fbpx
Wikipedia

Governor-General of India

The Governor-General of India (1833 to 1950, from 1858 to 1947 the Viceroy and Governor-General of India, commonly shortened to Viceroy of India) was the representative of the monarch of the United Kingdom in their capacity as the Emperor/Empress of India and after Indian independence in 1947, the representative of the Monarch of India. The office was created in 1773, with the title of Governor-General of the Presidency of Fort William. The officer had direct control only over his presidency but supervised other East India Company officials in India. Complete authority over all of British territory in the Indian subcontinent was granted in 1833, and the official came to be known as the "Governor-General of India".

Viceroy and
Governor-General of India
Standard during the British Raj (1858–1947)
Standard during the Dominion era (1947–1950)
StyleHis Excellency
Residence
Appointer
Formation20 October 1773 (Fort William)
22 April 1834 (India)
First holderWarren Hastings (Fort William)
Lord William Bentinck (India)
Final holder
Abolished26 January 1950
Superseded byGovernor-General of Pakistan (in territory that became Pakistan)

In 1858, because of the Indian Rebellion the previous year, the territories and assets of the East India Company came under the direct control of the British Crown; as a consequence, company rule in India was succeeded by the British Raj. The governor-general (now also the Viceroy) headed the central government of India, which administered the provinces of British India, including Bengal, Bombay, Madras, Punjab, the United Provinces, and others.[1] However, much of India was not ruled directly by the British Government; outside the provinces of British India, there were hundreds of nominally independent princely states or "native states", whose relationship was not with the British Government or the United Kingdom, but rather one of homage directly with the British monarch as sovereign successor to the Mughal emperors. From 1858, to reflect the governor-general's new additional role as the monarch's representative in response to the fealty relationships vis the princely states, the additional title of Viceroy was granted, such that the new office was entitled "Viceroy and Governor-General of India". This was usually shortened to "Viceroy of India".

The title of Viceroy was abandoned when British India was partitioned into the two independent dominions of India and Pakistan, but the office of governor-general continued to exist in each country separately until they adopted republican constitutions in 1950 and 1956, respectively.

Until 1858, the governor-general was selected by the Court of Directors of the East India Company, to whom he was responsible. Thereafter, he was appointed by the sovereign on the advice of the British Government; the Secretary of State for India, a member of the British Cabinet, was responsible for instructing him on the exercise of their powers. After 1947, the sovereign continued to appoint the governor-general but thereafter did so on the advice of the government of the newly independent Dominion of India.

The governor-general served at the pleasure of the sovereign, though the practice was to have them serve five-year terms. A governor-general could have their commission rescinded; and if one was removed, or left, a provisional governor-general was sometimes appointed until a new holder of the office could be chosen. The first governor-general in India (of Bengal) was Warren Hastings, the first official governor-general of British India was Lord William Bentinck, and the first governor-general of the Dominion of India was Lord Mountbatten.

History edit

 
Warren Hastings, the first governor-general of Fort William from 1773 to 1785.
 
Lord William Bentinck, the first governor general of India from 1834 – 1835

Many parts of the Indian subcontinent were governed by the British East India Company (founded in 1600), which nominally acted as the agent of the Mughal emperor. Early British administrators were presidents or governors of Bengal Presidency. In 1773, motivated by corruption in the company, the British government assumed partial control over the governance of India with the passage of the Regulating Act of 1773. A governor-general and Supreme Council of Bengal were appointed to rule over the Presidency of Fort William in Bengal. The first governor-general and Council were named in the Act.

The Charter Act 1833 replaced the governor-general and Council of Fort William with the governor-general and Council of India. The power to elect the governor-general was retained by the Court of Directors, but the choice became subject to the sovereign's approval via the India Board.

After the Indian Rebellion of 1857, the British East India Company's territories in India were put under the direct control of the sovereign. The Government of India Act 1858 vested the power to appoint the governor-general in the sovereign. The governor-general, in turn, had the power to appoint all lieutenant governors in India, subject to the sovereign's approval.

