they helped in abolishing the social evils of India - sati,sacrifice of the cow etc.They even introduced railways in India,they helped in building roads on mountains.
Raja ram mohan ray ended the sati pratha, though it was a old tradition but it was full of cruel act and against humanity, and the stage of women in india, so we should thankfull to raja ram mohan ray...also there was a british lord willium benting who supported to end sati pratha.
Raja Ram Mohan Roy
no. you fail
The British went into India and took control of their government. They outlawed the India people's culture (like making a law that outlaws sati (thats when a woman jumps in her dead husband's funeral pry) and making it legal for widows to remarry) and made the the people follow their rules, plant cash crops causing them to starve, and making them buy cheaper but more poorly made British goods.
Sati practice was banned in India by the British administration in 1829 through the Bengal Sati Regulation Act. This came after sustained efforts by social reformers and British officials to abolish this practice, which involved the self-immolation of widows on their husband's funeral pyres.
Sati pratha was banned in India in 1829 by the British government.
The practice of Sati was banned in India by Lord William Bentinck in 1829 through the Bengal Sati Regulation Act. This law made the act of Sati, where widows would self-immolate on their husband's funeral pyre, illegal in British India.
lord William bentinck
abolish burning of sati
Lord William Cavendish Bentinck
lord cornwallis
they helped in abolishing the social evils of India - sati,sacrifice of the cow etc.They even introduced railways in India,they helped in building roads on mountains.
The development of India during the British rule was-:Schools were opened.Systems like sati system, child marriage and female foeticide were banned.They taught Indians to sell land.Industries were opened.
King Ashoka
The sati system was officially abolished in India by the British authorities through legislation called the Bengal Sati Regulation in 1829. This regulation made it illegal for widows to be forced or coerced into self-immolation on their husbands' funeral pyres.
Sati was officially abolished in India in the year 1829 through the Bengal Sati Regulation Act introduced by Lord William Bentinck. This act made the practice of sati illegal and punishable by law.