India
Dec 23, 2015
India
Images of India
Republic of India
Some Facts
• 7th largest country in the world by area (3,287,590 km2)
• 2nd largest by population (1.1 billion people)
• capital: New Delhi
• biggest city: Mumbai (former Bombay)
• border to Bangladesh, Bhutan, Myanmar (Burma), China, Nepal and Pakistan
Languages: English (most important for national, political and commercial communication), Hindi as the national language (30%) and 14 other official languages
Religions: Hindu: 81.3%, Muslim: 12%, Christian: 2.3%, Sikh: 1.9% and others: 2.5%
History of India (the beginning - 1600)
3300 - 1700 BC Indus Valley Civilization 1500 BC Aryan tribes invade and
merge with the Dravidian inhabitants
712 BC Islam arrives on subcontinent (several
Islamic invasion between 1000 and 1500)
12th century Turkish invasions
15th century European traders arrive
1526 Babur of Timur establishes the Mughal Empire
by 1600 Mughal Dynasty rules most of the Indian sub-
continent
History of India (1600-1857)
31 Dec. 1600 British East India Company founded by Elizabeth I.1526 British set up first trading post in Surat.
Trade in cotton, silk, indigo, saltpetre, tea and opium. Monopoly over trade in East Indies, EIC had own military
1757 Victory in the Battle of Plassey established EIC as a military and commercial power.1857 Indian Mutiny is defeated by the British, Mughal
Empire is defeated; all political power is transferred from the East India Company to the British Crown
The British Raj (1858-1947)The Raj: British control of the political affairs of the whole of India
After the Indian Rebellion the governance of India was organized in: imperial government in London, central government in Calcutta ( represented by the viceroy) and the provincial governments
1876 Queen Victoria proclaimed Empress of India
Both the direct administration of India by the British crown and the technological change brought by the industrial revolution, had the effect of closely intertwining the economies of India and Great Britain. Railways, roads, canals, and bridges were rapidly built in India and telegraph links equally rapidly established in order that raw materials, such as cotton, from India's hinterland could be transported more efficiently to ports. Likewise, finished goods from England were transported back just as efficiently, for sale in the Indian markets.
1885 Indian National Congress founded to unite all Indians and
strengthen bonds with Britain
1920 Satyagraha (Ghandi‘s Non-Cooperation Movement) founded
Campaigns against British rule
1929 Indian Congress calls for independence
1930 (12 March - 6 April) Ghandi’s Salt March
1942 Quit India Movement initiated by Ghandi
1947 (15 August) Indian Independence
Republic of India
15 Aug. 1947 Independence Day and Partition of India and Pakistan
Jawaharlal Nehru becomes first Prime Minister of India, Mohammed Ali Jinnah becomes first Governor-General
1947 Due to sectarian violence over 1 million people werekilled when 6 million Muslims moved to Pakistan and 5 million Hindus moved to India.Ghandi opposed partition but had to cooperate to achieve Indian independence.
30 Jan. 1948 Ghandi is assassinated by Hindu fundamentalist1950 India becomes republic based on British model1956 War between India and Pakistan
1966 Indira Ghandi: first woman to become PM.
1971 2nd Indo-Pakistani war leads to 2nd partition: East
Pakistan becomes Bangladesh
1974 India builds the atomic bomb
1975-1977 The Emergency due to political unrest (highly
controversial)
1984 assassination of Indira Ghandi by Sikh bodyguard
Since independence, India has suffered from religious violence, caste-related violence and insurgencies in various parts, but has been able to control them through tolerance and constitutional reforms. Terrorism in India is also a major security problem, especially in Jammu and Kashmir, North-east India and recently in major cities like Delhi and Mumbai, 2001 Indian Parliament attack being the most prominent one.
Despite impressive gains in economic investment and output, India faces pressing problems such as significant overpopulation, environmental degradation, extensive poverty, and ethnic and religious strife.
The Indian Caste System
The Caste System is a rigid class structure based on Hinduism which is found in India. It is believed that if one leads a good life, following good karma and dharma, then they will be rewarded by being reincarnated as a person belonging to the next highest level in the Caste System. However, if one is wicked during their life, they will be demoted, and possibly even removed from the Caste System altogether. Outcasts, or Untouchables, are members of Hindu society thought to have been removed from the Caste System, with no hope of returning to it, due to their misdeeds in previous lives. Work that is deemed unclean for all other Hindus is reserved for these Outcasts.