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Showing posts with label NCERT-SOLUTIONS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NCERT-SOLUTIONS. Show all posts

Monday, August 31, 2020

Civil Disobedience Movement (1930-34)

CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE MOVEMENT (1930-34)




1929: LAHORE CONGRESS SESSION


1930: GANDHI'S ELEVEN POINTS

  • Gandhi placed 'Eleven Points' of administrative reforms before Lord Irwin & tried to negotiate with the government once again before launching the CDM.

1930: CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE BEGINS

  • Gandhi started his historic 'Dandi March' from Sabarmati Ashram to Dandi (240 miles, 24 days), accompanied by 78 followers & thus began CDM.

1930: GANDHI BREAKS SALT LAW

  • 6th April 1930
  • Gandhi reached Dandi, picked up a handful of salt & broke the salt law as a symbol of defiance to British Laws.
  • C Rajagopalachari led a slat march from Trichinopoly to Vedaranyam on the Tanjore coast.
  • Forms of protest included salt manufacture & resignations on a wide scale, boycott of foreign cloth & liquor, non-payment of land revenue in Ryotwari areas, anti-Chowkidari tax movement in Zamindari areas (Bihar), & Forest Satyagraha, i.e. peaceful violation of forest laws.

1930: CHITTAGONG ARMOURY RAID

  • 18th April 1930
  • Carried out by the Bengal revolutionaries led by Surya Sen.
  • ROLE OF KHAN ABDUL GAFFAR KHAN:
  • Khan had been active in NWFP for several years & had set up a band of non-violent revolutionaries, the Khudai Khidmatgars (Servants of God) or the Red Shirts (because of the color of their shirts) who played an active role in the CDM.
  • ANTI-CUNNINGHAM CIRCULAR AGITATION:
  • In Assam, a powerful agitation by students the infamous 'Cunningham Circular' was launched which prohibited students from participating in political activities associated with the national movement.
  • NON-REVENUE NO-RENT CAMPAIGN:
  • Was started in UP, Agra & Rae-Bareilly emerged as important centers.
  • The participation of women was the most remarkable feature of CDM.

1930-31: FIRST RTC (LONDON)

  • Chaired by British PM Ramsay MacDonald of the labor party.
  • First conference between the Indians & the British as equals.
  • Boycotted by Congress as it had launched the CDM, its proceedings proved to be quite meaningless & the British government grew anxious to secure Congress participation.
  • It recommended- 1.) Formation of an All India Federation of British Indian Provinces & the Indian States. 2.) A responsible government at the center with certain 'reservations & safeguards' for the transitional period.
  • In all, three RTCs were held in London to discuss the Indian constitutional question.
  • INC participated only in the 2nd RTC.
  • Ambedkar attended all the three RTCs.

1931: GANDHI RELEASED

  • 25th January 1931
  • The truce period begins.

1931: GANDHI-IRWIN TALK INITIATED

  • 14th February 1931
  • By the efforts of Sir TB Sapru & Sir MR Jayakar.

1931: GANDHI-IRWIN PACT (DELHI PACT)

  • End of First Phase of CDM
  • The fortnight-long talks culminated in the Delhi Pact.
  • In context to the pact, Sarojini Naidu termed as 'The Two Mahatmas'.
  • The pact was signed by Gandi on behalf of the Congress & by Irwin on behalf of the government on an equal footing.
  • As per the Pact, the Congress agreed to withdraw the CDM immediately & participate in the next RTC.

1931: SPECIAL CONGRESS SESSION AT KARACHI

  • 29th March 1931
  • It was called to ratify the Gandhi-Irwin Pact.
  • It was presided by Sardar Patel.
  • Adopted resolutions on Fundamental Rights (Jawaharlal Nehru with the help of M.N.Roy) & National Economic Programme.

1931: CHANGE OF GOVERNMENT

  • April-August 1931
  • Lord Irwin replaced by Lord Willingdon as Viceroy
  • MacDonald's Labour Cabinet was replaced by a new coalition government dominated by the Conservatives.
  • Sir Samuel Hoare:  he became Secretary of State for India.
  • The changed government adopted a hardened stand, saw the Delhi pact as a mistake.

1931: SECOND RTC (LONDON)

  • September-December 1931
  • Congress participated & was represented by Gandhi.
  • Gandhi gave a create Blanche to Jinnah, yet the communal problem could not be resolved.

