the Muslim League and it was called the Lucknow
Pact.

Provisions of the Lucknow Pact:

1. Provinces should be freed as much as possible from Central control in


administration and finance.
2. Four-fifths of the Central and Provincial Legislative Councils should be elected,
and one-fifth nominated.
3. Four-fifths of the provincial and central legislatures were to be elected on as
broad a franchise as possible.
4. Half the executive council members, including those of the central executive
council were to be Indians elected by the councils themselves.
5. The Congress also agreed to separate electorates for Muslims in provincial
council elections and for preferences in their favour (beyond the proportions
indicated by population) in all provinces except the Punjab and Bengal, where
some ground was given to the Hindu and Sikh minorities.
6. This pact paved the way for Hindu–Muslim cooperation in the Khilafat
Movement and Gandhi’s Non–Cooperation Movement.
7. The Governments, Central and Provincial, should be bound to act in
accordance with resolutions passed by their Legislative Councils unless they
were vetoed by the Governor-General or Governors–in– Council and, in that
event, if the resolution was passed again after an interval of not less than one
year, it should be put into effect;

Page 9
8. The relations of the Secretary of State with the Government of India should be
similar to those of the Colonial Secretary with the Governments of the
Dominions, and India should have an equal status with that of the Dominions
in any body concerned with imperial affairs.

The Lucknow Pact paved the way for Hindu Muslim Unity. Sarojini Ammaiyar called
Jinnah, the chief architect of the Lucknow Pact, “the Ambassador of Hindu–Muslim
Unity”. The Lucknow Pact proved that the educated class both from the Congress and
the League could work together with a common goal. This unity reached its climax
during the Khilafat and the Non-Cooperation Movements.

Poona Pact (1932)

▪ By 1930, Dr. Ambedkar had become a leader of national stature championing the
cause of the depressed people of the country. While presenting a real picture of the
condition of these people in the First Round Table Conference, he had demanded
separate electorates for them.
▪ On 16th August 1932 the British Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald made an
announcement, which came to be as the Communal Award.
▪ According to this award, the depressed classes were considered as a separate
community and as such provisions were made for separate electorates for them.
Mahatma Gandhi protested against the Communal Award and went on a fast unto
death in the Yerawada jail on 20th September 1932.
▪ Finally, an agreement was reached between Dr. Ambedkar and Gandhi. This
agreement came to be called as the Poona Pact. The British Government also
approved of it. Accordingly, 148 seats in different Provincial Legislatures were
reserved for the Depressed Classes in place of 71 as provided in the Communal
Award.
▪ The third Round Table Conference came to an end in 1932. The Congress once
more did not take part in it. Nonetheless, in March 1933, the British Government
issued a White Paper, which became the basis for the enactment of the Government
of India Act, 1935

Gandhi-Irwin pact (1931)

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▪ Gandhi-Irwin pact was signed on March 5, 1931. It marked the end of civil
disobedience in India. The movement had generated worldwide publicity, and
Viceroy Irwin was looking for a way to end it. Gandhi was released from custody in
January 1931, and the two men began negotiating the terms of the pact.
▪ In the end, Gandhi pledged to give up the satyagraha campaign, and Irwin agreed
to release tens of thousands of Indians who had been jailed during the movement.
▪ That year Gandhi attended the Second Round Table Conference in London as the
sole representative of the Congress. The government agreed to allow people to
make salt for their consumption, release political prisoners who had not indulged
in violence, and permitted the picketing of liquor and foreign cloth shops.

The Karachi Congress ratified the Gandhi–Irwin pact. However, the Viceroy refused to
commute the death sentence of Bhagat Singh and his comrades. Gandhi attended the
Second RTC but the government was adamant and declined to concede his demands.
He returned empty handed and the Congress resolved on renewing the civil
disobedience movement.

Questions:

1. Discuss the important provisions of the Regulating Act of 1773.


2. What are the important provisions of Minto Marley Reforms?
3. Describe the Lucknow Pact 1916.

Page 11
SECOND WORLD WAR & FINAL
PHASE STRUGGLE

Introduction

▪ The outbreak of Second World War and Britain’s decision to involve India in the
War without consulting Congress ministries in provinces, provoked the leaders of
Indian National Congress and Gandhi. The Congress ministers resigned in protest.
Gandhi launched the individual Satyagraha in October 1940 to keep up the morale
of the Congress.
▪ In the meantime, the election of Subash Chandra Bose as Congress President upset
Gandhi this led to Bose’s resignation. Later Bose started his Forward Bloc Party.
After his escape to Germany and Singapore formed Indian National Army and
carried on his revolutionary activities independent of the Congress movement.
▪ The Cripps Mission arrived in March 1942 to assuage the nationalists. But its
proposals bore no fruit. Gandhi decided to embark on the Quit India Movement in
August 1942. The British arrested all prominent leaders of the Congress and put
down the movement with an iron hand. Gandhi languished in jail until May 1944.
▪ Then came the Cabinet Mission, whose plan was eventually accepted by the
Congress. However, Jinnah and the Muslim League, persisting in their Pakistan
demand, announced Direct Action Day programme that ignited communal riots in
East Bengal. Gandhi began his tour in the riot-hit Naokali. Rajaji’s compromise
formula and Wavell plan and the Simla conference convened to consider the latter’s
plan did not help to resolve the deadlock.
▪ In the meantime, Royal Indian Navy revolted, prompting the British to quicken the
process of Independence. Mountbatten was appointed governor general to oversee
independence and the partition of the subcontinent into India and Pakistan.

Individual Satyagraha

▪ Unlike in the past, where Gandhi’s campaign had assumed a mass character,
Gandhi decided on the strategy of individual Satyagraha so that the war against
fascism was not hampered. The satyagrahis were handpicked by Gandhi and their

Page 1
demand was restricted to asserting their freedom of speech to preach against
participation in the war. The chosen satyagrahi was to inform the District
Magistrate of the date, time and place of the protest.
▪ On reaching there at the appointed time, and publicly declare the following: ‘It is
wrong to help the British War effort with men or money. The only worthy effort is
to resist all war efforts with non-violent resistance’ and offer arrest.
▪ The programme began on October 17, 1940 with Vinobha Bhave offering
Satyagraha near his Paunar ashram in Maharashtra. Gandhi suspended the
Satyagraha in December 1941. It was revived with some changes and groups offered
satyagrahas from January 1941 and was eventually withdrawn in August 1941.

August Offer

Individual Satyagraha was the Congress response to the August offer by the Viceroy,
Lord Linlithgow. On August 8, 1940, Linlithgow offered the following: Dominion status
at some unspecified future; expansion of the Viceroy’s Council (or the Executive
Council) to accommodate more Indians in it; setting up a War Advisory Council with
Indians in it; recognition of the rights of the minority; and a promise to recognize the
Indian peoples’ right to draft a constitution at some future date after the war.

Removal of Bose from Congress

▪ The August offer came too late for the Congress to even negotiate a settlement. The
Congress, at this time, was losing its sheen. Its membership had fallen from 4.5
million in 1938–39 to 1.4 million in 1940-41. Subhas Chandra Bose was isolated
within the Congress, as most leaders in the organisation’s top refused cooperation
with him.
▪ Bose resigned and the AICC session at Calcutta elected Rajendra Prasad as
president. Bose founded the Forward Bloc to function within the Congress and was
eventually removed from all positions in the organization in August 1939.

Lahore Resolution

▪ The arrogance displayed by the colonial government and its refusal to find a
meeting point between the promise of dominion status at some future date and the

Page 2
Congress demand for the promise of independence after cessation of the war as a
pre-condition to support war efforts was drawn from another development.
▪ That was the demand for a separate nation for Muslims. Though the genesis of a
separate unit or units consisting of Muslim majority regions in the Eastern and
North-Western India was in the making since the 1930s, the resolution on March
23, 1940, at Lahore was distinct.
▪ There is ample evidence that the Muslim League and its associates were given the
necessary encouragement to go for such a demand by the colonial administrators.
The resolution, then, gave the colonial rulers a certain sense of courage to refuse
negotiating with the Indian National Congress even while they sought cooperation
in the war efforts.
▪ In many ways the Congress at the time was weaker in the organizational sense.
Moreover, its leaders were committed to the idea that the British war efforts called
for support given the character of the Axis powers – Germany, Italy and Japan –
being fascist and thus a danger for democracy. Bose was the only leader who sought
non-cooperation with the allied forces and active cooperation with the Axis powers.
▪ All these were the important markers of 1940. Things however changed soon with
the Japanese advance in Southeast Asia and the collapse of the British army. It led
to a sense of urgency among the colonial rulers to ensure cooperation for the war
efforts in India even while not committing to freedom. Winston Churchill, now
heading the war cabinet, dispatched Sir Stafford Cripps to talk with the Congress.

Cripps Mission
Japan Storm South-East Asia
▪ The year 1941 was bad for the allied forces. France, Poland, Belgium, Norway and
Holland had fallen to Germany and Great Britain was facing destruction as well. Of
far more significance to India was Japan’s march into South-east Asia. This was
happening alongside the attack on Pearl Harbour, where Japanese war-planes
bombed the American port on December 7, 1941.
▪ US President F.D. Roosevelt and Chinese President Chiang Kai-Sheik were
concerned with halting Japan on its march.
▪ India, thus, came on their radar and the two put pressure on British Prime
Minister, Churchill to ensure cooperation for the war from the Indian people. By
Page 3
the end of 1941, the Japanese forces had stormed through the Philippines, Indo
China, Indonesia, Malaysia and Burma and were waiting to knock at India’s doors
in the North-East.
▪ The way the South East Asian region fell raised concerns to Britain and the Indian
National Congress. The British forces ran without offering any resistance. The
Indian soldiers of the British Indian Army were left to the mercy of the Japanese
forces. It was from among them that what would later on to become the Indian
National Army (INA) would be raised.
▪ Churchill was worried that Calcutta and Madras might fall in Japanese hands.
Similar thoughts ran in the minds of the leaders of the Congress too and they too
were desperate to seek an honourable way out to offer cooperation in the war effort.
▪ It was in this situation that the Congress Working Committee, in December 1941,
passed a resolution offering cooperation with the war effort on condition that
Britain promised independence to India after the war and transfer power to
Indians in a substantial sense immediately.

Arrival of Cripps

A delegation headed by Sir Stafford Cripps reached India in March 1942. That Cripps, a
Labour party representative in the War cabinet under Churchill, was chosen to head
the delegation lent credibility to the mission. Before setting out to India, he announced
that British policy in India aimed at ‘the earliest possible realisation of self-government
in India’. But the draft declaration he presented before he began negotiations fell far
short of independence.

Cripps Proposals

▪ Cripps promised Dominion Status and a constitution-making body after the war.
The constitution making body was to be partly elected by the provincial assemblies
and nominated members from the Princely states. The draft also spelt out the
prospect of Pakistan.
▪ It said that any province that was not prepared to accept the new constitution
would have the right to enter into a separate agreement with Britain regarding its

Page 4
future status. The draft did not contain anything new. Nehru recalled later: ‘When I
read these proposals for the first time I was profoundly depressed.’

Rejection of Cripps’ Proposals

The offer of Dominion Status was too little. The Congress also rejected the idea of
nominated members to the constitution-making body and sought elections in the
Princely States as in the Provinces. Above all these was the possibility of partition. The
negotiations were bound to breakdown and it did.

Options for Congress in the wake of Pearl Harbour Attack

▪ Churchill’s attitude towards the Indian National Movement for independence in


general and Gandhi in particular was one of contempt even earlier. He did not
change even when Britain needed cooperation in the war efforts so desperately. But
he came under pressure from the US and China.
▪ The Indian National Congress, meanwhile, was pushed against the wall. This
happened in two ways: the colonial government’s adamant stand against any
assurance of independence on the one hand and Subhas Bose’s campaign to join
hands with the Axis powers in the fight for independence. Bose had addressed the
people of India on the Azad Hind Radio broadcast from Germany in March 1942.
This was the context in which Gandhi thought of the Quit India movement.

Quit India Movement

Sometime in May 1942 Gandhi took it upon himself to steer the Indian National
Congress into action. Gandhi’s decision to launch a mass struggle this time, however,
met with reservation from C. Rajagopalachari as much as from Nehru. Conditions were
ripe for an agitation. Prices of commodities had shot up many-fold and there was
shortage of food grains too.

Congress Meet at Wardha

It was in this context that the Working Committee of the Indian National Congress met
at Wardha on July 14, 1942. The meeting resolved to launch a mass civil disobedience
movement. C. Rajagopalachari and Bhulabhai Desai who had reservations against

Page 5
launching a movement at that time resigned from the Congress Working Committee.
Nehru, despite being among those who did not want a movement then bound himself
with the majority’s decision in the Working Committee.

'Do or Die'

The futility that marked the Cripps mission had turned both Gandhi and Nehru sour
with the British than any time in the past. Gandhi expressed this in a press interview on
May 16, 1942 where he said: ‘Leave India to God. If that is too much, then leave her to
anarchy. This ordered disciplined anarchy should go and if there is complete
lawlessness, I would risk it.’ The Mahatma called upon the people to ‘Do or Die’ and
called the movement he launched from there as a ‘fight to the finish.

Quit India

▪ The colonial government did not wait. All the leaders of the Indian National
Congress, including Gandhi, were arrested early in the morning on August 9, 1942.
The Indian people too did not wait. The immediate response to the pre-dawn
arrests was hartals in almost all the towns where the people clashed, often
violently, with the police. Industrial workers across India went on strike.
▪ The Tata Steel Plant in Jamshedpur closed down by the striking workers for 13 days
beginning August 20. The textile workers in Ahmedabad struck work for more than
three months. Industrial towns witnessed strikes for varied periods across India.

Brutal Repression

▪ The colonial government responded with brutal repression and police resorted to
firing in many places. The army was called in to suppress the protest. The intensity
of the movement and the repression can be made out from the fact that as many as
57 battalions were called in as a whole. Aircrafts were used to strafe protesters.
▪ The momentum and its intensity was such that Linlithgow, wrote to Churchill,
describing the protests as ‘by far the most serious rebellion since 1857, the gravity
and extent of which we have so far concealed from the world for reasons of military
security.’
▪ Though this phase of the protest, predominantly urban, involving the industrial
workers and the students was put down by use of brutal force, the upsurge did not
Page 6
end. It spread in its second phase into the villages. A sixty-point increase in prices
of food-grains recorded between April and August 1942 had laid the seeds of
resentment.
▪ In addition, those leaders of the Congress, particularly the Socialists within, who
had managed to escape arrest on August 9 fanned into the countryside where they
organised the youth into guerrilla actions.

Outbreak of Violence
▪ Beginning late September 1942, the movement took the shape of attacks and
destruction of communication facilities such as telegraph lines, railway stations
and tracks and setting fire to government offices. This spread across the country
and was most intense in Eastern United Provinces, Bihar, Maharashtra and in
Bengal. The rebels even set up ‘national governments’ in pockets they liberated
from the colonial administration.
▪ An instance of this was the ‘Tamluk Jatiya Sarkar’ in the Midnapore district in
Bengal that lasted until September 1944. There was a parallel government in
Satara. Socialists like Jayaprakash Narayan, Achyut Patwardhan, Asaf Ali, Yusuf
Mehraly and Ram Manohar Lohia provided leadership. Gandhi’s 21 day fast in jail,
beginning February 10, 1943, marked a turning point and gave the movement (and
even the violence in a limited sense) a great push.

Spread and Intensity of the Movement

▪ The spread of the movement and its intensity can be gauged from the extent of
force that the colonial administration used to put it down. By the end of 1943, the
number of persons arrested across India stood at 91, 836.
▪ The police shot dead 1060 persons during the same period. 208 police outposts,
332 railway stations and 945 post offices were destroyed or damaged very badly. At
least 205 policemen defected and joined the rebels. R.H. Niblett, who served as
District Collector of Azamgarh in eastern United Province, removed from service
for being too mild with the rebels, recorded in his diary that the British unleashed
‘white terror’ using an ‘incendiary police to set fire to villages for several miles’ and

Page 7
that ‘reprisals (becoming) the rule of the day.’ Collective fines were imposed on all
the people in a village where public property was destroyed.

Clandestine Radio

▪ Yet another prominent feature of the Quit India movement was the use of Radio by
the rebels. The press being censored, the rebels set up a clandestine radio broadcast
system from Bombay. The transmitter was shifted from one place to another in and
around the city. Usha Mehta was the force behind the clandestine radio operations
and its broadcast was heard as far away as Madras.
▪ The Quit India movement was the most powerful onslaught against the colonial
state hitherto. The movement included the Congress, the Socialists, and the
Forward Bloc. The movement witnessed unprecedented unity of the people and
sent a message that the colonial rulers could not ignore.

Release of Gandhi

Gandhi’s release from prison, on health grounds, on May 6, 1944 led to the revival of
the Constructive Programme. Congress committees began activities in its garb and the
ban on the Congress imposed in the wake of the Quit India movement was thus
overcome. The colonial state, meanwhile, put forward a plan for negotiation. Lord
Archibald Wavell, who had replaced Linlithgow as Viceroy in October 1943, had begun
to work towards another round of negotiation. The message was clear: The British had
no option but to negotiate!

Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose and the INA:

▪ A considerably large contingent of the Indian Army was posted on the South East
Asian countries that were part of the British Empire. They were in Malaya, Burma
and elsewhere. The forces, however, could not stand up to the Japanese army. The
command of the British Indian Army in the South-East Asian front simply
retreated leaving the ranks behind as Prisoners of War (POWs).
▪ Mohan Singh, an officer of the British Indian Army in Malaya, approached the
Japanese for help and they found in this an opportunity. Japan’s interests lay in
colonizing China and not much India. The Indian POWs with the Japanese were
left under Mohan Singh’s command. The fall of Singapore to the Japanese forces
Page 8
added to the strength of the POWs and Mohan Singh now had 45,000 POWs under
his command.
▪ Of these, Mohan Singh had drafted about 40,000 men in the Indian National Army
by the end of 1942. Indians in the region saw the INA as saviours against Japanese
expansionism as much as the commander and other officers held out that the army
would march into India but only on invitation from the Indian National Congress.
▪ On July 2, 1943, Subhas Chandra Bose, reached Singapore. From there he went to
Tokyo and after a meeting with Prime Minister Tojo, the Japanese leader declared
that his country did not desire territorial expansion into India. Bose returned to
Singapore and set up the Provisional Government of Free India on October 21,
1943.
▪ This Provisional Government declared war against Britain and the other allied
nations. The Axis powers recognised Bose’s Provisional Government as its ally.

Subash and INA

Bose enlisted civilians too into the INA and one of the regiments was made up of
women. The Rani of Jhansi regiment of the INA was commanded by a medical doctor
and daughter of freedom fighter Ammu Swaminathan from Madras, Dr Lakshmi.

On July 6, 1944, Subhas Bose addressed a message to Gandhi over the Azad Hind
Radio from Rangoon. Calling him the ‘Father of the Nation’, Bose appealed to Gandhi
for his blessing in what he described as ‘India’s last war of independence.’

INA with Axis Powers in War

A battalion of the INA commanded by Shah Nawaz accompanied the Japanese army, in
its march on Imphal. This was in late 1944 and the Axis powers, including the Japanese
forces, had fallen into bad times all over. The Imphal campaign did not succeed and the
Japanese retreated before the final surrender to the British command in mid-1945.
Shah Nawaz and his soldiers of the INA were taken prisoners and charged with treason.

INA Trial

• The INA trials were held at the Red Fort in New Delhi. The Indian National
Congress fielded its best lawyers in defence of the INA soldiers. Nehru, who had

Page 9
given up his legal practice as early as in 1920 responding to Gandhi’s call for
non-cooperation, wore his black gown to appear in defence. Even though the
INA did not achieve much militarily, the trials made a huge impact in inspiring
the masses.
• The colonial government’s arrogance once again set the stage for another mass
mobilisation. The Indian National Congress, after the debacle at the Simla
Conference (June 25 and July 14, 1945) plunged into reaching out to the masses
by way of public meetings across the country.
• The INA figured more prominently as an issue in all these meetings than even
the Congress’s pitch for votes in the elections (under the 1935 Act) that were
expected soon.
• It was in this context that the colonial rulers sent up three prominent officers of
the INA – Shah Nawaz Khan, P.K. Sehgal and G.S. Dhillon – to trial. The press
in India reported the trials with all empathy and editorials sought the soldiers
freed immediately. The INA week was marked by processions, hartals and even
general strikes across the nation demanding release of the soldiers.
• The choice of the three men to be sent up for trial ended up rallying all political
opinion behind the campaign. The Muslim League, the Shiromani Akali Dal and
the Hindu Maha Sabha, all those who had stayed clear of the Quit India
campaign, joined the protests and raised funds for their defence.
• Although the trial court found Sehgal, Dhillon and Shah Nawaz Khan guilty of
treason, the commander in chief remitted the sentences and set them free on
January 6, 1946.
• The INA trials, indeed, set the stage for yet another important stage in the
history of the Indian National Movement in February 1946. The ratings of the
Royal Indian Navy (RIN) raised the banner of revolt.

The Royal Indian Navy Revolt

▪ The economic impact of the war was manifest in rising prices, shortage of food
grains and closure of war time industries causing retrenchment and employment.
This merged with the anti-British sentiments evident in the mass scale of the
protests revolving around the INA trials.

