Year |
Incident |
|
1611 |
East India Company
(EIC) establishes a factory in Masulipatnam  (modern An
dhra
Pradesh) |
|
1612 |
Factory established in
Surat |
|
1640 |
Factory established in
Madras |
|
1688 |
Portuguese Bombay
leased by EIC |
|
1700 |
Factory established in
Calcutta |
|
1717 |
Farrukhsiyar grants ‘ |
|
1750s:
Carnatic Wars (I: 1746-48 II: 1749-54 III: 1756-63) |
Carnatic
Wars These established the
British East IndiaÂ’s CompanyÂ’s supremacy amongst all the European compan
es
in India). Around then, the Carnatic region was nominally a dependency of
Hyderabad state (Mughal control), but was ruled by Nawab Dost Ali Khan |
|
I
Carnatic war
was the Indian theatre of the War of Austrian Succession in Europe, which
brought Britain and France into conflict, and spilled onto the Indian
subcontinent as well. Indian rulers were not
involved; Brits came out on top. First
military adventure of Robert Clive |
||
II
Carnatic war started
as a war of succession after the death of Nawab-ul-Mulk
(Nawab of Hyderabad), and Brits and French saw an opportunity to consolidate
influence and joined warring factions. Brits again came out on top, under
Clive. Ended by Treaty of Pondicherry in
1754, recognizing the British-supported candidate becoming the Nawab |
||
III
Carnatic war was
the Indian theatre of the Seven YearsÂ’ War in Europe. Spread as far a
Bengal, but was decided in southern India. Brits occupied Pondicherry (French
capital). Gave it back under Treaty of
Paris in 1763, but only as a trading post. This signaled the end of
French political ambitions in India |
||
1757: Battle
of Plassey (Brits
v/s Bengal Nawabs (Siraj-ud-Dalulah,
later Mir Jafar and Mir Qasim) |
Battle
of Plassey (Robert Clive v/s Siraj-ud-Daulah) When Alivardi Khan had come to power, he adopted a
strict policy with the British, who had been granted favorable trade rights
(including inland ones) by Farrukhsiyar in 1717. Alivardi had seen how Brits and French were waging proxy
wars in Carnatic using local rulers, and wanted to prevent Bengal from that
fate. Brits kept complaining that farman of 1717
was not being implemented fully, even as they continued rapacious inland
trade that harmed the NawabÂ’s revenue (which had been going on since 1717
) In 1756, Alivardi Khan died and his grandson Siraj-ud-Daulah became Nawab of Bengal.
He was suspicious of the British, and asked them to stop fortification (which
the British were doing because of wars with France both in Europe and in
Carnatic; French had also recently occupied Chandernagar
in Bengal. This had infuriated the Nawab, who didnÂ’t want any more of thi
s on
his land). Brits didnÂ’t stop fortifications, and the Nawab attacked the E
IC
in Calcutta and ransacked the city (‘blac
holeÂ’ incident) EIC officials fled to
an offshore island, and called for help from the company in Madras; under
Clive, the Brits seized Calcutta, and the French fort of Chandernagar
(7 yearsÂ’ war was on in Europe) French troops now
joined the Nawab. In response, Robert Clive bribed Mir Jafar (head of NawabÂ’s army), and defeated the Nawab a
Battle of Plassey. The British were now paramount rulers of Bengal, with all
forthcoming Nawabs at their mercy (as early as 1759, Mir Jafar had grown
disillusioned with the Brits, and started making alliances with the Dutch to
repel the British; he got deposed, Mir
Qasim came next) |
|
1761: Battle
of Panipat (Marathas v/s Afghans +
Shuja-ud-Daulah of Awadh; Brits not involved) |
Battle
of Panipat Mughal empire was under
free-fall after Aurangzeb. Already during AurangzebÂ’s time, Mughals an
Marathas had been fighting for 27 years (1680-1707). Marathas had had rapid
territorial gains (Gujarat, Malwa, Rajputana etc.). By 1737, they also
controlled most of Mughal territories south of Delhi. In 1758, Nana Saheb (Balaji Baji Rao) occupied
Punjab as well, and this brought the Marathas into direct confrontation with
the Afghans, under Ahmad Shah Abdali.
