Eknath Shinde Seeks Home Portfolio in Devendra Fadnavis-led Maharashtra Government: Shiv Sena Leader

Shiv Sena MLA Bharat Gogavale stated that the three Mahayuti allies are in discussions about portfolio allocation.

The Shiv Sena, under the leadership of Maharashtra Deputy Chief Minister Eknath Shinde, reiterated on Friday that its leader has formally requested the crucial Home portfolio from the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). The party also highlighted that the three Mahayuti allies—Shiv Sena, BJP, and smaller partners—are actively engaged in discussions regarding the allocation of various portfolios. The talks aim to finalize the distribution of key ministerial positions within the coalition government.

The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), Shiv Sena, and Ajit Pawar’s Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) form the Mahayuti, which secured a decisive victory in last month’s assembly elections. Following the election results, BJP’s Devendra Fadnavis took the oath as Chief Minister, with Eknath Shinde and Ajit Pawar, along with their deputies, also being sworn in on Thursday, 12 days after the election results were declared.

“When Fadnavis was the deputy CM in the previous Shinde-led government, he also held the Home department. Now, he has demanded the same arrangement, and talks regarding portfolio allocation are currently in progress,” news agency PTI quoted Shiv Sena MLA Bharat Gogavale as saying.

The Raigad MLA further added, “The demand was probably made to Prime Minister Narendra Modi or Union Home Minister Amit Shah. We hope the talks on portfolio allocation will be concluded in the next two days.”

The Raigad MLA, Bharat Gogavale, also mentioned that the Shiv Sena’s request for the Home portfolio was likely communicated to Prime Minister Narendra Modi or Union Home Minister Amit Shah. He expressed hope that the discussions regarding the allocation of portfolios would be finalized within the next two days. The ongoing talks are crucial for ensuring a smooth functioning of the newly formed government, with all coalition partners working towards a fair distribution of responsibilities. The resolution of these talks is expected to pave the way for the full cabinet formation in the state.

Bharat Gogavale, the Raigad MLA, further emphasized the importance of swift resolution in the portfolio allocation talks, signaling that the leadership was eager to finalize key positions to ensure the government’s effective functioning. He added that the demand for the Home portfolio by the Shiv Sena was rooted in the arrangement from the previous Shinde-led government, where Devendra Fadnavis, as deputy CM, also held the crucial Home department.

Gogavale noted that the discussions were likely being led by senior leaders such as Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Union Home Minister Amit Shah, given their influence in the decision-making process within the BJP. He expressed optimism that the talks would be concluded within the next two days, allowing for the finalization of the cabinet and the smooth commencement of the government’s work in Maharashtra. This swift resolution is seen as vital for maintaining stability in the coalition and addressing the state’s pressing issues.

COURTESY: DNAIndiaNews

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  270. ^ (a) Guyot-Rechard, Berenice (2017), Shadow States: India, China and the Himalayas, 1910–1962, Cambridge University Press, p. 235, ISBN 978-1-107-17679-9By invading NEFA, the PRC did not just aim to force a humiliated India to recognise its possession of the Aksai Chin. It also hoped to get, once and for all, the upper hand in their shadowing competition.
    (b) Chubb, Andrew (2021), “The Sino-Indian Border Crisis: Chinese Perceptions of Indian Nationalism”, in Golley, Jane; Jaivan, Linda; Strange, Sharon (eds.), Crisis, Australian National University Press, pp. 231–232, ISBN 978-1-76046-439-4The ensuing cycle of escalation culminated in the 1962 Sino-Indian border war in which Mao Zedong’s troops overran almost the entire state of Arunachal Pradesh in the eastern sector before unilaterally withdrawing, as if to underline the insult; most of the war’s several thousand casualties were Indian. The PLA’s decisive victories in the 1962 war not only humiliated the Indian Army, they also entrenched a status quo in Ladakh that was highly unfavourable for India, in which China controls almost all of the disputed territory. A nationalistic press and commentariat have kept 1962 vivid in India’s popular consciousness.
    (c) Lintner, Bertil (2018), China’s India War: Collision Course on the Roof of the World, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-909163-8Lin Biao was put in charge of the operation and that alliance between Mao and his loyal de facto chief of the PLA made the attack on India possible. With China’s ultimate victory in the war, Mao’s ultra-leftist line had won in China; whatever critical voices that were left in the Party after all the purges fell silent.
    (d) Medcalf, Rory (2020), Indo-Pacific Empire: China, America and the contest for the world’s pivotal, Manchester University Press, ISBN 978-1-5261-5077-6From an Indian perspective, the China-India war of 1962 was a shocking betrayal of the principles of co-operation and coexistence: a surprise attack that humiliated India and personally broke Nehru.
    (e) Ganguly, Sumit (1997), The Crisis in Kashmir: Portents of War, Hope of Peace, Woodrow Wilson Center Press and Cambridge University Press, p. 44, ISBN 978-0-521-65566-8In October 1962 India suffered the most humiliating military debacle in its post-independence history, at the hands of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA). The outcome of this conflict had far-reaching consequences for Indian foreign and defence policies. The harsh defeat that the Chinese PLA had inflicted on the Indian Army called into question some of the most deeply held precepts of Nehru’s foreign and defence policies.
    (f) Raghavan, Srinath (2019), “A Missed Opportunity? The Nehru-Zhou Enlai Summit of 1960”, in Bhagavan, Manu (ed.), India and the Cold War, University of North Carolina Press, p. 121, ISBN 978-1-4696-5117-0The ‘forward policy’ adopted by India to prevent the Chinese from occupying territory claimed by them was undertaken in the mistaken belief that Beijing would be cautious in dealing with India owing to Moscow’s stance on the dispute and its growing proximity to India. These misjudgments would eventually culminate in India’s humiliating defeat in the war of October–November 1962.
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  472. ^ Davidson, Alan (2014), The Oxford Companion to FoodOxford University Press, p. 161, ISBN 978-0-19-967733-7Chapatis are made from finely milled whole-wheat flour, called chapati flour or atta, and water. The dough is rolled into thin rounds which vary in size from region to region and then cooked without fat or oil on a slightly curved griddle called a tava.
  473. ^ Tamang, J. P.; Fleet, G. H. (2009), “Yeasts Diversity in Fermented Foods and Beverages”, in Satyanarayana, T.; Kunze, G. (eds.), Yeast Biotechnology: Diversity and Applications, Springer, p. 180, ISBN 978-1-4020-8292-4Idli is an acid-leavened and steamed cake made by bacterial fermentation of a thick batter made from coarsely ground rice and dehulled black gram. Idli cakes are soft, moist and spongy, have desirable sour flavour, and is eaten as breakfast in South India. Dosa batter is very similar to idli batter, except that both the rice and black gram are finely grounded. The batter is thinner than that of idli and is fried as a thin, crisp pancake and eaten directly in South India.
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  524. Jump up to:a b c Petraglia & Allchin 2007, p. 10, “Y-Chromosome and Mt-DNA data support the colonization of South Asia by modern humans originating in Africa. … Coalescence dates for most non-European populations average to between 73 and 55 ka.”
  525. Jump up to:a b Dyson 2018, p. 1, “Modern human beings—Homo sapiens—originated in Africa. Then, intermittently, sometime between 60,000 and 80,000 years ago, tiny groups of them began to enter the north-west of the Indian subcontinent. It seems likely that initially they came by way of the coast. … it is virtually certain that there were Homo sapiens in the subcontinent 55,000 years ago, even though the earliest fossils that have been found of them date to only about 30,000 years before the present.”
  526. Jump up to:a b Fisher 2018, p. 23, “Scholars estimate that the first successful expansion of the Homo sapiens range beyond Africa and across the Arabian Peninsula occurred from as early as 80,000 years ago to as late as 40,000 years ago, although there may have been prior unsuccessful emigrations. Some of their descendants extended the human range ever further in each generation, spreading into each habitable land they encountered. One human channel was along the warm and productive coastal lands of the Persian Gulf and northern Indian Ocean. Eventually, various bands entered India between 75,000 years ago and 35,000 years ago.”
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    (b) Fisher 2018, p. 33
  529. ^ Lowe 2015, pp. 1–2, “It consists of 1,028 hymns (sūktas), highly crafted poetic compositions originally intended for recital during rituals and for the invocation of and communication with the Indo-Aryan gods. Modern scholarly opinion largely agrees that these hymns were composed between around 1500 BCE and 1200 BCE, during the eastward migration of the Indo-Aryan tribes from the mountains of what is today northern Afghanistan across the Punjab into north India.”
  530. ^ (a) Witzel 2003, pp. 68–70, “It is known from internal evidence that the Vedic texts were orally composed in northern India, at first in the Greater Punjab and later on also in more eastern areas, including northern Bihar, between ca. 1500 BCE and ca. 500–400 BCE. The oldest text, the Rgveda, must have been more or less contemporary with the Mitanni texts of northern Syria/Iraq (1450–1350 BCE); […] The Vedic texts were orally composed and transmitted, without the use of script, in an unbroken line of transmission from teacher to student that was formalised early on. This ensured an impeccable textual transmission superior to the classical texts of other cultures; it is in fact something of a tape-recording of ca. 1500–500 BCE. Not just the actual words, but even the long-lost musical (tonal) accent (as in old Greek or in Japanese) has been preserved up to the present. […] The RV text was composed before the introduction and massive use of iron, that is before ca. 1200–1000 BCE.”;
    (b) Doniger 2014, pp. xviii, 10, “A Chronology of Hinduism: ca. 1500–1000 BCE Rig Veda; ca. 1200–900 BCE Yajur Veda, Sama Veda and Atharva Veda […] Hindu texts began with the Rig Veda (‘Knowledge of Verses’), composed in northwest India around 1500 BCE; the first of the three Vedas, it is the earliest extant text composed in Sanskrit, the language of ancient India.”;
    (c) Ludden 2014, p. 19, “In Punjab, a dry region with grasslands watered by five rivers (hence ‘panch’ and ‘ab’) draining the western Himalayas, one prehistoric culture left no material remains, but some of its ritual texts were preserved orally over the millennia. The culture is called Aryan, and evidence in its texts indicates that it spread slowly south-east, following the course of the Yamuna and Ganga Rivers. Its elite called itself Arya (pure) and distinguished themselves sharply from others. Aryans led kin groups organized as nomadic horse-herding tribes. Their ritual texts are called Vedas, composed in Sanskrit. Vedic Sanskrit is recorded only in hymns that were part of Vedic rituals to Aryan gods. To be Aryan apparently meant to belong to the elite among pastoral tribes. Texts that record Aryan culture are not precisely datable, but they seem to begin around 1200 BCE with four collections of Vedic hymns (Rg, Sama, Yajur, and Artharva).”;
    (d) Dyson 2018, pp. 14–15, “Although the collapse of the Indus valley civilization is no longer believed to have been due to an ‘Aryan invasion’ it is widely thought that, at roughly the same time, or perhaps a few centuries later, new Indo-Aryan-speaking people and influences began to enter the subcontinent from the north-west. Detailed evidence is lacking. Nevertheless, a predecessor of the language that would eventually be called Sanskrit was probably introduced into the north-west sometime between 3,900 and 3,000 years ago. This language was related to one then spoken in eastern Iran; and both of these languages belonged to the Indo-European language family. […] It seems likely that various small-scale migrations were involved in the gradual introduction of the predecessor language and associated cultural characteristics. However, there may not have been a tight relationship between movements of people on the one hand, and changes in language and culture on the other. Moreover, the process whereby a dynamic new force gradually arose—a people with a distinct ideology who eventually seem to have referred to themselves as ‘Arya’—was certainly two-way. That is, it involved a blending of new features which came from outside with other features—probably including some surviving Harappan influences—that were already present. Anyhow, it would be quite a few centuries before Sanskrit was written down. And the hymns and stories of the Arya people—especially the Vedas and the later Mahabharata and Ramayana epics—are poor guides as to historical events. Of course, the emerging Arya were to have a huge impact on the history of the subcontinent. Nevertheless, little is known about their early presence.”;
    (e) Robb 2011, pp. 46–, “The expansion of Aryan culture is supposed to have begun around 1500 BCE. It should not be thought that this Aryan emergence (though it implies some migration) necessarily meant either a sudden invasion of new peoples, or a complete break with earlier traditions. It comprises a set of cultural ideas and practices, upheld by a Sanskrit-speaking elite, or Aryans. The features of this society are recorded in the Vedas.”
  531. ^ (a) Jamison, Stephanie; Brereton, Joel (2020), The RigvedaOxford University Press, pp. 2, 4, ISBN 978-0-19-063339-4The RgVeda is one of the four Vedas, which together constitute the oldest texts in Sanskrit and the earliest evidence for what will become Hinduism. (p. 2) Although Vedic religion is very different in many regards from what is known as Classical Hinduism, the seeds are there. Gods like Visnu and Siva (under the name Rudra), who will become so dominant later, are already present in the Rgveda, though in roles both lesser than and different from those they will later play, and the principal Rgvedic gods like Indra remain in later Hinduism, though in diminished capacity (p. 4).;
    (b) Flood, Gavin (2020), “Introduction”, in Gavin Flood (ed.), The Oxford History of Hinduism: Hindu Practice: Hindu PracticeOxford University Press, pp. 4–, ISBN 978-0-19-105322-1I take the term ‘Hinduism to meaningfully denote a range and history of practice characterised by a number of features, particularly reference to Vedic textual and sacrificial origins, belonging to endogamous social units (jati/varna), participating in practices that involve making an offering to a deity and receiving a blessing (puja), and a first-level cultural polytheism (although many Hindus adhere to a second-level monotheism in which many gods are regarded as emanations or manifestations of the one, supreme being).;
    (c) Michaels, Axel (2017). Patrick Olivelle, Donald R. Davis (ed.). The Oxford History of Hinduism: Hindu Law: A New History of Dharmaśāstra. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 86–97. ISBN 978-0-19-100709-5Almost all traditional Hindu families observe until today at least three samskaras (initiation, marriage, and death ritual). Most other rituals have lost their popularity, are combined with other rites of passage, or are drastically shortened. Although samskaras vary from region to region, from class (varna) to class, and from caste to caste, their core elements remain the same owing to the common source, the Veda, and a common priestly tradition preserved by the Brahmin priests. (p 86)
    (d) Flood, Gavin D. (1996). An Introduction to HinduismCambridge University Press. p. 35. ISBN 978-0-521-43878-0It is this Sansrit, vedic, tradition which has maintained a continuity into modern times and which has provided the most important resource and inspiration for Hindu traditions and individuals. The Veda is the foundation for most later developments in what is known as Hinduism.
  532. ^ Dyson 2018, pp. 1625
  533. ^ Dyson 2018, p. 16
  534. ^ Fisher 2018, p. 59
  535. ^ (a) Dyson 2018, pp. 16–17;
    (b) Fisher 2018, p. 67;
    (c) Robb 2011, pp. 56–57;
    (d) Ludden 2014, pp. 29–30.
  536. ^ (a) Ludden 2014, pp. 28–29;
    (b) Glenn Van Brummelen (2014), “Arithmetic”, in Thomas F. Glick; Steven Livesey; Faith Wallis (eds.), Medieval Science, Technology, and Medicine: An EncyclopediaRoutledge, pp. 46–48, ISBN 978-1-135-45932-1
  537. ^ (a) Dyson 2018, p. 20;
    (b) Stein 2010, p. 90;
    (c) Ramusack, Barbara N. (1999), “Women in South Asia”, in Barbara N. Ramusack; Sharon L. Sievers (eds.), Women in Asia: Restoring Women to HistoryIndiana University Press, pp. 27–29, ISBN 0-253-21267-7
  538. Jump up to:a b Kulke & Rothermund 2004, p. 93.
  539. ^ Asher & Talbot 2006, p. 17–18: “The soaring height of the superstructure of Tanjavur’s Rajarajeshvara temple reflected the stature of the dynasty that sponsored its construction, for under Rajaraja (r. 985–1014) and his son Rajendra (r. 1014–1044), the Chola kingdom became the greatest Indian state of its era. […] The Cholas also had the advantage of proximity to the most active sector of long-distance trade within the Indian Ocean in this period, the eastern stretch extending from southeastern India through Southeast Asia and into south China. […] The victory of the Chola fleet led to fifty years of Indian dominance over the Strait of Malacca, the vital sea passage between the Malayan peninsula and Indonesia through which all trade to and from China was funneled. This was the apex of Indian influence in Southeast Asia, which had assimilated many elements of Indian civilization over the past six or more centuries, including the Sanskrit language, south Indian scripts, and the religions of Hinduism and Buddhism.”