1931: GOVERNMENT REPRESSION

  • September 1931
  • While India was away to London, Willingdon decided to launch a hard & immediate blow to the revival of the national movement.
  • The policy of 'Civil martial law' was launched & involved the passing of sweeping ordinances banning all Congress organizations.
  • Gandhi was arrested as soon as he returned from the RTC (4th January 1932).

1931: GANDHI RETURNED FROM LONDON

  • 28th December 1931
  • Gandhi returned to a changed political situation.

1931: SECOND CDM LAUNCHED

  • 4th January 1932
  • Gandhi was arrested & the movement was effectively crushed within a few months.
  • Afterward, it just lingered on.

1932: COMMUNAL AWARD

  • MacDonald announced the proposal on minority representation, known as the Communal Awards.
  • It declared depressed classes as the minority & entitled them to separate electorate.
  • Congress strongly disagreed with the communal award, yet it decided neither to accept nor reject it.
  • 20th Septemeber 1932, Gandhi (in Yerwada jail) sat on a fast unto death to oppose the Communal Award.

1932: POONA PACT

  • 24th September 1932
  • It was concluded betweenh Gandi & Ambedkar with the efforts of Ambedkar, MC Rajah & Madan Mohan Malviya.

1932: THIRD RTC

  • November-December 1932
  • It was attended by only 46 delegates & boycotted by the INC as well as the Labour Party in Britain.
  • In March 1933, a White Paper was published & contained four major proposals-Federation, Provincial Autonomy, dyarchy at the center & safeguards.
  • White Paper later became the basis of the Govt. of India Act, 1935.

1934: CDM WITHDRAWN

  • April 1934
  • In May 1933, Gandhi temporarily suspended the movement & formally withdrew it in April 1934.




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Saturday, August 15, 2020

POPULAR UPRISING & REVOLTS UP TO 1857 - HISTORY

POPULAR RISINGS & REVOLTS UP TO 1857

The establishment of British Rule was not a sudden event but a slow & gradual process comprising many wars & conquests, resulting in forceful subjugation of the Indian people. 

Naturally, it was a process resented & resisted at every stage. 

The British introduced rapid changes, which had an adverse impact on various aspects of Indian life. Consequently, people reacted to this new rule in two broadway.

These uprisings were directed against the common experience of oppression, brought about by the colonialists & their indigenous supporters.

Though these uprisings were localized in varying degrees, they emerged as the first expression of protest against the oppressive foreign rule & formed a significant prelude to the Revolt of 1857, also referred to as the- "First War of Independence".

Civil Rebellions

  • Civil Rebellions generally led by the rulers or their descendants, officials & retainers of the conquered Indian States as well as by improvised landlords & poligars (landed military magnets South India).
  • The mass base of these rebellions was provided by ruined peasants, artisans, & soldiers.
Peasants:
  • Group of small farmers or a farm laborer.
  • They were the sons of the soil, i.e. all those who were directly engaged in agricultural production.
Tribals/Adivasi:
  • The earliest inhabitants of a region.
  • They were lived in deep forests or hilly areas & shared a close bond with their land, forest & forest resources.
  • The tribal peasants combined agriculture with hunting & food gathering and even manufacturing from forest-based products.
  • Their relative isolation & closer ethnic bonds differentiated them from peasants.

Causes of the Pre-1857 Uprising:

