Timeline India thru 1991
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Manipur: http://manipuronline.com/FrontPage/index.htm
Medieval India: 1026-1756 http://www.itihaas.com/medieval/index.html
Wikipedia: http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_India
India is about 1/3 the size of the US. The state
of Uttar Pradesh,
with some 170 million people in 2006, included 8% of the world’s poor.
If it were a separate country it would be the 6th most populous in the
world.
(SSFC, 10/9/05, Par p.27)(Econ, 6/3/06, p.13)
India has 28
states (2002): Andrha Pradesh (Hyderabad), Assam, Bihar (Patna), Delhi,
Gujarat (Gandhinagar), Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Karnataka
(Bangalore), Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra (Mumbai), Manipur
(Imphal), Meghalaya (Shillong), Mizoram, Orissa, Pradesh, Punjab,
Rajasthan, Sikkim (Gangtok), Tamil Nadu, Tripura, Uttar Pradesh
(Lucknow), Uttaranchal, West Bengal (Kolkata).
(WSJ, 8/8/95, p. A11)(SFC, 11/26/98, p.B3)(SFC,
2/25/02, p.A7)
65Mil BC In
2003 US and Indian scientists reported on a new dinosaur species from
western India from this time. They named it Rajasaurus narmadensis, or
"Regal reptile from the Narmada," after the Narmada River region where
the bones were found.
(AP, 8/13/03)
50Mil BC The Tibetan Plateau began to lift about this
time as India thrust northward. This led to the creation of the Gobi
Desert north of the plateau.
(SFC, 5/19/06, p.B7)
c3,000BCE Ayurveda, a holistic Indian science, had
its beginnings. It later taught that the balancing of the mind, spirit
and body is the secret of health, vitality, longevity and beauty.
(SFC, 4/25/00, p.C6)
c3,000BCE Hatha Yoga, a combination of mind and body
exercises, began in India about this time.
(SSFC, 4/18/04, p.D16)
2700BC-700BC The Harappan civilization flourished in
the Indus and Ganges valleys.
(Reuters, 3/15/06)
c2,500 Excavations in 2000
revealed a walled city at the Dholavira site in Gujarat state.
(AM, 11/00, p.22)
2300-2000BC There was cultural exchange between the
Indus Valley civilization and Mesopotamia. The Indus Valley, or
Harrapan, civilization was discovered in 1920-21 when engraved seals
were discovered near present-day Sahiwal in Pakistani Punjab at a place
called Harappa.
(EAWC,
p.2)(http://inic.utexas.edu/asnic/subject/peoplesandlanguages.html)
2000BC Balathal, outside the city of Udaipur, was a
Chalcolithic village. The people used copper tools and weapons.
Terra-cotta figurines of bulls have been found at the site. It was
abandoned and reoccupied c340BC.
(AM, Mar/Apr 97 p.B)
c2000BC Tantra, a quasireligious doctrine, dates back
to this time. Its first texts were in Sanskrit and the original
adherents practiced ritual copulation.
(WSJ, 12/7/98, p.A1)
2000-1500BC The events of the Indian Ramayana epic, written around
500BC, supposedly took place about this time period.
(AM, 7/04, p.50)
1600-1500BC In India the Aryans invaded the Indus
Valley region. In 1999 researchers reported that gene patterns
confirmed that Caucasoid invaders entered India between 1000 and 2000
BC.
(EAWC, p.3)(SFC, 5/26/99, p.C2)
1600-1000 In India the Early Vedic period of Indian
civilization unfolded.
(EAWC, p.3)
1550BC In India writing disappeared for a time with
the destruction of the Indus Valley civilization.
(EAWC, p.4)
1500BC The Laws of Manu, a Hindu sacred text, dated
to about this time. It sanctified the caste system of India.
(www.fordham.edu/halsall/india/manu-full.html)(Econ,
10/6/07, p.15)
1500BC Before this time in India the sap of the
palmyra palm was used to make a fermented drink later called a "toddy"
by the English.
(SFEC, 6/22/97, Z1 p.5)
c1000BC The Rig Veda, the first Vedic literature was
written.
(EAWC, p.6)
c1000 The original Hindu calendar
was based on a lunar cycle and dated back to this time.
(SFC, 1/1/00, p.A18)
1000BC The Sushruta Samhita, an early text of
Ayurvedic medicine, was compiled by Sushrut, the primary pupil of
Dhanvantri, about this time. In 2003 India moved to assess the
country’s herbs systematically in a program called the Golden Triangle
Partnership.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ayurveda)(www.ccras.nic.in/gtp.htm)
1000-600BC This was the late Vedic period in India.
The Aryans were integrated into Indian culture and the caste system
emerged.
(EAWC, p.6)
800-600BC The Brahmans, a priestly caste, began to
emerge.
(EAWC, p.7)
800-500BC The Upanishadic philosophy began with the
writing of the Upanishads. Doctrines of rebirth and the transmigration
of souls began to appear.
(EAWC, p.7)
563BCE Apr 8, Buddha (d.483BCE), Siddhartha Gautama,
was born in Northern India. [Nepal] Raja Suddhodana, king of the Sakyas
in the 6th century BC, is best known as the father of Buddha. The
kingdom of the Sakyas was on what is now the border of Nepal and India.
Buddha was born in about 563 BC. The birthplace of the Indian prince
Siddartha, who became the monk Buddha, was believed to have been
discovered by archeologists in 1996. Lumbini, Nepal, birthplace of
Buddha, was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1997. [see May
15]
(http://eawc.evansville.edu,
p.9)(V.D.-H.K.p.21)(WSJ, 2/6/96, p.A-1)(SFC, 9/1/96, DB
p.30)(SFC,12/5/97, p.B2)(HN, 4/8/98)(HNQ, 3/30/99)
563BCE May 15, Wesak Day, also known as Buddha's
birthday. [see Apr 8]
(SFC, 5/15/03, p.A3)
543 BC Colonists from northern India subdued the
indigenous Vaddahs (Veddah) of Sri Lanka, known in the ancient
world as Taprobane and later called Serendip. Descendants of those
colonists, the Buddhist Sinhalese, form most of the population of Sri
Lanka.
(SFC, 6/20/96, p.A8)(SFC, 9/22/97, p.A10)
540-486BC Mahavira, the founder of Jainism, lived.
[see 480BC]
(EAWC, p.9)
537BC Cyrus the Persian campaigned
west of the Indus River.
(EAWC, p.9)
517-509BC Darius the Persian conquered the Indus
Valley region.
(EAWC, p.10)
c500BC The Ramayana, a literary epic depicting the
struggles of the god Ram, was composed.
(SFC, 3/8/96, p.A10)
c500BC The city of Varanasi was also known as Kashi
and Benares and has been a center of civilization for 2,500 years. It
is the home of the Hindu god Shiva.
(SFEC,11/23/97, p.T4)
c500-200BC In India the Mahabharata, of which the
Bhagavad-Gita is a part, was put into its final form.
(PC Comp. 12/94, p.278)(EAWC, p.10)
483BC Gautama Siddhartha Buddha,
the founder of Buddhism, died about this time in Kushinagar, in
northern India.
(eawc, p.9)(SSFC, 10/14/07,
p.A15)(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gautama_Buddha)
c480BCE Vardhamana Mahavira, the semi-legendary
teacher who reformed older doctrines and established Jainism, died. He
is regarded as the 24th and latest Tirthankara, one of the people to
have attained personal immortality through enlightenment. Jainism was
founded as a dualistic, ascetic religion as a revolt against the caste
system and the vague world spirit of Hinduism.
(WUD, 1994, p.762,1488,1580)
450BC In 2006 archaeologists in
Bangladesh said they had uncovered part of a fortified citadel at Wari,
northeast of Dhaka, dating back to this time that could have been a
stopping off point along an ancient trade route.
(Reuters, 3/15/06)
400BC In India Panini’s "Sutra,"
the earliest Sanskrit grammar, was written.
(EAWC, p.12)
344BC Alexander the Great brought
cultivated rice to the west after his invasion of India. [see 331BC]
(Hem., 12/96, p.82)
c340BC-200CE Balathal near Udaipur was reoccupied by
a new people who built a massive rampart around the site and later
abandoned it.
(AM, Mar/Apr 97 p.B)
331BC Alexander conquered the
Persian Empire and then made his way to India and conquered part of it.
(EAWC, p.13)
327BC-326BCE Alexander the Great passed through the
Indus Valley and installed Greek officials in the area.
(EAWC, p.13)
323BCE The death of Alexander provided an opportunity
for an independent state. Chandragupta Maurya founded the Maurya
dynasty, the first Indian empire with its capital in Patna.
(eawc, p.13)(SC, 5/18/02)
304BC Chandragupta traded 500 war
elephants to Seleucus in exchange for the Indus region and lands
immediately to the West.
(EAWC, p.14)
300BC Kautilya (aka Chanakya), an
Indian statesman and scholar, authored the Artha-Shastra (the Science
of Material Gain) at the end of the 4th century BC. This is the first
known treatise on government and economy.
(www.sscnet.ucla.edu/southasia/History/Ancient/Kautilya.html)
c300BC Palur in eastern India near Chilika Lake has
yielded red-and-black-ware potsherds, one of which had the image of a
boat.
(AM, Mar/Apr 97 p.B)
273-232 Ashoka, the grandson of Chandragupta Maurya,
ruled India, an area of a million sq. miles, and 50 million people. He
was the most impressive ruler of the Maurya dynasty and was strongly
disposed in favor of Buddhism, which orientation showed positively in
his public policy.
(V.D.-H.K.p.21)(EAWC, p.14)
260BCE Ashoka, the 3rd ruler of the Mauryan empire
(India), converted to Buddhism after defeating the Kalinga region. He
began promoting Buddhist teaching throughout the subcontinent and
beyond to Sri Lanka and even Greece.
(www.metmuseum.org/toah/ht/04/ssa/ht04ssa.htm)
250BC In India a general council
of Buddhist monks was held in Patna, where the canon of Buddhist
scripture was selected.
(EAWC, p.14)
250BC In India Emperor Ashoka
ordered a sculpture of four Asiatic lions about this time. The image
later became a model emblazoned on India’s passports and currency.
(WSJ, 6/27/07, p.A9)
c200BC-650CE Caves at Ajanta were painted and
sculpted during this period with court scenes and tales from the Jataka
and Bodhisattvas.
(WSJ, 11/12/98, p.A28)
184BC In India the Maurya dynasty
ended when the last ruler was assassinated by an ambitious army
commander.
(EAWC, p.15)
78CE Mar 3, Origin of Saka Era in
India.
(SC, 3/3/02)
79CE The Hindu calendar was
updated to the solar year with this year as year 1. The original dated
back to about 1000 BC.
(SFC, 1/1/00, p.A18)
100-200 Poompuhar (southern India) grew during the
reign of Karikal Cholan, the second-century Chola king who established
trade ties with China, Arabia and the Roman Empire. In the 20th century
remnants of brick buildings, water reservoirs, a boat jetty and Roman
coins were found during undersea excavations.
(AP, 1/14/05)
c300 Vatsayana wrote the
philosophical treatise "Kama Sutra" during the classical age of the
Gupta period. One of its 35 chapters dealt with various sexual
positions.
(SFEC, 3/2/97, DB p.32)
320 The Gupta state began with the
accession of Chandragupta I. His son and grandson were successful
conquerors and extended the state across Northern India from sea to
sea. The journal of the Buddhist monk Fa-hsien provides most of our
knowledge of Gupta society.
(MWH, 1994)
400 About this time sage-prince
Kambu of the Cambodian legends, who belonged to the Kamboja lineage,
appears to have sailed from Indian subcontinent, probably from
Saurashtra/Gujarat on the west coast of India and established a small
Kamboja kingdom in Bassac around Vat-Ph'u hill in Mekong Basin. The
first Khmer or king, know as Kambu, founded Kambujadesa, which means
the Sons of Kambu or Kambuja for short.
(SFEC, 10/20/96,
T5)(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kambu_Svayambhuva)
c400-500 The Indian philosopher Yashomitra made
commentaries on Buddhism and described it as "awakened" (vibuddha) and
"full-bloomed" or "perfected" (prabuddha).
(SFEM,12/14/97, p.46)
c500 The Indian monk Bodhidharma
hit on the idea of Zen after staring at a wall for nine years.
(WSJ, 10/23/96, p.A1)
544 In India about this time
Pulakeshin I instituted the Chalukyan kingdom and his son established
Vatapi, identified as Badami, as the capital.
(http://tinyurl.com/mdkhf)
550 Aryabhata (b.476), Indian
astronomer and mathematician, died. The Aryabhatiya, an astronomical
treatise, is the magnum opus and only extant work of Aryabhata.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aryabhata)
580-728 Pallava kings ruled in southern India, later
Tamil Nadu state. The port town of Mahabalipuram was the capital of
their ancient kingdom.
(AP, 9/21/05)
600-700CE The Tantras, Buddhist texts for generating
deep religious experiences, were produced.
(SFEC,12/14/97, p.T5)
c600-700 The 7th century Chinese Buddhist pilgrim
Hsuan-tsang sought out the sources of Buddhism in India.
(AM, 9/01, p.48)
c700-800 Padmasambhava was an 8th century sorcerer
and saint who converted Tibet to Buddhism.