  540. ^ (a) Ludden 2014, p. 54;
    (b) Asher & Talbot 2006, pp. 78–79;
    (c) Fisher 2018, p. 76
  541. ^ (a) Ludden 2014, pp. 68–70;
    (b) Asher & Talbot 2006, pp. 19, 24
  542. ^ (a) Dyson 2018, p. 48;
    (b) Asher & Talbot 2006, p. 52
  543. ^ Asher & Talbot 2006, p. 74
  544. ^ Asher & Talbot 2006, p. 267
  545. ^ Asher & Talbot 2006, p. 152
  546. Jump up to:a b Fisher 2018, p. 106
  547. ^ (a) Asher & Talbot 2006, p. 289
    (b) Fisher 2018, p. 120
  548. ^ Taylor, Miles (2016), “The British royal family and the colonial empire from the Georgians to Prince George”, in Aldrish, Robert; McCreery, Cindy (eds.), Crowns and Colonies: European Monarchies and Overseas EmpiresManchester University Press, pp. 38–39, ISBN 978-1-5261-0088-7
  549. ^ Peers 2013, p. 76.
  550. ^ Embree, Ainslie Thomas; Hay, Stephen N.; Bary, William Theodore De (1988), “Nationalism Takes Root: The Moderates”Sources of Indian Tradition: Modern India and PakistanColumbia University Press, p. 85, ISBN 978-0-231-06414-9
  551. ^ Marshall, P. J. (2001), The Cambridge Illustrated History of the British Empire, Cambridge University Press, p. 179, ISBN 978-0-521-00254-7The first modern nationalist movement to arise in the non-European empire, and one that became an inspiration for many others, was the Indian Congress.
  552. ^ Chiriyankandath, James (2016), Parties and Political Change in South Asia, Routledge, p. 2, ISBN 978-1-317-58620-3South Asian parties include several of the oldest in the post-colonial world, foremost among them the 129-year-old Indian National Congress that led India to independence in 1947
  553. ^ Fisher 2018, pp. 173–174: “The partition of South Asia that produced India and West and East Pakistan resulted from years of bitter negotiations and recriminations … The departing British also decreed that the hundreds of princes, who ruled one-third of the subcontinent and a quarter of its population, became legally independent, their status to be settled later. Geographical location, personal and popular sentiment, and substantial pressure and incentives from the new governments led almost all princes eventually to merge their domains into either Pakistan or India. … Each new government asserted its exclusive sovereignty within its borders, realigning all territories, animals, plants, minerals, and all other natural and human-made resources as either Pakistani or Indian property, to be used for its national development… Simultaneously, the central civil and military services and judiciary split roughly along religious ‘communal’ lines, even as they divided movable government assets according to a negotiated formula: 22.7 percent for Pakistan and 77.3 percent for India.”
  554. ^ Chatterji, Joya; Washbrook, David (2013), “Introduction: Concepts and Questions”, in Chatterji, Joya; Washbrook, David (eds.), Routledge Handbook of the South Asian Diaspora, London and New York: Routledge, ISBN 978-0-415-48010-9Joya Chatterji describes how the partition of the British Indian empire into the new nation states of India and Pakistan produced new diaspora on a vast, and hitherto unprecedented, scale, but hints that the sheer magnitude of refugee movements in South Asia after 1947 must be understood in the context of pre-existing migratory flows within the partitioned regions (see also Chatterji 2013). She also demonstrates that the new national states of India and Pakistan were quickly drawn into trying to stem this migration. As they put into place laws designed to restrict the return of partition emigrants, this produced new dilemmas for both new nations in their treatment of ‘overseas Indians’; and many of them lost their right to return to their places of origin in the subcontinent, and also their claims to full citizenship in host countries.
  555. ^ Talbot, Ian; Singh, Gurharpal (2009), The Partition of India, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-85661-4archived from the original on 13 December 2016, retrieved 15 November 2015, When the British divided and quit India in August 1947, they not only partitioned the subcontinent with the emergence of the two nations of India and Pakistan but also the provinces of Punjab and Bengal. … Indeed for many the Indian subcontinent’s division in August 1947 is seen as a unique event which defies comparative historical and conceptual analysis
  556. ^ Khan, Yasmin (2017) [2007], The Great Partition: The Making of India and Pakistan (2nd ed.), New Haven and London: Yale University Press, p. 1, ISBN 978-0-300-23032-1South Asians learned that the British Indian empire would be partitioned on 3 June 1947. They heard about it on the radio, from relations and friends, by reading newspapers and, later, through government pamphlets. Among a population of almost four hundred million, where the vast majority live in the countryside, ploughing the land as landless peasants or sharecroppers, it is hardly surprising that many thousands, perhaps hundreds of thousands, did not hear the news for many weeks afterwards. For some, the butchery and forced relocation of the summer months of 1947 may have been the first that they knew about the creation of the two new states rising from the fragmentary and terminally weakened British empire in India
  557. ^ (a) Copland 2001, pp. 71–78;
    (b) Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 222.
  558. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2012, p. 327: “Even though much remains to be done, especially in regard to eradicating poverty and securing effective structures of governance, India’s achievements since independence in sustaining freedom and democracy have been singular among the world’s new nations.”
  559. ^ Stein, Burton (2012), Arnold, David (ed.), A History of India, The Blackwell History of the World Series (2 ed.), Wiley-Blackwell, One of these is the idea of India as ‘the world’s largest democracy’, but a democracy forged less by the creation of representative institutions and expanding electorate under British rule than by the endeavours of India’s founding fathers – Gandhi, Nehru, Patel and Ambedkar – and the labours of the Constituent Assembly between 1946 and 1949, embodied in the Indian constitution of 1950. This democratic order, reinforced by the regular holding of nationwide elections and polling for the state assemblies, has, it can be argued, consistently underpinned a fundamentally democratic state structure – despite the anomaly of the Emergency and the apparent durability of the Gandhi-Nehru dynasty.
  560. ^ Fisher 2018, pp. 184–185: “Since 1947, India’s internal disputes over its national identity, while periodically bitter and occasionally punctuated by violence, have been largely managed with remarkable and sustained commitment to national unity and democracy.”
  561. ^ Dyson 2018, pp. 219, 262
  562. ^ Biswas, Soutik (1 May 2023). “Most populous nation: Should India rejoice or panic?”BBC NewsBritish Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 3 May 2023.
  563. ^ World Population Prospects 2022: Summary of Results (PDF). New York: United Nations Department of Social and Economic Affairs. 2022. pp. i.
  564. ^ Fisher 2018, p. 8
  565. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2012, pp. 265–266
  566. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2012, p. 266
  567. ^ Dyson 2018, p. 216
  568. ^ (a) “Kashmir, region Indian subcontinent”Encyclopaedia Britannicaarchived from the original on 13 August 2019, retrieved 15 August 2019, Kashmir, region of the northwestern Indian subcontinent … has been the subject of dispute between India and Pakistan since the partition of the Indian subcontinent in 1947.;
    (b) Pletcher, Kenneth, “Aksai Chin, Plateau Region, Asia”Encyclopaedia Britannicaarchived from the original on 2 April 2019, retrieved 16 August 2019, Aksai Chin, Chinese (Pinyin) Aksayqin, portion of the Kashmir region, … constitutes nearly all the territory of the Chinese-administered sector of Kashmir that is claimed by India;
    (c) Bosworth, C. E (2006). “Kashmir”Encyclopedia Americana: Jefferson to LatinScholastic Library Publishing. p. 328. ISBN 978-0-7172-0139-6KASHMIR, kash’mer, the northernmost region of the Indian subcontinent, administered partly by India, partly by Pakistan, and partly by China. The region has been the subject of a bitter dispute between India and Pakistan since they became independent in 1947
  569. ^ Narayan, Jitendra; John, Denny; Ramadas, Nirupama (2018). “Malnutrition in India: status and government initiatives”. Journal of Public Health Policy40 (1): 126–141. doi:10.1057/s41271-018-0149-5ISSN 0197-5897PMID 30353132S2CID 53032234.
  570. ^ Balakrishnan, Kalpana; Dey, Sagnik; et al. (2019). “The impact of air pollution on deaths, disease burden, and life expectancy across the states of India: the Global Burden of Disease Study 2017”The Lancet Planetary Health3 (1): e26–e39. doi:10.1016/S2542-5196(18)30261-4ISSN 2542-5196PMC 6358127PMID 30528905.
  571. Jump up to:a b IndiaInternational Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), 2019, archived from the original on 1 November 2020, retrieved 21 May 2019
  572. Jump up to:a b “India State of Forest Report, 2021”. Forest Survey of India, National Informatics Centre. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
  573. ^ Karanth & Gopal 2005, p. 374.
  574. ^ “India (noun)”Oxford English Dictionary (3rd ed.), 2009 (subscription required)
  575. ^ Thieme 1970, pp. 447–450.
  576. Jump up to:a b Kuiper 2010, p. 86.
  577. Jump up to:a b c Clémentin-Ojha 2014.
  578. ^ The Constitution of India (PDF), Ministry of Law and Justice, 1 December 2007, archived from the original (PDF) on 9 September 2014, retrieved 3 March 2012, Article 1(1): India, that is Bharat, shall be a Union of States.
  579. ^ Jha, Dwijendra Narayan (2014), Rethinking Hindu IdentityRoutledge, p. 11, ISBN 978-1-317-49034-0
  580. ^ Singh 2017, p. 253.
  581. Jump up to:a b Barrow 2003.
  582. ^ Paturi, Joseph; Patterson, Roger (2016). “Hinduism (with Hare Krishna)”. In Hodge, Bodie; Patterson, Roger (eds.). World Religions & Cults Volume 2: Moralistic, Mythical and Mysticism Religions. United States: New Leaf Publishing Group. pp. 59–60. ISBN 978-0-89051-922-6The actual term Hindu first occurs as a Persian geographical term for the people who lived beyond the Indus River. The term Hindu originated as a geographical term and did not refer to a religion. Later, Hindu was taken by European languages from the Arabic term al-Hind, which referred to the people who lived across the Indus River. This Arabic term was itself taken from the Persian term Hindū, which refers to all Indians. By the 13th century, Hindustan emerged as a popular alternative name for India, meaning the “land of Hindus.”
  583. ^ “Hindustan”Encyclopædia Britannica, retrieved 17 July 2011
  584. ^ Lowe, John J. (2017). Transitive Nouns and Adjectives: Evidence from Early Indo-AryanOxford University Press. p. 58. ISBN 978-0-19-879357-1The term ‘Epic Sanskrit’ refers to the language of the two great Sanskrit epics, the Mahābhārata and the Rāmāyaṇa. … It is likely, therefore, that the epic-like elements found in Vedic sources and the two epics that we have are not directly related, but that both drew on the same source, an oral tradition of storytelling that existed before, throughout, and after the Vedic period.
  585. Jump up to:a b Coningham & Young 2015, pp. 104–105.
  586. ^ Kulke & Rothermund 2004, pp. 21–23.
  587. Jump up to:a b Singh 2009, p. 181.
  588. ^ Possehl 2003, p. 2.
  589. Jump up to:a b c Singh 2009, p. 255.
  590. Jump up to:a b Singh 2009, pp. 186–187.
  591. ^ Witzel 2003, pp. 68–69.
  592. ^ Kulke & Rothermund 2004, pp. 41–43.
  593. Jump up to:a b Singh 2009, pp. 250–251.
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  595. ^ Kulke & Rothermund 2004, pp. 53–54.
  596. ^ Singh 2009, pp. 312–313.
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  598. ^ Stein 1998, p. 21.
  599. ^ Stein 1998, pp. 67–68.
  600. ^ Singh 2009, p. 300.
  601. Jump up to:a b Singh 2009, p. 319.
  602. ^ Stein 1998, pp. 78–79.
  603. ^ Kulke & Rothermund 2004, p. 70.
  604. ^ Singh 2009, p. 367.
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  606. ^ Stein 1998, pp. 89–90.
  607. ^ Singh 2009, pp. 408–415.
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  609. ^ Kulke & Rothermund 2004, pp. 89–91.
  610. Jump up to:a b c Singh 2009, p. 545.
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  612. Jump up to:a b Stein 1998, p. 132.
  613. Jump up to:a b c Stein 1998, pp. 119–120.
  614. Jump up to:a b Stein 1998, pp. 121–122.
  615. Jump up to:a b Stein 1998, p. 123.
  616. Jump up to:a b Stein 1998, p. 124.
  617. Jump up to:a b Stein 1998, pp. 127–128.
  618. ^ Ludden 2002, p. 68.
  619. ^ Asher & Talbot 2008, p. 47.
  620. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 6.
  621. ^ Ludden 2002, p. 67.
  622. ^ Asher & Talbot 2008, pp. 50–51.
  623. Jump up to:a b Asher & Talbot 2008, p. 53.
  624. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 12.
  625. ^ Robb 2001, p. 80.
  626. ^ Stein 1998, p. 164.
  627. ^ Asher & Talbot 2008, p. 115.
  628. ^ Robb 2001, pp. 90–91.
  629. Jump up to:a b Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 17.
  630. Jump up to:a b c Asher & Talbot 2008, p. 152.
  631. ^ Asher & Talbot 2008, p. 158.
  632. ^ Stein 1998, p. 169.
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  634. Jump up to:a b Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 23–24.
  635. ^ Asher & Talbot 2008, p. 256.
  636. Jump up to:a b c Asher & Talbot 2008, p. 286.
  637. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 44–49.
  638. ^ Robb 2001, pp. 98–100.
  639. ^ Ludden 2002, pp. 128–132.
  640. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 51–55.
  641. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 68–71.
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  643. ^ Robb 2001, pp. 151–152.
  644. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 94–99.
  645. ^ Brown 1994, p. 83.
  646. ^ Peers 2006, p. 50.
  647. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 100–103.
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  651. ^ Robb 2001, p. 183.
  652. ^ Sarkar 1983, pp. 1–4.
  653. ^ Copland 2001, pp. ix–x.
  654. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 123.
  655. ^ Stein 1998, p. 260.
  656. ^ Stein 2010, p. 245: An expansion of state functions in British and in princely India occurred as a result of the terrible famines of the later nineteenth century, … A reluctant regime decided that state resources had to be deployed and that anti-famine measures were best managed through technical experts.
  657. ^ Stein 1998, p. 258.
  658. Jump up to:a b Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 126.
  659. Jump up to:a b Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 97.
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  674. Jump up to:a b c d Ali & Aitchison 2005.
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  679. ^ Fisher 2018, p. 83, ” East of the lower Indus lay the inhospitable Rann of Kutch and Thar Desert. East of the upper Indus lay the more promising but narrow corridor between the Himalayan foothills on the north and the Thar Desert and Aravalli Mountains on the south. At the strategic choke point, just before reaching the fertile, well-watered Gangetic plain, sat Delhi. On this site, where life giving streams running off the most northern spur of the rocky Aravalli ridge flowed into the Jumna river, and where the war-horse and war-elephant trade intersected, a series of dynasties built fortified capitals.”
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  772. ^ (a) Guyot-Rechard, Berenice (2017), Shadow States: India, China and the Himalayas, 1910–1962, Cambridge University Press, p. 235, ISBN 978-1-107-17679-9By invading NEFA, the PRC did not just aim to force a humiliated India to recognise its possession of the Aksai Chin. It also hoped to get, once and for all, the upper hand in their shadowing competition.
    (b) Chubb, Andrew (2021), “The Sino-Indian Border Crisis: Chinese Perceptions of Indian Nationalism”, in Golley, Jane; Jaivan, Linda; Strange, Sharon (eds.), Crisis, Australian National University Press, pp. 231–232, ISBN 978-1-76046-439-4The ensuing cycle of escalation culminated in the 1962 Sino-Indian border war in which Mao Zedong’s troops overran almost the entire state of Arunachal Pradesh in the eastern sector before unilaterally withdrawing, as if to underline the insult; most of the war’s several thousand casualties were Indian. The PLA’s decisive victories in the 1962 war not only humiliated the Indian Army, they also entrenched a status quo in Ladakh that was highly unfavourable for India, in which China controls almost all of the disputed territory. A nationalistic press and commentariat have kept 1962 vivid in India’s popular consciousness.
    (c) Lintner, Bertil (2018), China’s India War: Collision Course on the Roof of the World, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-909163-8Lin Biao was put in charge of the operation and that alliance between Mao and his loyal de facto chief of the PLA made the attack on India possible. With China’s ultimate victory in the war, Mao’s ultra-leftist line had won in China; whatever critical voices that were left in the Party after all the purges fell silent.
    (d) Medcalf, Rory (2020), Indo-Pacific Empire: China, America and the contest for the world’s pivotal, Manchester University Press, ISBN 978-1-5261-5077-6From an Indian perspective, the China-India war of 1962 was a shocking betrayal of the principles of co-operation and coexistence: a surprise attack that humiliated India and personally broke Nehru.
    (e) Ganguly, Sumit (1997), The Crisis in Kashmir: Portents of War, Hope of Peace, Woodrow Wilson Center Press and Cambridge University Press, p. 44, ISBN 978-0-521-65566-8In October 1962 India suffered the most humiliating military debacle in its post-independence history, at the hands of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA). The outcome of this conflict had far-reaching consequences for Indian foreign and defence policies. The harsh defeat that the Chinese PLA had inflicted on the Indian Army called into question some of the most deeply held precepts of Nehru’s foreign and defence policies.