India and Pakistan acquired independence in 1947, but governors-general continued to be appointed over each nation until republican constitutions were written. Louis Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma, remained governor-general of India for ten months after independence, but the two nations were otherwise headed by native governors-general. India became a secular republic in 1950; Pakistan became an Islamic one in 1956.

Functions edit

 
Lord Curzon in his robes as viceroy of India, a post he held from 1899 to 1905.
 
Lord Mountbatten addressing the Chamber of Princes as Crown Representative in the 1940s

The governor-general originally had power only over the Presidency of Fort William in Bengal. The Regulating Act, however, granted the governor-general additional powers relating to foreign affairs and defence. The other presidencies of the East India Company (Madras, Bombay and Bencoolen) were not allowed to declare war on or make peace with an Indian prince without receiving the prior approval of the governor-general and Council of Fort William.[citation needed]

The powers of the governor-general, in respect of foreign affairs, were increased by the India Act 1784. The act provided that the other governors under the East India Company could not declare war, make peace or conclude a treaty with an Indian prince unless expressly directed to do so by the governor-general or by the company's Court of Directors.

While the governor-general thus became the controller of foreign policy in India, he was not the explicit head of British India. That status came only with the Charter Act 1833, which granted him "superintendence, direction and control of the whole civil and military Government" of all of British India. The act also granted legislative powers to the governor-general and council.

in 1835, Lord William Bentinck became the first governor general of India.[2]

After 1858, the governor-general (now usually known as the viceroy) functioned as the chief administrator of India and as the sovereign's representative. India was divided into numerous provinces, each under the head of a governor, lieutenant governor or chief commissioner or administrator. Governors were appointed by the British government, to whom they were directly responsible; lieutenant governors, chief commissioners, and administrators, however, were appointed by and were subordinate to the viceroy. The viceroy also oversaw the most powerful princely rulers: the Nizam of Hyderabad, the Maharaja of Mysore, the Maharaja (Scindia) of Gwalior, the Maharaja of Jammu and Kashmir and the Gaekwad (Gaekwar) Maharaja of Baroda. The remaining princely rulers were overseen either by the Rajputana Agency and Central India Agency, which were headed by representatives of the viceroy or by provincial authorities.

The Chamber of Princes was an institution established in 1920 by a royal proclamation of King-Emperor George V to provide a forum in which the princely rulers could voice their needs and aspirations to the government. The chamber usually met only once a year, with the viceroy presiding, but it appointed a standing committee, which met more often.

Upon independence in August 1947, the title of viceroy was abolished. The representative of India's sovereign, King George VI, became known once again as the governor-general. In 1948, C. Rajagopalachari became the only Indian governor-general. The governor-general's role was almost entirely ceremonial, with power being exercised on a day-to-day basis by the Indian cabinet. After the nation became a republic in 1950, the president of India continued to perform the same functions.

Council edit

 
The Viceregal Lodge in Simla, built in 1888, was the summer residence of the viceroy of India
 
Viceregal Lodge, Delhi, where Viceroy Lord Hardinge stayed (1912–31), now the main building of the University of Delhi[3]

The governor-general was always advised by a Council on the exercise of his legislative and executive powers. The governor-general, while exercising many functions, was referred to as the "Governor-General in Council."

The Regulating Act 1773 provided for the election of four counsellors by the East India Company's Court of Directors. The governor-general was to be assisted by an executive council of four members and was given a casting vote but no veto. The decision of the council was binding on the governor-general.

In 1784, the council was reduced to three members; the governor-general continued to have both an ordinary vote and a casting vote. In 1786, the power of the governor-general was increased even further, as Council decisions ceased to be binding.

The Charter Act 1833 made further changes to the structure of the council. The Act was the first law to distinguish between the executive and legislative responsibilities of the governor-general. As provided under the Act, there were to be four members of the Council appointed by the Court of Directors. The first three members were permitted to participate on all occasions, but the fourth member was only allowed to sit and vote when legislation was being debated.

In 1858, the Court of Directors ceased to have the power to appoint members of the council. Instead, the one member who had a vote only on legislative questions came to be appointed by the sovereign, and the other three members by the secretary of state for India.

