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Adrija RoychowdhuryOct 2, 2017
Five instances why Lal Bahadur Shastri is the most modest prime minister India has ever seen Subscriber Only
Reportedly, when Lal Bahadur Shastri passed away in 1966 he had no house on his name, nor any land in his possession.
Nandini RathiOct 1, 2017
Gandhi Jayanti 2018 special: When Mahatma Gandhi was welcomed by textile mill workers of Lancashire Subscriber Only
Gandhi Jayanti 2018: During his visit to Lancashire, England in 1931 Gandhi was mobbed -- not with anger but with admiration -- by the same community of weavers who had lost their jobs due to
Sonakshi AwasthiSep 28, 2017
"Women sleep outside the house to avoid the sleeping husband in the house," said Nonibala. Unaware of the concept of marital rape, many women do not know that forceful intercourse within a marriage constitutes a
Adrija RoychowdhurySep 26, 2017
Since the late 18th century, Durga Puja was a mark of status for the Bengali mercantile class before gradually becoming integral to the nationalism project to evoke the spirit of patriotic awakening among the sons
Express News ServiceSep 25, 2017
Studies on the behaviour of the octopuses on the new site, named Octlantis, corroborated what had been seen during studies on the first site, Octopolis - that octopuses are not as asocial as they were
Amitabh SinhaSep 25, 2017
The team has defined an “optimum” fouling point and “critical” fouling point to check state of fouling in the track. If the ballast has reached “optimum” fouling point, deep-screening is recommended immediately.
Adrija RoychowdhurySep 22, 2017
Who are the Rohingya? Subscriber Only
Majority of the Rakhine Buddhists believe that ‘Rohingya’ is a fabricated religious identity. They go on to cite historical documents to claim that the Burmese past never had any community called Rohingya.
ReutersSep 20, 2017
The emissions difference has been similar for ten years but the amount of CO2 has fallen, it said, adding that one reason the carbon dioxide values were almost identical was because diesel cars were heavier
Express Web DeskSep 17, 2017
The Sardar Sarovar project was a vision of the first deputy prime minister of India, Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel. The foundation stone of the project was laid out by Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru on April 5, 1961.
Adrija RoychowdhurySep 15, 2017
The conflict between the US and North Korea has been raging at least since the Korean War in 1950 which ended in the division of the Korean peninsula under the respective influence of the US
Express Web DeskSep 14, 2017
While European countries like Germany and Italy had been researching and experimenting on high speed rail network since as early as the beginning of the twentieth century, it was Japan which made the breakthrough in
Express Web DeskSep 11, 2017
A short film made in 1945 by the war department and army pictorial service signal corps, depicts in full detail the traffic control system inaugurated by the military police in Calcutta and the planning and
Adrija RoychowdhurySep 5, 2017
How Lord Ganesha is celebrated outside India Subscriber Only
Ganesha is frequently associated with entrepreneurial spirit and the spread of his popularity outside of India is attributed to the commercial contact between the country with its neighbours which resulted in the spread of Hinduism,
Express Web DeskSep 4, 2017
Two centuries ago, the concept of a Labour Day in Canada was conceived to pay homage to the workers’ union movements that had taken root in the country.
Adrija RoychowdhuryAug 31, 2017
As Mumbai reeled under the excessive rain on august 29, and Mumbaikars wondered if authorities had learnt any lessons from the 2005 flood, historians and city planners hark back to the history of India’s most
Nandini RathiAug 29, 2017
Rare images of the November 1945 Indian National Army (Azad Hind Fauj) trials from photojournalist Kulwant Roy’s work, as documented by Aditya Arya in the visual archive History in the Making.
Express Web DeskAug 29, 2017
Dhyan Chand was often called a ‘magician’ on the Hockey field. Such was his aura that it spread beyond India to Germany, Britain, Japan and Holland.
Nandini RathiAug 27, 2017
Why deras and sects find Punjab fertile for growth Subscriber Only
Modern Sikhism, which promised to get rid of untouchability, failed to provide that social equality in practice. The hold of casteist prejudice and hegemony sustained in spite of Sikh Gurus’ preachings against untouchability and their
Express Web DeskAug 21, 2017
A diverse collection of work by mythologists has shown that the connections between eclipse and mythological figures like demons existed across races and cultures and are to date, commonly followed by mankind across the world.
Nandini RathiAug 20, 2017
Both quality papers as well as tabloids in British press portrayed the transfer of power to India and Pakistan as the ‘fulfillment of Britain’s mission’.
Adrija RoychowdhuryAug 17, 2017
At the stroke of midnight, the freedom finally arrived, largely with the efforts of the Congress. But what did this freedom mean to those who were neither ruled by the British, nor were they close
Adrija RoychowdhuryAug 16, 2017
Voices of Partition: One UP Muslim and two Pakistan born Hindus recollect the horrors of 1947 Subscriber Only
The partition of Punjab remains by far the bloodiest part of Indian history, the dirtiest and scariest of all, tagging along as it did with the euphoria of freedom.
Adrija RoychowdhuryAug 15, 2017
Tales from princely states: A Kashmiri Pandit and a Jodhpur resident recollect being stuck between India and Pakistan Subscriber Only
What did independence mean to the ordinary folks residing in these states, far removed from the high drama of nationalist discourse and very often unaware of what course their homeland’s politics was about to take?
Adrija RoychowdhuryAug 15, 2017
Voices of Partition: A Dhaka Hindu and a Kolkata Muslim recount what Independence meant to them Subscriber Only
If the incoming Hindu population faced the bitterness of displacement on one hand, then the Muslims who stayed on in West Bengal were equally distraught.
Adrija RoychowdhuryAug 15, 2017
How world newspapers reported India’s independence in 1947 Subscriber Only
The major newspapers of the world had culled out a significant part of their front pages to underline the nationalist aspirations, the birth of the two nations and the celebrations as well as massacre that
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