Dadasaheb Phalke Award

92
Dadasaheb Phalke Award Award Information Category Indian Cinema Instituted 1969 First Awarded 1969 Awarded by Govt. of India Description Lifetime Achievement award First Awardee(s) Devika Rani 1969 Last Awardee(s) Tapan Sinha 2006 The Dadasaheb Phalke Award is an annual award given by the Indian government for lifetime contribution to Indian cinema . It was instituted in 1969 [1] , the birth centenary year of Dadasaheb Phalke [2] , considered the father of Indian cinema. The award for a particular year is given during the end of the following year along with the National Film Awards . The Bombay High Court had directed the Directorate of Film Festivals of India (DFFI) to consider uncensored films for the competition, a case which DFFI contested and won in the Supreme Court in late 2006. The case had delayed announcement of the award for 2006, which was announced in the middle of 2008. The 2007 award which had to be announced at the end of 2008 is pending. [edit ] Past Winners

Transcript of Dadasaheb Phalke Award

Dadasaheb Phalke Award

Award Information

Category Indian Cinema

Instituted 1969

First Awarded 1969

Awarded by Govt. of India

Description Lifetime Achievement award

First Awardee(s) Devika Rani 1969

Last Awardee(s) Tapan Sinha 2006

The Dadasaheb Phalke Award is an annual award given by the Indian government for lifetime contribution to Indian cinema. It was instituted in 1969 [1], the birth centenary year of Dadasaheb Phalke [2], considered the father of Indian cinema.

The award for a particular year is given during the end of the following year along with the National Film Awards. The Bombay High Court had directed the Directorate of Film Festivals of India (DFFI) to consider uncensored films for the competition, a case which DFFI contested and won in the Supreme Court in late 2006. The case had delayed announcement of the award for 2006, which was announced in the middle of 2008. The 2007 award which had to be announced at the end of 2008 is pending.

[edit] Past Winners

National Awards  

Year   Winner   Occupation  

17th 1969 Devika Rani actress

18th 1970 B. N. Sircar producer

19th 1971 Prithviraj Kapoor actor (posthumous)

20th 1972 Pankaj Mullick composer (music director)

21st 1973 Ruby Myers (Sulochana) actress

22nd 1974 Bomireddi Narasimha Reddy Director

23rd 1975 Dhirendranath Ganguly actor, director

24th 1976 Kanan Devi actress

25th 1977 Nitin Bose cinematographer, director, writer,

26th 1978 Rai Chand Boral composer, director

27th 1979 Sohrab Modi actor, director, producer

28th 1980 Paidi Jairaj actor, director

29th 1981 Naushad Ali composer (music director)

30th 1982 L. V. Prasad actor, director, producer

31st 1983 Durga Khote actress

32nd 1984 Satyajit Ray director

33rd 1985 V. Shantaram actor, director, producer

34th 1986 B. Nagi Reddy producer

35th 1987 Raj Kapoor actor, director

36th 1988 Ashok Kumar actor

37th 1989 Lata Mangeshkar singer

38th 1990 A. Nageswara Rao actor

39th 1991 Bhalji Pendharkar director, producer, writer

40th 1992 Bhupen Hazarika composer (music director)

41st 1993 Majrooh Sultanpuri lyricist

42nd 1994 Dilip Kumar actor

43rd 1995 Rajkumar actor

44th 1996 Sivaji Ganesan actor

45th 1997 Pradeep lyricist

46th 1998 B.R. Chopra director, producer

47th 1999 Hrishikesh Mukherjee director

48th 2000 Asha Bhosle singer

49th 2001 Yash Chopra director, producer

50th 2002 Dev Anand actor, director, producer

51st 2003 Mrinal Sen director

52nd 2004 Adoor Gopalakrishnan director

53rd 2005 Shyam Benegal director

54th 2006 Tapan Sinha director

55th 2007 pending announcement

Ashoka Chakra Award

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to: navigation, search

Ashoka Chakra

Award Information

Type Peace Time Gallantry

Category National Bravery

Awarded by Govt. of India

Previous Name(s) Ashoka Chakra, Class I(till 1967)

Ribbon

Award Rank

none ← Ashoka Chakra → Kirti Chakra

This article is about Ashoka Chakra, an award. For information about Ashoka Chakra the symbol, see Ashoka Chakra.

The Ashoka Chakra is an Indian military decoration awarded for valor, courageous action or self-sacrifice away from the battlefield. It is the peace time equivalent of the Param Vir Chakra, and is awarded for the "most conspicuous bravery or some daring or pre-eminent valour or self-sacrifice" other than in the face of the enemy. The decoration may be awarded either to military or civilian personnel and may be awarded posthumously.

Subsequent awards of the Ashoka Chakra are recognized by a bar to the medal ribbon (to date, none have been awarded). It is possible for a recipient to be awarded the Kirti Chakra or Shaurya Chakra in addition for separate acts of gallantry.

The medal was originally established on 4 January 1952 as the "Ashoka Chakra, Class I" as the first step of a three-class sequence of non-combatant bravery decorations. In 1967, these decorations were removed from the "class-based" system and renamed as the Ashoka Charkra, Kirti Chakra, and Shaurya Chakra. This is an important point in understanding the independent Indian view of decorations. It would also lead to changes in the Padma Vibhushan series, the distinguished service medal series, the life saving medal series, and the Defence Security Corps medal series.

From 1 February 1999, the central government instituted a monthly stipend for Ashoka Chakra recipients of Rs. 1400. Jammu and Kashmir awarded a cash award of Rs. 1500 (ca. 1960) for recipients of this award.

Obverse: Circular gold gilt, 1-3/8 inches in diameter. In the center, the chakra (wheel) of Ashoka, surrounded by a lotus wreath and with an ornate edge. Suspended by a straight bar suspender. The medal is named on the edge.

Reverse: Blank in the center, with "Ashoka Chakra" in Hindi along the upper edge on the medal and the same name in English along the lower rim, "ASHOKA CHAKRA". On either side is a lotus design. The center is blank, perhaps with the intent that details of the award be engraved there. There is no indication of the class on the pre-1967 awards, and, in fact, there is no difference between these medals and the post-1967 awards.

Ribbon: 32 mm, dark green with a 2 mm central saffron stripe. Dark green 15 mm, saffron 2 mm, dark green 15 mm.

[edit] See also

Ashoka the Great , Emperor of the Mauryan empire in the third century BC

[edit] External links

Bharat Rakshak Page on Ashoka Chakra Ashoka Chakra awardees of the Indian Air Force

[hide]

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Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashoka_Chakra_Award"

The International Gandhi Peace Prize, named after Mahatma Gandhi, is awarded annually by the government of India.

As a tribute to the ideals espoused by Gandhi, the Government of India launched the International Gandhi Peace Prize in 1995 on the occasion of the 125th birth anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi. This is an annual award given to individuals and institutions for their contributions towards social, economic and political transformation through non-violence and other Gandhian methods. The award carries Rs. 10 million in cash, convertible in any currency in the world, a plaque and a citation. It is open to all persons regardless of nationality, race, creed or sex.

A jury consisting of the Prime Minister of India, the Leader of the Opposition in the Lok Sabha, Chief Justice of India and two other eminent persons decides the awardee each year.

Ordinarily, only proposals coming from competent persons invited to nominate are considered. However, a proposal is not taken as invalid for consideration by the jury merely on the ground of not having emanated from competent persons. If, however, it is considered that none of the proposals merit recognition, the jury is free to withhold the award for that year. Only achievements within 10 years immediately preceding the nomination are considered for the award; an older work may, however, be considered if its significance has not become apparent until recently. A written work, in order to be eligible for consideration, should have been published.