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▪ B.C. Dutt, a rating (the designation for the Indians employed in the various war-
ships and elsewhere in the Royal Indian Navy) in the HMIS Talwar was arrested
for scribbling ‘Quit India’ on the panel of the ship. This provoked a strike by the
1,100 ratings on the ship. The ratings resented the racist behaviour of the English
commanders, the poor quality of the food and abuses that were the norm.
▪ Dutt’s arrest served as the trigger for the revolt on February 18, 1946. The day after,
the revolt was joined by the ratings in the Fort Barracks and the Castle and a large
number of them went into the Bombay cities in commandeered trucks waving
Congress flags and shouting anti-British slogans.
▪ Soon, the workers in the textile mills of Bombay joined the struggle. The trade
unions in Bombay and Calcutta called for a sympathy strike and the two cities
turned into war zones. Barricades were erected all over and pitched battles fought.
Shopkeepers downed shutters and hartals became the order of the day.
▪ Trains were stopped in the two cities with people sitting on the tracks. On news of
the Bombay revolt reaching Karachi, ratings in the HMIS Hindustan and other
naval establishments in Karachi went on a lightning strike on February 19.
▪ The strike wave spread to almost all the naval establishments across India and at
least 20,000 ratings from 78 ships and 20 shore establishments ended up revolting
in the days after February 18, 1946. There were strikes, expressing support to the
ratings in the Royal Indian Air Force stationed in Bombay, Poona, Calcutta, Jessore
and Ambala units.
▪ The sepoys in the army cantonment station at Jabalpur too went on strike. The
ratings, in many places, hoisted the Congress, the Communist, and the Muslim
League flags together on the ship masts during the revolt.
▪ The colonial government’s response was brutal repression. It was, indeed, a revolt
without a leadership; nor did the ratings move in an organised direction. While the
trade unions came out in solidarity with the ratings in no time and the strikes in
Bombay and Calcutta and Madras were strong expressions against British rule in
India, these did not last for long and the ratings were forced to surrender soon.
▪ Sardar Vallabhai Patel, then in Bombay, took the initiative to bring the revolt to an
end. The RIN mutiny, however, was indeed a glorious chapter in the Indian

Page 11
National Movement and perhaps the last act of rebellion in the long story of such
acts of valour in the cause of independence.

Rajaji Proposals and the Wavell Plan


Demand for a Separate Nation

Meanwhile, the communal challenge persisted and the Muslim League pressed with its
demand for a separate nation. The Lahore resolution of the Muslim League in March
1940 had altered the discourse from the Muslims being a ‘minority’ to the Muslims
constituting a ‘nation’. Mohammed Ali Jinnah was asserting this right as the sole
spokesperson of the community.

Rajaji’s Proposals

In April 1944, when the Congress leaders were in jail, C. Rajagopalachari put out a
proposal to resolve the issue. It contained the following:

▪ A post-war commission to be formed to demarcate the contiguous districts where


the Muslims were in absolute majority and a plebiscite of the adult population
there to ascertain whether they would prefer Pakistan;
▪ In case of a partition there would be a mutual agreement to run certain essential
services, like defence or communication;
▪ The border districts could choose to join either of the two sovereign states;
▪ The implementation of the scheme would wait till after full transfer of power. After
his release from prison, Gandhi, in July 1944, proposed talks with Jinnah based on
what came to be the ‘Rajaji formula’. The talks did not go anywhere.

Wavell Plan

▪ In June 1945 Lord Wavell moved to negotiate and called for the Simla conference.
The rest of the Congress leaders, including Jawaharlal Nehru, Sardar Patel and the
Congress president, Maulana Abul Kalam Azad were released from jail for this.
Wavell had set out on this project in March 1945 and sailed to London. There he
convinced Churchill of the imperative for a Congress–Muslim League coalition
government as a way to deal with the post-war political crisis.
Page 12
▪ The Viceroy’s proposal before the leaders of all political formations and most
prominently the Congress and the Muslim League was setting up of an Executive
Council, exclusively with Indians along with himself and the commander in-chief;
equal number of representatives in the council for the caste Hindus and the
Muslims and separate representation for the Scheduled Castes; and start of
discussions for a new constitution.The proposal displeased everyone.
▪ The Simla Conference held between June 25 and July 14, 1945 ended without
resolution. The talks broke down on the right of the Indian National Congress and
the Muslim League to nominate members to the Viceroy’s Council.
▪ The Muslim League insisted on its exclusive right to nominate Muslim members to
the Council. Its demand was that the Congress nominees shall only be caste Hindus
and that the Indian National Congress should not nominate a Muslim or a member
from the Scheduled Caste! This was seen as a means to further the divide on
communal lines and deny the Congress the status of representing the Indian
people.
▪ Lord Wavell found a council without Muslim League representation as unworkable
and thus abandoned the Simla talks. The years between the Lahore resolution of
1940 and the Simla Conference in 1945 marked the consolidation of a Muslim
national identity and the emergence of Jinnah as its sole spokesperson.
▪ It was at a convention of Muslim League Legislators in Delhi in April 1946, that
Pakistan was defined as a ‘sovereign independent state’. For the first time the
League also declared its composition in geographical terms as ‘the region consisting
of the Muslim majority provinces of Bengal and Assam in the Northeast and the
Punjab, North-West Frontier Province, Sind and Baluchistan in the Northwest. The
Congress president Maulana Abul Kalam Azad rejected this idea and held that the
Congress stood for a united India with complete independence.
▪ All these were developments after the Shimla conference of June–July 1945 and
after Churchill was voted out and replaced by a Labour Party government headed
by Clement Attlee. Times had changed in a substantial sense. British Prime
Minister, Attlee had declared the certainty of independence to India with only the
terms left to be decided.

Page 13
Mountbatten Plan
Cabinet Mission
▪ The changed global scenario in the post– World War II context led to the setting
up of the Cabinet Mission. Headed by Secretary of State for India, Sir Stafford
Cripps, and A.V. Alexander, the mission landed in India in March 1946 and
began work on its brief to set up a national government before the final transfer
of power.
▪ The mission proposed to constitute a ‘representative’ body by way of elections
across the provinces and the princely states and entrust this body with the task
of making a constitution for free India. The idea of partition did not figure at this
stage.
▪ Instead, the mission’s proposal was for a loose-knit confederation in which the
Muslim League could dominate the administration in the North-East and North
West provinces while the Congress would administer rest of the provinces.
▪ Jinnah sounded out his acceptance of the idea on June 6, 1946. The Congress,
meanwhile, perceived the Cabinet Mission’s plan as a clear sanction for the
setting up of a Constituent Assembly.
▪ Nehru conveyed through his speech at the AICC, on July 7, 1946, that the Indian
National Congress accepted the proposal. Subsequently, Jinnah on July 29,
1946, reacted to this and announced that the League stood opposed to the plan.
▪ After elaborate consultations, the viceroy issued invitations on 15 June 1946 to
the 14 men to join the interim government. The invitees were: Jawaharlal Nehru,
Vallabhbhai Patel, Rajendra Prasad, C. Rajagopalachari and Hari Krishna
Mahtab (on behalf of the INC); Mohammed Ali Jinnah, Liaquat Ali Khan,
Mohammed Ismail Khan, Khwaja Sir Nazimuddin and Abdul Rab Nishtar (from
the Muslim League) and Sardar Baldev Singh (on behalf of the Sikh community),
Sir N.P. Engineer (to represent the Parsis), Jagjivan Ram (representing the
scheduled castes) and John Mathai (as representative of the Indian Christians).
▪ Meanwhile, the Congress proposed Zakir Hussain from its quota of five
nominees to the interim council. The Muslim League objected to this and, on 29

Page 14
July 1946, Jinnah announced that the League would not participate in the
process to form the Constituent Assembly. This invited a sharp reaction from the
British administration.
▪ On 12 August 1946, the viceroy announced that he was inviting Nehru (Congress
president) to form the provisional government. After consultation with Nehru,
12 members of the National Interim Government were announced on 25 August
1946.
▪ Apart from Nehru, the other members were: Vallabhbhai Patel, Rajendra Prasad,
Asaf Ali, C. Rajagopalachari, Sarat Chandra Bose, John Mathai, Sardar Baldev
Singh, Sir Shafaat Ahmed Khan, Jagjivan Ram, Syed Ali Zaheer and Cooverji
Hormusji Bhabha. It was stated that two more Muslims will be nominated in due
course.
▪ Five Hindus, three Muslims and one representative each from the scheduled
castes, Indian Christians, Sikhs and Parsis formed the basis of this list. Later
Hare Krishna Mahtab was replaced by Sarat Chandra Bose. The Parsi nominee,
N.P. Engineer was replaced by Cooverji Hormusji Bhabha. In place of the
League’s nominees, the Congress put in the names of three of its own men: Asaf
Ali, Shafaat Ahmed Khan and Syed Ali Zaheer.
▪ The League, meanwhile, gave a call for ‘Direct Action’ on 16 August 1946. There
was bloodshed in Calcutta and several other places, including in Delhi. This was
when Gandhi set out on his own course to arrive in Calcutta and decided to stay
on at a deserted house in Beliaghatta, a locality that was worst affected,
accompanied only by a handful of followers.
▪ Muslims who were hounded out of their homes in Delhi were held in transit
camps (in Purana Quila and other places). It was only after Gandhi arrived there
(on 9 September 1946) and conveyed that the Muslims were Indian nationals
and hence must be protected by the Indian state (Nehru by then was the head of
the interim government) that the Delhi authorities began organising rations and
building latrines.
▪ It was in this context that the Congress agreed to the constitution of the interim
government. Nehru assumed office on 2 September 1946. Yet another round of
communal violence broke out across the country and more prominently in

Page 15
Bombay and Ahmedabad. Lord Wavell set out on another round of discussion
and after sounding out Nehru, he proposed, once again, to Jinnah that the
League participate in the interim government.
▪ The Muslim League accepted the proposal but Jinnah refused to join the cabinet.
The interim cabinet was reconstituted on October 26, 1946. Those who joined on
behalf of the League were Liaquat Ali Khan, I.I. Chundrigar, A. R. Nishtar,
Ghazanfar Ali Khan and Jogendra Nath Mandal.
▪ But there was no let-up in the animosity between the Congress and the League
and this was reflected in the functioning (rather non-functioning) of the interim
council of ministers. The League, meanwhile, was determined against
cooperating in the making of the constituent assembly. At another level, the
nation was in the grip of communal violence of unprecedented magnitude.
Naokhali in East Bengal was ravaged by communal violence.
▪ The members of the League who were part of the interim government refused to
participate in the ‘informal’ consultations that Nehru held before the formal
meeting of the cabinet in the viceroy’s presence. The Muslim League, it seemed,
were determined to wreck the interim government from within.
▪ While the Congress scored impressive victories in the July–August 1946
elections and secured 199 from out of the 210 general seats, the Muslim League
did equally well in seats reserved for the Muslims. The League’s tally was 76. All
but one of the 76 seats came from the Muslim-reserved constituencies. The
League, however, decided against participating in the Constituent Assembly.
Hence, only 207 members attended the first session of the Constituent Assembly
on 9 December 1946.
▪ Meanwhile the functioning of the interim government was far from smooth with
animosity between the Congress and the League growing by the day. The
‘informal’ meetings of the cabinet intended to settle differences before any
proposal was taken to the formal meeting that the Viceroy presided over, could
not be held from the very beginning.
▪ The proverbial last straw was the budget proposals presented by Liaquat Ali
Khan in March 1947. The finance minister proposed a variety of taxes on
industry and trade and proposed a commission to go into the affairs of about 150

Page 16
big business houses and inquire into the allegations of tax evasion against them.
Khan called this a ‘socialistic budget’. This, indeed, was a calculated bid to hit the
Indian industrialists who had, by this time, emerged as the most powerful
supporters of the Congress.
▪ The intention was clear: to hasten the partition and prove that there was no way
that the League and the Congress could work together towards independence.
British Prime Minister Atlee’s statement in Parliament on February 20, 1947,
that the British were firm on their intention to leave India by June 1948 set the
pace for another stage. Lord Wavell was replaced as Viceroy by Lord
Mountbatten on March 22, 1947.

Mountbatten Plan

▪ Mountbatten came up with a definite plan for partition. It involved splitting up


Punjab into West and East (where the west would go to Pakistan) and similar
division of Bengal wherein the Western parts will remain in India and the East
become Pakistan.
▪ The Congress Working Committee, on 1 May 1947, conveyed its acceptance of
the idea of partition to Mountbatten. The viceroy left for London soon after and
on his return disclosed the blueprint for partition and, more importantly, the
desire to advance the date of British withdrawal to 15 August 1947.
▪ There were only 11 weeks left between then and the eventual day of
independence. The AICC met on 15 June 1947. It was here that the resolution,
moved by Govind Ballabh Pant, accepting partition, was approved. It required
the persuasive powers of Nehru and Patel as well as the moral authority of
Gandhi to get the majority in the AICC in favour of the resolution.

The period between March 1946 and 15 August 1947 saw many tumultuous events such
as

1. the setting up of the Cabinet Mission,


2. the formation of the interim government,
3. the birth of the Constituent Assembly and

Page 17
4. the widening of rift between the Congress and the Muslim League leading to the
partition and finally the dawn of independence.

Questions :

1. Write a note on Lahore Resolution


2. Write an essay on Quit India Movement
3. Discuss about the Rajaji Proposals and the Wavell plan.

Page 18
COMMUNALISM LED TO PARTITION

Introduction:

▪ Before the establishment of British Raj, Mughals and their agents had ruled large
parts of the country. Large sections of the Muslims therefore enjoyed the
advantages of being the co-religionists of the ruling class many of whom were
sovereigns, landlords, the generals and officials. The official and court language
was Persian.
▪ When the British gradually replaced them they introduced a new system of
administration. By the mid-nineteenth century English education predominated.
The 1857 rebellion was the last gasp of the earlier ruling class. Following the brutal
suppression of the revolt, the Muslims lost everything, their land, their job and
other opportunities and were reduced to the state of penury. Unable to reconcile to
the condition to which they were reduced, the Muslims retreated into a shell. And
for the first few generations after 1857 they hated everything British.
▪ Besides they resented competing with the Hindus who had taken recourse to the
new avenues opened by colonialism. With the emergence of Indian nationalism
especially among the educated Hindu upper castes, the British saw in the Muslim
middle class a force to keep the Congress in check. They cleverly exploited the
situation for the promotion of their own interests. The competing three strands of
nationalism namely Indian nationalism, Hindu nationalism, and Muslim
nationalism are dealt with in this lesson.

Origin and Growth of Communalism in British India


1. Hindu Revivalism
• Some of the early nationalists believed that nationalism could be built only on a
Hindu foundation. As pointed out by Sarvepalli Gopal, Hindu, revivalism found
its voice in politics through the Arya Samaj, founded in 1875, with its assertion of
superior qualities of Hinduism. The organization of cow protection leagues in

Page 1
large parts of North India in the late nineteenth century gave a flip to Hindu
communalism.
• The effort of organizations such as Arya Samaj was strengthened by the
Theosophical movement led by Annie Besant from 1891. Besant identified
herself with Hindu nationalists and expressed her ideas as follows: ‘The Indian
work is first of all the revival, strengthening and uplifting of ancient religions.
This has brought with it a new self respect, a pride in the past, a belief in the
future and as an inevitable result, a great wave of patriotic life, the beginning of
the rebuilding of a nation.’

2. Rise of Muslims Consciousness


• Islam on the other hand, to quote Sarvepalli Gopal again, was securing its
articulation through the Aligarh movement. The British, by building the Aligarh
college and backing Syed Ahmed Khan, had assisted the birth of a Muslim
national party and Muslim political ideology.
• The Wahabi movement had also created cleavage in Hindu–Muslim relations.
The Wahabis wanted to take Islam to its pristine purity and to end the
superstition which according to them had sapped its vitality. From the Wahabis
to the Khilafatists, grassroots activism played a significant role in the
politicization of Muslims.
• Muslim consciousness developed due to other reasons as well. The Bengal
government’s order in the 1870s to replace Urdu by Hindi, and the Perso-Arabic
script by Nagri script in the courts and offices created apprehension in the minds
of the Muslim professional group.

3. Divide and Rule Policy of British


• The object of the British was to check the development of a composite Indian
identity, and to forest all attempts at consolidation and unification of Indians.
The British imperialism followed the policy of Divide and Rule. Bombay
Governor Elphinstone wrote, ‘Divide at Impera was the old Roman motto and it
should be ours.’

Page 2
• The British government lent legitimacy and prestige to communal ideology and
politics despite the governance challenge that communal riots posed. The
consequence of such sectarian approaches by all parties led to increasing
animosity between Hindus and Muslims in northern India which had its fall out
in other parts of India as well. The last decades of the nineteenth century was
marked by a number of Hindu–Muslim riots. Even in south India, there was a
major riot in Salem in July–August 1882.

4. Cow Slaughter and Communal Riots:


• In July 1893, a dispute arose between Hindus and Muslims in Azamgarh district
in the North-West Provinces. The riots that followed spread over a vast area,
encompassing the United Provinces, Bihar, Gujarat and Bombay, claiming over
a hundred lives. Gaurakshini Sabhas (cow protection leagues) were becoming
more militant and there were reports of forcible interference with the sale or
slaughter of cows.
• The riots over cow-slaughter became frequent after 1893 and 15 major riots of
this type broke out in the Punjab alone between 1883 and 1891. Cow
protectionists in the Punjab, the activities of Gaurakshini Sabhas in the Central
Provinces, the campaigners for the recognition of Devanagiri as official language
in courts and government offices in the United Provinces were also involved in
the Congress organization.

5. Failure of Congress and Government to combat Communalism


• The Indian National Congress, despite its secular and nationalist claims was
unable to prevent the involvement of its members in the activities of Hindu
communal organisations. This was a major factor in the Muslim distrust of the
Congress. Congressmen’s participation in shuddhi and sangathan campaigns of
the Arya Samaj further estranged Hindus and Muslims.
• The British government could have adopted measures to outlaw Cow Protection
Associations or to arrest the rank communalists who were causing distrust
among the people. But the British deliberately dodged the issue, as the

Page 3
identification of the Congressmen with revivalist and communal causes
provoked anti-Congress feelings among Muslims in North India.
• The Secretary of State Hamilton considered the development a happy augury for
he was earlier worried over the growing solidarity among various social and
religious groups in the context of the foundation of the Indian National
Congress.

6. Moves of the Congress


• Though many congress men had involvement in Hindu organisations like Arya
Samaj, the Congress leadership was secular. When there was an attempt by
some Congressmen to pass a resolution in the third session of the Indian
National Congress, making cow killing a penal offence, the Congress leadership
refused to entertain it.
• The Congress subsequently resolved that if any resolution affecting a particular
class or community was objected to by the delegates representing that
community, even though they were in minority, it would not be considered by
the Congress.

7. Role of Syed Ahmed Khan


• Sir Syed Ahmed Khan, the founder of Aligarh movement was initially supportive
of the Congress. Soon he was converted to the thinking that in a country
governed by Hindus, Muslims would be helpless, as they would be in a minority.
• However, there were Muslim leaders like Badruddin Tyabji, Rahmatullah Sayani
in Mumbai, Nawab Syed Mohammed Bahadur in Chennai and A. Rasul in
Bengal who supported the Congress. But the majority of Muslims in north India
toed the line of Syed Ahmed, and preferred to support the British.
• The introduction of representative institutions and of open competition to
government posts gave rise to apprehensions amongst Muslims and prompted
Syed and his followers to work for close collaboration with the Government. By
collaborating with the Government Syed Ahmed Khan hoped to secure for his
community a bigger share than otherwise would be due according to the
principles of number or merit.

Page 4
• The foundation of the Indian National Congress in 1885 was an attempt to
narrow the Hindu-Muslim divide and place the genuine grievances of all the
communities in the country before the British. But Sir Syed Ahmed Khan and
other Muslim leaders like Syed Ameer Ali, the first Indian to find a place in
London Privy Council, projected the Congress as a representative body of only
the Hindus. Of the seventy-two delegates attending the first session of the
Congress only two were Muslims. Muslim leaders opposed the Congress tooth
and nail on the plea that Muslims’ participation in it would create an
unfavourable reaction among the rulers against their community.

8. Religion in Local Body Elections


• Democratic politics had the unintended effect of fostering communal
tendencies. Local administrative bodies in the 1880s provided the scope for
pursuing communal politics. Municipal councillors acquired vast powers of
patronage which were used to build-up one’s political base. Hindus wresting the
control of municipal boards from the Muslims and vice versa led to
communalisation of local politics.
• Lal Chand, the principal spokesperson of the Punjab Hindu Sabha and later the
leader of Arya Samaj, highlighted the extent to which some Municipalities were
organised on communal lines: ‘The members of the Committee arrange
themselves in two rows, around the presidential chair. On the left are seated the
representatives of the banner of Islam and on the right the descendants of old
Rishis of Aryavarta.
• By this arrangement the members are constantly reminded that they are not
simply Municipal Councillors, but they are as Muhammedans versus Hindus
and vice-versa....’.

9. Week-kneed Policy of the Congress


• At the dawn of twentieth century, during the Swadeshi Movement in Bengal
(1905–06), Muslim supporters of the Swadeshi Movement were condemned as
“Congress touts.” The silence of the Congress and its refusal to deal with such
elements frontally not only provided stimulus to communal politics but also

Page 5
demoralized and discouraged the nationalist Muslims. Hindu communalism
had also gathered strength round this time. It derived its sustenance from the
view that the history of Muslim rule in India was characterised by degradation
of the Hindus through forcible conversion, imposition of jizya, strict application
of the shariat and the destruction of the places of worship. History textbooks
and literature based on the prejudiced views of British writers added fuel to
such views.
• The situation took a turn for the worst in the first decade of the twentieth
century when political radicalism went hand in hand with religious
conservatism. Tilak, Aurobindo Gosh and Lala Lajpat Rai aroused anti-colonial
consciousness by using religious symbols, festivals and platforms.
• The most aggravating factor was Tilak’s effort to mobilise Hindus through the
Ganapati festival. The Punjab Hindu Sabha founded in 1909 laid the foundation
for Hindu communal ideology and politics. Lal Chand spared no efforts to
condemn the Indian National Congress of pursuing a policy of appeasement
towards Muslims.