The Indian Councils Act 1861 made several changes to the council's composition. Three members were to be appointed by the Secretary of State for India, and two by the Sovereign. The power to appoint all five members passed to the Crown in 1869. The viceroy was empowered to appoint an additional 'six to twelve' members (changed to 'ten to sixteen' in 1892, and to 'sixty' in 1909). The five individuals appointed by the sovereign or the Indian secretary headed the executive departments, while those appointed by the viceroy debated and voted on legislation.

In 1919, an Indian legislature, consisting of a Council of State and a Legislative Assembly, took over the legislative functions of the Viceroy's Council. The viceroy nonetheless retained significant power over legislation. He could authorise the expenditure of money without the Legislature's consent for "ecclesiastical, political [and] defence" purposes, and for any purpose during "emergencies." He was permitted to veto, or even stop debate on, any bill. If he recommended the passage of a bill, but only one chamber cooperated, he could declare the bill passed over the objections of the other chamber. The Legislature had no authority over foreign affairs and defence. The president of the Council of State was appointed by the viceroy; the Legislative Assembly elected its president, but the election required the viceroy's approval.

Style and title edit

Until 1833, the title of the position was "governor-general of the Presidency of Fort William in Bengal". The Government of India Act 1833 converted the title into "governor-general of India", effective from 22 April 1834.[4] The title "viceroy and governor-general" was first used in the queen's proclamation appointing Viscount Canning in 1858.[5] It was never conferred by an act of parliament but was used in warrants of precedence and in the statutes of knightly orders. In usage, "viceroy" is employed where the governor-general's position as the monarch's representative is in view.[6] The viceregal title was not used when the sovereign was present in India. It was meant to indicate new responsibilities, especially ritualistic ones, but it conferred no new statutory authority. The governor-general regularly used the title in communications with the Imperial Legislative Council, but all legislation was made only in the name of the Governor-General-in-Council (or the Government of India).[7]

The governor-general was styled Excellency and enjoyed precedence over all other government officials in India. He was referred to as 'His Excellency' and addressed as 'Your Excellency'. From 1858 to 1947, the governor-general was known as the viceroy of India (from the French roi, meaning 'king'), and wives of Viceroys were known as Vicereines (from the French reine, meaning 'queen'). The Vicereine was referred to as 'Her Excellency' and was also addressed as 'Your Excellency'. Neither title was employed while the Sovereign was in India. However, the only British sovereign to visit India during the period of British rule was George V, who attended the Delhi Durbar in 1911 with his wife, Mary.[citation needed]

When the Order of the Star of India was founded in 1861, the viceroy was made its grand master ex officio. The viceroy was also made the ex officio grand master of the Order of the Indian Empire upon its foundation in 1877.

Most governors-general and viceroys were peers. Frequently, a viceroy who was already a peer would be granted a peerage of higher rank, as with the granting of a marquessate to Lord Reading and an earldom and later a marquessate to Freeman Freeman-Thomas. Of those viceroys who were not peers, Sir John Shore was a baronet, and Lord William Bentinck was entitled to the courtesy title 'lord' because he was the son of a duke. Only the first and last governors-general – Warren Hastings and Chakravarti Rajagopalachari – as well as some provisional governors-general, had no honorific titles at all.

Flag and insignia edit

From around 1885, the viceroy of India was allowed to fly a Union Flag augmented in the centre with the 'Star of India' surmounted by a crown. This flag was not the viceroy's personal flag; it was also used by governors, lieutenant governors, chief commissioners and other British officers in India. When at sea, only the viceroy flew the flag from the mainmast, while other officials flew it from the foremast.

From 1947 to 1950, the governor-general of India used a dark blue flag bearing the royal crest (a lion standing on the Crown), beneath which was the word 'India' in gold majuscules. The same design is still used by many other Commonwealth Realm governors-general. This last flag was the personal flag of the governor-general only.

Residence edit

 
Government House served as the Governor-General's residence during most of the nineteenth century.

The governor-general of Fort William resided in Belvedere House, Calcutta, until the early nineteenth century, when Government House was constructed. In 1854, the lieutenant governor of Bengal took up residence there. Now, the Belvedere Estate houses the National Library of India.