(SFEC,12/14/97, p.T5)
740 The Virupaksha temple in
Pattadakal, an early capital of the Chalukyas of southern India, was
built by Queen Lokamahadevi about this time to commemorate her
husband's victory over the Pallavas.
(http://tinyurl.com/s6lck)
981 Adherents to the Jainist faith
consecrated a 57-foot statue of their most important saint, Bahubali,
in the town of Shravana Belgola, India.
(Sm, 3/06, p.23)
985-1014 The Brihadeshwarar temple was built in
southeastern India’s Tamil Nadu state.
(WSJ, 10/1/04, p.A10)
985-1200 The Chola Kingdom prospered in southern
India. Arts flourished and the economy prospered under expanding trade
and military conquests. Ganesha, son of Shiva, was the first god
invoked at the beginning of a new enterprise.
(WSJ, 10/8/99, p.W14)(WSJ, 10/8/99, p.W14)
993 The south Indian Cola Empire
captured Anuradhapura (Sri Lanka).
(Arch, 7/02, p.34)
1000 The Gypsy people (Romany)
migrated from Rajasthan, India, about this time. They call themselves
Rom, which is derived from their original Indian caste name Dom.
(Wired, 9/96, p.46)(SFC, 2/28/97, p.A24)(Econ,
6/21/08, p.35)
1000-1100 An 11th century temple was constructed in
Thanjavur in southern India.
(WSJ, 6/9/97, p.A1)
1000-1100 The sandstone sculpture "Uma Maheshvara" is
a variant of the archetypal couple Shiva and Parvati.
(SFC, 6/28/97, p.E1)
1019 Machmud of Ghazni, a kingdom
in central Asia, invaded India and took so many captives that the
prices of slaves plummeted for several years. He invade India annually
for 25 years.
(WSJ, 1/11/99, p.R4)
1026-1756 http://www.itihaas.com/medieval/index.html
1100-1200 The bronze sculpture "Shiva Nataraya"
depicted the Hindu god of creation and destruction doing the dance that
sustains the universe.
(SFC, 6/28/97, p.E1)
1100-1200 The comic man-elephant "Ganesha" sculpture
was carved in schist.
(SFC, 6/28/97, p.E1)
1100-1200 There was a Muslim victory over the
Rajputs. It was commemorated by the 240-foot tower in Delhi known as
Qutb Minar.
(SFEC, 5/21/00, p.T8)
1140 Ghorid leaders from central
Afghanistan captured and burned Ghazni, then moved on to conquer India.
(www.afghan, 5/25/98)
1166 El-Idrisi (b.1099), a Muslim
geographer, died. The Arab geographer Idrisi claimed that Indians
preferred iron from East Africa over their own because of its
malleability.
(SSFC, 9/2/07, p.A18)(NH, 6/97, p.44)
1192-1198 Time of the Quwwatul Islam Masjid.
(SFEC, 5/21/00, p.T8)
1209 The Delhi Sultanate
established Muslim rule in northern India.
(AM, 7/04, p.51)
1274 Lal Shahbaz Qalandar
(b.1177), born as Seyyed Shah Hussain Marandi in Marand (near the city
of Tabriz) in Azerbaijan (then part of Iran), died. He had migrated to
Sindh and settled in Sehwan and was buried there. He is also known as
Shaikh Hussain Marandi. He was a Sufi in the regions that lie in the
Sindh province of Pakistan.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shahbaz_Qalander)
1298 Tamerlane plundered Delhi.
(SFEC, 5/21/00, p.T8)
c1300-1700 Vijayanagra (aka Hampi) in southern India
was the capital of a great empire during this time.
c1396 The tabla, a 600-year-old
invention, was evolved from Arabian drums to accompany a fusion of
Islamic Qawali singing and Dhrupad music composed for Sanskrit couplets
usually recited in temples.
(SFC, 5/19/96,Mag, p.25)
c1396 The kirana style of
Hindustani music began.
(SFC, 6/18/96, p.A17)
1399 Dec 17, Tamerlane's Mongols
destroyed the army of Mahmud Tughluk, Sultan of Delhi, at Panipat.
(HN, 12/17/98)
1451 An Afghan named Buhlul
invaded Delhi, and seized the throne. He founded the Lodi dynasty.
(www.afghan, 5/25/98)
1459 May 12, Sun City, India, was
founded by Rao Jodhpur.
(MC, 5/12/02)
1469 Apr 15, The guru Nanak
(d.1539), 1st guru of Sikhs, was born to Hindu parents in Lahore. Nanak
assimilated tenets of pantheistic Hinduism and monotheistic Islam and
founded Sikhism in the Punjab. He refused to accept the caste system
and the supremacy of the Brahmanical priests and forbade magic,
idolatry and pilgrimages. Brahma is the Hindu god of creation. Turbaned
followers would sport the main of the lion, Singha or Sikh. The sacred
Sikh book, Granth Sahib, was compiled by the 5th guru, Arjun, in 1605.
(WUD, 1994, p.1326)(Hem., 3/97, p.28)(SFEM, 9/19/99,
p.74)(SFC, 9/22/99, p.E1)(WSJ, 10/12/01, p.W17)
1483 Feb 14, Zahir al-Din Mohammed
Babur Shah, prince, founder Mughal dynasty in India (1526-30), was born.
(MC, 2/14/02)
1497 Jul 8, Vasco da Gama,
Portuguese explorer, departed on a trip to India. He sailed from Lisbon
enroute to Calicut, India. His journey took him around South Africa and
opened the Far East to European trade and colonial expansion.
(V.D.-H.K.p.143)(WUD, 1994,
p.1672)(www.indhistory.com/vasco-da-gama.html)
1498 May 20, Portuguese explorer
Vasco da Gama arrived at Calicut (Kozhikkode) in Kerala, India.
(www.indhistory.com/vasco-da-gama.html)
1504 Babur, founder of the Mughal
dynasty in India, captured Kabul in Afghanistan and maintained control
to 1519. Babur’s mother descended from Genghis Khan and his father from
Timur (Tamerlane).
(TL-MB, 1988, p.8)(www.afghan, 5/25/98)(WSJ,
10/24/00, p.A12)
1513 Portugal captured Goa, India.
(SSFC, 3/19/06, p.F7)
1519 Nanak (1469-1539) founded
Sikhism, a combination of Hinduism and Buddhism. Sikhs revere 10 gurus.
"Be in the world, but not worldly."
(TL-MB, 1988, p.11)(WSJ, 10/12/01, p.W17)
1524 Dec 24, Portuguese navigator
Vasco da Gama (~55), who had discovered a sea route around Africa to
India, died in Cochin, India. He had served as Viceroy in India.
(TL-MB, 1988, p.12)(AP, 12/24/97)(MC, 12/24/01)
1525 Babur, a warrior with an
Islamic Persian background, invaded Hindu India. He took Delhi and Agra
and made Agra his capital.
(HT, 4/97, p.22)
1526 Apr 21, Mongol Emperor
Zahir-ud-din Babur annihilated Indian Army of Ibrahim Lodi at the
Battle of Panipat. Babar, King of Kabul, established in this year the
Mughal dynasty at Delhi.
(TL-MB, 1988, p.13)(SFEC, 5/21/00, p.T8)(WSJ,
3/31/07, p.P10)
1526-1712 In northern India the Mughal Dynasty was
the last great dynasty to rule.
(Hem., 2/97, p.55)
1527 Mar 16, The Emperor Babur
defeated the Rajputs at the Battle of Kanvaha, removing the main Hindu
rivals in Northern India.
(HN, 3/16/99)
1528 Babar the Great ordered a
large mosque built in Ayodha, 2 years after he established the Mogul
Empire in India. The Babri Mosques was destroyed by a Hindu mob in 1992.
(AM, 7/04, p.49)
1529 May 6, Babur defeated the
Afghan Chiefs in the Battle of Ghagra, India.
(HN, 5/6/98)
1530 Dec 26, Zahir al-Din Mohammed
Babur Shah (47), founder Moguls dynasty (India), died. Babur left power
to his son Humayun, who built a royal city called Purana Qila that is
part of Delhi today.
(HT, 4/97, p.22)(MC, 12/26/01)
1537 In India Bangalore was
founded on the Deccan Plateau by a king who was lost and given a bowl
of boiled beans (Bendakalooru means town of boiled beans) by women in
the area.
(WSJ, 3/25/98, p.B10)
1538 Portugal captured Diu, India,
and established it as part of a fortified trade network.
(SSFC, 3/19/06, p.F7)
1542 Oct 14, Abul-Fath
Djalal-ud-Din, 3rd Mogul emperor of India (1556-1605), was born.
(MC, 10/14/01)
1542-1605 Emperor Akbar, godfather of Shah Jahan,
ruled as the 3rd Grand Moghul of India. Akbar commissioned an
illustrated manuscript of the Hamzanama (Story of Hamza, the paternal
uncle of the prophet Mohammed). The 1,400 painted folios took over 100
artists 15 years to complete.
(WSJ, 8/8/02, p.D10)
1556 Nov 5, The Emperor Akbar
defeated the Hindus in a 2nd Battle at Panipat and secured control of
the Mogul Empire. Akbar the Great became Mogul Emperor of India and
defeated the Afghans at the Battle of Panipat in the Punjab.
(TL-MB, 1988, p.19)(HN, 11/5/98)
1556 Humayun, son of Babur, fell
down the library steps in Purana Qila and died. This put his
14-year-old son, Akbar, on the throne.
(HT, 4/97, p.22)
1565 Humayun’s tomb was completed
in Delhi.
(SFEC, 5/21/00, p.T8)
1565 Akbar had the Red Fort built
in Agra along the Yamuna River.
(HT, 4/97, p.22)
1569-1627 Jehangir, later successor to Akbar. He
commissioned the artist Manohar for the painting "King David Playing
the Harp."
(SFEM, 2/1/98, p.14)
1569-1583 Akbar was informed by a holy man that he
would soon be a father. A Muslim wife bore him a son and Akbar built a
walled city, Fatehpur Siskri, in Sikri, the home village of the
holyman. The local water table could not meet the demands of the city
and after about 14 years the capital was moved back to Agra.
(HT, 4/97, p.23)
1574 The 4th Sikh guru founded the
city of Amritsar.
(WSJ, 10/12/01, p.W17)
c1575 Mahesa painted "Rustam Kills
a Demon."
(WSJ, 4/10/01, p.A20)
1579 Portuguese merchants set up
trading stations in Bengal.
(TL-MB, 1988, p.22)
1581 Akbar, Mughal Emperor of
India, conquered Afghanistan.
(TL-MB, p.23)
1586 Akbar, the greatest Mughal
Emperor of India, attempted to establish "Din Illahl" as a universal
religion acceptable to his many Hindu subjects. The movement eventually
collapsed under the 18th-century Muslim revival.
(TL-MB, p.24)
1592 Jan 5, Shah Jahan, Mughal
emperor of India (1628-58), was born. He later built the Taj Mahal.
(MC, 1/5/02)
1600 Dec 31, The British East
India Company (d.1874) was chartered by Queen Elizabeth I in London to
carry on trade in the East Indies in competition with the Dutch, who
controlled nutmeg from the Banda Islands.
(WUD, 1994, p.449)(WSJ, 1/11/99,
p.R49)(www.theeastindiacompany.com/history.html)
c1600 Christian missionaries
arrived in India with the first European traders.
(SFC, 11/6/99, p.A14)
1600-1700 The Hindu state of Kotah later became part
of the modern state of Rajasthan.
(AM, May/Jun 97 p.62)
c1600-1700 The 17th century Sikh guru Gobind Singh
said: "Oh Shiva, bless me, that nothing deters me from doing good
deeds, and where I am obliged to fight, I fight for sure to win."
(SFC, 4/12/99, p.A12)
c1600-1700 The warrior king Shivaji lived in the 17th
century.
(SFC, 7/24/01, p.A20)
c1604 Arjun, the 5th Sikh guru,
compiled the sacred book "Granth Sahib," a compilation of over 6,000
hymns meant to be sung to classical Indian ragas. Arjun was responsible
for the Harimandir (temple of God) in the city of Amritsar. Arjun was
later executed by Muslim rulers in Lahore. In 2004 Sikhs marked the
400th anniversary of the book’s arrival to Amritsar.
(WSJ, 10/12/01, p.W17)(AP, 9/1/04)
1605 Akbar the Great died. He was
succeeded by Juhangir (Jahangir, Jehangir, 1569-1627) the ineffectual
and his "evil queen" Nur Jahan.
(WUD, 1994, p.762)(HT, 4/97, p.23)
1615 Prince Shah Jahan, son of
Jehangir, returned home after a successful military campaign.
(WSJ, 12/16/97, p.A16)
1618-1707 Aurangzeb, Moghul ruler of India. His
wealth was said to be 10 times that of Louis XIV. The empire reached
its greatest size during his rule but his persecution of Hindu subjects
weakened Muslim Moghul control.
(WSJ, 1/11/99, p.R8)
1620 Jehangir, successor of Akbar,
visited the gardens of Kashmir and adopted the "flower style" as
opposed to the previous bestiaries.
(WSJ, 12/16/97, p.A16)
1627 Oct 28, Djehangir (Jahangir),
great mogul of India, died.
