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List of Viceroy of India: Crown Control to Independence

April 8, 2024 1780 0

Introduction

Post India First War of Independence 1857, The British government took direct control of Indian affairs from the East India Company in 1858.  The practice of appointing a Viceroy of India began after this event. The British monarch appointed the viceroy of India to oversee the territories instead of the East India Company. Post-independence, The title of viceroy of India was dropped, and native governor-generals led India and Pakistan. Lord Mountbatten became the last viceroy of India and supervised India’s transition to independence.

Chakravarti Rajagopalachari became India’s first and only Indian governor-general after independence.

A Comprehensive List of Viceroys of India and Their Tenure

  • Lord Canning (1858–62) 
    • Transfer of control from East India Company to the Crown, the Government of India Act, 1858. 
    • White Mutiny’ by European troops in 1859. 
    • Indian Councils Act of 1861. 
  • Lord Elgin I (1862–63): Wahabi Movement
  • Lord John Lawrence (1864–69) 
    • Bhutan War (1865). 
    • Setting up of the High Courts at Calcutta, Bombay, and Madras (1865). 
  • Lord Mayo (1869–72)
    • Opening of the Rajkot College in Kathiawar and the Mayo College at Ajmer for political training of Indian princes. 
    • Establishment of Statistical Survey of India
    • Establishment of the Department of Agriculture and Commerce
    • Introduction of state railways
  • Lord Northbrook (1872–76)
    • Visit of Prince of Wales in 1875. 
    • Trial of Gaekwar of Baroda. 
    • Kuka Movement in Punjab. 
    • Lord Lytton (1876–80)
    • The famine of 1876–78 affected Madras, Bombay, Mysore, Hyderabad, parts of central India and Punjab; 
    • Appointment of the Famine Commission under the presidency of Richard Strachey (1878). 
    • Royal Titles Act (1876), Queen Victoria assumed the title of ‘Kaiser-i-Hind’ or Queen Empress of India.
    • The Vernacular Press Act (1878). 
    • The Arms Act (1878). 
    • The Second Afghan War (1878–80). 
  • Lord Ripon (1880–84) 
    • Repeal of the Vernacular Press Act (1882).
    • The first Factory Act (1881) to improve labour conditions. 
    • Continuation of financial decentralization.
    • Government resolution on local self-government (1882). 
    • Appointment of the Education Commission under the chairmanship of Sir William Hunter (1882). 
    • The Ilbert Bill controversy (1883–84). 
    • Rendition of Mysore. 

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  • Lord Dufferin (1884–88)
    • The Third Burmese War (1885–86). 
    • Establishment of the Indian National Congress
  • Lord Lansdowne (1888–94) 
    • Factory Act (1891). 
    • Categorisation of civil services into imperial, provisional and subordinate. 
    • Indian Councils Act (1892). 
    • Setting up of the Durand Commission (1893) to define the Durand Line between India and Afghanistan (now between Pakistan and Afghanistan; a small portion of the line touches India in Pakistan occupied Kashmir). 
  • Lord Elgin II (1894–99): Two British officials were assassinated by the Chapekar brothers (1897). 
  • Lord Curzon (1899–1905)
    • Appointment of Police Commission (1902) under Sir Andrew Frazer to review police administration.
    • Appointment of the Universities Commission (1902) and passing of the Indian Universities Act (1904).
    • Establishment of the Department of Commerce and Industry. 
    • Calcutta Corporation Act (1899). 
    • Ancient Monuments Preservation Act (1904). 
    • Partition of Bengal (1905). 
    • Curzon-Kitchener controversy. 
    • Younghusband’s Mission to Tibet (1904). 
  • Lord Minto II (1905–10) 
    • Popularisation of anti-partition and Swadeshi Movements
    • Split in Congress in the annual session of 1907 in Surat. 
    • Establishment of the Muslim League by Aga Khan (1906). 
  • Lord Hardinge II (1910–16)
    • Creation of Bengal Presidency (like Bombay and Madras) in 1911. 
    • Transfer of capital from Calcutta to Delhi (1911). 
    • Establishment of the Hindu Mahasabha (1915) by Madan Mohan Malaviya. 
    • The coronation durbar of King George V was held in Delhi (1911). 
  • Lord Chelmsford (1916–21) 
    • Formation of Home Rule Leagues by Annie Besant and Tilak (1916). 
    • Lucknow session of the Congress (1916); Lucknow pact between the Congress and Muslim League (1916). 
    • Foundation of Sabarmati Ashram (1916) after Gandhi’s return; launch of Champaran Satyagraha (1916), Kheda Satyagraha (1918), and Satyagraha at Ahmedabad (1918). 
    • Montagu’s August Declaration (1917); Government of India Act (1919). 
    • The Rowlatt Act (1919); Jallianwala Bagh Massacre (1919); Launch of Non-Cooperation and Khilafat Movements. 
    • Foundation of Women’s University at Poona (1916) and appointment of Saddler’s Commission (1917) for reforms in educational policy. 
    • Death of Tilak (August 1, 1920). 
    • Appointment of S.P. Sinha as governor of Bihar (the first Indian to become a governor).