They started sending expeditionary forces to mount attacks on the small Maratha
garrisons in Punjab. War seemed imminent; both
sides wanted Shuja-ud-Daulah of Awadh on their
side. Shuja joined Afghans (‘Army of Islam’), and this was critical, bec
use
without his support Afghans wouldnÂ’t have had the money to stay for as lo
ng
as they did in India. Afghans laid siege to Panipat, and cut off supplies to Marathas
in Delhi, who started dying of starvation. Maratha soldiers begged to go to
war, and to war they did go. But the Afghans under Ahmad Shah Durrani and Shuja
were much stronger, and convincingly routed the Maraths
The
Marathas were to remain absent from the North Indian political scene for the
next decade, until another war in 1771 |
|
1763 |
III
Carnatic War ends in Treaty of Paris; with this, Britain
ends all political ambitions of France in India. Pondicherry returned to the
French, but only as a trading post |
|
Sanyasi
rebellion (Bengal/ East India): Brits imposed a ban on visits to holy places;
Sanyasis organized raids on company |
||
1764:
Battle
of Buxar |
Battle of Buxar (read
immediately after Battle of Plassey) Mir
Qasim
was installed as Nawab of Bengal after Mir JafarÂ’s rebellious activities.
Mir
Qasim also quickly saw that there was no way that British plunder of Bengal
could be allowed to go unchecked. He made alliances with Nawab of Awadh (Shuja-ud-Daulah) and Mughal King Shah Alam II; however, CliveÂ’
army convincingly beat their combined forces at Buxar. Shah Alam II now
signed the Treaty of Allahabad,
granting Diwani rights to the British EIC for Bengal (modern Bengal,
Orissa, Jharkhand, Bihar, and parts of UP) in return for allowing him to hold
court at Allahabad; Mir Qasim was replaced. Shuja-ud-Daulah
allowed to return to Awadh under a subsidiary force. This arrangement made the British virtual rulers of Bengal (the revenue-collection function had
hitherto been performed by the Nawabs). Now, the Nawab had the responsibility
for administration (Brits werenÂ’t interested in direct administration yet
),
while the Brits enjoyed the real power (without responsibility). =>
Led to
dual government in Bengal. With the Marathas just
having lost to the Afghans in the Battle of Panipat in 1761, they were to
remain absent from North Indian affairs for about a decade. This gave the
British a wide berth in consolidating their foothold over these parts. |
|
1767 <1767-99: Anglo-Mysore
(modern Karnataka) Wars> (I:
1767-69 II:
1780-84 III:
1789-92 IV:
1799) (Treaties: MMS-
Madras, Mangalore, Seringapatnam) |
I
Anglo-Mysore War (1767): Hyder Ali had become the ruler of Mysore
in 1761. Mysore had enemies Marathas to the north, and Hyderabad to the east.
