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Graduate Level intermediate Freedom Struggle Indian Independence National Movement Timeline
Indian Freedom Struggle: Complete Timeline 1857-1947
Chronological events, movements, leaders, and acts from 1857 to 1947 — essential for Kerala PSC exams.
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— Chronological events, movements, leaders, and acts from 1857 to 1947 — essential for Kerala PSC exams.
#Freedom Struggle
#Indian Independence
#National Movement
#Timeline
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The Indian Freedom Struggle (1857-1947) is one of the highest-weight topics in PSC exams. Expect 5-10 questions on movements, leaders, acts, and chronology.
Phase 1: The Revolt and Early Nationalism (1857–1905)
The Revolt of 1857
| Fact | Detail |
|---|---|
| Date | 10 May 1857 (Meerut) |
| Immediate cause | Greased cartridges (Enfield rifle — cow/pig fat) |
| First soldier to revolt | Mangal Pandey (29 March 1857, Barrackpore) |
| Centres & Leaders | Delhi: Bahadur Shah Zafar; Kanpur: Nana Sahib + Tantia Tope; Jhansi: Rani Lakshmibai; Lucknow: Begum Hazrat Mahal; Bihar: Kunwar Singh |
| Suppressed by | September 1858 |
| Result | End of East India Company rule; British Crown took over (Government of India Act, 1858) |
V.D. Savarkar called it the “First War of Independence.” British called it the “Sepoy Mutiny.”
Key Acts & Events (1858–1905)
| Year | Event |
|---|---|
| 1858 | Queen’s Proclamation — Crown takes over from EIC; Governor-General becomes Viceroy |
| 1861 | Indian Councils Act — Indians allowed in Viceroy’s council (advisory only) |
| 1876 | Queen Victoria declared Empress of India (Royal Titles Act) |
| 1878 | Vernacular Press Act (Lord Lytton) — censored Indian-language press |
| 1882 | Hunter Commission — education reform |
| 1883 | Ilbert Bill controversy — Indian judges could try Europeans; withdrawn after white protest |
| 1885 | Indian National Congress founded (28 Dec, Bombay); A.O. Hume; first president: W.C. Bonnerjee |
| 1892 | Indian Councils Act — expanded legislative councils |
| 1899 | Curzon becomes Viceroy — most controversial Viceroy |
| 1905 | Partition of Bengal (16 Oct) — Curzon divides Bengal; triggers Swadeshi Movement |
Phase 2: Swadeshi and Extremism (1905–1919)
| Year | Event |
|---|---|
| 1905 | Swadeshi Movement begins; boycott of British goods |
| 1906 | Muslim League founded (Dhaka, 30 Dec); INC Calcutta session — “Swaraj” demand (Dadabhai Naoroji) |
| 1907 | Surat Split — INC splits into Moderates (Gokhale) and Extremists (Tilak) |
| 1909 | Morley-Minto Reforms (Indian Councils Act) — separate electorate for Muslims |
| 1911 | Partition of Bengal annulled; capital shifted from Calcutta to Delhi |
| 1914 | Ghadar Movement (San Francisco); WWI begins — Indians support Britain hoping for reforms |
| 1915 | Gandhi returns to India from South Africa (9 Jan) |
| 1916 | Lucknow Pact — Congress-Muslim League unity; Home Rule Leagues by Tilak and Annie Besant |
| 1917 | Champaran Satyagraha (Bihar) — Gandhi’s first civil disobedience in India (indigo farmers) |
| 1918 | Kheda Satyagraha (Gujarat) and Ahmedabad Mill Strike — Gandhi’s early movements |
| 1919 | Rowlatt Act (March) — detention without trial; Jallianwala Bagh Massacre (13 April, Amritsar, Gen. Dyer) |
Trio of Early Nationalists
| Category | Leaders | Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Moderates | Dadabhai Naoroji, Gokhale, W.C. Bonnerjee, Pherozeshah Mehta | Prayer, petition, constitutional methods |
| Extremists | Tilak, Bipin Chandra Pal, Lala Lajpat Rai (“Lal-Bal-Pal”) | Boycott, national education, swadeshi |
| Revolutionaries | Bhagat Singh, Chandrashekhar Azad, Khudiram Bose | Armed resistance |
Phase 3: Gandhian Era (1919–1947)
Non-Cooperation Movement (1920–1922)
| Fact | Detail |
|---|---|
| Launched | 1 August 1920 (Gandhi) |
| Causes | Rowlatt Act + Jallianwala Bagh + Khilafat issue |
| Methods | Boycott of courts, schools, titles, legislatures; promotion of khadi |
| Khilafat alliance | Ali Brothers (Mohamed Ali, Shaukat Ali) joined with Gandhi |
| Ended | 12 February 1922 after Chauri Chaura incident (UP — mob burned police station; 22 policemen killed) |
Key Events 1920s–1930s
| Year | Event |
|---|---|
| 1921 | Moplah Rebellion (Malappuram, Kerala) — peasant uprising |
| 1922 | Chauri Chaura; Gandhi arrested; Swaraj Party formed (Motilal Nehru, C.R. Das) |
