History of Modern India
● Muazzam, the son of Aurangzeb was
called as the ‘Shah Bekhabar’.
● The Mughal King Farrukh Siyar
gratned concession to the English men to trade in Bengal, Gujarat and
Hyderabad.
● In 1759 Ali Mohar, the son of
Alamgir sat upon the Mughal throne as Shah Alam II.
● After the death of Maratha ruler
Shahu, the real power of the State came in the hands of Peshwas.
● Nawab Murshid Quli Khan of Bengal
transferred his capital to Murshidabad from Dacca.
● Nawab Mir Qasim of Bengal
transferred his capital to Moongher from Murshidabad.
● In the middle of the 18th century,
the nominal ruler of Mysore was Chika Krishnaraj. The real power of the State
lied with the two brothers—Nand Raj and Dev Raj.
● In 1761 Hyder Ali captured Nandraj
and became the master of Mysore.
● In the first Anglo-Mysore war,
Hyder Ali badly defeated the English army.
● In 1781 Hyder Ali conqurered Arcot
but in 1781 at Porn Novo Sir Eyerkoot defeated him.
● Ali Muhammad Khan established the
State of Rohilkhand.
● The early capital of Rohilkhand
was ‘Awala’ which later shifted to Rampur.
● Guru Har Gobind Singh constructed
the Akaal Takht at Amritsar.
● Guru Gobind Singh converted the
Sikhs into a warring and military group.
● In 1721, the two sects of Sikhism
‘Bandai’ and ‘Tatkhalsa’ merged in one sect ‘Khalsa’. This
sect became a headache for the
Mughals.
● The Sikhs were organized in 12
unions or misls which grew in political significance. Later Ranjeet Singh
conquered these misls and organized them into Punjab State.
● The ruler of the Afghanistan
conferred the title of Raja upon Ranjeet Singh and appointed him the Subedar of
Lahore.
● The treaty of Amritsar was signed
between the English and Ranjeet Singh in 1809. As a result the English checked
the expansion of Ranjeet Singh towards the region of Sutluj.
● According to the treaty of
Amritsar, the English accepted Ranjeet Singh as an independent ruler.
● During first Anglo-Sikh war, the
Governor-General of India was Lord Hardinge.
● Punjab was ruled by Maharaja Dalip
Singh when the Lahore Treaty was signed in 1846 between the Sikhs and the
English after the defeat of Sikhs in the first Anglo Sikh war.
● During Sirajudaulla’s time, the
English settlement at Calcutta became a resort for the enemies of Nawab and the
traitors.
● On 4th June, 1756 Sirajudaulla
invaded and captured the Qasim Bazar factory of English near Murshidabad.
● The Black hole tragedy as it is
known in history, came to light through the letter of Holvell. Some of the historians
consider it imaginery.
● In the contemporary historical
works like Sher-a-Mutkherin and Royas-us-Salatin, there is no reference to the
Black hole tragedy.
● On 9th February, 1757, the Ali
Nagar Treaty was signed between the English and the Nawab.
● After the war of Plassey, when
Sirajudaulla was running away from Murshidabad towards Patna he was captured
and killed.
● On 28 June, 1757, the English
declared Mir Jafar as the Nawab of Bengal.
● After victory in Plassey war, the
English Company obtained concessions to trade in Bengal, Bihar and Orissa.
● On 25 November, 1759, the Bedara
war was fought between the English and the Dutch and the Dutch were defeated.
The victory helped the English in consolidating their hold on Bengal.
● Mir Qasim planned friendship with
Vansittart to become the Nawab of Bengal.
● Mir Qasim gave to East India
Company, the districts of Vardhman, Midnapur and Chittgaon for the expenditure
of the English army.
● In 1764 the joint army of Mir
Qasim, Shujauddaulla and Shah Alam fought with the English—the war of Buxar,
the English were victorious in this war.
● After the Buxar War, the Allahabad
treaty was signed between English and the Mughal King Shah Alam in 1765 AD.
● According to Allahabad Treaty, the
districts of Kara and Allahabad were taken away from the Nawab of Oudh and
given to Mughal King. The East India Company agreed to pay to the king a
pension of Rs. 26 lacs. In lieu the English got Diwani rights in Bengal.