Marathas invaded Mysore around 1767; initial plan was that HyderabadÂ’s Ni
zam
will also invade and plunder, but the British invaded HyderabadÂ’s Norther
Sarkars (to establish a land route between their holdings in Calcutta and
Madras). This made the Nizam think of allying with Mysore. But Brits
pre-empted and attacked Mysore. No side won
decisively; Treaty of Madras in
1769 declared ceasefire, and Brits were to help out Mysore in case of
military aggression from Marathas. |
|
II
Anglo-Mysore War (1780): Going
against the Treaty of Madras, the British refused to help out in
Mysore-Maratha wars in 1770s, and Hyder Ali allied with the French. After
Britain and France started fighting in Europe, Brits occupied French port of
Mahe on Malabar coast. Hyder Ali used to get his French arms from this port. So,
Hyder Ali launched an attack in response, and included Marathas and Nizam of
Hyderabad. After a long-drawn
war, British losses were high, and London instructed EIC to stop the war and
sign a treaty. Treaty of Mangalore was
signed in 1784, and all territories won by either side given back. Brits agreed
not to intervene in any future wars between Mysore, Marathas, and Hyderabad. |
||
III
Anglo-Mysore War (1789): Tipu Sultan, Hyder
AliÂ’s son, was now the ruler; heÂ’d been looking to find a way to go to w
with the British. He attacked British ally Travancore (Kerala); Brits said okay letÂ’s fight. Â Tipu lost badly; Brits
couldÂ’ve occupied Mysore but didnÂ’t because they didnÂ’t want consolidat
n of
Maratha power, or to incur expenses by appointing someone directly under
Brits. They let Tipu rule, but took 2 of his sons
hostage so he would abide by the Treaty
of Seringapatnam (1792), whereby about half of
MysoreÂ’s area was given away
to Marathas
and Hyderabad. |
||
IV
Anglo-Mysore War (1799): Final
war; Tipu dead. Most of Mysore given away to Marathas and Nizam; core around Seringapatnam given to pre-Hyder Ali House of Wodeyars, who ‘ruled’ t
ll 1947 |
||
1773 |
Regulating
Act (GG- Warren Hastings): EIC, before and since
Plassey (1757), was involved in corrupt practices whereby the company
constantly veered on the verge of bankruptcy and couldnÂ’t repay it
commitments to the British government even as the ‘Nabobs’ beca
spectacularly wealthy. The Regulating Act was brought in for the better
management of the companyÂ’s affairs in India and in Britain. The Company
was
to act as the Sovereign power on behalf
of the Crown. Warren Hastings was the Governor in Bengal at this time (so
became first GG). Key features: 1.
GG + 4: Created executive
council of 4 members to assist the Governor-General of Bengal 2.
Governors of Bombay
and Madras presidencies made subordinate to GG of Bengal 3.
Established
Supreme Court in Calcutta 4.
Company servants were
forbidden from carrying on private trade or accept ‘presents’ from Indi
rulers |
|
1775 1775-1818: Anglo-Maratha
Wars (I:
1775-82 II:
1803-05 III:
1817-18) (Salbai, Bassein, Gwalior) |
I
Anglo-Maratha War (1775): Around this time, the Marathas were the only major
Indian power left on the subcontinent (and to some extent, Mysore). However,
there was internal squabbling for succession. Raghunath Rao signed a treaty with Brits (but he wasnÂ’t th
rightful heir); this treaty led to the start of the first war; this was
virtually a stalemate, ended with Treaty
of Salbai whereby both powers were to follow a
policy of peaceful coexistence. |
|
II
Anglo-Maratha War (1803): Nana Phadnavis died; succession struggle. One side (Raghunath
RaoÂ’s son Bajir Rao II) signed Treaty of Bassein with the Brits, in effect becoming their subsidiary. Other side, enraged,
attacked the Brits and the first side. Lost. Marathas lost large part of their territory |
||
III
Anglo-Maratha War (1817): Mostly a mopping-up operation; the previous war had
been stopped due to fiscal constraints. At the end of this war, all the
Maratha powers had surrendered to the British, under Treaty of Gwalior. Brits now controlled all of Southern India, south
of the Satluj river. |
||
1784 |
PittÂ’s India Act (GG- Warren Hastings):
 Passed
among allegations of continuing corruption and misrule even after the 1773
Regulating Act 1.
GG + 3: Governor-GeneralÂ’
council reduced to 3 members (from
4 after the Regulating Act) 2.
Modified the relationship between the EIC
and the British Government 3.
Made the EIC subordinate to the British
government by creating the Board of
Control, both to supervise the East India
Company's affairs and to prevent the Company's shareholders from interfering
in the governance of India. The erstwhile Court of Directors was still to
exist, but would manage only commercial affairs; BoC would manage political
affairs 4.