    (f) Raghavan, Srinath (2019), “A Missed Opportunity? The Nehru-Zhou Enlai Summit of 1960”, in Bhagavan, Manu (ed.), India and the Cold War, University of North Carolina Press, p. 121, ISBN 978-1-4696-5117-0The ‘forward policy’ adopted by India to prevent the Chinese from occupying territory claimed by them was undertaken in the mistaken belief that Beijing would be cautious in dealing with India owing to Moscow’s stance on the dispute and its growing proximity to India. These misjudgments would eventually culminate in India’s humiliating defeat in the war of October–November 1962.
  773. ^ Brahma Chellaney (2006). Asian Juggernaut: The Rise of China, India, and JapanHarperCollins. p. 195. ISBN 978-8172236502Indeed, Beijing’s acknowledgement of Indian control over Sikkim seems limited to the purpose of facilitating trade through the vertiginous Nathu-la Pass, the scene of bloody artillery duels in September 1967 when Indian troops beat back attacking Chinese forces.
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  950. ^ “More than 63 million women ‘missing’ in India, statistics show”Associated Press via The Guardian. 30 January 2018. Retrieved 17 November 2019. Quote: “More than 63 million women are “missing” statistically across India, and more than 21 million girls are unwanted by their families, government officials say. The skewed ratio of men to women is largely the result of sex-selective abortions, and better nutrition and medical care for boys, according to the government’s annual economic survey, which was released on Monday. In addition, the survey found that “families where a son is born are more likely to stop having children than families where a girl is born”.
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  964. Jump up to:a b c d Tarlo 1996, p. 26
  965. ^ Tarlo 1996, pp. 26–28
  966. Jump up to:a b c Alkazi, Roshen (2002), “Evolution of Indian Costume as a result of the links between Central Asia and India in ancient and medieval times”, in Rahman, Abdur (ed.), India’s Interaction with China, Central and West AsiaOxford University Press, pp. 464–484, ISBN 978-0-19-565789-0
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  968. ^ Stevenson, Angus; Waite, Maurice (2011), Concise Oxford English Dictionary: Book & CD-ROM SetOxford University Press, p. 774, ISBN 978-0-19-960110-3
  969. ^ Platts, John T. (John Thompson) (1884), A dictionary of Urdu, classical Hindi, and English, London: W. H. Allen & Co., p. 418, archived from the original on 24 February 2021, retrieved 26 August 2019 (online; updated February 2015)
  970. ^ Shukla, Pravina (2015), The Grace of Four Moons: Dress, Adornment, and the Art of the Body in Modern IndiaIndiana University Press, p. 71, ISBN 978-0-253-02121-2
  971. Jump up to:a b c d e Dwyer, Rachel (2014), Bollywood’s India: Hindi Cinema as a Guide to Contemporary IndiaReaktion Books, pp. 244–245, ISBN 978-1-78023-304-8
  972. ^ Dwyer, Rachel (2013), “Bombay Ishtyle”, in Stella Bruzzi, Pamela Church Gibson (ed.), Fashion Cultures: Theories, Explorations and AnalysisRoutledge, pp. 178–189, ISBN 978-1-136-29537-9
  973. Jump up to:a b c Davidson, Alan (2014), The Oxford Companion to FoodOxford University Press, p. 409, ISBN 978-0-19-967733-7
  974. ^ Davidson, Alan (2014), The Oxford Companion to FoodOxford University Press, p. 161, ISBN 978-0-19-967733-7Chapatis are made from finely milled whole-wheat flour, called chapati flour or atta, and water. The dough is rolled into thin rounds which vary in size from region to region and then cooked without fat or oil on a slightly curved griddle called a tava.
  975. ^ Tamang, J. P.; Fleet, G. H. (2009), “Yeasts Diversity in Fermented Foods and Beverages”, in Satyanarayana, T.; Kunze, G. (eds.), Yeast Biotechnology: Diversity and Applications, Springer, p. 180, ISBN 978-1-4020-8292-4Idli is an acid-leavened and steamed cake made by bacterial fermentation of a thick batter made from coarsely ground rice and dehulled black gram. Idli cakes are soft, moist and spongy, have desirable sour flavour, and is eaten as breakfast in South India. Dosa batter is very similar to idli batter, except that both the rice and black gram are finely grounded. The batter is thinner than that of idli and is fried as a thin, crisp pancake and eaten directly in South India.
  976. ^ Jhala, Angma Day (2015), Royal Patronage, Power and Aesthetics in Princely India, Routledge, p. 70, ISBN 978-1-317-31657-2With the ascent of the Mughal Empire in sixteenth-century India, Turkic, Persian and Afghan traditions of dress, ‘architecture and cuisine’ were adopted by non-Muslim indigenous elites in South Asia. In this manner, Central Asian cooking merged with older traditions within the subcontinent, to create such signature dishes as biryani (a fusion of the Persian pilau and the spice-laden dishes of Hindustan), and the Kashmiri meat stew of Rogan Josh. It not only generated new dishes and entire cuisines, but also fostered novel modes of eating. Such newer trends included the consumption of Persian condiments, which relied heavily on almonds, pastries and quince jams, alongside Indian achars made from sweet limes, green vegetables and curds as side relishes during Mughlai meals.
  977. ^ Panjabi, Camellia (1995), The Great Curries of IndiaSimon and Schuster, pp. 158–, ISBN 978-0-684-80383-8The Muslim influenced breads of India are leavened, like naanKhamiri roti, …
  978. Jump up to:a b c Davidson, Alan (2014), The Oxford Companion to FoodOxford University Press, p. 410, ISBN 978-0-19-967733-7
  979. ^ Sahakian, Marlyne; Saloma, Czarina; Erkman, Suren (2016), Food Consumption in the City: Practices and patterns in urban Asia and the PacificTaylor & Francis, p. 50, ISBN 978-1-317-31050-1
  980. ^ OECD; Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (2018), OECD-FAO Agricultural Outlook 2018–2027OECD Publishing, p. 21, ISBN 978-92-64-06203-0
  981. ^ Roger 2000.
  982. ^ Sengupta, Jayanta (2014), “India”, in Freedman, Paul; Chaplin, Joyce E.; Albala, Ken (eds.), Food in Time and Place: The American Historical Association Companion to Food HistoryUniversity of California Press, p. 74, ISBN 978-0-520-27745-8
  983. Jump up to:a b c Collingham, Elizabeth M. (2007), Curry: A Tale of Cooks and ConquerorsOxford University Press, p. 25, ISBN 978-0-19-532001-5
  984. ^ Nandy, Ashis (2004), “The Changing Popular Culture of Indian Food: Preliminary Notes”, South Asia Research24 (1): 9–19, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.830.7136doi:10.1177/0262728004042760ISSN 0262-7280S2CID 143223986
  985. ^ Srinivasan, Radhika; Jermyn, Leslie; Lek, Hui Hui (2001), India, Times Books International, p. 109, ISBN 978-981-232-184-8 Quote: “Girls in India usually play jump rope, or hopscotch, and five stones, tossing the stones up in the air and catching them in many different ways … the coconut-plucking contests, groundnut-eating races, … of rural India.”
  986. ^ Wolpert 2003, p. 2.
  987. ^ Rediff 2008 b.
  988. ^ “Candidates’ R13: Anand Draws, Clinches Rematch with Carlsen”. Archived from the original on 11 January 2015. Retrieved 14 December 2018.
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  991. ^ “From IPL to ISL, sports leagues in India to watch out for”The Financial Express. 26 September 2021. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
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  993. ^ “Kabaddi gets the IPL treatment”BBC News. 6 August 2014. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
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  1003. ^ Dehejia 2011.
  1004. References
  1005. Jump up to:a b c d National Informatics Centre 2005.
  1006. Jump up to:a b c d “National Symbols | National Portal of India”India.gov.in. Archived from the original on 4 February 2017. Retrieved 1 March 2017. The National Anthem of India Jana Gana Mana, composed originally in Bengali by Rabindranath Tagore, was adopted in its Hindi version by the Constituent Assembly as the National Anthem of India on 24 January 1950.
  1007. ^ “National anthem of India: a brief on ‘Jana Gana Mana'”News18. 14 August 2012. Archived from the original on 17 April 2019. Retrieved 7 June 2019.
  1008. ^ Wolpert 2003, p. 1.
  1009. ^ Constituent Assembly of India 1950.
  1010. Jump up to:a b Ministry of Home Affairs 1960.
  1011. ^ “Profile | National Portal of India”India.gov.in. Archived from the original on 30 August 2013. Retrieved 23 August 2013.
  1012. ^ “Constitutional Provisions – Official Language Related Part-17 of the Constitution of India”Department of Official Language via Government of IndiaArchived from the original on 18 April 2021. Retrieved 18 April 2021.
  1013. ^ “50th Report of the Commissioner for Linguistic Minorities in India (July 2012 to June 2013)” (PDF). Commissioner for Linguistic Minorities, Ministry of Minority AffairsGovernment of India. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 July 2016. Retrieved 26 December 2014.
  1014. ^ Eberhard, David M.; Simons, Gary F.; Fennig, Charles D. (2024). “India”Ethnologue: Languages of the World (27 ed.).
  1015. Jump up to:a b “C −1 Population by religious community – 2011”Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner. Archived from the original on 25 August 2015. Retrieved 25 August 2015.
  1016. Jump up to:a b c d e f Library of Congress 2004.
  1017. Jump up to:a b “World Population Prospects”Population Division – United Nations. Retrieved 2 July 2023.
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  1020. Jump up to:a b c d e f “World Economic Outlook Database, October 2024 Edition. (India)”www.imf.orgInternational Monetary Fund. 22 October 2024. Retrieved 22 October 2024.
  1021. ^ “Gini index (World Bank estimate) – India”World Bank.
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  1023. ^ “List of all left- & right-driving countries around the world”worldstandards.eu. 13 May 2020. Retrieved 10 June 2020.
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  1026. Jump up to:a b c Petraglia & Allchin 2007, p. 10, “Y-Chromosome and Mt-DNA data support the colonization of South Asia by modern humans originating in Africa. … Coalescence dates for most non-European populations average to between 73 and 55 ka.”
  1027. Jump up to:a b Dyson 2018, p. 1, “Modern human beings—Homo sapiens—originated in Africa. Then, intermittently, sometime between 60,000 and 80,000 years ago, tiny groups of them began to enter the north-west of the Indian subcontinent. It seems likely that initially they came by way of the coast. … it is virtually certain that there were Homo sapiens in the subcontinent 55,000 years ago, even though the earliest fossils that have been found of them date to only about 30,000 years before the present.”
  1028. Jump up to:a b Fisher 2018, p. 23, “Scholars estimate that the first successful expansion of the Homo sapiens range beyond Africa and across the Arabian Peninsula occurred from as early as 80,000 years ago to as late as 40,000 years ago, although there may have been prior unsuccessful emigrations. Some of their descendants extended the human range ever further in each generation, spreading into each habitable land they encountered. One human channel was along the warm and productive coastal lands of the Persian Gulf and northern Indian Ocean. Eventually, various bands entered India between 75,000 years ago and 35,000 years ago.”
  1029. ^ Dyson 2018, p. 28
  1030. ^ (a) Dyson 2018, pp. 4–5;
    (b) Fisher 2018, p. 33
  1031. ^ Lowe 2015, pp. 1–2, “It consists of 1,028 hymns (sūktas), highly crafted poetic compositions originally intended for recital during rituals and for the invocation of and communication with the Indo-Aryan gods. Modern scholarly opinion largely agrees that these hymns were composed between around 1500 BCE and 1200 BCE, during the eastward migration of the Indo-Aryan tribes from the mountains of what is today northern Afghanistan across the Punjab into north India.”
  1032. ^ (a) Witzel 2003, pp. 68–70, “It is known from internal evidence that the Vedic texts were orally composed in northern India, at first in the Greater Punjab and later on also in more eastern areas, including northern Bihar, between ca. 1500 BCE and ca. 500–400 BCE. The oldest text, the Rgveda, must have been more or less contemporary with the Mitanni texts of northern Syria/Iraq (1450–1350 BCE); […] The Vedic texts were orally composed and transmitted, without the use of script, in an unbroken line of transmission from teacher to student that was formalised early on. This ensured an impeccable textual transmission superior to the classical texts of other cultures; it is in fact something of a tape-recording of ca. 1500–500 BCE. Not just the actual words, but even the long-lost musical (tonal) accent (as in old Greek or in Japanese) has been preserved up to the present. […] The RV text was composed before the introduction and massive use of iron, that is before ca. 1200–1000 BCE.”;
    (b) Doniger 2014, pp. xviii, 10, “A Chronology of Hinduism: ca. 1500–1000 BCE Rig Veda; ca. 1200–900 BCE Yajur Veda, Sama Veda and Atharva Veda […] Hindu texts began with the Rig Veda (‘Knowledge of Verses’), composed in northwest India around 1500 BCE; the first of the three Vedas, it is the earliest extant text composed in Sanskrit, the language of ancient India.”;
    (c) Ludden 2014, p. 19, “In Punjab, a dry region with grasslands watered by five rivers (hence ‘panch’ and ‘ab’) draining the western Himalayas, one prehistoric culture left no material remains, but some of its ritual texts were preserved orally over the millennia. The culture is called Aryan, and evidence in its texts indicates that it spread slowly south-east, following the course of the Yamuna and Ganga Rivers. Its elite called itself Arya (pure) and distinguished themselves sharply from others. Aryans led kin groups organized as nomadic horse-herding tribes. Their ritual texts are called Vedas, composed in Sanskrit. Vedic Sanskrit is recorded only in hymns that were part of Vedic rituals to Aryan gods. To be Aryan apparently meant to belong to the elite among pastoral tribes. Texts that record Aryan culture are not precisely datable, but they seem to begin around 1200 BCE with four collections of Vedic hymns (Rg, Sama, Yajur, and Artharva).”;
    (d) Dyson 2018, pp. 14–15, “Although the collapse of the Indus valley civilization is no longer believed to have been due to an ‘Aryan invasion’ it is widely thought that, at roughly the same time, or perhaps a few centuries later, new Indo-Aryan-speaking people and influences began to enter the subcontinent from the north-west. Detailed evidence is lacking. Nevertheless, a predecessor of the language that would eventually be called Sanskrit was probably introduced into the north-west sometime between 3,900 and 3,000 years ago. This language was related to one then spoken in eastern Iran; and both of these languages belonged to the Indo-European language family. […] It seems likely that various small-scale migrations were involved in the gradual introduction of the predecessor language and associated cultural characteristics. However, there may not have been a tight relationship between movements of people on the one hand, and changes in language and culture on the other. Moreover, the process whereby a dynamic new force gradually arose—a people with a distinct ideology who eventually seem to have referred to themselves as ‘Arya’—was certainly two-way. That is, it involved a blending of new features which came from outside with other features—probably including some surviving Harappan influences—that were already present. Anyhow, it would be quite a few centuries before Sanskrit was written down. And the hymns and stories of the Arya people—especially the Vedas and the later Mahabharata and Ramayana epics—are poor guides as to historical events. Of course, the emerging Arya were to have a huge impact on the history of the subcontinent. Nevertheless, little is known about their early presence.”;
    (e) Robb 2011, pp. 46–, “The expansion of Aryan culture is supposed to have begun around 1500 BCE. It should not be thought that this Aryan emergence (though it implies some migration) necessarily meant either a sudden invasion of new peoples, or a complete break with earlier traditions. It comprises a set of cultural ideas and practices, upheld by a Sanskrit-speaking elite, or Aryans. The features of this society are recorded in the Vedas.”