Lord Wellesley, who is reputed to have said that 'India should be governed from a palace, not from a country house', constructed a grand mansion, known as Government House in Calcutta, between 1799 and 1803. The mansion remained in use until the capital moved from Calcutta to Delhi in 1912. Thereafter, the lieutenant governor of Bengal, who had hitherto resided in Belvedere House, was upgraded to a full governor and transferred to Government House. Now, it serves as the residence of the governor of the Indian state of West Bengal, and is referred to by its Bengali name Raj Bhavan.

After the capital moved from Calcutta to Delhi, the viceroy occupied the newly built Viceroy's House, designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens. Though construction began in 1912, it did not conclude until 1929; the palace was not formally inaugurated until 1931. The final cost exceeded £877,000 (over £35 million in modern terms)—more than twice the figure originally allocated. Today the residence, now known by the Hindi name of 'Rashtrapati Bhavan', is used by the president of India.

Throughout the British administration, governors-general retreated to the Viceregal Lodge (now Rashtrapati Niwas) at Shimla each summer to escape the heat, and the government of India moved with them. The Viceregal Lodge now houses the Indian Institute of Advanced Study. ThePeterhoff building in Shimla was also used by several viceroys, although the original building was destroyed by fire in 1981.

List edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ The term British India is mistakenly used to mean the same as the British Indian Empire, which included both the provinces and the princely states.
  2. ^ "Lord William Bentinck | British government official". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 30 May 2019.
  3. ^ . Hindustan Times. 20 July 2011. Archived from the original on 17 July 2012.
  4. ^ Government of India Act 1833, Keith, Arthur Berriedale, Speeches & Documents on Indian Policy, 1750–1921, see section 41 of the Act
  5. ^ "Queen Victoria's Proclamation".
  6. ^ H. Verney Lovett, "The Indian Governments, 1858–1918", The Cambridge History of the British Empire, Volume V: The Indian Empire, 1858–1918 (Cambridge University Press, 1932), p. 226.
  7. ^ Arnold P. Kaminsky, The India Office, 1880–1910 (Greenwood Press, 1986), p. 126.

External links edit

  • Association of Commonwealth Archivists and Record Managers (1999) "Government Buildings – India"[permanent dead link]
  • Forrest, G. W., CIE, (editor) (1910) Selections from the State Papers of the Governors-General of India; Warren Hastings (2 vols), Oxford: Blackwell's
  • Encyclopædia Britannica ("British Empire" and "Viceroy"), London: Cambridge University Press, 1911, 11th edition,
  • James, Lawrence (1997) Raj: the Making and Unmaking of British India London: Little, Brown & Company ISBN 0-316-64072-7
  • Keith, A. B. (editor) (1922) Speeches and Documents on Indian Policy, 1750–1921, London: Oxford University Press
  • Oldenburg, P. (2004). "India." Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopedia. ( 2009-10-31)

Further reading edit

  • Arnold, Sir Edwin (1865). The Marquis of Dalhousie's Administration of British India: Annexation of Pegu, Nagpor, and Oudh, and a general review of Lord Dalhousie's rule in India. Saunders, Otley, and Company.
  • Dodwell H. H., ed. The Cambridge History of India. Volume 6: The Indian Empire 1858–1918. With Chapters on the Development of Administration 1818–1858 (1932) 660pp online edition; also published as vol 5 of the Cambridge History of the British Empire
  • Moon, Penderel. The British Conquest and Dominion of India (2 vol. 1989) 1235pp; the fullest scholarly history of political and military events from a British top-down perspective;
  • Rudhra, A. B. (1940) The Viceroy and Governor-General of India. London: H. Milford, Oxford University Press
  • Spear, Percival (1990) [First published 1965], A History of India, vol. 2, New Delhi and London: Penguin Books. Pp. 298, ISBN 978-0-14-013836-8.


