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| See also: | List of years in India Timeline of Indian history  | ||||
Events in the year 1933 in India.
Incumbents
- Emperor of India – George V
 - Viceroy of India – The Earl of Willingdon
 
Events
- National income - ₹19,502 million
 - January – Extensive prosecutions of Communists for treason.[1]
 - Pakistan Declaration published
 - Indian National Congress meeting at Calcutta prevented by the police.[2]
 - 1 May – Gandhi released.[3]
 - 8 May – Mohandas Gandhi begins a 3-week hunger strike because of the mistreatment of the lower castes.
 - 1 August – Rearrest of Gandhi; released on 24 August.[4]
 - Gandhi transfers charge of Congress to Nehru.[5]
 - 26 November - A 20 year old landlord from Pakur named Amarendra Chandra Pandey killed using a Biological agent.[6]
 
Law
- Indian Wireless Telegraphy Act
 
Births
- 8 January – Supriya Devi, Bengali actress (born in Burma, now Myanmar) (died 2018).[7]
 - 14 February – Madhubala, actress (died 1969).
 - 18 February – Nimmi, actress. (died 2020).
 - 4 April – Balan K. Nair, actor (died 2000).
 - 20 July – Roddam Narasimha, scientist (died 2020)
 - 1 August – Meena Kumari, actress and poet (died 1972)
 - 31 August – Dhiru Parikh, poet, writer and critic (died 2021)
 - 27 September – Nagesh, comedian actor (died 2009).
 - 3 November – Amartya Sen, economist, philosopher and winner of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 1998.
 - 8 December – Narenda Kumar, mountaineer and soldier (died 2020)
 
Deaths
- April 2 – Ranjitsinhji, Indian cricketer and ruler of Nawanagar. (b. 1872)
 
References
- ↑ Everyman's Dictionary of Dates; 6th ed. J. M. Dent, 1971; p. 263
 - ↑ Everyman's Dictionary of Dates; 6th ed. J. M. Dent, 1971; p. 263
 - ↑ Everyman's Dictionary of Dates; 6th ed. J. M. Dent, 1971; p. 263
 - ↑ Everyman's Dictionary of Dates; 6th ed. J. M. Dent, 1971; p. 263
 - ↑ Everyman's Dictionary of Dates; 6th ed. J. M. Dent, 1971; p. 263
 - ↑ "The Indian 'germ murder' that gripped the world". BBC News. 24 December 2021. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
 - ↑ "আমি সেই মেয়ে : সুপ্রিয়া দেবী". Prothom Alo. 12 March 2015. Archived from the original on 9 December 2017. Retrieved 18 February 2021.
 
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