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Partition of Bengal & Swadeshi Movement






πŸ“Œ Topic 04 of 6 Β· Chapter 14 Β· Indian National Movement (1857–1920)

Partition of Bengal (1905) & Swadeshi Movement

Lord Curzon’s Partition of Bengal, Swadeshi movement, boycott of British goods, national education.

βš”οΈ Partition of Bengal (October 16, 1905)

  • Ordered by Lord Curzon (Viceroy) on October 16, 1905
  • Bengal divided into:
    • East Bengal and Assam β€” Muslim majority; capital Dhaka
    • West Bengal β€” Hindu majority; capital Calcutta
  • Official reason: Administrative convenience β€” Bengal was too large to govern
  • Real motive: Divide and rule β€” separate Hindus and Muslims; weaken Bengali nationalism
  • Widely seen as a divide and rule policy

πŸ•ŠοΈ Response β€” Raksha Bandhan

  • October 16, 1905 (Partition day) observed as Raksha Bandhan
  • Hindus and Muslims tied rakhis to each other β€” symbol of Hindu-Muslim unity
  • Rabindranath Tagore composed “Amar Sonar Bangla” β€” later became Bangladesh’s national anthem
  • Massive protests across Bengal and India

πŸ”₯ Swadeshi Movement

  • Launched as a direct response to the Partition of Bengal
  • Swadeshi = use of Indian-made goods; boycott of British goods
  • British cloth publicly burned; Manchester cloth boycotted
  • National education: National Council of Education established; Bengal National College founded
  • National industries: Promoted Indian industries β€” textiles, matches, soap
  • First mass movement in India β€” involved all sections of society
  • Spread beyond Bengal to Maharashtra, Punjab, Madras
⭐ Significance of Swadeshi Movement: The Swadeshi movement was the first mass movement in India. It showed that ordinary people β€” not just educated elites β€” could participate in the freedom struggle. It promoted Indian industries and vernacular languages. It was a precursor to Gandhi’s Non-Cooperation Movement (1920). Rabindranath Tagore’s songs became anthems of the movement.

πŸ“‰ Annulment of Partition (1911)

  • Bengal partition was annulled in 1911 by Lord Hardinge during the Delhi Durbar
  • Announced during the coronation of King George V
  • Bengal was reunited β€” but Bihar and Orissa were separated from Bengal
  • Capital shifted from Calcutta to Delhi
  • Nationalists celebrated the annulment as a victory
πŸ“ Exam Tip:
β€’ Partition of Bengal = October 16, 1905 = Lord Curzon = divide and rule
β€’ Raksha Bandhan = October 16, 1905 = Hindu-Muslim unity
β€’ “Amar Sonar Bangla” = Rabindranath Tagore = Bangladesh’s national anthem
β€’ Swadeshi = boycott British goods = first mass movement in India
β€’ Annulment of Partition = 1911 = Lord Hardinge = Delhi Durbar