governor, general, india, viceroy, india, redirects, here, viceroys, governors, portuguese, india, list, governors, portuguese, india, list, office, holders, during, british, list, governors, general, india, previous, similar, titles, from, 1680, 1758, list, g. Viceroy of India redirects here For viceroys and governors of Portuguese India see List of governors of Portuguese India For a list of the office holders during the British Raj see List of governors general of India For previous similar titles from 1680 1758 see List of governors of Bengal Presidency The Governor General of India 1833 to 1950 from 1858 to 1947 the Viceroy and Governor General of India commonly shortened to Viceroy of India was the representative of the monarch of the United Kingdom in their capacity as the Emperor Empress of India and after Indian independence in 1947 the representative of the Monarch of India The office was created in 1773 with the title of Governor General of the Presidency of Fort William The officer had direct control only over his presidency but supervised other East India Company officials in India Complete authority over all of British territory in the Indian subcontinent was granted in 1833 and the official came to be known as the Governor General of India Viceroy andGovernor General of IndiaStandard during the British Raj 1858 1947 Standard during the Dominion era 1947 1950 StyleHis ExcellencyResidenceGovernment House 1858 1931 Viceroy s House 1931 1950 Viceregal Lodge 1888 1947 AppointerEast India Company 1774 1858 Monarch of the United Kingdom 1858 1876 Emperor or Empress of India 1876 1947 Monarch of India 1947 1950 Formation20 October 1773 Fort William 22 April 1834 India First holderWarren Hastings Fort William Lord William Bentinck India Final holderLord Mountbatten 21 February 1947 15 August 1947 as the Viceroy of India Chakravarthi Rajagopalachari 21 June 1948 26 January 1950 as the Governor General of Dominion of India Abolished26 January 1950Superseded byGovernor General of Pakistan in territory that became Pakistan In 1858 because of the Indian Rebellion the previous year the territories and assets of the East India Company came under the direct control of the British Crown as a consequence company rule in India was succeeded by the British Raj The governor general now also the Viceroy headed the central government of India which administered the provinces of British India including Bengal Bombay Madras Punjab the United Provinces and others 1 However much of India was not ruled directly by the British Government outside the provinces of British India there were hundreds of nominally independent princely states or native states whose relationship was not with the British Government or the United Kingdom but rather one of homage directly with the British monarch as sovereign successor to the Mughal emperors From 1858 to reflect the governor general s new additional role as the monarch s representative in response to the fealty relationships vis the princely states the additional title of Viceroy was granted such that the new office was entitled Viceroy and Governor General of India This was usually shortened to Viceroy of India The title of Viceroy was abandoned when British India was partitioned into the two independent dominions of India and Pakistan but the office of governor general continued to exist in each country separately until they adopted republican constitutions in 1950 and 1956 respectively Until 1858 the governor general was selected by the Court of Directors of the East India Company to whom he was responsible Thereafter he was appointed by the sovereign on the advice of the British Government the Secretary of State for India a member of the British Cabinet was responsible for instructing him on the exercise of their powers After 1947 the sovereign continued to appoint the governor general but thereafter did so on the advice of the government of the newly independent Dominion of India The governor general served at the pleasure of the sovereign though the practice was to have them serve five year terms A governor general could have their commission rescinded and if one was removed or left a provisional governor general was sometimes appointed until a new holder of the office could be chosen The first governor general in India of Bengal was Warren Hastings the first official governor general of British India was Lord William Bentinck and the first governor general of the Dominion of India was Lord Mountbatten Contents 1 History 2 Functions 3 Council 4 Style and title 5 Flag and insignia 6 Residence 7 List 8 See also 9 References 10 External links 11 Further readingHistory edit nbsp Warren Hastings the first governor general of Fort William from 1773 to 1785 nbsp Lord William Bentinck the first governor general of India from 1834 1835Many parts of the Indian subcontinent were governed by the British East India Company founded in 1600 which nominally acted as the agent of the Mughal emperor Early British administrators were presidents or governors of Bengal Presidency In 1773 motivated by corruption in the company the British government assumed partial control over the governance of India with the passage of the Regulating Act of 1773 A governor general and Supreme Council of Bengal were