Introduction

India's social fabric weaves together over 1,600 mother tongues and hundreds of dialects into a single political union. Language is not merely a communication tool — it is the primary axis of cultural identity, political mobilisation, and demands for territorial autonomy. Regionalism, the assertion of regional identity and interests within or against the national framework, is a persistent feature of Indian democracy. The States Reorganisation Act (1956) was the foundational response to linguistic regionalism; its legacy continues to shape state boundaries, political alignments, and identity politics to this day.


Regionalism: Meaning and Types

Regionalism refers to the tendency of people of a particular region to feel a stronger attachment to their region — its language, culture, and economic interests — than to the nation as a whole.

Type Description Indian Example
Positive regionalism Asserting regional culture, literature, and language within the national framework Tamil classical language movement; promotion of Odia literature
Negative regionalism Demands that harm national unity or discriminate against non-locals Sons-of-soil movements (MNS targeting north Indians in Mumbai)
Sub-nationalism Identity movement within a regional unit seeking greater autonomy or separate statehood Gorkhaland movement (West Bengal), Bodoland (Assam)
Secessionism Demand to secede from India altogether Khalistan movement (Punjab, 1980s); Northeast militant groups
Linguistic chauvinism Hostility toward non-speakers of the dominant regional language Protests against Hindi imposition in Tamil Nadu

Regionalism vs. Secessionism: It is important to distinguish the two — most regionalism in India seeks greater autonomy or resources within the federal structure, not separation from India. Secessionist movements are rare and mostly confined to border states.


Origins of Linguistic Reorganisation Demand

The demand for linguistic states predates independence. Key milestones:

1920: Indian National Congress reorganised its provincial committees along linguistic lines — recognising that political mobilisation worked best in the mother tongue.

1927: Nehru Report and Congress resolutions acknowledged the linguistic principle for future state formation.

1948: Dhar Commission (S.K. Dhar) recommended against reorganisation on purely linguistic basis, favouring administrative convenience. Its report was rejected by linguistic movements.

1948–49: JVP Committee (Jawaharal Nehru, Vallabhbhai Patel, Pattabhi Sitaramaiah) reconsidered and also rejected immediate linguistic reorganisation, citing national integration concerns in the immediate post-independence period.

1952: Potti Sreeramulu, a Gandhian activist, began a fast unto death for a separate Telugu-speaking state (Andhra State) to be carved out of Madras State. He died on 15 December 1952 after a 56-day fast. His death triggered widespread violent protests across Andhra, forcing Prime Minister Nehru to announce the creation of Andhra State (effective 1 October 1953) — the first state formed on a linguistic basis.


States Reorganisation Commission (SRC) and the 1956 Act

SRC Constituted: 22 December 1953 under the chairmanship of Justice Fazl Ali, with Hridayanath Kunzru and K.M. Panikkar as members.

SRC Report submitted: September 1955.

Four criteria identified by the SRC for reorganisation:

  1. Preservation and strengthening of the unity and security of India
  2. Linguistic and cultural homogeneity
  3. Financial, economic, and administrative considerations
  4. Planning and promotion of the welfare of people in each unit

States Reorganisation Act, 1956 (SRA 1956)

  • Passed by Parliament and came into force on 1 November 1956
  • Abolished the existing Part A, B, C, and D States classification inherited from the colonial era
  • Created a uniform structure of States and Union Territories
  • Result: Reorganised India into 14 States and 6 Union Territories (effective 1 November 1956)

Key changes under SRA 1956:

Change Details
Andhra Pradesh formed Merger of Andhra State (1953) with Telangana region of Hyderabad State
Kerala formed Merger of Travancore-Cochin with Malabar district (from Madras)
Bombay State enlarged Bilingual state merging Marathi and Gujarati speakers (later divided in 1960)
Mysore enlarged Kannada-speaking areas consolidated
Punjab reconstituted Hindi-Punjabi mixed state (later trifurcated into Punjab, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh in 1966)
Rajasthan consolidated Former princely states merged

Article 350A was inserted by SRA 1956 — mandating facilities for instruction in mother tongue at the primary stage of education for linguistic minority children.


Post-1956 State Reorganisations

SRA 1956 was not the final word. Linguistic movements continued:

Year New State Formed From Basis
1960 Maharashtra and Gujarat Split from Bombay State Marathi vs Gujarati linguistic demand
1963 Nagaland Assam Tribal/ethnic identity
1966 Punjab, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh Punjab State Punjabi Suba movement; language + religion
1972 Meghalaya, Manipur, Tripura NE reorganisation Tribal identity
2000 Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Uttarakhand Bihar, MP, UP Regional development + tribal/hill identity
2014 Telangana Andhra Pradesh Regional development disparity — Telangana movement

The number of states has grown from 14 (1956) to 28 states and 8 Union Territories (as of 2024), largely driven by demands that SRA 1956 left unaddressed.


