Saturday, December 29, 2012

Presidents of Indian National Congress

Year Location of Session President
1885 Bombay Womesh Chandra Bonnerjee
1886 Calcutta Dadabhai Naoroji
1887 Madras Badruddin Tyabji
1888 Allahabad George Yule
1889 Bombay William Wedderburn
1890 Calcutta Pherozeshah Mehta
1891 Nagpur P. Ananda Charlu
1892 Allahabad Womesh Chandra Bonnerjee
1893 Lahore Dadabhai Naoroji
1894 Madras Alfred Webb
1895 Poona Surendranath Banerjea
1896 Calcutta Rahimtulla M. Sayani
1897 Amraoti C. Sankaran Nair
1898 Madras Ananda Mohan Bose
1899 Lucknow Romesh Chunder Dutt
1900 Lahore Narayan Ganesh Chandavarkar
1901 Calcutta Dinshaw Edulji Wacha
1902 Ahmedabad Surendranath Banerjea
1903 Madras Lalmohan Ghosh
1904 Bombay Henry Cotton
1905 Benares Gopal Krishna Gokhale
1906 Calcutta Dadabhai Naoroji
1907 Surat Rashbihari Ghosh
1908 Madras Rashbihari Ghosh
1909 Lahore Madan Mohan Malaviya
1910 Allahabad William Wedderburn
1911 Calcutta Bishan Narayan Dar
1912 Bankipur Rao Bahadur Raghunath Narasinha Mudholkar
1913 Karachi Nawab Syed Mohammad Bahadur
1914 Madras Bhupendra Nath Bose
1915 Bombay Satyendra Prasanna Sinha
1916 Lucknow Ambica Charan Mazumdar
1917 Calcutta Annie Besant
1918 Bombay Syed Hasan Imam
1918 Delhi Madan Mohan Malaviya
1919 Amritsar Motilal Nehru
1920 Calcutta Lala Lajpat Rai
1920 Nagpur C. Vijayaraghavachariar
1921 Ahmedabad Hakim Ajmal Khan
1922 Gaya Chittaranjan Das
1923 Cocanada Maulana Mohammad Ali
1923 Delhi Maulana Abul Kalam Azad
1924 Belgaum Mahatma Gandhi
1925 Kanpur Sarojini Naidu
1926 Gauhati S. Srinivasa Iyengar
1927 Madras Mukhtar Ahmad Ansari
1928 Calcutta Motilal Nehru
1929 Lahore Jawaharlal Nehru
1931 Karachi Vallabhbhai Patel
1932 Delhi Madan Mohan Malaviya
1933 Calcutta Nellie Sen Gupta/Madan Mohan Malaviya
1934 Bombay Rajendra Prasad
1935 Lucknow Jawaharlal Nehru
1936 Faizpur Jawaharlal Nehru
1938 Haripura Subhas Chandra Bose
1939 Tripuri Subhas Chandra Bose
1940 Ramgarh Maulana Abul Kalam Azad
1946 Meerut J. B. Kripalani
1948 Jaipur Pattabhi Sitaramayya
1950 Nashik Purshottam Das Tandon
1951 New Delhi Jawaharlal Nehru
1953 Hyderabad Jawaharlal Nehru
1954 Kalyani Jawaharlal Nehru
1955 Avadi (Madras) U. N. Dhebar
1956 Amritsar U. N. Dhebar
1957 Indore U. N. Dhebar
1958 Gauhati U. N. Dhebar
1959 Nagpur U. N. Dhebar
1960 Bangalore Neelam Sanjeeva Reddy
1961 Bhavnagar Neelam Sanjeeva Reddy
1962 Patna Neelam Sanjeeva Reddy
1964 Bhubaneswar K. Kamaraj
1965 Durgapur K. Kamaraj
1966 Jaipur K. Kamaraj
1968 Hyderabad S. Nijalingappa
1969 Faridabad S. Nijalingappa
1969 Bombay Jagjivan Ram
1972 Calcutta Shankar Dayal Sharma
1975 Chandigarh Dev Kanta Borooah
1978 New Delhi Indira Gandhi
1983 Calcutta Indira Gandhi
1985 Bombay Rajiv Gandhi
1992 Tirupati P. V. Narasimha Rao
1997 Calcutta Sitaram Kesri

Today in India History (29th December)



December 29, 1844

  • Womesh Chunder Bonnerjee or Umesh Chandra Banerjee, the first president of Indian National Congress in 1885, is born in Calcutta. He was also the first Indian to fight the election to British Parliament.

