Overview
Peasant, tribal and working class movements form a crucial strand of Indian resistance to colonial rule. Unlike the mainstream nationalist movement led by Western-educated elites, these uprisings were rooted in agrarian exploitation, loss of tribal lands and forests, and the oppressive conditions of early industrial labour. From the Indigo Revolt of 1859 to the Telangana armed struggle of 1946-51, these movements challenged both British imperialism and the feudal order that sustained it.
Exam Strategy: UPSC Prelims frequently tests dates, leaders and causes of specific revolts. Mains expects analysis of the socio-economic character of these movements and their relationship with the mainstream national movement. Essay papers may frame questions around agrarian distress and subaltern resistance.
Part I — Peasant Movements
1. Champaran Satyagraha (1917)
The Champaran Satyagraha was Mahatma Gandhi's first satyagraha in India and addressed the exploitation of indigo cultivators in the Champaran district of Bihar.
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Year | 1917 |
| Location | Champaran, Bihar |
| Leader | Mahatma Gandhi (invited by Rajkumar Shukla) |
| Core Grievance | The tinkathia system — compelled ryots to grow indigo on 3/20th of their land and surrender the produce to European planters at abysmally low prices |
| Method | Civil disobedience; Gandhi arrived at Motihari on 15 April 1917, was ordered to leave but refused, launching satyagraha on 17 April |
| Outcome | An enquiry committee was formed; the Champaran Agrarian Act, 1918 abolished the tinkathia system |
| Significance | First successful application of satyagraha on Indian soil; demonstrated that peasant grievances could be addressed through non-violent mass mobilisation |
2. Indigo Revolt (1859-60)
The Indigo Revolt was a peasant uprising in Bengal against the exploitative indigo plantation system imposed by European planters.
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Year | March 1859 – 1860 |
| Location | Nadia district, Bengal (spread to other parts of Bengal and Bihar) |
| Leaders | Digambar Biswas, Bishnu Biswas, and other ryot leaders |
| Core Grievance | Ryots were forced to sign contracts to grow indigo instead of food crops; paid far less than the cost of production; trapped in debt through advance loans (dadon) at usurious interest rates |
| Method | Began as a non-violent strike — ryots collectively refused to grow indigo; some zamindars supported them against the planters |
| British Response | A local magistrate ruled in March 1859 that indigo farmers could choose which crops to grow |
| Outcome | The Indigo Commission (1860) was appointed, which found the system oppressive; indigo cultivation in Bengal effectively ended |
| Cultural Impact | Dinabandhu Mitra's play Nil Darpan (1860) dramatised the plight of indigo cultivators and generated widespread public sympathy |
3. Deccan Riots (1875)
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Year | May – June 1875 |
| Location | Poona (Pune) and Ahmednagar districts, Maharashtra; spread to over 30 villages |
| Target | Sahukars (moneylenders), particularly Marwari and Gujarati moneylenders |
| Root Causes | (1) The ryotwari system mandated high, inflexible land revenue payments directly to the government; (2) The end of the American Civil War caused cotton prices to crash, devastating Deccan farmers who had shifted to cotton; (3) A sudden increase in land revenue by over 50% in 1875; (4) Usurious interest rates by moneylenders created a cycle of perpetual debt |
| Method | Peasants seized and publicly burnt debt bonds and documents held by moneylenders; socially boycotted them — notably not directed against the British |
| Outcome | The Deccan Riots Commission (1877) was appointed; led to the Deccan Agriculturists' Relief Act, 1879, which restricted moneylenders' ability to imprison farmers for unpaid debts and provided financial relief |
4. Moplah Rebellion (1921)
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Year | August – December 1921 |
| Location | Eranad and Valluvanad taluks, Malabar (present-day Kerala) |
| Community | Mappila (Moplah) Muslim tenant farmers |
| Leaders | Variyankunnath Kunjahammed Haji, Ali Musaliyar, Sithi Koya Thangal |
| Causes | (1) Exploitative landlord-tenant relations — rents consumed 75-80% of net produce; constant threat of eviction; (2) Influence of the Khilafat and Non-Cooperation movements; (3) British suppression of Khilafat agitation in Malabar |
