Linguistic reorganization of states
How India redrew its internal map on linguistic lines from the JVP Committee to the States Reorganisation Act, 1956, and the unresolved legacies.
A pledge inherited from the freedom struggle
The demand for provinces drawn on language was not a post-1947 novelty. The Indian National Congress had endorsed it as early as 1920, reorganising its own Pradesh Congress Committees on linguistic lines at the Nagpur session, and the Motilal Nehru Report (1928) and the Congress election manifesto of 1945-46 reaffirmed the commitment. Partition's trauma, however, made the leadership recoil. Fearing that fresh internal boundaries would fan separatism and weaken a fragile Union, Nehru, Patel and Sitaramayya constituted the Linguistic Provinces Commission under S.K. Dar (1948), which reported in December 1948 that reorganisation should rest on administrative convenience, not language.
Dar, JVP and the limits of caution
To manage the disappointment, the Congress appointed the JVP Committee (1948-49) — Jawaharlal Nehru, Vallabhbhai Patel and Pattabhi Sitaramayya. Its April 1949 report likewise counselled postponement, conceding only that Andhra might be considered if popular sentiment was overwhelming. The official mind was clear: nation-building, refugee rehabilitation and the integration of princely states took precedence over linguistic sentiment.
Potti Sriramulu and the breaking point
The dam broke in Andhra. Potti Sriramulu, a Gandhian, began a fast-unto-death on 19 October 1952 demanding a separate Telugu-speaking state carved from the Madras Presidency. He died on 15 December 1952 after 58 days, igniting violent agitation across the Telugu districts. Within three days the Government of India conceded; the Andhra State was inaugurated on 1 October 1953, the first state created purely on linguistic grounds. The episode demonstrated that suppression had failed and that a comprehensive, principled exercise was now unavoidable.
The States Reorganisation Commission
In December 1953 the Centre appointed the States Reorganisation Commission (SRC) under Fazl Ali, with K.M. Panikkar and H.N. Kunzru as members. Its 1955 report rejected language as the sole criterion, weighing national unity, financial viability, administrative convenience and the preservation of the 'four-fold' Part A, B, C, D classification it recommended abolishing. The States Reorganisation Act, 1956, together with the Seventh Constitutional Amendment, 1956, restructured India into 14 states and 6 union territories, erasing the colonial-era distinction between former British provinces and princely states. This was the single largest territorial reconstitution of the Republic, and it set the template every later bifurcation would follow.