  1033. ^ (a) Jamison, Stephanie; Brereton, Joel (2020), The RigvedaOxford University Press, pp. 2, 4, ISBN 978-0-19-063339-4The RgVeda is one of the four Vedas, which together constitute the oldest texts in Sanskrit and the earliest evidence for what will become Hinduism. (p. 2) Although Vedic religion is very different in many regards from what is known as Classical Hinduism, the seeds are there. Gods like Visnu and Siva (under the name Rudra), who will become so dominant later, are already present in the Rgveda, though in roles both lesser than and different from those they will later play, and the principal Rgvedic gods like Indra remain in later Hinduism, though in diminished capacity (p. 4).;
    (b) Flood, Gavin (2020), “Introduction”, in Gavin Flood (ed.), The Oxford History of Hinduism: Hindu Practice: Hindu PracticeOxford University Press, pp. 4–, ISBN 978-0-19-105322-1I take the term ‘Hinduism to meaningfully denote a range and history of practice characterised by a number of features, particularly reference to Vedic textual and sacrificial origins, belonging to endogamous social units (jati/varna), participating in practices that involve making an offering to a deity and receiving a blessing (puja), and a first-level cultural polytheism (although many Hindus adhere to a second-level monotheism in which many gods are regarded as emanations or manifestations of the one, supreme being).;
    (c) Michaels, Axel (2017). Patrick Olivelle, Donald R. Davis (ed.). The Oxford History of Hinduism: Hindu Law: A New History of Dharmaśāstra. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 86–97. ISBN 978-0-19-100709-5Almost all traditional Hindu families observe until today at least three samskaras (initiation, marriage, and death ritual). Most other rituals have lost their popularity, are combined with other rites of passage, or are drastically shortened. Although samskaras vary from region to region, from class (varna) to class, and from caste to caste, their core elements remain the same owing to the common source, the Veda, and a common priestly tradition preserved by the Brahmin priests. (p 86)
    (d) Flood, Gavin D. (1996). An Introduction to HinduismCambridge University Press. p. 35. ISBN 978-0-521-43878-0It is this Sansrit, vedic, tradition which has maintained a continuity into modern times and which has provided the most important resource and inspiration for Hindu traditions and individuals. The Veda is the foundation for most later developments in what is known as Hinduism.
  1034. ^ Dyson 2018, pp. 1625
  1035. ^ Dyson 2018, p. 16
  1036. ^ Fisher 2018, p. 59
  1037. ^ (a) Dyson 2018, pp. 16–17;
    (b) Fisher 2018, p. 67;
    (c) Robb 2011, pp. 56–57;
    (d) Ludden 2014, pp. 29–30.
  1038. ^ (a) Ludden 2014, pp. 28–29;
    (b) Glenn Van Brummelen (2014), “Arithmetic”, in Thomas F. Glick; Steven Livesey; Faith Wallis (eds.), Medieval Science, Technology, and Medicine: An EncyclopediaRoutledge, pp. 46–48, ISBN 978-1-135-45932-1
  1039. ^ (a) Dyson 2018, p. 20;
    (b) Stein 2010, p. 90;
    (c) Ramusack, Barbara N. (1999), “Women in South Asia”, in Barbara N. Ramusack; Sharon L. Sievers (eds.), Women in Asia: Restoring Women to HistoryIndiana University Press, pp. 27–29, ISBN 0-253-21267-7
  1040. Jump up to:a b Kulke & Rothermund 2004, p. 93.
  1041. ^ Asher & Talbot 2006, p. 17–18: “The soaring height of the superstructure of Tanjavur’s Rajarajeshvara temple reflected the stature of the dynasty that sponsored its construction, for under Rajaraja (r. 985–1014) and his son Rajendra (r. 1014–1044), the Chola kingdom became the greatest Indian state of its era. […] The Cholas also had the advantage of proximity to the most active sector of long-distance trade within the Indian Ocean in this period, the eastern stretch extending from southeastern India through Southeast Asia and into south China. […] The victory of the Chola fleet led to fifty years of Indian dominance over the Strait of Malacca, the vital sea passage between the Malayan peninsula and Indonesia through which all trade to and from China was funneled. This was the apex of Indian influence in Southeast Asia, which had assimilated many elements of Indian civilization over the past six or more centuries, including the Sanskrit language, south Indian scripts, and the religions of Hinduism and Buddhism.”
  1042. ^ (a) Ludden 2014, p. 54;
    (b) Asher & Talbot 2006, pp. 78–79;
    (c) Fisher 2018, p. 76
  1043. ^ (a) Ludden 2014, pp. 68–70;
    (b) Asher & Talbot 2006, pp. 19, 24
  1044. ^ (a) Dyson 2018, p. 48;
    (b) Asher & Talbot 2006, p. 52
  1045. ^ Asher & Talbot 2006, p. 74
  1046. ^ Asher & Talbot 2006, p. 267
  1047. ^ Asher & Talbot 2006, p. 152
  1048. Jump up to:a b Fisher 2018, p. 106
  1049. ^ (a) Asher & Talbot 2006, p. 289
    (b) Fisher 2018, p. 120
  1050. ^ Taylor, Miles (2016), “The British royal family and the colonial empire from the Georgians to Prince George”, in Aldrish, Robert; McCreery, Cindy (eds.), Crowns and Colonies: European Monarchies and Overseas EmpiresManchester University Press, pp. 38–39, ISBN 978-1-5261-0088-7
  1051. ^ Peers 2013, p. 76.
  1052. ^ Embree, Ainslie Thomas; Hay, Stephen N.; Bary, William Theodore De (1988), “Nationalism Takes Root: The Moderates”Sources of Indian Tradition: Modern India and PakistanColumbia University Press, p. 85, ISBN 978-0-231-06414-9
  1053. ^ Marshall, P. J. (2001), The Cambridge Illustrated History of the British Empire, Cambridge University Press, p. 179, ISBN 978-0-521-00254-7The first modern nationalist movement to arise in the non-European empire, and one that became an inspiration for many others, was the Indian Congress.
  1054. ^ Chiriyankandath, James (2016), Parties and Political Change in South Asia, Routledge, p. 2, ISBN 978-1-317-58620-3South Asian parties include several of the oldest in the post-colonial world, foremost among them the 129-year-old Indian National Congress that led India to independence in 1947
  1055. ^ Fisher 2018, pp. 173–174: “The partition of South Asia that produced India and West and East Pakistan resulted from years of bitter negotiations and recriminations … The departing British also decreed that the hundreds of princes, who ruled one-third of the subcontinent and a quarter of its population, became legally independent, their status to be settled later. Geographical location, personal and popular sentiment, and substantial pressure and incentives from the new governments led almost all princes eventually to merge their domains into either Pakistan or India. … Each new government asserted its exclusive sovereignty within its borders, realigning all territories, animals, plants, minerals, and all other natural and human-made resources as either Pakistani or Indian property, to be used for its national development… Simultaneously, the central civil and military services and judiciary split roughly along religious ‘communal’ lines, even as they divided movable government assets according to a negotiated formula: 22.7 percent for Pakistan and 77.3 percent for India.”
  1056. ^ Chatterji, Joya; Washbrook, David (2013), “Introduction: Concepts and Questions”, in Chatterji, Joya; Washbrook, David (eds.), Routledge Handbook of the South Asian Diaspora, London and New York: Routledge, ISBN 978-0-415-48010-9Joya Chatterji describes how the partition of the British Indian empire into the new nation states of India and Pakistan produced new diaspora on a vast, and hitherto unprecedented, scale, but hints that the sheer magnitude of refugee movements in South Asia after 1947 must be understood in the context of pre-existing migratory flows within the partitioned regions (see also Chatterji 2013). She also demonstrates that the new national states of India and Pakistan were quickly drawn into trying to stem this migration. As they put into place laws designed to restrict the return of partition emigrants, this produced new dilemmas for both new nations in their treatment of ‘overseas Indians’; and many of them lost their right to return to their places of origin in the subcontinent, and also their claims to full citizenship in host countries.
  1057. ^ Talbot, Ian; Singh, Gurharpal (2009), The Partition of India, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-85661-4archived from the original on 13 December 2016, retrieved 15 November 2015, When the British divided and quit India in August 1947, they not only partitioned the subcontinent with the emergence of the two nations of India and Pakistan but also the provinces of Punjab and Bengal. … Indeed for many the Indian subcontinent’s division in August 1947 is seen as a unique event which defies comparative historical and conceptual analysis
  1058. ^ Khan, Yasmin (2017) [2007], The Great Partition: The Making of India and Pakistan (2nd ed.), New Haven and London: Yale University Press, p. 1, ISBN 978-0-300-23032-1South Asians learned that the British Indian empire would be partitioned on 3 June 1947. They heard about it on the radio, from relations and friends, by reading newspapers and, later, through government pamphlets. Among a population of almost four hundred million, where the vast majority live in the countryside, ploughing the land as landless peasants or sharecroppers, it is hardly surprising that many thousands, perhaps hundreds of thousands, did not hear the news for many weeks afterwards. For some, the butchery and forced relocation of the summer months of 1947 may have been the first that they knew about the creation of the two new states rising from the fragmentary and terminally weakened British empire in India
  1059. ^ (a) Copland 2001, pp. 71–78;
    (b) Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 222.
  1060. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2012, p. 327: “Even though much remains to be done, especially in regard to eradicating poverty and securing effective structures of governance, India’s achievements since independence in sustaining freedom and democracy have been singular among the world’s new nations.”
  1061. ^ Stein, Burton (2012), Arnold, David (ed.), A History of India, The Blackwell History of the World Series (2 ed.), Wiley-Blackwell, One of these is the idea of India as ‘the world’s largest democracy’, but a democracy forged less by the creation of representative institutions and expanding electorate under British rule than by the endeavours of India’s founding fathers – Gandhi, Nehru, Patel and Ambedkar – and the labours of the Constituent Assembly between 1946 and 1949, embodied in the Indian constitution of 1950. This democratic order, reinforced by the regular holding of nationwide elections and polling for the state assemblies, has, it can be argued, consistently underpinned a fundamentally democratic state structure – despite the anomaly of the Emergency and the apparent durability of the Gandhi-Nehru dynasty.
  1062. ^ Fisher 2018, pp. 184–185: “Since 1947, India’s internal disputes over its national identity, while periodically bitter and occasionally punctuated by violence, have been largely managed with remarkable and sustained commitment to national unity and democracy.”
  1063. ^ Dyson 2018, pp. 219, 262
  1064. ^ Biswas, Soutik (1 May 2023). “Most populous nation: Should India rejoice or panic?”BBC NewsBritish Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 3 May 2023.
  1065. ^ World Population Prospects 2022: Summary of Results (PDF). New York: United Nations Department of Social and Economic Affairs. 2022. pp. i.
  1066. ^ Fisher 2018, p. 8
  1067. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2012, pp. 265–266
  1068. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2012, p. 266
  1069. ^ Dyson 2018, p. 216
  1070. ^ (a) “Kashmir, region Indian subcontinent”Encyclopaedia Britannicaarchived from the original on 13 August 2019, retrieved 15 August 2019, Kashmir, region of the northwestern Indian subcontinent … has been the subject of dispute between India and Pakistan since the partition of the Indian subcontinent in 1947.;
    (b) Pletcher, Kenneth, “Aksai Chin, Plateau Region, Asia”Encyclopaedia Britannicaarchived from the original on 2 April 2019, retrieved 16 August 2019, Aksai Chin, Chinese (Pinyin) Aksayqin, portion of the Kashmir region, … constitutes nearly all the territory of the Chinese-administered sector of Kashmir that is claimed by India;
    (c) Bosworth, C. E (2006). “Kashmir”Encyclopedia Americana: Jefferson to LatinScholastic Library Publishing. p. 328. ISBN 978-0-7172-0139-6KASHMIR, kash’mer, the northernmost region of the Indian subcontinent, administered partly by India, partly by Pakistan, and partly by China. The region has been the subject of a bitter dispute between India and Pakistan since they became independent in 1947
  1071. ^ Narayan, Jitendra; John, Denny; Ramadas, Nirupama (2018). “Malnutrition in India: status and government initiatives”. Journal of Public Health Policy40 (1): 126–141. doi:10.1057/s41271-018-0149-5ISSN 0197-5897PMID 30353132S2CID 53032234.
  1072. ^ Balakrishnan, Kalpana; Dey, Sagnik; et al. (2019). “The impact of air pollution on deaths, disease burden, and life expectancy across the states of India: the Global Burden of Disease Study 2017”The Lancet Planetary Health3 (1): e26–e39. doi:10.1016/S2542-5196(18)30261-4ISSN 2542-5196PMC 6358127PMID 30528905.
  1073. Jump up to:a b IndiaInternational Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), 2019, archived from the original on 1 November 2020, retrieved 21 May 2019
  1074. Jump up to:a b “India State of Forest Report, 2021”. Forest Survey of India, National Informatics Centre. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
  1075. ^ Karanth & Gopal 2005, p. 374.
  1076. ^ “India (noun)”Oxford English Dictionary (3rd ed.), 2009 (subscription required)
  1077. ^ Thieme 1970, pp. 447–450.
  1078. Jump up to:a b Kuiper 2010, p. 86.
  1079. Jump up to:a b c Clémentin-Ojha 2014.
  1080. ^ The Constitution of India (PDF), Ministry of Law and Justice, 1 December 2007, archived from the original (PDF) on 9 September 2014, retrieved 3 March 2012, Article 1(1): India, that is Bharat, shall be a Union of States.
  1081. ^ Jha, Dwijendra Narayan (2014), Rethinking Hindu IdentityRoutledge, p. 11, ISBN 978-1-317-49034-0
  1082. ^ Singh 2017, p. 253.
  1083. Jump up to:a b Barrow 2003.
  1084. ^ Paturi, Joseph; Patterson, Roger (2016). “Hinduism (with Hare Krishna)”. In Hodge, Bodie; Patterson, Roger (eds.). World Religions & Cults Volume 2: Moralistic, Mythical and Mysticism Religions. United States: New Leaf Publishing Group. pp. 59–60. ISBN 978-0-89051-922-6The actual term Hindu first occurs as a Persian geographical term for the people who lived beyond the Indus River. The term Hindu originated as a geographical term and did not refer to a religion. Later, Hindu was taken by European languages from the Arabic term al-Hind, which referred to the people who lived across the Indus River. This Arabic term was itself taken from the Persian term Hindū, which refers to all Indians. By the 13th century, Hindustan emerged as a popular alternative name for India, meaning the “land of Hindus.”
  1085. ^ “Hindustan”Encyclopædia Britannica, retrieved 17 July 2011
  1086. ^ Lowe, John J. (2017). Transitive Nouns and Adjectives: Evidence from Early Indo-AryanOxford University Press. p. 58. ISBN 978-0-19-879357-1The term ‘Epic Sanskrit’ refers to the language of the two great Sanskrit epics, the Mahābhārata and the Rāmāyaṇa. … It is likely, therefore, that the epic-like elements found in Vedic sources and the two epics that we have are not directly related, but that both drew on the same source, an oral tradition of storytelling that existed before, throughout, and after the Vedic period.
  1087. Jump up to:a b Coningham & Young 2015, pp. 104–105.
  1088. ^ Kulke & Rothermund 2004, pp. 21–23.
  1089. Jump up to:a b Singh 2009, p. 181.
  1090. ^ Possehl 2003, p. 2.
  1091. Jump up to:a b c Singh 2009, p. 255.
  1092. Jump up to:a b Singh 2009, pp. 186–187.
  1093. ^ Witzel 2003, pp. 68–69.
  1094. ^ Kulke & Rothermund 2004, pp. 41–43.
  1095. Jump up to:a b Singh 2009, pp. 250–251.
  1096. ^ Singh 2009, pp. 260–265.
  1097. ^ Kulke & Rothermund 2004, pp. 53–54.
  1098. ^ Singh 2009, pp. 312–313.
  1099. ^ Kulke & Rothermund 2004, pp. 54–56.
  1100. ^ Stein 1998, p. 21.
  1101. ^ Stein 1998, pp. 67–68.
  1102. ^ Singh 2009, p. 300.
  1103. Jump up to:a b Singh 2009, p. 319.
  1104. ^ Stein 1998, pp. 78–79.
  1105. ^ Kulke & Rothermund 2004, p. 70.
  1106. ^ Singh 2009, p. 367.
  1107. ^ Kulke & Rothermund 2004, p. 63.
  1108. ^ Stein 1998, pp. 89–90.
  1109. ^ Singh 2009, pp. 408–415.
  1110. ^ Stein 1998, pp. 92–95.
  1111. ^ Kulke & Rothermund 2004, pp. 89–91.
  1112. Jump up to:a b c Singh 2009, p. 545.
  1113. ^ Stein 1998, pp. 98–99.
  1114. Jump up to:a b Stein 1998, p. 132.
  1115. Jump up to:a b c Stein 1998, pp. 119–120.
  1116. Jump up to:a b Stein 1998, pp. 121–122.
  1117. Jump up to:a b Stein 1998, p. 123.
  1118. Jump up to:a b Stein 1998, p. 124.
  1119. Jump up to:a b Stein 1998, pp. 127–128.
  1120. ^ Ludden 2002, p. 68.
  1121. ^ Asher & Talbot 2008, p. 47.
  1122. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 6.
  1123. ^ Ludden 2002, p. 67.
  1124. ^ Asher & Talbot 2008, pp. 50–51.
  1125. Jump up to:a b Asher & Talbot 2008, p. 53.
  1126. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 12.
  1127. ^ Robb 2001, p. 80.
  1128. ^ Stein 1998, p. 164.
  1129. ^ Asher & Talbot 2008, p. 115.
  1130. ^ Robb 2001, pp. 90–91.
  1131. Jump up to:a b Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 17.
  1132. Jump up to:a b c Asher & Talbot 2008, p. 152.
  1133. ^ Asher & Talbot 2008, p. 158.
  1134. ^ Stein 1998, p. 169.