● After the death of Mir Jafar, his
son Nizamuddaula was enthroned as Nawab of Bengal.
● K. M. Panikkar holds that from
1765 to 1772, the rule of East India Company in Bengal was
the ‘rule of dacoits’.
● During Warren Hastings period, the
Treasury was transferred by the East India Company to Calcutta from Murshidabad
and Calcutta was made the capital.
● During the Governorship of Warren
Hastings, in every district of subjugated India one Civil and one Criminal
Court was opened.
● The cases upto to Rs. 500 were
referred to the Civil Court and alone it, the appeal could be made to the Sadar
Diwani Adalat.
● The District Criminal Court was
put in charge of an Indian Officer.
● The Regulating Act of 1773
established a Supreme Court at Calcutta.
● The Permanent settlement
introduced by Cornwallis brought changes in the land system. Most of the land
came in the hands of commercial and rich classes of Calcutta.
● The Permanent settlement ensured
the income of the Government. Besides the cooperation of the new Zamindars was
obtained.
● In the Mahalwari system, land
revenues was fixed either through the local Zamindars or their hereditary tax
collectors or the Zamindars of the Mahal. Mahal was the collection of villages.
The Mahalwari system was known in Punjab as the village system.
● The Raiyyatwari system was
introduced during early 19th century in some regions of Madras and Bombay. The
Govt. directly obtained a fixed amount from the peasants.
● In the Raiyyatwari system, the
revenue rate was fixed 45% to 50% of the total produce separately.
● The Raiyyatwari system had many
defects which the Govt. official accepted at the time of a parliamentary
inspection for the renewal of the Company’s Charter.
● In the Fifth and Sixth decades of
19 century, the English invested in large amount to control Indian economy.
● The English invested their capital
on roads and communications, Railway, Post and Telegraph, Banks and tea
gardens.
● In 1830 the Ahoms again rebelled
against the English. This time, the English Company adopted a peaceful policy
and granted north Assam and some other region to King Purandar Singh.
● Raja Teerath Singh of Nanakkalo
rebelled against the English with the help of Garo, Khampati and Sinhopo
tribes. Soon it took the shape of a mass-movement. In 1833, the English could
crust it with superior military force.
● In 1825, the Assam Rifles rebelled against the English.
● In 1825, the Assam Rifles rebelled against the English.
● In 1838, the Indian troops
stationed at Sholapur rebelled due to non-payment of the full allowances.
● In 1850 the Gobind Garh regiment
rebelled.
● On 1 January, 1857, the use of
British made Enfield Rifles was started in India. In the cartridges of this
Rifle, the fat of cows and pigs were used.
● In March 1857, the soldiers of
Bairakpur Cantt refused to use the fat cartridges.
● On 2 May, 1857, the Oudh Regiment
of Lucknow too refused to use these cartridges. As a result, the Oudh regiment
was disbanded.
● To the soldiers of Meerut who had
refused to use the fat cartridges, an English military
officer—Carr Michael Smith issued
the jail punishment of 5 years.
● On 10 May, 1857, a section of the
infantry and cavalry of Merrut rebelled at about 5 P.M.
● The rebels marched to Delhi,
captured the city and declared Bahadurshah the emperor of India. Bahadurshah
assumed the leadership of revolt in Delhi.
● During this rebellion, Nana Saheb
established his suzeranity over Kanpur and declared himself the Peshwa.
● In Bundelkhand Rani Lakshmi Bai of
Jhansi assumed the leadership of the revolt.
● In Bihar, the zamindar of
Jagdishpur, named Kunwar Singh led the revolt.
● On 28 May, 1857, the soldiers of
Nasirabad Cantt in Rajasthan, rebelled.
● Kota and Adva were the main
centres of revolt in Rajasthan.
● The Central India, Tantya Tope led
the revolt.
● In U.P. the importnat centres of
revolution were Jhansi, Kanpur, Bareilly, Meerut, Lucknow, Aligarh, Mathura and
Agra.
● The Bareilly rebellion was led by
Batakhs Khan.
● The Commissioner of Oudh, Henry
Laurrence died of a blast on 4th July, 1857.