| 1927 | Simon Commission (all-white; “Simon Go Back” protests); Lala Lajpat Rai injured in lathi charge (died Nov 1928) |
| 1928 | Nehru Report (Motilal Nehru) — dominion status demand |
| 1929 | Lahore Session (INC) — “Purna Swaraj” (complete independence) declared; 26 Jan 1930 = first Independence Day |
| 1930 | Dandi March (12 March–6 April; 390 km; Salt Satyagraha); Civil Disobedience Movement begins |
| 1930 | First Round Table Conference (London) — Congress boycotted |
| 1931 | Gandhi-Irwin Pact (March); Second RTC — Gandhi attends |
| 1932 | Communal Award (Ramsay MacDonald); Poona Pact (Gandhi-Ambedkar — reserved seats instead of separate electorate for depressed classes) |
| 1935 | Government of India Act — provincial autonomy, federal structure (never fully implemented); bicameral legislature |
Quit India Movement (1942)
| Fact | Detail |
|---|---|
| Date | 8 August 1942 (Bombay, Gowalia Tank/August Kranti Maidan) |
| Slogan | ”Do or Die” (Gandhi) |
| Also called | August Movement, Bharat Chhodo Andolan |
| Result | All top leaders arrested; underground movement continued (Aruna Asaf Ali hoisted flag; Ram Manohar Lohia, JP Narayan led underground) |
| Parallel govts | Satara (Maharashtra), Ballia (UP), Midnapore (Bengal) |
Other Critical Events (1940s)
| Year | Event |
|---|---|
| 1940 | Lahore Resolution (Muslim League) — demand for Pakistan |
| 1941 | Subhas Chandra Bose escapes to Germany |
| 1943 | Azad Hind Fauj (INA) formally organized by Bose (Singapore); “Jai Hind,” “Delhi Chalo” |
| 1943 | Bengal Famine — 3 million died |
| 1944 | INA’s Imphal campaign fails |
| 1945 | Shimla Conference (Wavell Plan) fails |
| 1946 | Cabinet Mission (3-member; grouped provinces; rejected by League); Royal Indian Navy Mutiny (Bombay); Direct Action Day (16 Aug — Calcutta riots) |
| 1946 | Interim Government formed (Nehru as VP of Viceroy’s Council) |
| 1947 | Mountbatten Plan (3 June); Indian Independence Act (18 July); 15 August 1947 — Independence |
Important Acts — Quick Reference
| Act | Year | Key Provision |
|---|---|---|
| Charter Act | 1833 | Governor-General of India (not Bengal); end of EIC trade monopoly |
| Government of India Act | 1858 | Crown rule; Secretary of State for India |
| Indian Councils Act | 1861 | Portfolio system; Indians in council |
| Indian Councils Act | 1892 | Indirect elections introduced |
| Morley-Minto Reforms | 1909 | Separate electorate for Muslims |
| Government of India Act | 1919 | Dyarchy in provinces (Montagu-Chelmsford) |
| Rowlatt Act | 1919 | Detention without trial |
| Government of India Act | 1935 | Provincial autonomy; federal court; All-India Federation (never implemented) |
| Indian Independence Act | 1947 | Two dominions: India and Pakistan |
Famous Slogans and Their Authors
| Slogan | Person |
|---|---|
| ”Swaraj is my birthright” | Bal Gangadhar Tilak |
| ”Inquilab Zindabad” | Hasrat Mohani (popularized by Bhagat Singh) |
| “Jai Hind” | Subhas Chandra Bose |
| ”Do or Die” | Mahatma Gandhi |
| ”Tum mujhe khoon do, main tumhe azadi dunga” | Subhas Chandra Bose |
| ”Dilli Chalo” | Subhas Chandra Bose |
| ”Aram Haram Hai” | Jawaharlal Nehru |
| ”Vande Mataram” | Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay (song); first sung politically at 1896 INC session |
| ”Simon Go Back” | Lala Lajpat Rai |
| ”Sarfaroshi ki Tamanna” | Ram Prasad Bismil |
Viceroys to Remember
| Viceroy | Period | Key Event |
|---|---|---|
| Lord Canning | 1856–62 | Last GG & first Viceroy; 1857 revolt |
| Lord Ripon | 1880–84 | ”Father of Local Self-Government”; Ilbert Bill |
| Lord Curzon | 1899–1905 | Partition of Bengal |
| Lord Hardinge | 1910–16 | Capital shift to Delhi; Bengal reunited |
| Lord Chelmsford | 1916–21 | Jallianwala Bagh; Montagu-Chelmsford reforms |
| Lord Irwin | 1926–31 | Dandi March; Gandhi-Irwin Pact |
| Lord Linlithgow | 1936–43 | WWII; Quit India; longest-serving Viceroy |
| Lord Mountbatten | 1947 | Last Viceroy; Partition; first Governor-General of free India |
Quick Recall
- First INC session? 1885, Bombay, W.C. Bonnerjee
- Champaran — which crop? Indigo
- Dandi March distance? 390 km, 24 days
- Poona Pact — between? Gandhi and Ambedkar (1932)
- Government of India Act 1935 significance? Basis for Indian Constitution
- INA slogan? Jai Hind, Delhi Chalo
- Last Viceroy? Lord Mountbatten
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