[edit] Gandhi Peace Prize Recipients

No   Year   Name   Recipient Description  

1. 1995 Julius Nyerere 1st President of Tanzania

2. 1996 A. T. Ariyaratne Founder of Sarvodaya Shramadana Movement

3. 1997[1] Gerhard Fischer [2] German diplomat, recognised for his work against leprosy and polio

4. 1998 Ramakrishna Mission Founded by Swami Vivekananda

5. 1999[3] Baba Amte Social Worker

6. 2000Nelson Mandela (co-recipient)

Former President of South Africa

7. 2000Grameen Bank (co-recipient)

Founded by Muhammad Yunus

8. 2001[4] John Hume Northern Irish Politician

9. 2002Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan

10. 2003 Václav HavelLast President of Czechoslovakia and first President of the Czech Republic

11. 2004 Coretta Scott King Widow of Martin Luther King

12. 2005[5] Desmond Tutu South African cleric and activist

The National Film Awards is the most prominent film award ceremony in India, and the country's oldest alongside the Filmfare Awards.[1] Established in 1954, it has been run by the Indian government's Directorate of Film Festivals since 1973. [2][3]

Every year a national panel appointed by the government selects the winning entry, and the award ceremony is held in New Delhi, where the President of India gives away the awards. This is followed by the inauguration of the National Film Festival, where the award-winning films are screened for the public. Declared for films produced in the previous year across the country, they hold the distinction of awarding merit to the best of Indian cinema overall, as well as presenting awards for the best films in each region and language of the country. Due to the national scale of the National Film Awards, it is considered equivalent of the American Academy Awards.[4][5]

Contents

[hide]

1 History 2 Juries 3 Awards up to 2007

o 3.1 Golden Lotus Award o 3.2 Silver Lotus Award o 3.3 Nargis Dutt Award o 3.4 Indira Gandhi Award for Best First Film o 3.5 Dadasaheb Phalke Lifetime Achievement Award o 3.6 Non-Feature Film Awards o 3.7 Best Book on Cinema o 3.8 Best Film Critic

4 See also 5 References

o 5.1 Notes o 5.2 Further reading

6 External links

[edit] History

The Awards were first presented in 1954. The Government of India conceived the ceremony to honour films made across India, on a national scale, to encourage the furthering of Indian art and culture.

[edit] Juries

The National Film Awards are presented in two main categories: Feature Films and Non-Feature Films. Two separate 10-member jury panels select the winners for each, and these juries are appointed by the Directorate of Film Festivals in India. Neither the Government or the

Directorate have influence over which films are selected for consideration and which films ultimately win awards. There are strict criteria as to whether a film is eligible for consideration by the jury panels. Over 100 films made across the country are entered in each category (Feature and Non-Feature) for the awards and deemed eligible each year.

[edit] Awards up to 2007

The Awards are presented to Feature Films produced in the previous year,[6] given in the following categories:

[edit] Golden Lotus Award

Official Name: Swarna Kamal

Best Film Best Direction Best Popular Film Providing Wholesome Entertainment Best Children's Film

[edit] Silver Lotus Award

Official Name: Rajat Kamal

Best Actor Best Actress Best Supporting Actor Best Supporting Actress Best Child Artist Best Cinematography Best Screenplay Best Art Direction Best Make-up Artist [7] Best Costume Design Best Music Direction Best Lyrics Best Male Playback Singer Best Female Playback Singer Best Choreography Best Audiography Best Editing Best Special Effects Second Best Feature Film Special Jury Award / Special Mention (Feature Film)

Best Feature Film in each of the languages specified in schedule VIII of the constitution:

Best Regional Film (Assamese) Best Regional Film (Bengali) Best Regional Film (Hindi) Best Regional Film (Kannada) Best Regional Film (Malayalam) Best Regional Film (Marathi) Best Regional Film (Oriya) Best Regional Film (Punjabi) Best Regional Film (Tamil) Best Regional Film (Telugu)

Best Feature Film in each of the languages other than those specified in schedule VIII of the constitution:

Best Feature Film in English Best Feature Film in Konkani Best Feature Film in Manipuri

Other Feature Film Awards:

Best Film on Family Welfare Best Film on Other Social Issues Best Film on Environment Conservation/Preservation

[edit] Nargis Dutt Award

This award is given to the Best Feature film on National Integration

Nargis Dutt Award for Best Feature Film on National Integration

[edit] Indira Gandhi Award for Best First Film

This award is given to the film judged Best First Film of a Director at the National Film Awards

Indira Gandhi Award

[edit] Dadasaheb Phalke Lifetime Achievement Award

This award is for lifetime achievement and contribution to Indian Cinema. It is named after Dadasaheb Phalke, one of India's pioneering film makers.

Dadasaheb Phalke Award

[edit] Non-Feature Film Awards

The Awards presented to Non-Feature Films are given in different categories including the following:

Best Non-Feature Film Best First Non-Feature Film Best Anthropological/Ethnographic Film Best Biographical Film Best Arts/Cultural Film Best Scientific Film Best Promotional Film Best Agriculture Film Best Film on Social Issues Best Educational/Motivational/Instructional Film Best Environment/Conservation/Preservation Film Best Exploration/Adventure Film Best Investigative Film Best Animated Film Best Short Fiction Film Best Non-Feature Film on Family Welfare Best Non-Feature Film Direction Best Non-Feature Film Cinematography Best Non-Feature Film Audiography Best Non-Feature Film Editing Best Non-Feature Film Music Direction Special Jury Award / Special Mention (Non-Feature Film)

[edit] Best Book on Cinema

This award is given to the Best Book on Cinema:

Best Book on Cinema

[edit] Best Film Critic

This award is given to the Best Film Critic on Cinema: Best Film Critic

The Indira Gandhi Award for Best First Film of a Director is a National Film Award, given to a feature film production, the jury of the National Film Awards feel is the Best debut film of a director in India.

The National Film Award - Indira Gandhi Award for Best First Film of a Director winners:

Year Film Director Language

20071. Kabul Express2. Ekantham

Kabir KhanMadhu Kaithapuram

HindiMalayalam

2006 Parineeta Pradeep Sarkar Hindi

2005 Grahanam Mohan Krishna Indraganti Telugu

2004 Margam Rajiv Vijaya Raghavan Malayalam

20031. Patal Ghar2. Prohor

Abhijit ChaudharySubhadro Chaudhary

BengaliBengali

2002 Thiladaanam K.N.T. Sastry Telugu

2001 Sayahnam R. Sarath Malayalam

20001. Laado2. Dollar Dreams

Aswini ChowdharyShekhar Kammula

HaryanviEnglish

1999 Daya Venu Malayalam

1998 Bhoothakkannadi A. K. Lohitha Das Malayalam

1997 Rag Birag Bindhu Chakraborthy Assamese

1996 Kahini Malaya Bhattacharya Bengali

1995 Moghamull G. Rajasekharan Tamil

1994 Sunya Theke Suru Ashok Viswanathan Bengali

1993 Mrs. Beatty's Children Pamela Rooks English

1992 Haldhaar Sanjeev Hazarika Assamese

1991 Perumthachan Ajayan Malayalam

1990 Wosobipo Gautam Bora Karbi

1989 Thrishagni Nabayendu Ghosh Hindi

1988 Ekti Jiban Raja Mitra Bengali

1987 Yeh Woh Manzil To Nahin Sudhir Mishra Hindi

1986 New Delhi Times Romesh Sharma Hindi

1985 Meendum Oru Kaathal Kathai Prathap Pothan Tamil

1984 Jaane Bhi Do Yaaron Kundan Shah Hindi

1983 Kann Sivanthaal Mann Sivakkum Sridhar Rajan Tamil

1982 Aadhar Sila Ashok Ahuja Hindi

1981 Maina Tadanta Utpalendu Chakraborthy Bengali

Nargis Dutt Award for Best Feature Film on National Integration

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£The Nargis Dutt Award for Best Feature Film on National Integration is a National Film Award, given to a feature film production, the jury of the National Film Awards feel has best dealt with themes relating to National Integration in India.

The winners of the Award:

Year Film Language Director

2007 Kallarali Hoovagi Kannada T.S. Nagabharna [1]

2006 Daivanamathil Malayalam Jayaraj

2005 Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose: The Forgotten Hero Hindi/English Shyam Benegal

2004 Pinjar Hindi Chandra Prakash Dwivedi

2003 Mr. and Mrs. Iyer English Aparna Sen

2002 Bub (father) Kashmiri Jyoti Sarup

2001 Pukar Hindi Rajkumar Santoshi

2000 Shaheed Udham Singh Punjabi Chitrarath

1999 Zakhm Hindi Mahesh Bhatt

1998 Border Hindi J.P. Dutta

1997 Kanakinavu Malayalam Siby Malayil

1996 Bombay Tamil Mani Ratnam

1995 Mukhta Marathi Jabbar Patel

1994 Sardar Hindi Ketan Mehta

1993 Roja Tamil Mani Ratnam

1992 Adi Mimansa Oriya A.K. Bir

1991 no award -

1990 Santa Sishunala Sharifa Kannada T.S. Nagabharana

1989 Rudraveena Telugu K. Balachander

1988 Tamas Hindi Govind Nihalani

1987 no award -

1986 Sree Narayana Guru Malayalam P.A. Backer

1985 Aadmi Aur Aurat Hindi Tapan Sinha

1984 Sookha Hindi M. S. Sathyu

1983 Aaroodam Malayalam I.V. Sasi

1982 Saptapadhi Telugu K. Viswanath

1981 Bhavni Bhavai Gujarati Ketan Mehta

1980 22 June 1897 Marathi Nachiket, Jayoo Patwardhan

1979 Grahana Kannada T.S. Nagabharana

1978 no award -

1977 no award -

1976 no award -

1975 Parinay Hindi Kanthilal Rathod

1974 Garam Hawa Hindi M. S. Sathyu

1973 Achanum Bappayum Malayalam K.S. Sethumadhavan

1972 Do Boond Pani Hindi Khwaja Ahmad Abbas

1971 Thurakkatha Vaathil Malayalam P. Bhaskaran

1970 Saat Hindustani Hindi Khwaja Ahmad Abbas

1969 Janma Bhoomi Malayalam John Sankaramangalam

1968 no award -

1967 Subhash Chandra Hindi Piyush Ghosh

1966 Shaheed Hindi S. Ram Sharma

[edit] References

1. ̂ 54th National Film Awards The Hindu, June 11, 2008.