● While suppressing the revolt, the
English officer Neil buried the dead Brahmans and burnt the dead Muslims.
● In March 1858, under the
leadership of Kunwar Singh, the rebels captured Azamgarh.
● While marching towards Benaras
from Azamgarh, there was an encounter between Kunwar Singh and the English
officer Lord Mark in which Lord Mark had to run away to save his life.
● Kunwar Singh of Jagdishpur was the
only leader to have died under the banner of freedom.
● On 14 December, 1857, the English
army blasted Kashmiri Gate of Delhi.
● In November 1857 the rebels defeated
the English General Windaham near Kanpur.
● Vinayak Damodar Saverker was the
first to name the rebellion of 1857 as the first war of Indian independence.
● According to Sir Seeley, the
rebellion of 1857 was fully a national revolt conducted by selfish soldiers.
● Sir John Lawrence, P. E. Roberts
and V. A. Smith have called it a Sepoy Mutiny.
● According to V. A. Smith, the
rebellion of 1857 was purely a sepoy mutiny which fully reflected the
indiscipline of Indian soldiers and the foolishness of English military
officers.
● According to Sir James Outtram,
the revolt of 1857 was the result of a conspiracy of the Muslims who desired to
fulfill their self-interest on the strength of the Hindus.
● Ashok Mehta in his book, ‘The
Great Revolt’, has attempted to prove that it was a national revolt.
● Pattabhi Sita Ramaiyya takes it to
be the first war of Indian independence.
● After crushing the revolt of 1857,
they constituted an India Council and abolished the Board of Directors. There
were 15 members in the India Council and a Secretary of State for India.
● After the revolt, Lord Canning
announced the Declaration of the Queen at a Durbar held at
Allahabad. He called it, ‘the Magna
Carta of Indian people’.
● In the Declaration of the Queen, the
policy of expansion of the political limits came to an end.
● The rebels responsible for the
murder of Englishmen were punished. All others were pardoned.
● The objective of Brahmo Samaj,
Arya Samaj, Ramkirshna Mission and the Theosophical
society etc. was to herald a
renaissance in India.
● Brahmo Samaj was founded in
Calcutta by Raja Ram Mohan Roy on 20 August, 1828.
● Raja Ram Mohan Roy always
advocated the appointment of Indians on high govt. posts. He played a major
role in the abolition of Sati system.
● After the death of Raja Ram Mohan
Roy on 20 August, 1833, Devendara Nath Tagore assumed the leadership of the
Brahmo Samaj.
● Aadi Brahmo Samaj was established
by Devendra Nath Thakur.
● Bhartiya Brahmo Samaj was founded
by Keshav Chandra Sen.
● The principles of Brahmo Samaj
helped immensely in the birth and Spread Indian nationalism.
● Raja Ram Mohan Roy established
Vedant College, English School and Hindu College at Calcutta.
● Raja Ram Mohan Roy was the
advocate of English Education and he thought English to be the vehicle of
progress.
● It was due to the effort of Raja
Ram Mohan Roy, that the restriction upon the newspapers were lifted.
● In 1819, at Maharashtra, Prarthna
Sabha was founded. It came to an end due to its limited scope.
● In 1867 Atma Ram Pandurang
established Prarthna Samaj. M. G. Ranade, R. G. Bhandarkar and Narayan
Chandrawarkar were the prominent members of this Samaj.
● Dayanand Saraswati left his house
at the age of 21. As a Brahmachari Sadhu, he travelled to different places in
India.
● Dayanand Saraswati started the
propagation of his religion from Agra.
● In 1874, he wrote his famous book
Satyarth Prakash.
● On 10 April, 1875 he founded Arya
Samaj at Bombay.
● Totapuri, a Vedantic sadhu taught
Vedant Sadhna to Dayananda.
● Ramkrishna Paramhans was born in
1836 in a poor Brahman family of Hoogly district of Bengal.
● Swami Vivekanand was the most
devoted disciple of Swami Ramkrishna Paramhans.
● Ramkrishna Pramhans did not
establish any Ashram or sect.
● In 1893 in the All Religion
Conference at Chicago Vivekanand impressed everyone, and
started a Vedant Samaj there.