Secretary of State was to be the
President of the Board; +5 members 5.
Bengal GG kind of made head, but
some autonomy to subordinate provincial Governors Failed because
boundaries of work between BoC and CoD were poorly
defined and arbitrary. |
|
1789 |
III Anglo-Mysore War
(see above): Tipu had been wanting to fight the brits; attacked their allies
Travancore. Lost, had to sign Treaty of Mangalore. His sons were taken
hostage by Brits to ensure good behavior. |
|
1793 |
Cornwallis introduced
Permanent Settlement in Bengal (demands had been raised by liberals in Britain
since Regulating Act of 1773); this was the first socio-economic regulation in British India |
|
1795 |
‘Benga
RegulationÂ’; declared
infanticide illegal. |
|
1799 |
IV Anglo-Mysore War;
ended in Tipu’s defeat, and installation of puppet rulers ‘House of |
|
Chuar
uprising (Bengal/ East India (Midnapore)): Â Happened due to famine, enhance
land-revenue demand, and general economic distress. WasnÂ’t a one-off inci
dent;
incidents happened till 1816. |
||
1803
|
II Anglo-Maratha War
(see above): ‘Renegade’ Baji Rao II signed Treaty of Bassein with Brit
death knell for Marathas (although there would be one more war after this) |
|
1813 |
Charter
Act of 1813 (GG- Minto; retired in 1813, succeeded by Hastings (Moira): Passed in the backdrop
of great economic turmoil in Europe; Napoleon had imposed the ‘Continenta
SystemÂ’ in Europe, and British traders were facing hardships. There was c
lamor
for revoking EICÂ’s monopoly on trade with India. Key features: 1. GG
+ 3 maintained 2. Ended the trade
monopoly of EIC with India, except for tea and trade with China 3. Missionaries now
allowed to go to India 4. EIC instructed to
spend Rs. 1 lakh per annum to strengthen the education systems 5. Empowered local
governments to impose taxes, subject to jurisdiction of SC |
|
1815 |
Atmiya
Sabha:
Raja Ram Mohan Roy established the Atmiya Sabha, a
precursor in the socio-religious reforms in Bengal. With this, he was known
as a campaigners for the rights of women. He started
opposing the Sati system and Polygamy in Hindus. |
|
1817
|
III Anglo-Maratha War
(see above): mop-up operation. All Maratha power now with British, who
controlled the entire Indian territory south of the Satluj. |
|
1828 |
Brahmo
Samaj established |
|
1829 |
William
Bentick brings
in ‘Abolishon of Sati Act’ |
|
1830 |
Dharma
Sabha established
by Radhakant Deb as retaliation to Brahmo SamajÂ’
growing influence; orthodox Hindu, status-quoist |
|
1833 |
Charter
Act of 1833 (GG- Bentick) (before this:
Regulating Act of 1773, PittÂ’s India Act of 1784) 1.
GG
+ 4: GGÂ’s council expanded to include a <
style='mso-bidi-font-weight:normal'>4th member (Macaulay was
the first such 4th member); not to be an executive member, only
legislative 2.
Trade license of EIC revoked altogether
(opening
up of trade with India to others, not only EIC); the EIC became a part of the
British government, but IndiaÂ’s administration remained under compan
officials 3.
Made
the GG of Bengal GG of India (title change); thus,
revoked the autonomy of the presidencies of Madras and Bombay; deprived Governments of Madras and Bombay of powers of
legislation 4.
First step
towards codifying India laws; India
Law Commission set up 5.
