Key Points at a Glance

  1. 1

    Brahmo Samaj (1828)

    • Founded by Raja Ram Mohan Roy in Calcutta — first major socio-religious reform organisation
    • Advocated monotheism; opposed idol worship, sati, and child marriage
    • Promoted women's education and widow remarriage using rational Vedantic arguments
    • Combined insights from Christian and Islamic monotheism with Hindu thought
    • Roy is called the "Father of the Indian Renaissance"
  2. 2

    Arya Samaj (1875)

    • Founded by Swami Dayananda Saraswati at Bombay; motto: "Krinvanto Vishwam Aryam" (Make the World Noble)
    • Proclaimed infallibility of the Vedas; opposed idol worship, caste discrimination, child marriage, and foreign rule
    • Introduced shuddhi (purification) ceremony to reconvert people to Hinduism
    • Spread education through the Gurukul residential school system
  3. 3

    Ramakrishna Mission (1897)

    • Founded by Swami Vivekananda in memory of his guru Sri Ramakrishna Paramahamsa
    • Combined Vedanta philosophy with practical social service
    • Motto: "Atmano Mokshartham Jagad Hitaya Cha" (For one's own liberation and the good of the world)
    • Vivekananda's Chicago speech (11 September 1893) electrified the world with "Sisters and Brothers of America"
  4. 4

    Theosophical Society (1875)

    • Founded in New York by Helena Petrovna Blavatsky (Russian) and Colonel Henry Steel Olcott (American)
    • Shifted to Adyar (Chennai) in 1882; combined Hindu/Buddhist spirituality with Western occultism
    • Promoted ancient Indian wisdom and attracted Indian intellectuals
    • Annie Besant (joined 1889) became its most influential Indian-phase president
    • RPSC 2021 directly tested this
  5. 5

    Aligarh Movement (1875)

    • Founded by Sir Syed Ahmed Khan — established Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental (MAO) College at Aligarh (1875; became Aligarh Muslim University in 1920)
    • Advocated Western education for Muslims while retaining Islamic identity
    • Established the Scientific Society to translate Western works into Urdu
    • Initially opposed Congress as a Hindu-dominated body
  6. 6

    Prarthana Samaj (1867)

    • Founded in Bombay by Atmaram Pandurang — largely inspired by the Brahmo Samaj
    • Focused on social reforms: widow remarriage, inter-caste dining, women's education
    • Justice Mahadev Govind Ranade and R.G. Bhandarkar were its key leaders
    • Ranade founded the Social Conference of India (1887) to pursue broader social reforms
  7. 7

    Young Bengal Movement (1820s–30s)

    • Inspired by Henry Louis Vivian Derozio (1809–1831), a Eurasian teacher at Hindu College, Calcutta
    • Encouraged free-thinking, rationalism, and criticism of Hindu tradition among his students ("Derozians")
    • Derozio was dismissed in 1831 before his death
    • His students became important public intellectuals, journalists, and reformers
  8. 8

    Sati Abolition (Regulation XVII, 1829)

    • Lord Bentinck abolished sati (widow immolation) under the influence of Ram Mohan Roy's persistent campaign
    • Roy published A Conference Between an Advocate and Opponent of Burning Widows Alive (1818–19) as the key textual weapon
    • He petitioned the government directly for legislative action
    • After the act, upper castes of Bengal counter-petitioned — Roy submitted a support petition in response
  9. 9

    Widow Remarriage Act (1856)

    • Passed under Lord Dalhousie due to the campaign of Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar (1820–1891)
    • Vidyasagar collected 25,000 signatures and published Marriage of Hindu Widows (1855) — using Parasara Smriti as scriptural argument
    • Also championed women's education and opened 35 girls' schools in Bengal
  10. 10

    B.R. Ambedkar (1891–1956)

    • Represented the most systematic challenge to Hindu caste society from within it
    • Founded Bahishkrit Hitakarini Sabha (1924) and Independent Labour Party (1936)
    • Led symbolic acts: Mahad Satyagraha (1927) — Dalits drinking from a public tank; burning of Manu Smriti (1927)
    • Converted to Buddhism (14 October 1956) with 500,000 followers — 6 weeks before his death; known as "Babasaheb"
  11. 11

    Jyotirao Phule (1827–1890)

    • Pioneering lower-caste reformer from Maharashtra (Mali/gardener caste)
    • Founded Satyashodhak Samaj (Truth-Seeking Society, 1873) to challenge Brahmin supremacy
    • Opened the first school for girls in Pune (1848) with wife Savitribai Phule — India's first woman teacher; also opened India's first school for "untouchables" (1852)
    • His book Gulamgiri (Slavery, 1873) drew on American abolitionism to critique caste oppression
  12. 12

    Sikh Reform Movements

    • Singh Sabha Movement (1873): Purified Sikhism from Hindu accretions; promoted Gurmukhi literacy and education
    • Akali Movement (1920–25) — also called Gurdwara Reform Movement: non-violent agitation to wrest control of Sikh shrines from corrupt mahants
    • Culminated in the Sikh Gurdwara Act (1925) — restoring shrines to the Sikh community

Predicted RAS Questions

Based on PYQ trends and 2026 syllabus analysis

1 5M Explain the ideology of the Theosophical Society and its significance for India. 5 marks · 50 words

Model Answer

The Theosophical Society (founded 1875, New York, by Blavatsky and Olcott; Adyar headquarters from 1882) believed in the universal brotherhood of humanity and the primacy of ancient wisdom traditions. It restored pride in India's Hindu/Buddhist heritage at a time of colonial cultural denigration. Annie Besant (President, 1907–33) combined Theosophy with Indian nationalism — founding Home Rule League (1916) and becoming INC's first woman president (1917).

~50 words • 5 marks