Курма Венката Редди Найду
Курма Венкатаредди Найду | |
---|---|
Kurma Venkatareddi Naidu in 1940-41 | |
1st Prime Minister of Madras Presidency | |
In office 1 April 1937 – 14 July 1937 | |
Governor | John Erskine, Lord Erskine |
Preceded by | Raja of Bobbili (as First Minister) |
Succeeded by | Chakravarti Rajagopalachari |
Governor of Madras Presidency (Acting) | |
In office 18 June 1936 – 1 October 1936 | |
Premier | Raja of Bobbili, P. T. Rajan |
Member of Viceroy's Executive Council | |
In office 1934–1937 | |
Governors‑General | Freeman Freeman-Thomas, 1st Marquess of Willingdon, Victor Hope, 2nd Marquess of Linlithgow |
Agent to the Union of South Africa | |
In office 1929–1932 | |
Monarch | George V of the United Kingdom |
Governors‑General | E. F. L. Wood, 1st Earl of Halifax, Freeman Freeman-Thomas, 1st Marquess of Willingdon |
Preceded by | V. S. Srinivasa Sastri |
Succeeded by | Kunwar Maharaj Singh |
Minister of Development | |
In office 1920–1923 | |
Premier | A. Subbarayalu Reddiar, Raja of Panagal |
Governor | Freeman Freeman-Thomas, 1st Marquess of Willingdon |
Preceded by | None |
Succeeded by | T. N. Sivagnanam Pillai |
Personal details | |
Born | 15 May 1875 Rajahmundry, Godavari District, Madras Presidency |
Died | 10 September 1942 Madras, Madras Presidency | (aged 67)
Nationality | Indian |
Political party | Justice Party |
Spouse | Lakshmi Kanthamma |
Children | KV Gopala Swamy Naidu, KV Raja Gopal Swamy Naidu, KV Madana Gopala Swamy Naidu, Kamala, Vimala |
Profession | Politician |
Рао Бахадур сэр Курма Венкатаредди Найду Ксси (1875–1942), также известный как Кв Редди Найду , был индийским политиком, адвокатом, дипломатом и профессором, который служил премьер -министром президента Мадраса . [ 1 ] Он был одним из немногих индейцев, которые также занимали должность губернатора президентства Мадраса , что делает его единственным человеком в истории, который служил и премьер -министром, и губернатором президентства Мадраса. [ 2 ] Будучи выдающимся лидером партии справедливости , Найду был известен своими усилиями по содействию социальному равенству, отмене неприкосновенности и социальным реформам. Он сыграл важную роль в основании первого женского колледжа в регионе Андхра, расположенном в Элуру . [ 3 ]
Родился в выдающейся семье Капу из района Годавари , [ 4 ] Найду получил свое образование в Мадрасском христианском колледже и Мадрасском юридическом колледже . До своей юридической карьеры он занимал должность профессора физики в государственном художественном колледже Раджахмундри . Он был вызван в бар в 1900 году и практиковал закон в Раджахмундри и Элуру. Его политическая карьера началась с его участия в местных и районных советах между 1901 и 1919 годами, после чего он присоединился к Партии справедливости . Найду сыграл ключевую роль в TM Nair делегации в Соединенное Королевство в 1918 году. Позже он служил в кабинетах A. subbarayalu Reddiar и Раджа Панагала в качестве министра развития и министра промышленности с 1920 по 1923 год. [2]
Naidu also held several diplomatic positions, including representing India at the League of Nations in Geneva in 1928 and serving as India's Agent to the Union of South Africa from 1929 to 1932.[2] He was also a member of the Indian delegation at the Second Round Table Conference in Cape Town in 1932.[5][6] After returning to India, Naidu served as a Law Member of the Council of State from 1933 to 1934 and as a member of the Governor's Executive Council of Madras from 1934 to 1937.[2] Between June and October 1936, he acted as the Governor of Madras Presidency. In April 1937, Naidu was appointed Prime Minister of Madras Presidency, a role he held until July 1937.[7]
In addition to his political and diplomatic contributions, Naidu held academic leadership roles, including serving as the Governor and ex-officio Chancellor of Andhra University and later as the Vice-Chancellor of Annamalai University in 1940. He passed away on 10 September 1942, and the Kurma Venkata Reddy Naidu Prize is awarded annually at Annamalai University in his honour.[2]
Early life
[edit]Kurma Venkatareddi Naidu was born on 15 May 1875 in Rajahmundry[8][9] in Godavari district and belonged to a Telaga Kapu family.[15] His father, Kurma Bapanna Naidu, won a name for himself as a Police Inspector. His mother, Venkata Ratnamma was reputed to be a pious and simple lady.[9]
Naidu's ancestors were rich and reportedly owned two villages, Gangavaram and Kurmapuram in the Ramachandrapuram mandal of Godavari district.[9] One of his paternal ancestors, Sambhanna Naidu, served as a military officer on the side of the English against the Dutch in the late eighteenth century and earned the title of Kumandan (Commandant) which became a family appellation.[9]
Education
[edit]He completed his B.A. degree from Madras Christian College in 1894 and later attended Madras Law College.[2] Before being called to the bar in 1900, he was a Professor of Physics at the Government Arts College, Rajahmundry. He started his practice as an advocate in Rajahmundry and then shifted to Eluru.[2][16]
Early political career
[edit]Naidu served on local and district boards in Rajahmundry and Eluru between 1901 and 1919.[2][17] He was a member of the Justice Party right from its inception. He was a part of the Justice Party delegation to England along with Dr. T. M. Nair and Arcot Ramasamy Mudaliar in July 1918.[18] In 1919, he led the non-Brahmin deputation to the Joint Parliamentary Committee on Constitutional Reforms. Naidu was an active partyman and when the Montagu–Chelmsford Reforms were passed in 1919, Naidu formulated a set of activities that the Justice Party should follow.