Formation of All India Muslim League

▪ On 1 October 1906, a 35-member delegation of the Muslim nobles, aristocrats, legal


professionals and other elite sections of the community mostly associated with
Aligarh movement gathered at Simla under the leadership of Aga Khan to present
an address to Lord Minto, the viceroy.
▪ They demanded proportionate representation of Muslims in government jobs,
appointment of Muslim judges in High Courts and members in Viceroy’s council,
etc. Though the Simla deputation failed to obtain any positive commitment from
the Viceroy, it worked as a catalyst for the foundation of the All India Muslim
League (AIML) to safeguard the interests of the Muslims in 1907.
▪ A group of big zamindars, erstwhile Nawabs and ex-bureaucrats became active
members of this movement. The League supported the partition of Bengal,
demanded separate electorates for Muslims, and pressed for safeguards for
Muslims in Government Service.

Page 6
Objectives of All India Muslim League:

▪ “To promote among the Muslims of India feelings of loyalty to the British
Government, and remove any misconception that may arise as to the instruction
of Government with regard to any of its measures.”
▪ To protect and advance the political rights and interests of Muslims of India, and
to respectfully represent their needs and aspirations to the Government.
▪ To prevent the rise among the Muslims of India of any feeling of hostility
towards other communities without prejudice to the aforementioned objects of
the League
▪ Initially, AIML was an elitist organization of urbanized Muslims. However, the
support of the British Government helped the League to become the sole
representative body of Indian Muslims. Within three years of its formation, the
AIML successfully achieved the status of separate electorates for the Muslims. It
granted separate constitutional identity to the Muslims.
▪ The Lucknow Pact (1916) put an official seal on a separate political identity to
Muslims.

Separate Electorates and the Spread of Communalism


• The institution of separate electorate was the principle technique adopted by the
Government of British India for fostering and spreading communalism. The
people were split into separate constituencies so that they voted communally,
thought communally, judged the representatives communally and expressed
their grievances communally.
• That the British did this with ulterior motive was evident from a note sent by
one of the British officers to Lady Minto: ‘I must send your Excellency a line to
say that a very big thing has happened to-day. A work of statesmanship, that
will affect Indian History for many a long year. It is nothing less than pulling of
62 million people from joining the ranks of seditious opposition.
• The announcement of separate electorates and the incorporation of the
principle of “divide and rule” into a formal constitutional arrangement made the
estrangement between Hindus and Muslims total.

Page 7
Emergence of the All India Hindu Mahasabha

• In the wake of the formation of the Muslim League and introduction of the
Government of India Act of 1909, a move to start a Hindu organisation was in
the air. In pursuance of the resolution passed at the fifth Punjab Hindu
Conference at Ambala and the sixth conference at Ferozepur, the first all Indian
Conference of Hindus was convened at Haridwar in 1915.
• The All India Hindu Mahasabha was started there with headquarters at Dehra
Dun. Provincial Hindu Sabhas were started subsequently in UP, with
headquarters at Allahabad and in Bombay and Bihar. While the sabhas in
Bombay and Bihar were not active, there was little response in Madras and
Bengal.
• Predominantly urban in character, the Mahasabha was concentrated in the
larger trading cities of north India, particularly in Allahabad, Kanpur, Benares,
Lucknow and Lahore. In UP, the Mahasabha, to a large extent was the creation
of the educated middle class leaders who were also activists in the Congress.
• The Khilafat movement gave some respite to the separatist politics of the
communalists. As a result, between 1920 and 1922, the Mahasabha ceased to
function. The entry of ulema into politics led Hindus to fear a revived and
aggressive Islam. Even important Muslim leaders like Ali brothers had always
been Khilafatists first and Congressmen second.
• The power of mobilisation on religious grounds demonstrated by the Muslims
during the Khilafat movement motivated the Hindu communalists to imitate
them in mobilizing the Hindu masses. Suddhi movement was not a new
phenomenon but in the post-Khilafat period it assumed new importance.
• In an effort to draw Hindus into the boycott of the visit of Prince of Wales in
1921, Swami Shradhananda tried to revive the Mahasabha by organizing cow-
protection propaganda. The bloody Malabar rebellion of 1921, where Muslim
peasants were pitted against both the British rulers and Hindu landlords, gave
another reason for the renewed campaign of the Hindu Mahasabha.
• Though the outbreak was basically an agrarian revolt, communal passion ran
high in consequence of which Gandhi himself viewed it as a Hindu-Muslim

Page 8
conflict. Gandhi wanted Muslim leaders to tender a public apology for the
happenings in Malabar.

Communalism in United Provinces (UP)


• The suspension of the non-cooperation movement in 1922 and the abolition of
the Caliphate in 1924 left the Muslims in a state of frustration. In the aftermath
of Non-Cooperation movement, the alliance between the Khilafatists and the
Congress crumbled.
• There was a fresh spate of communal violence, as Hindus and Muslims, in the
context of self-governing institutions created under the Act of 1919, began to
stake their political claims and in the process vied with each other to acquire
power and position. Of 968 delegates attending the sixth annual conference of
the Hindu Mahasabha in Varanasi in August 1923, 56.7 % came from the U.P.
• The United Provinces (UP), the Punjab, Delhi and Bihar together contributed
86.8 % of the delegates. Madras, Bombay and Bengal combined sent only 6.6%
of the delegates. 1920s was a trying period for the Congress. This time the
communal tension in the United Province was not only due to the zeal of Hindu
and Muslim religious leaders, but was fuelled by the political rivalries of the
Swarajists and Liberals.
• In Allahabad, Motilal Nehru and Madan Mohan Malaviya confronted each
other. When Nehru’s faction emerged victorious in the municipal elections of
1923, Malaviya’s faction began to exploit religious passions. The District
Magistrate Crosthwaite who conducted the investigation reported: ‘The Malavia
family have deliberately stirred up the Hindus and this has reacted on the
Muslims.’

The Hindu Mahasabha


• In the Punjab communalism as a powerful movement had set in completely. In
1924 Lala Lajpat Rai openly advocated the partition of the Punjab into Hindu
and Muslim Provinces. The Hindu Mahasabha, represented the forces of Hindu

Page 9
revivalism in the political domain, raised the slogan of ‘Akhand Hindustan’
against the Muslim League’s demand of separate electorates for Muslims.
• Ever since its inception, the Mahasabha’s role in the freedom struggle has been
rather controversial. While not supportive of British rule, the Mahasabha did
not offer its full support to the nationalist movement either.
• Since the Indian National Congress had to mobilize the support of all classes
and communities against foreign domination, the leaders of different
communities could not press for principle of secularism firmly for the fear of
losing the support of religious-minded groups.
• The Congress under the leadership of Gandhi held a number of unity
conferences during this period, but to no avail.

Delhi Conference of Muslims and their Proposals

One great outcome of the efforts at unity, however, was an offer by the Conference
of Muslims, which met at Delhi on March 20, 1927 to give up separate electorates if
four proposals were accepted.

1. The separation of Sind from Bombay


2. Reforms for the Frontier and Baluchistan
3. Representation by population in the Punjab and Bengal and
4. Thirty-three per cent seats for the Muslims in the Central Legislature.
• Motilal Nehru and S. Srinivasan persuaded the All India Congress Committee to
accept the Delhi proposals formulated by the Conference of the Muslims. But
communalism had struck such deep roots that the initiative fell through.
• Gandhi commented that the Hindu-Muslim issue had passed out of human
hands. Instead of seizing the opportunity to resolve the tangle, the Congress
chose to drag its feet by appointing committees, one to find out whether it was
financially feasible to separate Sind from Bombay and the other to examine
proportional representation as a means of safeguarding Muslim majorities.
• Jinnah who had taken the initiative to narrow down the breach between the two,
and had been hailed the ambassador of Hindu-Muslim unity by Sarojini, felt let
down as the Hindu Mahasabha members present at the All Parties Convention

Page 10
held in Calcutta in 1928 rejected all amendments and destroyed any possibility
of unity.
• Thereafter, most of the Muslims were convinced that they would get a better deal
from Government rather than from the Congress. In despair Jinnah left the
country, only to return many years later as a rank communalist.
4. Communal Award and its Aftermath
• The British Government was consistent in promoting communalism. Even the
delegates for the second round table conference were chosen on the basis of
their communal bearings. After the failure of the Round Table Conferences, the
British Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald announced the Communal Award
which further vitiated the political climate.
• The R.S.S. founded in 1925 was expanding and its volunteers had shot upto
1,00,000. K.B. Hedgewar, V.D. Savarkar and M.S. Golwalker were attempting to
elaborate on the concept of the Hindu Rashtra and openly advocated that ‘the
non-Hindu people in Hindustan must adopt the Hindu culture and
language...they must cease to be foreigners or may stay in the country wholly
subordinated to the Hindu Nation claiming nothing.' V.D. Savarkar asserted
that ‘We Hindus are a Nation by ourselves’.
• Though the Congress had forbidden its members from joining the Mahasabha
or the R.S.S. as early as 1934, it was only in December 1938 that the Congress
Working Committee declared Mahasabha membership to be a disqualification
for remaining in the Congress.
• The nationalism of the Indian National Congress was personified by Mahatma
Gandhi, who rejected the narrow nationalism exemplified by the Arya Samaj
and the Aligargh movement and strove to evolve a political identity that
transcended the different religions.
• Notwithstanding the state-supported communalism of different hues, the
Indian National Congress remained a dominant political force in India. In the
1937 elections, Congress won in seven of the eleven provinces and formed the
largest party in three others. The Muslim League’s performance was dismal. It
succeeded in winning only 4.8 per cent of the Muslim votes.

Page 11
• The Congress had emerged as a mass secular party. Yet the Government
branded it a Hindu organisation and projected the Muslim League as the real
representative of the Muslims and treated it on a par with the Congress. Seeing
this dismal performance, the Muslim League was convinced that the only choice
left to it was to whip up emotions on communal lines in provinces like Bengal
and Punjab.
• The over confidence of the Congress, given its overwhelming victory in the
elections, made it misjudge Muslim sentiment. Jinnah exploited the emotional
campaign of ‘Islam in danger’ to gain mass Muslim support after the 1936-37
elections – a divisive cause in which the Hindu Mahasabha came to its help
through coalition ministries.

Observation of Day of Deliverance

▪ The Second World War broke out in 1939 and the Viceroy of India Linlithgow
immediately announced that India was also at war. Since the declaration was made
without any consultation with the Congress, it was greatly resented by it. The
Congress Working Committee decided that all Congress ministries in the provinces
would resign. After the resignation of Congress ministries, the provincial governors
suspended the legislatures and took charge of the provincial administration.
▪ The Muslim League celebrated the end of Congress rule as a day of deliverance on
22 December 1939. On that day, the League passed resolutions in various places
against Congress for its alleged atrocities against Muslims.
▪ The demonstration of Nationalist Muslims was dubbed as anti-Islamic and
denigrated. It was in this atmosphere that the League passed its resolution on 26
March 1940 in Lahore demanding a separate nation for Muslims.
▪ Neither Jinnah nor Nawab Zafrullah Khan then had considered creation of
separate state for Muslims practicable. However, on March 23, 1940, the Muslim
League formally adopted the idea by passing a resolution.
▪ The text of the resolution ran as under: “Resolved that it is the concerted view of
this session of the All India Muslim League that no constitutional scheme would be
workable in this country or acceptable to Muslims unless it is designed on the
following basic principles, viz. that geographically contiguous units are demarcated

Page 12
into regions which should be constituted with such territorial readjustments as may
be necessary, that the area in which the Muslims are numerically in majority
should be grouped to constitute Independent State.” The League resolved that the
British government before leaving India should effect the partition of the country
into Indian union and Pakistan.

Direct Action Day

▪ Hindu communalism and Muslim communalism fed on each other throughout the
early 1940s. Muslim League openly boycotted the Quit India movement of 1942. In
the elections held in 1946 to the Constituent Assembly, Muslim League won all 30
seats reserved for Muslims in the Central Legislative Assembly and most of the
reserved provincial seats as well.
▪ The Congress Party was successful in gathering most of the general electorate seats,
but it could no longer effectively insist that it spoke for the entire population of
British India. In 1946 Secretary of State Pethick Lawrence led a three-member
Cabinet Mission to New Delhi with the hope of resolving the Congress–Muslim
League deadlock and, thus, of transferring British power to a single Indian
administration.
▪ Cripps was primarily responsible for drafting the Cabinet Mission Plan. The plan
proposed a three-tier federation for India, integrated by a central government in
Delhi, which would be limited to handling foreign affairs, communications,
defence, and only those finances required to take care of union matters.
▪ The subcontinent was to be divided into three major groups of provinces:
o Group A, to include the Hindu-majority provinces of the Bombay
Presidency, Madras Presidency, the United Provinces, Bihar, Orissa, and
the Central Provinces;
o Group B, to contain the Muslim-majority provinces of the Punjab, Sind,
the North-West Frontier, and Baluchistan; and
o Group C, to include the Muslim-majority Bengal and the Hindu majority
Assam.

Page 13
▪ The group governments were to be autonomous in everything excepting in matters
reserved to the centre. The princely states within each group were to be integrated
later into their neighbouring provinces. Local provincial governments were to have
the choice of opting out of the group in which they found themselves, should a
majority of their people desire to do so.
▪ Jinnah accepted the Cabinet Mission’s proposal, as did the Congress leaders. But
after several weeks of behind-the-scene negotiations, on July 29, 1946, the Muslim
League adopted a resolution rejecting the Cabinet Mission Plan and called upon the
Muslims throughout India to observe a ‘Direct Action Day’ in protest on August 16.
▪ The rioting and killing that took place for four days in Calcutta led to a terrible
violence resulting in thousands of deaths. Gandhi who was until then resisting any
effort to vivisect the country had to accede to the demand of the Muslim League for
creation of Pakistan.
▪ Mountbatten who succeeded Wavell came to India as Viceroy to effect the partition
plan and transfer of power.

Questions :

1. Trace the origin and growth of communalism in British India.


2. Discuss the emergence of the All India Hindu Mahasabha.
3. Write a Short note on ‘Direct Action Day’.

Page 14
EFFECT OF BRITISH RULE ON
SOCIO‐ECONOMIC FACTORS

Reforms in Civil and Judicial Administration

▪ Cornwallis organized company administration securing the services of William


Jones, a judge and an Orientalist. He set up a machinery for the detection and
punishment of crime, thereby ending the dual system of government established by
Clive. The collection of revenue was separated from administration and justice.
▪ He deprived the collectors of their judicial function and confined them to revenue
collection. Civil and criminal courts were thoroughly reorganized. At the top of the
judicial system was the Sadar Diwani Adalat and the Sadar Nizamat Adalat. These
two highest civil and criminal courts of appeal at Calcutta were presided over by the
Governor General and his Council.
▪ Under them were four provincial courts of appeal at Calcutta, Deccan,
Murshidabad and Patna. Each was to function under three European judges, aided
by Indian advisers. Next came the District and City courts, each presided over by a
European judge assisted by Indians. Every district and important city were
provided with a court. At the bottom of the judicial system were courts under
Indian judges, called munsifs.
▪ In civil cases, Muslim law was imposed and followed. In criminal cases, Hindu and
Muslim laws were applied according to the religion of the litigants. The biggest
contribution of Cornwallis was the reform of the civil services. Cornwallis provided
scope for employing capable and honest public servants. He put an end to the old
tradition of the civil service wherein the Company’s servants were given a small
salary but were permitted to trade. Cornwallis appointed people solely on merit but
considered that efficiency required the exclusion of Indians from the Company’s
service.
▪ Every district was divided into thanas (police circles). Each thana was under a
daroga, an Indian officer. Cornwallis’ police system was further improved under
Warren Hastings. The rigid separation of judicial and revenue powers was given

Page 1
up. The Collector began to function as Magistrate as well. Cornwallis, who toned up
the civil and criminal administration, however, did not pay adequate attention to
the education of Company servants.
▪ It was Wellesley who emphasized the need for educating and training them.
Wellesley thought the civilians should have a knowledge of the languages, laws,
customs and manners and history of India, in addition to their liberal education in
England. With this object, the College of Fort William was founded at Calcutta in
1800.
▪ A three-year course of study was provided for the Company’s civil servants. The
college was staffed by European professors and eighty Indian pundits. This became
the Oriental School for Bengal civilians. In 1806 the East India College was
established in England. In Madras, the College of Fort St George was set up by F.W.
Ellis in 1812 on the lines of College of Fort William. It was here that the theory that
the South Indian languages belonged to a separate family of languages independent
of Sanskrit was formulated.

Education
Under Company Rule
▪ The establishment of a Madrasa by a learned maulvi with the support of Warren
Hastings was the beginning of initiatives of British government to promote
education. This Madrasa started with forty stipendiary students. What Warren
Hastings had done for the Muslims; his successor was prepared to do for the
Hindus. Cornwallis established a Sanskrit college (1791) in Benares. The successive
governors in the next twenty years, however, did nothing to follow it up.
▪ The Company held the view that it was not desirable in its own interests to
encourage education in India. In 1813, when the Company Charter was renewed, it
contained a clause intended to force on the Company the initiative for a regular
educational policy. Hastings encouraged the foundation of vernacular schools by
missionaries. He was the patron of the Hindu College, established at Calcutta in
1817, supported by the Indian public for the teaching of English and of Western
science.
▪ The cause of education was further promoted by missionaries like Alexander Duff.
Thanks to Hastings’ liberal outlook, press censorship instituted in 1799 was

Page 2
abolished. It was in such an atmosphere that the Bengali Weekly, the Samachar
Darpan was started in 1818.
▪ The Charter of 1833 emphasized the development of the country primarily in the
interest of its inhabitants. William Bentinck, appointed the first Governor General
of united India reformed the society by suppressing thuggee (robbery and murder
committed by the thugs in accordance with their ritual), abolishing sati and
introducing English as the medium of instruction in schools and colleges.
▪ This he thought would facilitate Indianisation of the services. Bentinck founded the
Calcutta Medical College in March 1835. The students of this college were sent to
London in 1844 to complete their studies. Then years after the establishment of the
Calcutta Medical College, the Grant Medical College in Bombay was founded in
1845.
▪ In 1847 the Thomason Engineering College at Roorkee (now IIT Roorkee) came
into existence. In 1849 a school for girls was founded in Calcutta. Macaulay came to
India as a law member in 1835. He was appointed President of the Board of
Education. He had a poor opinion of indigenous learning. Macaulay recommended
and government accepted to make English the literary and official language of
India.
▪ Dalhousie showed keen interest in education. He approved of the system of
vernacular education designed by James Thomason, Lieutenant Governor of the
North-Western Provinces (1843- 53). The Educational Dispatch of Charles Wood
(1854) outlined a comprehensive scheme of education-primary, secondary,
collegiate. Departments of Public Instruction and a university for each of the three
Presidencies were organized for the purpose.
▪ University of Madras was established under this plan (1857), along with
universities in Bombay and Calcutta. Dalhousie modified the policy of Macaulay by
encouraging educational institutions in vernaculars too. He also agreed to the
principle of grants-in-aid to private effort, irrespective of caste or creed.

Under British Rule:

▪ Lord Ripon was a champion of education of the Indians. Ripon wanted to review
the working of the educational system on the basis of the recommendations of the

Page 3
Wood’s Despatch. For further improvement of the system Ripon appointed a
Commission in 1882 under the chairmanship of Sir William Hunter. The
Commission came to be known as the Hunter Commission. The Commission
recommended for the expansion and improvement of the elementary education of
the masses.
▪ The Commission suggested two channels for the secondary education-one was
literary education leading up to the Entrance Examination of the university and the
other preparing the students for a vocational career. The Commission noted the
poor status of women education. It encouraged the local bodies in the villages and
towns to manage the elementary education. This had resulted in the extraordinary
rise in the number of educational institutions in India.
▪ Curzon took a serious view of the fall in the standard of education and discipline in
the educational institutions. In his view the universities had degenerated into
factories for producing political revolutionaries. To set the educational system in
order, he instituted in 1902, a Universities Commission to go into the entire
question of university education in the country. On the basis of the findings and
recommendations of the Commission, Curzon brought in the Indian Universities
Act of 1904, which brought all the universities in India under the control of the
government.

British Agrarian Policy

▪ It is a well-known fact that India is primarily an agricultural country. The


overwhelming majority of its people depend on agriculture for sustenance. If the
crop is good, prosperity prevails otherwise it leads to famine and starvation.
Till the 18th century, there was a strong relation between agriculture and cottage
industries in India. India was not only ahead in the field of agriculture than most
other countries but it also held a prominent place in the world in the field of
handicraft production.
▪ The British destroyed handicraft industry in the country while unleashing far-
reaching changes in the country’s agrarian structure by introducing new systems of
land tenures and policies of revenue administration.

Page 4
▪ India’s national income, foreign trade, industrial expansion and almost every other
dominion of economic activity, depended on the country’s agriculture. The British
policies revolved around getting maximum income from land without caring much
about Indian interests of the cultivators. They abandoned the age -old system of
revenue administration and adopted in their place a ruthless policy of revenue
collection.
▪ After their advent, the British principally adopted three types of land tenures.
Roughly 19 per cent of the total area under the British rule, i.e., Bengal, Bihar,
Banaras, division of the Northern Western Provinces and northern Karnataka, were
brought under the Zamindari System or the Permanent Settlement. The
second revenue system, called the Mahalwari Settlement, was introduced in
about 30 per cent of the total area under British rule i.e., in major parts of the
North Western Provinces, Central Provinces and the Punjab with some variations.
The Ryotwari System covered about 51 per cent of the area under British rule
comprising part of the Bombay and Madras Presidencies, Assam and certain other
parts of British India.

The Permanent Settlement

▪ Lord Cornwallis’ most conspicuous administrative measure was the Permanent


Land Revenue Settlement of Bengal, which was extended to the provinces of Bihar
and Orissa. It is appropriate to recall that Warren Hastings introduced the annual
lease system of auctioning the land to the highest bidder. It created chaos in the
revenue administration.
▪ Cornwallis at the time of his appointment was instructed by the Directors to find a
satisfactory and permanent solution to the problems of the land revenue system in
order to protect the interests of both the Company and the cultivators. It obliged
the Governor- General to make a thorough enquiry into the usages, tenures and
rents prevalent in Bengal.
▪ The whole problem occupied Lord Cornwallis for over three years and after a
prolonged discussion with his colleagues like Sir John Shore and James Grant he
decided to abolish the annual lease system and introduce a decennial (Ten years)
settlement which was subsequently declared to be continuous.