The Arjun Awards were instituted in 1961 by the government of India to recognize outstanding achievement in National sports. The award carries a cash prize of Rs. 300,000, a bronze statuette of Arjun and a scroll.

Over the years the scope of the award has been expanded and a large number of sportspersons who belonged to the pre-Arjun Award era were also included in the list. Further, the number of disciplines for which the award is given was increased to include indigenous games and the physically handicapped category.

The Government has recently[when?] revised the scheme for the Arjun Award. As per the revised guidelines, to be eligible for the Award, a sportsperson should not only have had good performance consistently for the previous three years at the international level with excellence for the year for which the Award is recommended, but should also have shown qualities of leadership, sportsmanship and a sense of discipline.

From the year 2001, the award is given only in disciplines falling under the following categories:

Olympic Games / Asian Games / Commonwealth Games / World Cup / World Championship Disciplines and Cricket

Indigenous Games Sports for the Physically Challenged

Contents

[hide]

1 Arjun Awardees in Archery 2 Arjun Awardees in Athletics 3 Arjun Awardees in Badminton 4 Arjun Awardees in Ball Badminton 5 Arjun Awardees in Basketball 6 Arjun Awardees in Billiards & Snooker 7 Arjun Awardees in Boxing 8 Arjun Awardees in Carrom 9 Arjun Awardees in Chess 10 Arjun Awardees in Cricket 11 Arjun Awardees in Cycling

12 Arjun Awardees in Equestrian 13 Arjun Awardees in Football 14 Arjun Awardees in Golf 15 Arjun Awardees in Gymnastics 16 Arjun Awardees in Hockey 17 Arjun Awardees in Judo 18 Arjun Awardees in Kabaddi 19 Arjun Awardees in Lawn Tennis 20 Arjun Awardees in Rowing 21 Arjun Awardees in Shooting 22 Arjun Awardees in Squash 23 Arjun Awardees in Swimming 24 Arjun Awardees in Table Tennis 25 Arjun Awardees in Volleyball 26 Arjun Awardees in Weightlifting 27 Arjun Awardees in Wrestling 28 Arjun Awardees in Yachting 29 See also 30 External links

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Archery

No Year Recipient Name

1 1981 Krishna Das

2 1989 Shyam Lal

3 1991 Limba Ram

4 1992 Sanjeev Kumar Singh

5 2005 Tarundeep Rai

6 2005 Dola Banerjee

7 2006 Jayanta Talukdar

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Athletics

No Year Recipient Name

1 1961 Gurbachan Singh Randhawa

2 1962 Tarlok Singh

3 1963 Stephie D'Souza

4 1964 Makhan Singh

5 1965 Kenneth Powell

6 1966 Ajmer Singh

7 1966 B. S. Barua

8 1967 Praveen Kumar

9 1967 Bhim Singh

10 1968 Joginder Singh

11 1968 Manjit Walia

12 1969 Harnek Singh

13 1970 Mohinder Singh Gill

14 1971 Edward Sequeira

15 1972 Vijay Singh Chauhan

16 1973 Sriram Singh

17 1974 T. C. Yohannan

18 1974 Shivnath Singh

19 1975 Hari Chand

20 1975 V. Anusuya Bai

21 1976 Bahadur Singh Chouhan

22 1976 Geeta Zutshi

23 1978-79 Suresh Babu

24 1978-79 Angel Mary Joseph

25 1979-80 R. Gyanasekaran

26 1980-81 Gopal Saini

27 1981 Sabir Ali

28 1982 Charles Borromeo

29 1982 Chand Ram

30 1982 M. D. Valsamma

31 1983 Suresh Yadav

32 1983 P. T. Usha

33 1984 Raj Kumar

34 1984 Shiny Abraham

35 1985 Raghubir Singh Bal

36 1985 Asha Agarwal

37 1985 Adille Sumariwala

38 1986 Suman Rawat

39 1987 Balwinder Singh

40 1987 Vandana Rao

41 1987 Bagicha Singh

42 1987 Vandana Shanbagh

43 1988 Ashwini Nachappa

44 1989 Mercy Kuttan

45 1990 Deena Ram

46 1992 Bahadur Prasad

47 1993 K. Saramma

48 1994 Rosa Kutty

49 1995 Shakti Singh

50 1995 Jyotirmoyee Sikdar

51 1996 Ajit Bhaduria

52 1996 Padmini Thomas

53 1997 Reeth Abraham

54 1998 Sirichand Ram

55 1998 Neelam Jaswant Singh

56 1998 S. D. Eshan

57 1998 Rachita Mistry

58 1998 Paramjit Singh

59 1999 Gulab Chand

60 1999 Gurmit Kaur

61 1999 Parduman Singh

62 1999 Sunita Rani

63 2000 K. M. Beenamol

64 2000 Yadvendra Vashishta (PH)

65 2000 Vijay Bhalchandra Munishwar - Powerlifting (PH)

66 2000 Joginder Singh Bedi (PH) (For Life time Contribution)

67 2002 Anju Bobby George

68 2002 Saraswati Saha

69 2003 Soma Biswas

70 2003 Madhuri Saxena

71 2004 Anil Kumar

72 2004 J. J. Shobha

73 2004 Devendra Jhajharia (Physically Challenged)

74 2005 Manjit Kaur

75 2005 Rajinder Singh Rahelu (Physically Challenged)

76 2006 K. M. Binu

77 2007 Chitra K. Soman

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Badminton

No Year Recipient Name

1 1961 Nandu Natekar

2 1962 Meena Shah

3 1965 Dinesh Khanna

4 1967 Suresh Goel

5 1969 Dipu Ghosh

6 1970 D. V. Tambay

7 1971 S. Moorthy

8 1972 Prakash Padukone

9 1974 Raman Ghosh

10 1975 Davinder Ahuja

11 1976 Ami Ghia

12 1977-78 Ms. K.T. Singh

13 1980-81 Syed Modi

14 1982 P. Ganguli

15 1982 Madhumita Bisht

16 1991 Rajeev Bagga

17 2000 Pullela Gopichand

18 1999 George Thomas

19 2003 Madasu Srinivas Rao (Physically Challenged)

20 2004 Abhinn Shyam Gupta

21 2005 Aparna Popat

22 2006 Chetan Anand

23 2006 Rohit Bhakar (Physically Challenged)

