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Showing posts from March, 2025

Today In Indian History (1st April)

1621 - Birth of Guru Tegh Bahadur on 1st April in 1621. He was the ninth of ten gurus in the Sikh religion. Guru Tegh Bahadur was executed on the orders of Aurangzeb, the sixth Mughal emperor, in Delhi, on 11 November in 1675.  Born in Amritsar, Guru Tegh Bahadur was the youngest son of Guru Hargobind (1595 – 1644), the sixth Sikh guru. 

Today In Indian History (29th March)

1857 - Mangal Pandey , a sepoy of the 34th Regiment of the Bengal Native Infantry (BNI) mutinied against his commanding officers of the East India Company on 29 March 1857.  This event and his role in the subsequent events led to more resentment among the sepoys of the Bengal Army ultimately aiding in the Revolt of 1857. Also known as the Sepoy Mutiny,   the Revolt of 1857 resulted in the dissolution of the East India Company and the beginning of the British Raj through the Government of India Act 1858. Mangal Pandey was executed on 8 April 1857.  

Today In Indian History (27th March)

Death of Syed Ahmad Khan on 27th March in 1898. Sayyid Ahmad Khan was an Indian Muslim reformer and educationist. He is credited for originating the two-nation theory, founding the Aligarh Movement and being a founding father of Pakistan.  Syed Ahmad Khan began publishing the journal Tehzeeb-ul-Akhlaq (Social Reformer) on 24 December 1870 to spread awareness and knowledge on modern subjects and promote reforms in Muslim society. He was born on 17 October in 1817 in  Delhi, 

Today In Indian History (26th March)

1552   -  Amar Das became the third Sikh Guru on 26 March 1552 at the age of 73. Born on 5 May 1479 at Basarke in Amritsar district, Guru Amar Das was raised in an orthodox Hindu family. He established his headquarters in Goindwal. He introduced the ceremony of the Anand Karaj Marriage . He died on 1st September 1574, at the age of 95. 

Today In Indian History (24rd March)

1946 - Cabinet Mission arrives in India on 24 March 1946 . In September 1945 , the newly elected Labour government under Clement Atlee in Britain expressed its intention of creating a Constituent Assembly for India, that would frame India’s Constitution. The Cabinet Mission was sent to India to make this happen. Cabinet Mission arrives in New Delhi on 24 March 1946 The members of the Cabinet Mission were Lord Penthick-Lawrence , Secretary of State for India, Sir Stafford Cripps , President of the Board of Trade, and A.V Alexander , First Lord of Admiralty. The Cabinet Mission's plan failed due to the disagreement between the Indian National Congress and the Muslim League.  1776 - Death of Carnatic classical music composer Muthuswami Dikshitar on 24 March in 1776. He was one of the trinity of Carnatic music. Tyagaraja and Syama Sastri are the other two. Dikshitar mainly composed in Sanskrit with the exception of a few kritis in Telugu and Manipravalam. Manipravalam is a combina...

Today In Indian History (23rd March)

1351 - Firuz Shah Tughlaq , the third ruler of the  Tughlaq dynasty, succeeded the throne on 23 March 1351 at the age of forty-six.  He became sultan after the demise of his cousin Muhammad-bin-Tughlaq who had become second Tughlaq sultan in 1325 AD.  Firuz Shah Tughlaq is credited with the founding of the cities of Jaunpur in 1359 (Uttar Pradesh), Hissar and Fatehabad (Haryana), Firozpur (Punjab). Jaunpur was named after Muhammad bin Tughluq who was known by the name of Juna Khan before his accession to the throne. Firuz Shah Tughlaq was a religious bigot and this prevented him from being just to his non–Muslim subjects by imposing Jizya tax on them. Firuz died in 1388 , aged eighty-two.  His tomb is located in Hauz Khas in Delhi. 1931 - Death of revolutionary leaders Bhagat Singh , Raj Guru and Sukhdev on 23rd March, 1931. They were were hanged to death by the British government at the Lahore Central Jail in Lahore in 1931. They were given the death sentenc...

