Graduate Level intermediate Tribal Revolts Peasant Movements Indian History Freedom Struggle
Tribal Revolts & Peasant Movements in India
Complete study notes on major tribal revolts (Santhal, Munda, Bhil), peasant uprisings (Indigo, Deccan, Moplah), and agrarian movements. Essential for Kerala PSC Graduate Level exams.
Complete study notes on major tribal revolts (Santhal, Munda, Bhil), peasant uprisings (Indigo, Deccan, Moplah), and agrarian movements. Essential for Kerala PSC Graduate Level exams.
#Tribal Revolts
#Peasant Movements
#Indian History
#Freedom Struggle
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Tribal and peasant revolts form a critical part of the Kerala PSC history syllabus. Questions typically ask about leaders, regions, years, and causes. The tables below cover every major revolt tested in recent exams.
1. Major Tribal Revolts
Revolt
Year
Tribe/Region
Leader(s)
Cause
Paharia Revolt
1778
Raj Mahal Hills, Bihar
Tribal chiefs
British land encroachment
Kol Uprising
1831-32
Chotanagpur, Jharkhand
Buddhu Bhagat
Transfer of tribal land to outsiders (dikkus)
Santhal Rebellion (Hul)
1855-56
Raj Mahal Hills, Bihar
Sidhu and Kanhu Murmu
Exploitation by money-lenders and zamindars
Munda Ulgulan
1899-1900
Ranchi, Jharkhand
Birsa Munda
Restoration of tribal land rights (Khuntkatti system)
Bhil Revolt
1818-1831
Khandesh, Western India
Sevaram
British revenue policies
Rampa Rebellion
1879-80
Rampa region, Andhra
Alluri Sitarama Raju (1922 revival)
Restrictions on podu (shifting cultivation)
Khond Uprising
1846-48
Odisha
Chakra Bisoi
British ban on human sacrifice (Meriah)
Naga Revolt
1879-80
Naga Hills
Tribal chiefs
British administrative intrusion
2. Key Leaders of Tribal Movements
Leader
Movement
Significance
Birsa Munda
Munda Ulgulan (1899-1900)
Called “Dharti Aba” (Father of Earth); demanded restoration of Khuntkatti system
Sidhu and Kanhu
Santhal Rebellion (1855-56)
Led around 10,000 Santhals; declared end of Company rule
Alluri Sitarama Raju
Rampa Rebellion (1922-24)
Used guerrilla tactics against the British in the Eastern Ghats
Rani Gaidinliu
Naga Movement (1930s)
Heroine of Naga freedom; Jawaharlal Nehru called her “Rani”
Tantia Bhil
Bhil Revolt (1818-31)
Resisted British revenue collection in western India
3. Major Peasant Movements
Movement
Year
Region
Cause
Outcome
Indigo Revolt (Neel Bidroha)
1859-60
Bengal (Nadia, Jessore)
Forced cultivation under tinkathia system
Indigo Commission (1860); system abolished
Deccan Riots
1875
Poona, Ahmednagar (Maharashtra)
Exploitation by Marwari and Gujarati moneylenders
Deccan Agriculturists Relief Act (1879)
Pabna Agrarian League
1873
Pabna, Bengal
Rack-renting by zamindars
Bengal Tenancy Act (1885)
Moplah Rebellion
1921
Malabar, Kerala
Landlord (jenmi) oppression + Khilafat grievances
Suppressed by British; Wagon Tragedy
Champaran Satyagraha
1917
Champaran, Bihar
Tinkathia system (3/20 land for indigo)
Champaran Agrarian Act; Gandhiji’s first Satyagraha in India
Bargadari Act (1950) in post-independence West Bengal
Telangana Movement
1946-51
Hyderabad (Telangana)
Feudal exploitation by Nizam and jagirdars
Land redistribution after police action (1948)
4. The Indigo Revolt — Detail
Aspect
Detail
Year
1859-60
Region
Nadia and Jessore districts, Bengal
System
Tinkathia — Ryots forced to grow indigo on 3/20 of their holdings
Leaders
Digambar Biswas, Bishnu Charan Biswas
Literary support
Dinabandhu Mitra’s play “Nil Darpan” (1860) exposed atrocities
Commission
Indigo Commission (1860) found planters guilty
Result
Indigo cultivation made voluntary; system collapsed
5. Moplah Rebellion — Key Points for Kerala PSC
Aspect
Detail
Year
1921
Location
Eranad and Walluvanad taluks, Malabar
Causes
Jenmi (landlord) oppression of Moplah tenants + Khilafat agitation
Leaders
Variyankunnathu Kunjahammed Haji, Ali Musaliyar
Wagon Tragedy
67 Moplah prisoners died of suffocation in a locked railway wagon (November 1921)
British response
Martial law; over 10,000 rebels killed, wounded, or captured
Significance