24 2007 Anup Sridhar

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Ball Badminton

No Year Recipient Name

1 1970 J. Pitchyya

2 1972 Ms. J. Srinivasan

3 1973 A. Kareem

4 1975 L.A. Iqbal

5 1976 A. Sam Christ Das

6 1984 D. Rajaraman

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Basketball

No Year Recipient Name

1 1961 Sarbjit Singh

2 1967 Khushi Ram

3 1968 Gurdial Singh

4 1969 Hav. Hari Dutt

5 1970 Gulam Abbas Moontasir

6 1971 Man Mohan Singh

7 1973 S. K. Kataria

8 1974 A.K. Punj

9 1975 Hanuman Singh

10 1977-78 T. Vijayaraghawan

11 1979-80 Om Prakash

12 1982 Ajmer Singh

13 1991 Radhey Shyam

14 1991 Ms. S Sharma

15 1999 Sajjan Singh Cheema

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Billiards & Snooker

No Year Recipient Name

1 2002 Alok Kumar

2 2003 Pankaj Advani

3 2005 Anuja Prakash Thakur

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Boxing

No Year Recipient Name

1 1961 L. Buddy D' Souza

2 1962 Hav. P. Badadur Mal

3 1966 Hawa Singh

4 1968 Hav. Dennis Swamy

5 1971 Hav. Muniswamy Venu

6 1972 Hav. Chandranarayanan

7 1973 Hav. Mehatab Singh

8 1977-78 B.S. Thapa

9 1978-79 C.C. Machaiah

10 1979-80 B. Singh

11 1980-81 Issac Amaldas

12 1981 Hav. G. Manoharan

13 1982 Hav. Kaur Singh

14 1983 Jas Lal Pradhan

15 1986 Jai Pal Singh

16 1987 Seeva Jayaram

17 1989 Gopal Dewang

18 1991 D.S. Yadav

19 1992 Rajender Prasad

20 1993 Manoj Pingale

21 1993 Mukund Killekar

22 1995 V. Devarajan

23 1996 Raj Kumar Sangwan

24 1998 N.G. Dingko Singh

25 1999 Gurcharan Singh

26 1999 Jitender Kumar

27 2002 Md. Ali Qamar

28 2003 Ms. Mangte Chungneijang Marykom

29 2005 Akhil Kumar

30 2006 Vijender Kumar

31 2007 Verghese Johnson

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Carrom

No Year Recipient Name

1. 1996 A. Maria Irudayam

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Chess

No Year Recipient Name

1 1961 Manuel Aaron

2 1980-81 Rohini Khadilkar

3 1983 Dibyendu Barua

4 1984 Pravin Thipsay

5 1985 Vishwanathan Anand

6 1987 D. V. Prasad

7 1987 Bhagyashree Thipsay

8 1990 Anupama Gokhale

9 2000 Subbaraman Vijayalakshmi

10 2002 Krishnan Sasikiran

11 2003 Koneru Humpy

12 2005 Surya Shekhar Ganguly

13 2006 Pentyala Harikrishna

14 2007 Dronavalli Harika

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Cricket

Sachin Tendulkar

No Year Recipient Name

1 1961 Saleem Durani

2 1964 Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi

3 1965 Vijay Manjrekar

4 1966 Chandu Borde

5 1967 Ajit Wadekar

6 1968 E.A.S. Prasanna

7 1969 Bishan Singh Bedi

8 1970 Dilip Sardesai

9 1971 Srinivasaraghavan Venkataraghavan

10 1972 Eknath Solkar

11 1972 B.S. Chandrashekhar

12 1975 Sunil Gavaskar

13 1976 Shanta Rangaswamy

14 1977-78 Gundappa Vishwanath

15 1979-80 Kapil Dev Nikhanj

16 1980-81 Chetan Chauhan

17 1980-81 Syed Kirmani

18 1981 Dilip Vengsarkar

19 1982 Mohinder Amarnath

20 1983 Diana Edulji

21 1984 Ravi Shastri

22 1985 Shubhangi Kulkarni

23 1986 Mohammad Azharuddin

24 1986 Sandhya Agarwal

25 1989 Madan Lal

26 1993 Manoj Prabhakar

27 1993 Kiran More

28 1994 Sachin Tendulkar

29 1995 Anil Kumble

30 1996 Javagal Srinath

31 1997 Ajay Jadeja

32 1997 Sourav Ganguly

33 1998 Rahul Dravid

34 1998 Nayan Mongia

35 2000 B.K. Venkatesh Prasad

36 2002 Virender Sehwag

37 2003 Harbhajan Singh

38 2003 Ms. Mithali Raj

39 2005 Ms. Anju Jain

40 2006 Ms. Anjum Chopra

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Cycling

No Year Recipient Name

1 1975 Amar Singh

2 1978-79 Ms. M. Mahapatra

3 1983 A.R. Arthna

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Equestrian

No Year Recipient Name

1 1973 Dafadar Khan M. Khan

2 1976 Lt. Col. H.S. Sodhi

3 1982 Maj. R. Singh Brar

4 1982 Raghubir Singh (Equestrian)

5 1984 Capt. G. Mohd. Khan

6 1987 Maj. J.S. Ahluwalia

7 1991 Capt. Adhiraj Singh

8 2003 Capt. Rajesh Pattu

9 2004 Maj. Deep Kumar Ahlawat

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Football

No Year Recipient Name

1 1961 P. K. Banerjee

2 1962 T. Balaram

3 1963 Chuni Goswami

4 1964 Jarnail Singh

5 1965 Arun Lal Ghosh

6 1966 Yusuf Khan

7 1967 Peter Thangaraj

8 1969 Inder Singh

9 1970 Syed Naeemuddin

10 1971 C. P. Singh

11 1973 Magan Singh

12 1978-79 Gurdev Singh Gill

13 1979-80 Prasun Banerjee

14 1980-81 Mohammed Habib

15 1981 Sudhir Karmakar

16 1983 Shanti Mullick

17 1989 S. Bhattacharjee

18 1997 B. S. K. Shankhwalker

19 1998 Baichung Bhutia

20 2002 I. M. Vijayan

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Golf

No Year Recipient Name

1 1999 Chiranjeev Milkha Singh (Jeev Milkha Singh)

2 2002 Shiv Kapur

3 2004 Jyotinder Singh Randhawa (Jyoti Randhawa)