Page 5
The main features of the Permanent Settlement were as follows:

1. The zamindars of Bengal were recognised as the owners of land as long as they
paid the revenue to the East India Company regularly.
2. The amount of revenue that the zamindars had to pay to the Company was
firmly fixed and would not be raised under any circumstances. In other words
the Government of the East India Company got 89% leaving the rest to the
zamindars.
3. The ryots became tenants since they were considered the tillers of the soil.
4. This settlement took away the administrative and judicial functions of the
zamindars.
▪ The Permanent Settlement of Cornwallis was bitterly criticised on the point that it
was adopted with ‘undue haste’. The flagrant defect of this arrangement was that no
attempt was made ever either to survey the lands or to assess their value. The
assessment was made roughly on the basis of accounts of previous collections and
it was done in an irregular manner. The effects of this system both on the
zamindars and ryots were disastrous.
▪ As the revenue fixed by the system was too high, many zamindars defaulted on
payments. Their property was seized and distress sales were conducted leading to
their ruin. The rich zamindars who led luxurious lives left their villages and
migrated into towns. They entrusted their rent collection to agents who exacted all
kinds of illegal taxes besides the legal ones from the ryots.
▪ This had resulted in a great deal of misery amongst the peasants and
farmers. Therefore, Lord Cornwallis’ idea of building a system of benevolent
landlordism failed. Baden Powell remarks, “The zamindars as a class did nothing
for the tenants”. Though initially the Company gained financially, in the long run
the Company suffered financial loss because land productivity was high, income
from it was meagre since it was a fixed sum. It should be noted that in pre- British
period a share on the crop was fixed as land tax. Nevertheless, this system proved
to be a great boon to the zamindars and to the government of Bengal. It formed a
regular income and stabilised the government of the Company. The zamindars
prospered at the cost of the welfare of the tenants.

Page 6
Ryotwari Settlement

▪ The Ryotwari settlement was introduced mainly in Madras, Berar, Bombay and
Assam. Sir Thomas Munro introduced this system in the Madras Presidency. Under
this settlement, the peasant was recognised as the proprietor of land. There was no
intermediary like a Zamindar between the peasant and the government.
▪ So long as he paid the revenue in time, the peasant was not evicted from the land.
Besides, the land revenue was fixed for a period from 20 to 40 years at a time.
Every peasant was held personally responsible for direct payment of land revenue
to the government. However, in the end, this system also failed. Under this
settlement it was certainly not possible to collect revenue in a systematic manner.
The revenue officials indulged in harsh measures for non payment or delayed
payment.

Mahalwari Settlement

▪ In 1833, the Mahalwari settlement was introduced in the Punjab, the Central
Provinces and parts of North Western Provinces. Under this system the basic unit
of revenue settlement was the village or the Mahal. As the village lands belonged
jointly to the village community, the responsibility of paying the revenue rested
with the entire Mahal or the village community. So, the entire land of the village
was measured at the time of fixing the revenue.
▪ Though the Mahalwari system eliminated middlemen between the government and
the village community and brought about improvement in irrigation facility, yet its
benefit was largely enjoyed by the government.

Local Self-Government (1882)

Ripon believed that self-government is the highest and noblest principles of politics.
Therefore, Ripon helped the growth of local bodies like the Municipal Committees in
towns and the local boards in taluks and villages. The powers of municipalities were
increased. Their chairmen were to be non-officials. They were entrusted the care of
local amenities, sanitation, drainage and water-supply and also primary education.
District and taluk boards were created. It was insisted that the majority of the members
of these boards should be elected non-officials. The local bodies were given executive

Page 7
powers with financial resources of their own. It was perhaps the desire of Ripon that
power in India should be gradually transferred to the educated Indians. He also
insisted on the election of local bodies as against selection by the government. In all
these measures, Ripon’s concern was not so much for efficiency in administration.
Instead, Ripon diffused the administration and brought the government closer to the
people. This was his most important achievement. It was Ripon who laid the
foundations of the system which functions today.

Calcutta Corporation Act (1899)

The Viceroy brought in a new legislative measure namely the Calcutta Corporation Act
in 1899 by which the strength of the elected members was reduced and that of the
official members increased. Curzon gave more representations to the English people as
against the Indians in the Calcutta Corporation. There was strong resentment by the
Indian members against Curzon’s anti-people measures.

Police and Military Reforms

Curzon believed in efficiency and discipline. He instituted a Police Commission in 1902


under the chairmanship of Sir Andrew Frazer. Curzon accepted all the
recommendations and implemented them. He set up training schools for both the
officers and the constables and introduced provincial police service. As for the
remodeling of the army, it was by and large done by Lord Kitchener, the Commander-
in-Chief in India in Curzon’s time.

British Policy towards Indian Handicrafts

▪ The European companies began arriving on the Indian soil from 16 th century.
During this period, they were constantly engaged in fierce competition to establish
their supremacy and monopoly over Indian trade. Not surprisingly, therefore,
initial objective of the English East India Company was to have flourishing trade
with India. Later, this objective was enlarged to acquire a monopoly over this trade
and obtain its entire profit. Although the trade monopoly thus acquired by the
Company in India was ended by the Charter Act of 1833, yet the British Policy of
exploiting the resources of India continued unabated. In this respect, the nature of
the British rule was different from the earlier rulers. As far as the traditional
Page 8
handicraft industry and the production of objects of art were concerned, India was
already far ahead of other countries in the world. The textiles were the most
important among the Indian industries. Its cotton, silk and woollen products were
sought after all over the world. Particularly, the muslin of Dacca, carpets of Lahore,
shawls of Kashmir, and the embroidery works of Banaras were very famous. Ivory
goods, wood works and jewellery were other widely sought-after Indian
commodities.
▪ Apart from Dacca, which was highly famous for its muslins, the other important
centres of textile production were Krishnanagar, Chanderi, Arni and Banaras.
Dhotis and dupattas of Ahmedabad, Chikan of Lucknow, and silk borders of
Nagpur had earned a worldwide fame. For their silk products some small towns of
Bengal besides, Malda and Murshidabad were very famous.
▪ Similarly, Kashmir, Punjab and western Rajasthan were famous for their woollen
garments. Besides textiles, India was also known widely for its shipping, leather
and metal industries. Indian fame as an industrial economy rested on cutting and
polishing of marble and other precious stones and carving of ivory and sandalwood.
▪ Moradabad and Banaras were famous for brass, copper, bronze utensils. Nasik,
Poona, Hyderabad and Tanjore were famous for other metal works. Kutch, Sind
and Punjab were known for manufacturing arms. Kolhapur, Satara, Gorakhpur,
Agra, Chittor and Palaghat had likewise earned a reputation for their glass
industries.
▪ Making of gold, silver and diamond jewellery was another important industrial
activity in which many places in India specialized. These entire handicrafts
industry indicated a vibrant economy in India.
▪ Despite enjoying such fame in the world, the Indian handicraft industry had begun
to decline by the beginning of the 18th century. There were many reasons for it.
First, the policies followed by the English East India Company proved to be highly
detrimental to the Indian handicrafts industry. The Indian market was flooded with
the cheap finished goods from Britain. It resulted in a steep decline in the sale of
Indian products both within and outside of the country.
▪ In 1769, the Company encouraged the cultivation of raw silk in Bengal while
imposing service restrictions on the sale of its finished products. In 1813 strategies

Page 9
were devised by the Company to enhance the consumption of finished goods from
Britain. In this respect the tariff and octroi policies were suitably modified to suit
the British commercial interests. To cite an example, in 1835 only a minimal import
of British duty of 2.5 per cent was imposed on the import of British manufactured
cotton cloth whereas a very high 15 per cent export duty was charged on Indian
cotton textiles as per the new maritime regulations.
▪ Moreover, goods from England could only be brought by the English cargo ships.
As a result of all these policies, the Indian textiles could not enter the British
market, whereas the Indian market was flooded with British goods.
▪ Thus, with the rise of British paramountcy in India, the process of decline in the
power and status of Indian rulers had set in. Thus, the demands for the domestic
luxury goods like royal attires, armoury and objects of art by the Indian royalty also
reduced drastically.
▪ So, with the disappearance of the traditional dynasties, their nobility also passed
into oblivion. This led to a sharp decline in the demand for traditional luxury
goods. Besides, the Industrial revolution led to the invention of new machinery in
Europe. Power looms replaced handlooms. In India also the advent of machines led
to the decline of handicraft as now the machine-made products were available at
cheaper rate and more goods could be produced in much lesser time.
▪ Finally, the new communication and transport facilities brought about a revolution
in public life. Earlier, goods used to be transported either by bullock carts or by
ships. Thus, during the rainy season, it was not always convenient to carry on with
the normal transportation. But now conditions were changed with the introduction
of railways and steamer services. Concrete roads were laid to connect the country’s
agricultural hinterland. The import of goods from England also increased with the
simultaneous increase in exports of raw materials from India, leading to massive
loss of jobs among Indian artisans and craftsman who lost their only means to
livelihood.

Social Laws Concerning Women

▪ The condition of women, by the time the British established their rule, was not
encouraging. Several evil practices such as the practice of Sati, the Purdah system,

Page 10
child marriage, female infanticide, bride price and polygamy had made their life
quite miserable. The place of women had come to be confined to the four walls of
her home. The doors of education had been shut for them. From economic point of
view also her status was miserable. There was no social and economic equality
between a man and woman.
▪ A Hindu woman was not entitled to inherit any property. Thus, by and large, she
was completely dependent on men. During the 19th and 20th centuries some laws
were enacted with the sincere efforts of social reformers, humanists and some
British administrators to improve the condition of women in Indian society. The
first effort in this direction was the enactment of law against the practice of Sati
during the administration of Lord William Bentinck.

Female Infanticide

• Female infanticide was another inhuman practice afflicting the 19 th century Indian
society. It was particularly in vogue in Rajputana, Punjab and the North Western
Provinces. Colonel Todd, Johnson Duncan, Malcolm and other British
administrators have discussed about this evil custom in detail.
• Factors such as family pride, the fear of not finding a suitable match for the girl
child and the hesitation to bend before the prospective in-laws were some of the
major reasons responsible for this practice. Therefore, immediately after birth, the
female infants were being killed either by feeding them with opium or by
strangulating or by purposely neglecting them. Some laws were enacted against this
practice in 1795, 1802 and 1804 and then in 1870. However, the practice could not
be completely eradicated only through legal measures. Gradually, this evil practice
came to be done away through education and public opinion.

Widow Remarriage

▪ There are many historical evidences to suggest that widow remarriage enjoyed
social sanction during ancient period in India. In course of time the practice ceased
to prevail increasing the number of widows to lakhs during the 19th century.
▪ Therefore, it became incumbent on the part of the social reformers to make sincere
efforts to popularize widow remarriage by writing in newspapers and contemporary

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journals. Prominent among these reformers were Raja Rammohan Roy and Iswar
Chandra Vidyasagar. They carried out large scale campaigns in this regard mainly
through books, pamphlets and petitions with scores of signatures. In July 1856,
J.P. Grant, a member of the Governor-General’s Council finally tabled a bill in
support of the widow remarriage, which was passed on 13 July 1856 and came to be
called the Widow Remarriage Act, 1856.

Child Marriage

▪ The practice of child marriage was another social stigma for the women.
In November 1870, the Indian Reforms Association was started with the efforts of
Keshav Chandra Sen. A journal called Mahapap Bal Vivah (Child marriage: The
Cardinal Sin) was also launched with the efforts of B.M. Malabari to fight against
child marriage. In 1846, the minimum marriageable age for a girl was only 10
years.
▪ In 1891, through the enactment of the Age of Consent Act, this was raised to 12
years. In 1930, through the Sharda Act, the minimum age was raised to 14 years.
After independence, the limit was raised to 18 years in 1978.

Purdah System

Similarly, voices were raised against the practice of Purdah during the 19 th and 20th
century. The condition of women among the peasantry was relatively better in this
respect. Purdah was not so much prevalent in Southern India. Through the large scale
participation of women in the national freedom movement, the system disappeared
without any specific legislative measure taken against it.

Questions:

1. Discuss the reforms in civil and Judicial administration in British Rule.


2. Describe the main features of the permanent settlement.
3. Examine the British Policy towards Indian Handicrafts.

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SOCIO RELIGIOUS REFORM
MOVEMENTS

Introduction:
By the first quarter of the nineteenth century, India had produced a small English-
educated intelligentsia, closely associated with British administration or British trade.
The ideas and the work of the Christian missionaries had already begun to have its
impact. Bengal was the first province to be affected by the British influence and so it
was here that several ideas of reform originated. British administration, English
education, and European literature brought to India a new wave of thoughts that
challenged traditional knowledge.

Rationalism as the basis for ethical thinking, the idea of human progress and evolution,
the concept of natural rights associated with the Enlightenment, were the new ideas
which led to what has been termed as Indian Renaissance. The spread of printing
technology played a crucial role in the diffusion of ideas.

Emergence of Reform Movements:

▪ The British characterized Indian society in the nineteenth century as being caught
in a vicious circle of superstitions and obscurantism. In their view idolatry and
polytheism reinforced orthodoxy impelling the people to follow them blindly. The
social conditions were equally depressing. And the condition of women was
deplorable. The practice of sati came in for particular condemnation.
▪ The division of society according to birth resulting in the caste system was also
criticized. Most importantly, the British argued that without their intervention
there was no possibility of deliverance from these evils for Indians. Needless to say,
this was a self-serving argument, articulated by missionaries and Utilitarians to
justify British rule.
▪ India was a much bigger, more complex and diverse country in the early nineteenth
century. Conditions varied vastly across it. The social and cultural evils had been

Page 1
fought by Indian reformers through the ages. But the advent of the British with
their Enlightenment ideas undoubtedly posed a new challenge.
▪ This chapter looks at how social reform movements emerged in various parts of the
country. The development of the Western culture and ideology forced the
traditional institutions to revitalize themselves. During the second half of the
nineteenth century, the expression of protest and desire for change were articulated
through various reform movements.
▪ These movements aimed at reforming and democratizing the social institutions and
religious outlook of the Indian people. The emergence of new economic forces,
spread of education, growth of nationalist sentiment, influence of modern Western
thoughts, ideas and culture, and awareness of the changes taking place in Europe
strengthened the resolve to reform.
▪ What gave these reform movements an ideological unity were rationalism, religious
universalism and humanism. This perspective enabled them to adopt a rational
approach to tradition and evaluate the contemporary socio-religious practices from
the standpoint of social utility. For example, Raja Ram Mohan Roy repudiated the
infallibility of the Vedas and during the Aligarh Movement, Syed Ahmed Khan
emphasized that religious tenets were not immutable.
▪ As Keshab Chandra Sen said, ‘Our position is not that truths are to be in all
religions, but that all established religions of the World are true.’ These movements
enveloping the entire cultural stream of Indian society brought about significant
practices in the realms of language, religion, art and philosophy.

These reform movements can be broadly classified into two categories:

1. Reformist Movements
2. Revivalist Movements
▪ Both the movements depended in varying degrees on an appeal to the lost purity of
religion. The primary difference between them lay in the degree to which they
relied on tradition or on reason and conscience. The social reform movements
formed an integral part of the religious reforms primarily because all the efforts
towards social ills like caste- and gender– based inequality derived legitimacy from
religion.

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▪ Initially, the social reform movement had a narrow social base – they were limited
to the upper and middle strata of the society that tried to adjust their modernized
views to the existing social reality. From then on, the social reform movements
began to percolate to the lower strata of society to reconstruct the social fabric.
▪ Heated debates among the intellectuals expressed in the form of public arguments,
tracts and journals played a big role in taking new ideas to large sections of the
people, as well as to reformulate older ideas in a new form.
▪ At the start, organizations such as the Social Conference, Servants of India and the
Christian missionaries were instrumental in giving an impetus to the social reform
movements along with many enlightened individuals about whom we dwell on in
the following pages.
▪ In later years, especially by the twentieth century, the national movement provided
the leadership and organization for social reform.

Brahmo Samaj (1828)

▪ Raja Rammohun Roy, was a man of versatile genius. He established the Brahmo
Samaj in August, 1828. The Brahmo Samaj was committed to “the worship and
adoration of the eternal, unsearchable, immutable Being who is the Author and
Preserver of the Universe”. His long term agenda was to purify Hinduism and to
preach monotheism for which he drew authority from the Vedas.
▪ He emphasized human dignity, opposed idolatry and social evils such as sati. A
retired servant of the East India Company, he was conversant in many languages
including Persian and Sanskrit. His ideas and activities were aimed at the political
uplift of society through social reform. He was a determined crusader against the
inhuman practice of Sati.
▪ His tract written in 1818, A Conference Between an Advocate for and an Opponent
of the Practice of Burning Widows, cited sacred texts to prove that no religion
sanctioned the burning alive of widows. His efforts fructified and the Company
through an enactment of law (1829) declared the practice of sati a crime.

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The overall contribution of Brahmo Samaj can be summed up as follows :

1. It denounced polytheism, idol worship, and the faith in divine avatars


(incarnations)
2. It condemned the caste system, dogmas and superstitions.
3. It wanted the abolition of child marriage, purdah system and the practice of
sati
4. It supported widow remarriage
▪ Inspired by the ideals of the French Revolution, Rammohun Roy left for Europe
and died in Bristol. After his death there was a steady decline but for the new lease
life given to it by Devendranath Tagore (father of Rabindranath Tagore).
▪ After him the organization was taken forward by Keshab Chandra Sen from 1857.
The strength of the organization is known from the number of branches it had in
1865, 54 Samajas (fifty in Bengal, two in North West Province, one each in Punjab
and Madras).
▪ In course of time, the Brahmo Samaj broke into two namely Devendranath
Tagore’s, ‘Brahmo Samaj of India’ and Keshub Chandra Sen’s ‘Sadharan Brahmo
Samaj’.
▪ In Tamilnadu, Kasi Viswanatha Mudaliar was an adherent of the Samaj and he
wrote a play titled Brahmo Samaja Natakam to expound the ideas of the Samaj.
He also wrote a tract in support of widow remarriage. In 1864, a Tamil journal
titled Tathuva Bodhini was started for the cause of the Brahmo Samaj.
▪ The Brahmo Samaj met with great opposition from orthodox elements in Bengal
society such as the Hindu Dharma Sabha. However, there were also reformers such
as Ishwarchandra Vidyasagar, who advocated the same ideas but drew on Hindu
scriptures as authority.
▪ Even though the Brahmo Samaj did not win many adherents, it had a big impact on
the intellectuals. In the early stages, many young men seized of the radical ideas
avidly propagated them. Tagore’s family was a Brahmo family and its influence can
be seen in his writings and ideas.

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The Prarthana Samaj (1867)

▪ An off-shoot of the Brahmo Samaj, the Prarthana Samaj, was founded in 1867 in
Bombay by Atmaram Pandurang (1823– 98). The Prarthana Samaj as an
organization never had any great influence but its members, like M. G. Ranade
(1852-1901), R. G. Bhandarkar, and K.T. Telang, were among the great leaders of
nineteenth century Maharashtra and they became the founders of the social reform
movement in later years.
▪ Prarthana Samaj was similar to Brahmo Samaj, but it was consciously linked with
the bhakti tradition of the Maharashtrian saints. The Prarathana Samaj continued
its work mainly through educational work directed at women and workers at the
lower level. It concentrated on social reforms like inter-dining, intermarriage,
remarriage of widows, and uplift of women and depressed classes.
▪ The National Social Conference organized at the initiative of M.G. Ranade met each
year immediately after the Indian National Congress (1885) annual sessions.
Justice Ranade was an erudite scholar with a keen intellect and under his able
guidance the Prarthana Samaj became the active centre of a new social reformation
in western India.
▪ He was one of the founders of the Widow Marriage Association and was an ardent
promoter of the famous Deccan Education Society. Its object was to impart such
education to the young as would fit them for the unselfish service of the country.
When Ranade died in 1901, his leadership was taken over by Chandavarkar.

Arya Samaj (1875)

▪ The founder of the Arya Samaj was Dayananda Saraswati (1824–83). Dayananda, a
Gujarati, left home in his youth to become an ascetic. For seventeen years he
wandered around India. In 1863 he became a wandering preacher, and five years
later he added the establishment of schools to his activities.
▪ In 1872 he met the Brahmos in Calcutta. In 1875 he founded the Arya Samaj and
published his major work the Satyarth Prakash. In his view, contemporary
Hinduism had become degenerate. Therefore he rejected puranas, polytheism,
idolatry, the role of Brahmin priests, pilgrimages, many rituals and the prohibition

Page 5
on widow marriage. As a good Sanskrit scholar, he made a call to “Back to the
Vedas”.
▪ He wanted to shape society on the basis of the Vedas. He disregarded the puranas.
Like the other social reformers, he encouraged female education and remarriage of
widows. Swami Dayananda’s sphere of influence was largely in the Punjab region
where the trading community of Khatris experienced great mobility in colonial
times. However, in the Punjab region, there was much communal conflict among
Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs.
▪ Dayananda’s Shuddi (purification) movement i.e., conversion of non-Hindus to
Hindus was controversial and provoked controversies especially with the Ahmadiya
movement. Arya Samaj is considered to be a revivalist movement. Dayananda’s
influence continued into the twentieth century through the establishment of
Dayananad Anglo Vedic (DAV) schools and colleges.

