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India and Pakistan win independence after 200 years of British rule

At the stroke of midnight on August 15, 1947 C.E., a century and a half of British colonial authority over the Indian subcontinent came to an end. Two new sovereign nations — India and Pakistan — stepped into existence simultaneously, the product of decades of organized resistance, extraordinary sacrifice, and an independence movement that would inspire people around the world for generations to come.

Key facts

  • India Pakistan independence: The Indian Independence Act of 1947 C.E. received royal assent on July 18, 1947 C.E., and took full effect on August 15, formally partitioning British India into two self-governing dominions.
  • British India partition: The subcontinent was divided roughly along religious lines — a Hindu-majority India and a Muslim-majority Pakistan — with the northern province of Punjab and the eastern region of Bengal each split between the two new nations.
  • Nonviolent resistance: The independence movement was shaped significantly by Mohandas Gandhi’s campaigns of satyagraha — nonviolent civil disobedience — which began after World War I and built sustained public pressure on British authorities over three decades.

A movement that outlasted every attempt to suppress it

The Indian independence movement had deep roots. By the early 20th century, the Indian National Congress had become a significant political force, channeling popular frustration with colonial taxation, restricted civil rights, and the systematic extraction of India’s wealth for British benefit.

Gandhi transformed that frustration into organized, principled action. His campaigns — from the 1920 Non-Cooperation Movement to the 1930 Salt March to the 1942 “Quit India” movement — drew millions of ordinary people into direct, peaceful defiance of colonial rule. British authorities jailed Gandhi multiple times, along with hundreds of other leaders. The movement kept going.

World War II accelerated the crisis. Britain, weakened by years of war and facing growing unrest across its empire, could no longer sustain the political and military cost of holding India by force. In 1947 C.E., newly elected British Prime Minister Clement Attlee announced that Britain would transfer power no later than June 1948 C.E. The timeline was later moved forward dramatically — partly due to worsening communal violence that made delay increasingly dangerous.

Two nations at once

The partition plan, developed under the last Viceroy of India, Lord Mountbatten, divided the subcontinent in weeks. It was a process carried out with extraordinary speed and, by most historical accounts, insufficient care for the communities it would upend.

Pakistan came into being officially on August 14, 1947 C.E. India followed at midnight. Jawaharlal Nehru, India’s first prime minister, addressed the nation in a speech that has echoed across the decades: “At the stroke of the midnight hour, when the world sleeps, India will awake to life and freedom.”

Across the subcontinent, millions celebrated. Street festivals, prayers, and public gatherings marked the moment in cities and villages alike. For hundreds of millions of people who had lived under colonial rule their entire lives, independence was not an abstraction — it was immediate, personal, and real.

Lasting impact

The birth of India and Pakistan as independent nations sent a signal that proved impossible for other colonial powers to ignore. Within two decades, dozens of nations across Asia and Africa had won their own independence. The methods and moral frameworks developed by the Indian independence movement — particularly nonviolent resistance — directly influenced freedom movements from the American civil rights struggle to anti-apartheid organizing in South Africa.

India became the world’s largest democracy, a distinction it holds to this day. Pakistan established itself as a major regional power. Both nations have made significant contributions to science, literature, technology, and global governance in the decades since independence.

The moment also reframed what sovereignty meant on a global scale. The United Nations, founded just two years earlier, had enshrined the right of peoples to self-determination. India and Pakistan’s independence demonstrated that the principle had teeth.

Blindspots and limits

The joy of independence was inseparable from one of the largest and most violent mass displacements in recorded history. An estimated 10 to 20 million people were forced to flee across the new borders — Muslims moving to Pakistan, Hindus and Sikhs moving to India — in a migration marked by widespread massacres, assault, and the destruction of entire communities. Estimates of those killed in the Punjab violence alone range from hundreds of thousands to over a million.

Gandhi, who had devoted his life to Hindu-Muslim unity, was devastated by the sectarian bloodshed. He was assassinated by a Hindu nationalist in January 1948 C.E. while leading a prayer meeting aimed at ending the violence. The partition’s trauma shaped the politics of both nations for generations, including multiple wars and an ongoing dispute over Kashmir that remains unresolved today. Independence, in this case, arrived as an achievement and a wound at the same time.

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For more on this story, see: HISTORY.com — India and Pakistan win independence

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