The 8th Schedule: Scheduled Languages

The 8th Schedule of the Constitution lists the languages officially recognised by India. They receive resources for development, can be used for official purposes, and are eligible for consideration as official languages of states.

Original list (1950): 14 languages.

Current list (2024): 22 languages

Serial Language Serial Language
1 Assamese 12 Odia
2 Bengali 13 Punjabi
3 Bodo 14 Sanskrit
4 Dogri 15 Santali
5 Gujarati 16 Sindhi
6 Hindi 17 Tamil
7 Kannada 18 Telugu
8 Kashmiri 19 Urdu
9 Konkani 20 Maithili
10 Manipuri 21 Nepali
11 Marathi 22 Malayalam

Additions were made through: 71st Amendment (1992) — Konkani, Manipuri, Nepali; 92nd Amendment (2003) — Bodo, Dogri, Maithili, Santali. Demands remain for inclusion of several other languages (Bhojpuri, Rajasthani, Tulu, Gondi, etc.).


Classical Languages

The Government of India grants Classical Language status to languages with ancient literary traditions. Criteria (revised 2024): high antiquity, large corpus of ancient literature, and original literary tradition.

Classical languages as of October 2024 (11 languages):

Language Year Designated
Tamil 2004
Sanskrit 2005
Kannada 2008
Telugu 2008
Malayalam 2013
Odia 2014
Marathi October 2024
Pali October 2024
Prakrit October 2024
Assamese October 2024
Bengali October 2024

The Union Cabinet approved the designation of five new classical languages (Marathi, Pali, Prakrit, Assamese, Bengali) in October 2024, raising the total to 11. India is now the only country in the world to have recognised 11 classical languages.


Regional Parties and Linguistic Identity

Regional parties have grown significantly as vehicles for linguistic and sub-national identity:

Party State Linguistic/Regional Basis
DMK / AIADMK Tamil Nadu Tamil linguistic identity; anti-Hindi imposition
TDP / YSR-CP / TRS (BRS) Andhra Pradesh / Telangana Telugu regional identity; Telangana sub-nationalism
Shiv Sena Maharashtra Marathi manoos identity; sons-of-soil
Akali Dal Punjab Sikh-Punjabi religious-linguistic identity
AGP Assam Assamese identity; anti-immigration
Trinamool Congress West Bengal Bengali identity; opposition to central government encroachment

The 2024 General Elections reinforced the pattern: national parties rely on coalition partners (regional parties) to form governments, demonstrating that linguistic regionalism remains a structural feature of India's party system.


Hindi-Non-Hindi Controversy

The Official Languages Act, 1963 designated Hindi as the official language of the Union; English was retained as an associate official language indefinitely. States with non-Hindi speaking majorities (Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, Karnataka, etc.) have consistently opposed:

  • Three-language formula departures that favour Hindi
  • Hindi-only signage on central government facilities
  • National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 initially proposed imposing Hindi, withdrawn after protests

Tamil Nadu has formally opposed the three-language formula since the anti-Hindi agitations of 1965 (in which 70+ people died in protests) and continues to implement a two-language (Tamil + English) policy in schools.


Exam Strategy

For Prelims: SRA 1956 created 14 states and 6 UTs. SRC members: Fazl Ali, Kunzru, Panikkar. Potti Sreeramulu died 15 December 1952 after 56-day fast → Andhra State formed 1 October 1953. 8th Schedule has 22 languages. Classical languages: 11 as of October 2024 (5 added — Marathi, Pali, Prakrit, Assamese, Bengali). Article 350A mandates mother-tongue instruction at primary level.

For Mains (GS1): Classic questions: "Regionalism in India is both a threat and a healthy expression of diversity. Discuss." or "Critically examine the role of linguistic identity in Indian politics." Structure: (1) distinguish regionalism from secessionism; (2) historical drivers (SRA 1956, unfinished agenda); (3) positive role (cultural preservation, political representation); (4) negative effects (parochialism, sons-of-soil violence, linguistic chauvinism); (5) federal accommodation mechanisms (States, Official Languages, 8th Schedule); (6) way forward — cooperative federalism and inclusive development.

Key Data Points:

  • SRA 1956: effective 1 November 1956; 14 states, 6 UTs
  • Potti Sreeramulu: 56-day fast; death 15 December 1952
  • 8th Schedule: 22 languages (last added by 92nd Amendment 2003: Bodo, Dogri, Maithili, Santali)
  • Classical languages: 11 as of October 2024 (5 newly added in Cabinet decision October 2024)
  • Current: 28 States + 8 Union Territories (Telangana formed 2014 as the 29th state; Jammu & Kashmir bifurcated to 2 UTs in 2019)