India 1900 To 1947
India 1900 To 1947
India 1900 To 1947
History Learning Site > Modern World History > India 1900 to 1947
Search Site:
In 1900, India was part of the British Empire; but by the end of 1947, <>
India had achieved independence.
Related Pages
Online For most of the Nineteenth Century, India was ruled by the British.
College India was considered the jewel in the crown of the British Empire. • Lord Louis
and Queen Victoria had been made Empress of India and the British had Mountbatte
University a major military presence in India. n
Degree • Chester
Guide Indian nationals had no say in central government and even at a Nimitz
local level, their influence on policy and decision making was • Vice
minimal. Admiral
Jisaburo
In 1885, educated middle class nationals had founded the Indian Ozawa
National Conference (INC). Their aim was to get a much greater • Erwin
say in the way India was governed. Rommel
• General
In response to this development, the Morley-Minto reforms were
Alexander
introduced in 1909. Morley was the Secretary of State for India and
Vandegrift
Lord Morley was Viceroy of India. Their reforms lead to each
province in India having its own governor and Indian nationals were • Georgy
allowed to sit on the councils which advised these governors. Zhukov
• The Phoney
After 1918, nationalism within India intensified. This was probably War
due to 2 reasons: • The Battle
of the River
1. Many educated nationals in India were far from satisfied with the Plate
Morley-Minto reforms. White Englishmen still dominated India and
• U-boats
there had been no real decrease in their power or increase in
national power. The INC (Indian National Council) wanted a lot • The
more. Bismarck
As early as 1917, Britain had toyed with the idea of giving India a
measure of self-government: "the gradual development of self-
governing institutions with a view to the progressive realisation of
responsible government in India as an integral part of the British
Empire".
However, the British controlled all central government and within the
provincial governments, the British kept control of the key posts of
tax and law and order.
Many Tory MP’s in Britain were against the whole idea of giving
anything whatsoever to India in terms of self-government. They had
two complaints about the whole idea:
2. Would it start the process that would lead to the break-up of the
British Empire?
Riots did break out and the most infamous was at Amritsar in the
Punjab where 379 unarmed protesters were shot dead by British
soldiers based there. 1200 were injured. This incident shocked
many in India but what caused equal outrage was the British
reaction to Amritsar – the officer commanding British troops at
Amritsar, General Dyer, was simply allowed to resign his
commission after an inquiry criticised his leadership during the riot.
Many national Indians felt that he, and others in the army, had got
away very lightly. The more radical Indians felt that the British
government had all but sanctioned murder.
The most vocal opponent of the idea of some form of self-rule for
India was Lord Birkenhead whole was Secretary of State for India
from 1924 to 1928. With such an opponent, any move to self-rule
was very difficult at best, and probably impossible in reality.
In India, the 1920’s saw the emergence of three men who were to
have a huge impact on the future of India:
Jawaharlal Nehru
Mahatma Gandhi
Muhammed Jinnah
During the time the Simon Commission reported, Gandhi started his
second civil disobedience campaign. This included Gandhi
deliberately breaking the law. The law in India stated that only the
government could manufacture salt. After a 250-mile march to the
sea, Gandhi started to produce his own salt. This produced a violent
clash with the British authorities and Gandhi was arrested.
The nationalists in India were not satisfied with this as the act did not
introduce dominion status and white dominions were allowed to
control their own defence and foreign policies. Also the princes who
still ruled areas of India still refused to co-operate with the provincial
assemblies so the second strand of the Act would have been
meaningless.
The act’s major failing was that it ignored the religious rivalry
between the Muslims and Hindus. Nearly two-thirds of India’s
population were Hindus and the Muslims feared that in an
independent and democratic India they would be treated unfairly. In
the 1937 provincial elections, the Hindus, who dominated the
Congress Party under Nehru, won eight out of the eleven provinces.
The Muslim League under Jinnah demanded a separate state of
their own to be called Pakistan. Both Gandhi and the Congress
Party were determined to preserve Indian unity. Such a rivalry
between the Hindus and Muslims could only bode ill for the future of
India.
World War Two shelved the Indian issue – albeit temporarily. The
Indians provided valuable military help in the fight against Japan
especially in the campaign in Burma. The British promised dominion
status for India once the war had ended.