Ramakrishna Mission (1897)

▪ As we saw above, the early reform movements in Bengal were radical, questioning
and criticising tradition very strongly. In response to this emerged the
Ramakrishna Mission as an important religious movement. Ramakrishna
Paramahamsa (1836–1886), a poor priest in a temple at Dakshineswar near
Kolkata, had no formal education but led an intense spiritual life. He had a deep
faith in the inherent truth of all religions and tested its belief by performing
religious service in accordance with the practices of different religions.
▪ According to him ‘all the religious views are but different ways to lead to the same
goal.’ In a backlash, the later generation of Western educated intellectuals were
drawn to Ramakrishna’s broad view, mysticism and spiritual fervour. He
expounded his views in short stories and admirable parables which were compiled
by an admirer as Ramakrishna Kathamrita (The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna).
▪ The most famous among his disciples was a young graduate of the Calcutta
University named Narendranath Dutta, afterwards famously called Swami
Vivekananda (1863 1902). Emphasising practical work over philosophizing he
established the modern institution of the Ramakrishna Mission. He carried
Ramakrishna’s message all over India and the world. His learning, eloquence,

Page 6
spiritual fervour and personality gathered round him a band of followers across the
country, many of whom also joined the national movement.
▪ He attended in 1893 the famous, ‘Parliament of Religions’ at Chicago, and made a
deep impact on those congregated there. The Mission opened schools, dispensaries
and orphanages and helped people during their time of distress caused by
calamities.

Theosophical Society (1886)

▪ Even as Indian intellectuals felt challenged by western Enlightenment and


rationalistic movements, there was a strain of thinking in the West which looked to
the East for spiritual salvation. From this idea emerged the Theosophical Society,
founded by Madam H.P. Blavatsky and Colonel H.S.Olcott in the United States of
America in 1875.
▪ They came to India in 1879 and established their headquarters at Adyar in 1886.
Under the leadership of Annie Besant, who came to India in 1893, the Theosophical
Society gathered strength and won many adherents. The Theosophical Society
started associations across south India.
▪ Though involved in many controversies, the Society played an important role in the
revival of Buddhism in India. Iyotheethoss Pandithar, the radical Dalit thinker, was
introduced to modern Buddhism through his interaction with Colonel Olcott who
took him to Sri Lanka. There he met many Buddhist monks including the
renowned revivalist Anagarika Dharmapala and Acharya Sumangala.

Satya Shodhak Samaj (1873)

▪ While the movements discussed above were largely focussed on upper castes there
were some exceptional movements which mobilized lower castes and articulated
their perspective. The most important among them was Jyotiba Phule, who
belonged to the Mali (gardener) community. Born in 1827, he received initial
education in a mission school but had to discontinue it in 1833.
▪ Jyotiba Phule waged a life-long struggle against upper caste tyranny. In his quest
for the truth, Phule read the Vedas, the Manu Samhita, the Puranas, and the
thought of Buddha, Mahavira and the medieval Bhakti saints extensively. He also

Page 7
acquainted himself with Western thought, and Christian and Islamic religions.
Phule judged the whole culture and tradition through the spirit of rationality and
equality. While the principle of equality called for a total rejection of caste system,
authoritarian family structure and subordination of women, the principle of
rationality demanded the removal of superstitions and ritualism.
▪ Phule held radical views on social, religious, political and economic issues. He
considered the caste system as an antithesis of the principle of human equality. He
sought to raise the morale of the non-Brahmins and united them to revolt against
the centuries old inequality and social degradation.
▪ Towards this end Phule founded the Satya Shodak Samaj (Society for Seeking
Truth) in 1875. His most important book is Gulamgiri (Slavery).
▪ Phule looked upon education of the masses as a liberating and revolutionary factor.
Since women and deprived and downtrodden were the worst sufferers in the
society, Phule argued that women’s liberation was linked with the liberation of
other classes in society. Equality between classes as also between men and women
was stressed by Phule. During marriages he asked the bridegroom to promise the
right of education to his bride.
▪ Phule also tried to translate his ideas into actual struggles. He urged the British
Government to impart compulsory primary education to the masses through
teachers drawn from the cultivating classes. He started a school for girls in Poona
in 1851 and one for depressed classes with the assistance of his wife Savitri.
▪ He also started schools for the "untouchables" and founded a home for widow’s
children. In his work we find the beginnings of the later day non-Brahman
movement of Maharashtra.

Pandita Ramabai (1858–1922)

▪ Pandita Ramabai was foremost among the Indian leaders who worked for the
emancipation of women. She came from a learned family and was a great scholar of
Sanskrit and addressed many learned groups in different parts of the country. She
was given the title of “Pandita” and “Saraswati” for her deep knowledge of Sanskrit.
▪ After the death of her parents she and her brother travelled to different parts of the
country. They went to Calcutta in 1878. Two years later her brother also died. A

Page 8
little later in 1880 she married a Bengali belonging to a family of lower social
status. Thus, even at that time she was bold enough to marry a man of a different
caste and different language.
▪ After the death of her husband two years later she returned to Poona and started
the Arya Mahila Samaj with the help of leaders like Ranade and Bhandarkar. 300
women were educated in the Samaj in 1882.
▪ Ramabai started the Sharada Sadan (shelter for homeless) for the destitute widows
with the help of Ranade and Bhandarkar. But soon she was accused of converting
Hindu women to Christianity and hence had to shift her activities to Khedgoan
near Poona. She established a Mukti Sadan (freedom house) there. Soon there were
2000 children and women in the house. Vocational training was given make them
self-reliant.

Sri Narayana Guru

This movement emerged in Kerala and was born out of conflict between the depressed
classes and the upper castes. It was started by Sri Narayana Guru (1854- 1928)
spearheading a social movement of the Ezhavas of Kerala, a community of toddy
tappers.

The Ezhavas were the single largest group in Kerala constituting 26% of population. A
great scholar in Malayalam, Tamil and Sanskrit, Sri Narayana Guru established the Sri
Narayana Guru Dharma Paripalana (SNDP) Yogam in 1902.

The SNDP Yogam took up several issues such as

1. right of admission to public schools.


2. recruitment to government services.
3. access to roads and entry to temples; and
4. political representation.
▪ The movement as a whole brought transformative structural changes such as
upward social mobility, shift in traditional distribution of power and a federation of
‘backward classes’ into a large conglomeration. As a response to the prohibition on
Ezhavas into temples, Sri Narayana Guru established new temples, and empowered
the community to modernize itself. Great personalities such as the poet Kumaran

Page 9
Asan Dr. Palpu and Sahodaran Ayyappan emerged from the movement, and made
a lasting impact in the democratization of Kerala Society.
▪ Even though the Guru himself was not directly involved in the movement, the
Vaikom Satyagraha, organized to protest against the ban on the entry of Ezhavas on
the temple streets of Vaikom made a deep impact on subsequent temple entry
movements.

Islamic Reform Movements

▪ The Revolt of 1857 and its brutal suppression by the British had an adverse impact
on the Muslims of South Asia. While they were viewed with suspicion by the British
for the 1857 insurgency, the Muslims themselves withdrew into a shell and did not
use the opportunities opened up by colonial modernity.
▪ Consequently, they lagged behind in education and attendant employment
opportunities. In this context, a few decades later some reform movements
emerged among the Muslims.

Aligarh Movement (1875)

Aligarh Movement was started by Syed Ahmad Khan in 1875. He wanted to reconcile
Western scientific education with the teachings of the Quran. The Aligarh movement
aimed at spreading

1. Modern education among Indian Muslims without weakening their allegiance to


Islam, and
2. Social reforms among Muslims relating to purdah, polygamy, and divorce. Syed’s
progressive social ideas were propagated through his magazine Tahdhibul-
Akhluq (Improvement of Manners and Morals). Syed Ahmad Khan’s educational
programme emphasized from the outset the advantages of the use of English as
the medium of instruction.
▪ In 1864 he founded a Scientific Society of Aligarh for the introduction of Western
sciences through translations into Urdu of works on physical sciences. The same
year he founded a modern school at Ghazipur. In 1868 he promoted the formation
of education committees in several districts, to initiate modern education among
the Muslims.

Page 10
▪ During his visit to Europe in 1869–70 he developed the plans of his life-work, a
major educational institution for Indian Muslims. In order to promote English
education among the Muslims, he founded in 1875 a modern school at Aligarh,
which soon developed into the Muhammedan Anglo–Oriental College (1877). This
college was to become the Muslim University after his death.
▪ It became the nursery of Muslim political and intellectual leaders. In 1886 Syed
Ahmad Khan founded the Muhammedan Anglo Oriental Educational Conference as
a general forum for spreading liberal ideas among the Indian Muslims. He rejected
blind adherence to religious law and asked for a reinterpretation of the Quran in
the light of reason to suit the new trends of the time.
▪ He attempted to liberalize Indian Islam and made it amenable to new ideas and
new interpretations. In this mission he had to face the brunt of vehement attacks of
orthodox theologians.

Ahmadiyya Movement (1889)

▪ The Ahmadiyya movement founded by Mirza Ghulam Ahmed (1835–1908) in 1889


established a different trend. While emphasizing the return to the original
principles enunciated in the Quran, Ghulam Ahmed became controversial when he
claimed to be a Messiah, which was considered heretical by mainstream Islam.
▪ But he won many converts. His primary work was to defend Islam against the
polemics of the Arya Samaj and the Christian missionaries. In social morals the
Ahmadiya movement was conservative, adhering to polygamy, veiling of women,
and the classical rules of divorce.

The Deoband Movement (1866)

▪ The Deoband movement was organised by the orthodox section among the Muslim
ulemas as a revivalist movement with the twin objective of propagating the pure
teachings of the Quran and Hadis among Muslims. The movement was established
in Deoband in Saranpur district (by Mohammad Qasim Nanotavi (1833-1877) and
Rashid Ahmed Gangohi (1828–1905) to train religious leaders for the Muslim
community.

Page 11
▪ In contrast to the Aligarh Movement, which aimed at the welfare of Muslims
through Western education and support of the British Government, the aim of the
Deoband Movement was religious regeneration of the Muslim community. The
instruction imparted at Deoband adhered to classical Islamic tradition.
▪ The seminary at Deoband was founded in 1867 by theologians of the School of
Wali-Allah. Muhammad Qasim Nanotavi took a prominent part in counter
polemics against the Christian missionaries and the Arya Samajists.
▪ The principal objectives of the seminary at Deoband were to re-establish contact
between the theologians and the educated Muslim middle classes, and to revive the
study of Muslim religious and scholastic sciences. As a religious university
Deoband soon became an honoured institution, not only in Muslim India but also
in the world of Islam at large.

Nadwat al-‘ulama

A school less conservative than Deoband and more responsive to the demands of the
modern age was the Nadwat al- ‘ulama,’ founded in 1894 at Lucknow by the historian
Shibli Nu‘mani and other scholars. The school aimed to offer an enlightened
interpretation of religion in order to fight the trends of agnosticism and atheism which
had followed the advent of modern Western education.

Farangi Mahal

The third famous traditional school is the much older one at Farangi Mahal in
Lucknow. Farangi Mahal accepted Sufism as a valid experience and a valid field of
study. Another traditionalist movement was the ahl-i-hadith or of the followers of the
dicta of the Prophet.

Parsi Reform Movements

▪ Zoroastrians, persecuted in their Persian homeland, migrated in large numbers to


the west coast of India in the tenth century. As a trading community they flourished
over the centuries. A close-knit community it too was not left untouched by the
reform movements of the nineteenth century.
▪ The Rahnumai Madayasnan Sabha (Religious Reform Association) was founded in
1851 by a group of English educated Parsis for the “regeneration of the social
Page 12
conditions of the Parsis and the restoration of the Zoroastrian religion to its
pristine purity”. The movement had Naoroji Furdonji, Dadabhai Naoroji,
K. R. Cama and S.S. Bengalee as its leaders. The message of reform was spread by
the newspaper Rast-Gofar (Truth Teller).
▪ Parsi religious rituals and practices were reformed and the Parsi creed redefined. In
the social sphere, attempts were made to uplift the status of Parsi women through
education, removal of the purdah, raising the age of marriage and the like.
Gradually, the Parsis emerged as the most westernised section of the Indian
society. They played a key role in the nationalist movement and in the
industrialization of India.

Sikh Reform Movement

The Sikh community could not remain untouched by the rising tide of rationalist and
progressive ideas of the nineteenth century. The Singh Sabha Movement was formed in
1873, with a two-fold objective

1. to make available modern western education to the Sikhs


2. to counter the proselytizing activities of Christian missionaries as well as
Hindu revivalists.
▪ A network of Khalsa Schools was established throughout Punjab. The Akali
movement was an offshoot of the Singh Sabha Movement. The Akali movement
aimed at liberating the Sikh Gurudwara from the corrupt control of the Udasi
Mahants (priests).
▪ The Government passed the Sikh Gurudwara Act in 1922 (amended in 1925), which
gave control to Shiromani Gurudwara Prabandhak Committee (SGPC) as the main
body.

Reform Movements in Tamilnadu

As we saw earlier, the reform movements of the north India had its own impact on
Tamilnadu. Brahmo Samaj and Arya Samaj had their branches. Keshab Chandra Sen
visited Madras and lectured here. But Tamilnadu also saw its own reform movements.

Vaikunda Swamigal (1809-1851)

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▪ The Sri Vaikunda Swamigal’s cult, which survives to this day, was organized in the
1830s. Born in a poor family (1809) at Sastankoil Vilai (now known as
Swamithoppu), a village then in south Travancore (the present day Kanyakumari
district), Muthukutti, spent his childhood in the village pial school, learning
religious and moral texts.
▪ He also learnt the Bible and became well-versed in Christian theology. At the age of
twenty two, Muthukutti, cured of a skin disease, after a holy bath in the sea during
his visit to the Murugan temple at Tiruchendur (Thoothukudi district), claimed that
Lord Vishnu had given him a rebirth as his son. On his return from Tiruchendur,
assuming the new name of Sri Vaikundar, he practised austerities for two years.
Soon his fame spread far and wide.
▪ In his preaching Vaikundar attacked the traditional caste-ridden Travancore
society and its ruler for collecting excessive taxes from the lower caste people. He
was arrested and jailed by the Raja of Travancore for his “seditious speeches”.
When he was released from jail (1838) he became more popular among the people.
▪ His followers called him Aiya (father) and his cult came to be known as Aiya Vazhi
(path of the father). His teachings were compiled as a text called Akila Thirattu
which is recited religiously to this day. Vaikunda Swamy instructed his followers to
give up worship of pudams. He also exhorted them not to offer animal sacrifices to
their deities. He advocated vegetarianism.
▪ As a symbol of protest, Vaikunda Swamy urged his followers to wear a turban, a
right which was permitted only to upper castes in those days. As a part of his effort
to practice equality, Vaikunda Swamy regularly organized inter-dining through his
Samathuva Sangam, among different castes. In his feeding centres called Nilal
Tangals, caste-based restrictions were broken down. The Vaikunda Swamy cult
posed a serious challenge to the spread of Christianity in south Travancore even
after his death in 1851.

Vallalar Ramalinga Swamigal (1823–1874)

▪ Ramalinga Swamigal was born in a modest family near Chidambaram and spent
his early life in Madras. He never had formal schooling, but exhibited great
scholarship. Inspired by the Saiva Tevaram and Tiruvasagam hymns, he began to

Page 14
compose moving poems on his own. In his time, Saiva religion was in the grip of
Saiva monasteries such as those at Thiruvaduthurai, Dharumapuram and
Thiruppanandal.
▪ Ramalinga Swamigal’s poems expressed radical ideas and condemned bigotry and
irrationality. He underwent certain mystical experiences which he expressed in his
poems. This was resented by the orthodox elements in Saiva religion. He
established the Sathya Dharma Salai at Vadalur where he began to feed poor
people, especially in the context of the 1860s famine and pestilence, irrespective of
caste and creed.
▪ He founded the Sathya Gnana Sabhai to organize his followers. This brought him
into conflict with established Saivite orders, and matters came to a head when his
followers published his poems under the title of Tiruvarutpa (Songs of Grace) in
1867.
▪ Orthodox Saivites under the Sri Lankan reformer Arumuga Navalar criticized this
as blasphemous and launched a tract war. But ultimately, Ramalinga Swamigal’s
contribution was recognized and his writings inspired universal ideas, and
undermined sectarianism in Saiva religion.

Buddhist Revivalism and Iyotheethoss Pandithar (1845-1914)

▪ As we saw in an earlier lesson, Buddhism had been practically wiped out in the
Tamil country by the beginning of the second millennium. Towards the end of the
nineteenth century, there was a revival of Buddhism. The publication of the
complete edition of Jeevaka Chintamani (1887) and Manimekalai (1898) were
landmarks in the recovery of heterodox traditions.
▪ But the most important figure was Iyotheethoss Pandithar (1845– 1914). A native
doctor by profession, he was an erudite scholar. He also came under the influence
of Colonel Olcott of the Theosophical Society. In the 1890s he began a movement
among the Adi Dravidars arguing that they were the original Buddhists who had
been consigned to ‘untouchability’ due to their opposition to Vedic Brahminism.
▪ He reread classical Tamil and other texts to make his case. He also encouraged the
conversion to Buddhism. He found the greatest following in north Tamilnadu and
among the working classes of the Kolar Gold Fields. In this movement,

Page 15
M. Singavelu and Prof P. Lakshmi Narasu also played an important role. Pandithar
ran a weekly journal called Oru Paisa Tamilan (later Tamilan) from 1908 until his
death.

Christian Missionaries

▪ The official religious policy of the East India Company was one of neutrality
towards the native religions. Their reason for continuing this policy was the belief
that the earlier Portuguese rule had come to an end because of their attempts to
forcibly convert people to Christianity.
▪ As a result of this concern, the Company government prohibited the entry of
missionaries into the territories under their control. In 1793 two English
missionaries, William Carey and John Thomas, both Baptists, set out to India with
the intention of starting a mission.
▪ In view of the ban on missionary activity they settled down in the Danish Colony of
Serampore, north of Calcutta. Carey, along with two other missionaries, Joshua
Marshman and William Ward established the Serampore Mission in 1799.
▪ The Serampore missionaries were the first evangelical Baptist missionaries in
India. They were followed later by other missionary groups belonging to different
Protestant denominations. Before the arrival of the Serampore missionaries,
several centuries earlier, there were Christian missions in the Portuguese territory
of Goa, and also on the Malabar Coast and the Coromandel Coast.
▪ The work of the earlier missionaries was limited both geographically and in terms
of the number of conversions to Christianity. Thus major attempts at
proselytization began during the nineteenth century. The missionaries organized
schools for the socially and economically deprived and pleaded for their economic
improvement through employment in the state service.
▪ They also fought for their ‘civil rights’ that included access to public roads, and
permission for the women of these groups to wear upper garments. The
missionaries gave shelter to orphaned children and other destitute widows in their
missions and provided education for them in their boarding schools.
▪ Particularly after the famines which were quite common during the nineteenth
century, about which we discussed in the previous lesson, the missionaries

Page 16
organized relief. Providing shelter and succour gave these an opportunity to
convert people to Christianity.
▪ In Tirunelveli district many villages took to Christianity during famines, especially
in the last quarter of nineteenth century. The same phenomenon was witnessed in
Andhra where Malas and Madigas embraced Christianity in a big way.
▪ The Company government did little to provide modern education for the native
population. For a long time, the provision of elementary school facilities to the
native population, especially in the interiors for the disprivileged and the poor
people, was a responsibility willingly accepted by the Christian missionaries. It
must be noted that the Christian Missionaries took the initiative of establishing
Hospitals and Dispensaries.

Significance of the Reform Movements

▪ The orthodox sections of the society could not accept the scientific and ideological
onslaught of the socio-religious reformers. As a result of this, the reformers were
subjected to abuse, persecution, issuing of fatwas and even assassination attempts
by the reactionaries. However, in spite of opposition, these movements contributed
towards liberation of the individual from the conformity born out of fear.
▪ The translation of religious texts into vernacular languages, emphasis on an
individual’s right to interpret the scriptures, and simplification of rituals made
worship a more personal experience. The movements emphasised the human
intellect’s capacity to reason and think.
▪ By weeding out corrupt elements in religious practices, the reformers enabled their
followers to counter the official taunt that their religions and society were decadent
and inferior. It gave the rising middle classes the much needed cultural roots to
cling to.

Questions :

1. Write a short note Emergence of Reform Movements?


2. Write a note on (a) Arya Samaj (b) Theosophical Society.
3. Describe the Islamic Reform Movements.

Page 17
INDIA SINCE INDEPENDENCE

Introduction:

▪ Freedom from colonial rule came with a price. The partition of India involved
dividing the provinces of Bengal and Punjab into two. Though not envisaged at the
time of the division, it was followed by migration of Hindus from East Bengal to
West Bengal and Muslims from Bihar and West Bengal to East Bengal.
▪ Similarly, Hindus and Sikhs in West Punjab had to migrate to eastern Punjab and
Muslims in eastern Punjab to western Punjab. The boundaries between India and
Pakistan were to be determined on the composition of the people in each village on
their religion; and villages where the majority were Muslims were to constitute
Pakistan and where the Hindus were the majority to form India. There were other
factors too: rivers, roads and mountains acted as markers of boundaries.
▪ The proposal was that the religious minorities – whether Hindus or Muslims – in
these villages were to stay on and live as Indians (in case of Muslims) and
Pakistanis (in case of Hindus) wherever they were.
▪ There was a separate scheme for those villages where the Muslims were a majority
and yet the village not contiguous with the proposed territory of Pakistan and those
villages where the Hindus were a majority and yet not contiguous with the
proposed territory of India: they were to remain part of the nation with which the
village was contiguous.
▪ A new complication had arisen by this time and that was the recognition of Sikhs as
a religious identity in Punjab, in addition to the Hindus, and the Muslims; the Akali
Dal had declared its preference to stay on with India irrespective of its people living
in villages that would otherwise become part of Pakistan. This complex situation
was the consequence of the fast pace of developments in Britain on the issue of
independence to India.
▪ The declaration on February 20, 1947 by Prime Minister Atlee, setting June 30,
1948 for the British to withdraw from India and Mountbatten’s arrival as viceroy
replacing Wavell on March 22, 1947 had set the stage for the transfer of power to
Indians.