First act
that provisioned to freely admit the natives of India to share in
administration |
|
1835 |
Metcalfe (GG) repeals Licensing Act that had imposed
restrictions on freedom of press |
|
1839 |
Tattvabodhini
Sabha established
by Debendranath Tagore. When Brahmo Samaj became weak after the death of its
founder Ram Mohan Roy, Debendranath
Tagore took every possible initiative and established the 'Tattvanodhini Sabha'. Its prime objective was to
propagate the spirit of Hindu Scriptures, including the Vedas. Came together
with Brahmo Samaj in 1840s. The
Tattvabodhini Sabha encouraged a balanced attitude
towards religion, a feature that attracted both the groups, conservative like
Ishwar Chandra Gupta as well as modern outlook-ed people like Iswar Chandra
Vidyasagar. Debendranath
Tagore, however, modified his philosophy and conflict with many of the views
of the members of the Sabha. Thus came a split in the Sabha in 1859 and
subsequently, the liability of publishing the journal and books for the
circulation of the faith fell on Calcutta Brahmo Samaj. |
|
1853 |
Charter
Act of 1853 (GG- Dalhousie (James Broun-Ramsey)) 1. GG + 4 + 6: 4th member in council placed on equal footing with the other 3, and 6 new ‘Legislative Councillors’ 2. All previous Charter
Acts had explicitly dictated how long the EICÂ’s charter was being renewe
for; this one just said unless Parliament decides otherwise, EIC would
administer India 3. Deprived the Court of
Directors from using appointments to ICS
as a patronage device; appointments
thrown open via competitive examinations |
|
1854 |
‘WoodÂ
DespatchÂ’ to GG Lord Dalhousie, asking to:
(i) Set up education department in every province; (ii) Â Universities
on the model of the London University be established in big cities such as
Bombay, Calcutta and Madras; (iii) Â
At
least one government school be opened in every district; (iv) Indians should
also be taught in their native tongues. Is called Magna-carta of English
Education in India. |
|
1856 |
Hindu Widow Remarriage
Act |
|
1858 |
Government
of India Act (GG- Charles Canning) 1. Abolished
the EICÂ’s rule in India,
the Court of Directors, and the Board of Control 2. Crown was now to
govern India directly via a ‘Secretary of State for India’ 3. GG renamed Viceroy (Canning was thus first
Viceroy) 4. 15
member
council to assist SoS |
|
1861 |
Indian
Councils Act (GG- Charles Canning) 1. GG
+ 5 + (6-12): Additional
member in executive council; minimum 6 and maximum 12 legislative members, half of whom had to be
non-officials (nominated by provinces and the Calcutta Chamber of Commerce;
thus, Indian participation initiated) 2. Portfolio
system introduced 3. Decentralization:
Re-instated
legislative powers of Governments of Madras and Bombay 4. GG had veto, could issue ordinances 5. LC members could discuss budget, but couldnÂ’t leg
islate
on budget |
|
1865 |
Split in Brahmo Samaj |
|
1866 |
East
India Association founded
by Dadabhai Naoroji in London. Â
It
was one of the predecessor organizations of the Indian National Congress. Â The idea was to present the
correct information about India to the British Public and voice Indian
Grievances. Became defunct in 1880s. |
|
1870 |
MayoÂ’
Resolution (Fiscal
Decentralization from Centre to Provinces) |
|
1867 |
Poona
Sarvajanik Sabha founded by Ranade to represent the aspirations of the people to
government. It published a quartely journal to put
forth the problems of people before the government. |
|
1873 |
Satyashodhak
Samaj founded
by Jyotiba Phule. Aim was to create caste consciousness; first
movement with leadership from low castes; Raja Bali used as symbol. |
|
1875 |
Arya
Samaj founded
by Dayanand Saraswati; “Back
to
the Vedas”, end priestly domination, promote inter-caste and widow marria
ges,
no idol worship |
|
1878 |
Vernacular Press Act,
Arms Act |
|
Keshab Chanda Sen’s ‘Brah Samaj of India’ further splits into two (otherSadharan Brahmo Samaj’). o:p> |
||
1882 |
RiponÂ’
Resolution (Fiscal
Decentralization from Provinces to Local Bodies) |
|
Hunter Education
Commission  | ||
1883 |
Ilbert
Bill (Ripon):
Â
proposed
an amendment for existing laws in the country at the time to allow Indian
judges and magistrates the jurisdiction to try British offenders in criminal