| Began | 20 August 1921, in Tirurangadi after a clash between Moplahs and British police |
| Outcome | Suppressed with massive military force; the notorious Wagon Tragedy — 67 Moplah prisoners died of suffocation while being transported in a locked railway wagon |
| Debate | The movement is debated — viewed as both a peasant revolt against landlordism and as a communal uprising |
5. Tebhaga Movement (1946-47)
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Year | 1946-47 (continued till 1950 in some areas) |
| Location | Bengal — particularly Dinajpur, Rangpur, Jalpaiguri, Mymensingh, 24-Parganas; spread to 19 districts |
| Organisation | All India Kisan Sabha (AIKS), the peasant front of the Communist Party of India |
| Demand | Tebhaga (literally "three shares") — sharecroppers demanded that the landlord's share be reduced from one-half to one-third of the harvest |
| Method | Sharecroppers harvested crops and stored them in their own granaries instead of the jotedars' (landlords'); in many areas, landlords fled, leaving the countryside under Kisan Sabha control |
| Outcome | The Bargadari Act (1950) recognised the right of sharecroppers to two-thirds of the produce when they provided the inputs; approximately 40% of sharecropping peasants gained tebhaga rights |
6. Telangana Peasant Armed Struggle (1946-51)
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Year | 1946-1951 |
| Location | Telangana region of the princely state of Hyderabad — primarily Nalgonda and Warangal districts |
| Organisation | Communist Party of India (CPI) through the Andhra Mahasabha |
| Target | The Nizam of Hyderabad, Mir Osman Ali Khan, and feudal landlords (Durras/Doras) who held near-absolute power over peasants |
| Trigger | On 4 July 1946, a local peasant leader was killed in village Kadavendi, Warangal, by agents of a landlord |
| Achievements | Rebels established gram rajyams (village communes) in nearly 4,000 villages covering 16,000 sq. miles and 3 million people; redistributed land; abolished vetti (forced labour); raised agricultural wages |
| Indian Army Intervention | On 13 September 1948, the Indian Army launched Operation Polo ("Police Action") against Hyderabad; the Nizam surrendered within a week |
| End | The CPI formally withdrew the armed struggle on 21 October 1951 |
Mains Tip: The Telangana movement is significant because it was one of the largest peasant revolts in post-independence India. Compare it with the Tebhaga movement — both were communist-led but differed in scale, methods, and outcomes.
Summary: Major Peasant Movements
| Movement | Year | Region | Core Issue | Key Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Champaran Satyagraha | 1917 | Bihar | Tinkathia system (forced indigo) | Champaran Agrarian Act, 1918 |
| Indigo Revolt | 1859-60 | Bengal | Forced indigo cultivation, debt bondage | Indigo Commission; end of indigo in Bengal |
| Deccan Riots | 1875 | Maharashtra | Usurious moneylending, revenue hikes | Deccan Agriculturists' Relief Act, 1879 |
| Moplah Rebellion | 1921 | Malabar, Kerala | Landlord exploitation, Khilafat | Military suppression; Wagon Tragedy |
| Tebhaga Movement | 1946-47 | Bengal | Landlord share of harvest | Bargadari Act, 1950 |
| Telangana Struggle | 1946-51 | Hyderabad | Feudal exploitation by Doras | Village communes; land redistribution |
Part II — Tribal Movements
1. Kol Uprising (1831-32)
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Year | 1831-32 |
| Location | Chotanagpur plateau (present-day Jharkhand) |
| Tribe | Kols (joined later by Oraons and Hos) |
| Leaders | Budhu Bhagat, Joa Bhagat, Jhindrai Manki |
| Causes | (1) Encroachment of non-tribal communities (Hindu, Muslim, Sikh landlords) into tribal territories; (2) Imposition of forced labour, fines, and cattle confiscation by new landlords; (3) New land laws and taxes on goods like salt; (4) Collapse of the traditional Munda-Manki system of self-governance |
| Method | Armed revolt targeting non-tribals (Sadans/Dikus — outsiders) |
| Suppression | British established the South-West Frontier Division with headquarters at Lohardaga; police stations set up in tribal areas |
2. Santhal Rebellion (1855-56)
The Santhal Rebellion (known as Hul in the Santhal language) was one of the most significant tribal uprisings in Indian history.