Social legislation has to be undertaken and inequitious laws that, for ages, maintained an invidious distinction between Brahmins and non-Brahmins, with regard to marriage, adoption and inheritance and the like, must be altered. Outside the sphere of politics, the work before us is equally onerous. Social reconstruction must be taken in hand at once. Social equality must be established. The strain of untouchability shall be removed. The dictates of priestcraft must be silenced. Paracheries must be purified. Agraharams must be humanized. The hold of humiliating customs and rituals must be unloosed. The portals of temples must be thrown broad open. The contents of sealed scriptures should be brought to light.[19]
Minister in Justice Party Cabinet
[edit]In December 1920, when the Justice Party was elected to power in Madras Presidency, Naidu won a seat in the Madras Legislative Council and served as the Minister of Development.[20] He also served as the Minister of Industries in the government of the Raja of Panagal from 1921 to 1923,[21][22] when he was dropped in favour of T. N. Sivagnanam Pillai.[23] He remained neutral when a vote of no-confidence was passed against the government of the Raja of Panagal.[24]
In 1924, when the Muddiman Committee came to India to assess the implementation and progress of dyarchy, K. V. Reddi Naidu explained its progress thus:
I was a Minister of Development without the forests. I was a Minister of Agriculture minus Irrigation. As a Minister of Agriculture I had nothing to do with the Madras Agriculturists Loan Act or the Madras Land Improvement Loans Act. The efficacy and efficiency of a Minister of Agriculture without having anything to do with irrigation, agricultural loans, land improvement loans and famine relief, may better be imagined than described. Then again, I was Minister of Industries without factories, boilers, electricity and water power, mines or labor, all of which are reserved subjects. [22]
Naidu also lent his support to reduction of economic inequality in villages. A speech delivered by him in 1924 emphasised the dangers of colonial forms of property rights. In Naidu's view, "the English and Scotch land systems were based upon the Roman conception of Dominium. According to these systems, the landlord is the absolute owner of the soil. The tenant has no proprietary interest in it and has no rights whatsoever."[25]
In 1928, Naidu was a member of the Indian delegation to the League of Nations, Geneva.[26]
Agent to South Africa
[edit]In January 1929, Naidu succeeded V. S. Srinivasa Sastri as British India's Agent to the Union of South Africa.[27] In January 1930, he came under severe criticism from the South African Indian Congress (SAIC) for not having done enough to protect the interests of the Indians migrants.[27] In February 1930, the first reading of the TALT (Amendment) Bill was passed. The South African Indian Congress was severely opposed to the Bill and Naidu spoke at a meeting of the SAIC in October 1930 expressing his outrage.[27] He was a member of the Indian delegation which participated in the Second Round Table Conference with the representatives of the South African Government on 4 January 1932.[28] Naidu's term came to an end on 3 August 1932 and he was succeeded by Kunwar Maharaj Singh.[28]
Acting Governor of Madras Presidency
[edit]On leaving South Africa, he took up various positions in the Indian Government. He became a member of the Council of State from 1933 to 1934, and a member of the Governor's Executive Council, Madras, 1934 -1937. In between, he was the acting Governor of Madras Presidency from June–October 1936.[7]
Prime Minister of Madras Presidency
[edit]
Naidu was the Prime Minister of Madras Presidency from 1 April 1937 to 14 July 1937.[7][29] The 1937 assembly elections were held and the results declared in February 1937. Despite being the majority party in the assembly and the council, the Indian National Congress was hesitant to form a Government because of the veto powers given to the governor. The Governor of Madras, Lord Erskine, decided to form an interim provisional Government with non-members and opposition members of the Legislative Assembly. V. S. Srinivasa Sastri was first offered the Prime Ministership of the interim government but he refused to accept it.