cases at the District level, something that was
disallowed at the time. DidnÂ’t pass. Finally,
a solution was adopted by way of compromise: jurisdiction to try Europeans
would be conferred on European and Indian District Magistrates and Sessions
Judges alike. Â
However,
a defendant would in all cases have
the right to claim trial by a jury of which at least half the members must be
European. |
|
1885 |
Indian National
Congress formed; first President: WC Bonnerji |
|
1890 |
Kadambini becomes the
first woman to address INC (I think she was the first female graduate of
Calcutta University) |
|
1891 |
Act
X : raised the age of consent for sexual intercourse for
all girls, married or unmarried, from 10 years to 12 years old; everything
before would be classified as rape and attract penal punishment |
|
1892 |
Councils
Act
(Lansdowne) |
|
1896 |
Bombay plague; Chapekar brothers shoot someone important, hanged; Tilak
jailed for praising them (they were his disciples anyway) |
|
1897 |
Ramakrishna
Movement
started by Vivekananda (Narendranath Dutta); Â aim was to spread the universal message of Vedanta,
love all religions, service of humans = service of god. |
|
1902 |
Sri
Narayan Guru Dharma Paripalana (SNDP) movement; Â |
|
1904 |
Official Secrets Act |
|
1905 |
Partition of Bengal, Swadeshi Movement |
|
Shyamji
Krishna Verma
starts Indian Home Rule Society in London |
||
GK Gokhale starts ‘Servants of India Society’; <
pan
style='color:black;mso-themecolor:text1'>non-religious, aimed at
raising cadres for nation-building |
||
1906 |
INC adopts Swaraj as goal during Calcutta session
under Dadabhai NaorojiÂ’s presidentship | |
‘Yugantar’ st
rted in Anushilan Samiti (which was a revolutionary terrorist
organization in Bengal) |
||
Shimla
Deputation: In 1906 a group of Muslim landed magnates and
chieftains organized a deputation of Lord Minto, the Viceroy, at Simla and pleaded for concession to the Muslim community
of India. Â Within
a few months following the Simla Deputation a
political forum of the communalist Muslims emerged. Nawab Salimullah of Dacca took
initiative in organizing a conference of the communalist Muslims in which a
resolution was adopted in favour of the foundation of the All
India Muslim League. |
||
1907 |
Muslim League founded |
|
INC Surat split |
||
1908 |
Prafulla Chaki and
Khudiram Bose executed forÂ
bomb-carriage incident |
|
Tilak praises them,
deported to Mandalay for 8 years under charges of sedition |
||
1909 |
Indian
Councils Act (GG- Minto:
father of communal electorates)
(‘Minto-Morley Reforms’) 1. GG was Minto 2. GG
+ 7 + (60): Massively
increased the size of Legislative Council at the center (16 to 60), and also
in the provinces; officials still in
majority (34 officials, 25 elected (13 general, 8 Muslims, 6 British
Capitalists, 2 landlords), 4 nominated) 3. LCs could discuss 4. Separate electorates introduced 5. Satyendranath
Sinha became
the first Indian to join the GGÂ’s executive council |
|
1911 |
Partition of Bengal
annulled under constant opposition from Hindu communalist groups, and because
of the rise of revolutionary terrorism; immediate cause for discontent was a
huge famine, and the simultaneous pomp of the Delhi Durbar for a visiting
Royal |
|
1912 |
RB Bose and Sachin
Sanyal throw a bomb at Viceroy Hardinge |
|
1914 |
Tilak returns to India
(back from Prison in Mandalay) |
|
Ghadar
party
formed in San Francisco under Lala Hardayal, after Komagata Maru incident |
||
1915 |
Amidst WW1, Defense of India rules imposed that
curbed all kinds of civil liberties- entire leadership of Ghadar movement
beheaded |
|
Pherozshah Mehta and
Gopalkrishna Gokhale both dead (natural causes) |
||
1916 |
Congress reunites in
Lucknow (after Surat Split of 1907) |
|
Lucknow
Pact (between
the Muslim League and the Congress) |
||
Tilak and Annie Besant
start the Home Rule League Movement (instrumental
in making the INC a potent political force again, by bringing the extremists
and moderates under the same fold again) |
||
1917 |
Gandhi enters the
nationalist scene; Champaran Satyagraha |
|
Justice
Party founded
in Tamil Nadu; this was a political party focused on securing jobs for non-brahmins in legislature.
