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During 1900, Bengal had become the nerve centre for Indian nationalism. At that time it was the
biggest province of British India and included parts of Bihar and Orissa. To weaken it, Lord
Curzon (18991905) the Viceroy of India, proposed partition of Bengal. The official reason was
stated as administrative inconvenience due to the size of Bengal. But partition itself was based
on a religious and political agenda. Bengal was to be divided into two regions i.e. East
Bengal and Assam out of the rest of Bengal. Thus to reduce the nationalist movement in Bengal
and thereby in the entire country, Bengal partition was to take place on 16 October 1905.
H. H. Riseley, home secretary to the government of India, stated on 6 December 1904: "Bengal
united is a power; Bengal divided will pull in several different ways. That is what Congress
leaders feel; their apprehensions are perfectly correct and they form one of the great merits of
the scheme... in this scheme... one of our main objects is to split up and thereby weaken a solid
body of opponents to our rule".
So the British tried to curb Bengali influence on the nationalist movement and also introduced a
new form of division based on religion to create challenges for theIndian National Congress,
which was slowly becoming the main opponent to British rule.
But the Indian nationalists saw the design behind partition and condemned it unanimously,
starting the anti-partition and the Swadeshi movements. The Swadeshi movement was also
known as Vandemataram movement in deltaic Andhra Pradesh.