Today In Indian History (22nd March)

1739 - Military leader Nader Shah sacks Delhi on 22 March 1739 during the reign of Mughal emperor Mohammad Shah by killing thousands of the inhabitants of the city.   1894 - Birth of Surya Sen , an Indian revolutionary, on 22 March 1894 . He is best known for leading the Chittagong Armoury Raid in 1930. A revolutionary leader from Bengal, Surya Sen had founded the Chittagong Republic Army with a view to freeing Chittagong (now in Bangladesh) from the British rule. A teacher by profession, Surya Sen led an armed uprising and organized simultaneous attacks on the British strongholds. On April 18, 1930, the Chittagong (or Indian) Republican Army, founded by  Surya Sen, raided two government armories. The telegraph, telephone and railway station were disrupted. As a result, Chittagong was completely cut of from the rest of India. After these daring raids and attacks, Surya Sen declared the formation of a free National Revolutionary Government. But his venture did not last l...

Today In Indian History (21st March)

1887 - Birth of Manabendra Nath Ro y, better known as M. N. Roy , on 21 March 1887. M. N. Roy was a revolutionary, philosopher, radical activist and political theorist. Roy was the founder of the Mexican Communist Party and the Communist Party of India (Tashkent group). M. N. Roy died on 25 January in 1954.

Today In Indian History (20th March)

1351 - Death of Muḥammad bin Tughluq on 20th March in 1351 . Muhammad bin Tughluq was the second ruler of the  Tughluq dynasty of the Delhi Sultanate. He was the son of Ghiyas-ud-din Tughlaq , the founder of the Tughlaq dynasty. He ascended the throne after killing his father. Born Jauna Khan  aka Ulugh Khan , Muhammad bin Tughluq died 20th March in 1351 while fighting against the rebels in Thatta in Sindh.  Muhammad bin Tughluq was among the most remarkable, enigmatic and controversial figures among the Sultans of Delhi. To his contemporaries, he was a mixture of cruelty and kindness.    1602 -  Dutch East India Company was established on 20 March 1602 to facilitate trade between the Netherlands and the rest of the world. Chinsurah (now Chuchura)  in Hooghly district in West Bengal was a famous Dutch settlement.  A View of Chinsurah  | Wikimedia Commons 1782 - 20th March marks the anniversary of the birth of the Oriental Scholar, Lieutenant...

Today In Indian History (19th March)

1919 - Rowlatt Act was passed by the British government in Delhi on 18 March 1919 . The Rowlatt Act made it legal for British forces to arrest and hold Indians without a trial and judicial review.  Jallianwala Bagh massacre took place in Amritsar to protest against the Rowlatt Act on 13th April in 1919. In 1919, Satyagraha Sabha was formed by Mahatma Gandhi in Bombay to protest against the Rowlatt Act.  

Today In Indian History (17th March)

1920 - Birth of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman on 17 March 1920. Also known by the honorific Bangabandhu, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman was a Bangladeshi politician, revolutionary, statesman and activist, who was the first president of Bangladesh. Sheikh Mujibur Rahman was voted as the Greatest Bengali of all time in the 2004 BBC opinion poll.  Sheikh Mujibur Rahman was  killed during a military coup in 1975, along with most of his family.

Today In Indian History (16th March)

1527  - The Battle of Khanwa was fought on 16 March 1527 at Khanwa, a village in the Bharatpur district of Rajasthan. Khanwa is 60 km west of Agra. The battle was fought between Babur , the first Mughal emperor, and the Mewar ruler Rana Sanga for supremacy of Northern India. The battle resulted in the victory of the Mughal forces. 1559 - Birth of Maharana Amar Singh I on 16 March in 1559 . Amar Singh was the son and successor of Maharana Pratap of Mewar Kingdom. The first military campaign undertaken by Jahangir , the Mughal emperor and son of Akbar , was against Rana Amar Singh. The Mughal expeditions sent against Mewar in 1606 and 1608-09 proved indecisive, but in 1613-14 the campaign led by Jahangir's third son Khurram (later Shah Jahan ) proved decisive and Rana Amar Singh submitted to the Mughals in 1615. Jahangir offered most liberal terms to Mewar and thus ended a long struggle between Mewar and the Mughals. The emperor installed two life-size marble statues of Rana Amar ...

Today In Indian History (15th March)

1206 - Muhammad of Ghor or Muhammad Ghori was stabbed to death at Damyak (in modern Pakistan) on the 15th March, 1206. Muhammad Ghori was the next prominent invader on India after Mahmud of Ghazni. Muhammad Ghori took the title of  Mu'izzuddin  Muhammad ibn Sam after he became sultan.