  1135. ^ Asher & Talbot 2008, p. 186.
  1136. Jump up to:a b Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 23–24.
  1137. ^ Asher & Talbot 2008, p. 256.
  1138. Jump up to:a b c Asher & Talbot 2008, p. 286.
  1139. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 44–49.
  1140. ^ Robb 2001, pp. 98–100.
  1141. ^ Ludden 2002, pp. 128–132.
  1142. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 51–55.
  1143. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 68–71.
  1144. ^ Asher & Talbot 2008, p. 289.
  1145. ^ Robb 2001, pp. 151–152.
  1146. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 94–99.
  1147. ^ Brown 1994, p. 83.
  1148. ^ Peers 2006, p. 50.
  1149. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 100–103.
  1150. ^ Brown 1994, pp. 85–86.
  1151. ^ Stein 1998, p. 239.
  1152. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 103–108.
  1153. ^ Robb 2001, p. 183.
  1154. ^ Sarkar 1983, pp. 1–4.
  1155. ^ Copland 2001, pp. ix–x.
  1156. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 123.
  1157. ^ Stein 1998, p. 260.
  1158. ^ Stein 2010, p. 245: An expansion of state functions in British and in princely India occurred as a result of the terrible famines of the later nineteenth century, … A reluctant regime decided that state resources had to be deployed and that anti-famine measures were best managed through technical experts.
  1159. ^ Stein 1998, p. 258.
  1160. Jump up to:a b Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 126.
  1161. Jump up to:a b Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 97.
  1162. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 163.
  1163. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 167.
  1164. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 195–197.
  1165. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 203.
  1166. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 231.
  1167. ^ “London Declaration, 1949”Commonwealth. Retrieved 11 October 2022.
  1168. ^ “Role of Soviet Union in India’s industrialisation: a comparative assessment with the West” (PDF). ijrar.com.
  1169. ^ “Briefing Rooms: India”Economic Research ServiceUnited States Department of Agriculture, 2009, archived from the original on 20 May 2011
  1170. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 265–266.
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  1172. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 253.
  1173. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 274.
  1174. Jump up to:a b Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 247–248.
  1175. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 304.
  1176. Jump up to:a b c d Ali & Aitchison 2005.
  1177. ^ Dikshit & Schwartzberg 2023, p. 7.
  1178. ^ Prakash et al. 2000.
  1179. ^ Kaul 1970, p. 160, ” The Aravalli range boldy defines the eastern limit of the arid and semi-arid zone. Probably the more humid conditions that prevail near the Aravallis prevented the extension of aridity towards the east and the Ganges Valley. It is noteworthy that, wherever there are gaps in this range, sand has advanced to the east of it.”
  1180. ^ Prasad 1974, p. 372, ” The topography of the Indian Desert is dominated by the Aravalli Ranges on its eastern border, which consist largely of tightly folded and highly metamorphosed Archaean rocks.”
  1181. ^ Fisher 2018, p. 83, ” East of the lower Indus lay the inhospitable Rann of Kutch and Thar Desert. East of the upper Indus lay the more promising but narrow corridor between the Himalayan foothills on the north and the Thar Desert and Aravalli Mountains on the south. At the strategic choke point, just before reaching the fertile, well-watered Gangetic plain, sat Delhi. On this site, where life giving streams running off the most northern spur of the rocky Aravalli ridge flowed into the Jumna river, and where the war-horse and war-elephant trade intersected, a series of dynasties built fortified capitals.”
  1182. ^ Mcgrail et al. 2003, p. 257.
  1183. ^ Dikshit & Schwartzberg 2023, p. 8.
  1184. ^ Dikshit & Schwartzberg 2023, pp. 9–10.
  1185. ^ Ministry of Information and Broadcasting 2007, p. 1.
  1186. Jump up to:a b Kumar et al. 2006.
  1187. ^ Dikshit & Schwartzberg 2023, p. 15.
  1188. ^ Duff 1993, p. 353.
  1189. ^ Basu & Xavier 2017, p. 78.
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  1191. ^ Dikshit & Schwartzberg 2023, p. 17.
  1192. ^ Dikshit & Schwartzberg 2023, p. 12.
  1193. ^ Dikshit & Schwartzberg 2023, p. 13.
  1194. Jump up to:a b Chang 1967, pp. 391–394.
  1195. ^ Posey 1994, p. 118.
  1196. ^ Wolpert 2003, p. 4.
  1197. ^ Heitzman & Worden 1996, p. 97.
  1198. ^ Sharma, Vibha (15 June 2020). “Average temperature over India projected to rise by 4.4 degrees Celsius: Govt report on impact of climate change in country”The Tribune. Retrieved 30 November 2020.
  1199. ^ Sethi, Nitin (3 February 2007). “Global warming: Mumbai to face the heat”The Times of India. Retrieved 11 March 2021.
  1200. ^ Gupta, Vivek; Jain, Manoj Kumar (2018). “Investigation of multi-model spatiotemporal mesoscale drought projections over India under climate change scenario”Journal of Hydrology567: 489–509. Bibcode:2018JHyd..567..489Gdoi:10.1016/j.jhydrol.2018.10.012ISSN 0022-1694S2CID 135053362.
  1201. ^ Megadiverse Countries, Biodiversity A–Z, UN Environment World Conservation Monitoring Centre, retrieved 17 October 2021
  1202. ^ “Animal Discoveries 2011: New Species and New Records” (PDF). Zoological Survey of India. 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 January 2013. Retrieved 20 July 2012.
  1203. Jump up to:a b Puri, S. K., “Biodiversity Profile of India”ces.iisc.ernet.in, archived from the original on 21 November 2011, retrieved 20 June 2007
  1204. ^ Basak 1983, p. 24.
  1205. Jump up to:a b Venkataraman, Krishnamoorthy; Sivaperuman, Chandrakasan (2018), “Biodiversity Hotspots in India”, in Sivaperuman, Chandrakasan; Venkataraman, Krishnamoorthy (eds.), Indian Hotspots: Vertebrate Faunal Diversity, Conservation and ManagementSpringer, p. 5, ISBN 978-981-10-6605-4
  1206. Jump up to:a b c d Jha, Raghbendra (2018), Facets of India’s Economy and Her Society Volume II: Current State and Future ProspectsSpringer, p. 198, ISBN 978-1-349-95342-4
  1207. Jump up to:a b c “Forest Cover in States/UTs in India in 2019”Forest Research Institute via National Informatics Centre. Retrieved 16 October 2021.
  1208. ^ Tritsch 2001, pp. 11–12.
  1209. ^ Tritsch 2001, p. 12India has two natural zones of thorn forest, one in the rain shadow area of the Deccan Plateau east of the Western Ghats, and the other in the western part of the Indo-Gangetic plain. Growth is limited only by moisture availability in these areas, so with irrigation the fertile alluvial soil of Punjab and Haryana has been turned into India’s prime agricultural area. Much of the thorn forest covering the plains probably had savannah-like features now no longer visible.
  1210. ^ Goyal, Anupam (2006), The WTO and International Environmental Law: Towards ConciliationOxford University Press, p. 295, ISBN 978-0-19-567710-2 Quote: “The Indian government successfully argued that the medicinal neem tree is part of traditional Indian knowledge. (page 295)”
  1211. ^ Hughes, Julie E. (2013), Animal KingdomsHarvard University Press, p. 106, ISBN 978-0-674-07480-4At same time, the leafy pipal trees and comparative abundance that marked the Mewari landscape fostered refinements unattainable in other lands.
  1212. ^ Ameri, Marta (2018), “Letting the Pictures Speak: An Image-Based Approach to the Mythological and Narrative Imagery of the Harappan World”, in Ameri, Marta; Costello, Sarah Kielt; Jamison, Gregg; Scott, Sarah Jarmer (eds.), Seals and Sealing in the Ancient World: Case Studies from the Near East, Egypt, the Aegean, and South AsiaCambridge University Press, pp. 156–157, ISBN 978-1-108-17351-3 Quote: “The last of the centaurs has the long, wavy, horizontal horns of a markhor, a human face, a heavy-set body that appears bovine, and a goat tail … This figure is often depicted by itself, but it is also consistently represented in scenes that seem to reflect the adoration of a figure in a pipal tree or arbour and which may be termed ritual. These include fully detailed scenes like that visible in the large ‘divine adoration’ seal from Mohenjo-daro.”
  1213. ^ Paul Gwynne (2011), World Religions in Practice: A Comparative IntroductionJohn Wiley & Sons, p. 358, ISBN 978-1-4443-6005-9The tree under which Sakyamuni became the Buddha is a peepal tree (Ficus religiosa).
  1214. ^ Crame & Owen 2002, p. 142.
  1215. ^ Karanth 2006.
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  1217. ^ Singh, M.; Kumar, A. & Molur, S. (2008). “Trachypithecus johnii”The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species2008. e.T44694A10927987. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2008.RLTS.T44694A10927987.en.
  1218. ^ Fischer, Johann“Semnopithecus johnii”ITISArchived from the original on 29 August 2018. Retrieved 27 August 2018.
  1219. Jump up to:a b S.D. Biju; Sushil Dutta; M.S. Ravichandran Karthikeyan Vasudevan; S.P. Vijayakumar; Chelmala Srinivasulu; Gajanan Dasaramji Bhuddhe (2004). “Duttaphrynus beddomii”The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species2004IUCN: e.T54584A86543952. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2004.RLTS.T54584A11155448.en.
  1220. ^ Frost, Darrel R. (2015). Duttaphrynus beddomii (Günther, 1876)”Amphibian Species of the World: an Online Reference. Version 6.0American Museum of Natural HistoryArchived from the original on 21 July 2015. Retrieved 13 September 2015.
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  1222. ^ Lovette, Irby J.; Fitzpatrick, John W. (2016), Handbook of Bird BiologyJohn Wiley & Sons, p. 599, ISBN 978-1-118-29105-4
  1223. ^ Tritsch 2001, p. 15Before it was so heavily settled and intensively exploited, the Punjab was dominated by thorn forest interspersed by rolling grasslands which were grazed on by millions of Blackbuck, accompanied by their dominant predator, the Cheetah. Always keen hunters, the Moghul princes kept tame cheetahs which were used to chase and bring down the Blackbuck. Today the Cheetah is extinct in India and the severely endangered Blackbuck no longer exists in the Punjab.
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  1274. ^ (a) Guyot-Rechard, Berenice (2017), Shadow States: India, China and the Himalayas, 1910–1962, Cambridge University Press, p. 235, ISBN 978-1-107-17679-9By invading NEFA, the PRC did not just aim to force a humiliated India to recognise its possession of the Aksai Chin. It also hoped to get, once and for all, the upper hand in their shadowing competition.
    (b) Chubb, Andrew (2021), “The Sino-Indian Border Crisis: Chinese Perceptions of Indian Nationalism”, in Golley, Jane; Jaivan, Linda; Strange, Sharon (eds.), Crisis, Australian National University Press, pp. 231–232, ISBN 978-1-76046-439-4The ensuing cycle of escalation culminated in the 1962 Sino-Indian border war in which Mao Zedong’s troops overran almost the entire state of Arunachal Pradesh in the eastern sector before unilaterally withdrawing, as if to underline the insult; most of the war’s several thousand casualties were Indian. The PLA’s decisive victories in the 1962 war not only humiliated the Indian Army, they also entrenched a status quo in Ladakh that was highly unfavourable for India, in which China controls almost all of the disputed territory. A nationalistic press and commentariat have kept 1962 vivid in India’s popular consciousness.
    (c) Lintner, Bertil (2018), China’s India War: Collision Course on the Roof of the World, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-909163-8Lin Biao was put in charge of the operation and that alliance between Mao and his loyal de facto chief of the PLA made the attack on India possible. With China’s ultimate victory in the war, Mao’s ultra-leftist line had won in China; whatever critical voices that were left in the Party after all the purges fell silent.
    (d) Medcalf, Rory (2020), Indo-Pacific Empire: China, America and the contest for the world’s pivotal, Manchester University Press, ISBN 978-1-5261-5077-6From an Indian perspective, the China-India war of 1962 was a shocking betrayal of the principles of co-operation and coexistence: a surprise attack that humiliated India and personally broke Nehru.
    (e) Ganguly, Sumit (1997), The Crisis in Kashmir: Portents of War, Hope of Peace, Woodrow Wilson Center Press and Cambridge University Press, p. 44, ISBN 978-0-521-65566-8In October 1962 India suffered the most humiliating military debacle in its post-independence history, at the hands of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA). The outcome of this conflict had far-reaching consequences for Indian foreign and defence policies. The harsh defeat that the Chinese PLA had inflicted on the Indian Army called into question some of the most deeply held precepts of Nehru’s foreign and defence policies.
    (f) Raghavan, Srinath (2019), “A Missed Opportunity? The Nehru-Zhou Enlai Summit of 1960”, in Bhagavan, Manu (ed.), India and the Cold War, University of North Carolina Press, p. 121, ISBN 978-1-4696-5117-0The ‘forward policy’ adopted by India to prevent the Chinese from occupying territory claimed by them was undertaken in the mistaken belief that Beijing would be cautious in dealing with India owing to Moscow’s stance on the dispute and its growing proximity to India. These misjudgments would eventually culminate in India’s humiliating defeat in the war of October–November 1962.
  1275. ^ Brahma Chellaney (2006). Asian Juggernaut: The Rise of China, India, and JapanHarperCollins. p. 195. ISBN 978-8172236502Indeed, Beijing’s acknowledgement of Indian control over Sikkim seems limited to the purpose of facilitating trade through the vertiginous Nathu-la Pass, the scene of bloody artillery duels in September 1967 when Indian troops beat back attacking Chinese forces.
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  1474. ^ Dwyer, Rachel (2013), “Bombay Ishtyle”, in Stella Bruzzi, Pamela Church Gibson (ed.), Fashion Cultures: Theories, Explorations and AnalysisRoutledge, pp. 178–189, ISBN 978-1-136-29537-9
  1475. Jump up to:a b c Davidson, Alan (2014), The Oxford Companion to FoodOxford University Press, p. 409, ISBN 978-0-19-967733-7
  1476. ^ Davidson, Alan (2014), The Oxford Companion to FoodOxford University Press, p. 161, ISBN 978-0-19-967733-7Chapatis are made from finely milled whole-wheat flour, called chapati flour or atta, and water. The dough is rolled into thin rounds which vary in size from region to region and then cooked without fat or oil on a slightly curved griddle called a tava.
  1477. ^ Tamang, J. P.; Fleet, G. H. (2009), “Yeasts Diversity in Fermented Foods and Beverages”, in Satyanarayana, T.; Kunze, G. (eds.), Yeast Biotechnology: Diversity and Applications, Springer, p. 180, ISBN 978-1-4020-8292-4Idli is an acid-leavened and steamed cake made by bacterial fermentation of a thick batter made from coarsely ground rice and dehulled black gram. Idli cakes are soft, moist and spongy, have desirable sour flavour, and is eaten as breakfast in South India. Dosa batter is very similar to idli batter, except that both the rice and black gram are finely grounded. The batter is thinner than that of idli and is fried as a thin, crisp pancake and eaten directly in South India.
  1478. ^ Jhala, Angma Day (2015), Royal Patronage, Power and Aesthetics in Princely India, Routledge, p. 70, ISBN 978-1-317-31657-2With the ascent of the Mughal Empire in sixteenth-century India, Turkic, Persian and Afghan traditions of dress, ‘architecture and cuisine’ were adopted by non-Muslim indigenous elites in South Asia. In this manner, Central Asian cooking merged with older traditions within the subcontinent, to create such signature dishes as biryani (a fusion of the Persian pilau and the spice-laden dishes of Hindustan), and the Kashmiri meat stew of Rogan Josh. It not only generated new dishes and entire cuisines, but also fostered novel modes of eating. Such newer trends included the consumption of Persian condiments, which relied heavily on almonds, pastries and quince jams, alongside Indian achars made from sweet limes, green vegetables and curds as side relishes during Mughlai meals.
  1479. ^ Panjabi, Camellia (1995), The Great Curries of IndiaSimon and Schuster, pp. 158–, ISBN 978-0-684-80383-8The Muslim influenced breads of India are leavened, like naanKhamiri roti, …
  1480. Jump up to:a b c Davidson, Alan (2014), The Oxford Companion to FoodOxford University Press, p. 410, ISBN 978-0-19-967733-7
  1481. ^ Sahakian, Marlyne; Saloma, Czarina; Erkman, Suren (2016), Food Consumption in the City: Practices and patterns in urban Asia and the PacificTaylor & Francis, p. 50, ISBN 978-1-317-31050-1
  1482. ^ OECD; Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (2018), OECD-FAO Agricultural Outlook 2018–2027OECD Publishing, p. 21, ISBN 978-92-64-06203-0
  1483. ^ Roger 2000.