Jawaharlal Nehru
Mahatma Gandhi
Muhammed Jinnah
History Learning Site > Modern World History > India 1900 to 1947
Search Site:
© 2000-2008 historylearningsite.co.uk
Traffic optimization
As early as 1917, Britain had toyed with the idea of giving India a
measure of self-government: "the gradual development of self-
governing institutions with a view to the progressive realisation of
responsible government in India as an integral part of the British
Empire".
However, the British controlled all central government and within the
provincial governments, the British kept control of the key posts of
tax and law and order.
Many Tory MP’s in Britain were against the whole idea of giving
anything whatsoever to India in terms of self-government. They had
two complaints about the whole idea:
2. Would it start the process that would lead to the break-up of the
British Empire?
Riots did break out and the most infamous was at Amritsar in the
Punjab where 379 unarmed protesters were shot dead by British
soldiers based there. 1200 were injured. This incident shocked
many in India but what caused equal outrage was the British
reaction to Amritsar – the officer commanding British troops at
Amritsar, General Dyer, was simply allowed to resign his
commission after an inquiry criticised his leadership during the riot.
Many national Indians felt that he, and others in the army, had got
away very lightly. The more radical Indians felt that the British
government had all but sanctioned murder.
The most vocal opponent of the idea of some form of self-rule for
India was Lord Birkenhead whole was Secretary of State for India
from 1924 to 1928. With such an opponent, any move to self-rule
was very difficult at best, and probably impossible in reality.
In India, the 1920’s saw the emergence of three men who were to
have a huge impact on the future of India:
Jawaharlal Nehru
Mahatma Gandhi
Muhammed Jinnah
During the time the Simon Commission reported, Gandhi started his
second civil disobedience campaign. This included Gandhi
deliberately breaking the law. The law in India stated that only the
government could manufacture salt. After a 250-mile march to the
sea, Gandhi started to produce his own salt. This produced a violent
clash with the British authorities and Gandhi was arrested.
The nationalists in India were not satisfied with this as the act did not
introduce dominion status and white dominions were allowed to
control their own defence and foreign policies. Also the princes who
still ruled areas of India still refused to co-operate with the provincial
assemblies so the second strand of the Act would have been
meaningless.
The act’s major failing was that it ignored the religious rivalry
between the Muslims and Hindus. Nearly two-thirds of India’s
population were Hindus and the Muslims feared that in an
independent and democratic India they would be treated unfairly. In
the 1937 provincial elections, the Hindus, who dominated the
Congress Party under Nehru, won eight out of the eleven provinces.
The Muslim League under Jinnah demanded a separate state of
their own to be called Pakistan. Both Gandhi and the Congress
Party were determined to preserve Indian unity. Such a rivalry
between the Hindus and Muslims could only bode ill for the future of
India.
World War Two shelved the Indian issue – albeit temporarily. The
Indians provided valuable military help in the fight against Japan
especially in the campaign in Burma. The British promised dominion
status for India once the war had ended.
Jawaharlal Nehru
Mahatma Gandhi
Muhammed Jinnah
History Learning Site > Modern World History > India 1900 to 1947
Search Site:
© 2000-2008 historylearningsite.co.uk
Traffic optimization
Report Abuse « Previous |
Search: The Web Tripod
Top 100 | Next »
share:
del.icio.us
| digg |
Select Rating (369) reddit |
furl |
facebook
©Aharon Daniel
1999-2000
allowed to use
Site Sponsors
You can support Wikipedia by making a tax-deductible donation.
edit
Indian Independence Movement Portal
Shortcut:
WP:PIIM
After the revolt was crushed, the British partitioned the region into British India and the
Princely States. They tried to develop a class of educated elites, whose political
organizing sought Indian political rights and representation. However, increasing public
disenchantment with the British authority — their curtailing of Indian civil liberties (such
as the Rowlatt Act), political rights, and culture as well as their avoidance of basic issues
facing common Indians and an essential nonacceptance of foreign occupation — led to an
upsurge in Revolutionary movement for Indian independence aimed at overthrowing the
European colonial powers, particularly the British.
edit
Selected article
edit
Selected picture
Indian freedom fighter Bhagat Singh, at the age of 21 in jail
edit
Categories
[−] Indian independence movement
[+] Indian independence activists
[+] Ghadar Party
[+] Hindu-German Conspiracy
[+] Literature of Indian independence movement
[+] Indian Independence League
[+] Indian National Army
[+] Indian National Congress
[+] Indian Rebellion of 1857
[+] Indian revolutionaries
[+] Partition of India
[+] Presidents of the Indian National Congress
[+] Quit India Movement
[+] Revolutionary movement for Indian independence
edit
Did you know...