● In 1896 Vivekanand established
Ramkrishna Mission.
● In the last years of the third
decade of the 19th century, the young Bengal movement was led
by an Englishman named Henry William
Derozio.
● On 7 September, 1875 in New York,
U.S.A. Madame H.P. Blatavesky (Russian) and Col. H.
S. Alcott (American) founded the
Theosophical Society.
● Mrs. Annie Besant, an Irish lady
was a very active member of Theosophical Society in India.
● Due to the efforts of Ishwar
Chandra Vidyasagar, in 1856, the Widow Remarriage Act was
legislated.
● The slogan of ‘Inkalab Zindabad’
was given by Mohammad Iqbal.
● Sir Saiyyad Ahmad Khan founded the
Anglo Oriental College at Aligarh in 1877 which later
became known as Aligarh Muslim
University.
● Haji Shariatullah was the
initiator of Faryaz movement.
● In Maharashtra the Bharat Sewak
Samaj was started by Gopal Krishna Gokhale.
● In 1922 Amrit Lal Viththal Das
established the Bheel Sewa Mandal.
● Jyoti Ba Phule was the champion of
widowremarriage in Maharashtra.
● In 1911 Narayan Maltar Joshi
organised the Social Service League, a society to solve the
social problems. He was assisted by
some educated Indians.
● Avanindra Nath Thakur founded the
society known as—The Indian Society of Oriental Art.
● In the 19th century, the famous
Bengali author Bankim Chandra Chatterjee composed the
song— Vande Matram.
● In 1875, Sisir Kumar Ghose founded
the India League.
● The Indian Association founded by
Surendra Nath Banerjee was replaced by the Indian League
in 1876.
● The credit for founding the Indian
National Congress in 1885 goes to an English officer, Allen
Octavian Hume.
● The first Conference of the Indian
National Congress was held at Gokuldas Tejpal Sanskrit
College, Bombay under the
chairmanship of W. C. Banerjee.
● Bal Gangadhar Tilak started Ganesh
Mahotsav in 1893 and Shivaji Samaroh in 1895.
● Pandit Jugal Kishore published the
first newspaper of India—Udant Martand. It was a paper
which gave top priority to Indian
interests.
● During Lord Curzon’s time in 1905,
Bengal was divided.
● In 1911, in Lord Hardinge’s time,
the partition of Bengal was cancelled.
● Lala Lajpat Rai and Ajeet Singh
were exiled to Burma in 1907.
● In 1911 the capital of India was
shifted to Delhi from Calcutta.
● On Nov. 1913, the Ghadar Party was
founded at Sanfransisco city of America by the great
revolutionary of Punjab named Lala
Hardayal.
● Kashi Ram and Hardayal were the
active members of the Ghadar Party.
● In 1906, Agha Khan founded the All
India Muslim League.
● In 1916, a pact was signed between
Muslim League and Congress which is known in history as
the Lucknow Pact.
● In 1916 Bal Gangadhar Tilak
established the Home Rule League of India.
● After Lucknow Pact, Congress and
League presented the plan of political reforms based on
separate electoral regions. This
pact led to an increase in communalism.
● In 1914 Annie Besant brought out a
newspaper in English named ‘New India’.
● Gandhiji established the Sabarmati
Ashram in Ahmedabad.
● On 30 March, 1919, Satyagraha Day
was observed in whole of India. The Satyagraha was
peaceful at all places except Punjab
and Delhi.
● Dr. Satyapal and Dr. Saifuddin,
the leaders of the Punjab Satyagraha were imprisoned. In
protest, a meeting was organized at
Jallianwala Bagh in Amritsar . The people who assembled
here were gunned down. This is known
as ‘Jalhianwalla bagh Massacre’ of April 1919.
● After the world war I, the Indian
Muslims were excited due to the treatment meted out to Caliph by the British in
Turkey. In 1919 they started the Khilafat movement under the leadership of
Maulana Shaukat Ali and Muhammad Ali.
● The Congress joined the Muslims in Khilafat movement. On 31 August, 1919, the Khilafat Day was observed.
● Mahatma Gandhi launched the Non-cooperation Mass Movement in 1920-21. But violence broke out at Chauri Chaura then in Gorakhpur district which saddened Gandhiji. In February 1922 he announced the closure of the movement.