Founded by CN Mulaidar,
T. Nair, and P. Thyagaraja. |
||
Russian Revolution
(was to lead to rise of the left ad peasant movements later) |
||
1918 |
Kheda Satyagraha |
|
Ahmedabad Mill Strike |
||
1919 |
Rowlatt Satyagraha,
Jallianwala Bagh Massacre, Gandhi jailed |
|
Government
of India Act (Montague-Chelmsford
Reforms) 1. GG was Chelmsford 2. Replaced
Legislative Council with a bicameral structure; both houses had
majority members elected by direct elections (but limited franchise- property, tax, or education) 3. Dyarchy
(two
executives in Provinces; one responsible to Legislature (‘Ministers’), a
the other to Governor (‘Executive Councillors’) 4.
3
members of GGÂ’s executive council to be Indians 6.
Separated
provincial budgets from central; provinces could enact their own budgets |
||
1920 |
Congress commits
itself to extra-constitutional mass struggle (Nagpur session) |
|
Non-Cooperation/
Khilafat Movement starts |
||
MN
Roy founded
CPI in Tashkent |
||
1921 |
Akali Movement; Â started to liberate Sikh Gurudwaras from Udasi Mahants; later won and set up SGPC; later turned
communal (think why?) |
|
1922 |
Chaura-Chauri incident;
Gandhi calls off NCM, arrested for 6 years |
|
Mapilla
rebellion
in Malabar |
||
1923 |
Swarajist-‘ |
|
1924 |
Gandhi released on
health grounds (check) |
|
Swaraj party (from
within the Congress) fights elections; wins handsomely |
||
Hindustan
Republican Army
set up by Ramprasad Bismil, Sachin Sanyal, and Jogendranath
Chatterjee |
||
Vaikom
Satyagraha (temple
entry, led by KV Keshav) |
||
Kanpur
Bolshevik Conspiracy Case: SA Dange jailed |
||
1925 |
CR Das dies; leads to
split in Bengal Congress: JM Sengupta faction (backed by revolutionary Anushilan group), and other led by SC Bose (Yugantar
group) |
|
Kakori train robbery
(Bismil, Ashfaqullah, Rajendra Lahiri hanged) |
||
1926 |
Swaraj party splits
due to differences- some members like MMM and Lala Lajpat Rai wanted more
concession to Hindus, Nehru and CR Das (?) were secular and left the Swaraj
party; elections, Swaraj party does badly |
|
1927 |
Simon Commission- all
white, no Indians; huge protests, even Muslim League protests. Lala Lajpat
Rai killed during demonstrations |
|
‘Delh
ProposalsÂ’ by
the Muslim League; first ever
acceptance of Joint Electorates |
||
1928 |
Saunders Murder by
HSRA; Bhagat Singh and Batukeshwar Dutt throw bombs
in the Central Legislative Assembly to protest the Public Safety Bill and Trade
Disputes Bill |
|
Calcutta
Session |
Nehru
Report |
|
INC declares that if
the Government doesnÂ’t grant dominion status within a year, they will sta
rt a
satyagraha; Gandhi tours the country to prepare the masses for the coming
struggle |
||
1929 |
INC declares Purna Swaraj as its goal in Lahore;
all Congress ministries resign |
|
League issues JinnahÂ’s 14 points |
||
Irwin announces that
goal of Brits is to eventually grant dominion status |
||
Meerut Conspiracy Case |
||
‘Delh
ManifestoÂ’ | ||
1930 |
Launch of the Civil
Disobedience Movement via Dandi March in
March; movement builds up, Gandhi arrested in May |
