India in the 20th c' - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 30
About This Presentation
Title:

India in the 20th c'

Description:

As their power declined in the 18th century, lesser princely contenders vied ... self-determination (Wilson's 14 Points) applied to Europe --Indian elites argued ' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:307
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 31
Provided by: Joan130
Category:
Tags: 20th | india | wilsons

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: India in the 20th c'


1
India in the 20th c.
2
Unique Features
  • Worlds largest democracy and with virtually no
    previous democratic tradition!
  • Diversity (religions, ethnic groups, languages)
  • Potential conflict
  • over Kashmir
  • nuclear testing
  • Growing economy

3
In the Early Modern Era
  • Mughal Dynasty
  • f. 1526
  • Muslim from Central Asia
  • A gunpowder empire
  • As their power declined in the 18th century,
    lesser princely contenders vied with one another
    for supremacy.
  • In this environment, the British East India
    Company was able to play off one Indian prince
    against another --divide and rule
  • Likewise, at first the Mughal Empire controlled
    the Europeans traders but as the Empire began to
    fall apart the British found it easy to gain
    control.

4
From Trading Stations to Indirect British Rule
Era of the Princely States
  • In 17th c., BEIC established trading stations in
    Surat, Bombay, Calcutta. It had the right to
    establish colonies, make laws collect taxes,
    and have an army!
  • Growing British control enabled them to sell
    their relatively cheap manufactured goods to
    Indians with significant long-term consequences
    indigenous manufacturing, especially of textiles,
    and a whole generation of Indian artisans were
    ruined by the forced opening of the India market
    (dependency theory)

Until 1857, Britain established informal colonial
rule (via BEIC) because PROFITS, not political
conquest, was goal of this private corp., the
BEIC allowed local rulers to remain in power if
they helped the company.
5
Era of the Princely States
  • To increase its profits the company began to
    develop the infrastructure of India
  • Built the most extensive Railroad system in Asia
  • Established a postal and telegraph network
  • Canal system opened millions of acres of land to
    agriculture
  • Roads and bridges
  • Who does all this benefit the most though? What
    might be wrong with a company running a country?

6
British Improvementsin India - Health
  • Health care helped population increase

7
Whats wrong or right with this?
  • B.E.I.C began to make reforms to change and
    outlaw traditional Indian practices such as the
  • Equality before the law- regardless of caste
  • Elimination of caste and religious customs
    considered barbaric
  • Sati
  • Female infanticide

8
  • Education reflected British ethnocentrism, but
    also created an upper and middle class that spoke
    a common language and picked up western political
    ideals such as rule by the consent of the
    governed
  • To change some of the traditional beliefs and
    attitudes held by Indians, the British built

SCHOOLS
However, all classes were taught in
ENGLISH
Future independence leaders were educated in the
Western ideals of freedom and equality
9
  • The British also make the Indians follow British
    Laws
  • Is this a good thing or bad thing?

10
  • The British believed that they were
    ______________India.

modernizing
  • This also meant that India was being forced to
    _______________ which many Indians did not want
    to do.

westernize
11
1857 Turning PointSepoy Rebellion
  • Muslim Hindu Sepoys angered over new gun grease
    pouches used to keep new amno dry.
  • British suppress establish direct colonial rule
    as a consequence (Govt of India Act 1858)
  • Marked beginning of British Raj (present-day
    India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Myanmar)

12
Under British Rule
  • Crown Jewel of British Empire India supplied
    raw materials outlet for manufactured goods,
    plus soldiers in both world wars
  • Economy stagnant with little industry and
    oppressive landlords
  • Central government effective state

13
Economic Changes under British Rule
  • Improved transportation communication
    infrastructure BUT
  • Improvements in transportation were beneficial
    to British industry but paid for by Indian people
    (taxes)

14
British Effect on the Indian Economy - Industry
  • Indian used to have cottage industries which
    sold goods to Europe (until 1800s)
  • British govt closed home market to Indian goods
  • This caused widespread unemployment in India

15
British Effect on the Indian Economy - Industry
  • India became a great MARKET for British goods
  • India was transformed into a farming colony of
    Britain ( Crops)
  • India provided raw materials to British industry

16
India was a major supplier of raw materials
Indians must buy finished goods from Britain
Indians must produce raw materials for Britain
Jewel in the Crown
Tea, indigo, coffee, cotton, and jute, opium
17
British Effect on India - Social Political
  • British occupied most of the high positions in
    society and government
  • British treated Indians as inferiors morally,
    politically and culturally
  • British gave Indians no responsibility for their
    own govt ---didnt allow them to experience
    self-rule
  • Famines became more frequent and widespread.
  • Traditional Indian values IGNORED!