● In March 1922 Motilal Nehru and Deshbandhu Chitranjan Das established the Swaraj Party.
● In the elections of 1923 the Swaraj Party scored 40 seats out of 148.
● In 1927 the Bardoli Satyagraha was conducted by Sardar Vallabh Bhai Patel.
● In 1928 under the chairmanship of Sir John Simon a Commission came to India to inspect the administrative work. The Indians boycotted it as no Indian was a member of the Commission. In March 1928 the Commission went back.
● In the 1929 Lahore Congress session held under the chairmanship of Jawaharlal Nehru, the meaning of Swaraj was declared as total independence.
● In 1930 Gandhiji broke the Salt laws by his Dandi March and he started the Civil Disobedience movement.
● In 1930, the Congress boycotted the first Round Table Conference.
● In 1931, after Gandhi-Irwin pact Gandhiji went to attend the second Round Table Conference along with the members of Muslim League.
● In the third Round table conference in 1932, Congress did not send any representative. Only 46 members went to participate under different categories.
● The meeting of the Executive of Congress held on 1 January, 1932 decided to again start the Civil Disobedience Movement due to the completely negative attitude of the Government.
● The British Prime Minister Ramsay Macdonald declared the communal award on 16 August, 1932.
● On 25 September, 1932, the Poona Pact was signed. Common agreement was made on two conditions for preparing the electoral regions. The representative of the Depressed classes was B.R. Ambedkar.
● In 1932 Gandhiji founded the Harijan Sewak Sangh for the uplift of the Harijans.
● On 8 May, 1933 Gandhiji declared the programme of 21 days fast for his self-purification.
● Gandhiji began ‘Individual Satyagraha and Civil Disobedience on 1 August, 1933.
● The Government of India Act of 1935 had 312 articles and 19 enclosures.
● In 1935, the British provinces were 11 e.g., Madras, Bombay, Bengal, Bihar, Punjab, Orissa, Central Provinces, Assam, North West Frontier Provinces, United Provinces and Sindh.
● The Government of India Act of 1935, the subjects were divided into three departments—Federal, Provincial and Concurrent.
● This Act divided the British provinces of India in two categories. 11 were the provinces under the Governor and 5 provinces were under Lieutenant Commissioners.
● The Govt. of India Act, 1935, proposed Federal system and Provincial autonomy. The plan of Federal system could not be implemented. The elections for the Provincial legislative Councils were held in the January-February of 1937.
● The Congress won majority in 5 provinces—Madras, United Provinces, Central Provinces, Bihar and Orissa in the general election of 1937.
● In Punjab, the Unionist Party and Muslim League jointly formed the Government. This Government worked without any obstruction till 1947.
● In Bengal the Krishak Praja Party and the Muslim League jointly formed the Government. Its Cabinet worked till 14 August, 1947. Sikandar Hayaat Khan was the head of this Government.
● The Congress Cabinets worked from 1937 to 1939.
● In 1934, the members of Congress Executive, Acharya Narendra Dev, Jai Prakash and Achyut Patvardhan organized the Congress Socialist Party.
● In the Haripura session of the Congress (1938), S. C. Bose was unanimously elected the President.
● Subhash Chandra Bose organized a National Planning Committee.
● In 1939 Bose was relected Congress President defeating Gandhi’s candidate P. Sitaramayya.
● In April 1939, Subhash Chandra Bose resigned from the post of the President and started a militant party known as Forward Block.
● In 1939, Jawaharlal Nehru became the President of the Tribal Conference of Indian States.
● In 1933, a Muslim student named Choudhary Rahmat Ali studying in England proposed the formation of a separate Muslim State and called it Pakistan.
● On 24th March, 1940, in the Lahore Conference of the Muslim League, the Pakistan proposal was passed.
● Lord Linlithgo presented the August proposal before the Congress on 8 August, 1940 for getting cooperation during the war.
● The Individual Satyagraha was started from 17 October, 1940. Acharya Vinoba Bhave was the first Satyagrahi. Gandhiji postponed it on 17 December, 1940.
● It was restarted on 5 January, 1941. During this period more than 20 thousand people were arrested.