appointed to rule over the Presidency of Fort William in Bengal The first governor general and Council were named in the Act The Charter Act 1833 replaced the governor general and Council of Fort William with the governor general and Council of India The power to elect the governor general was retained by the Court of Directors but the choice became subject to the sovereign s approval via the India Board After the Indian Rebellion of 1857 the British East India Company s territories in India were put under the direct control of the sovereign The Government of India Act 1858 vested the power to appoint the governor general in the sovereign The governor general in turn had the power to appoint all lieutenant governors in India subject to the sovereign s approval India and Pakistan acquired independence in 1947 but governors general continued to be appointed over each nation until republican constitutions were written Louis Mountbatten 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma remained governor general of India for ten months after independence but the two nations were otherwise headed by native governors general India became a secular republic in 1950 Pakistan became an Islamic one in 1956 Functions edit nbsp Lord Curzon in his robes as viceroy of India a post he held from 1899 to 1905 nbsp Lord Mountbatten addressing the Chamber of Princes as Crown Representative in the 1940sThe governor general originally had power only over the Presidency of Fort William in Bengal The Regulating Act however granted the governor general additional powers relating to foreign affairs and defence The other presidencies of the East India Company Madras Bombay and Bencoolen were not allowed to declare war on or make peace with an Indian prince without receiving the prior approval of the governor general and Council of Fort William citation needed The powers of the governor general in respect of foreign affairs were increased by the India Act 1784 The act provided that the other governors under the East India Company could not declare war make peace or conclude a treaty with an Indian prince unless expressly directed to do so by the governor general or by the company s Court of Directors While the governor general thus became the controller of foreign policy in India he was not the explicit head of British India That status came only with the Charter Act 1833 which granted him superintendence direction and control of the whole civil and military Government of all of British India The act also granted legislative powers to the governor general and council in 1835 Lord William Bentinck became the first governor general of India 2 After 1858 the governor general now usually known as the viceroy functioned as the chief administrator of India and as the sovereign s representative India was divided into numerous provinces each under the head of a governor lieutenant governor or chief commissioner or administrator Governors were appointed by the British government to whom they were directly responsible lieutenant governors chief commissioners and administrators however were appointed by and were subordinate to the viceroy The viceroy also oversaw the most powerful princely rulers the Nizam of Hyderabad the Maharaja of Mysore the Maharaja Scindia of Gwalior the Maharaja of Jammu and Kashmir and the Gaekwad Gaekwar Maharaja of Baroda The remaining princely rulers were overseen either by the Rajputana Agency and Central India Agency which were headed by representatives of the viceroy or by provincial authorities The Chamber of Princes was an institution established in 1920 by a royal proclamation of King Emperor George V to provide a forum in which the princely rulers could voice their needs and aspirations to the government The chamber usually met only once a year with the viceroy presiding but it appointed a standing committee which met more often Upon independence in August 1947 the title of viceroy was abolished The representative of India s sovereign King George VI became known once again as the governor general In 1948 C Rajagopalachari became the only Indian governor general The governor general s role was almost entirely ceremonial with power being exercised on a day to day basis by the Indian cabinet After the nation became a republic in 1950 the president of India continued to perform the same functions Council editMain articles Council of India and Viceroy s Executive Council nbsp The Viceregal Lodge in Simla built in 1888 was the summer residence of the viceroy of India nbsp Viceregal Lodge Delhi where Viceroy Lord Hardinge stayed 1912 31 now the main building of the University of Delhi 3 The governor general was always advised by a Council on the exercise of his legislative and executive powers The governor general while exercising many functions was referred to as the Governor General in Council The Regulating Act 1773 provided for the election of four counsellors by the East India Company s Court of Directors The governor general was to be assisted by an executive council of four members and was given a casting vote but no veto The decision of the council was binding on the governor general In 1784 the council was reduced to three members the governor general continued to have both an ordinary vote and a casting vote In 