The establishment of British rule had a far more devastating impact on the lives of various sections of Indian people, forcing them to rise in revolt against the colonial rule. Following are the reason for the uprising of Revolts:
The devastating impact on rulers & zamindars:
  • Several Rajas & Nawabs lost their principalities owing to the Company's policy of expansion.
  • Thousands of zamindars & poligars were uprooted; their rights were taken over by the colonial state.
  • They were forced to sell their rights due to their inability to pay higher revenues.
The devastating impact on Peasants:
  • The Company introduced rapid changes in administration & land revenue system, disrupting agrarian society.
  • The new land settlements (Permanent, Ryotwari & Mahalwari) created new ownership.
  • The colonial rulers insisted payment of revenue in cash, encouraging money lending practices which often resulted in heavy peasant indebtedness & landlessness.
  • The new land settlements also did away with certain customary rights like forest & pasturage rights.
  • Caste/Communal differences got strained.
  • Peasants were forced to grow cash crops like indigo, cotton instead of food grains, even in years of food grain scarcity, resulting in increased peasant exploitation & even famines.
  • The new judicial & administrative systems further encouraged the rich to oppress the poor. Cultivators were flogged, tortured & jailed for non-payment of rent, taxes & interests.
  • Corruption in lower levels of judiciary & administration made the life of the common man miserable.
The devastating impact on Artisans:
  • Colonialism also spelled doom for Indian artisans. As per the colonial policy, India was to be a market for British goods. These machine-made British goods were cheaper & finer than those made by Indian artisans. Without the demand for their handmade goods, the Indian artisans were thrown into unemployment.
  • While India was flooded with British manufactures, discriminatory tariffs were levied against Indian goods in Britain, ruining the Indian handloom & handicraft industry both ways.
  • Destruction of the indigenous industry led to large scale migrations from industry to agriculture (called peasantisation) with no simultaneous improvement in agriculture. This further increased pressure on land.
The devastating impact on Tribals:
  • The colonial administration ended the relative isolation of tribals & brought them within the ambit of the colonial economy & exploitation.
  • It intruded into the tribal polity, encroached upon tribal lands & transformed tribal relationships with land & forests.
  • It recognized the tribals as zamindars & introduced new land revenue system, taxed tribal products.
  • The colonial administration introduced a large number of outsiders among the tribals. These included middlemen such as the traders, revenue farmers & money landers who pulled the tribals into the very center of colonial exploitation.

Popular Uprisings up to 1857:

Bengal & Eastern India:

Revolts

Period

Sanyasi-Fakir Rebellion

1763 - 1800

Chuar Rebellion (Midnapur)

1766 – 1772

1795 - 1816

Peasant Uprising of Rangpur & Dinajpur

1820 - 37

Ho & Munda Rising

1820 - 37

Kol Uprising

(Chota Nagpur Plateau)

1825

Pagal Panthis Revolt

1825

Ahoma’s Revolt

(Assam)

1828

Khasi Revolt

(Khasi Hill)

1829

Faraizi Disturbances

1838 - 51

Khond Uprising

(Orissa)

1837 - 56

Savara Rebellion

1856 - 57

Santhal Rebellion

(Rajmahal Hills)

1855 - 56


Western India:

Revolts

Period

Bhil Uprising (Khandesh, Western Ghats)

1818, 1825, 1831 & 1846

Waghera Rising (Okha Mandal)

1818 -19

The Kutch Rebellion (Kutch & Kathiawar)

1819 & 1831

Ramosi Rising

(Western Ghats)

1822 & 1839

Koli Rising (Gujarat)

 

1824 -29, 1839 & 1844 -48

Surat Salt Agitation

1844 - 48

Kolhapur & Savanvadi Revolts

1844


Southern India:

Revolts

Period

The Revolt of the Raja of Vizianagaram

1794

The Revolt of Diwan Velu Thampi (Travancore)

1805

The Rebellion at Mysore

1830 - 1831

Mapilla Uprisings (Malabar)

1836 - 54


Northern India:

Revolts

Period

Kuka or Namdhari Movement (Western Punjab)

1840






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Thursday, August 13, 2020

THE ENGLISH (1600 - 1717) - HISTORY

ENGLISH EAST INDIA COMPANY (1600-1717)

English too had become impatient to participate in the profitable Asian Trade. 

1599: A company to trade with the East was formed under the auspices of a group of merchants known as - the Merchant Adventurers. The company popularly came to be known as the East India Company (or EIC, nickname- John Company).

Fig: Flag of EIC. 

 A Glance of English East India Company:

1600: The English Company:

  • The company was granted a royal charter by Queen Elizabeth giving it to the exclusive privilege of trading east of the Cape of Good Hopes for a period of 15 years.
  • In the beginning, the English company concentrated on the spice trade.
  • The initial voyages of the Company were made to the Spice Islands in Indonesia.
  • Soon the English discovered the importance of Indian goods especially textiles as a barter (trading) commodity for the spice trade.
  • Surat (Gujarat) was established as the trade transit point & the company ships were docked there.
  • The company now planned to open a factory at Surat & Captain Hawkins was sent.
1608: Captain Hawkins-
  • He was sent as a representative of the English Company to the Court of Jahangir to obtain permission to open a factory - at Surat (Gujarat).
  • He was the first Englishman to set foot on Indian soil.
  • He could speak the Turkish language & he came in a ship named - 'Hector'.
  • 1609: He arrived at Surat & from there went to the Court of Jahangir at Agra.
  • He obtained permission to open factories on the west coast but the Company not satisfied as to wanted permission for the whole of the country.  
1611:  MusaliptnamThe English opened their first factory in the south. 

