History of India, 1931 AD, Bhagat Singh was hanged by the British, Second Round Table Conference, Gandhi-Irvin Pact
History of India, 1931 AD, Bhagat Singh was hanged by the British, Second Round Table Conference, Gandhi-Irvin Pact
In 1931, Bhagat Singh, a revolutionary of India's struggle for independence, was hanged by the British.
In the same year, the Second Round Table Conference was held in London, where the Indian National Congress and the British discussed the future of India.
The conference ended without an agreement on the future of India and the British government declared a new constitution, the Government of India Act 1935.
The Second Round Table Conference resulted in the Gandhi-Irvin Pact in 1931, which proposed a form of limited autonomy for Indians within the British Empire.
The pact allowed the Indian National Congress to participate in the provincial and central governments.
The pact also gave the Indian people the right to elect their own representatives to the legislatures.
The Gandhi-Irvin Pact of 1931 was an important step in India's struggle for independence, as it paved the way for the Indian people to gain more control over their own destiny.
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