1786 the power of the governor general was increased even further as Council decisions ceased to be binding The Charter Act 1833 made further changes to the structure of the council The Act was the first law to distinguish between the executive and legislative responsibilities of the governor general As provided under the Act there were to be four members of the Council appointed by the Court of Directors The first three members were permitted to participate on all occasions but the fourth member was only allowed to sit and vote when legislation was being debated In 1858 the Court of Directors ceased to have the power to appoint members of the council Instead the one member who had a vote only on legislative questions came to be appointed by the sovereign and the other three members by the secretary of state for India The Indian Councils Act 1861 made several changes to the council s composition Three members were to be appointed by the Secretary of State for India and two by the Sovereign The power to appoint all five members passed to the Crown in 1869 The viceroy was empowered to appoint an additional six to twelve members changed to ten to sixteen in 1892 and to sixty in 1909 The five individuals appointed by the sovereign or the Indian secretary headed the executive departments while those appointed by the viceroy debated and voted on legislation In 1919 an Indian legislature consisting of a Council of State and a Legislative Assembly took over the legislative functions of the Viceroy s Council The viceroy nonetheless retained significant power over legislation He could authorise the expenditure of money without the Legislature s consent for ecclesiastical political and defence purposes and for any purpose during emergencies He was permitted to veto or even stop debate on any bill If he recommended the passage of a bill but only one chamber cooperated he could declare the bill passed over the objections of the other chamber The Legislature had no authority over foreign affairs and defence The president of the Council of State was appointed by the viceroy the Legislative Assembly elected its president but the election required the viceroy s approval Style and title editUntil 1833 the title of the position was governor general of the Presidency of Fort William in Bengal The Government of India Act 1833 converted the title into governor general of India effective from 22 April 1834 4 The title viceroy and governor general was first used in the queen s proclamation appointing Viscount Canning in 1858 5 It was never conferred by an act of parliament but was used in warrants of precedence and in the statutes of knightly orders In usage viceroy is employed where the governor general s position as the monarch s representative is in view 6 The viceregal title was not used when the sovereign was present in India It was meant to indicate new responsibilities especially ritualistic ones but it conferred no new statutory authority The governor general regularly used the title in communications with the Imperial Legislative Council but all legislation was made only in the name of the Governor General in Council or the Government of India 7 The governor general was styled Excellency and enjoyed precedence over all other government officials in India He was referred to as His Excellency and addressed as Your Excellency From 1858 to 1947 the governor general was known as the viceroy of India from the French roi meaning king and wives of Viceroys were known as Vicereines from the French reine meaning queen The Vicereine was referred to as Her Excellency and was also addressed as Your Excellency Neither title was employed while the Sovereign was in India However the only British sovereign to visit India during the period of British rule was George V who attended the Delhi Durbar in 1911 with his wife Mary citation needed When the Order of the Star of India was founded in 1861 the viceroy was made its grand master ex officio The viceroy was also made the ex officio grand master of the Order of the Indian Empire upon its foundation in 1877 Most governors general and viceroys were peers Frequently a viceroy who was already a peer would be granted a peerage of higher rank as with the granting of a marquessate to Lord Reading and an earldom and later a marquessate to Freeman Freeman Thomas Of those viceroys who were not peers Sir John Shore was a baronet and Lord William Bentinck was entitled to the courtesy title lord because he was the son of a duke Only the first and last governors general Warren Hastings and Chakravarti Rajagopalachari as well as some provisional governors general had no honorific titles at all Flag and insignia editMain article Star of India flag From around 1885 the viceroy of India was allowed to fly a Union Flag augmented in the centre with the Star of India surmounted by a crown This flag was not the viceroy s personal flag it was also used by governors lieutenant governors chief commissioners and other British officers in India When at sea only the viceroy flew the flag from the mainmast while other officials flew it from the foremast From 1947 to 1950 the governor general of India used a dark blue flag bearing the royal crest a lion standing on the Crown beneath which was the word India in gold majuscules