Page 1
▪ This was when the Muslim League leadership had gathered the support of a vast
majority of the Muslim community behind it and disputing the claims of the
Congress to represent all Indians.
▪ On June 3, 1947, Mountbatten advanced the date of British withdrawal to August
15, 1947. As for the communal question and the issue of two nations, the proposal
was to hand over power to two successor dominion governments of India and
Pakistan.
▪ The division of Bengal and the Punjab, as proposed, meant partition – a reality to
which Congress finally reconciled. The Mountbatten plan for independence along
with partition of India was accepted at the AICC meeting at Meerut on June 14,
1947.
▪ Gandhi, who had opposed the idea of division with vehemence in the past, now
conceded its inevitability. Gandhi explained the change. He held that the unabated
communal violence and the participation in it of the people across the Punjab and
in Bengal had left himself and the Congress with no any strength to resist partition.
▪ Sadly, the canker of communalism and the partition system that the colonial
collaborators produced took its toll on the infant Indian nation. It began with the
assassination of the Mahatma on January 30, 1948.

Consequences of Partition

▪ The challenges before free India included grappling with the consequences of
partition, planning the economy and reforming the education system (which will be
dealt with in the following lesson), making a Constitution that reflected the
aspirations kindled by the freedom struggle, merger of the Princely states (more
than 500 in number and of different sizes), and resolving the diversity on the basis
of languages spoken by the people with the needs of a nation-state.
▪ Further, a foreign policy that was in tune with the ideals of democracy, sovereignty
and fraternity had to be formulated. The partition of India on Hindu–Muslim lines
was put forth as a demand by the Muslim League in vague terms ever since its
Lahore session (March 1940).

Page 2
▪ But its architecture and execution began only with Lord Mountbatten’s
announcement of his plan on June 3, 1947 and advancing the date of transfer of
power to August 15, 1947. The time left between the two dates was a mere 72 days.
▪ Sir Cyril Radcliffe, a lawyer by training with no exposure to India and its reality,
was sent from London to re-draw the map of India. Its execution was left to the
dominion governments of India and Pakistan after August 15, 1947. Radcliffe
arrived in India on July 8, 1947. He was given charge of presiding over two
Boundary Commissions: one for the Punjab and the other for Bengal.
▪ Two judges from the Muslim community and two from the Hindu community were
included. The commissions were left with five weeks to identify villages as Hindu or
Muslim majority on the basis of the 1941 census. It is widely accepted that the
census of 1941, conducted in the midst of the World War II led to faulty results
everywhere.
▪ The commissions were also constrained by factors such as contiguity of villages and
by demands of the Sikh community that villages in West Punjab where their
shrines were located be taken into India irrespective of the population of Sikhs in
those villages.
▪ The two commissions submitted the report on August 9, 1947. Mountbatten’s
dispensation, meanwhile, decided to postpone the execution of the boundaries to a
date after power was transferred to the two dominions.
▪ The contours of the two dominions – India and Pakistan – were drawn in the
scheme on August 14/15, 1947 in so far as the administration was concerned; the
people, however, were not informed about the new map when they celebrated
Independence Day on August 14/15, 1947.
▪ Radcliffe’s award contained all kinds of anomalies. The provincial assembly in
Punjab had resolved that West Punjab would go to Pakistan. The other provinces,
which were geographically contiguous with Pakistan such as Sind, Baluchistan and
the North-West Frontier Provinces followed this.
▪ Similarly, the Bengal Assembly, resolved that the eastern parts of the province were
to constitute Pakistan on this side. The award Radcliffe presented, on August 9,
1947, marked 62,000 square miles of land that was hitherto part of the Punjab to
Pakistan.

Page 3
▪ The total population (based on the 1941 census) of this region was 15,800,000
people of whom 11,850,000 were Muslims. Almost a quarter of the population in
this territory – West Punjab – were non-Muslims; and the Mountbatten Plan as
executed by Sir Radcliffe meant they continued to live as minorities in Pakistan.
▪ Similarly, East Punjab that was to be part of India was demarcated to consist of
37,000 square miles of territory with a population of 12,600,000. Of this,
4,375,000 were Muslims.
▪ In other words, more than a third of the population in east Punjab would be
Muslims. The demographic composition of the Indian and Pakistani parts of
Bengal was no less complicated. West Bengal that remained part of India accounted
for an area of 28,000 square miles with a population of 21,200,00 out of which
5,300,000 were Muslims; in other words, Muslims constituted a quarter of the
population of the Indian part of the former Bengal province.
▪ Sir Radcliffe’s commission marked 49,400 square miles of territory from former
Bengal with 39,100,000 people for Pakistan. The Muslim population there,
according to the 1941 census, was 27,700,000.
▪ In other words, 29 per cent of the population were Hindus. East Pakistan (which
became Bangladesh in December 1971) was constituted by putting together the
eastern part of divided Bengal, Sylhet district of Assam, the district of Khulna in the
region and also the Chittagong Hill tracts.
▪ Such districts of Bengal as Murshidabad, Malda and Nadia which had a
substantially large Muslim population were left to remain in India. The exercise
was one without a method. The re-drawn map of India was left with the two
independent governments by the colonial rulers. It was left to the independent
governments of India and Pakistan to fix the exact boundaries.
▪ However, the understanding was that the religious minorities in both the nations –
the Hindus in West and East Pakistan and the Muslims in India, in East Punjab
and West Bengal as well as in United Provinces and elsewhere – would continue to
live as minorities but as citizens in their nations.
▪ After the partition, there were as many as 42 million Muslims in India and 20
million non-Muslims (Hindus, Sindhis and Sikhs) in Pakistan. The vivisection of

Page 4
India, taking place as it did in the middle of heightened Hindu-Muslim violence,
had rendered a smooth transition impossible.
▪ Despite the conspicuous exhibition of Hindu–Muslim unity during the RIN mutiny
and the INA trials (see previous lesson), the polity now resembled a volcano.
Communal riots had become normal in many parts of India, and were most
pronounced in the Punjab and Bengal. Minorities on both sides of the divide lived
in fear and insecurity even as the two nations were born.
▪ That Gandhi, who led the struggle for freedom from the front and whom the
colonial rulers found impossible to ignore, stayed far away from New Delhi and
observed a fast on August 15, 1947, was symbolic.
▪ The partition brought about a system in place where the minorities on either side
were beginning to think of relocating to the other side due to fear and insecurity. As
violence spread, police remained mute spectators. This triggered more migration of
the minorities from both nations.
▪ In the four months between August and November 1947, as many as four-and-a-
half million people left West Pakistan to India, reaching towns in East Punjab or
Delhi.
▪ Meanwhile, five-and-a-half million Muslims left their homes in India (East Punjab,
United Provinces and Delhi) to live in Pakistan. A large number of those who left
their homes on either side of the newly marked border thought they would return
after things normalised; but that was not to be.
▪ Similar migration happened between either sides of the new border in Bengal too.
In both countries property left behind by the fleeing families were up for grabs. The
long line of refugees walking crossing the borders was called ‘kafla’. The refugees
on the march were targets for gangs belonging to the ‘other’ community to wreak
vengeance. Trains from either side of the new border in the Punjab were targeted
by killer mobs and many of those reached their destination with piles of dead
bodies. The violence was of such a scale that those killed the numbers of remains
mere estimates. The number ranges between 200,000 to 500,000 people dead and
15 million people displaced.
▪ Even as late as in April 1950, the political leadership of the two nations wished and
hoped to restore normality and the return of those who left their homes on either

Page 5
side. On April 8, 1950, Nehru and Liaquat Ali Khan signed the Delhi pact, with a
view to restoring confidence among the minorities on both sides.
▪ This, however, failed to change the ground reality. Even while the pact was signed
the Government of India was also working on measures to rehabilitate those who
had left West Punjab to the East and to Delhi and render them vocational skills and
training. The wounds caused by the partition violence hardly healed even after
decades. Scores of literary works stand testimony to the trauma of partition.
▪ The partition posed a bigger challenge before Nehru and the Constituent Assembly,
now engaged with drafting the founding and the fundamental law of the nation: to
draft a constitution that is secular, democratic and republican as against Pakistan’s
decision to become an Islamic Republic.

Making of the Constitution

▪ It was a demand from the Indian National Congress, voiced formally in 1934, that
the Indian people shall draft their constitution rather than the British Parliament.
The Congress thus rejected the White Paper circulated by the colonial government.
The founding principle that Indians shall make their own constitution was laid
down by Gandhi as early as in 1922. Gandhi had held that rather than a gif of the
British Parliament, swaraj must spring from ‘the wishes of the people of India as
expressed through their freely chosen representatives’.
▪ Elections were held, based on the 1935 Act, to the Provincial Assemblies in August
1946. These elected assemblies in turn were to elect the Central Assembly, which
would also become the Constituent Assembly. The voters in the July 1946 elections
to the provinces were those who owned property – the principle of universal adult
franchise was still a far cry.
▪ The results revealed the Muslim League’s command in Muslim majority
constituencies while the Indian National Congress swept the elections elsewhere.
The League decided to stay away from the Constitution making process and
pressed hard for a separate nation. The Congress went for the Constituent
assembly.
▪ The elected members of the various Provincial assemblies voted nominees of the
Congress to the Constituent Assembly. The Constituent Assembly (224 seats) that

Page 6
came into being, though dominated by the Congress, also included smaller outfits
such as the communists, socialists and others. The Congress ensured the election of
Dr B.R. Ambedkar from a seat in Bombay and subsequently elected him chairman
of the drafting committee.
▪ Apart from electing its own stalwarts to the Assembly, the Congress leadership
made it a point to send leading constitutional lawyers. This was to make a
constitution that contained the idealism that marked the freedom struggle and the
meaning of swaraj, as specified in the Fundamental Rights Resolution passed by
the Indian National Congress at its Karachi session (March 1931).
▪ This, indeed, laid the basis for the making of our constitution a document
conveying an article of faith guaranteeing to the citizens a set of fundamental rights
as much as a set of directive principles of state policy. The constitution also
committed the nation to the principle of universal adult franchise, and an
autonomous election commission.
▪ The constitution also underscored the independence of the judiciary as much as it
laid down sovereign law-making powers with the representatives of the people. The
members of the constituent assembly were not averse to learn and pick up features
from the constitutions from all over the world; and at the same time they were clear
that the exercise was not about copying provisions from the various constitutions
from across the world.
▪ Jawaharlal Nehru set the ball rolling, on December 13, 1946, by placing the
Objectives Resolution before the Constituent Assembly. The assembly was
convened for the first time, on December 9, 1946.
▪ Rajendra Prasad was elected chairman of the House. The Objectives Resolution is
indeed the most concise introduction to the spirit and the contents of the
Constitution of India.
▪ The importance of this resolution can be understood if we see the Preamble to the
Constitution and the Fundamental Rights and Directive Principles of State Policy
enshrined in it and as adopted on November 26, 1949.
▪ The Constitution of India, thus, marked a new beginning and yet established
continuity with India’s past. The Fundamental Rights drew everything from clause
5 of the Objectives Resolution as much as from the rights enlisted by the Indian

Page 7
National Congress at its Karachi session. The spirit of the Constitution was drawn
from the experience of the struggle for freedom and the legal language from the
Objectives Resolution and most importantly from the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights (UDHR), promulgated by the United Nations on December 10,
1948.

Merger of Princely States

▪ The adoption of the Constitution on November 26, 1949 was only the beginning of
a bold new experiment by the infant nation. There were a host of other challenges
that the nation and its leaders faced and they had to be addressed even while the
Constituent Assembly met and started its job of drafting independent India’s
constitution. Among them was the integration of the Indian States or the Princely
States.
▪ The task of integrating the Princely States into the Indian Union was achieved with
such speed that by August 15, 1947, except Kashmir, Junagadh and Hyderabad, all
had agreed to sign an Instrument of Accession with India, acknowledging its
central authority over Defence, External Affairs and Communications.
▪ The task of integrating these states, with one or the other Provinces of the Indian
Union was accomplished with ease. The resolution passed at the All India States
People’s Conference (December 1945 and April 1947) that states refusing to join the
Constituent Assembly would be treated as hostile was enough to get the rulers to
sign the Instrument of Accession in most cases.
▪ There was the offer of a generous privy purse to the princes. The rapid unification
of India was ably handled and achieved by Sardar Vallabhai Patel, who as Home
Minister in the Interim Cabinet was also entrusted with the States Ministry for this
purpose. The People’s Movements exerted pressure on the princes to accede to the
Indian union.
▪ The long, militant struggle that went on in the Travancore State for Responsible
Government culminating in the Punnapra–Vayalar armed struggle against the
Diwan, Sir C.P. Ramaswamy, the Praja Mandal as well as some tribal agitations
that took place in the Orissa region – Nilagiri, Dhenkanal and Talcher – and the

Page 8
movement against the Maharaja of Mysore conducted by the Indian National
Congress all played a major role in the integration of Princely States.
▪ Yet, there was the problem posed by the recalcitrant ruler of Hyderabad, with the
Nizam declaring his kingdom as independent. The ruler of Junagadh wanted to join
Pakistan, much against the wishes of the people.
▪ Similarly, the Hindu ruler of Kashmir, Maharaja Hari Singh, declared that Kashmir
would remain independent while the people of the State under the leadership of the
National Conference had waged a “Quit Kashmir” agitation against the Maharaja. It
must be stressed here that the movement in Kashmir as well as the other Princely
States were also against the decadent practice of feudal land and social relations
that prevailed there.
▪ “The police action” executed in Hyderabad within 48 hours after the Nizam
declared his intentions demonstrated that India meant business. It was the popular
anger against the Nizam and his militia, known as the Razakkars, that was manifest
in the Telengana people’s movement led by the communists there which provided
the legitimacy to “the police action”.
▪ Though Patel had been negotiating with the Maharaja of Kashmir since 1946, Hari
Singh was opposed to accession. However, in a few months after independence – in
October 1947 – marauders from Pakistan raided Kashmir and there was no way
that Maharaja Hari Singh could resist this attack on his own.
▪ Before India went to his rescue the Instrument of Accession was signed by him at
the instance of Patel. Thus, Kashmir too became an integral part of the Indian
Union. This process and the commitment of the leaders of independent India to the
concerns of the people of Kashmir led the Constituent Assembly to provide for
autonomous status to the State of Jammu and Kashmir under Article 370 of the
Constitution.

Linguistic
Reorganization of States

▪ An important aspect of the making of independent India was the reorganization of


states on linguistic basis. The colonial rulers had rendered the sub-continent into
administrative units, dividing the land by way of Presidencies or Provinces without

Page 9
taking into account the language and its impact on culture on a region.
Independence and the idea of a constitutional democracy meant that the people
were sovereign and that India was a multi-cultural nation where federal principles
were to be adopted in a holistic sense and not just as an administrative strategy.
▪ The linguistic reorganization of states was raised and argued out in Constituent
Assembly between 1947 and 1949. The assembly however decided to hold it in
abeyance for a while on the grounds that the task was huge and could create
problems in the aftermath of the partition and the accompanying violence.
▪ After the Constitution came into force it began to be implemented in stages,
beginning with the formation of a composite Andhra Pradesh in 1956. It
culminated in the trifurcation of Punjab to constitute a Punjabi-speaking state of
Punjab and carving out Haryana and Himachal Pradesh from the existing state of
Punjab in 1966.
▪ The idea of linguistic reorganisation of states was integral to the national
movement, atleast since 1920. The Indian National Congress, at its Nagpur session
(1920), recorded that the national identity will have to be necessarily achieved
through linguistic identity and resolved to set up the Provincial Congress
Committees on a linguistic basis.
▪ It took concrete expression in the Nehru Committee Report of 1928. Section 86 of
the Nehru Report read: “The redistribution of provinces should take place on a
linguistic basis on the demand of the majority of the population of the area
concerned, subject to financial and administrative considerations.”
▪ This idea was expressed, in categorical terms, in the manifesto of the Indian
National Congress for the elections to the Central and Provincial Legislative
Assemblies in 1945. The manifesto made a clear reference to the reorganisation of
the provinces: “… it (the Congress) has also stood for the freedom of each group
and territorial area within the nation to develop its own life and culture within the
larger framework, and it has stated that for this purpose such territorial areas or
provinces should be constituted as far as possible, on a linguistic and cultural
basis…”
▪ On August 31, 1946, only a month after the elections to the Constituent Assembly,
Pattabhi Sitaramayya raised the demand for an Andhra Province: “The whole

Page 10
problem” he wrote, “must be taken up as the first and foremost problem to be
solved by the Constituent Assembly”. He also presided over a conference, on
December 8, 1946, that passed a resolution demanding that the Constituent
Assembly accept the principle for linguistic reorganisation of States.
▪ The Government of India in a communiqué stated that Andhra could be mentioned
as a separate unit in the new Constitution as was done in case of the Sind and
Orissa under the Government of India Act, 1935. The Drafting Committee of the
Constituent Assembly, however, found such a mention of Andhra was not possible
until the geographical schedule of the province was outlined.
▪ Hence, on June 17, 1948, Chairman Rajendra Prasad set up a 3-member
commission, called The Linguistic Provinces Commission with a specific brief to
examine and report on the formation of new provinces of Andhra, Kerala,
Karnataka and Maharashtra. Its report, submitted on December 10, 1948, listed out
reasons against the idea of linguistic reorganisation in the given context. It dealt
with each of the four proposed States – Andhra, Karnataka, Kerala and
Maharashtra – and concluded against such an idea.
▪ However, the demand for linguistic reorganisation of states did not stop. The issue
gained centre-stage with Pattabhi Sitaramayya’s election as the Congress President
at the Jaipur session. A resolution there led to the constitution of a committee with
Sardar Vallabhai Patel, Pattabhi Sitaramayya and Jawaharlal Nehru (also called the
JVP committee).
▪ The JVP committee submitted its report on April 1, 1949. It too held that the
demand for linguistic states, in the given context, as “narrow provincialism’’ and
that it could become a “menace’’ to the development of the country. The JVP
committee also held out that “while language is a binding force, it is also a
separating one’’.
▪ However, it stressed that it was possible that “when conditions are more static and
the state of peoples’ minds calmer, the adjustment of these boundaries or the
creation of new provinces can be undertaken with relative ease and with advantage
to all concerned.’’
▪ The committee said in conclusion that it was not the right time to embark upon the
idea of linguistic reorganisation of States. In other words, the consensus was that

Page 11
the linguistic reorganisation of states be postponed. There was provision for re-
working the boundaries between states and also for the formation of new states
from parts of existing states.
▪ The makers of the Constitution did not qualify the reorganisation of the States as
only on linguistic basis but left it open as long as there was agreement on such
reorganisation. The idea of linguistic states revived soon after the first general
elections were over. Potti Sriramulu’s fast demanding a separate state of Andhra,
beginning October 19, 1952 and his death thereafter on December 15, 1952.
▪ This led to the constitution of the States Reorganisation Commission, with Fazli Ali
as Chairperson, and K.M. Panikkar and H.N. Husrau as members. The Commission
submitted its report in October 1955. The Commission recommended the following
States to constitute the Indian Union: Madras, Kerala, Karnataka, Hyderabad,
Andhra, Bombay, Vidharbha, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Punjab, Uttar Pradesh,
Bihar, West Bengal, Assam, Orissa and Jammu & Kashmir.
▪ In other words, the Commission’s recommendations were a compromise between
administrative convenience and linguistic concerns. The Nehru regime, however,
was, by then, committed to the principle of linguistic reorganization of the States
and thus went ahead implementing the States Reorganisation Act, 1956.
▪ Andhra Pradesh, including the Hyderabad State came into existence. Kerala,
including the Travancore-Cochin State and the Malabar district of Madras, came
into existence. Karnataka came into being including the Mysore State and also
parts of Bombay and Madras States.
▪ In all these cases, the core principle was linguistic identity. The Nehru regime,
however, denied acceding to a similar demand in the case of the Gujarati speaking
people. However, this too was conceded in May 1960 with the creation of
Maharashtra and Gujarat.
▪ Subsequently, the demand for a Punjabi subha continued to be described by the
establishment as separatist until 1966. The trifurcation of Punjab, brought to an
end the process that was initiated by the Indian National Congress, in 1920, to put
language as the basis for the reorganization of the provinces.

