- C. P. Ramaswami Iyer
Infobox Officeholder
honorific-prefix = Sir
name = C. P. Ramaswami Iyer
honorific-suffix =
imagesize =250px
small
caption = "Portrait of Sir C. P. Ramaswami Iyer, "The Hindu ", 1939
order =Dewan ofTravancore
office =
term_start =1936
term_end =August 19 ,1947
vicepresident =
viceprimeminister =
deputy =
lieutenant =
monarch =SriChithira Thirunal of Travancore
president =
primeminister =
governor =
governor-general =
governor_general =
succeeding =
predecessor =Mohammad Habibullah
successor =P. G. N. Unnithan
constituency =
majority =
birth_date =12 November 1879
birth_place =Madras ,British India
death_date =death date and age|1966|09|26|1879|11|12
death_place =London ,United Kingdom
nationality =
party =
spouse =
relations =
children =
residence =
alma_mater =Presidency College, Madras
occupation =lawyer ,
profession =Attorney-General ,Statesman
religion =Hindu
website =
footnotes =Sir Chetpat Pattabhirama Ramaswami Iyer (Tamil:சேத்துப்பட்டு பட்டாபி ராமசுவாமி அய்யர்) , KCSI, KCIE until 1948 (
12 November 1879 –26 September 1966 ) was anIndia n administrator noted for his progressive yet authoritarian rule. He served as theDewan ofTravancore from 1936 to 1947.Biography
Sir C.P.Ramaswami Iyer was born on the 12th of November, 1879 as the only son of Judge Pattabhirama Iyer and his wife Seetha Lakshmi Ammal. He was educated at the Wesley College High School at
Madras following which he did his B.A. from thePresidency College, Madras and later took a degree from the Madras Law College. Between 1903 and 1916 he practised as a lawyer inMadras , winning several popular cases. Between 1917 and 1918 he became, along withJawaharlal Nehru a joint secretary of theIndian National Congress . In 1919 he declined an offer to the Judgeship of the Madras High Court. By 1920 he became Advocate-General for the Presidency of Madras with which power, between 1921 and 1923 several Acts, such as the City Municipalities Act, the Madras Local Boards Act, etc were passed. Between 1923 and 1928 he served as Law Member of the Executive Council, Government of Madras, first duringLord Willingdon 's and later during Lord Goschen's Governorship; in charge of Law, Police, Irrigation and Ports, Electricity etc. In 1926 the title of Knight Commander of theOrder of the Indian Empire (KCIE) was bestowed upon him and he came to be known as "Sir" C.P. Ramaswami Iyer henceforth. Between 1926 and 1927 he was the Indian Delegate at theLeague of Nations inGeneva . The same year he became Member of the Executive Council, Government of Madras. By 1931 he was a Law Member of theGovernment of India and in 1932 attended the ThirdRound Table Conference atLondon . Between 1932 and 1936 he became the constitutional advisor to the Maharajah ofTravancore , Sri Chithira Thirunal. In 1933 he was the sole Indian delegate to the World Economic Conference and the next year he drafted aConstitution for the state ofKashmir . From 1936 to 1947 he wasDewan ofTravancore , succeeded byPGN Unnithan .Dewan of Travancore
Sir C.P. Ramaswami Iyer became
Dewan ofTravancore in 1936 and started his career thus with the revolutionaryTemple Entry Proclamation of 1936 whereby untouchables and lower caste people ofTravancore were permitted entry intoHindu Temples in that state. This was the first time that untouchability was attempted to be abolished by direct Government action.Mahatma Gandhi expressed great satisfaction and addressed meetings throughout Travancore praising theDewan and Sovereign ofTravancore . During his Dewanship ofTravancore he initiated the Pechipara Hydro-electric Scheme (presentKodayar Hydroelectric Power Project inKanyakumari District ), thePeriyar Game Sanctuary and other irrigation projects. He inaugurated many industries including the Fertiliser and Chemicals, Travancore (FACT), Travancore Rayon, Cement, Aluminium, etc. He enlarged and reorganised laminated wood furniture and screw pine industries. He introduced, for the first time, graded agriculturalincome tax and abolished land revenue; he expanded the Pallivasal Hydro-Electric Project. He carried out a great deal of pioneering work for theVivekananda Rock atCape Comorin and built guesthouses at Kanyakumari. He renovated thePadmanabhapuram Palace ofMarthanda Varma 's days (in present-dayKanyakumari District ) and expanded theTrivandrum Art Gallery. In 