Conventional Long Name: | Bihar and Orissa Province |
Common Name: | Bihar and Orissa |
Nation: | British India |
Subdivision: | Province |
Year Start: | 1912 |
Event Start: | Separation from Bengal |
Year End: | 1936 |
Event End: | Bifurcation of Bihar and Orissa Province |
P1: | Bengal Presidency |
S1: | Bihar Province |
S2: | Orissa Province |
Flag P1: | British Raj Red Ensign.svg |
Flag S1: | British Raj Red Ensign.svg |
Flag S2: | British Raj Red Ensign.svg |
Image Map Caption: | Bihar and Orissa in a 1912 map of British India |
Capital: | Patna |
Bihar and Orissa was a province of British India,[1] which included the present-day Indian states of Bihar, Jharkhand, and parts of Odisha. The territories were conquered by the British in the 18th and 19th centuries, and were governed by the then Indian Civil Service of the Bengal Presidency, the largest administrative subdivision in British India.
On 22 March 1912, both Bihar and Orissa divisions were separated from the Bengal Presidency as Bihar and Orissa Province. On 1 April 1936, the province was partitioned into Bihar and the Orissa Province.
In 1756, Bihar was part of the Bengal Subah and while Orissa was part of the Nagpur kingdom within the Maratha Confederacy.
The Treaty of Allahabad was signed on 16 August 1765, between the Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II, son of the late Emperor Alamgir II, and Robert, Lord Clive, of the East India Company,[1] as a result of the Battle of Buxar of 22 October 1764. The Treaty marks the political and constitutional involvement and the beginning of British rule in India. Based on the terms of the agreement, Alam granted the East India Company Diwani rights, or the right to collect taxes on behalf of the Emperor from the eastern province of Bengal-Bihar-Orissa. Bihar was acquired through annexation of Bengal Subah, while Orissa was annexed by the British following the defeat of the Marathas in the Anglo-Maratha Wars.
Bihar and Orissa was separated from Bengal on 22 March 1912, with Patna as capital.[2] A number of princely states, including the Orissa Tributary States, were under the authority of the provincial governor.
The Montagu–Chelmsford Reforms enacted through the Government of India Act 1919 expanded the Bihar & Orissa Legislative Council from 43 to 103 members. The Legislative Council now consisted of 2 ex-officio Executive Councillors, 25 nominated members (12 official, 13 non-official) and 76 elected members (48 Non-Muslim, 18 Muslim, 1 European, 3 Commerce & Industry, 5 Landholders and 1 University constituencies).[3] The reforms also introduced the principle of dyarchy, whereby certain responsibilities such as agriculture, health, education, and local government, were transferred to elected ministers.
Name | Period | Department | |
---|---|---|---|
Khan Bahadur Syed Muhammad Fakhruddin | January 1921 to 6 May 1933 | Education, Agriculture, Cooperative Credit Industries, Religious Endowment, Excise | |
Madhusudan Das | January 1921 to 9 March 1923 | Local Self-Government, Medical Public Health, Public Works | |
Ganesh Dutt | March 1923 till end of dyarchy | Local Self-Government, Medical Public Health, Public Works | |
Khan Bahadur Syed Muhammad Hussain | 6 May 1933 to 24 December 1933 | Education, Agriculture, Cooperative Credit Industries, Religious Endowment, Registration | |
Syed Muhammad Abdul Aziz | 15 January 1934 till end of dyarchy | Education, Agriculture, Cooperative Credit Industries, Religious Endowment, Registration |
On 1 April 1936, the province was divided into Bihar Province (which included present-day Bihar and Jharkhand states) and Orissa Province, and the Odia speaking princely states placed under the authority of the Eastern States Agency.
See main article: List of Governors of Bihar and Orissa. From 1912 to 1920, the province had a lieutenant governor heading the provincial government. This post was upgraded to governor in 1920, when Satyendra Prasanna Sinha, 1st Baron Sinha was appointed to fill it.[4]