Nationalist Movement & After Independence
Organised nationalism took shape with the founding of the Indian National Congress in 1885 (its first session held in Bombay, with A. O. Hume playing a key role). The early leaders petitioned and pleaded; later the movement became a mass struggle under Mahatma Gandhi, who returned from South Africa and made non-violence (ahimsa) and satyagraha (truth-force) the weapons of the freedom struggle. The key Gandhian movements are the ones CTET tests: the Non-Cooperation Movement (1920-22), in which Indians boycotted British goods, schools, courts and titles; the Civil Disobedience Movement launched by the Dandi Salt March (1930), when Gandhi walked to the sea at Dandi to make salt and break the British salt law; and the Quit India Movement (1942), with its famous slogan 'Do or Die', demanding an immediate end to British rule. The long struggle ended with Independence on 15 August 1947, accompanied by the painful Partition of the country into India and Pakistan. Then began nation-building: framing the Constitution (which came into force on 26 January 1950, making India a republic) under the chairmanship of Dr B. R. Ambedkar's drafting committee, integrating the princely states, and building a democratic nation with universal adult franchise.
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📝 Topic test — 8 questions
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Key Concepts — Quick Reference
Landmark dates to memorise cold
| Harappan Civilisation | c. 2500 BCE (mature phase ~2600-1900 BCE), Bronze Age cities |
|---|---|
| Mauryan Empire / Ashoka | Mauryas from c. 321 BCE; Ashoka ruled c. 268-232 BCE; Kalinga War c. 261 BCE |
| Battle of Plassey | 1757 - Company defeats Siraj-ud-Daulah of Bengal |
| Battle of Buxar | 1764 - Company wins Diwani (revenue rights) of Bengal in 1765 |
| Revolt of 1857 | First major uprising against Company rule; began at Meerut |
| Indian National Congress | Founded 1885 (A. O. Hume); first session in Bombay |
| Dandi Salt March | 1930 - Civil Disobedience Movement led by Gandhi |
| Quit India Movement | 1942 - "Do or Die"; demand for immediate British withdrawal |
| Independence | 15 August 1947; Republic on 26 January 1950 |
Who is who / what is what
| Ashoka | Mauryan king; spread Dhamma; edicts in Brahmi/Prakrit |
|---|---|
| Chandragupta Maurya | Founder of Mauryan Empire, guided by Chanakya (Kautilya) |
| Samudragupta | Gupta ruler praised in the Prayag Prashasti (Allahabad pillar) |
| Akbar | Greatest Mughal; policy of sulh-i-kul (peace with all); Din-i-Ilahi |
| Sources of history | Archaeological (tools, coins, monuments) + literary (manuscripts, inscriptions) |
| Bhakti & Sufi | Devotional movements stressing love of God over ritual/caste |