1937 Sir CP, as he was popularly known, started the University of Travancore with the Maharajah as Chancellor and himself as Vice Chancellor. He also established the Marine Biological Institute; organized mineral sands, rare earth and titanium products industries. In 1939 he was awarded an honorary L.L.D. Degree by the University of Travancore and in the same year he celebrated his sixtieth birthday by making great donations to charitable foundations and the University. In 1940 under his DewanshipTravancore became the first state to nationalise road transport inIndia . He also started aluminium, ceramic, fertilizer, rayon and other industries with major government collaboration. The same year capital punishment was abolished and adult franchise introduced. He was also the first to appoint a lady as District Judge (Mrs. Anna Chandy later became the first Indian woman High Court Judge). Sir CP introduced for the first time the mid day meal scheme to prompt poor children to attend school. During Sir CP's tenure as Dewan ofTravancore the revenues rose up from Rs. 2.5crore s to 9 crores without any additional taxation.In 1941 the British conferred on him the title of Knight Grand Commander of the Star of India (KCSI). In 1946 he resigned from the post of
Dewan ofTravancore but was persuaded to return. When Indian Independence came into viewTravancore and otherPrincely States were given two options of either staying independent or merging with the dominions ofIndia orPakistan . Sir CP was in favour of the independence ofTravancore which saw a great furore being created by theIndian National Congress . In 1947 after an unsuccessful attempt was made at his life by K.C.S.Mani he resigned the post ofDewan and leftTravancore on August 19, 1947. He was succeeded byPGN Unnithan .Criticism and dissent
While hailed as a modernizing reformer by many, his administration was also marked by popular dissent. During this period he came into conflict with the Communists on numerous occasions Fact|date=May 2007, several incidents of which became minor rebellions. These culminated in 1946, when a communist uprising, which is popularly known as
Punnapra-Vayalar revolt attempted to establish a new government in the Punnapara-Vayalar regionFact|date=May 2007, which resulted in the death of more than 3000 people and was put down by the Travancore army and navy.Jawaharlal Nehru once remarked about Iyer:"There is little now in common between us except our common nationality. He is today a full- blooded apologist of British rule in India, especially during the last few years; an admirer of dictatorship in India and elsewhere, and himself a shining ornament of autocracy in an Indian state." [http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/thscrip/print.pl?file=2003042000160400.htm&date=2003/04/20/&prd=mag&] :
Later life
After he resigned his Dewanship of
Travancore Sir. C.P.Ramaswami Iyer left forLondon ; in 1948 he returned his titles of KCSI and KCIE in a letter to the Governor-GeneralLord Louis Mountbatten . The same year he visited theUnited States andSouth America to lecture onHinduism . in 1949-1950 he was Professor of theAmerican Academy of Asian Studies atCalifornia . He was also, during this period, Delegate to the East West Philosophical Congress at Honolulu as well as to the International PEN conference. He returned toIndia within a few years and accepted the post of Vice Chancellor,Annamalai University . At the request of theGovernment of India he accepted Vice Chancellorship ofBanaras Hindu University also and became the first person in India to be Vice Chancellor of two Universities at the same time in 1955.The same year he served as Leader of the Indian Universities Delegation to
China and sent a report to Government on the political situation in China and her policy vis-à-vis India, predicting the India-China fallout. Sir CP served in several important commissions and delegations till 1966 when he left forLondon and while there he passed away suddenly and peacefully, sitting in an armchair, at theNational Liberal Club at about 11.30 a.m. on the 26th of September 1966.References
* [http://cprfoundation.org/otherpages/01-cpr.htm Biography and timeline]
* Sir C.P. Thiruvithamcore Charithrathil (Malayalam) by Sreedhara Menon
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.