The same design is still used by many other Commonwealth Realm governors general This last flag was the personal flag of the governor general only nbsp Badge of the viceroy of India 1876 1904 depicted with St Edward s Crown nbsp Badge of the viceroy and governor general 1904 1947 depicted with Tudor Crown nbsp Standard of the viceroy and governor general 1885 1947 nbsp Standard of the governor general 1947 50 Residence edit nbsp Government House served as the Governor General s residence during most of the nineteenth century The governor general of Fort William resided in Belvedere House Calcutta until the early nineteenth century when Government House was constructed In 1854 the lieutenant governor of Bengal took up residence there Now the Belvedere Estate houses the National Library of India Lord Wellesley who is reputed to have said that India should be governed from a palace not from a country house constructed a grand mansion known as Government House in Calcutta between 1799 and 1803 The mansion remained in use until the capital moved from Calcutta to Delhi in 1912 Thereafter the lieutenant governor of Bengal who had hitherto resided in Belvedere House was upgraded to a full governor and transferred to Government House Now it serves as the residence of the governor of the Indian state of West Bengal and is referred to by its Bengali name Raj Bhavan After the capital moved from Calcutta to Delhi the viceroy occupied the newly built Viceroy s House designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens Though construction began in 1912 it did not conclude until 1929 the palace was not formally inaugurated until 1931 The final cost exceeded 877 000 over 35 million in modern terms more than twice the figure originally allocated Today the residence now known by the Hindi name of Rashtrapati Bhavan is used by the president of India Throughout the British administration governors general retreated to the Viceregal Lodge now Rashtrapati Niwas at Shimla each summer to escape the heat and the government of India moved with them The Viceregal Lodge now houses the Indian Institute of Advanced Study ThePeterhoff building in Shimla was also used by several viceroys although the original building was destroyed by fire in 1981 List editMain article List of governors general of IndiaSee also edit nbsp India portal nbsp Pakistan portal nbsp United Kingdom portal nbsp Politics portalBritish Empire Commander in Chief India Council of India Emperor of India History of Bangladesh History of India History of Pakistan India Office Indian Civil Service Indian independence movement List of governors general of India Partition of IndiaReferences edit The term British India is mistakenly used to mean the same as the British Indian Empire which included both the provinces and the princely states Lord William Bentinck British government official Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 30 May 2019 Imperial Impressions Hindustan Times 20 July 2011 Archived from the original on 17 July 2012 Government of India Act 1833 Keith Arthur Berriedale Speeches amp Documents on Indian Policy 1750 1921 see section 41 of the Act Queen Victoria s Proclamation H Verney Lovett The Indian Governments 1858 1918 The Cambridge History of the British Empire Volume V The Indian Empire 1858 1918 Cambridge University Press 1932 p 226 Arnold P Kaminsky The India Office 1880 1910 Greenwood Press 1986 p 126 External links editAssociation of Commonwealth Archivists and Record Managers 1999 Government Buildings India permanent dead link Forrest G W CIE editor 1910 Selections from the State Papers of the Governors General of India Warren Hastings 2 vols Oxford Blackwell s Encyclopaedia Britannica British Empire and Viceroy London Cambridge University Press 1911 11th edition James Lawrence 1997 Raj the Making and Unmaking of British India London Little Brown amp Company ISBN 0 316 64072 7 Keith A B editor 1922 Speeches and Documents on Indian Policy 1750 1921 London Oxford University Press Oldenburg P 2004 India Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopedia Archived 2009 10 31 mountbattenofburma com Tribute amp Memorial website to Louis 1st Earl Mountbatten of BurmaFurther reading edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Governors General of India Arnold Sir Edwin 1865 The Marquis of Dalhousie s Administration of British India Annexation of Pegu Nagpor and Oudh and a general review of Lord Dalhousie s rule in India Saunders Otley and Company Dodwell H H ed The Cambridge History of India Volume 6 The Indian Empire 1858 1918 With Chapters on the Development of Administration 1818 1858 1932 660pp online edition also published as vol 5 of the Cambridge History of the British Empire Moon Penderel The British Conquest and Dominion of India 2 vol 1989 1235pp the fullest scholarly history of political and military events from a British top down perspective Rudhra A B 1940 The Viceroy and Governor General of India London H Milford Oxford University Press Spear Percival 1990 First published 1965 A History of India vol 2 New Delhi and London Penguin Books Pp 298 ISBN 978 0 14 013836 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Governor General of India amp oldid 1199223463, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.