Partition of Bengal Significant Signposts 1905-1911
Book Specification
Item Code: | IDH327 |
Author: | Nityapriya Ghosh And Ashoke Kumar Mukhopadhyay |
Publisher: | Sahitya Samsad |
Edition: | 2022 |
ISBN: | 8179550656 |
Pages: | 217 (B & W Illus: 60, Map:1) |
Cover: | Hardcover |
Other Details | 10.6" X 7.3" |
Weight | 850 gm |
Book Description
About the Book
The Partition of Bengal in 1905 and its annulment in 1911-12 are landmarks in the history of India's struggle for freedom. The partition led the people of Bengal to protest against the arbitrary and motivated decision. The protest went through three phases: meetings and memorials, constitutional boycott, and terrorism. Bengali sentiments were sought to be placated by the eventual revocation of British India was moved to Delhi from Calcutta to check the furore of Bengal militancy.
This volume brings together a selection of texts, including the relevant government resolutions and proclamations; memorials and resolutions adopted at public protest meetings; historic lectures and addresses by Lord Curzon, Sir Charles Tegart, Abdur Rasul, Surendranath Banerjea, Rabindranath Tagore, Bepin Chandra Pal, Krishnakumar Mitra; essays, comments and editorials in newspapers of the period - and in The Bengalee, Bande Mataram and Yugantar, three major contemporary organs of protest. It offers readers a direct feel of the pulse of the times; and allows social scientists, historians and scholars to study closely the beginnings of the communal divide that led to the second Partition of 1947.
About the Author
Nityapriya Ghosh (b. 1934) has taught English in colleges, worked in the civil service and has been a public relations executive. He has written books on Rabindranath Tagore and writes on literary and political subjects.
Ashoke Kumar Mukhopadhyay (b. 1955) works as a corporate communications executive and has written political biographies and edited documents on communism in India.
H. H Risley's Letter of 3 December 1903 | 1 |
Lord Curzon's Visit in East Bengal | 17 |
Town Hall Memorial, 18 March 1904 | 33 |
Public Resolution on the Partition of Bengal | 38 |
Resolution by Congress | 39 |
Town Hall Resolution | 39 |
Bengal Provincial Conference, Mymensingh, 1905 | 40 |
East Bengal's Memorial to the Secretary of State | 46 |
The Partition of Bengal : Secretary of State's Despatch | 50 |
East Bengal's Second Memorial to the Secretary of State | 52 |
The Partition Question and the Memorials to Parliament | 54 |
Government of India's Resolution (19 July 1905) | 57 |
Government Resolution on the Partition of Bengal | 62 |
Memorial from Bengal to Hon'ble the Commons | 65 |
Agitation or Organisation ? B C Pal | 68 |
Partition and Protest | 71 |
The Protest Meeting in the Calcutta Town Hall 7 August 1905 | 73 |
Town Hall Resolution | 79 |
Sir Andrew Fraser's Speech at Murshidabad | 80 |
The Legal Aspect of the Partition Question | 82 |
Proclamation (1 September 1905) | 84 |
Tagore's National Songs | 85 |
Calcutta in Ferment | 86 |
Bangalakshmir Bratakatha | 91 |
The Carlyle Circular and the Anti-Circular Society | 95 |
Bengal Provincial Conference, Barisal, 1906 | 96 |
That Sinful Desire | 123 |
Mukti Kon Pathe | 126 |
The Man of the Past and the Man of the Future | 129 |
All India Muslim League Formed, 1906 | 132 |
Bengal Provincial Conference, Berhampur, 1907 | 132 |
Doctrine of Passive Resistance | 142 |
Mymensingh District Conference, 1907 | 147 |
Mahomedans and Swadeshi | 150 |
Lal Istahar | 153 |
East Bengal Disturbances | 158 |
True Meaning of the Risley Circular | 161 |
The Bengal Government's Letter | 164 |
Mr. Chowdhury's Policy | 166 |
In Praise of Honest John | 168 |
The Morality of Boycott | 172 |
Bengal Provincial Conference, Pabna, 1908 | 175 |
Revolutionary Beginnings | 193 |
'Actions' by Secret Societies and Extremist Forces in Bengal 1906-1911 | 195 |
Terror: "Perverted Patriotism" | 202 |
Notification (1912) | 208 |
Announcement (1912) | 208 |
Bengal Provincial Conference, Dacca, 1913 | 209 |
Chronology of Events | 212 |