send mail to support@abhimanu.com mentioning your email id and mobileno registered with us! if details not recieved
Resend Opt after 60 Sec.
By Loging in you agree to Terms of Services and Privacy Policy
Claim your free MCQ
Please specify
Sorry for the inconvenience but we’re performing some maintenance at the moment. Website can be slow during this phase..
Please verify your mobile number
Login not allowed, Please logout from existing browser
Please update your name
Subscribe to Notifications
Stay updated with the latest Current affairs and other important updates regarding video Lectures, Test Schedules, live sessions etc..
Your Free user account at abhipedia has been created.
Remember, success is a journey, not a destination. Stay motivated and keep moving forward!
Refer & Earn
Enquire Now
My Abhipedia Earning
Kindly Login to view your earning
Support
James Augustus Hickey in 1780 started The Bengal Gazette or Calcutta General Advertiser, the first newspaper in India which was seized because of outspoken criticism of government in 1872. Later more newspapers/journals came out-The Bengal Journal, Calcutta Chronicle, Madras Courier, Bombay Herald. Company’s officers were worried that these newspapers might reach London and expose their misdeeds.
Censorship of Press Act (1799) - Lord Wellesley enacted this, anticipating French invasion of India. It imposed almost wartime press restrictions including pre-censorship. These restrictions were relaxed under Lord Hastings, who had progressive views, and in 1818, pre-censorship was dispensed with.
Licensing Regulations (1823) - The acting Governor-General, John Adams, who had reactionary views, enacted these. According to these Regulations, starting or using a press without license was a penal offense. These restrictions were directed chiefly against Indian language or Indian edited newspapers. Rammohan Roy’s Mirat-ul-Akbar had to stop publication.
Liberation of Indian Press (1835) - Metcalfe (Governor-General-1835-36)-repealed the obnoxious 1823 ordinance and earned the epithet, “Liberator of Indian Press”.
- Lord Macaulay also supported the cause of a free press in India.
- A new Press Act (1835) required a printer/publisher to declare precise account of premises of publications and cease functioning, if required by a similar declaration.
- The result of a liberal press policy was a rapid growth of newspapers.
Licensing Act (1857) - Due to emergency caused by 1857 revolt and in addition to already existing registration procedure laid down by Metcalfe Act, this act imposed licensing restriction and government reserved the right to stop publication, circulation of any book, newspaper or printed matter.
Right from early nineteenth century, defence of civil liberties, including the freedom of the Press, had been high on nationalist agenda. As early as 1824, Raja Rammohan Roy had protested against a resolution restricting the freedom of the Press.
The early phase of nationalist movement from around 1870 to 1918 focussed more on politicization, political propaganda and education, formation and propagation of nationalist ideology and arousing, training, mobilization and consolidation of public opinion, than on mass agitation or active mobilization of masses through open meetings. For this purpose the Press proved to be a crucial tool in the hands of the nationalists. The Indian National Congress in its early days relied solely on the Press to propagate its resolutions and proceedings.
Many newspapers emerged during these years under distinguished and fearless journalists, such as Hindu and Swadesamitran under G. Subramaniya Aiyar, Bengalee under Surendranath Banerjee, Voice of India under Dadabhai Naoroji, Amrit Bazar Patrika under Sisir Kumar Ghosh and Motilal Ghosh, Indian Mirror under N.N. Sen, Kesari (Marathi) and Maharatta (English) under Balgangadhar Tilak, Sudharak under Gopal Krishna Gokhale, Hindustan and Advocate under G.P. Verma, Tribune and Akbhar-i-am in Punjab, Gujrati, Indu Prakash, Dhyan Prakash and Kal in Bombay and Som Prakash Banganivasi and Sadharani in Bengal.
These newspapers were not established as profit-making business ventures but were seen as a national and public service. In fact, these newspapers had a wide reach and they stimulated a library movement. Even beyond cities and towns, these newspapers reached the remote villages, where each news item and editorial would be read and discussed thoroughly in the ‘local libraries’ which would gather around a single newspaper. In this way, these libraries served the purpose of not only political education but also of political participation. In these newspapers, government acts and policies were put to critical scrutiny. This way, they acted as an institution of opposition to government.
The Government on its part had enacted many strident laws, such as section 124 A of Indian Penal Code which provided that anyone trying to cause disaffection against the British Government in India was to be transported for life or for any term or imprisoned upto three years. But the nationalist-minded journalists had evolved many clever stratagems to subvert these legal hurdles. For instance, writings hostile to the government used to be prefaced with sentiments of loyalty to the government or critical writings of socialists or Irish nationalists from newspapers in England used to be quoted. This was a difficult task which required intelligent mix of simplicity with subtlety.
The national movement, from the beginning, stood for freedom of Press. The Indian newspapers became highly critical of Lord Lytton’s administration especially regarding its inhuman treatment to victims of famine of 1876-77. The government struck back with the Vernacular Press Act (1878).
Vernacular Press Act was designed to better control the Vernacular press and effectively punish and repress seditious writing.
The Act, nicknamed “gagging act”, had as its worst features:-
1. Discrimination between English and vernacular press
2. No right of appeal.
Under VPA, proceedings were instituted against Som Prakash, Bharat Mihir, Dacca Prakash, Samachar,
There was strong opposition to the Act and finally Ripon repealed it in 1881.
In 1833, Surendranath Banerjee became the first Indian journalist to be imprisoned while performing his duty as a journalist. He had criticized a judge of Calcutta High Court for being insensitive to religious sentiments of Bengalis in one of his judgments. Banerjee did so in an angry editorial in Bengalee.
In 1898, the government amended section 124 A and added another section 153 A which made it a criminal offense for anyone to bring into contempt the Government of India or to create hatred among different classes, that is, vis-a-vis Englishmen in India. This also led to nation-wide protests. During Swadishi and boycott movements and due to rise of militant nationalist trends, several repressive laws were passed.
Newspaper (Incitement to Offenses) Act 1908 Aimed against extremist nationalist activity-magistrates were empowered to confiscate Press property which published objectionable material likely to cause incitement to murder/acts of violence.
Indian Press Act 1910 revived worst features of VPA-Local government empowered to demand a security at registration from printer/publisher and forfeit/deregister if it was an offending newspaper and printer of a newspaper was required to submit two copies of each issue to local government free of charge.
Tilak as the leader of militant nationalists was tried on charges of sedition and transported to Mandlay (Burma) for six years. This led to countrywide protests. In Bombay, textile workers and railway workshop workers took on the army on streets and struck work for days. Lenin hailed this as the entrance of the Indian working class on the political stage.
Further Acts After than Govt. passed
By: Subhash Singh ProfileResourcesReport error
Access to prime resources
New Courses