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Partition of India: Difference between revisions

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Created page with "{{#seo: |title=Partition of India – Events, Causes, Impact, and Legacy |description=Learn about the Partition of India in 1947: its political causes, mass migration, communal violence, and its profound and lasting effects on South Asia. |image=Partition_India_1947_Map.svg |keywords=Partition of India, 1947 Partition, Radcliffe Line, mass migration India Pakistan, communal violence, Mountbatten Plan, Partition legacy }} The '''Partition of India''' in August 1947 result..."
 
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|keywords=Partition of India, 1947 Partition, Radcliffe Line, mass migration India Pakistan, communal violence, Mountbatten Plan, Partition legacy
|keywords=Partition of India, 1947 Partition, Radcliffe Line, mass migration India Pakistan, communal violence, Mountbatten Plan, Partition legacy
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The '''Partition of India''' in August 1947 resulted in the division of British India into two independent dominions – '''India''' and '''Pakistan''' – as guided by the '''Indian Independence Act 1947'''.<ref>https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/10-11/30/enacted</ref> It triggered the largest mass migration in human history, with around '''14–15 million''' people displaced and '''approximately 1–2 million''' deaths due to communal violence.<ref>https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-40873861</ref>
The '''Partition of India''' in August 1947 resulted in the division of British India into two independent dominions – '''[[India]]''' and '''[[Pakistan]]''' – as guided by the '''Indian Independence Act 1947'''.<ref>https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/10-11/30/enacted</ref> It triggered the largest mass migration in human history, with around '''14–15 million''' people displaced and '''approximately 1–2 million''' deaths due to communal violence.<ref>https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-40873861</ref>


== Background and Causes ==
== Background and Causes ==
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* [[Indian Independence Act 1947]]
* [[Indian Independence Act 1947]]
* [[Radcliffe Line]]
* [[Radcliffe Line]]
* [[Kashmir conflict]]
* [[Migration and refugee crises]]


== References ==
== References ==
<references/>
<references/>

Revision as of 08:51, 8 July 2025

The Partition of India in August 1947 resulted in the division of British India into two independent dominions – India and Pakistan – as guided by the Indian Independence Act 1947.[1] It triggered the largest mass migration in human history, with around 14–15 million people displaced and approximately 1–2 million deaths due to communal violence.[2]

Background and Causes

  • Mountbatten Plan (3 June 1947): Proposed by Viceroy Lord Mountbatten, it divided India on religious lines, setting 15 August 1947 as Independence Day.[3]
  • Radcliffe Line: Sir Cyril Radcliffe drew the borders between India and Pakistan in just five weeks, leading to confusion and unrest.[4]
  • Communal Tensions: Decades of Hindu-Muslim division, worsened by the British divide-and-rule policy, exploded into full-blown riots.[5]

Mass Migration and Violence

  • Largest Migration: Over 14 million people crossed borders; Hindus and Sikhs to India, Muslims to Pakistan.[6]
  • Violence and Atrocities: Trains full of refugees were attacked. Thousands were killed in Punjab and Bengal.[7]
  • Women Victims: An estimated 75,000–100,000 women were abducted or assaulted during the riots.[8]

Key Events

  • Rawalpindi Massacres (March 1947): Communal riots began even before partition, with thousands killed.
  • Train Massacres: Multiple refugee trains were ambushed and all passengers killed.[9]
  • Direct Action Day (1946): Sparked Hindu-Muslim riots in Calcutta and Bengal.[10]

Aftermath and Consequences

  • Kashmir Dispute: Accession of Kashmir to India led to the first Indo-Pak war in 1947–48.[11]
  • New Borders, Broken Lives: The Radcliffe Line split families, villages, and economies.[12]
  • Permanent Hostility: Partition led to 3 major wars and ongoing conflict between India and Pakistan.[13]

Legacy and Remembrance

  • National Trauma: Millions lost homes, loved ones, and identity.[14]
  • Partition Museum: Located in Amritsar, it documents survivor accounts and history.[15]
  • Global Influence: Partition's memory shapes diaspora narratives, literature, and politics worldwide.[16]

See Also

References