4 2007 Arjun Atwal

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Gymnastics

No Year Recipient Name

1 1961 Shyam Lal

2 1975 Montu Debnath

3 1985 Ms. S. Sharma

4 1989 Ms. Krupali Patel

5 2000 Dr. (Ms.) Kalpna Debnath

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Hockey

No Year Recipient Name

1 1961 Prithipal Singh

2 1961 N. Lumsden

3 1963 Charanjit Singh

4 1964 S. Laxman

5 1965 Udham Singh

6 1965 E. Britto

7 1966 V. J. Peter

8 1966 Sunita Puri

9 1966 Gurbaksh Singh

10 1967 Harbinder Singh

11 1967 Mohinder Lal

12 1968 Balbir Singh Kular

13 1970 Ajit Pal Singh

14 1971 P. Krishnamurthy

15 1972 Michael Kindo

16 1973 M. P. Ganesh

17 1973 O. Mascarenhas

18 1974 Ashok Kumar

19 1974 A. Kaur

20 1975 B. P. Govinda

21 1975 R. Saini

22 1977-78 Capt. Harcharan Singh

23 1977-78 L. L. Fernandes

24 1979-80 Vasudevan Baskaran

25 1979-80 R. B. Mundphan

26 1980-81 Mohammed Shahid

27 1980-81 Eliza Nelson

28 1981 Versha Soni

29 1983 Zafar Iqbal

30 1984 Rajbir Kaur

31 1984 S. Maney

32 1985 Prem Maya Sonir

33 1985 Panda Muthanna

34 1986 J. M. Carvalho

35 1988 M. P. Singh

36 1989 Pargat Singh

37 1990 Jagbir Singh

38 1992 Mervyn Fernandes

39 1994 Jude Felix Sabastain

40 1995 Dhanraj Pillai

41 1995 Mukesh Kumar

42 1996 A. B. Subbaiah

43 1996 Ashish Kumar Ballal

44 1997 Harmik Singh

45 1997 Surinder Singh Sodhi

46 1997 Rajinder Singh

47 1998 S. Surjit Singh

48 1998 Pritam Rani Siwach

49 1998 B. S. Dhillon

50 1998 S. Omana Kumari

51 1998 Mohammed Riaz

52 1998 Baldev Singh

53 1998 Maharaj Krishna Kaushik

54 1999 Balbir Singh Kullar

55 1998 Lt. Col. Haripal Kaushik

56 1998 Ramandeep Singh

57 1998 V. J. Phillips

58 2000 Baljeet Singh Saini

59 2000 Tingonleima Chanu

60 2000 Gp. Capt. R. S. Bhola

61 2000 Balkishan Singh

62 2000 Jalaluddin Rizvi

63 2000 Madhu Yadav

64 2002 Dilip Tirkey

65 2002 Gagan Ajit Singh

66 2002 Mamta Kharab

67 2003 Devesh Chauhan

68 2003 Suraj Lata Devi

69 2004 Deepak Thakur

70 2004 Innocent Helen Mary

71 2005 Viren Rasquinha

72 2006 Jyoti Sunita Kullu

73 2007 Prabhjot Singh

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Judo

No Year Recipient Name

1 1992 Sandeep Byala

2 1993 Cawas Billimoria

3 1996 Ms. Poonam Chopra

4 1998 Narender Singh

5 2003 Akram Shah

6 2004 Ms. Angom Anita Chanu

7 2007 Ms. Tombi Devi

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Kabaddi

No Year Recipient Name

1 1998 Ashan Kumar

2 1998 Biswajit Palit

3 1999 Balwinder Singh

4 1999 Tirath Raj

5 2000 C. Homonappa

6 2002 Ram Mehar Singh

7 2003 Sanjeev Kumar

8 2004 Sunder Singh

9 2005 Ramesh Kumar

10 2006 Naveen Gautam

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Lawn Tennis

No Year Recipient Name

1 1961 Ramanathan Krishnan

2 1962 Naresh Kumar

3 1966 Jaidip Mukerjea

4 1967 Premjit Lall

5 1974 Vijay Amritraj

6 1978-79 Nirupama Mankad

7 1980-81 Ramesh Krishnan

8 1985 Anand Amritraj

9 1990 Leander Paes

10 1995 Mahesh Bhupathi

11 1996 Gaurav Natekar

12 1997 Asif Ismail

13 2000 Akhtar Ali

14 2004 Sania Mirza

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Rowing

No Year Recipient Name

1 1981 Maj. Parveen Oberoy

2 1984 Capt. M.A. Naik

3 1991 Naib Subedar Dalvir Singh

4 1994 Major R.S. Bhanwala

5 1996 Surender Singh Waldia

6 1999 Jagjit Singh

7 2000 Surender Singh Kanwasi

8 2004 Jenil Krishnan

9 2007 Bajranj Lal Thakur

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Shooting

No Year Recipient Name

1 1961 Karni Singh

2 1968 Rajyashree Kumari

3 1969 Bhuvaneshwari Kumari

4 1971 Bhim Singh

5 1972 Udyan Chinubhai

6 1978-79 Randhir Singh

7 1981 S. P. Chauhan

8 1983 Mohinder Lal

9 1983 Soma Dutta

10 1985 A. J. Pandit

11 1986 Bhagirath Samai

12 1993 Mansher Singh

13 1994 Jaspal Rana

14 1996 Moraad A. Khan

15 1997 Satendra Kumar

16 1997 Shilpi Singh

17 1998 Manavjit Singh

18 1998 Roopa Unnikrishnan

19 1999 Vivek Singh

20 2000 Anjali Vedpathak Bhagwat

21 2000 Abhinav Bindra

22 2000 Gurbir Singh

23 2002 Anwer Sultan

24 2002 Suma Shirur

25 2003 Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore

26 2004 Deepali A. Deshpande

27 2005 Gagan Narang

28 2006 Vijay Kumar

29 2007 Avneet Kaur Sidhu

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Squash

No Year Recipient Name

1 2006 Sourav Ghosal

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Swimming

No Year Recipient Name

1 1961 Jam. Bajarangi Prasad

2 1966 Rima Datta

3 1967 Arun Shaw

4 1969 Baidyanath Nath

5 1971 Bhanwar Singh

6 1973 D. (Tingoo) Khatau

7 1974 A.B. Sarang

8 1974 Manjari Bhargava (diving)

9 1975 M.S. Rana

10 1975 Smita Desai

11 1982 Persis Madan

12 1983 Anita Sood

13 1984 Khajan Singh

14 1988 Wilson Cherian

15 1990 Bula Choudhury

16 1996 V. Kutraleeshwaran

17 1998 Bhanu Sachdeva

18 1999 Nisha Millet

19 2000 Sebastian Xavier

20 2000 J. Abhijith

21 2005 Shikha Tandon

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Table Tennis

No Year Recipient Name

1 1961 J.C. Vohra

2 1965 G. R. Deewan

3 1966 U. Sundararaj

4 1967 F. R. Khodaiji

5 1969 Mir Kasim Ali

6 1970 G. Jagannath

7 1971 K. F. Khodaiji

8 1973 N. R. Bajaj

9 1976 S. Shailja

10 1979-80 Indu Puri

11 1980-81 Manjit Dua

12 1982 V. Chandrasekhar

13 1985 Kamlesh Mehta

14 1987 Monalisa Barua

15 1989 Niyati Shah

16 1990 M. S. Walia

17 1997 Chetan Baboor

18 1998 Subramaniam Raman

19 2002 Mantu Ghosh

20 2004 Achanta Sharath Kamal

21 2005 Soumyadeep Roy

22 2006 Subhajit Saha

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Volleyball

No Year Recipient Name

1 1961 A. Palanisamy

2 1962 Nripjit Singh

3 1972 Balwant Singh "Ballu"

4 1973 G.M. Reddy

5 1974 M.S. Rao

6 1975 Sub. Insp. R. Singh

7 1975 K.C. Elamma

8 1976 Jimmy George

9 1977-78 A. Raman Rao

10 1978-79 Kutty Krishan

11 1979-80 S.K. Mishra

12 1982 G.E. Sridharan

13 1983 R.K. Purohit

14 1984 Saley Joseph

15 1986 Cyril C. Vallor

16 1989 Abdul Basith

17 1990 Dalel Singh Ror

18 1991 K. Udaya Kumar

19 1999 Sukhpal Singh

20 2000 P.V. Ramana

21 2002 Ravikant Reddy

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Weightlifting

No Year Recipient Name

1 1961 A.N. Ghosh

2 1962 L.K. Dass

3 1963 K.E. Rao

4 1965 B.S. Bhatia

5 1966 Mohan Lal Ghosh

6 1967 S. John Gabriel

7 1970 Arun Kumar Dass

8 1971 S.L. Salwan

9 1972 Anil Kumar Mandal

10 1974 S. Vellaiswamy

11 1975 Dalbir Singh

12 1976 K. Balamuruganandam

13 1977-78 M.T. Selvan

14 1978-79 E. Karaunakaran

15 1981 B.K. Satpathy

16 1982 Tara Singh

17 1983 Vispy K. Daroga

18 1985 Mehar Chand Bhaskar

19 1986 Jag Mohan Sapra

20 1987 G. Devan

21 1989 Jyotsna Dutta

22 1990 R. Chandra

23 1990 N. Kunjarani

24 1991 Chhaya Adak

25 1993 Bharati Singh

26 1994 K. Malleswari

27 1997 Paramjit Sharma

28 1997 N. Laxmi

29 1998 Satheesha Rai

30 1999 Dalbir Singh

31 2000 Sanamacha Chanu Thingbaijan

32 2002 Thandava Murthy Muthu

33 2006 Geeta Rani

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Wrestling

No Year Recipient Name

1 1961 Hav. Udey Chanf

2 1962 Malwa

3 1963 G. Andalkar

4 1964 Bishamber Singh

5 1966 Bhim Singh

6 1967 Mukhtiar Singh

7 1969 Master Chandgi Ram (Indian style wrestling)

8 1970 Sudesh Kumar

9 1972 Prem Nath

10 1973 Jagroop Singh

11 1974 Satpal

12 1978-79 Rajinder Singh

13 1980-81 Jagminder Singh

14 1982 Kartar Singh

15 1985 Mahabir Singh

16 1987 Subhash

17 1988 Rajesh Kumar

18 1989 Satywan

19 1990 Ombir Singh

20 1992 Pappu Yadav

21 1993 Ashok Kumar

22 1997 Jagdish Singh

23 1997 Sanjay Kumar

24 1998 Kaka Pawar

25 1998 Rohtas Singh Dahiya

26 1999 Ashok Kumar

27 2000 Randhir Singh

28 2000 Kripa Shakar Patel

29 2000 K.D. Jadhav (Posthumously)

30 2000 Naresh Kumar

31 2002 Palwinder Singh Cheema

32 2002 Sujeet Mann

33 2003 Shokhinder Tomar

34 2004 Anuj Kumar

35 2005 Sushil Kumar

36 2006 Geetika Jakhar

37 2007 Alka Tomar

[edit] Arjun Awardees in Yachting

No Year Recipient Name

1 1970 Lt. Cdr. S. J. Contractor

2 1973 Afsar Hussain

3 1978-79 Cdr. S. K. Mongia

4 1981 Zarir Karanjia

5 1982 Farokh Tarapore

6 1982 Fali Unwalla

7 1982 Jeeja Unwalla

8 1986 Lt. Dhruv Bhandari

9 1987 C. S. Pradipak

10 1990 P. K. Garg

11 1993 Cdr. Homi Motiwala

12 1996 Lt. Cdr. Kelly Subbanand Rao (Posthumously)

13 1999 Aashim Mongia

14 2002 Nitin Mongia

[edit] See also

Bharat Ratna

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to: navigation, search

Bharat Ratna

Award Information

Type Civilian

Category General

Instituted 1954

Last Awarded 2008

Total Awarded 41

Awarded by Government of India

Description An image of the Sun alongwith the words "Bharat Ratna",inscribed in Devanagari script,on a peepul leaf

First Awardee(s) Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan

Last Awardee(s) Bhimsen Joshi

Award Rank

None ← Bharat Ratna → Padma Vibhushan

Bharat Ratna (translates to Jewel of India[1] or Gem of India[2] in English) is India's highest civilian award, awarded for the highest degrees of national service. This service includes artistic, literary, and scientific achievements, as well as "recognition of public service of the highest order."[3] Unlike knights, holders of the Bharat Ratna carry no special title nor any other honorifics, but they do have a place in the Indian order of precedence.