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  • Lord Reading (1921–26) 
    • Chauri Chaura incident (February 5, 1922) and the subsequent withdrawal of the Non-Cooperation Movement. 
    • Moplah rebellion in Kerala (1921). 
    • Repeal of the Press Act of 1910 and the Rowlatt Act of 1919. 
    • Criminal Law Amendment Act and the abolition of cotton excise. 
    • Communal riots in Multan, Amritsar, Delhi, Aligarh, Arvi, and Calcutta. 
    • Kakori train robbery (1925). 
    • Murder of Swami Shraddhanand (1926). 
    • Establishment of the Swaraj Party by C.R. Das and Motilal Nehru (1922). 
    • The decision to hold simultaneous examinations for the ICS both in Delhi and London, with effect from 1923. 
  • Lord Irwin (1926–31) 
    • Visit of the Simon Commission to India (1928) and the boycott of the commission by the Indians. 
    • An All-Parties Conference was held at Lucknow (1928) for suggestions for the (future) Constitution of India, the report of which was called the Nehru Report or the Nehru Constitution. 
    • Appointment of the Harcourt Butler Indian States Commission (1927). 
    • Murder of Saunders, the assistant superintendent of police of Lahore; bomb blast in the Assembly Hall of Delhi (1929); 
    • the Lahore Conspiracy Case and death of Jatin Das after prolonged hunger strike (1929), and bomb accident in train in Delhi (1929). 
    • Lahore session of the Congress (1929); Purna Swaraj Resolution. 
    • Dandi March (March 12, 1930) by Gandhi to launch the Civil Disobedience Movement.  
    • Deepavali Declaration’ by Lord Irwin (1929). 
    • Boycott of the First Round Table Conference (1930), Gandhi-Irwin Pact (1931), and suspension of the Civil Disobedience Movement. 
  • Lord Willingdon (1931–36)
    • Second Round Table Conference (1931) and failure of the conference, resumption of Civil Disobedience Movement. 
    • Announcement of Communal Award (1932) under which separate communal electorates were set up.
    • ‘Fast unto death’ by Gandhi in Yeravada prison, broken after the Poona Pact (1932). 
    • Third Round Table Conference (1932). 
    • Launch of Individual Civil Disobedience (1933). 
    • The Government of India Act of 1935. 
    • Establishment of All India Kisan Sabha (1936) and Congress Socialist Party by Acharya Narendra Dev and Jayaprakash Narayan (1934). 
    • Burma separated from India (1935). 
  • Lord Linlithgow (1936–44)
    • First general elections (1936–37); Congress attained an absolute majority. 
    • Resignation of the Congress ministries after the outbreak of the Second World War (1939). 
    • Subhas Chandra Bose was elected as the president of Congress at the fifty-first session of the Congress (1938). 
    • Resignation of Bose in 1939 and formation of the Forward Bloc (1939). 
    • Lahore Resolution (March 1940) by the Muslim League, demanded for separate state for Muslims.
    • ‘August Offer’ (1940) by the viceroy; its criticism by the Congress and endorsement by the Muslim League. 
    • Winston Churchill was elected prime minister of England (1940). 
    • Escape of Subhas Chandra Bose from India (1941) and organization of the Indian National Army.
    • Cripps Mission’s Cripps Plan to offer dominion status to India and setting up of a Constituent Assembly; its rejection by the Congress. 
    • The passing of the ‘Quit India Resolution’ by the Congress (1942); outbreak of ‘August Revolution’; or Revolt of 1942 after the arrest of national leaders. 
    • Divide and Quit’ slogan at the Karachi session (1944) of the Muslim League.
  • Lord Wavell (1944–1947)
    • C. Rajagopalachari’s CR Formula (1944), failure of Gandhi Jinnah talks (1944). 
    • Wavell Plan and the Shimla Conference (1942). 
    • End of Second World War (1945). 
    • Proposals of the Cabinet Mission (1946) and its acceptance by the Congress. 
    • Observance of ‘Direct Action Day’ (August 16, 1946), also known as the 1946 Calcutta Killings, by the Muslim League. 
    • Elections to the Constituent Assembly, formation of Interim Government by the Congress (September 1946). 
    • Announcement of the end of British rule in India by Clement Attlee (prime minister of England) on February 20, 1947. 
  • Lord Mountbatten (1947–1948)
    • June 3rd plan (June 3, 1947) announced. 
    • Introduction of the Indian Independence Bill in the House of Commons. 
    • Appointment of two boundary commissions under Sir Cyril Radcliff for the partition of Bengal and Punjab
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UDAAN PRELIMS WALLAH
Comprehensive coverage with a concise format
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हिंदी में भी उपलब्ध
Quick Revise Now !
UDAAN PRELIMS WALLAH
Comprehensive coverage with a concise format
Integration of PYQ within the booklet
Designed as per recent trends of Prelims questions
हिंदी में भी उपलब्ध

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