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Year | 1855-56 |
| Location | Rajmahal Hills, present-day Jharkhand and Bengal |
| Tribe | Santhals |
| Leaders | Four brothers — Sidhu, Kanhu, Chand, and Bhairav Murmu, and their sisters Phulo and Jhano |
| Causes | Exploitation by zamindars, moneylenders (mahajans), and corrupt colonial officials (dikus — outsiders); land alienation; oppressive revenue demands |
| Declaration | On 30 June 1855, Sidhu and Kanhu gathered about 10,000 Santhals, claiming divine instruction from Thakur Bonga (the great spirit) to drive out outsiders |
| Scale | An estimated 60,000-80,000 Santhals joined the rebellion |
| Suppression | British deployed massive military force including elephants; Sidhu captured in August 1855; Kanhu, Chand, and Bhairav captured by December 1855 |
| Outcome | British created a separate Santhal Pargana district with special administrative arrangements to reduce exploitation |
| Legacy | 30 June is celebrated as Hul Diwas in Jharkhand |
3. Birsa Munda and the Munda Ulgulan (1899-1900)
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Year | 1899-1900 |
| Location | Chotanagpur plateau (Ranchi and Singhbhum), present-day Jharkhand |
| Tribe | Mundas |
| Leader | Birsa Munda (15 November 1875 – 9 June 1900) |
| Core Grievance | Erosion of the traditional khuntkatti (communal) land system; exploitation by dikus (outsiders), landlords, and missionaries; introduction of the beth begari (forced labour) system |
| Birsa's Movement | Created a new faith called Birsait; called upon Mundas to fight superstition, give up animal sacrifice, stop taking intoxicants, wear the sacred thread, and retain worship at the sarna (sacred grove) |
| War Cry | "Diku Raj Tuntu Jana — Abua Raj Ete Jana" (The rule of outsiders is over, our own rule has begun) |
| Key Events | Christmas Eve 1899 — attacks on churches in Ranchi and Singhbhum; January 1900 — attack on Khunti police station |
| End | Birsa arrested in March 1900; died in Ranchi Jail on 9 June 1900 at age 25, under mysterious circumstances |
| Legacy | Led to the Chotanagpur Tenancy Act, 1908, which recognised khuntkatti rights and banned beth begari; Birsa's birthday (15 November) is celebrated as Janjatiya Gaurav Diwas |
4. Khond Uprising (1837-1856)
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Year | 1837-1856 |
| Location | Hilly and forested regions of Odisha (Ghumsar, Kandhamal, Boudh) and parts of Andhra Pradesh |
| Tribe | Khonds (Kondhs) |
| Leader | Chakra Bisoi |
| Causes | (1) British suppression of the Meriah sacrifice (a form of human sacrifice believed to ensure soil fertility); (2) New revenue systems imposed on tribal areas; (3) Viewed British interference as an assault on cultural identity |
| Method | Guerrilla warfare — attacks on police stations, disruption of communication lines |
| British Response | Military expeditions; establishment of the Meriah Agency to administer the region and suppress human sacrifice |
5. Rampa Rebellion (1922-24)
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Year | August 1922 – May 1924 |
| Location | Godavari district, Madras Presidency (present-day Andhra Pradesh) |
| Leader | Alluri Sitarama Raju (1897/1898 – 7 May 1924), known as "Manyam Veerudu" (Hero of the Jungle) |
| Causes | (1) The Madras Forest Act, 1882 restricted tribal access to forests, preventing podu (shifting) cultivation; (2) Forced labour as coolies; (3) Zamindars and merchants exploiting tribal people through the legal system |
| Method | Guerrilla tactics; first attack on Chintapalli police station on 22 August 1922 with over 300 tribal rebels; combined armed resistance with Non-Cooperation ideals — promoting temperance, khadi, and panchayat courts |
| End | Alluri was captured and executed on 7 May 1924 |
| Legacy | Indian government released a commemorative stamp in 1986; his birthday (4 July) is celebrated as a state festival in Andhra Pradesh |
Prelims Tip: Alluri Sitarama Raju's Rampa Rebellion is frequently tested. Remember: it combined tribal grievances with Gandhian ideals (khadi, temperance) but used armed resistance, unlike mainstream Non-Cooperation.