18
Indian National Congress
  • f. 1885 in the midst of growing intellectual and
    cultural ferment
  • British colonial leaders and traditional Indian
    elites became allies of sorts from poor
    peasants, squeezed resources used to maintain
    colonial, bureaucratic state and conspicuous life
    styles of princes
  • Growing Indian NATIONALIST movement At first,
    mainly Indian elites who invoked liberal
    principles of political equality by requesting
    greater Indian involvement in higher offices
    (still under British rule) and sending petitions
    to British government

19
World War I Turning Point in Indian nationalism
  • As great European empires disintegrated
  • self-determination (Wilsons 14 Points)
    applied to Europe --Indian elites argued why
    there not here?
  • Indian soldiers shot sacred Europeans and seen
    them fight one another and fall
  • Russian Revolution an example of throwing off
    monarchy
  • 1919 Rowlatt Acts suppressed speech protests
  • 1919 Amritsar Massacre

20
Mohandas K. Gandhi
  • Charismatic leader the mahatma
  • Most responsible for transforming the INC from a
    narrow, elitist club to a mass nationalist
    movement advocating home rule
  • Under his leadership, Indians of different
    economic classes, castes, religions etc. came to
    share core political values such as national
    sovereignty
  • Fought to improve the status of the lowest
    classes of society--the casteless Untouchables,
    whom he called harijans ("children of God").
  • Used ahimsa (non-violence)
  • satyagraha (passive resistance by
    peaceful boycotts, strikes
  • non-cooperation and mass
    demonstrations --literally means
  • holding fast to truthsometimes
    called truth force),
  • swadeshi ("of our country" or
    self-reliance --Gandhi weaving own cloth)

21
Gandhi Economic Self-Sufficiency
  • Convinced that economic self-sufficiency was a
    prerequisite for self-government, he called on
    Indian people to boycott British goods and return
    to wearing rough homespun cotton clothing.
  • Disagreed with those who wanted India to
    industrialize, advocating instead manual labor
    and the revival of cottage industries.
  • Admonished his people to boycott institutions
    operated by the British in India such as schools,
    offices and courts.

22
Under Gandhi, INC launched 2 movements
  • Non-Cooperation movement
  • 1920-1922
  • -Jawaharal Nehru emerged as an important leader,
    exploring ways of combining socialist ideas with
    satyagraha and ahimsa

23
and Civil Disobedience Movement (1930)
  • Began with salt boycott March to the Sea

Results 1935 Government of India Act Limited
self-government with executive under British
control. Ultimately failed because 600 nominally
sovereign princes refused to cooperate and
Muslims feared Hindu domination
24
World War 2 the final straw
1943 Quit India movement renewal of mass
civil disobedience Most INC leaders in jail
during WW2 Only Muslim League supported British
WW2
  • At wars end, Britain and its economy were
    severely damaged.

25
1947 Indian independence from Britain
Partition India and Pakistan (divided into two
parts in NW and NE corners of subcontinent)
  • Though India Pakistan were overwhelmingly Hindu
    and Muslim, respectively, approx. 50 mil people
    caught on borders of other country violence
    erupted.
  • Gandhi assassinated by Hindu radical five months
    after independence

26
Fears of a Civil War in India, Feb. 1946
27
Initial Advantages for India
  • Strong sense of national identity
  • No anti-British witch hunt (contrast China and
    USSR which made self-conscious attempts to cut
    themselves off from pre-Revolutionary societies)
    --emphasis on consensus and accommodation of
    leaders
  • Long anti-colonial movement gave leaders
    experience many educated in England

28
Jawaharlal Nehru 1st prime minister, 1947-1964
  • Gifted PM left lasting mark on country through
  • combination of personal charisma,
    intellectual
  • power and an ability to provide effective,
    day to
  • day political leadership
  • India adopted constitution--based on British
    model
  • Nationalist and social democrat
  • inherited a strong central government and a weak
    economy from Britain
  • goes about trying to strengthen India's
    independence and national power on one hand and
    improve economy and poor on the other used
    government machinery that India inherited to
    accomplish
  • created a mixed economy with a strong and
    powerful state role in planning which allowed for
    significant private enterprise as well
  • secular

29
In the Cold War
  • India under Nehru was non-aligned
  • made U.S. suspicious because did not support
    its view of the global struggle of the "free
    world" vs. "totalitarianism" --India does not
    see world in same terms having just emerged from
    colonialism

30
Indira Gandhi
  • PM 1966-1984 (except for 3 years in 70s)
  • Chosen by Congress Party (what INC became after
    independence) because she was Nehrus daughter
    (connection to powerful man) and thought could
    manipulate her
  • Populist leader appealed to common people
  • Nationalist re-ignited nationalist ideas
  • Personal style very popular surrounded only by
    highly loyal officials
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com