Who is justice ranade




















He was from Brahmin well to do and an orthodox family. His early education was at Kolhapur and completed higher education in Bombay. Ranade was a distinguished judge, writer cum social reformer of India during the pre-independence era.

He believed every Indian who had the equipment of western education had this public responsibility and he set an ideal example by his own efforts for 30 years for all to follow. His wife Ramabai Ranade was also a known social reformer. As a judge of Bombay High Court, he was instrumental in giving a progressive shape to public life in Maharashtra and played an important role in setting up the Indian National Congress. Ranade wrote a number of books and articles to educate people about their rights.

He published books on Indian economics and on Maratha history. Though he himself was subject to a second marriage of child bride, he educated his wife.

Owing to the absence of the historic instinct among our people, we have necessarily to depend upon the testimony of foreign historians. That testimony is, however, unexceptional because it was for the most part given before the Mohammedan domination had effected the separation which distinguishes the old India of the past from the modern India in which we are now living. His understanding of Indian history illustrated that he was always wary of the dangers of a single story. Apart from being a noted historian, M.

Ranade was also a judge. But these are just two disciplines in which he worked. Born on 18 January, in Niphad, Maharashtra, Ranade went on to be part of the first batch of then newly established Bombay University.

He was responsible for the introduction of vernacular languages in the university curriculum. By , Ranade had become a judge of the Bombay High Court.

He was also appointed an instructor of history at Elphinstone College, Bombay. This opportunity sparked his interest in the history of Marathas. His passion for the subject resulted in him writing Rise of Maratha Power in Ranade died on 16 January in Pune. In , he was a leading figure in the Indian Social Conference, which was a reform organisation associated with the Congress in its early years. But he never practiced and joined government service.

He had a very profound knowledge of Hindu Law and his judgments have made important contributions to this branch of law. Throughout his judicial career he sat on the Appellate Side.

He was strictly judicial and unbiased in his approach. Although every effort has been made to provide complete and accurate information on this website, the possibility of some errors and mistakes, cannot be ruled out.

Visitors to the site are requested to cross check the information with the authorities concerned or consult the relevant record. The information made available here is not meant for legal evidence. Robert Hill Pinhey Scott Nanabhai Haridas John Marriott Baron De H. Larpent Atkinson



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