Today In Indian History (14th March)

1878 - The Vernacular Press Act of 1878 was introduced by Lord Lytton , then Viceroy of India, and was passed on March 14, 1878. The Vernacular Press Act was enacted to curtail the freedom of the Indian press and prevent the expression of criticism toward British policies.  The Vernacular Press Act was repealed in 1881 by Lord Ripon, the then viceroy of India. 

Today In Indian History (13th March)

1742  - Death of Nana Phadnavis (also spelt as Nana Fadnavis) on 13 March 1800 in Pune. Nana Fadnavis was a brilliant Maratha minister and statesman during the Peshwa administration in Pune. He is often referred to as "the Maratha Machiavelli".   Nana Phadnavis was born in Satara on 12th February in 1742.  1940 - Michael O’Dwyer was killed in London on 13th March 1940 by Udham Singh. Udham Singh was a great revolutionary who avenged the infamous Jalianwala Bagh massacre in Amritsar by murdering Michael O’Dwyer, who was the Lieutenant Governor of Punjab in 1919 when Brigadier General Reginald Dyer, the military commander of Amritsar had ordered the firing on the innocent people who have gathered here to protest the arrest of Congress leaders Dr. Saifuddin Kitchlew and Dr. Satya Pal under Rowlatt Act. Udham Singh killed O’Dwyer in London on 13th March 1940. He was arrested on the spot and sentenced to death on 21st July in the same year.

Today In Indian History (11th March)

1689 - Death of Sambhaji on 1 1 March 1689 . Eldest son of Shivaji , the founder of the Maratha Empire, Sambhaji ruled from 1681 to 1689. He was captured, and after cruel torture for more than three weeks by Aurangzeb, he was brutally put to death by the Mughals forces on the instruction of Aurangzeb. He was executed by beheading on 11 March 1689 at Tulapur on the banks of the Bhima river near Pune. Sambhaji was born at Purandar fort to Shivaji's first wife, Saibai Nimbalkar, who died on  5 September 1659  when he was two years old. 

Today In Indian History (10th March)

1897 - Death of Savitribai Phule on March 10 in 1897 . Savitribai Phule was a poet, reformer and educationist. Born on January 3, 1831 in Naigaon in a lowly Mali family in Maharashtra Satara district she was married off at the tender age of 10. Her parents were Lakshmi and Khandoji Nevase Patil.  Critical of the prevailing Hindu religion and custom Savitribai Phule along with her husband, Jyotirao Phule, established several schools for the uplift of the untouchables and women.  Savitribai Phule started India’s first school for girls at Pune's Bhide Wada in 1848. To make the depressed classes conscious of their rights, she and her husband founded the Satya Sodhak Samaj in 1873.  Savitribai passed away on March 10, 1897. Her important works include: • Kavya Phule (“Flowers of Poems”) (published in 1854) • Bavan Kashi Subodh Ratnakar (published in1892) • Matushri Savitribai Phulenchi Bhashane Va Gaani • Jotibanchi Bhashane Vol. 1 to 4 – [Collection of Mahatma Ph...

Today In Indian History (9th March)

1285 - Death of Muhammad Khan, eldest son of Slave Sultan Balban, on 9th March in 1285. Balban did not lose sight of the Mongol danger that was lurking in the north-west frontier of the Mamluk kingdom during his rule .  Balban’s cousin Sher Khan Sunqar was ably defending the frontier. However, Balban grew suspicious of him and got him murdered. His death left the field open for the Mongols to indulge in their incursions of the frontier tracts. After  Sher Khan Sunqar   prince Muhammad was made governor of Multan to check the Mongol menace.  Bughra Khan, Balban's second son, was placed in charge of the territories of  Samana and Sunam. In 1279 they, together with Malik Mubarak Bektars from Delhi, successfully repulsed the Mongol invasion. However, in A.D. 1285 Mongols under their leader Tamar invaded Punjab. Muhammad proceeded towards Lahore and Dipalpur and was killed during his fight against the Mongols. He was given the title of Shahid, "the Martyr" and cam...

Today In Indian History (8th March)

1535- Death of Rani Karnavati on 8 March 1535 . A princess and temporary ruler from Bundi in  Rajasthan Rani Karnavati, also known as Rani Karmavati, was married to Mewar ruler Rana Sanga (c. 1508–1528).  Rani Karnavati was grandmother of Maharana Pratap. She served as regent during the minority of her son, from 1527 until 1533. She was as fierce as her husband and defended Chittor, the capital of Mewar, with a small contingent of soldiers until it inevitably fell to the Gujarat army which was led by Bahadur Shah of Gujarat. She refused to flee and performed jauhar to protect her honor.