• ...that the Indian National Congress, led by Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru, issued
the Declaration of Independence on January 26, 1930?
• ...that Ceylon was part of the Madras Presidency from 1795 until it was made a
separate Crown Colony in 1798?
• ...that Subhash Chandra Bose was elected president of the Indian National
Congress for two consecutive terms?
• ...that Sir Narayan Ganesh Chandavarkar was regarded as the "leading Hindu
reformer of western India"?
edit
Things you can do
Here are some tasks you can do:
edit
Special Events...
• The Indian Rebellion of 1857, (Hindi: १८५७ का पथम भारतीय सवतनतता सनगाम)
also known as the First War of Indian Independence, the Sepoy Rebellion and
the Indian Mutiny was a prolonged period of armed uprisings in different parts
of India against British occupation of that part of the subcontinent.
• Hindu-German Conspiracy- the name given to the plans made by Indian
revolutionaries to start a nationalist mutiny in India with the assistance of the
Central powers. The term covers the Annie Larsen plot in the United States, 1915
Ghadar Conspiracy in India and the mutiny at Singapore, the 1915 Christmas Day
plot under Bagha Jatin, the Indo-German efforts in Afghanistan, as well as lesser
known efforts by Indian revolutionary network in Europe and Mesopotamia.
• Non-Cooperation Movement:- the first-ever series of nationwide people's
movements of nonviolent resistance, led by Mahatma Gandhi and the Indian
National Congress.
• The Quit India Movement (Bharat Chhodo Andolan or the August Movement):-
a civil disobedience movement in India launched in August 1942 in response to
Mahatma Gandhi's call for immediate independence of India.
edit
Topics related to Indian independence movement
Colonisation - British East India Company - Plassey - Buxar - British India -
History:
French India - Portuguese India - More...
Indian nationalism - Swaraj - Gandhism - Satyagraha - Hindu nationalism -
Philosophies:
Indian Muslim nationalism - Swadeshi - Socialism
Rebellion of 1857 - Partition of Bengal - Revolutionaries - Champaran and
Kheda - Jallianwala Bagh Massacre - Non-Cooperation - Flag Satyagraha -
Events and
Bardoli - 1928 Protests - Nehru Report - Purna Swaraj - Salt Satyagraha - Act
movements:
of 1935 - Legion Freies Indien - Cripps' mission - Quit India - Indian National
Army - Bombay Mutiny
Indian National Congress - Ghadar - Home Rule - Khudai Khidmatgar - Swaraj
Organisations:
Party - Anushilan Samiti - Azad Hind - More...
Mangal Pandey - Rani of Jhansi - Bal Gangadhar Tilak - Gopal Krishna
Gokhale - Lala Lajpat Rai - Bipin Chandra Pal - Mahatma Gandhi - Sardar
Indian leaders: Patel - Subhash Chandra Bose - Badshah Khan - Jawaharlal Nehru - Maulana
Azad - Chandrasekhar Azad - Rajaji - Bhagat Singh - Sarojini Naidu -
Purushottam Das Tandon - Tanguturi Prakasam - Alluri Sitaramaraju - More...
Robert Clive - James Outram - Dalhousie - Irwin - Linlithgow - Wavell -
British Raj:
Stafford Cripps - Mountbatten - More...
Cabinet Mission - Indian Independence Act - Partition of India - Political
Independence:
integration - Constitution - Republic of India
edit
Other Portals
What are portals? · List of portals · Featured portals
Views
• Portal
• Discussion
• Edit this page
• History
Personal tools
Navigation
• Main page
• Contents
• Featured content
• Current events
• Random article
Search
Interaction
• About Wikipedia
• Community portal
• Recent changes
• Contact Wikipedia
• Donate to Wikipedia
• Help
Toolbox
edit
Indian Independence Movement Portal
Shortcut:
WP:PIIM
After the revolt was crushed, the British partitioned the region into British India and the
Princely States. They tried to develop a class of educated elites, whose political
organizing sought Indian political rights and representation. However, increasing public
disenchantment with the British authority — their curtailing of Indian civil liberties (such
as the Rowlatt Act), political rights, and culture as well as their avoidance of basic issues
facing common Indians and an essential nonacceptance of foreign occupation — led to an
upsurge in Revolutionary movement for Indian independence aimed at overthrowing the
European colonial powers, particularly the British.
edit
Selected article
edit
Selected picture
Indian freedom fighter Bhagat Singh, at the age of 21 in jail
edit
Categories
[−] Indian independence movement
[+] Indian independence activists
[+] Ghadar Party
[+] Hindu-German Conspiracy
[+] Literature of Indian independence movement
[+] Indian Independence League
[+] Indian National Army
[+] Indian National Congress
[+] Indian Rebellion of 1857
[+] Indian revolutionaries
[+] Partition of India
[+] Presidents of the Indian National Congress
[+] Quit India Movement
[+] Revolutionary movement for Indian independence
edit
Did you know...