1612: 'Battle of Swally Hole' The English defeated the Portuguese, near Surat.

1613: The English were allowed to set up a permanent factory at Surat (Gujarat)

1615: Sir Thomas Roe-
  • He was sent by King James I as an ambassador to the court of Jahangir.
  • Roe was successful in obtaining royal Farman permitting the British to trade and establish factories in all parts of the Mughal Empire.
1625:
  •  Soon the English began to feel insecure in absence of fortified settlements & made an attempt to fortify Surat but the Mughal frustrated the attempt & imprisoned the English. 
  • The English then decided to shift their focus to South India to avoid direct confrontation with the Mughals.
  • Conditions in South India were more favorable to English as they did not have to face a strong Indian government there.

Madras:

1632: 
  • Sultan of Golconda issues a golden Farman in favor of the English, permitting them to trade freely from the ports of Golconda on an annual payment of 500 pagodas.
1639: Francis Day-
  • He was able to join obtain Madras on lease from the Raja of Chandragiri & shifted the center of their activity to Madras.
  • The Raja allowed the English to fortify Madras, to administer it & to coin the money on the condition that the English will pay him half the customs revenue of the port.
  • The English set up a factory & built a small fort around it called 'Fort St. George'.
1690: The British bought the Fort Devanampatnam, near Madras, and renamed it as- Fort St. David.

Bengal:

1651: 
  • At Hugli, the first English factory in Bengal was set up upon receiving permission from Sultan Shuja (second son of Emperor Shah Jahan), the Subahdar of Bengal.
1658:
  •  All establishment of the Company in Bengal, Bihar, Orissa, & Coromandel Coast were brought under the control of Fort St. George.

1690: Job Charnock-
  • He established a factory at Sutanuti which was fortified in 1696 and is called Fort William.
1698:
  • The English Company obtained from Subahdar of Bengal Azim-us-Shan, the zamindari (right to collect revenue) of the villages of Sutanuti, Kalikata, and Gobindpur on payment of Rs.1,200. to the previous proprietors. 
1700:
  • The Bengal factories were placed under Fort William.
  • Soon the Kalikata village grew into a city known as- Calcutta.

Bombay:

1662:
  • King Charles II received Bombay as dowry on marrying a Portuguese princess.
1668:
  • The Crown transferred it to the Company on an annual rent of 10 pounds and it was soon fortified in the wake of threats from the raising Maratha Power.
  • Bombay quickly replaced Surat as the principal depot of the Company on the West coast. 
1717: Magna Carta by Farrukhsiyar-
  • Farrukhsiyar granted the English Company valuable trading privileges under the Farman of 1717 described as the Magna Carta of the Company.
  • The Farman was granted because earlier in 1714, William Hamilton, a surgeon in the British East India Company had successfully cured Farrukhsiyar of a disease (swelling in the groin).
  • After successful treatment, Farrukhsiyar finally arranged his marriage to the daughter of Raja Ajit Singh of Jodhpur, which had been delayed by the illness. 
  • The Farman was instrumental in increasing the Company's stronghold in Bengal which later colonized Bengal followed by the rest of India.
Provisions of Farman:
  • The British were allowed duty-free trade in Bengal in lieu of an annual payment of Rs.30,000.
  • Exemption from payment of all dues at Surat in lieu of a one-time settlement of Rs.10,000.
  • The Campany retained its old privilege of exemption from payment of all dues at Hyderabad & for Madras was required to pay only the existing rent.
  • The Company was allowed to rent more territory around Calcutta.
  • The Company was allowed to use its own currency (minted at Bombay) throughout India.
  • The Company was also granted the right to issue passes or dastaks for the movement of such goods.
  • The Company's' servants were also permitted to trade but were not covered under this Farman. 
Farman as Source of Conflict:
  • This Farman became a perpetual source of conflict between the Company & the Nawab of Bengal.
  • The strong Nawab of Bengal Murshid Quli Khan & Alivardi Khan- objected to the English interpretation of the Farman of 1717.
  • They exercised strict control over the English traders & prevented them from misusing the Dastaks.
  • Despite strong political control by native rulers, the commercial affairs of the Company flourished.
  • Madra, Bombay, Calcutta - became the nuclei of commercial activities.






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