Page 12
India’s Foreign Policy

▪ The founding principles of independent India’s foreign policy were, in fact,


formulated at least three decades before independence. It evolved in the course of
the freedom struggle and was rooted in its conviction against any form of
colonialism. Jawaharlal Nehru was its prime architect.
▪ India’s foreign policy was based on certain basic principles. They are: anti-
colonialism, anti-imperialism, anti-apartheid or anti-racism, non-alignment with
the super powers, Afro Asian Unity, non-aggression, non-interference in other’s
internal affairs, mutual respect for each other’s sovereignty and territorial integrity,
and the promotion of world peace and security.
▪ The commitment to peace between nations was not placed in a vacuum; it was
placed with an equally emphatic commitment to justice. The context in which
India’s foreign policy was formulated was further complicated by the two
contesting power blocs that dominated the world in the post-war scenario: the US
and the USSR.
▪ Independent India responded to this with non-alignment as its foreign policy
doctrine. Before we go into the details of nonalignment, it will be useful to look at
India’s relationship with China since independence. China was liberated by its
people from Japanese colonial expansionism in 1949, just two years after India’s
Independence. Nehru laid a lot of importance on friendship with China, with whom
India shared a long border.
▪ India was the first to recognize the new People’s Republic of China on January 1,
1950. The shared experience of suffering at the hands of colonial powers and its
consequences – poverty and underdevelopment – in Nehru’s perception was force
enough to get the two nations to join hands to give Asia its due place in the world.
Nehru pressed for representation for Communist China in the UN Security Council.
▪ However, when China occupied Tibet, in 1950, India was unhappy that it had not
been taken into confidence. In 1954, India and China signed a treaty in which India
recognized China’s rights over Tibet and the two countries placed their relationship
within a set of principles, widely known since then as the principles of Panch Sheel.
▪ Meanwhile, Nehru took special efforts to project China and Chou En-lai at the
Bandung Conference, held in April 1955. In 1959, the Dalai Lama, fled Tibet along

Page 13
with thousands of refugees after a revolt by the Buddhists was crushed by the
Chinese government.
▪ The Dalai Lama was given asylum in India and it made the Chinese unhappy. Soon
after, in October 1959, the Chinese opened fire on an Indian patrol near the Kongka
pass in Ladakh, killing five Indian policemen and capturing a dozen others. Though
talks were held at various levels including with Chou En-lai, not much headway was
made.
▪ Then came the 1962 war with China. On 8 September 1962, Chinese forces attacked
the Tagla ridge and dislodged Indian troops. All the goodwill and attempts to forge
an Asian bloc in the world came to a stop. India took a long time to recover from
the blow to its self respect, and perhaps it was only the victory over Pakistan in the
Bangladesh war, in which China and the US were also supporting Pakistan, that
restored the sense of self-worth.
▪ India’s contribution to the world, however, was not restricted to its relationship
with China and the Panch Sheel. It was most pronounced and lasting in the form of
non-alignment and its concretisation at the Bandung Conference.
▪ In March 1947, Nehru organised the Asian Relations Conference, attended by more
than twenty countries. The theme of the conference was Asian independence and
assertion on the world stage. Another such conference was held in December 1948
in specific response to the Dutch attempt to re-colonize Indonesia.
▪ The de-colonization initiative was carried forward further at the Asian leaders’
conference in Colombo in 1954, culminating in the Afro Asian Conference in
Bandung, Indonesia, in 1955. The Bandung Conference set the stage for the
meeting of nations at Belgrade and the birth of the Non-Aligned Movement.
▪ The architect of independent India’s foreign policy, indeed, was Jawaharlal Nehru
and the high point of it was reached in 1961 when he stood with Nasser of Egypt
and Tito of Yugoslavia to call for nuclear disarmament and peace. The importance
of non-alignment and its essence in such a world is best explained from what
Nehru had to say about it. “So far as all these evil forces of fascism, colonialism and
racialism or the nuclear bomb and aggression and suppression are concerned, we
stand most emphatically and unequivocally committed against them . . .
▪ We are unaligned only in relation to the cold war with its military pacts. We object
to all this business of forcing the new nations of Asia and Africa into their cold war
machine. Otherwise, we are free to condemn any development which we consider

Page 14
wrong or harmful to the world or ourselves and we use that freedom every time the
occasion arises.”

Questions:

1. Examine the consequences of partition.


2. Give a detailed answer on Merger of Princely States.
3. Discuss about the India’s foreign policy.

Page 15
CHARACTERISTICS OF INDIAN CULTURE
Introduction:

▪ Indian culture is one of the most ancient cultures of the world. The ancient cultures
of Egypt, Greece, Rome, etc. were destroyed with time and only their remnants are
left. But Indian culture is alive till today. Its fundamental principles are the same,
as were in the ancient time. One can see village panchayats, caste systems and joint
family system.
▪ The teachings of Buddha, Mahavira, and Lord Krishna are alive till today also and
are source of inspiration. The values of spirituality, praying nature, faith in karma
and reincarnation, non-violence, truth, non-stealing, Chastity, Non-
Acquisitiveness, etc. inspire people of this nation, today also. Material development
and materials come under civilization while Art of Living, customs, traditions come
under culture.
▪ Material development is possible to a limit. This is the reason, that the civilizations
got destroyed while Indian culture is present till today because the basis of
development was spirituality and not materialism. Thus, Indian culture can be
called an ancient culture, whose past is alive even in the present.
▪ The reminiscent of the stone-age found in Pallavaram, Chingalpet, Vellore,
Tinnivalli near Madras, in the valley of river Sohan, in Pindhighev area in West
Punjab, in Rehand area of Mirzapur in Uttar Pradesh, in Narmada Valley in
Madhya Pradesh, in Hoshangabad and Maheshwar, make it clear that India has
been the land of development and growth of human culture.
▪ On the basis of excavation done in places like Harappa and Mohanjodaro etc. we
come to know the developed civilization and culture of the pre-historical era, which
was flourished around 3000 B.C. Thus, Indian culture is about 5000 years old.

Characteristics of Indian Culture

Traditional Indian culture, in its overall thrust towards the spiritual, promotes moral
values and the attitudes of generosity, simplicity and frugality. Some of the striking
features of Indian culture that pervade its numerous castes, tribes, ethnic groups and
religious groups and sects are as follows.

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A Cosmic Vision

▪ The framework of Indian culture places human beings within a conception of the
universe as a divine creation. It is not anthropo-centric (human-centric) only and
considers all elements of creation, both living and non-living, as manifestations of
the divine.
▪ Therefore, it respects God‘s design and promotes the ideal of co-existence. This
vision thus, synthesizes human beings, nature and God into one integral whole.
This is reflected in the idea of satyam-shivam-sundaram.

Sense of Harmony

▪ Indian philosophy and culture tries to achieve an innate harmony and order and
this is extended to the entire cosmos. Indian culture assumes that natural cosmic
order inherent in nature is the foundation of moral and social order. Inner
harmony is supposed to be the foundation of outer harmony.
▪ External order and beauty will naturally follow from inner harmony. Indian culture
balances and seeks to synthesize the material and the spiritual, as aptly illustrated
by the concept of purushartha

Tolerance

▪ An important characteristic of Indian culture is tolerance. In India, tolerance and


liberalism is found for all religions, castes, communities, etc. Many foreign cultures
invaded India and Indian society gave every culture the opportunity of prospering.
Indian society accepted and respected Shaka, Huna, Shithiyan, Muslim, Christian,
Sikh, Jain, Buddhist cultures.
▪ The feeling of tolerance towards all religions is a wonderful characteristic of Indian
society. Rigveda says-―Truth is one, even then the Scholars describe it in various
forms. In Gita, Lord Krishna says, ―Those praying others are actually praying me.
This thought is the extreme of tolerance. There is a peaceful coexistence of various
religions in India and all have been effecting each other – although this tradition
has been badly affected by activities of converting religion by some religious
organisations.

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▪ All the religions existing in India are respected equally. Indian culture accepts the
manifoldness of reality and assimilates plurality of viewpoints, behaviours, customs
and institutions. It does not try to suppress diversity in favour of uniformity. The
motto of Indian culture is both unity in diversity as well as diversity in unity.

Continuity and Stability

▪ The principles of Indian culture are today also that much in practice, as they were
initially. A special characteristic of Indian culture is – its continuous flow. Since,
Indian culture is based on values, so it‘s development is continuous. Many
centuries passed by, many changes occurred, many foreign invaders were faced, but
the light of Indian culture today also is continuously glowing.
▪ No Scholar can end its history of like that of the cultures Egypt, Greece, Rome,
Sumer, Babylon and Syria because it is yet in the phase of construction. Indian
culture can be understood by looking at its present cultural standards. The light of
ancient Indian culture life is yet glowing. Many invasions occurred, many rulers
changed, many laws were passed but even today, the traditional institutions,
religion, epics, literature, philosophy, traditions, etc. are alive. The situations and
government could not remove them completely. The stability of Indian culture is
unique within itself, even today.
▪ Indian culture has always favoured change within continuity. It is in favour of
gradual change or reform. It does not favour abrupt or instant change. Therefore,
most changes in thought have come in the form of commentaries and
interpretation and not in the form of original systems of thought. In matters of
behaviour also synthesis of old and new is preferred over replacement of old by the
new.

Adaptability

▪ Adaptability has a great contribution in making Indian culture immortal.


Adaptability is the process of changing according to time, place and period. It‘s an
essential element of longevity of any culture. Indian culture has a unique property
of adjustment, as a result of which, it is maintained till today.

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▪ Indian family, caste, religion and institutions have changed themselves with time.
Due to adaptability and co-ordination of Indian culture, it‘s continuity, utility and
activity is still present. Dr. Radha Krishnan, in his book, Indian culture: Some
Thoughts‘, while describing the adaptability of Indian culture has said all people
whether black or white, Hindus or Muslims, Christians or Jews are brothers and
our country is the entire universe.
▪ We should have devotion for those things, which are beyond the limits of
knowledge and regarding which, it‘s difficult to say anything. Our hope towards
mankind was based on that respect and devotion, which people had towards other‘s
views. There should be no efforts on imposing our thoughts on others.

Receptivity

▪ Receptivity is an important characteristic of Indian culture. Indian culture has


always accepted the good of the invading cultures. Indian culture is like an ocean,
in which many rivers come and meet. In the same way all castes succumbed to the
Indian culture and very rapidly they dissolved in the Hindutva.
▪ Indian culture has always adjusted with other cultures it‘s ability to maintain unity
amongst the diversities of all is the best. The reliability, which developed in this
culture due to this receptivity, is a boon for this world and is appreciated by all. We
have always adopted the properties of various cultures. Vasudaiva Kutumbakam is
the soul of Indian culture.
▪ Indian culture has always answered and activated itself by receiving and adjusting
with the elements of foreign cultures. Indian culture has received the elements of
Muslim cultures and has never hesitated in accepting the useful things of foreign
culture. Therefore, it‘s continuity, utility and activity are still there today.
▪ The adaptability and receptivity of this culture has given it the power to remain
alive in all the conditions. Due to this property, Indian culture was never destroyed
even after facing the foreign attacks. Actually, Indian society and culture had
facilitated foreign attackers by getting them close and becoming intimate with them
and not only gave but also received many things.

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Spirituality

▪ Spirituality is the soul of Indian culture. Here the existence of soul is accepted.
Therefore, the ultimate aim of man is not physical comforts but is self-realisation.
Radha Kumud Mukerjee, in his book, Hindu Civilization‘, has analysed that Indian
culture, which kept it‘s personal specialities, bound the entire nation in unity in
such a way that nation and culture were considered inseparable and became
unanimous.
▪ Nation became culture and culture became nation. Country took the form of
Spiritual World, beyond the physical world. When Indian culture originated in the
times of Rigveda, then it spread with time to Saptasindhu, Bramhavarta, Aryavarta,
Jumbudweepa, Bharata Varsha or India. Because of its strength, it reached abroad
beyond the borders of India and established there also.

Thoughts about Karma and Reincarnation

▪ The concept of Karma (action) and Reincarnation have special importance in


Indian culture. It is believed that one gains virtue during good action and takes
birth in higher order in his next birth and spends a comfortable life. The one doing
bad action takes birth in lower order in his next birth and suffers pain and leads a
miserable life.
▪ Upanishads say that the Principle of fruits of action is correct. A man gets the fruits
as per the action he does. Therefore, man needs to modify his actions, so as to
improve the next birth also. Continuously performing good actions in all his birth,
he will get salvation, i.e. will be liberated from the cycle of birth and death. This
concept is not only of the Upnishads but is also the basis of the Jainism, Buddhism,
etc. In this way, the concept of reincarnation is associated with the principle of
action. The actual cause of reincarnation is the actions done in the previous birth.

Emphasis on Duty

▪ As against rights, Indian culture emphasises dharma or moral duty. It is believed


that performance of one‘s duty is more important than asserting one‘s right. It also
emphasises the complementariness between one‘s own duty and other‘s rights.
Thus, through the emphasis on community or family obligations, Indian culture

Page 5
promotes interdependence rather than Independence and autonomy of the
individual.
▪ The Ideal of Joint Family At the level of marriage, there is a lot of plurality in India.
At the level of family, however, there is striking similarity. For example, the ideal or
norm of joint family is upheld by almost every Indian. Every person may not live in
a joint household but the ideal of joint family is still favoured.
▪ The family is the defining feature of Indian culture. Although Indians differentiate
between individual identity and family identity, the Western type of individualism
is rare in Indian culture.

Caste System

Another characteristic of Indian culture is social stratification. In every region of India,


there are about 200 castes. The social structure is made of thousands of those castes
and sub-castes, which decide the social status of a person on the basis of birth.

Four Duties

▪ By fulfilling duties, a person can follow his religion while living in physical comforts
and thus can gain salvation. Fulfilling duties is a characteristic of Indian culture.
▪ In this, in a person‘s life, four basis are considered-
o Dharma (religion),
o Arth (money),
o Kama (lust),
o Moksha (salvation).
▪ Religion is related to the fulfilment of moral duties. Money is related to the
fulfilment of all needs. Lust is associated with pleasures in life. Salvation is the last
goal. All these inspire an individual to fulfil his duties and to live in a disciplined
way in society. Two contradictory thoughts are seen in the history of the world-first
the world and life is momentary and destructible and second is that the success of
life depends on the enjoyment.
▪ Its best example is Western school of thought. But one can see the co-ordination
between the two in Indian culture. Both should be mingled to the real nature,
importance and goal of human life. The expression of this coordination is the

Page 6
Principle of Efforts. It is believed that the nation, which has forgotten its culture, is
not an alive nation. He used to tell the importance of Indian cultural values. People
who believe in material development can be intolerant.
▪ Those who believe in development of weapons can be unrelative. Those who
consider harm done to others for their own welfare as forgivable can be liberal but
the exceptional of Indian culture is that though it considers material as an essential
thing but has not made it the centre of faith.
▪ Though it has used the power of weapons but has considered its welfare in it. It has
considered harm done to others for its own welfare as unforgivable. The ultimate
goal of life here is not luxury and desires but is sacrifice-penance and self-
realisation.

Indian Culture during the Contemporary Period

▪ The social structural affiliation of the classical in the traditional Indian culture had
been broadly linked with princes, priests, monks, munis, sadhus, scholars, guild
masters and other prosperous groups. During the medieval period the relationship
between the classical and the folk was not disturbed.
▪ In ancient India the classical tradition was linked not only to Sanskrit but there
were also streams of the classical tradition associated with Pali and Tamil. Sanskrit
was the bearer of the Hindu classical tradition and the Mahayana Buddhist
tradition and some of the Jain science traditions as well. Pali was the vehicle of the
Theravadi Buddhist tradition and Tamil was the bearer of the South Indian
classical tradition.
▪ During the modern period, the relationship between the classical represented by
English and the vernacular folk traditions has broken down. Traditional
equilibrium has been affected by different factors and processes of modernization.
With the impact of modern social forces the relationship between the classical and
the folk traditions has been disturbed. In the urban centres a new middle class has
been growing and assuming the role of the bearer of the classical tradition.
▪ The middle class has a world view and outlook that is radically different from the
bearers of the folk tradition. They are mostly the bearers of Western cultural values,
norms, ideas, outlook and institutions, and English has become their dominant

Page 7
language. Throughout history, the folk and the tribal traditions have remained
relatively unaffected by changes in political structures.
▪ The importance of classical traditions has been changing from time to time with
changes in political power structure but the folk and the tribal traditions have
remained consistently vibrant.
▪ The classical traditions in traditional India had always accepted the importance as
well as given space to the folk and the tribal cultures. The bearers of modern
Western classical cultural tradition, on the other hand, have on occasions shown
less tolerance towards the folk and the tribal traditions.
▪ They usually brand the traditional culture as primitive, barbaric and superstitious
in comparison to the modern culture. They try to modernize and westernize all the
elements and streams of Indian culture. The processes of westernization,
industrialisation, urbanisation, globalisation and democratisation are influencing
various aspects of Indian culture today.
▪ These modernizing and secularizing forces, however, have not yet cut off
contemporary Indian culture from the traditional and cultural roots of Indian
culture. The traditional cultural media not only continue to survive today, but also
some aspects of it have also been incorporated in novel ways into an emerging
popular and, classical culture.

Questions :

1. Bring out the characteristics of Indian culture


2. Examine the Indian Culture during the contemporary period
3. What are the four duties in Indian Culture. Explain

Page 8
UNITY IN DIVERSITY

Introduction:

One feature that is most often noticed about India is its unity in diversity. This
overworked cliché has become a part of India‘s self-identity. India is a country of sub-
continental proportions. From north to south, east to west, people from diverse
backgrounds have mixed and cultures have intermingled over centuries.

Nevertheless, there has been an underlying continuity in identity. Beneath the


bewildering diversity of religion, language and customs of this vast country, the
underlying unity is remarkable. The idea of unity is traced back by scholars to ancient
times.

The underlying cultural unity was strengthened further with the administrative unity
brought about during the British rule and with the construction of India as a modern
independent nation after the independence. The enduring nature of Indian unity has
always been fascinating.

Indian unity is the product of certain historical factors that are present in various fields
of Indian social life. It appears as if the inhabitants from the Himalayas in the north to
Kanyakumari in the south, and Kutch in the west to Arunachal in the east are woven
together into a beautiful tapestry.

In the process of its evolution, Indian society has acquired a culture characterized by
stable patterns of pluralism. However, the acceptance of cultural pluralism does not
detract us from the idea of promoting economic, political and social integration.

European Sociology conceptualizes unity in a society in terms of linguistic nationality


or in terms of political sovereignty. Thus, the primary basis of unity belongs to a nation.
According to many Indian sociologists, however, unity in India and the whole of South
Asia, in fact, has been civilisational, going back to ancient times and continuing to the
present day. Thus, at the civilisational level there is unity in South Asia, but this South

Page 1
Asian civilisation is divided today into many nations like India, Pakistan, Bangladesh,
Sri Lanka and Nepal.

Forms of Diversity in India


Racial Diversity

You may have seen people of different races in India. A race is a group of people with a
set of distinctive physical features such as skin colour, type of nose, form of hair, etc.

(1) the Negrito, (2) the Proto Australoid, (3) the Mongoloid,

(4) the Mediterranean, (5) the Western Brachycephals, (6) the Nordic.

Besides telling you what the various types denote, we shall not go into the details of this
issue, because that will involve us in technical matters pertaining to physical
anthropology. Here, we need only to be aware of the diversity of racial types in India.

▪ Negritos are the people who belong to the black racial stock as found in Africa.
They have black skin colour, frizzle hair, thick lips, etc. In India some of the tribes
in South India, such as the Kadar, the Irula and the Paniyan have distinct Negrito
strain.
▪ The Proto-Australoid races consist of an ethnic group, which includes the
Australian aborigines and other peoples of southern Asia and Pacific Islands.
Representatives of this group are the Ainu of Japan, the Vedda of Sri Lanka, and
the Sakai of Malaysia. In India the tribes of Middle India belong to this strain.
Some of these tribes are the Ho of Singhbhumi, Bihar, and the Bhil of the Vindhya
ranges.
▪ The Mongoloids are a major racial stock native to Asia, including the peoples of
northern and eastern Asia. For example, Chinese, Japanese, Burmese, Eskimos,
and often American Indians also belong to this race. In India, the North Eastern
regions have tribes of brachycephalic Mongoloid strain. A slightly different kind of
Mongoloid racial stock is found in the Brahmputra Valley. The Mikir-Bodo group of
tribes and the Angami Nagas represent the best examples of Mongoloid racial
composition in India

Page 2
▪ The Mediterranean races relate to the Caucasian physical type, i.e., the white
race. It is characterised by medium or short stature, slender build, long head with
cephalic index (the ratio multiplied by 100 of the maximum breadth of the head to
its maximum length) of less than 75 and dark (continental) complexion.

▪ The Western Brachycephals are divided into the following three sub-groups:
1. The Alpenoid are characterised by broad head, medium stature and light
skin, found amongst Bania castes of Gujarat, the Kayasthas of Bengal, etc.
2. The Dinaric are characterised by broad head, long nose, tall stature and
dark skin colour, found amongst the Brahmin of Bengal, the non-Brahmin of
Karnataka,
3. The Armenoid are characterised by features similar to Dinaric. The
Armenoid have a more marked shape of the back of head, a prominent and
narrow nose. The Parsi of Bombay show the typical characteristics of the
Armenoid race.
▪ The Nordic races belong to the physical type characterised by tall stature, long
head, light skin and hair, and blue eyes. They are found in Scandinavian countries,
Europe. In India, they are found in different parts of north of the country,
especially in Punjab and Rajputana. The Kho of Chitral, the Red Kaffirs, the
Khatash are some of the representatives of this type. Research suggests that the
Nordics came from the north, probably from south east Russia and south west
Siberia, through central Asia to India.

Linguistic Diversity

While the famous linguist Grierson noted 179 languages and 544 dialects, the 1971
census on the other hand, reported 1652 languages in India which are spoken as
mother tongue. Not all these languages are, however, equally widespread. Many of
them are tribal speeches and these are spoken by less than one percent of the total
population. Here you can see that in India there is a good deal of linguistic diversity.

▪ Only 22 languages are listed in Schedule VIII of the Indian Constitution. These are
Assamese, Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Kashmiri, Konkani, Malayalam,

Page 3
Manipuri, Marathi, Nepali, Oriya, Punjabi, Sanskrit, Sindhi, Tamil, Telugu, bodo,
dongri, Maithili, santhali.
▪ The above constitutionally recognised languages belong to two linguistic families:
Indo-Aryan and Dravidian. Malayalam, Kannada, Tamil and Telugu are the four
major Dravidian languages.

This linguistic diversity notwithstanding, we have always had a sort of link language,
though it has varied from age to age. In ancient times it was Sanskrit, in medieval age it
was Arabic or Persian and in modern times we have Hindi and English as official
languages.

Religious Diversity

India is a land of multiple religions. We find here followers of various faiths,


particularly of Hinduism, Islam, Christianity, Sikhism, Buddhism, Jainism,
Zoroastrianism, among others.

You know it that Hinduism is the dominant religion of India. According to the census
of 1981 it is professed by 82.64 percent of the total population. Next comes Islam,
which is practised by 11.35 percent. This is followed by Christianity having a following
of 2.43 percent, Sikhism reported by 1.96 percent, Buddhism by 0.71 percent and
Jainism by 0.48 percent. The religions with lesser following are Judaism,
Zoroastrianism and Bahaism.

While Hinduism saw a slight reduction in the percentage of their followers by the year
1991, most of the other religions increased their strength though by very narrow
margin. According to the 1991 census the Hinduism has 82.41 percent followers to the
total population. 11.67 percent followed Islam and 2.32 percent followed Christianity.
Sikhism, Buddhism and Jainism followed by 1.99, 0.77 and 0.41 percent, respectively.
And 0.43 reported to follow other religions.