(MC, 10/28/01)
1628-1658 Shah Jahan (1592-1666), a descendent of the
Moghuls, ruled India. He was India’s 3rd Mughal emperor. The manuscript
"Padshahnama" (King of the World) by Abdul-Hamid Lahawri documents the
reign of Shah Jahan. In 1997 Wheeler Thackston made a new translation.
(WUD, 1994, p.1309)(HT, 4/97, p.22)(WSJ, 12/4/97,
p.A20)
1630 The Spiti Valley, a part of
western Tibet, became part of India.
(SFEC, 7/23/00, p.T9)
1630-1631 There was a great famine in India. Records
indicate that cannibalism became so rampant that human flesh was sold
on the open market.
(SFC, 7/6/96, p.E4)
1631 Jun 17, Mumtax Mahal, wife of
Shah Jahan of India, her tomb (Taj Mahal), died. Arjumand Shah Begum
(aka Mumtaz Mahal -Jewel of the Palace), was the 2nd wife of Shah
Jahan. She had bore him 14 children and died in childbirth. He build
the Taj Mahal (1654) in her memory. The project took 22 years and cost
$18 million.
(HT, 4/97, p.22)(SFEC, 5/21/00, p.T8)(SC, 6/7/02)
1639 The walled city of Old Delhi,
the 6th Delhi city, was erected by Shah Jahan. It came to be called
Shajahanabad after the construction of new Delhi by the British.
(SFEC, 5/21/00, p.T1)
1642 The Hope Diamond is said to
have been stolen from a Hindu statue in India and sold to Louis XIV of
France in 1645. John Baptiste Tavernier, a diamond merchant, acquired
the 112 carat blue diamond in India. The rumor that it was stolen from
a Hindu statue was later invented by the French jeweler Cartier.
(SFC, 9/26/96, p.A3)(THC, 12/3/97)
1643 The great marble dome of the
Taj Mahal was first completed.
(WSJ, 3/31/07, p.P10)
1648 The Lal Qila (Red Fort) was
built by the Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan. [see 1565]
(Hem., 2/97, p.58)
1653 Shah Jahan completed the Taj
Mahal. Master builders, masons, calligraphers, etc. along with more
than 20,000 laborers, worked for 22 years under orders of Mughal
Emperor Shah Jahan to complete the great mausoleum for the shah's
beloved wife. In 2007 Diana and Michael Preston authored “Taj Mahal”
and Ebba Koch authored “the Complete Taj Mahal.”
(WSJ, 3/31/07,
p.P10)(www.tribuneindia.com/2003/20030713/spectrum/heritage.htm)
1654-1656 Rembrandt painted a medallion portrait of
Muhammed Adil Shah of Bijapur.
(SFEM, 2/1/98, p.16)(SFC, 2/7/98, p.E8)
1658 Jun 15, The Mogul emperor
Aurangzeb imprisoned his father the Shah, after winning a battle at
Samgarh.
(HT, 6/15/00)
1658 Jun 25, In India Aurangzeb
proclaimed himself emperor of the Moghuls. Aurangzeb, son of Shah
Jahan, overthrew his father and locked him up in the Jasmine tower.
(HT, 4/97, p.24)(HN, 6/25/98)
1658 The Jami Masjid (Friday
Mosque) was completed in Delhi.
(SFEC, 5/21/00, p.T8)
1662 Dutch fortune seekers killed
over 400 members of the Nayar warrior caste in Kerala.
(SFEM, 7/18/99, p.12)
1664 Michael Sweerts (b.1618),
Belgium-born artist, died in Goa, India. He did much of his important
work in Rome, moved to the Netherlands, and traveled in Asia with a
band of missionaries. His major work included a series depicting the
Seven Acts of Mercy.
(WSJ, 7/2/02, p.D7)
1666 Jan 22, Shah Jahan died.
(HT, 4/97, p.24)
1668 Mar 26, England took control
of Bombay, India.
(SS, 3/26/02)
1668 Mar 27, English king Charles
II gave Bombay to the East India Company.
(MC, 3/27/02)
1674 Jun 6, Sivaji crowned himself
King of India.
(HN, 6/6/98)
1675 The 9th Sikh guru was
executed in Delhi. His son, Gobind Rai, took up arms and organized a
new fraternity called the Khalsa (the pure), and gave them the common
surname Singh (lion), and changed his own name to Gobind Singh.
(WSJ, 10/12/01, p.W17)
1680 Apr 3, Shivaji Bhosle
(b.~1630), warrior king and founder of the Maratha empire of western
India, died.
(Econ, 7/12/08,
p.73)(http://profiles.incredible-people.com/shivaji-bhonsle/)
c1694/5 Devidas painted "The Awakening of Trust."
(WSJ, 4/10/01, p.A20)
1699 The Sikhs were founded by a
series of 10 prophets or gurus and believe in one God but many paths to
heaven. [see Nanak c1500, 1519] In 1999 some 20,000 thousands of Sikhs
gathered to march in SF on the 300th anniversary of their religion.
(SFEC, 4/25/99, p.C1)
1707 Mar 3, Aurangzeb (88),
Emperor of India (1658-1707), died.
(SC, 3/3/02)
1708 Gobind Singh, the 10th Sikh
guru died in India. He named the “Granth Sahib” holy book as his
eternal successor before his death.
(AP, 9/1/04)
1725-1774 Sir Robert Clive, soldier of fortune. Known
as "Clive of India" he wrested Bengal away from the French on behalf of
the British East India Co. [see 1757]
(WSJ, 1/11/99, p.R8)
1737 Sep 19, In India’s Bay of
Bengal a cyclone destroyed some 20,000 ships. It was estimated that
more than 300,000 people died in the densely populated area called the
Sundarbans. Later research indicated the population of Calcutta at the
time to be around 20,000. An estimate of the number of deaths was
revised down to about 3,000.
(http://cires.colorado.edu/~bilham/gif_images/1737Calcutta.pdf)
1739 Mar 20, In India, Nadir Shah
of Persia occupied Delhi and took possession of the Peacock thrown.
King Nadir Shah later took the golden Peacock Throne back to Persia.
(HN, 3/20/99)(SFEC, 5/21/00, p.T8)
1746 Sep 21, A French
expeditionary army occupied Labourdonnais. Colonial governor Joseph
Francois Dupleix occupied Madras.
(PCh, 1992, p.298)(MC, 9/21/01)
1747-1773 Rule of Ahmad Shah Abdali (Durrani). Ahmad
Shah consolidated and enlarged Afghanistan. He defeated the Moghuls in
the west of the Indus, and he takes Herat away from the Persians. Ahmad
Shah Durrani's empire extended from Central Asia to Delhi, from Kashmir
to the Arabian sea. It became the greatest Muslim empire in the second
half of the 18th century.
(www.afghan, 5/25/98)
c1750 By this time the British
East India Company had gained virtual control of India.
(SFEC, 8/3/97, p.A15)
1751 Aug 31, English troops under
sir Robert Clive occupied Arcot, India.
(MC, 8/31/01)
1756 Jun 20, In India rebels
defeated the British army at Calcutta. British soldiers were imprisoned
in a suffocating cell that gained notoriety as the "Black Hole of
Calcutta." Most of them died. The exact circumstances of this incident,
such as the number of prisoners, originally put at 146, are disputed.
(HN, 6/20/98)(AP, 6/20/07)
1756 Dec 6, British troops under
Robert Clive occupied Fulta, India.
(MC, 12/6/01)
1757 Jan 2, British troops
occupied Calcutta, India.
(MC, 1/2/02)
1757 Jan 28, Ahmed Shah, the first
King of Afghanistan, occupied Delhi and annexed the Punjab.
(HN, 1/28/99)
1757 Jun 23, Forces of the East
India Company led by Robert Clive (1725-1774) defeated Indians at
Plassey and won control of Bengal. Lord Clive defeated Siraj-ud-daula,
the Nawab of Bengal and exacted a payment of $140 million from Moghul
ruler Mir Jafar and a Moghul title of nobility and rights to land
around Calcutta. This effectively marked the beginning of British
colonial rule in India. Clive served 2 terms as the governor of Bengal.
(WSJ, 1/11/99, p.R8)(SSFM, 4/1/01, p.40)(AP, 6/23/07)
1758 Jan 2, The French began
bombardment of Madras, India.
(HN, 1/2/99)
1763 The "Jnaneshvari" manuscript,
a commentary on the Bhagavad Gita, was completed. In this period Hindu
books began to vie with Muslim texts in the perfection of their paper,
calligraphy, illustration and binding.
(WSJ, 12/11/01, p.A17)
1767 Robert Clive returned to
England with a huge fortune and was accused of embezzlement.
(WSJ, 1/11/99, p.R8)
1767 George Hodgeson, British
entrepreneur, cut a deal with the East India Company to start providing
beer to the British Civil-service and merchant classes in the India
colonies. He doubled the hop content to help preserve the beer on its
long voyage.
(WSJ, 8/13/04, p.W6)
1768-1834 The brigand, Amir Khan Pindari, was finally
bribed by the British to retire with a grant of sovereignty over 4
territories.
(SFC, 2/7/98, p.E8)
1773-1785 Warren Hastings served as the British
governor-general of India. [see 1787]
(WSJ, 5/1/00, p.A24)(WSJ, 2/22/00, p.A20)
1780-1839 The Maharajah Ranjit Singh. He consolidated
Sikh rule after splintering conflicts with Punjab's Mughal court and
Afghan and Persian invaders.
(SFC, 9/22/99, p.E1)
1782 Zayn al-Din, the John James
Audubon of Indian art, painted "A Painted Stork."
(SFC, 2/7/98, p.E1)
1783 May 4, In India Tipu Sultan
was enthroned as the ruler of Mysore after the death of Haider Ali in a
simple ceremony at Bednur.
(www.ndtv.com/convergence/ndtv/story.aspx?id=NEWEN20080048779)
1785 Apr, Elizabeth Marsh
(b.1735), traveler and writer, died of breast cancer in Calcutta,
India. In 1769 she had published “The Female Captive,” an account of
her captivity in a Muslim court. In 2007 Linda Colley authored “The
Ordeal of Elizabeth Marsh: A Woman in World History.”
(Econ, 7/14/07,
p.89)(www.lrb.co.uk/v29/n12/mant01_.html)
1786 Feb 24, Charles Cornwallis,
whose armies had surrendered to US at Yorktown, was appointed
governor-general of India. [see Sep 12]
(MC, 2/24/02)
1786 Sep 12, Despite his failed
efforts to suppress the American Revolution, Lord Cornwallis was
appointed governor general of India. [see Feb 24]
(HN, 9/12/98)
1787 There was an effort to
impeach the governor-general of India. Edmund Burke indicted Warren
Hastings, governor-general of India (1773-1785), on 21 charges for high
crimes and misdemeanors. The trial lasted 7 years and Hastings was
acquitted on all charges.
(SFEC, 11/1/98, BR p.11)(WSJ, 5/1/00, p.A24)
1789 Dec, In India’s city of
Coringa 3 tidal waves caused by a cyclone destroyed the harbor city at
the mouth of the Ganges river. Most ships were sunk and some 20,000
people drowned.
(www.emergency-management.net/cyclone.htm)
1789 Thomas Daniell, R.A., painted
his "South View of the Taj Mahal."
(SFEM, 2/1/98, p.16)
1795 Mar 11, Battle at
Kurdla, India: Mahratten beat Moguls.
(MC, 3/12/02)
1798 Lord Wellesley decided to
build a new British Government House in Calcutta and chose the
neo-classical Kedleston Hall in Derbyshire as a model.
(SSFM, 4/1/01, p.43)
1799 May 4, In India Tipu Sultan
was killed in a battle against 5,000 British soldiers who stormed and
razed his capital, Seringapatanam. British forces defeated the sultan
of Mysore at the Battle of Seringapatam.
(www.ndtv.com/convergence/ndtv/story.aspx?id=NEWEN20080048779)(SSFM,
4/1/01, p.42)
1799 In Jaipur, India, the Hawa
Mahal (the palace of wind) a five-storied sandstone building, was built
by a Hindu king for his queen.
(Reuters, 5/14/08)
1803 Sep 23, British Major General
Sir Arthur Wellesley defeated the Marathas at Assaye, India.
(HN, 9/23/98)
1805 Lord Charles Cornwallis,
governor general of India, died in India.
(HNQ, 9/9/02)
1809 In southern Kerala their was
a rise against British control in Travancore.
(SFEM, 7/18/99, p.10)
1812 May, William Moorcroft, East
India Co. head of 5,000 acre horse farm at Pusa, departed for Tibet in
search of horses to improve his stock.
(ON, 1/02, p.3)
1817 In Kerala the Maharani of
Travancore issued an edict that the state should defray the whole cost
of education of its people.
(SFEM, 7/18/99, p.10)
1818 Jun 2, The British army
defeated the Maratha alliance in Bombay, India.
(HN, 6/2/98)
1819 William Moorcroft, East India
Co. head of 5,000 acre horse farm at Pusa, India, set out for Bukhara,
Uzbekistan, to trade for horses.
(ON, 1/02, p.5)
1819 A British hunting party
discovered the painted caves at Ajanta that dated from c200BC-650CE.
(WSJ, 11/12/98, p.A28)
1820 A "Skinner Artist" painted
"Thakur Daulat Singh in a Council."
