The reorganisation of states and territories in India has been a dynamic process shaped by administrative efficiency, linguistic identity, cultural aspirations, and political considerations.
Reorganisation Under British Rule (Mid-19th Century onwards)
Provinces were created for administrative convenience, not cultural or linguistic coherence. Eg- Bengal Presidency included Bengal, Bihar, Orissa – too large to govern efficiently.
Partition of Bengal (1905) by Lord Curzon along communal lines – reversed in 1911 due to Swadeshi agitation.
Separation of Sindh from Bombay Presidency (1936) and creation of Orissa Province (1936).
Post-Independence Reorganisation
Integration of Princely States (1947-50)
565 princely states merged into the Indian Union through instruments of accession and mergers.
Rajasthan formed from 19 princely states, Madhya Bharat from Central Indian states.
Linguistic Reorganisation
Dhar Commission (1948) & JVP Committee (1949) opposed linguistic reorganisation.
States Reorganisation Commission (SRC, 1956) under Fazl Ali recommended reorganisation on linguistic basis.
States Reorganisation Act (1956) created 14 states and 6 union territories.
Subsequent Reorganisations
Bombay split into Maharashtra and Gujarat (1960) after Samyukta Maharashtra Movement
Punjab trifurcated into Punjab, Haryana, and Himachal Pradesh (1966) on linguistic basis
Northeastern states carved out – Nagaland (1963), Meghalaya (1972), Mizoram, Arunachal Pradesh, Manipur, Tripura.
Goa became a state in 1987 after liberation from Portuguese rule (1961).
Recent Reorganisations
Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Uttarakhand created in 2000 from Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh respectively – driven by demands for better governance and tribal identity.
Telangana was carved out of Andhra Pradesh in 2014 after prolonged agitation.
Union Territory Changes
Reorganisation of Jammu & Kashmir into two UTs (2019) under Jammu & Kashmir Reorganisation Act.
Ladakh was created as a separate UT (2019).
However, continuous demands for new states (Vidarbha, Gorkhaland, Bodoland) indicate the process remains ongoing.
The reorganisation of states reflects India’s capacity for democratic accommodation of diverse aspirations within a federal framework.