Summary: Major Tribal Movements
| Movement | Year | Region | Tribe | Leader |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kol Uprising | 1831-32 | Chotanagpur | Kols, Oraons, Hos | Budhu Bhagat |
| Khond Uprising | 1837-56 | Odisha | Khonds | Chakra Bisoi |
| Santhal Rebellion (Hul) | 1855-56 | Rajmahal Hills | Santhals | Sidhu & Kanhu Murmu |
| Munda Ulgulan | 1899-1900 | Chotanagpur | Mundas | Birsa Munda |
| Rampa Rebellion | 1922-24 | Godavari | Hill tribes | Alluri Sitarama Raju |
Part III — Early Working Class Movements
Growth of the Industrial Working Class
The introduction of railways, jute mills, cotton textile mills, and coal mines in the mid-19th century created an industrial working class in India. Workers faced extremely poor conditions — 16-hour workdays, no leave, child labour, unsafe factories, and wages barely sufficient for survival.
Key Labour Legislations Under British Rule
| Legislation | Year | Key Provision |
|---|---|---|
| Indian Factories Act (First) | 1881 | Prohibited employment of children under 7; limited child working hours to 9 per day; applied only to factories with 100+ workers |
| Indian Factories Act (Second) | 1891 | Extended to factories with 50+ workers; limited women's working hours; weekly holiday mandated |
| Indian Trade Unions Act | 1926 | Legalised trade unions; granted registered unions legal protection |
| Trade Disputes Act | 1929 | Established tribunals for dispute resolution; restricted strikes in public utilities |
Formation of AITUC (1920)
The All India Trade Union Congress (AITUC) was founded on 31 October 1920 in Bombay — India's oldest trade union federation.
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Founded | 31 October 1920, Bombay |
| Founders | Lala Lajpat Rai, Joseph Baptista, N.M. Joshi, Diwan Chaman Lall |
| First President | Lala Lajpat Rai |
| Purpose | Represent Indian workers at the International Labour Organisation (ILO) and coordinate the trade union movement nationally |
| Split | Until 1945, AITUC was the primary trade union body; later split along party lines — INTUC (Congress, 1947), HMS (Socialist, 1948), BMS (RSS, 1955) |
Bombay Textile Mill Strike (1928)
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Year | April – October 1928 |
| Scale | Over 1,00,000 (one lakh) textile workers struck; 70 out of 84 textile mills shut down |
| Union | Girni Kamgar Union (membership over 70,000) |
| Demands | Reversal of wage cuts; standardisation of wage scales; negotiated introduction of the double- and triple-loom system |
| Duration | Over 5 months |
| Communist Influence | The strike marked the growing influence of Communist-aligned unions; leaders like S.A. Dange and B.T. Ranadive played key roles |
| Outcome | Strike called off on 4 October 1928 after negotiations; agreement to undo wage cuts and submit demands to a commission of enquiry |
| Aftermath | Led to the Meerut Conspiracy Case (1929), where 33 labour leaders were arrested for "conspiring to deprive the King Emperor of his sovereignty" |
Mains Tip: When analysing the early working class movement, highlight: (1) its urban-industrial character as distinct from peasant/tribal movements; (2) the role of communist ideology in organising workers; (3) the British response through both legislation (Trade Disputes Act, 1929) and repression (Meerut Case).