(SFEM, 2/1/98, p.14)
1820 The Prince of Baroda was
forbidden to increase his daily number of canon salutes by the British
Raj, so instead he had his fort's canons made from solid gold at 28
pounds each.
(WSJ, 1/11/99, p.R4)
1820-1821 Sita Ram painted "West View of a Mosque and
Gateway."
(SFEM, 2/1/98, p.16)
1820-1825 Ghulam Ali Khan painted his gouache and
watercolor: "Assembly of Ascetics and Yogins around a Fire."
(SFC, 2/7/98, p.E8)
1827 "Nawab Nasir ud Din Haidar,
King of Oudh in his palace" was painted by a local artist.
(SFEM, 2/1/98, p.16)
1829 Nov 8, Lord William Bentinck,
Governor-General of the East India Company, called for the abolition of
sati (suttee), the practice of a widow burning herself to death on her
husband's funeral pyre. [see Dec 4]
(www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/1829bentinck.html)
1829 Dec 4, British colonial
rulers abolished "suttee" (Sati) in India. This was the practice of a
widow burning herself to death on her husband's funeral pyre.
(http://chnm.gmu.edu/wwh/p/103.html)(Reuters,
9/21/06)
1830s Thomas Babington Macaulay
(1800-1859), English essayist, historian and politician, served as a
member of the British Supreme Council in India.
(www.britannica.com)(Econ, 10/30/04, p.48)
1831 Muslim warrior Sayeed Ahmad
Shaheed was slain in Balakot (later part of Pakistan) while failing to
repel Sikh invaders.
(AP, 4/6/06)
1834 The maharaja of Jammu was
able to annex Ladakh, a West Tibetan kingdom.
(SFEC,12/14/97, p.T4)
1834 William Bentinck, India's
governor-general, wrote to his superiors in London that Indian
cloth-makers were suffering severe hardship due to the efficiency of
the English textile industry.
(WSJ, 3/29/04, p.A1)
1836 Feb 18, Swami Ramakrishna
[Gadadhar Chatterji], Indian mystic, Hindu leader, was born.
(MC, 2/18/02)
1838 Jun 27, Bankim Chandra
Chatterjee, Bengali novelist (Anandamath), was born.
(SC, 6/27/02)
1838 Oct 1, Lord Auckland, British
governor general in India, issued the Simla Manifesto, setting forth
the necessary reasons for British intervention in Afghanistan. This led
to the 1st Anglo-Afghan War.
(Econ, 10/7/06,
p.18)(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_Anglo-Afghan_War)
1838 Dec, India’s British governor
general dispatched to Kabul the Army of the Indus to protect British
interests from growing Russian influence.
(SSFC, 10/28/01,
p.C8)(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_Anglo-Afghan_War)
1838 Emily Eden painted her
portrait of "Hira Singh."
(SFEM, 2/1/98, p.16)
1839 Nov, In India’s city Coringa
a gigantic 40-foot tidal wave caused by an enormous cyclone wiped out
the harbor city that was never entirely rebuilt; 20,000 vessels in the
bay were destroyed and some 300,000 people died.
(www.emergency-management.net/cyclone.htm)
1839 A Sikh kingdom under Ranjit
Singh ruled the Punjab until this time.
(WSJ, 10/12/01, p.W17)
1844 The maharaja of Jammu
purchased Kashmir from the East India Company.
(SFEC,12/14/97, p.T4)
1846 Feb 10, British General Sir
Hugh Gough decisively routed Tej Singh’s Sikhs in the Battle of Sobraon.
(HN, 2/10/97)
1846 Lt. Harry Lumsden in the heat
of India’s Punjab dyed his PJs a tawny color. They were made of cotton
and called khaki in Hindi.
(NH, 6/96, p.7)
1849 Feb 21, In the Second Sikh
War, Sir Hugh Gough’s well placed guns won a victory over a Sikh force
twice the size of his at Gujerat on the Chenab River, assuring British
control of the Punjab for years to come.
(HN, 2/21/98)
1853 Apr 16, India's 1st steam
locomotive pulled 14 cars and 400 people 34 km. from Bombay to Thane.
(NG, 5/95, p.140)(Econ, 12/6/03, p.61)
1857 May 10, The Seepoys of India
revolted against the British Army. The Bengal Army, Indian soldiers in
the British army, staged a revolt in what is viewed as the first
attempt at independence. The Rani of Jhansi, a charismatic female
strategist, led the Hindu revolt.
(SFEC, 8/3/97, p.A15)(HN, 5/10/98)(SSFC, 11/9/03,
p.C9)
1857 May 11, Indian mutineers
against the British seized Delhi.
(HN, 5/11/98)
1857 Jul 15, British women and
children were murdered in the second Cawnpore Massacre during the
Indian Mutiny.
(HN, 7/15/98)
1857 Sep 20, Delhi, India, fell to
British forces.
(AP, 9/20/07)
1857 The 1st madrasah, religious
school, was founded in Deoband in the wake of a jihad against British
colonial government.
(WSJ, 10/2/01, p.A1A14)
1858 Mar 21, British forces in
India lifted the siege of Lucknow, ending the Indian Mutiny.
(HN, 3/21/99)
1858 The East India Company was
abolished and the British government assumed the administration of
India.
(SFEC, 8/3/97, p.A15)
1859 The Murray’s "Handbook for
Travelers in India" was first published.
(SFEC,11/23/97, p.T5)
1860 A British seaman proposed
digging a deeper, 19-mile shipping canal in the shallow Palk strait
between India and Sri Lanka. In 2004 India planned to go ahead with the
project.
(Econ, 11/6/04, p.44)
1861 In Bombay, India, the Magen
David synagogue was erected at the sole expense of David Sasson Esq.
(WSJ, 9/17/98, p.A20)
1861 British colonial rulers
framed an anti-homosexuality law for India.
(Reuters, 7/7/06)
1861 In India the Murree Brewery
Co. Ltd. was founded by British colonialists. In 1947 it came under the
control of Pakistan.
(SFC, 7/10/00, p.A8)
1861-1941 Sir Rabindranath Tagore, Indian Nobel
Prize-winning poet: "Each child comes with the message that God is not
yet discouraged of man."
(AP, 10/26/00)
1862 Nov 7, The body of exiled
Bahadur Shah Zafar II was lowered into an unmarked grave in Rangoon
(Burma-Myanmar). Zafar II, the last Mughal emperor in India, was
deposed in the 1857 sepoy mutiny. In 2006 William Dalrymple authored
“The Last Mughal: The Fall of a Dynasty, Delhi, 1857.”
(Econ, 11/11/06, p.96)
1863 George Richmond, R.A.,
painted the portrait "Maharani ‘Chund Kowr’ alias Rani Jindan" in India.
(SFEM, 2/1/98, p.14)(SFC, 2/7/98, p.E1)
1864 Oct 1, A cyclone struck
Calcutta and 70,000 were killed. [see Oct 5]
(MC, 10/1/01)
1864 Oct 5, Calcutta, India, was
denuded by a cyclone and some 70,000 people were killed.
(www.emergency-management.net/cyclone.htm)
1865 Dec 30, Rudyard Kipling
(d.1936), British author and poet, best known for "Jungle Book" and
"Soldiers Three," was born in Bombay, India. "There are only two
classes of mankind in the world -- doctors and patients." He won the
Nobel prize for literature in 1907.
(AP, 12/30/97)(HN, 12/30/98)(AP, 2/7/00)(MC,
12/30/01)
1865 During the Orissa famine in
India the British political secretariat of the Bengal government
refused to import rice to the stricken areas because it was “a breach
of the laws of political economy.”
(WSJ, 2/23/06, p.D8)
1868 In Darjeeling, India, English
tea planters formed the Darjeeling Planters Club.
(SSFC, 7/15/07, p.G5)
1869 Oct 2, Mohandas Karamchad
Gandhi (d.1948), called Mahatma, Hindu nationalist, political and
spiritual leader was born in Porbandar, India. His nonviolent actions
helped to eradicate British rule in India. He was assassinated in 1948.
"Love is the strongest force the world possesses, and yet it is the
humblest imaginable." "To enjoy life one should give up the lure of
life." [see Oct 3]
(AHD, 1971, p.542)(HFA, ‘96, p.40)(SFC, 1/31/97,
p.A13) (AP, 10/2/97) (AP, 1/12/98)(HN, 10/2/98)(AP, 1/12/98)(AP,
1/20/99)
1869 Oct 3, Mohandas Karamchad
Gandhi (d.1948), called Mahatma, Hindu nationalist and spiritual leader
was born. He was later assassinated. [see Oct 2]
(AHD, 1971, p.542)(HFA, ‘96, p.40)(SFC, 1/31/97,
p.A13)
1876 Oct 31, In India’s Megna
River Delta a tidal wave caused by a cyclone flooded the river delta
and the city of Backergunge. Some areas became covered with 40 feet of
water. 100,000 people drowned and another 100,000 were reported to have
perished from subsequent diseases caused by polluted water.
(www.emergency-management.net/cyclone.htm)
1876 Queen Victoria added the
title of Empress of India.
(SFEC, 8/3/97, p.A15)
1877-1879 India experienced a devastating famine that
left 6-12 million people dead.
(http://sharpgary.org/1864-1895.html)(Econ, 1/29/05,
p.74)
1878 British officials recorded
624 human killings by wolves in the area of Banbirpur in the state of
Uttar Pradesh.
(SFC, 9/1/96, p.A16)
1882 Jun 6, Cyclone in Arabian Sea
(Bombay India) drowned 100,000.
(MC, 6/6/02)
1884 In Bombay a Jewish synagogue
was erected by Jacob Elias David Sasson and his brothers.
(WSJ, 9/17/98, p.A20)
1884 Dabur India Ltd. was
established by a doctor who prescribed mint leaf remedies to cure
stomach aches. It later became the largest company in Ayurvedic
medicine.
(WSJ, 12/27/99, p.B9D)
1885 Mar 31, Madame Blavatsky was
hoisted in an invalid chair onto a steamer in the Madras harbor of
India and departed for London. In England she wrote "The Secret
Doctrine" and had as guests to her salon William Butler Yeats, Annie
Besant and the young Mohandas K. Gandhi.
(Smith., 5/95, p.127)
1886 The Congress Party of India
was founded.
(SFC, 1/9/96, p.A10)
1886-1967 Mir Osman Ali Khan, 7th and last ruler of
the Sif Jahi dynasty in India. He ruled Hyderabad up to 1948 and
amassed a fortune from taxation. He donated to hundreds of universities
and hospitals regardless of caste and religion. When he died rooms were
found filled with bank notes eaten through by rats.
(WSJ, 1/11/98, p.R18)
1887 Feb 26, Sir Benegal Narsing
Rau, president of UN Security Council (1950), was born in India.
(SC, 2/26/02)
1887 Swami Sivananda (d.1963) was
born as Kuppuswami in India. He became a doctor but opted for a
spiritual path with 6 commands: Serve, Love, Give, Purify, Meditate,
Realize.”
(SSFC, 10/3/04,
p.D5)(www.yogamag.net/yogas/inspY.shtml)
1888 Apr 20, 246 people were
reported killed by hail in Moradabad, India.
(MC, 4/20/02)
1889 Nov 14, Jawaharlal Nehru
(d.1964), Indian nationalist leader (1947-1964), was born. "A man who
is afraid will do anything."
(AP, 9/27/97)(HN, 11/14/00)(MC, 11/14/01)
1889 A telegraph line connected
Victoria, Canada, to India by way of an undersea cable from Bamfield.
(SSFC, 3/3/02, p.C8)
1890 Capt. Hamilton Bower, an
Indian Army intelligence officer, returned to Calcutta with 51
birch-bark leaves of a manuscript acquired from a treasure hunter in
Kucha, along the northern route of the Silk Road. They proved to be the
oldest known Indian manuscripts.
(AM, 7/00, p.72)
1892 Plague hit China and spread
throughout south Asia. It ended after killing 6 million people in India.
(SFC, 7/2/05, p.F9)
1893 The Durand line, drawn by
British diplomat Sir Mortimer Durand, fixed the borders of Afghanistan
with British India, splitting Pushtun tribal areas, leaving half of
these Afghans in what is now Pakistan. By 2007 no Afghan government had
yet accepted the border.
(www.afghan-web.com/history/)(Econ, 7/22/06,
p.44)(Econ, 8/18/07, p.34)
1894 The British introduced the
Land Acquisition Act in India in order to build railroads and canals.
It obliged private owners to part with land required for a public
purpose.
(Econ, 8/30/08, p.63)
1895 The British began shipping
thousands of Indians to east Africa to build a railway. Many settled
there to become station masters, artisans, clerks and shopkeepers.
(Econ, 4/12/08, p.67)
1895-1986 Jiddu Krishnamurti, Indian author and
philosopher: "To seek fulfillment is to invite frustration."
(AP, 6/19/98)
1897 Jun 12, Possibly the most
severe quake in history struck Assam, India. Shock waves were felt over
an area size of Europe.
(MC, 6/12/02)
1897 Nov 23, Nirad C. Chaudhuri
(d.1999 at 101), author and scholar, was born in Kishorganj. At age 90
he published his 2nd autobiography "Thy Hand Great Anarch."