One of the longest agrarian revolts; linked both agrarian and anti-colonial grievances
6. Peasant Movements in Kerala
Movement
Period
Details
Moplah Rebellions (multiple)
1836-1921
Over 30 outbreaks in Malabar; culminated in 1921 revolt
Punnapra-Vayalar Uprising
1946
Worker-peasant uprising in Alappuzha against Diwan C.P. Ramaswami Iyer
Kayyur Revolt
1941
Peasant revolt in Kasaragod; four participants were hanged (Kayyur Martyrs)
7. Important Acts Resulting from Peasant Movements
Act
Year
Background
Bengal Rent Act
1859
Post-Indigo revolt; defined tenant rights
Deccan Agriculturists Relief Act
1879
Post-Deccan Riots; restricted civil arrest for debt
Bengal Tenancy Act
1885
Post-Pabna unrest; occupancy rights for tenants
Champaran Agrarian Act
1918
Post-Champaran Satyagraha; tinkathia abolished
Malabar Tenancy Act
1929
Post-Moplah Rebellion; limited eviction powers of jenmis
8. Quick Recall Table — Year-Leader-Region
Year
Leader/Movement
Region
1831
Buddhu Bhagat / Kol Uprising
Chotanagpur
1855
Sidhu-Kanhu / Santhal Rebellion
Raj Mahal Hills
1859
Digambar Biswas / Indigo Revolt
Bengal
1875
Deccan Riots
Poona-Ahmednagar
1899
Birsa Munda / Ulgulan
Ranchi
1917
Gandhiji / Champaran
Bihar
1921
Kunjahammed Haji / Moplah
Malabar
1946
Tebhaga Movement
Bengal
1946
Punnapra-Vayalar
Alappuzha
9. Previous Year Question Patterns
“Who led the Santhal Rebellion?” — Sidhu and Kanhu
“Deccan Agriculturists Relief Act was passed in which year?” — 1879
“Nil Darpan was written by” — Dinabandhu Mitra
“Wagon Tragedy is associated with” — Moplah Rebellion (1921)
“Birsa Munda is associated with which tribe?” — Munda
“Champaran Satyagraha year?” — 1917
“Punnapra-Vayalar is in which district?” — Alappuzha
Tribal and peasant revolts form a critical part of the Kerala PSC history syllabus. Questions typically ask about leaders, regions, years, and causes. The tables below cover every major revolt tested in recent exams.
1. Major Tribal Revolts
Revolt
Year
Tribe/Region
Leader(s)
Cause
Paharia Revolt
1778
Raj Mahal Hills, Bihar
Tribal chiefs
British land encroachment
Kol Uprising
1831-32
Chotanagpur, Jharkhand
Buddhu Bhagat
Transfer of tribal land to outsiders (dikkus)
Santhal Rebellion (Hul)
1855-56
Raj Mahal Hills, Bihar
Sidhu and Kanhu Murmu
Exploitation by money-lenders and zamindars
Munda Ulgulan
1899-1900
Ranchi, Jharkhand
Birsa Munda
Restoration of tribal land rights (Khuntkatti system)
Bhil Revolt
1818-1831
Khandesh, Western India
Sevaram
British revenue policies
Rampa Rebellion
1879-80
Rampa region, Andhra
Alluri Sitarama Raju (1922 revival)
Restrictions on podu (shifting cultivation)
Khond Uprising
1846-48
Odisha
Chakra Bisoi
British ban on human sacrifice (Meriah)
Naga Revolt
1879-80
Naga Hills
Tribal chiefs
British administrative intrusion
2. Key Leaders of Tribal Movements
Leader
Movement
Significance
Birsa Munda
Munda Ulgulan (1899-1900)
Called “Dharti Aba” (Father of Earth); demanded restoration of Khuntkatti system
Sidhu and Kanhu
Santhal Rebellion (1855-56)
Led around 10,000 Santhals; declared end of Company rule
Alluri Sitarama Raju
Rampa Rebellion (1922-24)
Used guerrilla tactics against the British in the Eastern Ghats
Rani Gaidinliu
Naga Movement (1930s)
Heroine of Naga freedom; Jawaharlal Nehru called her “Rani”
Tantia Bhil
Bhil Revolt (1818-31)
Resisted British revenue collection in western India
3. Major Peasant Movements
Movement
Year
Region
Cause
Outcome
Indigo Revolt (Neel Bidroha)
1859-60
Bengal (Nadia, Jessore)
Forced cultivation under tinkathia system
Indigo Commission (1860); system abolished
Deccan Riots
1875
Poona, Ahmednagar (Maharashtra)
Exploitation by Marwari and Gujarati moneylenders
Deccan Agriculturists Relief Act (1879)
Pabna Agrarian League
1873
Pabna, Bengal
Rack-renting by zamindars
Bengal Tenancy Act (1885)
Moplah Rebellion
1921
Malabar, Kerala
Landlord (jenmi) oppression + Khilafat grievances
Suppressed by British; Wagon Tragedy
Champaran Satyagraha
1917
Champaran, Bihar
Tinkathia system (3/20 land for indigo)
Champaran Agrarian Act; Gandhiji’s first Satyagraha in India