The award was established by the first President of India, Rajendra Prasad, on January 2, 1954.[4] Along with other major national honours, such as the Padma Vibhushan, Padma Bhushan and Padma Shri, the awarding of the Bharat Ratna was suspended from July 13, 1977 to January 26, 1980.

The honour has been awarded to forty one persons, a list which includes two non-Indians and a naturalized Indian citizen. Tamil Nadu and Uttar Pradesh are the states with the highest number(7) of awardees followed closely by Maharashtra(6). Originally, the specifications for the award called for a circular gold medal carrying the state emblem and motto, among other things. It is uncertain if a design in accordance with the original specifications was ever made. The actual award is designed in the shape of a peepul leaf and carries with the words "Bharat Ratna", inscribed in Devanagari script. The reverse side of the medal carries the state emblem and motto. The award is attached to a two-inch wide ribbon, and was designed to be worn around the recipient's neck.

Contents

[hide]

1 History 2 Controversies

o 2.1 Award to Subhas Chandra Bose o 2.2 Award to Abul Kalam Azad

3 Specifications 4 Living Recipients of the Bharat Ratna

o 4.1 Indian Recipients o 4.2 Foreign Recipients

5 Complete list of the Awardees 6 References 7 External links

[edit] History

The order was established by Dr Rajendra Prasad, President of India, on January 2, 1954. The original statutes of January 1954 did not make allowance for posthumous awards (and this perhaps explains why the decoration was never awarded to Mahatma Gandhi), though this provision was added in the January 1955 statute. Subsequently, there have been twelve posthumous awards, including the award to Subhash Chandra Bose in 1992, which was later withdrawn due to a legal technicality, the only case of an award being withdrawn. The award was briefly suspended from July 13, 1977 to January 26, 1980.

The Bharta Ratna Citation, the certificate conferred to Late M. G. Ramachandran

While there was no formal provision that recipients of the Bharat Ratna should be Indian citizens, this seems to have been the general assumption. There has been one award to a naturalized Indian citizen — Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu, better known as Mother Teresa (1980); and two to non-Indians — Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan (1987) and Nelson Mandela (1990). The awarding of this honor though, has frequently been the subject of litigation questioning the constitutional basis of such.

[edit] Controversies

[edit] Award to Subhas Chandra Bose

Indian freedom fighter Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose was awarded Bharat Ratna posthumously in 1992. The award was later withdrawn due to a legal technicality. This is the only case of an award being withdrawn. It was withdrawn in response to a Supreme Court of India directive following a Public Interest Litigation filed in the Court against the posthumous nature of the award. The Award Committee could not give conclusive evidence of Bose’s death and thus it invalidated the posthumous award.

[edit] Award to Abul Kalam Azad

When the award was offered to freedom fighter and India's first Minister of Education, Abul Kalam Azad, he promptly declined it saying that it should not be given to those who have been on the selection committee. Later he was awarded posthumously in 1992.[5]

[edit] Specifications

The original specifications for the award called for a circular gold medal, 35 mm in diameter, with the sun and the Hindi legend "Bharat Ratna" above and a floral wreath below. The reverse was to carry the state emblem and motto. It was to be worn around the neck from a white ribbon. There is no indication that any specimens of this design were ever produced and one year later the design was altered.

[edit] Living Recipients of the Bharat Ratna

[edit] Indian Recipients

A.P.J Abdul Kalam (1997) Ravi Shankar (1999) Amartya Sen (1999) Lata Mangeshkar (2001) Bhimsen Joshi (2008)

[edit] Foreign Recipients

Nelson Mandela (1990)

[edit] Complete list of the Awardees

S.No Name Birth /

death Awarded Notes

Indian state or country of origin

1.Sir Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan

1888–1975

1954Second President, First Vice President, Philosopher.

Andhra Pradesh

2.Chakravarti Rajagopalachari

1878–1972

1954Last Governor-General, Freedom Fighter.

Tamil Nadu

3. Sir C. V. Raman1888–1970

1954 Nobel-prize winning Physicist Tamil Nadu

4. Bhagwan Das1869–1958

1955 Literature, Freedom Fighter Uttar Pradesh

5.Sir Mokshagundam Visvesvarayya

1861–1962

1955Civil Engineer, Dam Architect, Diwan of Princely state of Mysore

Karnataka

6. Jawaharlal Nehru1889–1964

1955First Prime Minister, Freedom Fighter, Author.

Uttar Pradesh

7.Govind Ballabh Pant

1887–1961

1957Freedom Fighter, Home Minister

Uttar Pradesh (now Uttarakhand)

8.Dhondo Keshav Karve

1858–1962

1958Educationist, Social Reformer, Awarded in his birth centenary year.

Maharashtra

9. Dr. B. C. Roy1882–1962

1961Physician, Politician, Former Chief Minister of West Bengal

West Bengal

10.Purushottam Das Tandon

1882–1962

1961 Freedom Fighter, Educationist Uttar Pradesh

11. Dr. Rajendra Prasad 1884– 1962 First President, Freedom Bihar

1963 Fighter, Jurist

12. Dr. Zakir Hussain1897–1969

1963 Former President, Scholar. Andhra Pradesh

13.Pandurang Vaman Kane

1880–1972

1963 Indologist and Sanskrit scholar Maharashtra

14. Lal Bahadur Shastri1904–1966

1966Posthumous, Second Prime Minister, Freedom Fighter

Uttar Pradesh

15. Indira Gandhi1917–1984

1971 Former Prime Minister Uttar Pradesh

16. V. V. Giri1894–1980

1975Former President, Trade Unionist.

Orissa

17. K. Kamaraj1903–1975

1976Posthumous, Freedom Fighter, Chief Minister-Tamil Nadu.

Tamil Nadu

18. Mother Teresa1910–1997

1980 Nobel Laureate (Peace, 1979).Republic of Macedonia

19.Acharya Vinoba Bhave

1895–1982

1983Posthumous, Social Reformer, Freedom Fighter.

Maharashtra

20.Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan

1890–1988

1987First non-citizen, Freedom Fighter.

Pakistan

21.M. G. Ramachandran

1917–1987

1988Posthumous, Chief Minister-Tamil Nadu, Actor.

Tamil Nadu

22. B. R. Ambedkar 1891–1956

1990 Posthumous, Architect-Indian Constitution,Social Reformer,

Maharashtra

Economist and Scholar

23. Nelson Mandela b. 1918 1990Second non-citizen and first non-Indian, Leader of Anti-Apartheid movement.

South Africa

24. Rajiv Gandhi1944–1991

1991Posthumous, Former Prime Minister

New Delhi

25.Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel

1875–1950

1991Posthumous, Freedom Fighter, First Home Minister of India.

Gujarat

26. Morarji Desai1896–1995

1991Former Prime Minister, Freedom Fighter.

Gujarat

27.Maulana Abul Kalam Azad

1888–1958

1992Posthumous, Freedom Fighter, First Education Minister of India

West Bengal

28. J. R. D. Tata1904–1993

1992 Industrialist and philanthropist. Maharashtra

29. Satyajit Ray1922–1992

1992 Film Director ,Oscar winner West Bengal

30. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam b. 1931 1997 Former President, Scientist. Tamil Nadu

31. Gulzarilal Nanda1898–1998

1997Freedom Fighter, former Prime Minister.

Punjab

32. Aruna Asaf Ali1908–1996

1997 Posthumous, Freedom Fighter. West Bengal

33. M. S. Subbulakshmi 1916– 1998 Carnatic music vocalist. Tamil Nadu

2004

34.Chidambaram Subramaniam

1910–2000

1998Freedom Fighter, Minister of Agriculture (Father of Green revolution).