(SFC, 8/3/99, p.A20)
1898 British army officers began
using the new portable Roorkhee chair. It was named in honor of the
headquarters of the Indian Army corps of Engineers at Roorkhee.
(SSFM, 4/1/01, p.46)
1899-1905 Lord George Nathaniel Curzon served as
Viceroy of India.
(SSFM, 4/1/01, p.43)
1900 The Maharajah of Patiala, Sir
Bhupinder Singh, ascended the throne of Patiala at the age of 8.
Patiala was a prominent Sikh state in northwestern India. He was known
for his jeweled sarpech, a turban ornament.
(WSJ, 11/5/99, p.W16)
1900-1947 This period of India’s history is covered
in the 2007 book “Indian summer: The Secret History of the End of an
Empire,” by Alex von Tunzelmann.
(SSFC, 8/12/07, p.M3)
1901 Rudyard Kipling published
"Kim."
(WSJ, 7/17/98, p.W11)
1901 India’s population of about
300 million was secured and governed by a British contingent of some
154,000 including dependents. In 2005 David Gilmour authored “The
Ruling Caste: Imperial Lives in the Victorian Raj.”
(Econ, 11/12/05, p.89)
1903 Jun 25, George Orwell
(d.1950), English novelist, essayist and critic, was born in India as
Eric Arthur Blair. He took his pen name in 1932. His books included
"Animal Farm" (1945) and "1984" (1949), which attacked totalitarianism.
"Each generation imagines itself to be more intelligent than the one
that went before it, and wiser than the one that comes after it."
(HN, 6/25/99)(AP,
9/23/00)(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Orwell)
1903 English Col. Francis
Younghusband marched off from Darjeeling, India, with 1,000 British and
Indian soldiers, 7,000 mules and 4,000 yaks to invade Tibet.
(SSFC, 7/15/07, p.G5)
1906 May 29, Terence Hanbury White
(T.H. White), novelist (The Sword in the Stone, England Have My Bones),
was born in Bombay, India.
(HN, 5/29/01)(SC, 5/29/02)
1906 Sep 11, Mohandas Gandhi
addressed a meeting in Johannesburg on social protest against the
Asiatic Law Amendment, a new law by the province of Transvaal that made
it compulsory for all Indians over age 8 to register with the
government and carry ID cards. In the India Opinion he published
articles on what he called Satyagraha (Truth Force): "the vindication
of truth not by infliction of suffering on the opponent but on one's
self."
(ON, 9/03, p.1)
1907 Jul 1, The Asiatic
Registration Act became law in the province of Transvaal, SA.
(ON, 9/03, p.1)
1910 Feb 25, The Dalai Lama fled
from the Chinese and took refuge in India.
(HN, 2/25/98)
1910 In India Laxmanrao Kirloskar
banded together 25 workers and their families and succeeded in
transforming a barren expanse in Aundh state into his dream village.
Kirloskar Brothers Limited (KBL), the first Kirloskar venture at
Kirloskarvadi was to become the base for all of the Kirloskar Group's
subsequent enterprises. It began as the only Indian company with its
own products, a fodder cutter and iron plough, which competed with
British products.
(http://kirloskarapps.kirloskar.com/kirloskar/web/11$M1.html)(Econ,
6/3/06, Survey p.8)
1911 King George V of Britain
visited India. He went hunting in Nepal and from the back of an
elephant bagged 21 tigers, 8 rhinos, and a bear.
(NG, 12/97, p.138)
1912 In India the film “Pundalit,”
the first result of an Indian’s use to tell a story, opened in Bombay.
An ad for the film survived, but the film itself was lost.
(Econ, 12/2/06, p.87)
1913 Nov 6, Mohandas K. Gandhi was
arrested as he led a march of Indian miners in South Africa.
(AP, 11/6/97)
1914 Jan, Gen. Smuts began
negotiations with Mohandas Gandhi to eradicate many of the racist laws
imposed on South African Indians.
(ON, 9/03, p.5)
1914 Sep 22, The German cruiser
Emden shelled Madras, India, destroying 346,000 gallons of fuel and
killing only five civilians.
(HN, 9/22/99)
1915 Nov 22, The Anglo-Indian
army, led by British General Sir Charles Townshend, attacked a larger
Turkish force under General Nur-ud-Din at Ctesiphon, Iraq, but was
repulsed.
(HN, 11/22/98)
1917 Nov 19, Indira Gandhi was
born in Allahabad. She served as prime minister of India from 1967 to
1977 and 1978 to 1984, when she was assassinated by her own guards.
(HN, 11/19/00)(AP, 11/19/07)
1919 Mar 30, Gandhi announced
resistance against Rowlatt Act.
(MC, 3/30/02)
1919 Apr 13, In the Amritsar
Massacre British forces under the command of General Reginald Dyer
killed hundreds of Indian nationalists in the thickly crowded plaza at
Jallianwala Bagh.
(HN, 4/13/98)(EWH, 4th ed., p.1101)
1919 Dec 23, Britain instituted a
new constitution for India.
(HN, 12/23/98)
1919 Gilette Co. opened a sales
office in Calcutta. Razor blades were sold from a plant in London.
(WSJ, 3/13/97, p.A1)
1919-1996 Pandit Pran Nath (1919-1996), Indian
classical singer and teacher, moved to New York in 1972. He was a
master of the 600-year-old kirana style of Hindustani music that
involves very minute gradations of pitch. He also redesigned the
tamboura.
(SFC, 6/18/96, p.A17)
1920 Mar 23, The Perserikatan
Communist of India (PKI) political party formed.
(SS, 3/23/02)
1920 Apr 7, Ravi Shankar, sitar
player, was born in Benares, India.
(MC, 4/7/02)
1920 Apr 26, Srinivasa Ramanujan
(b.1887), Indian mathematician, died in India. In 1913 English
mathematician G.H. Hardy recognized his brilliant work, and asked
Ramanujan to study under him at Cambridge. In 2007 British playwright
Simon McBurney created “A Disappearing Number,” for his theater group
“Complicite,” based on Ramanujan’s 5 years a Cambridge.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Srinivasa_Ramanujan)(Econ, 9/1/07, p.76)
1920-1921 The Indus Valley, or Harrapan, civilization
was discovered when engraved seals were discovered near present-day
Sahiwal in Pakistani Punjab at a place called Harappa.
(EAWC,
p.2)(http://inic.utexas.edu/asnic/subject/peoplesandlanguages.html)
1920s British architect Edward
Luyten built New Delhi in the late 20s.
(Hem., 2/97, p.57)
1921 Feb 12, In Delhi, India, the
Duke of Connaught laid the foundation stone of the Parliament building,
designed by Herbert Baker.
(www.indfy.com/places-to-see-in-delhi/central-delhi/parliament-house.html)
1921 Mar 3, In India the Central
Legislative Assembly opened. The Committee on Public Accounts was first
set up in the wake of the Montague-Chelmsford Reforms. The Finance
Member of the Executive Council used to be the Chairman of the
Committee. The Secretariat assistance to the Committee was rendered by
the then Finance Department (later the Ministry of Finance). This
position continued right up to 1949.
(http://tinyurl.com/2tnbet)(www.parliamentofindia.nic.in/ls/intro/p14.htm)
1921 May 2, Satyajit Ray, Indian
film director (Aparajito, The World of Apu), was born.
(HN, 5/2/02)
1921 Jun 28, P.V. Narasimha Rao
(d.2004), later India’s Prime Minister (1991-1996), was born to an
upper-caste farming family in Andhra Pradesh state.
(SFC, 12/24/04, p.B4)
1921 Mohandas Gandhi began
peaceful the non-cooperation movement against British rule. The
Non-cooperation Movement of 1920-'22 sought to induce the British
government to grant self-government to India. The movement grew from
the Amritsar massacre of April 1919, when the British killed some 400
Indians. The movement marked the transition of Indian nationalism from
a middle class to a mass movement.
(SFEC, 8/3/97, p.A15)(HNQ, 11/24/98)
1922 Mar 18, Mohandas K. Gandhi
was sentenced in India to six years' imprisonment for civil
disobedience. He was released after serving two years. [see Mar 22]
(AP, 3/18/97)(HN, 3/18/98)
1922 Mar 22, A British court
sentenced Mahatma Gandhi to 6 years in prison. [see Mar 18]
(MC, 3/22/02)
1922 Civil disobedience
demonstrators killed 22 police officers and Gandhi called off his
campaign of disobedience.
(SFEC, 8/3/97, p.A15)
1923 Apr 8, Death toll from plague
reached 1,000 in India.
(HN, 4/8/98)
1924 Feb 24, Mahatma Gandhi was
released from jail.
(MC, 2/24/02)
1924 The Gateway of India monument
in Bombay was completed. It commemorated the 1st visit of a British
monarch to India, King George V and Queen Mary in 1911.
(AP, 8/26/03)
1924 Gandhi undertook a fast to
end Hindu-Muslim rioting. The rioting stopped after 21 days.
(SFC, 12/1/00, p.A12)
1924 Archeologists identified a
writing system they called the Indus Valley Script.
(SFC, 9/15/06, p.A3)
1925 Jul 26, Tyeb Mehta, painter
and film maker, was born in Gujarat, India. In 2005 one of his
paintings fetched $1.58 million.
(Econ, 9/16/06,
p.75)(www.iloveindia.com/indian-heroes/tyeb-mehta.html)
1925 In India the National
Volunteer Corps, Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), was founded. The
Hindu revival group was highly disciplined and led its members in
military style physical training. The corps spawned a political
movement that coalesced as the BJP in 1980.
(WSJ, 5/16/96, p.A-10)(WSJ, 2/27/98, p.A1)
1925 Bombay, India, introduced a
new commuter rail service.
(SFC, 11/12/04, p.W1)
1926 Apr 2, Riots took place
between Moslems and Hindus in Calcutta.
(MC, 4/2/02)
1927 The book "Mother India" by
Katherine Mayo demonized Indian civilization with images of widow
burnings, untouchability and cow-worship.
(SFEC, 12/13/98, BR p.3)
1927 In India the Musalman
Urdu-language newspaper began operating in Chennai. In 2008 the
handwritten newspaper was still operating with some 23,000 subscribers.
(WSJ, 9/16/08, p.A20)
1928 Aug 30, Jawaharlal Nehru
requested the independence of India.
(MC, 8/30/01)
1928 In India British colonial
authorities began to print money.
(WSJ, 8/29/96, B1)
1929 Apr 26, First non-stop flight
from England to India was completed.
(HN, 4/26/98)
1930 Mar 8, Mahatma Gandhi started
civil disobedience in India. [see Mar 12]
(MC, 3/8/02)
1930 Mar 12, Indian political and
spiritual leader Mohandas K. Gandhi began a 200-mile march to the sea
to protest a British tax on salt. The march symbolized his defiance of
British Rule over India.
(HN, 3/12/98)(AP, 3/12/98)
1930 Apr 5, Mahatma Ghandi defied
British law by making salt in India instead of buying it from the
British.
(HN, 4/5/99)
1930 May 4, Mahatma Gandhi was
arrested by the British.
(HN, 5/4/98)
1930 Gandhi called for peaceful
civil disobedience and the Indian National Congress issued a
declaration of grievances against Britain.
(SFEC, 8/3/97, p.A15)
1930 Shyamaji Krishnavarma
(b.1857), founder of a pro-independence monthly the India House, a hub
for British-based Indian nationalists, died in Geneva. His ashes were
returned to India in 2003.
(AP, 8/22/03)
1931-1933 In 2007 it was reported that British
scientists began conducting experiments in the early 1930s to determine
whether mustard gas damaged Indians' skin more than British soldiers'.
They went on for more than 10 years at a military site in Rawalpindi
(later a part of Pakistan).
(AP, 9/1/07)
1931 Feb 10, New Delhi became the
capital of India. [see Mar 26]
(MC, 2/10/02)
1931 Mar 5, Gandhi and British
viceroy Lord Irwin signed a pact.
(MC, 3/5/02)
1931 Mar 25, Fifty people were
killed in riots that broke out in India. Gandhi was one of many people
assaulted.
(HN, 3/24/98)
1931 Mar 26, New Delhi replaced
Calcutta as capitol of British-India. [see Feb 10]
(SS, 3/26/02)
1931 Francis Ingall (d.1998 at 89)
led his Lancers in a charge on horseback at the Battle of Karawal near
the Khyber Pass against Afridi tribesmen. It was the final such attack
by a regiment of the British Army. He later authored "The Last of the
Bengal Lancers."
(SFC, 9/25/98, p.D4)
1931 The India Gate was built in
New Delhi as tribute to the 90,000 Indian soldiers who died in WW I.
(SFEC, 5/21/00, p.T8)
1932 Sep 20, Gandhi began a hunger
strike against the treatment of untouchables.
(MC, 9/20/01)
1933 May 18, H.D. Deve Gowda,
later chief minister of the southern state of Karnataka and then prime
minister in 1996, was born.
(WP, 6/29/96, p.A20)
1933 May 8, Gandhi began a hunger
strike to protest British oppression in India.
(HN, 5/8/98)
1934 Jan 15, An 8.4 earthquake in
India and Nepal killed some 15,000 people. It damaged the Mahabuddha
Temple in Patan, Nepal, one of but 3 in the world.
