Discover Bengal · Unfolded
❦Abul Mansur Ahmad
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Partition of Bengal
In 1905, the British colonial government partitioned Bengal and created the new province of Eastern Bengal and Assam with Dacca as its capital. Officials defended the move as administrative reform, but many critics treated it as a divide-and-rule intervention that weakened Bengali political influence. The measure triggered boycott campaigns, Swadeshi activism, new cultural forms of protest, and differentiated Hindu and Muslim political responses across Bengal.
1,947
Partition and Eastern Bengal
In 1947, British India was divided into India and Pakistan, and Bengal itself was split into West Bengal and East Bengal. The chapter is not only about constitutional division: the delayed Radcliffe boundary, minority insecurity, refugee movement, and administrative rupture reshaped everyday life and set the stage for later struggles over language, autonomy, and state legitimacy in East Bengal.
1,952
Language Movement
The Language Movement grew out of the post-1947 struggle over representation, when demands for Bangla in the Constituent Assembly, education, administration, and public life collided with the Pakistani state's Urdu-only policy. The movement reached its decisive phase in February 1952, when students and activists defied Section 144 and police opened fire, turning language into the moral center of Bengali political identity.
1,954
United Front Election Victory in East Bengal
In the 1954 East Bengal provincial election, the United Front won an overwhelming victory over the ruling Muslim League. The result reflected accumulated public anger over representation, language rights, and economic inequality, and signaled a major shift toward regional democratic assertion in East Bengal.
1,958
Martial Law in Pakistan
In October 1958, Pakistan entered military rule, suspending parliamentary politics and concentrating power under a centralized authoritarian framework. In East Pakistan, martial law constrained provincial democratic space, strengthened bureaucratic-military control, and deepened long-term grievances over representation and autonomy.
1,966
Six-Point Programme Announced
In 1966, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman publicly advanced the Six-Point Programme as a constitutional framework for provincial autonomy in Pakistan. The programme reorganized East Pakistan's political demands around representation, fiscal control, and federal restructuring, quickly becoming a defining platform of Bengali nationalist politics.
1,969
Mass Uprising
The 1969 Mass Uprising in East Pakistan brought together students, workers, opposition parties, and ordinary citizens against prolonged military-backed authoritarianism. It accelerated the collapse of the Ayub regime, widened the demand for democratic rights and regional autonomy, and prepared the political ground for the decisive elections of 1970 and the liberation struggle that followed.
1,970
Bhola Cyclone and the 1970 Election
In late 1970, East Pakistan was shaken first by the catastrophic Bhola cyclone of 12 November and then by Pakistan's first general election under universal adult franchise on 7 December. The cyclone exposed the scale of administrative neglect, relief failure, and delta vulnerability, while the election gave Sheikh Mujibur Rahman's Awami League an overwhelming democratic mandate. Together, ecological catastrophe and the denied transfer of power turned autonomy politics into an immediate constitutional crisis on the eve of the Liberation War.
1,971
Liberation War
The Liberation War of 1971 grew out of the denied majority verdict of the 1970 election, the March non-cooperation movement, and the Pakistan Army's 25 March crackdown. What followed was not a single battlefield episode but a combined political, military, and humanitarian rupture: a provisional government, sector-based armed resistance, mass displacement into India, and finally the defeat of Pakistani forces in December and the birth of Bangladesh.