  1484. ^ Sengupta, Jayanta (2014), “India”, in Freedman, Paul; Chaplin, Joyce E.; Albala, Ken (eds.), Food in Time and Place: The American Historical Association Companion to Food HistoryUniversity of California Press, p. 74, ISBN 978-0-520-27745-8
  1485. Jump up to:a b c Collingham, Elizabeth M. (2007), Curry: A Tale of Cooks and ConquerorsOxford University Press, p. 25, ISBN 978-0-19-532001-5
  1486. ^ Nandy, Ashis (2004), “The Changing Popular Culture of Indian Food: Preliminary Notes”, South Asia Research24 (1): 9–19, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.830.7136doi:10.1177/0262728004042760ISSN 0262-7280S2CID 143223986
  1487. ^ Srinivasan, Radhika; Jermyn, Leslie; Lek, Hui Hui (2001), India, Times Books International, p. 109, ISBN 978-981-232-184-8 Quote: “Girls in India usually play jump rope, or hopscotch, and five stones, tossing the stones up in the air and catching them in many different ways … the coconut-plucking contests, groundnut-eating races, … of rural India.”
  1488. ^ Wolpert 2003, p. 2.
  1489. ^ Rediff 2008 b.
  1490. ^ “Candidates’ R13: Anand Draws, Clinches Rematch with Carlsen”. Archived from the original on 11 January 2015. Retrieved 14 December 2018.
  1491. ^ Binmore 2007, p. 98.
  1492. ^ Shores, Lori (15 February 2007), Teens in IndiaCompass Point Books, p. 78, ISBN 978-0-7565-2063-2archived from the original on 17 June 2012, retrieved 24 July 2011
  1493. ^ “From IPL to ISL, sports leagues in India to watch out for”The Financial Express. 26 September 2021. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  1494. ^ “Indian Super League: Odisha president says sacking Stuart Baxter was ‘the only course of action'”. Sky Sports. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  1495. ^ “Kabaddi gets the IPL treatment”BBC News. 6 August 2014. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  1496. ^ “What India was crazy about: Hockey first, Cricket later, Football, Kabaddi now?”India Today. 14 August 2017.
  1497. ^ Futterman & Sharma 2009.
  1498. ^ Commonwealth Games 2010.
  1499. ^ Cyriac 2010.
  1500. ^ British Broadcasting Corporation 2010 a.
  1501. ^ Mint 2010.
  1502. ^ Xavier 2010.
  1503. ^ “Basketball team named for 11th South Asian Games”The Nation. Nawaiwaqt Group. 2 January 2010. Archived from the original on 2 December 2012. Retrieved 23 November 2019.
  1504. ^ Majumdar & Bandyopadhyay 2006, pp. 1–5.
  1505. ^ Dehejia 2011.
  1506. References
  1507. Jump up to:a b c d National Informatics Centre 2005.
  1508. Jump up to:a b c d “National Symbols | National Portal of India”India.gov.in. Archived from the original on 4 February 2017. Retrieved 1 March 2017. The National Anthem of India Jana Gana Mana, composed originally in Bengali by Rabindranath Tagore, was adopted in its Hindi version by the Constituent Assembly as the National Anthem of India on 24 January 1950.
  1509. ^ “National anthem of India: a brief on ‘Jana Gana Mana'”News18. 14 August 2012. Archived from the original on 17 April 2019. Retrieved 7 June 2019.
  1510. ^ Wolpert 2003, p. 1.
  1511. ^ Constituent Assembly of India 1950.
  1512. Jump up to:a b Ministry of Home Affairs 1960.
  1513. ^ “Profile | National Portal of India”India.gov.in. Archived from the original on 30 August 2013. Retrieved 23 August 2013.
  1514. ^ “Constitutional Provisions – Official Language Related Part-17 of the Constitution of India”Department of Official Language via Government of IndiaArchived from the original on 18 April 2021. Retrieved 18 April 2021.
  1515. ^ “50th Report of the Commissioner for Linguistic Minorities in India (July 2012 to June 2013)” (PDF). Commissioner for Linguistic Minorities, Ministry of Minority AffairsGovernment of India. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 July 2016. Retrieved 26 December 2014.
  1516. ^ Eberhard, David M.; Simons, Gary F.; Fennig, Charles D. (2024). “India”Ethnologue: Languages of the World (27 ed.).
  1517. Jump up to:a b “C −1 Population by religious community – 2011”Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner. Archived from the original on 25 August 2015. Retrieved 25 August 2015.
  1518. Jump up to:a b c d e f Library of Congress 2004.
  1519. Jump up to:a b “World Population Prospects”Population Division – United Nations. Retrieved 2 July 2023.
  1520. ^ “Population Enumeration Data (Final Population)”2011 Census DataOffice of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner, India. Archived from the original on 22 May 2016. Retrieved 17 June 2016.
  1521. ^ “A – 2 Decadal Variation in Population Since 1901” (PDF). 2011 Census DataOffice of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner, India. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 April 2016. Retrieved 17 June 2016.
  1522. Jump up to:a b c d e f “World Economic Outlook Database, October 2024 Edition. (India)”www.imf.orgInternational Monetary Fund. 22 October 2024. Retrieved 22 October 2024.
  1523. ^ “Gini index (World Bank estimate) – India”World Bank.
  1524. ^ “Human Development Report 2023/24” (PDF). United Nations Development Programme. 13 March 2024. Retrieved 13 March 2024.
  1525. ^ “List of all left- & right-driving countries around the world”worldstandards.eu. 13 May 2020. Retrieved 10 June 2020.
  1526. ^
  1527. ^ “Ministry of Home Affairs (Department of Border Management)” (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 March 2015. Retrieved 1 September 2008.
  1528. Jump up to:a b c Petraglia & Allchin 2007, p. 10, “Y-Chromosome and Mt-DNA data support the colonization of South Asia by modern humans originating in Africa. … Coalescence dates for most non-European populations average to between 73 and 55 ka.”
  1529. Jump up to:a b Dyson 2018, p. 1, “Modern human beings—Homo sapiens—originated in Africa. Then, intermittently, sometime between 60,000 and 80,000 years ago, tiny groups of them began to enter the north-west of the Indian subcontinent. It seems likely that initially they came by way of the coast. … it is virtually certain that there were Homo sapiens in the subcontinent 55,000 years ago, even though the earliest fossils that have been found of them date to only about 30,000 years before the present.”
  1530. Jump up to:a b Fisher 2018, p. 23, “Scholars estimate that the first successful expansion of the Homo sapiens range beyond Africa and across the Arabian Peninsula occurred from as early as 80,000 years ago to as late as 40,000 years ago, although there may have been prior unsuccessful emigrations. Some of their descendants extended the human range ever further in each generation, spreading into each habitable land they encountered. One human channel was along the warm and productive coastal lands of the Persian Gulf and northern Indian Ocean. Eventually, various bands entered India between 75,000 years ago and 35,000 years ago.”
  1531. ^ Dyson 2018, p. 28
  1532. ^ (a) Dyson 2018, pp. 4–5;
    (b) Fisher 2018, p. 33
  1533. ^ Lowe 2015, pp. 1–2, “It consists of 1,028 hymns (sūktas), highly crafted poetic compositions originally intended for recital during rituals and for the invocation of and communication with the Indo-Aryan gods. Modern scholarly opinion largely agrees that these hymns were composed between around 1500 BCE and 1200 BCE, during the eastward migration of the Indo-Aryan tribes from the mountains of what is today northern Afghanistan across the Punjab into north India.”
  1534. ^ (a) Witzel 2003, pp. 68–70, “It is known from internal evidence that the Vedic texts were orally composed in northern India, at first in the Greater Punjab and later on also in more eastern areas, including northern Bihar, between ca. 1500 BCE and ca. 500–400 BCE. The oldest text, the Rgveda, must have been more or less contemporary with the Mitanni texts of northern Syria/Iraq (1450–1350 BCE); […] The Vedic texts were orally composed and transmitted, without the use of script, in an unbroken line of transmission from teacher to student that was formalised early on. This ensured an impeccable textual transmission superior to the classical texts of other cultures; it is in fact something of a tape-recording of ca. 1500–500 BCE. Not just the actual words, but even the long-lost musical (tonal) accent (as in old Greek or in Japanese) has been preserved up to the present. […] The RV text was composed before the introduction and massive use of iron, that is before ca. 1200–1000 BCE.”;
    (b) Doniger 2014, pp. xviii, 10, “A Chronology of Hinduism: ca. 1500–1000 BCE Rig Veda; ca. 1200–900 BCE Yajur Veda, Sama Veda and Atharva Veda […] Hindu texts began with the Rig Veda (‘Knowledge of Verses’), composed in northwest India around 1500 BCE; the first of the three Vedas, it is the earliest extant text composed in Sanskrit, the language of ancient India.”;
    (c) Ludden 2014, p. 19, “In Punjab, a dry region with grasslands watered by five rivers (hence ‘panch’ and ‘ab’) draining the western Himalayas, one prehistoric culture left no material remains, but some of its ritual texts were preserved orally over the millennia. The culture is called Aryan, and evidence in its texts indicates that it spread slowly south-east, following the course of the Yamuna and Ganga Rivers. Its elite called itself Arya (pure) and distinguished themselves sharply from others. Aryans led kin groups organized as nomadic horse-herding tribes. Their ritual texts are called Vedas, composed in Sanskrit. Vedic Sanskrit is recorded only in hymns that were part of Vedic rituals to Aryan gods. To be Aryan apparently meant to belong to the elite among pastoral tribes. Texts that record Aryan culture are not precisely datable, but they seem to begin around 1200 BCE with four collections of Vedic hymns (Rg, Sama, Yajur, and Artharva).”;
    (d) Dyson 2018, pp. 14–15, “Although the collapse of the Indus valley civilization is no longer believed to have been due to an ‘Aryan invasion’ it is widely thought that, at roughly the same time, or perhaps a few centuries later, new Indo-Aryan-speaking people and influences began to enter the subcontinent from the north-west. Detailed evidence is lacking. Nevertheless, a predecessor of the language that would eventually be called Sanskrit was probably introduced into the north-west sometime between 3,900 and 3,000 years ago. This language was related to one then spoken in eastern Iran; and both of these languages belonged to the Indo-European language family. […] It seems likely that various small-scale migrations were involved in the gradual introduction of the predecessor language and associated cultural characteristics. However, there may not have been a tight relationship between movements of people on the one hand, and changes in language and culture on the other. Moreover, the process whereby a dynamic new force gradually arose—a people with a distinct ideology who eventually seem to have referred to themselves as ‘Arya’—was certainly two-way. That is, it involved a blending of new features which came from outside with other features—probably including some surviving Harappan influences—that were already present. Anyhow, it would be quite a few centuries before Sanskrit was written down. And the hymns and stories of the Arya people—especially the Vedas and the later Mahabharata and Ramayana epics—are poor guides as to historical events. Of course, the emerging Arya were to have a huge impact on the history of the subcontinent. Nevertheless, little is known about their early presence.”;
    (e) Robb 2011, pp. 46–, “The expansion of Aryan culture is supposed to have begun around 1500 BCE. It should not be thought that this Aryan emergence (though it implies some migration) necessarily meant either a sudden invasion of new peoples, or a complete break with earlier traditions. It comprises a set of cultural ideas and practices, upheld by a Sanskrit-speaking elite, or Aryans. The features of this society are recorded in the Vedas.”
  1535. ^ (a) Jamison, Stephanie; Brereton, Joel (2020), The RigvedaOxford University Press, pp. 2, 4, ISBN 978-0-19-063339-4The RgVeda is one of the four Vedas, which together constitute the oldest texts in Sanskrit and the earliest evidence for what will become Hinduism. (p. 2) Although Vedic religion is very different in many regards from what is known as Classical Hinduism, the seeds are there. Gods like Visnu and Siva (under the name Rudra), who will become so dominant later, are already present in the Rgveda, though in roles both lesser than and different from those they will later play, and the principal Rgvedic gods like Indra remain in later Hinduism, though in diminished capacity (p. 4).;
    (b) Flood, Gavin (2020), “Introduction”, in Gavin Flood (ed.), The Oxford History of Hinduism: Hindu Practice: Hindu PracticeOxford University Press, pp. 4–, ISBN 978-0-19-105322-1I take the term ‘Hinduism to meaningfully denote a range and history of practice characterised by a number of features, particularly reference to Vedic textual and sacrificial origins, belonging to endogamous social units (jati/varna), participating in practices that involve making an offering to a deity and receiving a blessing (puja), and a first-level cultural polytheism (although many Hindus adhere to a second-level monotheism in which many gods are regarded as emanations or manifestations of the one, supreme being).;
    (c) Michaels, Axel (2017). Patrick Olivelle, Donald R. Davis (ed.). The Oxford History of Hinduism: Hindu Law: A New History of Dharmaśāstra. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 86–97. ISBN 978-0-19-100709-5Almost all traditional Hindu families observe until today at least three samskaras (initiation, marriage, and death ritual). Most other rituals have lost their popularity, are combined with other rites of passage, or are drastically shortened. Although samskaras vary from region to region, from class (varna) to class, and from caste to caste, their core elements remain the same owing to the common source, the Veda, and a common priestly tradition preserved by the Brahmin priests. (p 86)
    (d) Flood, Gavin D. (1996). An Introduction to HinduismCambridge University Press. p. 35. ISBN 978-0-521-43878-0It is this Sansrit, vedic, tradition which has maintained a continuity into modern times and which has provided the most important resource and inspiration for Hindu traditions and individuals. The Veda is the foundation for most later developments in what is known as Hinduism.
  1536. ^ Dyson 2018, pp. 1625
  1537. ^ Dyson 2018, p. 16
  1538. ^ Fisher 2018, p. 59
  1539. ^ (a) Dyson 2018, pp. 16–17;
    (b) Fisher 2018, p. 67;
    (c) Robb 2011, pp. 56–57;
    (d) Ludden 2014, pp. 29–30.
  1540. ^ (a) Ludden 2014, pp. 28–29;
    (b) Glenn Van Brummelen (2014), “Arithmetic”, in Thomas F. Glick; Steven Livesey; Faith Wallis (eds.), Medieval Science, Technology, and Medicine: An EncyclopediaRoutledge, pp. 46–48, ISBN 978-1-135-45932-1
  1541. ^ (a) Dyson 2018, p. 20;
    (b) Stein 2010, p. 90;
    (c) Ramusack, Barbara N. (1999), “Women in South Asia”, in Barbara N. Ramusack; Sharon L. Sievers (eds.), Women in Asia: Restoring Women to HistoryIndiana University Press, pp. 27–29, ISBN 0-253-21267-7
  1542. Jump up to:a b Kulke & Rothermund 2004, p. 93.
  1543. ^ Asher & Talbot 2006, p. 17–18: “The soaring height of the superstructure of Tanjavur’s Rajarajeshvara temple reflected the stature of the dynasty that sponsored its construction, for under Rajaraja (r. 985–1014) and his son Rajendra (r. 1014–1044), the Chola kingdom became the greatest Indian state of its era. […] The Cholas also had the advantage of proximity to the most active sector of long-distance trade within the Indian Ocean in this period, the eastern stretch extending from southeastern India through Southeast Asia and into south China. […] The victory of the Chola fleet led to fifty years of Indian dominance over the Strait of Malacca, the vital sea passage between the Malayan peninsula and Indonesia through which all trade to and from China was funneled. This was the apex of Indian influence in Southeast Asia, which had assimilated many elements of Indian civilization over the past six or more centuries, including the Sanskrit language, south Indian scripts, and the religions of Hinduism and Buddhism.”
  1544. ^ (a) Ludden 2014, p. 54;
    (b) Asher & Talbot 2006, pp. 78–79;
    (c) Fisher 2018, p. 76
  1545. ^ (a) Ludden 2014, pp. 68–70;
    (b) Asher & Talbot 2006, pp. 19, 24
  1546. ^ (a) Dyson 2018, p. 48;
    (b) Asher & Talbot 2006, p. 52
  1547. ^ Asher & Talbot 2006, p. 74
  1548. ^ Asher & Talbot 2006, p. 267
  1549. ^ Asher & Talbot 2006, p. 152
  1550. Jump up to:a b Fisher 2018, p. 106
  1551. ^ (a) Asher & Talbot 2006, p. 289
    (b) Fisher 2018, p. 120
  1552. ^ Taylor, Miles (2016), “The British royal family and the colonial empire from the Georgians to Prince George”, in Aldrish, Robert; McCreery, Cindy (eds.), Crowns and Colonies: European Monarchies and Overseas EmpiresManchester University Press, pp. 38–39, ISBN 978-1-5261-0088-7
  1553. ^ Peers 2013, p. 76.