(http://asc-india.org/menu/gquakes.htm)(WSJ,
1/22/98, p.A17)
1934 Apr 7, In India, Mahatma
Gandhi suspended his campaign of civil disobedience.
(MC, 4/7/02)
1934 Oct 24, Mohandas Karamchand
Gandhi, called Mahatma or "Great Soul," resigned from Congress in India.
(HN, 10/24/98)
1934 Margaret Sanger, US birth
control pioneer, was invited to Trivandrum in Kerala.
(SFEM, 7/18/99, p.12)
1935 Mar 19, The British fired on
20,000 Moslems in India, killing 23.
(HN, 3/19/98)
1935 May 31, In Quetta, India
(later Pakistan), a magnitude 7.5 earthquake killed some 50,000 people.
The earthquake flattened Quetta, killing an estimated 26,000 people in
the city alone, more than half its population.
(AP, 12/27/03)(AP, 10/15/05)
1935 R. K. Narayan (d.2001), age
29, published his 1st book: "Swami and Friends" in Britain.
(SFC, 5/14/01, p.B2)
1935 In India the Doon School was
founded in Dehra Dun, 140 miles northeast of New Delhi, on the former
site of Imperial Forest College & Research Institute.
(WSJ, 6/3/06, p.A1)
1935 Delhi, India, recorded minus
0.6 degrees Celsius.
(AP, 1/8/06)
1936 Feb 8, Pandit Jawaharlal
Nehru followed Gandhi as chairman of India Congress Party.
(MC, 2/8/02)
1936 Apr 29, Zubin Mehta,
conductor (NY Philharmonic 1976), was born in Bombay, India.
(MC, 4/29/02)
1938 Lakireddy Bali Reddy was born
in Velvadam in Andhra Pradesh state. The Reddy caste was traditionally
made up of landowners. He later studied engineering at UC Berkeley and
established land holdings valued at some $60 million.
(SFEC, 2/6/00, p.A12)
1938 There was extensive flooding
in India that was not rivaled until 1998.
(WSJ, 9/4/98, p.A1)
1939 Mar 3, In Bombay, Ghandi
began a fast to protest the state's autocratic rule.
(HN, 3/3/99)
1939 Mar 21, Ghandi called on the
world to disarm, thinking that Hitler would follow.
(HN, 3/21/98)
1940 Mar 23, The All-India Muslim
League called for a Muslim homeland.
(SS, 3/23/02)
1940 Jul 27, Bharati Mukherjee,
Indian novelist (The Middleman and Other Stories), was born.
(HN, 7/27/01)
1940 The Muslim League demanded a
separate homeland for the Muslim-majority regions of India.
(SFEC, 8/3/97, p.A15)
1941 Apr 14, Julie Christie,
actress (Dr Zhivago), was born in Assam, India.
(MC, 4/14/02)
1941 May 25, Some 5,000 drowned in
a storm at Ganges Delta region in India.
(SC, 5/25/02)
1941 Nov 24, Indian infantry
attacked German tanks at Sidi Omar.
(MC, 11/24/01)
1942 Jan 15, Jawaharlal Nehru
succeeded Mohandas K. Gandhi as head of India's National Congress Party.
(AP, 1/15/02)
1942 Feb 9, Chiang Kai-shek met
with Sir Stafford Cripps, the British viceroy in India. Detachment 101
harried the Japanese in Burma and provided close support for regular
Allied forces.
(HN, 2/9/97)
1942 Feb 22, India’s Capt. Sam
Manekshaw (1914-2008) was severely wounded in a counteroffensive
against Japanese forces on the Sittong River in Burma. In 1969
Manekshaw became the 8th chief of the Indian army.
(SFC, 7/1/08, p.B5)
1942 May 5, General Joseph
Stilwell learned that the Japanese had cut his railway out of China and
was forced to lead his troops into India.
(HN, 5/5/99)
1942 May 14, The British, in
retreat from Burma, reached India.
(HN, 5/14/98)
1942 Aug 9, Mahatma Gandhi and 50
others were arrested in Bombay after the passing of a "quit India"
campaign by the All-India Congress.
(MC, 8/9/02)
1942 Oct 16, In India a cyclone
devastated Bengal and about 40,000 lives were lost.
. (www.emergency-management.net/cyclone.htm)
1942 Dec 20, 1st Japanese began
the bombing of Calcutta.
(MC, 12/20/01)
1943 There was a major famine in
Bengal that left 3 million people dead.
(SFC, 10/15/98, p.A2)
1944 Feb 4, The Japanese attacked
the Indian Seventh Army in Burma.
(HN, 2/4/99)
1944 Apr 1, Japanese troops
conquered Jessami, East-India.
(MC, 4/1/02)
1944 May 5, Gandhi was freed from
prison.
(MC, 5/5/02)
1944 Aug 19, The last Japanese
troops were driven out of India.
(MC, 8/19/02)
1944 Aug 20, Rajiv Gandhi, Prime
Minster of India (1984-89), was born.
(HN, 8/20/98)(MC, 8/20/02)
1945 May 3,
Allied forces captured Rangoon, Burma, from the Japanese.
(AP, 5/3/07)
1945 Nov 29, In India Bajaj Auto
came into existence as M/s Bachraj Trading Corporation Private Limited.
(www.bajajauto.com/aboutbajaj/milestones.asp)(Econ,
6/3/06, Survey p.10)
c1945 The India Gate in New Delhi
was built to memorialize the 85,000 Indians who died in WW II.
(Hem., 2/97, p.58)
1945 In Amalner Mohamed Hussain
Premji (d.1966) founded Western India Vegetable Products Ltd. After 5
decades of bonuses and share splits one original share grew to over
12,000 shares of the Wipro high tech software firm.
(WSJ, 5/9/00, p.A16)
1945-1946 The British government organized elections
for a constituent assembly.
(SFEC, 8/3/97, p.A15)
1945-1949 A series of wars for independence during
this period spread from India to Burma, Thailand, Malaysia and
Singapore. In 2007 Christopher Bayly and Tim Harper authored “Forgotten
Wars: Freedom and Revolution in Southeast Asia.”
(WSJ, 8/9/07, p.D7)
1946 Feb 23, Anti-British
demonstration in India drew a crowd of 300,000.
(HN, 2/23/98)
1946 Mar 15, British premier
Attlee agreed with India's right to independence.
(MC, 3/15/02)
1946 May 3, The International
Military Tribunal for the Far East convened in Tokyo for Japanese War
Crimes. 28 defendants were tried. Radhabinod Pal, the judge from India,
was the only judge with an international law background and the only
judge to find all the defendants innocent on all counts.
(WSJ, 4/30/98, p.A15)(MC, 5/3/02)
1946 Aug 16, A riot in Calcutta
left some 3-4,000 Moslems and Hindus dead.
(MC, 8/16/02)
1946 Sep 2, Nehru formed a
government in India.
(MC, 9/2/01)
1947 Jan 2, Mahatma Gandhi began a
march for peace in East-Bengali.
(MC, 1/2/02)
1947 Feb 20, The British pledged
to leave India by June 1948.
(HN, 2/20/98)
1947 Feb 20, Lord Louis
Mountbatten was appointed the last viceroy of India.
(MC, 2/20/02)
1947 Mar 6, Winston Churchill
opposed the withdrawal of troops from India.
(HN, 3/6/98)
1947 Jun 3, In Britain an
announcement was made in the House of Commons that India was to be
partitioned and that independence would follow. In 2007 Yasmin Khan
authored “The Great Partition: The Making of India and Pakistan.”
(Econ, 7/21/07, p.81)
1947 Jun 15, The All-Indian
Congress accepted a British plan for the partition of India. Britain
partitioned the subcontinent and Pakistan was founded as an independent
country.
(SFC, 7/1/97, p.A9)(HN, 6/15/98)
1947 Jul 18, King George VI signed
the Indian Independence Bill. In 2008 Peter Clarke authored “The Last
Thousand Days of the British Empire.
(http://indiainteracts.com/columnist/2007/08/15/The-60-days-to-Aug-15-1947India-at-60/)(WSJ,
6/20/08, p.A11)
1947 Aug 15, India gained
independence after some 200 years of British rule. Britain partitioned
the subcontinent. Prior to independence, 565 princes ruled a third of
India. After independence the government let the royals retain their
titles and assets in return for incorporating their principalities into
the new nation. The 664 princely states of India were given the choice
of which country they wanted to join. Although most of the people of
Kashmir were Muslim, the maharaja was Hindu and he appealed to India
for help. Independence in Pakistan and India led to bloody conflicts
and thousands died. In 1999 Fareed Zakaria published "Raj: The Making
and Unmaking of British India." In 2006 David Gilmour authored “The
Ruling Caste,” an account of Britain’s Indian Civil Service (ICS).
(WSJ, 1/9/95, A-8)(WSJ, 12/21/95, p.A-12)(WSJ,
5/16/96, p.A-10)(SFEC, 8/3/97, p.A15)(AP, 8/15/97)(SFC, 6/4/98,
p.C2)(WSJ, 1/29/99, p.W7)(WSJ, 2/23/06, p.D8)
1947 Sep 7, Battles took place
between Hindus and Moslems in New Delhi.
(MC, 9/7/01)
1947 Oct 27, The Hindu maharajah
of Muslim-majority Kashmir joined India. The accession, not recognized
by Pakistan, led to a war.
(SSFC, 12/30/01, p.A22)(SFC, 6/8/02, p.A20)
1947 Nov 2, Jawaharlal Nehru said:
"We have declared that the fate of Kashmir is ultimately to be decided
by the people. That pledge we have given, and the Maharaja has
supported it not only to the people of Kashmir but the world. We will
not, and cannot back out of it. We are prepared when peace and law and
order have been established to have a referendum held under
international auspices like the United Nations. We want it to be a fair
and just reference to the people, and we shall accept their verdict. I
can imagine no fairer and juster offer."
(http://tinyurl.com/8sovl)
1947 In India the “Bombay Rents,
Hotel and Lodging House Rates Control Act” was adopted to provide
relief to the city’s migrants following partition with Pakistan. Rents
were set to 1940 levels to prevent gouging. By 2006 the measure had
been extended over 20 times and property development was severely
impeded as tenants fought to hold on to rent-controlled apartments.
(WSJ, 6/5/06, p.A6)
1947 India passed an Industrial
Disputes Act. Chapter 5B barred establishments with over 100 workers
from laying off employees without the permission of the state
government.
(Econ, 6/3/06, Survey p.12)
1947 At the time of India’s
partition and the creation of Pakistan, many Muslim Biharis moved to
what was then East Bengal. In 1971, when war broke out between West
Pakistan and East Pakistan (or Bangladesh), the Biharis, who mostly
considered themselves Pakistani, sided with West Pakistan.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biharis)
1947 Rajshri, an entertainment
conglomerate, was founded.
(WWW, 1947)
1947 Vittal Mallya (d.1983),
formed UB Group in India when he bought a controlling interest in
Kingfisher Beer.
(SSFC, 10/26/03, p.I3)
1947 India’s population was about
340 million.
(SSFC, 6/24/01, p.A27)
1948 Jan 18, Ghandi broke a
121-hour fast after halting Moslem-Hindu riots.
(HN, 1/18/99)
1948 Jan 30, Mohandas Karamchand
Gandhi (78) was assassinated by Nathuram Godse, a fellow Hindu while
walking to a prayer meeting in New Delhi a few minutes after five
o'clock in the evening. Godse felt that in trying to achieve
reconciliation between Hindus and Muslims, Gandhi had betrayed the
Hindu cause. Born into a family of merchants, Gandhi studied law in
England, where he was inspired by Henry David Thoreau's "Civil
Disobedience" and developed his own philosophy of peaceful resistance.
After residing and practicing law in South Africa for 20 years, Gandhi
returned to India to campaign for home rule and reconciliation of all
classes and religious groups. Convinced that India would never be free
as part of the British Empire, he demanded independence as payment for
helping Britain win World War II. Indian independence was achieved in
1947, but riots broke out between Hindus and Muslims seeking the
partition of the country into India and Pakistan. Mahatma ("Great
Soul") Gandhi was on a hunger strike demanding an end to the violence
when he was murdered. The book "Gandhi the Man" by Eknath Easwaran was
published in 1972.
(AHD, 1971, p.542)(HFA, '96, p.40)(SFC, 1/31/97,
p.A13)(SFC,12/24/97, p.C6) (HNPD, 1/309)
1948 The seven sins according to
Mahatma Gandhi were: 1) wealth without work. 2) Pleasure without
conscience. 3) Knowledge without character. 4) Commerce without
morality. 5) Science without humanity. 6) Worship without sacrifice. 7)
Politics without principal.
(SFEC, 1/23/00, Z1 p.2)
1948 Feb 28, The last
British troops left India. The First Battalion of the Somerset Light
Infantry passed through the Gateway of India monument in a ceremony.
(AP, 8/26/03)
1948 May, India and Pakistan went
to war over the Himalayan region of Kashmir, which was divided between
the two nations at partition. The Pakistani third was known as Jammu
and Kashmir, while India controlled the eastern two-thirds where 8
million people lived.
(SFEC, 8/3/97, p.A15)(WSJ, 5/22/98, p.A15)
1948 Jun 21, Lord Mountbatten
resigned as Viceroy of India.