Then there are sects within each religion. Hinduism, for example, has many sects
including Shaiva, Shakta and Vaishnava. Add to them the sects born or religious reform
movements such as Arya Samaj, Brahmo Samaj, Ram Krishna Mission.

More recently, some new cults have come up such as Radhaswami, Saibaba, etc.
Similarly, Islam is divided into Shiya and Sunni; Sikhism into Namdhari and

Page 4
Nirankari; Jainism into Digambar and Shvetambar; and Buddhism into Hinayan and
Mahayan.

While Hindu and Muslim are found in almost all parts of India, the remaining minority
religions have their pockets of concentration. Christians have their strongholds in the
three southern states of Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh and in the north-
eastern states like Nagaland and Meghalaya. Sikhs are concentrated largely in Punjab,
Buddhists in Maharashtra, and Jains are mainly spread over Maharashtra, Rajasthan
and Gujarat, but also found in most urban centres throughout the country.

Caste Diversity

India, as you know, is a country of castes. The term caste is generally used in two
senses: sometimes in the sense of Varna and sometimes in the sense of Jati.

1. Varna refers to a segment of the four-fold division of Hindu society based on


functional criterion. The four Varna are Brahman, Kshatriya, Vaishya and Shudra
with their specialised functions as learning, defence, trade and manual service. The
Varna hierarchy is accepted all over India.
2. Jati refers to a hereditary endogamous status group practising a specific traditional
occupation. You may be surprised to know that there are more than 3,000 jati in
India. These are hierarchically graded in different ways in different regions.

It may also be noted that the practice of caste system is not confined to Hindus alone.
We find castes among the Muslim, Christian, Sikh as well as other communities. You
may have heard of the hierarchy of Shaikh, Saiyed, Mughal, Pathan among the Muslim.
Furthermore, there are castes like teli (oil pressure), dhobi (washerman), darjee
(tailor), etc. among the Muslim.

Similarly, caste consciousness among the Christian in India is not unknown. Since a
vast majority of Christians in India are converted from Hindu fold, the converts have
carried the caste system into Christianity.

Among the Sikh again you have so many castes including Jat Sikh and Majahabi Sikh
(lower castes). In view of this you can well imagine the extent of caste diversity in
India.

Page 5
INDIA: A SECULAR STATE
Introduction
▪ The term “Secular” means being "separate" from religion, or having no religious
basis. A secular person is one who does not owe his moral values to any religion.
His values are the product of his rational and scientific thinking.
▪ Secularism means separation of religion from political, economic, social and
cultural aspects of life, religion being treated as a purely personal matter.
▪ It emphasized dissociation of the state from religion and full freedom to all
religions and tolerance of all religions. It also stands for equal opportunities for
followers of all religions, and no discrimination and partiality on grounds of
religion.

Secularism in the History of India


▪ Secular traditions are very deep rooted in the history of India. Indian culture is
based on the blending of various spiritual traditions and social movements.
▪ In ancient India, the Santam Dharma (Hinduism) was basically allowed to develop
as a holistic religion by welcoming different spiritual traditions and trying to
integrate them into a common mainstream. The development of four Vedas and the
various interpretations of the Upanishads and the Puranas clearly highlight the
religious plurality of Hinduism.
▪ Emperor Ashoka was the first great emperor to announce, as early as third century
B.C. that, the state would not prosecute any religious sect. In his 12th Rock
Edict, Ashoka made an appeal not only for the toleration of all religion sects but
also to develop a spirit of great respect toward them. Even after the advent
of Jainism, Buddhism and later Islam and Christianity on the Indian soil, the quest
for religious toleration and coexistence of different faiths continued.
▪ In medieval India, the Sufi and Bhakti movements bond the people of various
communities together with love and peace. The leading lights of these movements
were Khwaja Moinuddin Chisti, Baba Farid, Sant Kabir Das, Guru Nanak Dev,
Saint Tukaram and Mira Bai etc.

Page 1
▪ In medieval India, religious toleration and freedom of worship marked the State
under Akbar. He had a number of Hindus as his ministers, forbade forcible
conversions and abolished Jizya. The most prominent evidence of his tolerance
policy was his promulgation of ‘Din-i-Ilahi’ or the Divine Faith, which had elements
of both Hindu and Muslim faith. That this was not imposed upon the subjects is
obvious from the fact that there were few adherents to it. Along with this he
emphasized the concept of ‘sulh-i-kul’ or peace and harmony among religions. He
even sponsored a series of religious debates which were held in the ‘Ibadat
Khana’ of the Hall of Worship, and the participants in these debates included
theologians from amongst Brahmins, Jains and Zoroastrians.
▪ Even before Akbar, Babar had advised Humayun to “shed religious prejudice,
protect temples, preserve cows, and administer justice properly in this tradition.”
▪ The spirit of secularism was strengthened and enriched through the Indian
freedom movement too, though the British have pursued the policy of divide and
rule.
▪ In accordance with this policy, the British partitioned Bengal in 1905. Separate
electorates were provided for Muslims through the Indian Councils Act of 1909, a
provision which was extended to Sikhs, Indian Christians, Europeans and Anglo
Indians in certain provinces by the Government of India Act, 1919.
▪ Ramsay MacDonald Communal Award of 1932, provided for separate electorates as
well as reservation of seats for minorities, even for the depressed classes became
the basis for representation under the Government of India Act, 1935.
▪ However, Indian freedom movement was characterized by secular tradition and
ethos right from the start. In the initial part of the Indian freedom movement, the
liberals like Sir Feroz Shah Mehta, Govind Ranade, Gopal Krishna Gokhale by and
large pursued a secular approach to politics.
▪ The constitution drafted by Pandit Motilal Nehru as the chairman of the
historic Nehru Committee in 1928, had many provision on secularism as:
o ‘There shall be no state religion for the commonwealth of India or for any
province in the commonwealth, nor shall the state, either directly or
indirectly, endow any religion any preference or impose any disability on
account of religious beliefs or religious status’.

Page 2
▪ Gandhiji’s secularism was based on a commitment to the brotherhood of religious
communities based on their respect for and pursuit of truth, whereas, J. L. Nehru’s
secularism was based on a commitment to scientific humanism tinged with a
progressive view of historical change.

Secularism and the Indian Constitution


The term ‘Secular’ was added to the preamble by the Forty-Second Constitution
Amendment Act of 1976, (India is a sovereign, socialist, secular, democratic,
republic).
It emphasize the fact that constitutionally, India is a secular country which has no State
religion. And that the state shall recognise and accept all religions, not favour or
patronize any particular religion.
▪ While Article 14 grants equality before the law and equal protection of the laws to
all. Article 15 enlarges the concept of secularism to the widest possible extent by
prohibiting discrimination on grounds of religion, race, caste, sex or place of birth.
▪ Article 16 (1) guarantees equality of opportunity to all citizens in matters of
public employment and reiterates that there would be no discrimination on the
basis of religion, race, caste, sex, descent, place of birth and residence.
▪ Article 25 provides ‘Freedom of Conscience’, that is, all persons are equally
entitled to freedom of conscience and the right to freely profess, practise and
propagate religion.
▪ Article 26, every religious group or individual has the right to establish and
maintain institutions for religious and charitable purposes and to manage its own
affairs in matters of religion.
▪ Article 27, the state shall not compel any citizen to pay any taxes for the
promotion or maintenance of any particular religion or religious institution.
▪ Article 28 allows educational institutions maintained by different religious groups
to impart religious instruction.
▪ Article 29 and Article 30 provides cultural and educational rights to the
minorities.

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▪ Article 51A i.e. Fundamental Duties obliges all the citizens to promote harmony
and the spirit of common brotherhood and to value and preserve the rich heritage
of our composite culture.

Questions:

1. Analyse the secularism in the history of India.


2. Examine – Secularism and the Indian Constitution.

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ORGANIZATIONS FOR FINE
ARTS, DANCE, DRAMA AND MUSIC
Archaeological Survey of India

▪ The Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) is directly under the aegis of the Ministry
of Culture and it is the foremost institution for archaeological researches conducted
across India. It has been charged with preservation of the cultural heritage of our
nation. Its focus is on the preservation of physical and tangible heritage that is
accumulated in the ancient monuments and archaeological sites.
▪ The provisions of the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Sites and Remains
Act, 1958, guide ASI. Another major legislation that directs the working of the ASI,
is the Antiquities and Art Treasure Act, 1972. This Act directs ASI to prevent the
illegal export of Indian antiquities from our nation.
▪ Although the ASI is charged with the control over all heritage sites across the
nation, for the smooth functioning, the entire country has been divided into 24
Circles, which concentrate on preservation of monuments under their jurisdiction.
ASI employs many trained archaeologists, architects, conservators, epigraphists,
etc.
▪ They have other institutions under their aegis like the Museums, Excavation
branches, Epigraphy branches, Building Survey Projects, Horticulture branch,
Temple Survey Projects, etc. One of the more specialised and one in the kind
project by the ASI is their Underwater Archaeology Wing. The ASI also has several
diplomas and degrees for studying archaeology from the Institute of Archaeology in
New Delhi.

Crafts Council of India:

▪ The Crafts Council of India or CCI is a non-profit organisation that promotes


activities to preserve and develop handicraft industry in India. Kamala Devi
Chattopadhyay who wanted to help the craft persons to get regular work and
recognition for their craft, established the CCI in 1976.

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▪ Although their headquarter is located in Chennai, they have over ten State Councils
that are affiliated to the parent organisation. They achieved a global platform after
being affiliated to the World Crafts Council.
▪ Their main objective is to safeguard the interests of crafts personnel and to
preserve craft traditions. Over the years they have established a series of shops that
display the arts and crafts patronised by the Crafts Council.
▪ This shop has been named ‘Kamala’ after the founder of the CCI. One of their
current objectives is to find innovative ways to blend ancient handicraft techniques
with contemporary ideas and demands.
▪ The Craft Fair Council is the main body behind organising the All India Craft Fair.
The Department of Culture and the Zonal Cultural Centres are responsible for
organising craft fairs in their respective areas. They are also responsible for
organising cultural events during the Republic Day celebrations every year.
▪ Their responsibility is to ensure that the unique artistic traditions of various parts
of India are represented in globally recognised platforms.

Indira Gandhi National Centre

▪ The late Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, in memory of his mother Smt. Indira
Gandhi, launched the Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts (IGNCA) in 1985.
▪ The functioning of the IGNCA was governed by the Indira Gandhi National Centre
for the Arts Trust which was constituted and registered on 24 March 1987 at New
Delhi. It has a Board of Trustees which meet frequently to decide the work of the
Centre.
▪ IGNCA is headed by a Chairman who is assisted by an Executive Committee. They
direct the functioning of the academic and administrative division.
▪ The IGNCA is an autonomous institution that concentrates on research,
conservation, display and dissemination of arts. Although they concentrate on the
visual and performing art, yet they also promote critical and creative literature.

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The IGNCA has six functional units as given hereunder

Units Functions

Kala Nidhi The multi-form library

Devoted mainly to the study and publication of


Kala Kosa
fundamental texts in Indian languages.

Janapada Sampada Engaged in lifestyle studies

Cultural Apply technology-based tools for cultural


Informatics preservation and propagation

Administrative section that acts as a spine


Sutradhara
supporting and coordinating all the activities

The executive unit which transforms researches and


Kala Darsana studies emanating from the IGNCA into visible forms
through exhibitions

▪ Their main objective is to be the major resource centre for the oral and visual art
forms in India. They need to accumulate and preserve art and crafts. They need to
conduct researches on arts and humanities and publish their findings in the form of
reference works, glossaries, encyclopedia and dictionaries.
▪ They should also cultivate linkages and webs of interaction with different strata of
the society and different communities and regions.

Centre for Cultural Resources and Training

▪ The Ministry of Culture, Government of India, has instituted the Centre for
Cultural Resources and Training (CCRT) for linking education with culture. It was
established in 1979 at the behest of Dr. Kapila Vatsyayan and Smt. Kamala Devi
Chattopadhyay. Although an autonomous body, CCRT has been mandated by the

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government to strengthen the foundation of the nation by making education,
culture based and meaningful.
▪ CCRT has its headquarters in New Delhi and three Regional Centres at Udaipur in
the west, Hyderabad in the south and Guwahati in the north-east, to facilitate the
widespread dissemination of Indian art and culture.
▪ CCRT has a holistic approach towards education and they focus on the emotional,
spiritual and cognitive development of children. They want to do this through
reframing education and making it more meaningful.
▪ CCRT not only focuses on the students but creates an awareness amongst teachers,
principals and non-teaching/ administrative actors about the multiplicity of
regional cultures and languages in India. This plurality has to be incorporated
amongst the syllabus and enforced through new and innovative teaching methods.

Some of these new methodologies suggested are

▪ To organise workshops to equip teachers with practical training and knowledge in


crafts that can be taught as part of the school curriculum. These activities can range
from classical dance to music and even varied art forms that showcase the diversity
of Indian culture.
▪ To create a curriculum on Indian art and culture for teachers who would
consequently teach them to the students.
▪ To create a library to house the scripts, digital photographs, audio and visual
recordings, which would be culturally oriented educational aids and would focus on
the arts and crafts of rural India and means to revive and keep them
alive.
▪ The Government of India provides funds to CCRT to offer scholarships to students,
teachers and artists helping them in their endeavour in interlinking education with
culture. These scholarships are given to Young Artists, Junior and Senior
Fellowships for deeper researches. They also organise the Cultural Heritage Young
Leadership Programme that aims at promoting social values and community
participation amongst the pro-active young people of India.

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National Archives of India

▪ This is one of the oldest institutions that was created by the British to keep the
administrative records pertaining to the Indian state. The idea of its establishment
is attributed to the British Civil Auditor, Sandeman, who wanted a ‘Grand Central
Archive’ to protect all the valuable records in 1860.
▪ The archive or the ‘Imperial Records Department’ (IRD) was first established in
1891 in the old British capital-Calcutta under the auspices of Prof. G.W. Forrest.
The IRD was shifted to New Delhi in 1911 as the British changed the national
capital from Calcutta to Delhi. After India gained its independence, the IRD was
renamed as the National Archives of India (NAI).
▪ Soon after this rechristening, there was a change in the administrative set-up and a
Director of the Archives headed the NAI. The archives were opened to the public
for research in 1939. Furthermore, a Conservation Research Laboratory (CRL) was
added to the archives in 1940 for the express purpose of conserving and preserving
these important documents about Indian history.
▪ Slowly, the ambit of responsibility of the Archives was increased to include
acquisition of the public records and private papers/collections that were added to
the library. They also started research and reference programmes and formalised
training for conservation. They also opened regional centres at Jaipur,
Bhubaneswar and Puducherry.
▪ According the Memorandum concerning the National Archives of India, issued by
the Ministry of Culture, the main objectives of NAI are as given below:
1. The vision that guides the National Archives of India is to help in the
preservation of the Indian documentary cultural heritage and ensure that it is
handed to the coming generations and they can be given greater access to the
archival holdings.
2. Their mission is to collect large amount of documents and to manage them
scientifically. They also promote the administration and conservation of
records in all the regional centres.
3. They want to create and nurture closer relations between the archival
institutions and archivists especially at the national and international level.
Lastly, the NAI wants to develop a scientific temper amongst the archivists,

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custodians and users of the records about the rich documentary heritage of
India.

Indian Council for Cultural Relations

▪ The Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR) is under the aegis of the Ministry
of Culture and was established to conduct programmes that promote Indian culture
on an international platform.
▪ Maulana Abul Kalam Azad, who firmly believed in promoting cultural exchanges
with other countries and cultures, established it in 1950. ICCR focuses on the
formulation and implementation of the programmes and policies that are deeply
rooted in the external cultural relations between India and other nations. With
globalisation, the platforms of cultural exchanges among nations have taken
various forms.
▪ ICCR funds various programmes relating to visual and performing arts that are
international in their appeal. They provide grants in support of programmes like
the Jazz Festival in New Delhi, the North-East Music Festival in Guwahati, etc.
▪ The programmes are an integral way of establishing and developing relations with
similar national and international organisations that focus in the field of
culture.
▪ The major focus of ICCR is to promote international friendship, promote cultural
exchange between nations, generate healthy competition and exchange, and in turn
blend the new and old features of the Indian culture.

National Mission for Manuscripts

▪ The Archaeological Survey of India and the National Archives of India had
encountered a large number of manuscripts that are the repositories of the ancient
and medieval heritage of India. It is on their recommendation that the Government
of India has ordered for the establishment of the National Mission for Manuscripts
(NMM).
▪ The foremost task of the NMM was to create the ‘National Electronic Database’.
This database has about one million manuscripts, which makes it the largest
database of Indian manuscripts in the world. Another major task of the NMM was

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to conserve the manuscripts using indigenous and modern methods so as to
preserve documents while retaining its ancient heritage.

Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage

▪ The Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage or INTACH is a non-profit
NGO, which was founded in 1984 in New Delhi. The primary purpose of the
organisation was to spearhead awareness regarding our heritage and to take steps
to conserve it.
▪ The organization has various branches that are called ‘Chapters’. Currently, they
have Chapters in about 170 Indian cities and several international ones too.
▪ The first governing council of the INTACH consisted of noted people like the
former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, M.G.K Menon, Dr. Kapila Vatsyayan,
Madhavrao Scindia etc.
▪ According to the Memorandum of Rules and Regulations of INTACH they are
supposed to:
1. Restore the monuments and ruins to their original state and then help with
the subsequent management and sustenance of the monument.
2. They have to create awareness amongst the masses about conservation of
heritage property. They have to create awareness programs like awareness
drive in schools, workshops for various groups about conservation etc.
3. They are to create and support Heritage Walks that would cover major areas
of historic cities and create awareness amongst the citizens about the living
cultural heritage that surrounds them.
▪ They should specifically focus on monuments that fall out of the purview of the
Archaeological survey of India and work with the local authorities in terms of
preservation and maintenance.
▪ The work done by INTACH is appreciated and supported by various other
governmental agencies and several foreign countries have signed Memorandum of
Understanding (MoU) with them.
▪ The most famous example is the INTACH UK Trust that was established in 1987
through a bequest from the Charles Wallace foundation. They fund projects in
India that focus on heritage conservation. They also help people reconcile tourism

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activities and conservation of monuments, as they are necessary both for the
preservation of our culture and its dissemination to the world.

Sahitya Academi

▪ The Government of India established the “National Academy of Letters” or the


Sahitya Academi in 1954.
▪ The primary function of this organisation was to work as a national organisation
o to promote literary culture in India,
o to foster and co-ordinate literature in all the Indian languages and
o to overall promote the national unity of the country.

It is an autonomous organisation, which undertakes literary activities in over 24


Indian languages. Apart from the 22 languages that are mentioned in the Constitution
of India, the Sahitya Academi gives recognition to two more languages: English and
Rajasthani. They have several awards and fellowships that honor the great contribution
made to linguistic development by writers.

▪ For the last few years their collective focus has shifted to the preservation of the
Oral and tribal literature. Our ancient society and traditional knowledge was
transferred as oral knowledge and that needs to be preserved for the coming
generations.

Sangeet Natak Academi

▪ The Sangeet Natak Academi was the first national academy set up for the Arts by
the Government of India in 1952. The first President of India, Dr. Rajendra Prasad,
inaugurated it.
▪ The major focus of the academy was to create a set-up for music, drama and dances
of India. It was supposed to be the primary body for showcasing the performing
arts in the country. They also had the ardent task of promoting the enormous
intangible heritage of India as demonstrated through the forms of music, dance
and drama.
▪ They are not only supposed to be the central agency to monitor the preservation of
our cultural heritage but they need to collaborate with the State and Union territory
governments to preserve and promote their culture on a national platform.
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▪ The Sangeet Natak Academi also looks after several institutions, which focus
primarily of either dance or music or drama. For example, they administer the
National School of Drama that was set up in 1959 for focused work on dramatics in
India. They also collaborate with international organizations like UNESCO to save
the cultural heritage of India.
▪ Sangeet Natak Academi has launched a decade long project to work on the dance
form of Koodiyattam.

They have several aims and objectives like:

▪ To promote research and performances in the fields of music, dance and drama.
▪ To encourage the establishment of centres for theatres, especially for regional
theatres
▪ To promote teaching acting, study of stagecraft and play production and
direction.
▪ To conduct and promote literature on Indian music, dance and drama.
▪ Special emphasis should be given to create handbooks and illustrated
dictionaries that explain technical terms.
▪ To revive, promote and preserve the folk dance, music and drama especially
community art, martial music and any other type of music.
▪ To foster cultural contacts with international community in the fields of dance,
music and drama.

Lalit Kala Academy

▪ The National Academy of Art or the Lalit Kala Academy was set up by the
Government of India in 1954 with the sole object to promote fine arts in India. The
academy is an autonomous body that is funded by the Ministry of Culture.
▪ They focus on the encouragement and understanding of fine arts. Although they
deal with national and international art, their focus is on the promotion and
preservation of Indian art.
▪ Their main centre is in Delhi and they have Regional Centres in Chennai, Kolkata,
Lucknow, Shimla, Shillong and Bhubaneswar. They organize national and

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international exhibitions and event showcasing the works of the artists patronized
by the Lalit Kala Academy.
▪ Important exhibitions include the National Exhibition of Art, International
Triennale India etc. They also have the task to preserve the long tradition of visual
arts in India. They have established centres to preserve and document a permanent
collection, which focuses on the modern and contemporary art in India. This
collection features the art of many contemporary Indian legends.
▪ Apart from this they have also created an archive and a library that has a
substantial art collection. They now have a conservation laboratory and are
materially sound. They also try to promote visual culture by providing scholarships
and grants to artists and art organizations.
▪ They give financial assistance and grants to deserving and needy artists. They also
organise several functions that would bring the varied visual cultures of India
together to get a panoramic view of Indian cultural heritage.

Questions :

1. Write a short note on Archaeological Survey of India.


2. Describe the CCRT
3. Give a short note on
i. Lalith Kala Academy
ii. Sangeet Natak Academy

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