Thursday, December 27, 2012

Today in India History (28th December)




Image Credit: Wikimedia Commons
December 28 1885
The Indian National Congress (INC) is Founded by A.O. Hume in Mumbai. First session of INC was held in Mumbai from 28 –31 December in 1885.

Today in India History (27th December)

·         The famous Urdu poet Mirza Ghalib during the Mughal period was born in Agra on 27 December 1797. Today is Ghalib's 215th birth anniversary.


Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Today in India History (26th December)

  • Zahir-ud-din Muhammad Babur Shah or Babur, as he is generally called, died on 26th December at the age of 47 in 1530 in Agra. Babur was the founder of the Mughal dynasty in India in 1526. The Mughal rule in India came to an end in 1857 when it last ruler Bahadur Shah Zafar was exiled to Burma by the British.
  • Henry Louis Vivian Derozio, founder of Young Bengal Movement, passes away on 26th December 1831 at a young age of 22 in Calcutta.


Tuesday, December 25, 2012

Today in India History (25th December)




Leading nationalist and patriot Madan Mohan Malaviya was born on 25th December 1961 in Allahabad. He is the founder of Banaras Hindu University in 1916 and remained its vice-chancellor from 1919 to 1938.

Monday, December 24, 2012

Adil Shahi Dynasty of Bijapur

Photo taken in 1928
Photographer: Martin Hürlimann
Source: ebay.com

Adil Shahi Dynasty of Bijapur was one of the five succession states that came into existence after disintegration of the Bahmani Sultanate of Deccan. Yusuf Adil Khan was the founder of the Adil Shahi kingdom whose rulers ruled Bijapur from until 1686 when Bijapur was annexed into the Mughal Empire by the last great Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb.

Yusuf Adil Khan
A protégé of the wazir of Bahmani Sultanate, Mahmud Gawan, Yusuf Adil Khan was a descendant of a scion of the Ottoman dynasty. A prominent figure in the declining years of the Bahmani Sultanate, he was appointed governor of the Bijapur province of the Sultanate. 

Yusuf Adil was married to a Babuji Khanam, sister of a Maratha warrior. After a reign of twenty two years Yusuf died in 1510. He was buried in Gogi, a town in Yadgir district of Karnataka. The first three rulers of Bijapur Sultanate (excluding Mallu Adil Shahi who was deposed within six months) were buried in Gogi. Today Gogi is known for being home to reserves of uranium. 


Himself a scholar and accomplished musician, Yusuf Adil was a great patron of art and literature.


Ismail Adil Khan
Yusuf Adil Khan was succeeded by his 13-year old son Ismail. As soon as he took the reigns of the kingdom, he has to cede Goa to the Portuguese under their governor Afonso de Albuquerque. Ismail Adil Shah defeated the Barid Shahi ruler and occupied Bidar for some time. However, he proved unsuccessful in withstanding the invasion of the Vijayanagar army under Krishnadeva Raya and as a result Raichur, bone of contention between Vijayanagar and Bahmani Sultanate, passed into the hands of Krishnadeva Raya.

Ibrahim Adil Shah
Ismail died in 1534 and was succeeded by his son Mallu. Mallu Adil Shah was an incapable ruler and was deposed only sixth months after becoming Bijapur ruler. He was replaced by his younger brother Ibrahim. Ibrahim Adil Shah was the first Bijapur ruler to assume the title of Shah. During his reign Persian was replaced by “Hindvi’ (Dakhini Urdu ) as the official language of Bijapur. Tolerant of other religions, Ibrahim Adil Shah employed the Hindus in the kingdom. Though Ibrahim Adil Shah was defeated by Rama Raya, the de facto ruler of Vijayanagar, he was able to occupy Adoni in 1535.

Ali Adil Shah

Ali Adil Shah's Tomb known as Bara Kaman

Ibrahim Adil Shah died in 1558 and was succeeded by his son Ali Adil Shah. He was in constant quarrel with the Nizam Shahis of Ahmadnagar for the occupation of Sholapur. He entered into an alliance with Rama Raya and the Golconda Sultan Ibrahim Qutb Shah and invaded Ahmadnagar. Hussein Nizam Shah I was forced to flee to Junnar. Ibrahim Adil Shah died in 1558.  