(MC, 6/21/02)
1948 The former kingdom of Ladakh
and Kashmir, annexed in 1834 by the maharajah of Jammu, became the East
Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir.
(SFEC,12/14/97, p.T4)
1948 Electricity laws were passed
that limited private involvement.
(WSJ, 8/27/96, p.A10)
1948 India established an Atomic
Energy Commission.
(SFC, 5/28/98, p.A9)
1949 Jan 1, The UN brokered a
cease-fire in Kashmir. It granted Kashmir the right to vote on whether
to remain in India or to join Pakistan. No vote took place.
(SSFC, 12/30/01, p.A22)(SFC, 6/8/02, p.A20)
1949 Jan 30, In India, 100,000
people prayed at the site of Gandhi's assassination on the first
anniversary of his death.
(HN, 1/30/99)
1949 Feb 19, Mass arrests of
communists took place in India.
(MC, 2/19/02)
1949 May 12, S.V.L. Pandit of
India was received as the first foreign woman ambassador to the US.
(SC, internet, 5/12/97)
1949 Sep 21, Manipur merged with
India.
(http://manipuronline.com/Manipur/merger.htm)
1949 Nov 26, India adopted a
constitution as a republic within the British Commonwealth. Pandit
Nehru became Prime Minister.
(HN, 11/26/98)(AP, 11/26/07)
1949 Bhutan decided that its
policies would be guided by relations with India.
(Econ, 12/18/04, p.55)
1950 Jan 26, India officially
proclaimed itself a republic as Rajendra Prasad took the oath of office
as president.
(AP, 1/26/98)
1950 Oct 26, Mother Teresa
(d.1997), known in India as the "saint of the gutters", founded the
Missionaries of Charity global order of nuns in Calcutta.
(MC, 10/26/01)(AP, 9/26/04)
1950 The Indian film "Barsaat" was
a blockbuster written by Ramanand Sagar.
(WSJ, 4/22/98, p.A1)
1950 The Muslim Tablighi Ijtimah
(Congregation of Preaching) movement was founded in India. They
believed Islam should be spread by setting a good example, one of
modesty and non-violence.
(SFC, 11/3/01, p.A7)
1950 Mysore became an Indian
state. The former Maharaja became its rajpramukh, or governor, until
1975.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karnataka)
1950 India’s lowest castes and
tribes were allowed claim to just over 20% of government and other
public-sector jobs. A presidential order excluded any “person who
professes a religion different from Hinduism” from entitlement to
affirmative action programs. The rule was amended in 1956 to include
Dalit Sikhs. The system was extended in 1990 to include another 27% for
other backward castes.
(Econ, 4/29/06, p.46)(WSJ, 9/19/07, p.A18)
1950 The Indian Institutes of
Technology was established. The first IIT was built on the site of a
former British prison camp in Kharagpur. By 2007 the institute had 7
campuses taking in 4,500 new students each year.
(SSFC, 2/25/07, p.B1)
1950 A great earthquake measuring
8.5 ravaged half of northern India’s Assam state. Thousands of dead
rats were caught in fisherman’s nets just before the quake.
(SFC, 8/17/96, p.A4)(SFC, 3/30/99, p.F2)
1950 Aurobindo Ghose,
Bengalese-born and Western educated guru and yogi, died. "Man lives
mostly in his surface mind, life and body, but there is an inner being
within him with greater possibilities to which he has to awake to
greater beauty, harmony, power and knowledge."
(SSFC, 6/16/02, p.A17)
1951 Jan 24, Indian leader Nehru
assailed the U.S. and demanded the UN to name Peking as an aggressor in
Korea.
(HN, 1/24/99)
1951 Nirad C. Chaudhuri (d.1999 at
101) published "The Autobiography of an Unknown Indian."
(SFC, 8/3/99, p.A20)
1951 The film "Awaara" (The
Vagabond) starred Leela Chitnis. She left India for the US in the 1980s
and died in 2003 at age 93.
(SFC, 7/16/03, p.A19)
1952 May 13, Pandit Jawaharlal
Nehru became premier of India.
(MC, 5/13/02)
1953 Oct, Universal Children’s Day
was first observed in India. It was adopted by the UN General Assembly
in 1954. It became observed on different days in different ways in more
than 120 nations. In India, Children’s Day is celebrated on 14th
November, the birth anniversary of PM Jawaharlal Nehru.
(www.indianchild.com/childrens_day_india.htm)
1953 Sripati Chandrasekhar
authored "Hungry People and Empty Lands."
(SSFC, 6/24/01, p.A27)
1953 Durell Stone received a
commission to design the American Embassy in New Delhi. From this time
on his work incorporated the tropes of Mughal architecture.
(WSJ, 12/2/03, p.A1)
1954 Jun, India and China devised
and embraced “five principles of peaceful coexistence.”
(Econ, 7/31/04, p.36)
1955 May 5, India’s parliament
accepted Hindu divorce.
(MC, 5/5/02)
1955 India established a policy
that barred foreign print media from publishing within the country.
(WSJ, 8/13/96, p.A7)
1955 In India the ICICI Bank was
founded as a state development bank. In 1994 it formed a commercial
banking subsidiary.
(Econ, 5/20/06, Survey p.19)
1956 Sep 1, Indian state of
Tripura became a territory.
(SC, 9/1/02)
1956 The US and Canada agreed to
help India build a nuclear research reactor for power generation. India
rejected oversight by the new Int’l. Atomic Energy Agency.
(SFC, 5/28/98, p.A9)
1957 The film "Pather Panchali"
from India was directed by Satyajit Ray.
(SFEC, 4/13/97, DB p.44)
1957 India passed legislation
allowing the government to seize stray cattle.
(WSJ, 1/10/06, p.A1)
1958 The Indian film “Mother
India,” directed by Mehboob Khan, was nominated for an Oscar.
(Econ, 2/9/08, p.72)
1958 Jawaharlal Nehru, prime
minister of India, trekked for a month to make a treaty with Bhutan. He
demanded to be met at the border by someone of equal rank. King
Wangchuk balked at making the trip and quickly appointed his aide,
Jigme Palden Dorji, as prime minister to meet Nehru 127 miles away by
mule and foot.
(WSJ, 3/6/97, p.A8)(Econ, 5/14/05, p.46)
1958 India began designing and
buying equipment for a plutonium reprocessing plant at Trombay, which
would provide it capability for atomic weapons.
(SFC, 5/28/98, p.A9)
1958 Dhirubhai Ambani (d.2002)
founded India's project-building Reliance Corp. In 2002 its sales
reached $16.8 billion.
(Econ, 12/20/03, p.98)(Econ, 11/27/04, p.69)
1959 Jan, In New Delhi, India, the
Int’l. Commission of Jurists held a congress with the theme “The Rule
of Law.” They drew up the “declaration of Delhi,” which developed the
principles and procedures underlying the Rule of Law as well as
defining and clarifying the concept itself.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Declaration_of_Delhi)(Econ, 3/15/08, p.84)
1959 Mar 17, The Dalai Lama fled
Tibet and went to India, triggering a flood of refugees escaping
Chinese rule.
(HN 3/17/98)(WSJ, 8/30/08, p.A8)
1959 Mar 31, Dalai Lama fled the
Chinese suppression of a national uprising in Tibet and crossed the
border into India. India granted him political asylum.
(MC, 3/31/02)
1959 Oct 23, Chinese troops moved
into India and 17 died.
(MC, 10/23/01)
1959 Dec 9-1959 Dec 14, Pres.
Eisenhower visited India and met with President Prasad and Prime
Minister Nehru. He addressed India’s Parliament and said: “ We
who are free, and who prize our freedom above all other gifts of God
and nature, must know each other better; trust each other more; support
each other.”
(www.theamericanpresidency.us/34thvisitsabroad.htm)(Econ, 2/25/06, p.29)
1959 India kicked out Gillette Co.
in order to protect its domestic blade makers.
(WSJ, 3/13/97, p.A1)
1960 May 1, India's Bombay state
split into Gujarat and Maharashtra states.
(MC, 5/1/02)
1960 Oct 10, A cyclone and tidal
wave hit the Gulf of Bengal and killed about 6,000 in East Pakistan.
(www.emergency-management.net/cyclone.htm)
1960 In India the film
"Mughal-e-Azam" (Emperor of the Moghuls) was released. It became one of
Bollywood's greatest classics. In 2004 it was re-released in a color
version. The film was set in Lahore at a time when Muslims ruled India.
It was shown in Pakistan for the 1st time in 2006.
(AP, 11/8/04)(Reuters, 4/23/06)
1961 Apr 18, Pamella Bordes,
British parliament prostitute, was born in New Delhi, India.
(MC, 4/18/02)
1961 Nov 5, India's premier Nehru
arrived in NY.
(MC, 11/5/01)
1961 Nov 8, Pres. Kennedy
concluded talks with India’s PM Nehru.
(www.historycentral.com/Documents/sixties/118.html)
1961 Nov, India’s PM Jawaharlal
Nehru visited with Walt Disney in Disneyland.
(SSFC, 5/1/05, p.F3)
1961 India wrested Goa and Diu
from Portugal.
(SSFC, 3/19/06, p.F6)
1961 India outlawed the dowry as
an institutionalized marital custom to help reduce gender-driven
abortions.
(SFC, 12/6/02, p.J1)
1961 M.S. Swaminathan, adviser to
India’s minister of agriculture, invited Norman Borlaug, a plant
geneticist who had improved the yield on Mexican wheat, to visit India.
(Econ, 12/24/05, p.29)
1961 Bharat Forge incorporated in
India. By 2006 it was the world’s second biggest maker of forgings for
car engine and chassis components.
(Econ, 6/3/06, Survey
p.8)(www.bharatforge.com/insidepages/company/history.asp)
1961-1968 Octavio Paz, poet and Nobel laureate,
served as the Mexican ambassador to India. In 1997 he published "In
Light of India."
(SFEC, 8/31/97, BR p.9)
1962 Oct 20, A Chinese army landed
in India for a brief border war in the Himalayas.
(WSJ, 5/16/96, p.A-10)(SFC, 11/29/96,
p.A1)(http://countrystudies.us/nepal/19.htm)
1962 Nov 21, China agreed to a
cease-fire on India-China border.
(AP, 11/21/02)
1962 Kalpana Chawla, US astronaut,
was born Karnal, India. She was among the 7 astronauts killed in the US
Columbia space shuttle tragedy Feb 1, 2003.
(SSFC, 2/2/03, p.A8)
1962 China gained control from
India of the northeast region of Kashmir known as Aksai Chin.
(SSFC, 12/30/01, p.A22)
1962 The northeast Indian state of
Arunachal Pradesh, twice the size of Switzerland, was briefly occupied
by China and closed to foreign tourists, due to the border war. It
re-opened in 1993.
(SSFC, 1/4/04, p.C10)(Econ, 7/5/08, p.95)
1962 China exacted control over
western Tibet and many nomad refugees fled to Ladakh.
(SFEC,12/14/97, p.T4)
1963 Mar, Norman Borlaug, plant
breeder, arrived in India and began testing new varieties of Mexican
wheat, whose yields were shown to be 4-5 times better than Indian
varieties. In 1970 he won the Nobel Prize for his development of
high-yield wheat varieties for which he was dubbed father of the "Green
Revolution."
(SFC, 10/15/97, p.A15)(WSJ, 12/3/02, p.A1)(Econ,
12/24/05, p.30)
1963 May 20-1963 May 23, In East
Pakistan a cyclone killed about 22,000 along coast of the Bay of Bengal.
(www.emergency-management.net/cyclone.htm)
1963 Nov 21, India launched its
first rocket from Thumba in Kerala state.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thumba_Equatorial_Rocket_Launching_Station)
1963 Dec 2, Sabu Sabu (39), actor
(Sabu Dastagir), died of a heart attack in Chatsworth, California. He
was born in Karapur, Mysore, India, on January 27, 1924, beginning his
movie career at the age of 13. His films included “Elephant Boy”
(1937); “Drums” (1938); “The Thief of Baghdad” (1940); “Jungle
Book” (1942) and “Arabian Nights” (1942).
(www.imdb.com/name/nm0754942/)
1963 Ray Dolby, while working in
India, conceived of separating recorded sound into 2 channels as a
means to strip away unwanted tape recording noise. His 1st prototype
was completed in London in 1966.
(SFC, 3/29/04, p.D1)
1964 Jan 10, Battles took place
between Muslims & Hindus in Calcutta.
(MC, 1/10/02)
1964 May 27, Independent India's
first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, died. In 2003 Judith M. Brown
authored "Nehru: A Political Life."
(AP, 5/27/97)(Econ, 10/18/03, p.82)
1964 Dec 23, India and Ceylon were
hit by a cyclone and 4,850 were killed.
(MC, 12/23/01)
1964 R. K. Narayan (d.2001)
authored "Gods, Demons and Others." In it he retold stories from
Sanskrit and Tamil epics
(SFC, 5/14/01, p.B2)
1964 The first Indian mutual fund,
Unit Scheme-1964 aka US-64, was founded.