Then Erskine formed an interim government with Kurma Venkata Reddi Naidu as prime minister on 1 April 1937. However the ministry was short lived as the Congress was persuaded to form the government. On 14 July, Naidu resigned and Rajaji became prime minister.[30][31][32] Naidu remains the shortest-serving Prime Minister of the Presidency era and (factoring in the Presidency's successor states of Madras and Tamil Nadu), remained the shortest-serving ever until V. N. Janaki overtook his record in 1988 - almost five decades later.
Council of ministers in K. V. Reddi Naidu's interim provisional cabinet (1 April - 14 July 1937):[33]
Minister | Portfolio |
---|---|
Kurma Venkata Reddi Naidu | Prime Minister, Public, Revenue and Legal |
A. T. Panneerselvam | Home and Finance |
M. A. Muthiah Chettiar | Local self-government |
P. Kalifulla Sahib Bahadur | Public Works |
M. C. Rajah | Development |
R. M. Palat | Education and Public health |
Academia
[edit]Before being called to the bar in 1900, Naidu was a Professor of Physics at the Government Arts College, Rajahmundry.[2] Andhra University was inaugurated in temporary premises at Bezawada in the year 1926 by Lord Goschen, the first Chancellor. Goschen was the Governor of Madras Presidency from April 1924 to June 1929. He was succeeded by Lord Erskine who was in the chair up to March 1940 except for a brief interregnum from 18 June 1936 to 1 October 1936. During this period, Kurma Venkata Reddi Naidu was the Governor and ex-officio Chancellor of Andhra University. He also served as the Vice-Chancellor of Annamalai University in 1940. Annamalai University offers a prize every year in his name, the Kurma Venkata Reddi Naidu Prize.[34][35]
Personal life
[edit]Naidu lived in Madras in a palatial mansion on Boag Road, T. Nagar. The house later came under the ownership of film star Sivaji Ganesan.[2] As a tribute to Naidu's exalted status and the high offices he held, the then European-owned Madras Southern Mahratta Railway allotted him, under instructions from the Government of India, a special salon exuding luxury whenever he travelled. This privilege was extended to very few Indians and he was the only one in the Madras Presidency to receive it. He died on 10 September 1942.[2]
Naidu's son, Kurma Venu Gopalaswamy was an advocate, playwright and administrator. Venu Gopalaswamy was the first professor of law at Andhra University and the first honorary professor of theatre arts and chairman of the Faculty of Arts.[36] In April 1942, Venu Gopalaswamy was appointed the Registrar of Andhra University which he held till his retirement in February 1964.[37] Nalla Reddi Naidu, son of one of Venkatareddi Naidu's cousins, served as the first Member of Parliament of Rajahmundry from 1952 to 1957.
References
[edit]- ^ Muthiah, S. (2008). Madras, Chennai: A 400-year Record of the First City of Modern India. Palaniappa Brothers. p. 336. ISBN 978-81-8379-468-8.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k Randor Guy (1–15 July 2009). "Justice Party policies owed much to him". Madras Musings. Vol. XIX. Retrieved 3 May 2023.
- ^ "భారతీయ కవితా కోకిల (ప్రపంచ తెలుగు మహాసభలు)". Andhra Bhoomi (in Telugu). 15 December 2017. Retrieved 9 May 2023.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Satyanarayana, A. (2005). Dalits and Upper Castes: Essays in Social History. Kanishka Publishers, Distributors. p. 7. ISBN 978-81-7391-703-5.
- ^ Shridevi, S. (1976). Luminaries of Andhra Pradesh. Andhra Pradesh Sahitya Akademi. p. 98.
- ^ Nicholls, George Heaton (1961). South Africa in My Time. Allen & Unwin. p. 303.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c "Colonial administrators and post-independence leaders in India (1616–2000)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- ^ Rao, K. Sreeranjani Subba (1989). Struggle for Freedom: Case Study of the East Godavari District, 1905-1947. Mittal Publications. p. 91. ISBN 978-81-7099-176-2.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d Rao, Gummidithala Venkata Subba (1957). Life and Times of Sir K.V. Reddi Naidu. Addepally. p. 4.
- ^ Rao, Gummidithala Venkata Subba (1957). Life and Times of Sir K.V. Reddi Naidu. Addepally. p. 7.