Tamil Nadu

35.Jayaprakash Narayan

1902–1979

1998Posthumous, Freedom Fighter, Social Reformer.

Bihar

36. Pandit Ravi Shankar b. 1920 1999 Classical sitar player Uttar Pradesh

37. Amartya Sen b. 1933 1999 Nobel-prize winning Economist West Bengal

38. Gopinath Bordoloi1890–1950

1999Posthumous, Freedom fighter, Chief Minister

Assam

39. Lata Mangeshkar b. 1929 2001 Singer Maharashtra

40. Bismillah Khan1916–2006

2001Classical musician, shehnai maestro

Bihar

41. Bhimsen Joshi b. 1922 2008 Classical singer Maharashtra

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to: navigation, search

Padma Vibhushan

Award Information

Type Civilian

Category General

Instituted 1954

First Awarded 1954

Last Awarded 2008

Total Awarded 242

Awarded by Govt. of India

Previous Name(s) Padma Vibushan, Pahela Varg

Ribbon Medium Pink

First Awardee(s) Satyendra Nath Bose & others (1954)

Last Awardee(s) Justice (Dr) A.S. Anand & others (2008)

Award Rank

Bharat Ratna ← Padma Vibhushan → Padma

Bhushan

The Padma Vibhushan is India's second highest civilian honour. It consists of a medal and a citation and is awarded by the President of India.

It was established on January 2, 1954. It comes after the Bharat Ratna and before the Padma Bhushan. It is awarded to recognize exceptional and distinguished service to the nation in any field, including government service.

Contents

[hide]

1 History 2 Medallion details

o 2.1 First medallion (1954-1955) o 2.2 Second medallion (1955-1957) o 2.3 Current medallion (1957-current)

3 List of Awardees 4 External links

[edit] History

The award was established by Presidential decree on 2 January 1954. Padma Vibhushan was originally established as the Pahela Varg (First Class) of a three-class "Padma Vibhushan" awards. However the structure was changed in 1955 and there is no record of the award being presented to any of the recipients in the original structure.

The award was suspended between 1977 and 1980. No award was made between 1992 and 1998 as well. As of March 2009, 242 people have received the award.

[edit] Medallion details

[edit] First medallion (1954-1955)

The initial medal was a circular gold medal, 1-3/8 inches in diameter, with an embossed lotus flower in the center and the legend "Padma Vibhusman" above and a floral wreath below. The obverse side had the Indian state emblem with the legend Desh Seva (National Service) above and a lotus wreath below.

No record exists to show whether this design was used to present a medal to any of the awardees.

[edit] Second medallion (1955-1957)

In 1955, the badge design was altered to be a "mainly circular" 1-3/16-inch toned bronze badge with geometrical patterns. The center had a lotus flower with four major petals embossed in white gold. Above and below this flower, the name of the decoration Padma Vibhushan was embossed in silver-gilt.

[edit] Current medallion (1957-current)

In 1957, the badge design was retained but the material changed from toned bronze to burnished bronze.

[edit] List of Awardees

Year Name Field State Country

1954 Dr. Satyendra Nath Bose Literature & Education West Bengal India

1954 Dr. Zakir Hussain Public Affairs Andhra Pradesh India

1954 Shri Balasaheb Gangadhar Kher Public Affairs Maharashtra India

1954 Shri Jigme Dorji Wangchuk Public Affairs Bihar India

1954 Nand Lal Bose Arts West Bengal India

1954 Shri V.K. Krishna Menon Public Affairs Kerala India

1955 Dr. Dhondo Keshav Karve Literature & Education Maharashtra India

1955 J.R.D. Tata Trade & Industry Maharashtra India

1956 Chandulal Madhavlal Trivedi Public Affairs Madhya Pradesh India

1956 Fazal Ali Public Affairs Bihar India

1956 Jankibai Bajaj Social Work Madhya Pradesh India

1957 Ghanshyam Das Birla Trade & Industry Rajasthan India

1957 Motilal Chimanlal Setalvad Law and Public affairs Maharashtra India

1957 Shriprakash Public Affairs Andhra Pradesh India

1959 John Matthai Literature & Education Kerala India

1959 Radhabinod Pal Public Affairs West Bengal India

1959 Gaganvihari Lallubhai Mehta Social Work Maharashtra India

1960 Naryana Raghvan Pillai Public Affairs Tamil Nadu India

1962 H. Varda Raja Iyengar Civil Service Tamil Nadu India

1962 Padmaja Naidu Public Affairs Andhra Pradesh India

1962 Vijayalakshmi Pandit Civil Service Uttar Pradesh India

1963Dr. Arcot Lakshman Swami Mudaliar

Medicine Tamil Nadu India

1963 Dr. Suniti Kumar Chatterji Literature & Education West Bengal India

1963 Hari Vinayak Pataskar Public Affairs Maharashtra India

1964 Pt. Gopinath Kaviraj Literature & Education Uttar Pradesh India

1964 Acharya Kalelkar Literature & Education Maharashtra India

1965 Arjan Singh Civil Service Delhi India

1965 Joyanto Nath Chaudhuri Civil Service West Bengal India

1965 Mehdi Nawaz Jung Public Affairs Andhra Pradesh India

1966 Valerian Cardinal Gracias Social Work Maharashtra India

1967 Bhola Nath Jha Civil Service Uttar Pradesh India

1967 Chandra Kisan Daphtary Public Affairs Maharashtra India

1967 Hafix Mohammed Ibrahim Civil Service Andhra Pradesh India

1967 Pattadakal Venkanna R Rao Civil Service Andhra Pradesh India

1968 Mahadev Srihari Ane Public Affairs Madhya Pradesh India

1968 Dr. Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar Science & Engineering Illinois United States

1968 Prasanta Chandra Mahalanobis Statistical Science Delhi India

1968 K. Vaidyanatha Kalyana Sundaram Public Affairs Delhi India

1968 Kripal Singh Civil Service Delhi India

1969 Hargobind Khorana Science & Engineering Massachusetts United States

1969 Mohan Sinha Mehta Civil Service Rajasthan India

1969 Dattatraya Shridhar Joshi Civil Service Maharashtra India

1969 Ghananand Pande Civil Service Uttar Pradesh India

1969 Rajeshwar Dayal Civil Service Delhi India

1970 Binay Ranjan Sen Civil Service West Bengal India

1970 Dr Tara Chand Literature & Education Uttar Pradesh India

1970Paramasiva Prabhakar Kumaramangalam

Civil Service Tamil Nadu India

1970 Grp.Capt. Suranjan Das Civil Service West Bengal India

1970 Lt. General Harbaksh Singh Military Service Punjab India

1970 A. Rameswami Mudaliar Civil Service Andhra Pradesh India

1970 Anthony Lancelot Dias Public Affairs Maharashtra India

1971 Dr. Vithal Nagesh Shirodkar Medicine Goa India

1971 Balaram Sivaraman Civil Service Tamil Nadu India

1971 Bimal Prasad Chaliha Civil Service Assam India

1971 Uday Shankar Arts Maharashtra India

1971 Sumati Morarjee Civil Service Maharashtra India

1971 Ustad Allauddin Khan Arts West Bengal India

1972 S. M. Nanda Civil Service Delhi India

1972 Pratap Chandra Lal Civil Service Punjab India

1972 Aditya Nath Jha Public Affairs Uttar Pradesh India

1972 Jivraj N. Mehta Public Affairs Maharashtra India

1972 P. Balacharya Gajendragadkar Public Affairs Maharashtra India

1972 Vikram Ambalal Sarabhai Science & Engineering Gujarat India

1972 Sam Manekshaw Military Service Tamil Nadu India

1972 Ghulam Mohammed Sadiq Public AffairsJammu and Kashmir

India

1972 Hormasji Maneckji Seervai Law and Public affairs Maharashtra India

1973 Daulat Singh Kothari Science & Engineering Delhi India

1973 Nagendra Singh Public Affairs Rajasthan India

1973 Tirumalrao Swaminathan Civil Service Tamil Nadu India

1973 U. N. Dhebar Social Work Gujarat India

1973 Basanti Devi Civil Service West Bengal India

1973 Nellie Sengupta Social Work West Bengal India

1974 V. Kasturi Ranga Varadarja Rao Civil Service Karnataka India

1974 Benode Behari Mukherjee Arts West Bengal India

1974 Harish Chandra Sarin Civil Service Delhi India

1974 Niren De Law and Public Affairs West Bengal India

1975 Basanti Dulal Nag Chaudhuri Literature & Education West Bengal India

1975 Chintaman Dwarkanath Deshmukh Public Affairs Maharashtra India

1975 Durgabai Deshmukh Social Work Maharashtra India

1975 Premlila Vithaldas Thackersey Literature & Education Maharashtra India

1975 Raja Ramanna Science & Engineering Karnataka India

1975 Homi Nusserwanji Sethna Civil Service Maharashtra India

1975 M.S. Subbulakshmi Arts Tamil Nadu India

1975 Mary Clubwala Jadhav Social Work Tamil Nadu India

1976 Col. Bashir Hussain Zaidi Literature & Education Delhi India

1976Dr. Kalpathi Ramakrishna Ramanathan

Science & Engineering Kerala India

1976 Kalu Lal Shrimali Literature & Education Uttar Pradesh India

1976 Giani Gurmukh Singh Mussafir Literature & Education Punjab India

1976 Keshava Shankar Pillai Arts Delhi India

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Literature & Education Delhi India

