When was Zamindari Association established in India? 

When was Zamindari Association established in India?  Correct Answer 1838

​ The correct answer is 1838.Key Points

  • Zamindari Association:
    • It was founded by Dwarakanath Tagore in 1838 in Bengal.
    • This association is formed to safeguard the interest of landlords.
    • It is the only legal machinery to raise the issues of landholders.
    • Zamindari Association is also called a Landholder's society.

Additional Information 

  • Indian National Association:
    • It was founded by Surendranath Banerjee and Anand Mohan Bose in 1876 in Bengal.
    • It is also called the Indian Association of Calcutta.
    • They promoted political education among the masses and they unified the opinions of people into key political issues.
    • Indian National Association is one of the leading political organizations which later merged with the Indian National Congress.
  • Servants of India Society
    • Gopal Krishna Gokhale established the Servants of India Society in 1905 for the expansion of Indian education.
    • In the field of famine relief, union organization, cooperatives, and uplift of tribals and depressed, the Society did commendable work.
    • The society worked in the fields of promotion of education, removal of untouchability, promotion of sanitation and healthcare, etc.
    • From 1911, it also published its newsletter titled “Hitavada” in English from Nagpur.
    • The society still exists and has its headquarters in Pune.
  • Tattwabodhini Sabha
    • The Tattwabodhini Sabha was established by Debendranath Tagore.
    • On 6 October 1839 Debendranath established Tattvaranjini Sabha which was renamed as 'Tattwabodhini Sabha'.
    • The objective of Sabha was to promote a rational and humanist form of Hinduism based on Vedanta and the Upanishads.
    • The Tattwabodhini Sabha was a group started in Calcutta.
    • It is a faction group of Brahmo Samaj, reformers of Hinduism and Indian Society.
    • In 1828Raja Ram Mohan Roy established Brahmo Samaj.
    • Debendranath Tagore complied a text as "Brahmo Dharma."

Related Questions

Principle: If an injury is the result of a reasonably foreseeable cause, the person/authority responsible is liable for damages because he has a duty to take reasonable measures to prevent it.
Facts: Janet, a housewife standing at her balcony, was struck on the head by a ball that flew out of a cricket field across her home. Janet sues the District Cricket Association (DCA), the owner of the cricket field for public nuisance and negligence on the ground that the field did not have a fence high enough to prevent such occurrence. District Cricket Association (DCA) claims that only about 10 balls had escaped the field in the previous 10 years and it was therefore an unforeseeable risk. Is there a duty on the part of the District Cricket Association (DCA) to prevent the risk? Is the District Cricket Association (DCA) liable to compensate Janet?
Zamindari Association was formed by?