- ^ "After Series of 'Outsiders', Sasikala to be first Tamil CM in 29 Years". News18. Retrieved 12 February 2017.
- ^ Джаффрело, Кристоф (2003). Тихая революция Индии: рост нижних каст в Северной Индии . C. Hurst & Co. p. 174. ISBN 978-1-85065-670-8 .
- ^ Сешадри К. (1991). Социальный дух Южной Индии . Арихантские издатели. п. 73.
- ^ IRSCHICK, Юджин Ф. Политика и социальные конфликты в Южной Индии . Калифорнийский университет . п. 175.
- ^ [ 10 ] [ 4 ] [ 11 ] [ 12 ] [ 13 ] [ 14 ]
- ^ Рао, Гуммидитала Венката Субба (1957). Жизнь и времена сэра К.В. Редди Найду . Addepally. п. 5
- ^ IRSCHICK, Юджин Ф. Политика и социальные конфликты в Южной Индии . Калифорнийский университет . п. 179
- ^ Энциклопедия политических партий , с. 69
- ^ Энциклопедия политических партий, с. 172
- ^ Энциклопедия политических партий, стр. 182
- ^ Энциклопедия политических партий, с. 71
- ^ Jump up to: а беременный Энциклопедия политических партий, с. 177
- ^ Энциклопедия политических партий, с. 184
- ^ Энциклопедия политических партий, с. 186
- ^ Нат, Маник (31 июля 2023 года). Нехватка капитала: кредитное и индийское экономическое развитие, 1920–1960 . Издательство Кембриджского университета . п. 115. ISBN 978-1-009-35907-8 .
- ^ Шериф М.А. (1994). Поиск утешения: биография Абдуллы Юсуф Али, интерпретатора Корана . п. 89. ISBN 978-983-9154-00-9 .
- ^ Jump up to: а беременный в «Хронология Южной Африки 1915-1930» . Южноафриканские отели. Архивировано из оригинала 25 июля 2008 года . Получено 24 октября 2008 года .
- ^ Jump up to: а беременный «Хронология Южной Африки 1930-1945» . Южноафриканские отели. Архивировано из оригинала 25 июля 2008 года . Получено 24 октября 2008 года .
- ^ «Главные министры Тамилнада с 1920 года» . Правительство Тамилнада. Архивировано из оригинала 23 апреля 2013 года . Получено 24 октября 2008 года .
- ^ Раманатан, KV (2008). Письма Сатьямурти: Индийская свобода борется с глазами парламентария, том 1 . Pearson Education India. С. 301–5. ISBN 978-81-317-1488-1 . ISBN 978-81-317-1488-1 .
- ^ Менон, Висалакши (2003). От движения к правительству: Конгресс в Объединенных провинциях, 1937-42 . Мудрец. п. 75. ISBN 0-7619-9620-6 . ISBN 978-0-7619-9620-0 .
- ^ Нагараджан, Кришнасвами (1989). Доктор Раджа сэр Мутия Четтиар: биография . Аннамалайский университет. Стр. 63–70.
- ^ Партия Справедливости Золотой Юбилей Сувенир, 1968 .
- ^ Нараянасвами, Б.В. (28 сентября 1941 г.). Раджа сэр Аннамалай Четтиар, Том память . Университет Османии, Цифровая библиотека Индии. Аннамалайский университет издательство.
- ^ Добро пожаловать в Университет Аннамалаи, архивные 21 июля 2008 г. на машине Wayback
- ^ «Департамент театрального профиля искусств» . Архивировано из оригинала 1 марта 2009 года . Получено 30 июля 2009 года .
- ^ «Список регистраторов Университета Андхра на веб -сайте AU» . Архивировано из оригинала 20 июня 2009 года . Получено 30 июля 2009 года .
Дальнейшее чтение
[ редактировать ]- «Андхра Маха из Южной Африки - формирование и рост» . AMSSA 70-летие 1931-2001 Сувенирная брошюра . Амса. Архивировано из оригинала 21 декабря 2007 года . Получено 24 октября 2008 года .
- 1875 Рождения
- 1942 Смерть
- Рыцари командир Ордена звезды Индии
- Индийские рыцари холостяк
- Главные министры Тамилнада
- Народ телугу
- Выпускники христианского колледжа Мадрас
- Партия справедливости (Индия) политики
- Академический персонал Университета Аннамалай
- Люди из Элуру
- Члены Имперского законодательного совета Индии
- Рай Бахадурс
- Выпускники Университета Мадраса
- Члены Совета генерального губернатора Индии
- Движение Андхра
- Адвокаты из Британской Индии