● Cripps Mission visited India in 1942. It was onemember Commission and only Sir Strafford Cripps was the member.
● The Congress and the League, both rejected the Cripps Proposals.
● The Quit India movement resolution was passed on 14 July, 1942 in the Executive of the Congress Session held at Wardha. It was reaffirmed on 8 August, 1942.
● The interim government of free India was organized on 21 October, 1943 by Subhash Chandra Bose in Singapore.
● 21 Indian political leaders were invited to attend a Conference at Simla in June 1945. It ended in failure.
● In December 1945, the General Elections were held in India. The Congress received the majority in 6 provinces.
● On 18 February, 1946, the non Commissioned officers and Naval soldiers of the Royal Indian Navy who were called Rattings, began a militant revolt at Bombay.
● In order to remove the Constitutional crisis the British Government sent the Cabinet Mission to India.
● It came on 29 March, 1946 to New Delhi and it declared its proposals.
● Muslim League observed the Direct Action Day on 16 August 1946.
● The Interim Government of India was organized under the leadership of Jawaharlal Nehru. The Cabinet took oath on 2nd September, 1946.
● The Constituent Assembly first met under the chairmanship of Dr. Rajendra Prasad on 6th December, 1946.
● Atlee declared on 20 February, 1947 that the English would leave India after transferring the power to responsible people before June 1948.
● The Mountbatten Plan of 3 June, 1947 was mainly the Plan of partition. It was agreed upon by the Executive of the Indian National Congress on 14-15 June in a meeting at Delhi.
● In July 1947, the Indian Independence Act was passed by the British Parliament.
● India became independent on 15 August, 1947.
● On 26 January, 1950, the state of Hyderabad merged in the Indian Federation.
● On 20 April 1954, the Panchsheel Pact was signed between India and China.
● On 20 October, 1962 China invaded upon India. Soon it occupied Assam Valley and Laddakh. On 21 November, 1962, China declared one sided ceasefire.
● The Congress joined the Muslims in Khilafat movement. On 31 August, 1919, the Khilafat Day was observed.
● Mahatma Gandhi launched the Non-cooperation Mass Movement in 1920-21. But violence broke out at Chauri Chaura then in Gorakhpur district which saddened Gandhiji. In February 1922 he announced the closure of the movement.
● In March 1922 Motilal Nehru and Deshbandhu Chitranjan Das established the Swaraj Party.
● In the elections of 1923 the Swaraj Party scored 40 seats out of 148.
● In 1927 the Bardoli Satyagraha was conducted by Sardar Vallabh Bhai Patel.
● In 1928 under the chairmanship of Sir John Simon a Commission came to India to inspect the administrative work. The Indians boycotted it as no Indian was a member of the Commission. In March 1928 the Commission went back.
● In the 1929 Lahore Congress session held under the chairmanship of Jawaharlal Nehru, the meaning of Swaraj was declared as total independence.
● In 1930 Gandhiji broke the Salt laws by his Dandi March and he started the Civil Disobedience movement.
● In 1930, the Congress boycotted the first Round Table Conference.
● In 1931, after Gandhi-Irwin pact Gandhiji went to attend the second Round Table Conference along with the members of Muslim League.
● In the third Round table conference in 1932, Congress did not send any representative. Only 46 members went to participate under different categories.
● The meeting of the Executive of Congress held on 1 January, 1932 decided to again start the Civil Disobedience Movement due to the completely negative attitude of the Government.
● The British Prime Minister Ramsay Macdonald declared the communal award on 16 August, 1932.
● On 25 September, 1932, the Poona Pact was signed. Common agreement was made on two conditions for preparing the electoral regions. The representative of the Depressed classes was B.R. Ambedkar.
● In 1932 Gandhiji founded the Harijan Sewak Sangh for the uplift of the Harijans.
● On 8 May, 1933 Gandhiji declared the programme of 21 days fast for his self-purification.
● Gandhiji began ‘Individual Satyagraha and Civil Disobedience on 1 August, 1933.
● The Government of India Act of 1935 had 312 articles and 19 enclosures.
