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Sushil Chandra Mishra: 1940 Collector of Satna and Tikamgarh, Chairman of M.P.E.B: M A Quraishi: 1941 Nirmal Kumar Mukarji: 1941 1943 1st Rank from the Last Batch of ICS Governor of Punjab, Last ICS officer in the Indian Government-8th Home Secretary 13th Cabinet Secretary of India: Bhagwan Singh (later Captain) 1946 Indian High Commissioner to ...
Subhas Chandra Bose [h] (23 January 1897 – 18 August 1945) was an Indian nationalist whose defiance of British authority in India made him a hero among many Indians, [l] but his wartime alliances with Nazi Germany and Fascist Japan left a legacy vexed by authoritarianism, [q] anti-Semitism, [x] and military failure.
ICS officers normally served for a minimum of twenty-five years, and there was a maximum service period of thirty-five years. [1] ICS officers served as political officers in the Indian Political Department and also were given fifty percent of the judgeships in the state high court (the rest were generally elevated from the high court bar). [18]
Presidency [note 2] Professor of History, Delhi University: Suniti Kumar Chatterjee: Scottish Church College: linguist Surajit Chandra Sinha: Presidency [note 2] anthropologist Susobhan Sarkar: Presidency [note 2] Professor and Head of Department of History, Presidency College, Calcutta Tapan Raychaudhuri: BA (History); DPhil (History ...
Latika Bose herself took the role of secretary. [4] The MRS, which was founded in Chittagong, Bengal Presidency, [2] saw their aim of improvements in the status of women and the achievement of swaraj (self-governance) as being mutually dependent. Education of women was a key to this and the MRS involved ten existing local educational groups ...
The Bose family migrated to Jharia from Bengal during his childhood. P. C. Bose went on to become a teacher at Jharia Raj High School. [2] He was a noted Indian National Congress politician and Gandhian Independence Activist from Dhanbad, the other from the region being Purushottam K. Chauhan. He joined Civil Disobedience and Satyagraha ...
The Indian National Army (INA, sometimes Second INA; [2] Azad Hind Fauj / ˈ ɑː z ɑː ð ˈ h i n ð ˈ f ɔː dʒ /; lit. 'Free Indian Army') was a Japanese-allied and -supported armed force constituted in Southeast Asia during World War II and led by Indian anti-colonial nationalist Subhas Chandra Bose.
Ram Chandra Bose was twice elected to be the official lay delegate to the General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church in the United States. [16] When he arrived for the Conference in Cincinnati in 1880 along with 9 other delegates from foreign countries, it was the first time foreign delegates had attended the General Conference in an ...