Today In Indian History (7th March)

1775 - The Treaty of Surat was signed on 7th March in 1775 . Under the treaty Raghunath Rao , one of the claimants to the throne of the Peshwa, agreed to cede Salsette and Bassein Fort to the British in consideration of being himself restored to Poona.  Warren Hastings, the Governor-General of Bengal, disapproved of the Bombay Government’s action and annulled the Treaty of Surat and sent his own agent to negotiate a very different new pact, the Treaty of Purandhar (1776).  

Manasollasa of Someshwara III

Manasollasa is authored by Kalyani Chalukya king Bhulokamalla Someshwara III who ruled from 1126 AD and 1138. Also known as Abhilasitartha-chintamani (the wish-fulfilling magic stone), this five volume compendium deals with a vast array of topics namely polity, governance, ethics, economics, astronomy, astrology, rhetoric, metallurgy, veterinary medicine, horticulture, perfumes, food, architecture, games, painting, poetry, healing of trees, dance and music. This 12th century encyclopaedic treatise is written in Sanskrit.  

Today In Indian History (6th March)

1759  -  The siege of Masulipatam  or Machilipatnam commenced on 6 March 1759  by the British during the Seven Years' War 1756–63),  a conflict between European powers.  The siege commenced on 6 March 1759 and lasted until the storming of the town by the British on the 7 April. The British were commanded by Colonel Francis Forde while the French defenders were under the command of Conflans.

Today In Indian History (5th March)

1539 - Death of Nuno da Cunha on 5 March 1539. He was a Portuguese admiral who was governor of Portuguese possessions in India from 1529 to 1538.  He transferred his capital from Cochin to Goa in 1530 AD and established factories at San thome (Madras) and Hughli (Bengal). In 1534 AD, he captured Diu and Bassein from the Sultan of Gujarat, Bahadur Shah and compelled him to sign the treaty of Bassein. 1931 - The Gandhi-Irwin Pact was signed on 5th March 1931 by Mahatma Gandhi and Indian Viceroy Lord Irwin . Under the agreement Gandhi agreed to end the Civil Disobedience Movement in India against British rule and to join the second Round Table Conference , held from September to December 1931 in London. The Government withdrew the repressive ordinances and released political prisoners except those guilty of violence. 

Today In Indian History (3rd March)

1575 -   On  3 March   1575,  the Battle of Tukaroi was fought between the Mughals army and the Sultanate of Bengal .  The Battle of Tukaroi, also known as the Battle of Bajhaura or the Battle of Mughulmari , took place near the village of Tukaroi in present-day Balasore district of Odisha. It resulted in a Mughal victory and led to the weakening of the Bengal Sultanate which was annexed to the Mughal empire after their victory in the Battle of Rajmahal in 1576.   1707 - Death of Aurangzeb, the sixth  Mughal emperor, on 3rd  March.  He  ascended the throne after  imprisoning his father Shah Jehan, the fifth Mughal emperor in 1658.  Shah Jahan passed the remaining years of his life in captivity until  he died at the age of seventy-four in 1966. A ruthless and intolerant ruler known for his military prowess, Aurangzeb  ruled from  1658 to 1707.  Mughal Empire was at its most expansive during the r...

Today In Indian History (2nd March)

1700   - Death of Rajaram , the third king ( Chhatrapati ) of the Maratha Kingdom, on 2nd March in 1700. He was the third king ( Chhatrapati ) of the Maratha Kingdom, who ruled from 1689 to 1700.  Born on 24 February in 1670 ,  Rajaram was the son Shivaji. He ascended the throne in  1689 after the death of his (half) brother  Sambhaji who was brutally put to death by Aurangzeb.   Rajaram died on 2 March 1700  in Sinhgad  fort (in Pune district) at the age of 30.  1949 - Death of  Sarojini Naidu   on  2nd March in   1949.   Sarojini Naidu  was born  on 13 February in 1879. She was the president of the Indian National Congress in the Kanpur session held in 1925. She became the second woman to preside over the Congress after Annie Besant. She was given the title of " Nightingale of India ".  Sarojini Naidu had participated in the Second Round Table Conference in 1931.  Round Table...