● In 1935, the British provinces were 11 e.g., Madras, Bombay, Bengal, Bihar, Punjab, Orissa, Central Provinces, Assam, North West Frontier Provinces, United Provinces and Sindh.
● The Government of India Act of 1935, the subjects were divided into three departments—Federal, Provincial and Concurrent.
● This Act divided the British provinces of India in two categories. 11 were the provinces under the Governor and 5 provinces were under Lieutenant Commissioners.
● The Govt. of India Act, 1935, proposed Federal system and Provincial autonomy. The plan of Federal system could not be implemented. The elections for the Provincial legislative Councils were held in the January-February of 1937.
● The Congress won majority in 5 provinces—Madras, United Provinces, Central Provinces, Bihar and Orissa in the general election of 1937.
● In Punjab, the Unionist Party and Muslim League jointly formed the Government. This Government worked without any obstruction till 1947.
● In Bengal the Krishak Praja Party and the Muslim League jointly formed the Government. Its Cabinet worked till 14 August, 1947. Sikandar Hayaat Khan was the head of this Government.
● The Congress Cabinets worked from 1937 to 1939.
● In 1934, the members of Congress Executive, Acharya Narendra Dev, Jai Prakash and Achyut Patvardhan organized the Congress Socialist Party.
● In the Haripura session of the Congress (1938), S. C. Bose was unanimously elected the President.
● Subhash Chandra Bose organized a National Planning Committee.
● In 1939 Bose was relected Congress President defeating Gandhi’s candidate P. Sitaramayya.
● In April 1939, Subhash Chandra Bose resigned from the post of the President and started a militant party known as Forward Block.
● In 1939, Jawaharlal Nehru became the President of the Tribal Conference of Indian States.
● In 1933, a Muslim student named Choudhary Rahmat Ali studying in England proposed the formation of a separate Muslim State and called it Pakistan.
● On 24th March, 1940, in the Lahore Conference of the Muslim League, the Pakistan proposal was passed.
● Lord Linlithgo presented the August proposal before the Congress on 8 August, 1940 for getting cooperation during the war.
● The Individual Satyagraha was started from 17 October, 1940. Acharya Vinoba Bhave was the first Satyagrahi. Gandhiji postponed it on 17 December, 1940.
● It was restarted on 5 January, 1941. During this period more than 20 thousand people were arrested.
● Cripps Mission visited India in 1942. It was onemember Commission and only Sir Strafford Cripps was the member.
● The Congress and the League, both rejected the Cripps Proposals.
● The Quit India movement resolution was passed on 14 July, 1942 in the Executive of the Congress Session held at Wardha. It was reaffirmed on 8 August, 1942.
● The interim government of free India was organized on 21 October, 1943 by Subhash Chandra Bose in Singapore.
● 21 Indian political leaders were invited to attend a Conference at Simla in June 1945. It ended in failure.
● In December 1945, the General Elections were held in India. The Congress received the majority in 6 provinces.
● On 18 February, 1946, the non Commissioned officers and Naval soldiers of the Royal Indian Navy who were called Rattings, began a militant revolt at Bombay.
● In order to remove the Constitutional crisis the British Government sent the Cabinet Mission to India.
● It came on 29 March, 1946 to New Delhi and it declared its proposals.
● Muslim League observed the Direct Action Day on 16 August 1946.
● The Interim Government of India was organized under the leadership of Jawaharlal Nehru. The Cabinet took oath on 2nd September, 1946.
● The Constituent Assembly first met under the chairmanship of Dr. Rajendra Prasad on 6th December, 1946.
● Atlee declared on 20 February, 1947 that the English would leave India after transferring the power to responsible people before June 1948.
● The Mountbatten Plan of 3 June, 1947 was mainly the Plan of partition. It was agreed upon by the Executive of the Indian National Congress on 14-15 June in a meeting at Delhi.
● In July 1947, the Indian Independence Act was passed by the British Parliament.
● India became independent on 15 August, 1947.
● On 26 January, 1950, the state of Hyderabad merged in the Indian Federation.
● On 20 April 1954, the Panchsheel Pact was signed between India and China.
● On 20 October, 1962 China invaded upon India. Soon it occupied Assam Valley and Laddakh. On 21 November, 1962, China declared one sided ceasefire.
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