Common Features of Peasant, Tribal and Working Class Movements
| Feature | Peasant Movements | Tribal Movements | Working Class Movements |
|---|---|---|---|
| Social Base | Tenant farmers, sharecroppers, ryots | Adivasi/tribal communities | Factory workers, mill hands, miners |
| Primary Grievance | Land revenue, moneylender exploitation, forced cultivation | Land alienation, forest rights, cultural interference | Low wages, long hours, unsafe conditions |
| Enemy | Zamindars, moneylenders, British revenue system | Dikus (outsiders), missionaries, British forest laws | Factory owners, British industrial interests |
| Leadership | Local peasant leaders; later, political parties (Congress, CPI) | Tribal chiefs, religious/messianic figures | Trade unions, communist leaders |
| Method | Crop refusal, bond-burning, social boycott | Armed resistance, guerrilla warfare | Strikes, demonstrations |
| British Response | Commissions, relief acts | Military suppression, creation of protected areas | Factory acts, criminalisation of strikes |
Key Terms for Quick Revision
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Tinkathia | System forcing peasants to grow indigo on 3/20th of their land (Champaran) |
| Dadon | Advance loans given by indigo planters to lock peasants into cultivation contracts |
| Tebhaga | "Three shares" — demand to reduce landlord share to 1/3 of harvest |
| Vetti | Forced unpaid labour extracted by feudal landlords (Telangana) |
| Diku | Outsider/foreigner — tribal term for non-tribal exploiters |
| Khuntkatti | Munda communal land tenure system |
| Beth Begari | Forced labour system imposed on Munda tribals |
| Sarna | Sacred grove — centre of tribal worship in Munda tradition |
| Ulgulan | "Great Tumult" — Birsa Munda's rebellion |
| Hul | "Revolution" — Santhal term for their 1855-56 rebellion |
| Meriah | Human sacrifice practised by the Khonds |
| Podu | Shifting/slash-and-burn cultivation practised by tribal communities |
| Gram Rajyam | Village commune established during the Telangana struggle |
Frequently Asked Prelims Questions — Pattern
| Question Pattern | Answer |
|---|---|
| Leader of Santhal Rebellion? | Sidhu and Kanhu Murmu (1855-56) |
| Birsa Munda belonged to which tribe? | Munda tribe, Chotanagpur |
| What was the Ulgulan? | Birsa Munda's rebellion (1899-1900) — "Great Tumult" |
| Who led the Rampa Rebellion? | Alluri Sitarama Raju (1922-24) |
| AITUC first president? | Lala Lajpat Rai (founded 31 October 1920) |
| Tebhaga demand was for? | Reducing landlord share to 1/3 of harvest |
| Deccan Riots targeted whom? | Moneylenders (sahukars) — not the British directly |
| Champaran — which crop? | Indigo — tinkathia system (3/20th of land) |
| What was the Meerut Conspiracy Case? | Trial of 33 labour leaders (1929) after Bombay textile strike |
| Which act resulted from the Deccan Riots? | Deccan Agriculturists' Relief Act, 1879 |
| Chotanagpur Tenancy Act year? | 1908 — result of Munda Ulgulan |
| Moplah Rebellion location? | Eranad and Valluvanad taluks, Malabar (Kerala) |
| Telangana struggle — how many villages? | Nearly 4,000 villages established gram rajyams |
Sources: Bipin Chandra, India's Struggle for Independence; Sumit Sarkar, Modern India 1885–1947; Britannica; Wikipedia; Government of India archival sources.
BharatNotes