  1554. ^ Embree, Ainslie Thomas; Hay, Stephen N.; Bary, William Theodore De (1988), “Nationalism Takes Root: The Moderates”Sources of Indian Tradition: Modern India and PakistanColumbia University Press, p. 85, ISBN 978-0-231-06414-9
  1555. ^ Marshall, P. J. (2001), The Cambridge Illustrated History of the British Empire, Cambridge University Press, p. 179, ISBN 978-0-521-00254-7The first modern nationalist movement to arise in the non-European empire, and one that became an inspiration for many others, was the Indian Congress.
  1556. ^ Chiriyankandath, James (2016), Parties and Political Change in South Asia, Routledge, p. 2, ISBN 978-1-317-58620-3South Asian parties include several of the oldest in the post-colonial world, foremost among them the 129-year-old Indian National Congress that led India to independence in 1947
  1557. ^ Fisher 2018, pp. 173–174: “The partition of South Asia that produced India and West and East Pakistan resulted from years of bitter negotiations and recriminations … The departing British also decreed that the hundreds of princes, who ruled one-third of the subcontinent and a quarter of its population, became legally independent, their status to be settled later. Geographical location, personal and popular sentiment, and substantial pressure and incentives from the new governments led almost all princes eventually to merge their domains into either Pakistan or India. … Each new government asserted its exclusive sovereignty within its borders, realigning all territories, animals, plants, minerals, and all other natural and human-made resources as either Pakistani or Indian property, to be used for its national development… Simultaneously, the central civil and military services and judiciary split roughly along religious ‘communal’ lines, even as they divided movable government assets according to a negotiated formula: 22.7 percent for Pakistan and 77.3 percent for India.”
  1558. ^ Chatterji, Joya; Washbrook, David (2013), “Introduction: Concepts and Questions”, in Chatterji, Joya; Washbrook, David (eds.), Routledge Handbook of the South Asian Diaspora, London and New York: Routledge, ISBN 978-0-415-48010-9Joya Chatterji describes how the partition of the British Indian empire into the new nation states of India and Pakistan produced new diaspora on a vast, and hitherto unprecedented, scale, but hints that the sheer magnitude of refugee movements in South Asia after 1947 must be understood in the context of pre-existing migratory flows within the partitioned regions (see also Chatterji 2013). She also demonstrates that the new national states of India and Pakistan were quickly drawn into trying to stem this migration. As they put into place laws designed to restrict the return of partition emigrants, this produced new dilemmas for both new nations in their treatment of ‘overseas Indians’; and many of them lost their right to return to their places of origin in the subcontinent, and also their claims to full citizenship in host countries.
  1559. ^ Talbot, Ian; Singh, Gurharpal (2009), The Partition of India, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-85661-4archived from the original on 13 December 2016, retrieved 15 November 2015, When the British divided and quit India in August 1947, they not only partitioned the subcontinent with the emergence of the two nations of India and Pakistan but also the provinces of Punjab and Bengal. … Indeed for many the Indian subcontinent’s division in August 1947 is seen as a unique event which defies comparative historical and conceptual analysis
  1560. ^ Khan, Yasmin (2017) [2007], The Great Partition: The Making of India and Pakistan (2nd ed.), New Haven and London: Yale University Press, p. 1, ISBN 978-0-300-23032-1South Asians learned that the British Indian empire would be partitioned on 3 June 1947. They heard about it on the radio, from relations and friends, by reading newspapers and, later, through government pamphlets. Among a population of almost four hundred million, where the vast majority live in the countryside, ploughing the land as landless peasants or sharecroppers, it is hardly surprising that many thousands, perhaps hundreds of thousands, did not hear the news for many weeks afterwards. For some, the butchery and forced relocation of the summer months of 1947 may have been the first that they knew about the creation of the two new states rising from the fragmentary and terminally weakened British empire in India
  1561. ^ (a) Copland 2001, pp. 71–78;
    (b) Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 222.
  1562. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2012, p. 327: “Even though much remains to be done, especially in regard to eradicating poverty and securing effective structures of governance, India’s achievements since independence in sustaining freedom and democracy have been singular among the world’s new nations.”
  1563. ^ Stein, Burton (2012), Arnold, David (ed.), A History of India, The Blackwell History of the World Series (2 ed.), Wiley-Blackwell, One of these is the idea of India as ‘the world’s largest democracy’, but a democracy forged less by the creation of representative institutions and expanding electorate under British rule than by the endeavours of India’s founding fathers – Gandhi, Nehru, Patel and Ambedkar – and the labours of the Constituent Assembly between 1946 and 1949, embodied in the Indian constitution of 1950. This democratic order, reinforced by the regular holding of nationwide elections and polling for the state assemblies, has, it can be argued, consistently underpinned a fundamentally democratic state structure – despite the anomaly of the Emergency and the apparent durability of the Gandhi-Nehru dynasty.
  1564. ^ Fisher 2018, pp. 184–185: “Since 1947, India’s internal disputes over its national identity, while periodically bitter and occasionally punctuated by violence, have been largely managed with remarkable and sustained commitment to national unity and democracy.”
  1565. ^ Dyson 2018, pp. 219, 262
  1566. ^ Biswas, Soutik (1 May 2023). “Most populous nation: Should India rejoice or panic?”BBC NewsBritish Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 3 May 2023.
  1567. ^ World Population Prospects 2022: Summary of Results (PDF). New York: United Nations Department of Social and Economic Affairs. 2022. pp. i.
  1568. ^ Fisher 2018, p. 8
  1569. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2012, pp. 265–266
  1570. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2012, p. 266
  1571. ^ Dyson 2018, p. 216
  1572. ^ (a) “Kashmir, region Indian subcontinent”Encyclopaedia Britannicaarchived from the original on 13 August 2019, retrieved 15 August 2019, Kashmir, region of the northwestern Indian subcontinent … has been the subject of dispute between India and Pakistan since the partition of the Indian subcontinent in 1947.;
    (b) Pletcher, Kenneth, “Aksai Chin, Plateau Region, Asia”Encyclopaedia Britannicaarchived from the original on 2 April 2019, retrieved 16 August 2019, Aksai Chin, Chinese (Pinyin) Aksayqin, portion of the Kashmir region, … constitutes nearly all the territory of the Chinese-administered sector of Kashmir that is claimed by India;
    (c) Bosworth, C. E (2006). “Kashmir”Encyclopedia Americana: Jefferson to LatinScholastic Library Publishing. p. 328. ISBN 978-0-7172-0139-6KASHMIR, kash’mer, the northernmost region of the Indian subcontinent, administered partly by India, partly by Pakistan, and partly by China. The region has been the subject of a bitter dispute between India and Pakistan since they became independent in 1947
  1573. ^ Narayan, Jitendra; John, Denny; Ramadas, Nirupama (2018). “Malnutrition in India: status and government initiatives”. Journal of Public Health Policy40 (1): 126–141. doi:10.1057/s41271-018-0149-5ISSN 0197-5897PMID 30353132S2CID 53032234.
  1574. ^ Balakrishnan, Kalpana; Dey, Sagnik; et al. (2019). “The impact of air pollution on deaths, disease burden, and life expectancy across the states of India: the Global Burden of Disease Study 2017”The Lancet Planetary Health3 (1): e26–e39. doi:10.1016/S2542-5196(18)30261-4ISSN 2542-5196PMC 6358127PMID 30528905.
  1575. Jump up to:a b IndiaInternational Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), 2019, archived from the original on 1 November 2020, retrieved 21 May 2019
  1576. Jump up to:a b “India State of Forest Report, 2021”. Forest Survey of India, National Informatics Centre. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
  1577. ^ Karanth & Gopal 2005, p. 374.
  1578. ^ “India (noun)”Oxford English Dictionary (3rd ed.), 2009 (subscription required)
  1579. ^ Thieme 1970, pp. 447–450.
  1580. Jump up to:a b Kuiper 2010, p. 86.
  1581. Jump up to:a b c Clémentin-Ojha 2014.
  1582. ^ The Constitution of India (PDF), Ministry of Law and Justice, 1 December 2007, archived from the original (PDF) on 9 September 2014, retrieved 3 March 2012, Article 1(1): India, that is Bharat, shall be a Union of States.
  1583. ^ Jha, Dwijendra Narayan (2014), Rethinking Hindu IdentityRoutledge, p. 11, ISBN 978-1-317-49034-0
  1584. ^ Singh 2017, p. 253.
  1585. Jump up to:a b Barrow 2003.
  1586. ^ Paturi, Joseph; Patterson, Roger (2016). “Hinduism (with Hare Krishna)”. In Hodge, Bodie; Patterson, Roger (eds.). World Religions & Cults Volume 2: Moralistic, Mythical and Mysticism Religions. United States: New Leaf Publishing Group. pp. 59–60. ISBN 978-0-89051-922-6The actual term Hindu first occurs as a Persian geographical term for the people who lived beyond the Indus River. The term Hindu originated as a geographical term and did not refer to a religion. Later, Hindu was taken by European languages from the Arabic term al-Hind, which referred to the people who lived across the Indus River. This Arabic term was itself taken from the Persian term Hindū, which refers to all Indians. By the 13th century, Hindustan emerged as a popular alternative name for India, meaning the “land of Hindus.”
  1587. ^ “Hindustan”Encyclopædia Britannica, retrieved 17 July 2011
  1588. ^ Lowe, John J. (2017). Transitive Nouns and Adjectives: Evidence from Early Indo-AryanOxford University Press. p. 58. ISBN 978-0-19-879357-1The term ‘Epic Sanskrit’ refers to the language of the two great Sanskrit epics, the Mahābhārata and the Rāmāyaṇa. … It is likely, therefore, that the epic-like elements found in Vedic sources and the two epics that we have are not directly related, but that both drew on the same source, an oral tradition of storytelling that existed before, throughout, and after the Vedic period.
  1589. Jump up to:a b Coningham & Young 2015, pp. 104–105.
  1590. ^ Kulke & Rothermund 2004, pp. 21–23.
  1591. Jump up to:a b Singh 2009, p. 181.
  1592. ^ Possehl 2003, p. 2.
  1593. Jump up to:a b c Singh 2009, p. 255.
  1594. Jump up to:a b Singh 2009, pp. 186–187.
  1595. ^ Witzel 2003, pp. 68–69.
  1596. ^ Kulke & Rothermund 2004, pp. 41–43.
  1597. Jump up to:a b Singh 2009, pp. 250–251.
  1598. ^ Singh 2009, pp. 260–265.
  1599. ^ Kulke & Rothermund 2004, pp. 53–54.
  1600. ^ Singh 2009, pp. 312–313.
  1601. ^ Kulke & Rothermund 2004, pp. 54–56.
  1602. ^ Stein 1998, p. 21.
  1603. ^ Stein 1998, pp. 67–68.
  1604. ^ Singh 2009, p. 300.
  1605. Jump up to:a b Singh 2009, p. 319.
  1606. ^ Stein 1998, pp. 78–79.
  1607. ^ Kulke & Rothermund 2004, p. 70.
  1608. ^ Singh 2009, p. 367.
  1609. ^ Kulke & Rothermund 2004, p. 63.
  1610. ^ Stein 1998, pp. 89–90.
  1611. ^ Singh 2009, pp. 408–415.
  1612. ^ Stein 1998, pp. 92–95.
  1613. ^ Kulke & Rothermund 2004, pp. 89–91.
  1614. Jump up to:a b c Singh 2009, p. 545.
  1615. ^ Stein 1998, pp. 98–99.
  1616. Jump up to:a b Stein 1998, p. 132.
  1617. Jump up to:a b c Stein 1998, pp. 119–120.
  1618. Jump up to:a b Stein 1998, pp. 121–122.
  1619. Jump up to:a b Stein 1998, p. 123.
  1620. Jump up to:a b Stein 1998, p. 124.
  1621. Jump up to:a b Stein 1998, pp. 127–128.
  1622. ^ Ludden 2002, p. 68.
  1623. ^ Asher & Talbot 2008, p. 47.
  1624. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 6.
  1625. ^ Ludden 2002, p. 67.
  1626. ^ Asher & Talbot 2008, pp. 50–51.
  1627. Jump up to:a b Asher & Talbot 2008, p. 53.
  1628. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 12.
  1629. ^ Robb 2001, p. 80.
  1630. ^ Stein 1998, p. 164.
  1631. ^ Asher & Talbot 2008, p. 115.
  1632. ^ Robb 2001, pp. 90–91.
  1633. Jump up to:a b Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 17.
  1634. Jump up to:a b c Asher & Talbot 2008, p. 152.
  1635. ^ Asher & Talbot 2008, p. 158.
  1636. ^ Stein 1998, p. 169.
  1637. ^ Asher & Talbot 2008, p. 186.
  1638. Jump up to:a b Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 23–24.
  1639. ^ Asher & Talbot 2008, p. 256.
  1640. Jump up to:a b c Asher & Talbot 2008, p. 286.
  1641. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 44–49.
  1642. ^ Robb 2001, pp. 98–100.
  1643. ^ Ludden 2002, pp. 128–132.
  1644. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 51–55.
  1645. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 68–71.
  1646. ^ Asher & Talbot 2008, p. 289.
  1647. ^ Robb 2001, pp. 151–152.
  1648. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 94–99.
  1649. ^ Brown 1994, p. 83.
  1650. ^ Peers 2006, p. 50.
  1651. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 100–103.
  1652. ^ Brown 1994, pp. 85–86.
  1653. ^ Stein 1998, p. 239.
  1654. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 103–108.
  1655. ^ Robb 2001, p. 183.
  1656. ^ Sarkar 1983, pp. 1–4.
  1657. ^ Copland 2001, pp. ix–x.
  1658. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 123.
  1659. ^ Stein 1998, p. 260.
  1660. ^ Stein 2010, p. 245: An expansion of state functions in British and in princely India occurred as a result of the terrible famines of the later nineteenth century, … A reluctant regime decided that state resources had to be deployed and that anti-famine measures were best managed through technical experts.
  1661. ^ Stein 1998, p. 258.
  1662. Jump up to:a b Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 126.
  1663. Jump up to:a b Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 97.
  1664. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 163.
  1665. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 167.
  1666. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 195–197.
  1667. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 203.
  1668. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 231.
  1669. ^ “London Declaration, 1949”Commonwealth. Retrieved 11 October 2022.
  1670. ^ “Role of Soviet Union in India’s industrialisation: a comparative assessment with the West” (PDF). ijrar.com.
  1671. ^ “Briefing Rooms: India”Economic Research ServiceUnited States Department of Agriculture, 2009, archived from the original on 20 May 2011
  1672. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 265–266.
  1673. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 266–270.
  1674. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 253.
  1675. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 274.
  1676. Jump up to:a b Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, pp. 247–248.
  1677. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 304.
  1678. Jump up to:a b c d Ali & Aitchison 2005.
  1679. ^ Dikshit & Schwartzberg 2023, p. 7.
  1680. ^ Prakash et al. 2000.
  1681. ^ Kaul 1970, p. 160, ” The Aravalli range boldy defines the eastern limit of the arid and semi-arid zone. Probably the more humid conditions that prevail near the Aravallis prevented the extension of aridity towards the east and the Ganges Valley. It is noteworthy that, wherever there are gaps in this range, sand has advanced to the east of it.”
  1682. ^ Prasad 1974, p. 372, ” The topography of the Indian Desert is dominated by the Aravalli Ranges on its eastern border, which consist largely of tightly folded and highly metamorphosed Archaean rocks.”
  1683. ^ Fisher 2018, p. 83, ” East of the lower Indus lay the inhospitable Rann of Kutch and Thar Desert. East of the upper Indus lay the more promising but narrow corridor between the Himalayan foothills on the north and the Thar Desert and Aravalli Mountains on the south. At the strategic choke point, just before reaching the fertile, well-watered Gangetic plain, sat Delhi. On this site, where life giving streams running off the most northern spur of the rocky Aravalli ridge flowed into the Jumna river, and where the war-horse and war-elephant trade intersected, a series of dynasties built fortified capitals.”
  1684. ^ Mcgrail et al. 2003, p. 257.
  1685. ^ Dikshit & Schwartzberg 2023, p. 8.
  1686. ^ Dikshit & Schwartzberg 2023, pp. 9–10.
  1687. ^ Ministry of Information and Broadcasting 2007, p. 1.
  1688. Jump up to:a b Kumar et al. 2006.
  1689. ^ Dikshit & Schwartzberg 2023, p. 15.
  1690. ^ Duff 1993, p. 353.
  1691. ^ Basu & Xavier 2017, p. 78.
  1692. ^ Dikshit & Schwartzberg 2023, p. 16.
  1693. ^ Dikshit & Schwartzberg 2023, p. 17.
  1694. ^ Dikshit & Schwartzberg 2023, p. 12.
  1695. ^ Dikshit & Schwartzberg 2023, p. 13.
  1696. Jump up to:a b Chang 1967, pp. 391–394.
  1697. ^ Posey 1994, p. 118.
  1698. ^ Wolpert 2003, p. 4.
  1699. ^ Heitzman & Worden 1996, p. 97.