|
First RTC in London (to discuss Simon recommendations);
Congress boycotts |
||
Chittagong Armory Raid
(Surya Sen etc.) |
||
Sarda Act |
||
Garhwal Rifles
soldiers refuse to open fire on unarmed crowd |
||
1931 |
Gandhi-Irwin
Pact (Delhi
Pact- put INC and GoI on equal footing) |
|
Bhagat Singh, Sukhdev,
and Rajguru hanged (Lahore Conspiracy Case) |
||
INC Karachi session; 2
landmark resolutions on Fundamental Rights and National Economic Programme
passed |
||
Second RTC; Gandhi
dismayed at strong focus on Communal
Award to depressed classes, decides to resume CDM. Arrested upon return
to India without a trial, jailed in Yeravada
(Poona) |
||
Gurvayur
Satyagraha (temple
entry) |
||
1932 |
Communal
Award announced
by Ramsey Macdonald (SoS) |
|
Gandhi undertakes fast
unto death in Yeravada against this; him and
Ambedkar sign the Poona Pact; Gandhi
sets up the ‘All India Anti-Untouchability League’ from jail |
||
Third RTC in London |
||
1933 |
Gandhi released from
prison |
|
1934 |
Gandhi retires from
active politics (after dispute in Congress regarding direction), devotes
himself to constructive work; withdraws
CDM |
|
1935 |
Government
of India Act 1.
Establishment
of All-India Federation (didnÂ’t happen as Princes didnÂ’t agree) 2.
Abolished
diarchy in provinces (=> provinvial autonomy),
and introduced it at the central level; 3
legislative lists 3.
Responsible
governance in the provinces (implemented for a while); Governor answerable to
legislature 4.
Further
extended separate electorates to depressed classes, women, and labour 5.
Extended
franchise; about 10% eligible to vote 6.
Still,
about 80% of central budget not votable 7.
Established Reserve
Bank of India
|
|
1936 |
Maharaja of Travancore
allows temple entry (after lots of struggle- think Vaikom,
Gurvayur etc.) |
|
1937 |
Provincial elections
held, Congress wins/emerges as single largest party in all provinces but two (check
which two); Muslim League dismayed, moves to extreme communalism |
|
1939 |
WW2 starts; Congress
ministries resign; League observes the day of resignation as Deliverance Day |
|
1940 |
Pakistan
Resolution at
the LeagueÂ’s Lahore session | |
August Offer (Linlithgow) |
||
Congress launches individual satyagrahas;
‘Dilli Chalo’; first satyagraha was Vinoba Bhave | ||
1942 |
Quit India Movement
(resolution in Bombay in August); Gandhi and other leaders arrested
immediately after resolution |
|
Cripps Mission (‘Blueprint for India’s Partition) o:p> |
||
1944/45 |
WavellÂ’s Plan/
Shimla
Conference |
|
Calcutta upsurge 01;
elections (communal polarization, league sweeps muslim
areas) |
||
1946 |
Cabinet Mission |
|
Calcutta upsurge 02 +
RIN mutiny |
||
August |
Communal riots at an
unprecedented scale |
|
September |
Interim congress
government (despite INC opposition to compulsory grouping) |
|
October |
Muslim League joins
interim government |
|
1947 |
February |
AttleeÂ’s state
ment:
weÂ’re leaving by June 1948 |
June |
Mountbatten Plan |
|
August 15 |
Independence |
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