After Ibrahim Adil Shah's death  Ali Adil Shah became Bijapur ruler in 1558. Ali Adil Shah entered into a matrimonial alliance with Nizam Shahis by marrying daughter of Hussein Nizam Shah I, Chand Bibi, in 1564. 

The haughty conduct of the Vijayanagar army instilled a sense of bitterness among the Bahmani succession states including Bijapur. 

Thus was formed the Muslim Confederacy which dismantled the mighty Vijayanagar empire in 1565 at the Battle of Talikota, also known as that of Rakkasagi–Tangadag.

Ibrahim Adil Shah II

Ali Adil Shah was murdered in 1580, and since he had no sons, his nephew Ibrahim II ascended the throne. Ibrahim Adil Shah II, who ruled for 47 years till 1627, was a great patron of art and culture. He was tolerant of other religions and affectionately called Jagadguru by his Hindu subjects. During his first twenty years of reign his aunt Chand Bibi ran the show. Chand Bibi was known for her intrepidity. When Mughal army were advancing to Ahmadnagar to annex it,  Chand Bibi returned to her place of birth and it was during her battle with the Mughals under Akbar that she was killed in 1600. Her death proved to be a blow to Ibrahim Adil Shah II who gave his daughter in marriage to Mughal Prince Daniyal. 

A man of learning, Ibrahim Ail Shah II wrote the famous book of Hindi songs, Nawras-Namah. During his reign the Tarikh- i- Ferishta was completed. He also constructed several works of architecture including the magnificent tomb he built for his wife Chand Sultana.

Muhamamd Adil Shah
Ibrahim Adil Shah II was succeeded by his son Muhamamd Adil Shah in 1627. He was able to extend the territories of Bijapur by capturing those of Ahmadnagar and Vijayanagar, and helped the Mughals in annexing the former in 1636. Muhammad Adil Shah II died in 1657 and was buried in the magnificent tomb the Gol Gumbaz, which is an architectural marvel.

Ali Adil Shah II
Muhammad Adil Shah II was succeeded to the Bijapur throne by Ali II in 1657. He ruled till 1672. Fifth Mughal emperor Shah Jahan refused to recognize Ali II as the legitimate ruler of Bijapur and sent Prince Aurangzeb to lay siege on Bijapur. However, Ali was saved from the fact that Aurangzeb had to return to the North to fight the war of succession amongst the sons of Shah Jahan. This prolonged the longevity of Bijapur kingdom to an extent. Meanwhile Shivaji came into prominence in the south. Like his predecessors, Ali was also a patron of art and literature. His half-finished mausoleum bears testimony to his fondness for art.

Sikander Adil Shah
Ali II was succeeded by Sikander, the last ruler of the Adil Shahi Dynasty of Bijapur. In 1674, Shivaji was crowned as Chhatrapati at Raigarh. In 1681, Aurangzeb moved to South India never tor return till his death and Bijapur was incorporated into the Mughal Empire on 12 September 1686. Thus the independence of Bijapur was extinguished.  Sikander Adil Shah died in 1700. at the time of his death he was just 32 years old. 



Sunday, December 23, 2012

Today in Indian History (24th December)

Vasco da Gama lands at Calicut, May 20, 1498


  • On 24th December, 1524, renowned Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama died in Cochin (now Kochi), a major port in India.
  • Pattabhi Sitaramayya, freedom fighter and president of Indian National Congress in 1948, was born in Andhra Pradesh on 24th December, 1880. He was defeated by Subhash Chandra Bose for the post of Congress President in Tripura Session of 1939. Mahatma Gandhi termed Sitaramayya’s defeat as ‘his own’.
  • On 24th December, 1924, famous playback singer Mohammed Rafi was born.
  • Periyar E.V.Ramasami, prominent social worker and freedom fighter, passes away on 24th December in 1973 at the age of 94. He started the Self-Respect Movement, one of the several social movements for the uplift of the society.
  • Melakkath Gopalan Ramachandran, popularly known as MGR, dies on 24th December in 1987.  A very popular politician, he was the Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu. The crowd that gathered in his funeral was one of the largest in Independent India. He was posthumously awarded India’s top civilian award Bharat Ratna.
  • On 24th December in 1999, Indian Airlines Airbus 300 en route from Kathmandu to Delhi with 186 people on board was hijacked shortly after take-off.

Today In Indian History (22nd January)

1666 - Death of Shah Jahan  on January 22, 1666 in Agra. He was  born on January 5, 1592 in Lahore. Shah Jahān was the Mughal emperor from ...