Top 20 Independence Day Of India Greeting Images, Gif's 2020
What Is Independence day Of India?
Indian Independence Bill, which carves the independent nations of India
and Pakistan out of the former Mogul Empire, comes into force at the
stroke of midnight on August 15, 1947.
Disclaimers: Images are not for sale!
The Indian independence movement first gained momentum at the beginning of the 20th century
Gandhi organised the first of his many effective passive-resistance campaigns in protest of Britain’s oppressive rule in India.
the British government made some concessions to the Indian nationalists,
but during World War II discontent with British rule had grown to such a degree that Britain feared losing India to the Axis.
Gandhi and other nationalist leaders rejected as empty the British
promises of Indian self-government after the war and organised the
nonviolent
Anti-British demonstrations accelerated after the war,
to appease the Muslim League and conclude the independence negotiations.
August 15, 1947, the Indian Independence Bill took effect,
that would result in the deaths of hundreds of thousands, including Gandhi,
who was assassinated by a Hindu fanatic in January 1948 during a prayer vigil to an area of Muslim-Hindu violence.
Axis help to raise a liberation force. The raising of the Indian National Army in 1942 by Subhash Chandra Bose would see a unique military campaign to end British rule.
The congress also led a civil disobedience movement in 1942 demanding that the British leave India.
Following these and widespread communal rioting in Calcutta, the Raj ended on the mid-night of 15th August, 1947,
but only at the expense of the Partition of the country into India and Pakistan.
India developed a class of educated elites whose political organising sought Indian political rights and representation.
alienation from issues facing common Indians — led to an upsurge in revolutionary activities aimed at overthrowing the European colonial powers, particularly the British.
The movement came to a head between 1918 and 1922 when the first series of non-violent campaigns of civil disobedience were launched by the Indian National Congress
The congress also led a civil disobedience movement in 1942 demanding that the British leave India a movement called the Quit India Movement. Following these and widespread communal rioting in Calcutta, ended on the mid-night of 15th August, 1947, but only at the expense of the Partition of the country into Two countries.
Please do not enter any spam links in the comment box.