Undivided India
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India has several socio-political, historical, and geographical meanings.
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[edit] Greater India
Greater India is another term sometimes used to describe the region between Central Asia in the North and tropical Indonesia in the South, and from the borderlands of Persia to Tibet and western China, which has had a significant Indian influence on its culture and civilization, including religious thought, language, art and literature.
This socio-cultural region is now part of the modern nations of (from the west): Iran (Seistan-Balochistan province), Pakistan, Afghanistan, India, Nepal, Bhutan, the trans-Tsangpo and Yunnan regions of China, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Maldives, Laos, Cambodia, Thailand, Brunei, East Timor, the Philippines, Malaysia, Indonesia and Singapore, the Mauritius, Maldives, Seychelles, Comoros and other islands of the Indian Ocean.
[edit] South Asia
Officially, it is a term which refers to the major part of the South Asia which comprised the British Raj, and included the current sovereign states of India, Bangladesh, and Pakistan. Undivided India did not include all geographical regions and nations of the South Asia like Nepal and Bhutan, but included most of the Princely states of India.
References to undivided India are found in some legal enactments including India’s Citizenship Act, 1955, which states that for the meaning of undivided India [1] (in the context of this Act), the undivided India means India as defined in the Government of India Act 1935, as originally enacted. There are innumerable other references to undivided India, in a variety of contexts, but mostly indicating India with boundaries as it existed just before the partition of India into India and Pakistan.
[edit] Indian subcontinent
The term Indian subcontinent largely corresponds to South Asia or Greater India, and is used in geographical or geological contexts rather than political or historical ones.
[edit] Indosphere
Indosphere is a term, defined as "a socio-political sphere subsuming those countries, cultures, and languages that have historically come under influence from the politics, culture, religion, and languages of India (notably, Laos, Thailand, Cambodia, Burma)." [2]
[edit] Indies
The Indies or East Indies (or East India) is a term used to describe lands of South and Southeast Asia, occupying all of the former British India, the present Indian Union, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Sri Lanka, the Maldives, and also Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia.[citation needed]
The East Indies also include Iranian Baluchistan, Indochina, the Philippine Islands, Brunei, Singapore and East Timor.[citation needed] It does not, however, include Irian Jaya (West Papua), which is part of Melanesia.
The inhabitants of the East Indies are often called East Indians, distinguishing them both from inhabitants of the Caribbean which is also called the West Indies, and from the indigenous peoples of the Americas who are often called "Indians" or "American Indians."
[edit] Undivided India
Akhanda Bharata (literally "Undivided India") is a term that refers to regions that had a Hindu majority in the past, before the Islamic conquest and post-colonial partition. It includes all of present day Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan,[citation needed] India, Nepal,[citation needed] Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, Malaysia and Indonesia.[citation needed].
The geographic frontiers of this region is held to range from the Himalayan region in the north to the ocean in the south, the borders of Bharatavarsha as outlined in the Vishnu Purana.
Akhanda Bharatam is the Sanskrit name for this region, emphasizing the predominance of Dharmic religions, implying a foreign and intrusive nature of Islam in the region, and is thus a concept of religious or ethnic nationalism rather than a of a political state. It is an important part of the ideology of Hindutva[citation needed] subscribed to by Nationalist Indians as well as Hindu nationalists and organizations such as Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) and political parties such as the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).[citation needed]
[edit] See also
Categories: Wikipedia articles needing factual verification | Articles to be merged since January 2007 | Articles with unsourced statements since January 2007 | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since February 2007 | Politics of India | Indian independence movement | British rule in India | Irredentism | Pakistan Movement | Pan movements | Divided regions | Indian nationalism