"British Empire in India" redirects here. For other uses, see British India (disambiguation).
"Indian Empire" redirects here. For other Indian empires, see History of India.
The British Raj (rāj, lit. "reign" in Hindi)[4] is the term often used for British rule in the Indian subcontinent, usually but not exclusively for the period between 1858 and 1947.[5] The term can also refer to the period of dominion.[5][6] The region under British control, commonly called India in contemporary usage, included areas directly administered by the United Kingdom[7](contemporaneously British India), as well as the princely states ruled by individual rulers under the paramountcy of the British Crown. The region was less commonly also called the Indian Empire.[8] As India, it was a founding member of the League of Nations and the United Nations, and a participating nation in the Summer Olympics in 1900, 1920, 1928, 1932, and 1936.
The system of governance was instituted in 1858, when the rule of the British East India Company was transferred to the Crown in the person of Queen Victoria[9] – who in 1876 was proclaimed Empress of India – and lasted until 1947, when the British Indian Empire was partitioned into two sovereign dominion states, the Union of India (later the Republic of India) and theDominion of Pakistan (later the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, the eastern half of which, still later, became the People's Republic of Bangladesh). At the inception of the Raj in 1858, Lower Burma was already a part of British India; Upper Burma was added in 1886, and the resulting union, Burma, was administered as a province until 1937, when it became a separate British colony which gained its own independence in 1948.
The budget of the Raj covered municipal affairs, the police, the small but highly trained Indian Civil Service that ran government operations, and the Indian Army. It was paid entirely by Indians through taxes, especially on farmland and on salt. The large, well-trained Indian Army played major roles in both World Wars; the rest of the time it trained to fight off a possible Russian invasion through Afghanistan. The great majority of the Indian people were very poor farmers; economic growth at 1% a year was neutralised by population growth of 1%
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