• ...that the Indian National Congress, led by Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru, issued
the Declaration of Independence on January 26, 1930?
• ...that Ceylon was part of the Madras Presidency from 1795 until it was made a
separate Crown Colony in 1798?
• ...that Subhash Chandra Bose was elected president of the Indian National
Congress for two consecutive terms?
• ...that Sir Narayan Ganesh Chandavarkar was regarded as the "leading Hindu
reformer of western India"?
edit
Things you can do
Here are some tasks you can do:
edit
Special Events...
• The Indian Rebellion of 1857, (Hindi: १८५७ का पथम भारतीय सवतनतता सनगाम)
also known as the First War of Indian Independence, the Sepoy Rebellion and
the Indian Mutiny was a prolonged period of armed uprisings in different parts
of India against British occupation of that part of the subcontinent.
• Hindu-German Conspiracy- the name given to the plans made by Indian
revolutionaries to start a nationalist mutiny in India with the assistance of the
Central powers. The term covers the Annie Larsen plot in the United States, 1915
Ghadar Conspiracy in India and the mutiny at Singapore, the 1915 Christmas Day
plot under Bagha Jatin, the Indo-German efforts in Afghanistan, as well as lesser
known efforts by Indian revolutionary network in Europe and Mesopotamia.
• Non-Cooperation Movement:- the first-ever series of nationwide people's
movements of nonviolent resistance, led by Mahatma Gandhi and the Indian
National Congress.
• The Quit India Movement (Bharat Chhodo Andolan or the August Movement):-
a civil disobedience movement in India launched in August 1942 in response to
Mahatma Gandhi's call for immediate independence of India.
edit
Topics related to Indian independence movement
Colonisation - British East India Company - Plassey - Buxar - British India -
History:
French India - Portuguese India - More...
Indian nationalism - Swaraj - Gandhism - Satyagraha - Hindu nationalism -
Philosophies:
Indian Muslim nationalism - Swadeshi - Socialism
Rebellion of 1857 - Partition of Bengal - Revolutionaries - Champaran and
Kheda - Jallianwala Bagh Massacre - Non-Cooperation - Flag Satyagraha -
Events and
Bardoli - 1928 Protests - Nehru Report - Purna Swaraj - Salt Satyagraha - Act
movements:
of 1935 - Legion Freies Indien - Cripps' mission - Quit India - Indian National
Army - Bombay Mutiny
Indian National Congress - Ghadar - Home Rule - Khudai Khidmatgar - Swaraj
Organisations:
Party - Anushilan Samiti - Azad Hind - More...
Mangal Pandey - Rani of Jhansi - Bal Gangadhar Tilak - Gopal Krishna
Gokhale - Lala Lajpat Rai - Bipin Chandra Pal - Mahatma Gandhi - Sardar
Indian leaders: Patel - Subhash Chandra Bose - Badshah Khan - Jawaharlal Nehru - Maulana
Azad - Chandrasekhar Azad - Rajaji - Bhagat Singh - Sarojini Naidu -
Purushottam Das Tandon - Tanguturi Prakasam - Alluri Sitaramaraju - More...
Robert Clive - James Outram - Dalhousie - Irwin - Linlithgow - Wavell -
British Raj:
Stafford Cripps - Mountbatten - More...
Cabinet Mission - Indian Independence Act - Partition of India - Political
Independence:
integration - Constitution - Republic of India
edit
Other Portals
What are portals? · List of portals · Featured portals
Views
• Portal
• Discussion
• Edit this page
• History
Personal tools
Navigation
• Main page
• Contents
• Featured content
• Current events
• Random article
Search
Interaction
• About Wikipedia
• Community portal
• Recent changes
• Contact Wikipedia
• Donate to Wikipedia
• Help
Toolbox