(WSJ, 10/15/98, p.A20)
1964-1968 In India’s "green revolution" the wheat
crop increased from 10 million to 17 million tons following the use of
dwarfing genes and fertilizer to increase the grains on each
stalk. Chidambaram Subramaniam, minister of agriculture,
convinced Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri to use new seeds,
developed by Norman Borlaug (Nobel Prize 1970) in Mexico, for wheat
production.
(SFC, 11/11/00, p.A26)(WSJ, 12/3/02, p.A1)
1965 Apr 5, The second
Indo-Pakistani conflict began when fighting broke out in the Rann of
Kachchh, a sparsely inhabited region along the West Pakistan-India
border.
(Encyclopaedia.com, 2002)
1965 Aug 6, Indo-Pakistani
fighting spread to Kashmir and to the Punjab, The 2nd Indo-Pakistani
conflict started without a formal declaration of war. Skirmishes with
Indian forces started as early as August 6 or 7.
(http://ph.infoplease.com/ce6/history/A0858805.html)
1965 Apr 9, India and Pakistan
engaged in a border fight.
(MC, 4/9/02)
1965 May 11-12, In East Pakistan a
cyclone killed some 12,000.
(www.emergency-management.net/cyclone.htm)
1965 May 25, India and Pakistan
engaged in border fights.
(SC, 5/25/02)
1965 Jun 1-2, The 2nd of 2
cyclones in less than a month killed 35,000 along the Ganges River in
East Pakistan.
(www.emergency-management.net/cyclone.htm)
1965 Aug 6, Indian troops invaded
Pakistan. Indo-Pakistani fighting spread to Kashmir and to the Punjab,
The 2nd Indo-Pakistani conflict started without a formal declaration of
war. Skirmishes with Indian forces started as early as August 6 or 7.
(http://ph.infoplease.com/ce6/history/A0858805.html)(MC, 8/6/02)
1965 Aug 14, The first major
engagement between the regular armed forces of India and Pakistan took
place. The next day, Indian forces scored a major victory after a
prolonged artillery barrage and captured three important mountain
positions in the northern sector. Later in the month, the Pakistanis
counterattacked, moving concentrations near Tithwal, Uri, and Punch.
Their move, in turn, provoked a powerful Indian thrust into Azad
Kashmir. Other Indian forces captured a number of strategic mountain
positions and eventually took the key Haji Pir Pass, eight kilometers
inside Pakistani territory.
(Encyclopaedia.com,
2002)(http://ph.infoplease.com/ce6/history/A0858805.html)
1965 Sep 1-19, Indian gains led to
a major Pakistani counterattack in the southern sector, in Punjab,
where Indian forces were caught unprepared and suffered heavy losses.
The sheer strength of the Pakistani thrust, which was spearheaded by
seventy tanks and two infantry brigades, led Indian commanders to call
in air support. Pakistan retaliated on September 2 with its own air
strikes in both Kashmir and Punjab.
(http://www.onwar.com/aced/chrono/c1900s/yr65/fkashmir1965)
(WSJ, 6/11/96, p.A12)(SFEC, 8/3/97, p.A15)(HN,
9/6/98)(SFC, 6/8/02, p.A20)(MC, 9/1/02)(Encyclopaedia.com, 2002)
1965 Sep 20, The India-Pakistani
war was at the point of stalemate when the UN Security Council
unanimously passed a resolution that called for a cease-fire. New Delhi
accepted the cease-fire resolution on September 21 and Islamabad on
September 22, and the war ended on September 23. The Indian side lost
3,000 while the Pakistani side suffered 3,800 battlefield deaths.
(http://www.onwar.com/aced/chrono/c1900s/yr65/fkashmir1965)
1965 Sep 22, Pakistan agreed to
the UN brokered cease-fire that India affirmed the day before. [see Jan
10, 1966]
(HNQ, 4/26/99)
1965 The Oberoi Hotel opened and
was India’s first luxury lodging.
(Hem., 2/97, p.57)
1965 The Narmada Valley
Development Project began. It included the development of 30 large
dams, 135 medium dams and 3,000 small dams.
(SFC, 1/17/02, p.A9)
1966 Jan 10, The Tashkent
Agreement, was signed in the Soviet city of Tashkent, and officially
ended a 17-day war between Pakistan and India. It required that both
sides withdraw by February 26, 1966, to positions held prior to August
5, 1965, and observe the cease-fire line agreed to on June 30, 1965.
The agreement was brokered by Soviet premier Aleksey Kosygin and signed
by Indian Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri and Pakistan President
Ayub Khan. The Indian prime minister died the day after signing the
agreement.
(HNQ,
4/26/99)(www.onwar.com/aced/chrono/c1900s/yr65/fkashmir1965)
1966 Jan 11, India’s PM Lal
Bahadur Shastri, the successor of Nehru and engineer of the Green
Revolution, died.
(WSJ, 3/19/00, p.A19)
1966 Jan 19, Indira Gandhi,
Nehru’s daughter, was elected the 3rd prime minister of India.
(SFEC, 8/3/97, p.A15)(AP, 1/19/98)(MC, 1/19/02)
1966 Jun 24, A Bombay to NY Air
India flight crashed into Mont Blanc (Switz) and 117 died.
(MC, 6/24/02)
1966 Dec 22, The United States
announced the allocation of 900,000 tons of grain to fight the famine
in India.
(HN, 12/22/98)
1966 Azim Premji took over the
operations of the Western India Vegetable Product Ltd., later known as
Wipro, following the death of his father. Political changes in 1977
banned many imports and allowed him to expand to manufacturing
computers and other electronics.
(WSJ, 9/11/07, p.A16)
1967 Mar 6, The daughter of Josef
Stalin, Svetlana Alliluyeva, appeared at the US Embassy in India and
announced her intention to defect to the West.
(AP, 3/6/07)
1967 Mar 9, Svetlana Alliluyeva
(Allilueva), Josef Stalin's daughter, requested political asylum at the
US Embassy in India. She arrived at New York in April and held a press
conference during which she denounced her father's regime.
(HN, 3/9/98)( http://tinyurl.com/bd6yq)
1967 Oct 12, In India a massive
cyclone struck the rural Orissa state consisting of small villages.
Basically all life (human and animal) and each structure was wiped out;
the precise number of fatalities and destruction is unknown.
(www.emergency-management.net/cyclone.htm)
1967 Sripati Chandrasekhar was
appointed health minister.
(SSFC, 6/24/01, p.A27)
1967 In India a Maoist-inspired
rebel movement began in the West Bengal village of Naxalbari. Police
action wiped the movement out over the next 8 years. It resurfaced in
the 1980s as the People’s War Group in an area of Andra Pradesh called
Telugana and supporters came to be called Naxalites.
(Econ, 4/15/06, p.45)
1967 India’s population climbed to
500 million.
(SSFC, 6/24/01, p.A27)
1968 Feb 16, Beatles George
Harrison & John Lennon flew to India with their wives for
transcendental meditation with the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi.
(MC, 2/16/02)
1968 Jul 1, The United States,
Britain, the Soviet Union and 58 other nations signed the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty. India refused to sign.
(AP, 7/1/97)(SFC, 5/28/98, p.A9)
1968 The Triennale-India art show
began in New Delhi with shows held every 3 years.
(SFC,12/27/97, p.C16)
1968 In India Tata Consultancy
Services (TCS) was founded. Public shares were offered in 2004 as sales
hit %1.5 billion and employees numbered 28,000.
(Econ, 7/24/04, p.61)
1970 Nov 13, The Bhola Cyclone
killed an estimated 300,000 in East Pakistan (Bangladesh). The highest
loss of life and destruction occurred on the low lying islands of the
Ganges Delta south of Dhaka. In particular the island and district of
Bhola, where casualties may have exceeded 100,000 alone, with the towns
of Charfasson and Tazumuddin being devastated. The city of Chittagong
was also badly affected. The official death toll was put at 150,000,
with 100,000 people missing. However many estimates put the true figure
as high as 500,000.
(SFEC, 9/5/04,
p.6)(http://banglapedia.search.com.bd/HT/C_0397.htm)
1970 India introduced “process”
patents which allowed innovators to protect the way they made drugs,
rather than the molecules themselves.
(Econ, 6/18/05, Survey p.17)
1970 Ahmedabad, the largest city
in India’s state of Gujarat, was the capital of Gujarat from 1960 to
1970; the capital was shifted to Gandhinagar thereafter.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ahmedabad)
1970 The shooting of tigers was
banned in India.
(NG, 12/97, p.13)
1971 Mar 21, Sheik Mujibur Rahman
(Mujeeb-ur Rehman) declared East Pakistan (later Bangladesh)
independent of Pakistan. Pakistani Pres. Yahya Khan ordered the army
in; several million East Bengali refugees fled to India. Rahman was the
father of later PM Hasina Wajid.
(WUD, 1994, p. 1688)(SFC, 12/31/00, p.B3)
1971 Mar 27, PM of India, Indira
Gandhi, expressed full support of her government to the Bangladeshi
struggle for independence. The Bangladesh-India border was opened to
allow the Bangladeshi Refugees safe shelter in India.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo-Pakistani_War_of_1971)
1971 May, PM Indira Gandhi of
India proclaimed the established royalty to be ordinary citizens and
abolished their government perks. She made them pay taxes on their
property or pass it to the state. The wealth tax doubled to 8% of net
income.
(WSJ, 1/9/95,
Aa-8)(www.indembsofia.org/shtml/en/includes/ind.html)
1971 Oct 29, On the east coast of
India a tidal wave and cyclone struck Cuttack in Orissa state and
killed some 10,000 people.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pre-1980_North_Indian_Ocean_cyclone_seasons#1971_Orissa_Cyclone)
1971 Nov 5, Nixon and Kissinger
met in the Oval Office, to discuss Nixon's conversation with Gandhi the
day before. "We really slobbered over the old witch," Nixon told
Kissinger, according to a transcript of their conversation released in
2005 as part of a State Department compilation of significant documents
involving American foreign policy.
(AP, 6/28/05)
1971 Dec 3, The 3rd Indo-Pakistani
war began when India intervened in the Pakistani civil war. Pakistan
attacked Indian airfields and India mobilized its army after nearly 10
million refugees poured into India. The India-Pakistani civil war ended
with independence for East Pakistan, now Bangladesh.
(SFEC, 8/3/97, p.A15)(SFC, 6/12/99, p.A12)(SSFC,
12/30/01, p.A22)
1971 Dec 6, India recognized the
Democratic Republic of Bangladesh and Pakistan broke off diplomatic
relations. Bangladesh later accused Pakistan of war atrocities that led
to the death of some 3 million people during the 9-month war.
(WUD, 1994, p. 1688)(SFC, 12/31/00, p.B3)
1971 Dec 16, Pakistani forces in
East Pakistan surrendered to the allied forces of India and Bangladesh,
jointly known as the Mitro Bahini. Bangladesh gained independence.
Bangladesh later accused Pakistan of war atrocities that led to the
death of some 3 million people during the 9-month war.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo-Pakistani_War_of_1971)(SFC,
12/31/00, p.B3)
1971 Dec 17, A cease fire began
between India and Pakistan in East Pakistan.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo-Pakistani_War_of_1971)
1971 Ram Dass (b.1931) published
his best-seller "Be Here Now." It was about his trek through India. He
was accompanied in part by Bhagavan Das, Michael Riggs. Riggs had set
off for India in 1963 at age 18. Bhagavan Das wrote his own memoir in
1997 titled "It’s Here Now (Are You?): A Spiritual Memoir.
(SFC, 12/1/97,
p.E5)(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ram_Dass)
1971 Following Pakistan’s defeated
by India and Bangladesh in the Bangladesh war. Pakistan decided to
develop a nuclear weapons program.
(SFC, 5/28/98, p.A9)
1971 Bikram yoga, developed by
master yogi Bikram Choudhury (b.1946) in India, was brought to the US.
The practice included exercises in sweat lodge conditions.
(SSFC, 4/29/01, p.C6)
1972 Mar 19, India and Bangladesh
signed a friendship treaty.
(http://banglapedia.search.com.bd/HT/I_0040.htm)
1972 Jul 10, During an extended
drought a herd of stampeding elephants killed 24 in the Chandka Forest
of India.
(http://tinyurl.com/3bppys)
1972 Jul 2, India and Pakistan
signed the Simla Agreement that provided for a bilateral settlement of
disputes and a "Line of Control" in Kashmir. Article 6 of the accord
clearly states: "Both governments agree... to discuss further the
modalities and arrangements for the establishment of durable peace and
normalization of relations," including "a final settlement of the Jammu
and Kashmir."
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shimla_Agreement)(SSFC, 12/30/01, p.A22)
1972 Ela Bhatt founded the
Self-Employed Women’s Association (SEWA).
(SFEC, 2/8/98, Z1 p.5)
1972 India enacted a Wildlife
Protection Act. It banned the hunting of tigers, the capture and sale
of bears (dancing bears) as well as the catching of snakes. In 2001
animal performances on the streets were banned. Snake charmers felt
their livelihood threatened.
(SFC, 7/8/02, p.A3)(SFC, 12/4/04, p.B10)(Econ,
6/25/05, p.41)
1973 Nov 1, In India the state of
Mysore was renamed Karnataka.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karnataka)
1973 Dec 10, North Korea and India
established diplomatic ties.
(AFP, 2/7/06)(http://tinyurl.com/4vzdbf)
1973 India began Project Tiger and
estab