1977 T. Balasaraswati Arts Tamil Nadu India

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1982 Mira Behn Social WorkUnited Kingdom

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1988 Kuppalli Venkatappa Puttappa Literature & Education Karnataka India

1988 Mirza Hameedullah Beg Law and Public Affairs Delhi India

1988 Pandurang Shastri AthavaleSocial Work and Religious Work

Maharashtra India

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1990Dr. Avul Pakir Jainulabdeen Abdul Kalam

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1990Vallmpadugai Srinivasa Raghavan Arunachalam

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1992Dr. Mallikarjun Bheemarayappa Mansur

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1992Dr. Shantaram Rajaram Vankudre Alias Dr.V.Shantaram

Arts Maharashtra India

1992Dr. Sivaramakrishna Iyer Padmavati

Medicine Delhi India

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2001Dr. Chakravarthi Vijayaraghava Narasimhan

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2008 Ratan Tata Industry Maharashtra India

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2008 Sachin Tendulkar Sports Maharashtra India

2009 Dr. Chandrika Prasad Srivastava Civil Service Maharashtra India

2009 Shri Sunderlal BahugunaEnvironmental Conservation

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2009 Prof. D. P. Chattopadhyaya Literature & Education West Bengal India

2009 Prof. Jasbir Singh Bajaj Medicine Punjab India

2009 Dr Purshotam Lal Medicine Uttar Pradesh India

2009 Shri Govind Narain Public Affairs Uttar Pradesh India

2009 Dr. Anil Kakodkar Science & Engineering Maharashtra India

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2009 Sister Nirmala Social Work West Bengal India

2009 Dr. A. S. Ganguly Trade & Industry Maharashtra India

[edit] External links

List of Padma Vibhushan awardees

The Padma Bhushan award is an Indian civilian decoration established on January 2, 1954 by the President of India. It stands third in the hierarchy of civilian awards, after the Bharat Ratna and the Padma Vibhushan, but comes before the Padma Shri. It is awarded to recognize distinguished service of a high order to the nation, in any field.

Padma Bhushan

Award Information

Type Civilian

Category General

Instituted 1954

First Awarded 1954

Last Awarded 2009

Total Awarded 1034

Awarded by Govt. of India

Award Rank

Padma Vibhushan ← Padma Bhushan →

Padma Shri

Award Information

Type War Time Gallantry

Category National Bravery

Instituted 1950

First Awarded 1947

Last Awarded 1999

Awarded by Govt. of India

Description The second highest military decoration in India.

Award Rank

Param Vir Chakra ← Maha Veera Chakra →

Vir Chakra

The Maha Vira Chakra (MVC) is the second highest military decoration in India and is awarded for acts of conspicuous gallantry in the presence of the enemy, whether on land, at sea or in the air. It may be awarded posthumously. Literally Maha Veera Chakra means wheel of a great hero.

Contents

[hide]

1 Appearance 2 History 3 References 4 External links

[edit] Appearance

The medal is made of standard silver and is circular in shape. Embossed on the obverse is a five pointed heraldic star with circular center-piece bearing the gilded state emblem of India in the center. The words "Mahavira Chakra" are embossed in Devanagari and English on the reverse with two lotus flowers in the middle. The decoration is worn on the left breast with a half-white and half-orange riband about 3.2 cm in width, the orange being near the left shoulder.[1]

[edit] History

More than 155 acts of bravery and selfless courage have been recognized since the inception of the medal. The most MVCs awarded in a single conflict was in the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971, when eleven were given to the Indian Air Force.

Provision was made for the award of a bar for a second award of the Maha Vira Chakra, the first two being awarded in 1965. To date, there are six known awards of a first bar: Wing Commander Jag Mohan Nath (1962 and 1 September 1965), Major General Rajindar Singh (19 March 1948 and 6 September 1965), General Arun Shridhar Vaidya (16 September 1965 and 5 December 1971), Wing Commander Padmanabha Gautam (6 September 1965 and 5 December 1971 [posthumous]), Colonel Chewang Rinchen (July 1948 and 8 December 1971), and Brigadier Sant Singh (2 November 1965 and January 1972),. No second bars have been awarded. Award of the decoration carried with it the right to use M.V.C. as a postnominal abbreviation.

[edit] References

1. ̂ http://www.india9.com/i9show/Mahavir-Chakra-27619.htm

[edit] External links

Official list of Maha Vir Chakra recipients Writeups on Maha Vir Chakra winners

Award Information

Type War Time Gallantry

Category National Bravery

Instituted 1950

First Awarded 1947

Last Awarded 1999

Total Awarded 21

Awarded by Govt. of India

Description The highest military decoration in India.

First Awardee(s) Major Som Nath Sharma(posthumous)

Last Awardee(s) Captain Vikram Batra(posthumous)

Award Rank

none ← Param Vir Chakra

→ Maha Vir Chakra

For the Indian-born British composer, see Param Vir

The Param Vir Chakra (PVC) is India's highest military decoration awarded for the highest degree of valour or self-sacrifice in the presence of the enemy, similar to the British Victoria Cross, US Medal of Honor, or French Legion of Honor or Russian Cross of St. George. [1] It can be, and often has been, awarded posthumously.

Param Vir means "Bravest of the Brave" in Sanskrit. (Param = Highest; Vīr = Brave (warrior); Chakra = wheel/medal).

The PVC was established on 26 January 1950 (the date of India becoming a republic), by the President of India, with effect from 15 August 1947 (the date of Indian independence). It can be awarded to officers or enlisted personnel from all branches of the Indian military. It is the second highest award of the government of India after Bharat Ratna (amendment in the statute on 26 January 1980 resulted in this order of wearing). It replaced the former British colonial Victoria Cross (VC), (see List of Indian Victoria Cross recipients).

Provision was made for the award of a bar for second (or subsequent) awards of the Param Vir Chakra. To date, there have been no such awards. Award of the decoration carries with it the right to use P.V.C. as a postnominal abbreviation.

The Ashoka Chakra is the peace time equivalent of the Param Vir Chakra, and is awarded for the "most conspicuous bravery or some daring or pre-eminent valour or self-sacrifice" other than in the face of the enemy. The decoration may be awarded either to military or civilian personnel and may be awarded posthumously Ashoka Chakra Award.

The award also carries a cash allowance for those under the rank of lieutenant (or the appropriate service equivalent) and, in some cases, a cash award. On the death of the recipient, the pension is transferred to the widow until her death or remarriage. The paltry amount of the pension has been a rather controversial issue throughout the life of the decoration. By March 1999, the stipend stood at Rs. 1500 per month. In addition, many states have established individual pension rewards that far exceeds the central government's stipend for the recipients of the decoration.

Subedar Major Bana Singh of the Eighth Jammu and Kashmir Light Infantry was the only serving personnel of the Indian defence establishment with a Param Vir Chakra till the Kargil operations.

Contents

[hide]

1 Design 2 Decorated personnel 3 Commemorations

4 More information 5 Notes 6 External links

[edit] Design

The medal was designed by Savitri Khanolkar (born Eva Yuonne Linda Maday-de-Maros to a Hungarian father and Russian mother) who was married to an Indian Army officer, Vikram Khanolkar. This was done following a request from the first native Adjutant General, Major General Hira Lal Atal, who in turn had been entrusted with the responsibility of coming up with an Indian equivalent of the Victoria Cross by Pandit Jawahar Lal Nehru, the first Prime Minister of the Indian Union. Coincidentally,