  1700. ^ Sharma, Vibha (15 June 2020). “Average temperature over India projected to rise by 4.4 degrees Celsius: Govt report on impact of climate change in country”The Tribune. Retrieved 30 November 2020.
  1701. ^ Sethi, Nitin (3 February 2007). “Global warming: Mumbai to face the heat”The Times of India. Retrieved 11 March 2021.
  1702. ^ Gupta, Vivek; Jain, Manoj Kumar (2018). “Investigation of multi-model spatiotemporal mesoscale drought projections over India under climate change scenario”Journal of Hydrology567: 489–509. Bibcode:2018JHyd..567..489Gdoi:10.1016/j.jhydrol.2018.10.012ISSN 0022-1694S2CID 135053362.
  1703. ^ Megadiverse Countries, Biodiversity A–Z, UN Environment World Conservation Monitoring Centre, retrieved 17 October 2021
  1704. ^ “Animal Discoveries 2011: New Species and New Records” (PDF). Zoological Survey of India. 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 January 2013. Retrieved 20 July 2012.
  1705. Jump up to:a b Puri, S. K., “Biodiversity Profile of India”ces.iisc.ernet.in, archived from the original on 21 November 2011, retrieved 20 June 2007
  1706. ^ Basak 1983, p. 24.
  1707. Jump up to:a b Venkataraman, Krishnamoorthy; Sivaperuman, Chandrakasan (2018), “Biodiversity Hotspots in India”, in Sivaperuman, Chandrakasan; Venkataraman, Krishnamoorthy (eds.), Indian Hotspots: Vertebrate Faunal Diversity, Conservation and ManagementSpringer, p. 5, ISBN 978-981-10-6605-4
  1708. Jump up to:a b c d Jha, Raghbendra (2018), Facets of India’s Economy and Her Society Volume II: Current State and Future ProspectsSpringer, p. 198, ISBN 978-1-349-95342-4
  1709. Jump up to:a b c “Forest Cover in States/UTs in India in 2019”Forest Research Institute via National Informatics Centre. Retrieved 16 October 2021.
  1710. ^ Tritsch 2001, pp. 11–12.
  1711. ^ Tritsch 2001, p. 12India has two natural zones of thorn forest, one in the rain shadow area of the Deccan Plateau east of the Western Ghats, and the other in the western part of the Indo-Gangetic plain. Growth is limited only by moisture availability in these areas, so with irrigation the fertile alluvial soil of Punjab and Haryana has been turned into India’s prime agricultural area. Much of the thorn forest covering the plains probably had savannah-like features now no longer visible.
  1712. ^ Goyal, Anupam (2006), The WTO and International Environmental Law: Towards ConciliationOxford University Press, p. 295, ISBN 978-0-19-567710-2 Quote: “The Indian government successfully argued that the medicinal neem tree is part of traditional Indian knowledge. (page 295)”
  1713. ^ Hughes, Julie E. (2013), Animal KingdomsHarvard University Press, p. 106, ISBN 978-0-674-07480-4At same time, the leafy pipal trees and comparative abundance that marked the Mewari landscape fostered refinements unattainable in other lands.
  1714. ^ Ameri, Marta (2018), “Letting the Pictures Speak: An Image-Based Approach to the Mythological and Narrative Imagery of the Harappan World”, in Ameri, Marta; Costello, Sarah Kielt; Jamison, Gregg; Scott, Sarah Jarmer (eds.), Seals and Sealing in the Ancient World: Case Studies from the Near East, Egypt, the Aegean, and South AsiaCambridge University Press, pp. 156–157, ISBN 978-1-108-17351-3 Quote: “The last of the centaurs has the long, wavy, horizontal horns of a markhor, a human face, a heavy-set body that appears bovine, and a goat tail … This figure is often depicted by itself, but it is also consistently represented in scenes that seem to reflect the adoration of a figure in a pipal tree or arbour and which may be termed ritual. These include fully detailed scenes like that visible in the large ‘divine adoration’ seal from Mohenjo-daro.”
  1715. ^ Paul Gwynne (2011), World Religions in Practice: A Comparative IntroductionJohn Wiley & Sons, p. 358, ISBN 978-1-4443-6005-9The tree under which Sakyamuni became the Buddha is a peepal tree (Ficus religiosa).
  1716. ^ Crame & Owen 2002, p. 142.
  1717. ^ Karanth 2006.
  1718. ^ Tritsch 2001, p. 14.
  1719. ^ Singh, M.; Kumar, A. & Molur, S. (2008). “Trachypithecus johnii”The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species2008. e.T44694A10927987. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2008.RLTS.T44694A10927987.en.
  1720. ^ Fischer, Johann“Semnopithecus johnii”ITISArchived from the original on 29 August 2018. Retrieved 27 August 2018.
  1721. Jump up to:a b S.D. Biju; Sushil Dutta; M.S. Ravichandran Karthikeyan Vasudevan; S.P. Vijayakumar; Chelmala Srinivasulu; Gajanan Dasaramji Bhuddhe (2004). “Duttaphrynus beddomii”The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species2004IUCN: e.T54584A86543952. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2004.RLTS.T54584A11155448.en.
  1722. ^ Frost, Darrel R. (2015). Duttaphrynus beddomii (Günther, 1876)”Amphibian Species of the World: an Online Reference. Version 6.0American Museum of Natural HistoryArchived from the original on 21 July 2015. Retrieved 13 September 2015.
  1723. ^ Mace 1994, p. 4.
  1724. ^ Lovette, Irby J.; Fitzpatrick, John W. (2016), Handbook of Bird BiologyJohn Wiley & Sons, p. 599, ISBN 978-1-118-29105-4
  1725. ^ Tritsch 2001, p. 15Before it was so heavily settled and intensively exploited, the Punjab was dominated by thorn forest interspersed by rolling grasslands which were grazed on by millions of Blackbuck, accompanied by their dominant predator, the Cheetah. Always keen hunters, the Moghul princes kept tame cheetahs which were used to chase and bring down the Blackbuck. Today the Cheetah is extinct in India and the severely endangered Blackbuck no longer exists in the Punjab.
  1726. ^ Ministry of Environment and Forests 1972.
  1727. ^ Department of Environment and Forests 1988.
  1728. ^ “Biosphere” (PDF). Retrieved 28 June 2023.
  1729. ^ “75 Ramsar Sites in 75th Year of Independence”pib.gov.in. Retrieved 28 June 2023.
  1730. ^ Reviving the Roar: India’s Tiger Population Is On the Rise, 13 April 2023, retrieved 15 April 2023
  1731. ^ Johnston, Hank (2019), Social Movements, Nonviolent Resistance, and the StateRoutledge, p. 83, ISBN 978-0-429-88566-2
  1732. ^ Burnell & Calvert 1999, p. 125.
  1733. ^ Election Commission of India.
  1734. ^ Sáez, Lawrence; Sinha, Aseema (2010). “Political cycles, political institutions and public expenditure in India, 1980–2000”. British Journal of Political Science40 (1): 91–113. doi:10.1017/s0007123409990226ISSN 0007-1234S2CID 154767259.
  1735. ^ Malik & Singh 1992, pp. 318–336.
  1736. ^ Banerjee 2005, p. 3118.
  1737. ^ Halarnkar, Samar (13 June 2012). “Narendra Modi makes his move”BBC NewsThe right-wing Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), India’s primary opposition party
  1738. ^ Sarkar 2007, p. 84.
  1739. ^ Chander 2004, p. 117.
  1740. ^ Bhambhri 1992, pp. 118, 143.
  1741. ^ “Narasimha Rao Passes Away”The Hindu. 24 December 2004. Archived from the original on 13 February 2009. Retrieved 2 November 2008.
  1742. ^ Dunleavy, Diwakar & Dunleavy 2007.
  1743. ^ Kulke & Rothermund 2004, p. 384.
  1744. ^ Business Standard 2009.
  1745. ^ “BJP first party since 1984 to win parliamentary majority on its own”DNA. Indo-Asian News Service. 16 May 2014. Archived from the original on 21 May 2014. Retrieved 20 May 2014.
  1746. ^ Mashal, Mujib (4 June 2024). “Modi Wins 3rd Term in India Election With Closer Results Than Expected”The New York Times.
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  1748. ^ Pylee 2003a, p. 4.
  1749. ^ Dutt 1998, p. 421.
  1750. ^ Wheare 1980, p. 28.
  1751. ^ Echeverri-Gent 2002, pp. 19–20.
  1752. ^ Sinha 2004, p. 25.
  1753. ^ Khan, Saeed (25 January 2010). “There’s no national language in India: Gujarat High Court”The Times of India. Archived from the original on 18 March 2014. Retrieved 5 May 2014.
  1754. ^ “Learning with the Times: India doesn’t have any ‘national language'”The Times of India. 16 November 2009. Archived from the original on 10 October 2017.
  1755. ^ “Hindi, not a national language: Court”Press Trust of India via The Hindu. Ahmedabad. 25 January 2010. Archived from the original on 4 July 2014. Retrieved 23 December 2014.
  1756. ^ “The Constitution of India” (PDF). legislature.gov.inArchived (PDF) from the original on 16 April 2019. Retrieved 16 July 2016.
  1757. Jump up to:a b Sharma 2007, p. 31.
  1758. ^ Sharma 2007, p. 138.
  1759. ^ Gledhill 1970, p. 112.
  1760. Jump up to:a b Sharma 1950.
  1761. Jump up to:a b Sharma 2007, p. 162.
  1762. ^ Mathew 2003, p. 524.
  1763. ^ Gledhill 1970, p. 127.
  1764. ^ Sharma 2007, p. 161.
  1765. ^ Sharma 2007, p. 143.
  1766. ^ “Cabinet approves scrapping of 2 seats reserved for Anglo-Indians in Parliament”National Herald. 5 December 2019. Retrieved 17 October 2021.
  1767. ^ Ghosh, Abantika; Kaushal, Pradeep (2 January 2020). “Explained: Anglo-Indian quota, its history, MPs”The Indian Express. Retrieved 17 October 2021.
  1768. Jump up to:a b Neuborne 2003, p. 478.
  1769. ^ Sharma 2007, pp. 238, 255.
  1770. ^ Sripati 1998, pp. 423–424.
  1771. ^ Pylee 2003b, p. 314.
  1772. ^ Sharma 2007, p. 49.
  1773. ^ “India”Commonwealth Local Government ForumArchived from the original on 15 July 2019. Retrieved 7 September 2019.
  1774. ^ Dinkel, Jürgen (2018). The Non-Aligned Movement: Genesis, Organization and Politics (1927–1992)Brill. pp. 92–93. ISBN 978-90-04-33613-1.
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  1776. ^ (a) Guyot-Rechard, Berenice (2017), Shadow States: India, China and the Himalayas, 1910–1962, Cambridge University Press, p. 235, ISBN 978-1-107-17679-9By invading NEFA, the PRC did not just aim to force a humiliated India to recognise its possession of the Aksai Chin. It also hoped to get, once and for all, the upper hand in their shadowing competition.
    (b) Chubb, Andrew (2021), “The Sino-Indian Border Crisis: Chinese Perceptions of Indian Nationalism”, in Golley, Jane; Jaivan, Linda; Strange, Sharon (eds.), Crisis, Australian National University Press, pp. 231–232, ISBN 978-1-76046-439-4The ensuing cycle of escalation culminated in the 1962 Sino-Indian border war in which Mao Zedong’s troops overran almost the entire state of Arunachal Pradesh in the eastern sector before unilaterally withdrawing, as if to underline the insult; most of the war’s several thousand casualties were Indian. The PLA’s decisive victories in the 1962 war not only humiliated the Indian Army, they also entrenched a status quo in Ladakh that was highly unfavourable for India, in which China controls almost all of the disputed territory. A nationalistic press and commentariat have kept 1962 vivid in India’s popular consciousness.
    (c) Lintner, Bertil (2018), China’s India War: Collision Course on the Roof of the World, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-909163-8Lin Biao was put in charge of the operation and that alliance between Mao and his loyal de facto chief of the PLA made the attack on India possible. With China’s ultimate victory in the war, Mao’s ultra-leftist line had won in China; whatever critical voices that were left in the Party after all the purges fell silent.
    (d) Medcalf, Rory (2020), Indo-Pacific Empire: China, America and the contest for the world’s pivotal, Manchester University Press, ISBN 978-1-5261-5077-6From an Indian perspective, the China-India war of 1962 was a shocking betrayal of the principles of co-operation and coexistence: a surprise attack that humiliated India and personally broke Nehru.
    (e) Ganguly, Sumit (1997), The Crisis in Kashmir: Portents of War, Hope of Peace, Woodrow Wilson Center Press and Cambridge University Press, p. 44, ISBN 978-0-521-65566-8In October 1962 India suffered the most humiliating military debacle in its post-independence history, at the hands of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA). The outcome of this conflict had far-reaching consequences for Indian foreign and defence policies. The harsh defeat that the Chinese PLA had inflicted on the Indian Army called into question some of the most deeply held precepts of Nehru’s foreign and defence policies.
    (f) Raghavan, Srinath (2019), “A Missed Opportunity? The Nehru-Zhou Enlai Summit of 1960”, in Bhagavan, Manu (ed.), India and the Cold War, University of North Carolina Press, p. 121, ISBN 978-1-4696-5117-0The ‘forward policy’ adopted by India to prevent the Chinese from occupying territory claimed by them was undertaken in the mistaken belief that Beijing would be cautious in dealing with India owing to Moscow’s stance on the dispute and its growing proximity to India. These misjudgments would eventually culminate in India’s humiliating defeat in the war of October–November 1962.
  1777. ^ Brahma Chellaney (2006). Asian Juggernaut: The Rise of China, India, and JapanHarperCollins. p. 195. ISBN 978-8172236502Indeed, Beijing’s acknowledgement of Indian control over Sikkim seems limited to the purpose of facilitating trade through the vertiginous Nathu-la Pass, the scene of bloody artillery duels in September 1967 when Indian troops beat back attacking Chinese forces.
  1778. ^ Gilbert 2002, pp. 486–487.
  1779. ^ Sharma 1999, p. 56.
  1780. ^ Gvosdev, N.K.; Marsh, C. (2013). Russian Foreign Policy: Interests, Vectors, and Sectors. SAGE Publications. p. 353. ISBN 978-1-4833-1130-2Putin’s visit to India in December 2012 for the yearly India–Russia summit saw both sides reaffirming their special relationship.
  1781. ^ Alford 2008.
  1782. ^ Jorge Heine; R. Viswanathan (Spring 2011). “The Other BRIC in Latin America: India”Americas Quarterly. Archived from the original on 25 May 2017. Retrieved 19 May 2017.
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  1785. ^ Muir, Hugh (13 July 2009), “Diary”The Guardian, archived from the original on 19 October 2014, retrieved 17 October 2021, Members of the Indian armed forces have the plum job of leading off the great morning parade for Bastille Day. Only after units and bands from India’s navy and air force have followed the Maratha Light Infantry will the parade be entirely given over to … France’s armed services.
  1786. ^ Perkovich 2001, pp. 60–86, 106–125.
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Mukesh Singh Profile He is an IITian, Electronics & Telecom Engineer and MBA in TQM with more than 15 years wide experience in Education sector, Quality Assurance & Software development . He is TQM expert and worked for numbers of Schools ,College and Universities to implement TQM in education sectors He is an author of “TQM in Practice” and member of “Quality circle forum of India”, Indian Institute of Quality, New Delhi & World Quality Congress . His thesis on TQM was published during world quality congress 2003 and he is also faculty member of Quality Institute of India ,New Delhi He is a Six Sigma Master Black Belt from CII. He worked in Raymond Ltd from 1999-2001 and joined Innodata Software Ltd in 2001 as a QA Engineer. He worked with the Dow Chemical Company (US MNC) for implementation of Quality Systems and Process Improvement for Software Industries & Automotive Industries. He worked with leading certification body like ICS, SGS, DNV,TUV & BVQI for Systems Certification & Consultancy and audited & consulted more than 1000 reputed organization for (ISO 9001/14001/18001/22000/TS16949,ISO 22001 & ISO 27001) and helped the supplier base of OEM's for improving the product quality, IT security and achieving customer satisfaction through implementation of effective systems. Faculty with his wide experience with more than 500 Industries (Like TCS, Indian Railways, ONGC, BPCL, HPCL, BSE( Gr Floor BOI Shareholdings), UTI, ONGC, Lexcite.com Ltd, eximkey.com, Penta Computing, Selectron Process Control, Mass-Tech, United Software Inc, Indrajit System, Reymount Commodities, PC Ware, ACI Laptop ,Elle Electricals, DAV Institutions etc), has helped the industry in implementing ISMS Risk Analysis, Asset Classification, BCP Planning, ISMS Implementation FMEA, Process Control using Statistical Techniques and Problem Solving approach making process improvements in various assignments. He has traveled to 25 countries around the world including US, Europe and worldwide regularly for corporate training and business purposes.
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