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  1. Thirrupathi Brothers is an Indian Tamil film production company owned by brothers N. Subash Chandrabose and N. Lingusamy and was founded in 2006.

  2. Subhas Chandra Bose ( / ʃʊbˈhɑːs ˈtʃʌndrə ˈboʊs / ⓘ shuub-HAHSS CHUN-drə BOHSS; [12] 23 January 1897 – 18 August 1945) was an Indian nationalist whose defiance of British authority in India made him a hero among many Indians, but his wartime alliances with Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan left a legacy vexed by authoritarianism, anti-Semitism, an...

    Year
    Title
    Director
    Cast
    2024
    Bhaskar Sakthi
    Kungumaraj Muthusamy, Parvaiz Mahroo, ...
    2023
    Jagan Vijaya
    Vinoth Kishan, Gouri G. Kishan
    2016
    Ponram
    Sivakarthikeyan, Keerthi Suresh, ...
    2015
    Vijay Vasanth, Sanyathara
  3. सुभाष चन्द्र बोस (23 जनवरी 1897 - 18 अगस्त 1945) भारत के स्वतन्त्रता संग्राम के अग्रणी तथा सबसे बड़े नेता थे। द्वितीय विश्वयुद्ध के दौरान, अंग्रेज़ों के खिलाफ लड़ने के लिए, उन्होंने जापान के सहयोग से आज़ाद हिन्द फ़ौज का गठन किया था। [3] उनके द्वारा दिया गया "जय हिन्द" का नारा भारत का राष्ट्रीय नारा बन गया है। "तुम मुझे खून दो मैं तुम्हे आजादी दू...

    • Death
    • Legends of Bose's Survival
    • Inquiries
    • References

    Last months with the Indian National Army

    During the last week of April 1945, Subhas Chandra Bose along with his senior Indian National Army (INA) officers, several hundred enlisted INA men, and nearly a hundred women from the INA's Rani of Jhansi Regiment left Rangoon by road for Moulmein in Burma. Accompanied by Lieutenant General Saburo Isoda, the head of the Japanese-INA liaison organization Hikari Kikan, their Japanese military convoy was able to reach the right bank of the Sittang river, albeit slowly. (See map 1.) However, ver...

    Last days and journeys

    Reliable strands of historical narrative about Bose's last days are united up to this point. However, they separate briefly for the period between 16 August, when Bose received news of Japan's surrender in Singapore, and shortly after noon on 17 August, when Bose and his party arrived at Saigon airport from Saigon city to board a plane.(See map 2.) In one version, Bose flew out from Singapore to Saigon, stopping briefly in Bangkok, on the 16th. Soon after arriving in Saigon, he visited Field...

    Death in plane crash

    Just as the bomber was leaving the standard path taken by aircraft during take-off, the passengers inside heard a loud sound, similar to an engine backfiring. Airport mechanics saw something fall out of the plane. It was the portside engine, or a part of it, and the propeller. The plane swung wildly to the right and plummeted, crashing, breaking into two, and exploding into flames. Inside, the chief pilot, copilot and General Shidea were instantly killed. Rahman was stunned, passing out brief...

    Immediate post-war legends

    Subhas Chandra Bose's exploits had become legendary long before his physical death in August 1945.[h] From the time he had escaped house arrest in Calcutta in 1940, rumours had been rife in India about whether or not he was alive, and if the latter, where he was and what he was doing. His appearance in faraway Germany in 1941 created a sense of mystery about his activities. With Congress leaders in jail in the wake of the Quit India Resolution in August 1942 and the Indian public starved for...

    Enduring legends

    In the 1950s, stories appeared in which Bose had become a sadhu, or Hindu renunciant. The best-known and most intricate of the renunciant tales of Subhas Bose, and one which, according to historian Leonard A. Gordon, may "properly be called a myth," was told in the early 1960s. Some associates of Bose, from two decades before, had formed an organization, the "Subhasbadi Janata", to promote this story in which Bose was now the chief sadhu of an ashram (or hermitage) in Shaulmari (also Shoulmar...

    Perspectives on durability of legends

    According to historians Christopher Bayly and Tim Harper: Amid all this, Joyce Chapman Lebra,wrote in 2008:

    Figgess Report 1946

    Confronted with rumours about Bose, which had begun to spread within days of his death, the Supreme Allied Command, South-east Asia, under Mountbatten, tasked Colonel (later Sir) John Figgess, an intelligence officer, with investigating Bose's death. Figgess's report, submitted on 25 July 1946, however, was confidential, being work done in Indian Political Intelligence (IPI), a partially secret branch of the Government of India. Figgess was interviewed in the 1980s by Leonard A. Gordon and co...

    Shah Nawaz Committee 1956

    With the goal of quelling the rumours about what happened to Subhas Chandra Bose after mid-August 1945, the Government of India in 1956 appointed a three-man committee headed by Shah Nawaz Khan. Khan was at the time a Member of Parliament as well as a former Lieutenant Colonel in the Indian National Army and the best-known defendant in the INA Trials of a decade before. The other members of the committee were S. N. Maitra, ICS, who was nominated by the Government of West Bengal, and Suresh Ch...

    Khosla Commission 1970

    In 1977, two decades after the Shah Nawaz committee had reported its findings, historian Joyce Chapman Lebra wrote about Suresh Chandra Bose's dissenting note: "Whatever Mr Bose's motives in issuing his minority report, he has helped to perpetuate until the present the faith that Subhas Chandra Bose still lives."In fact, during the early 1960s, the rumours about Subhas Bose's extant forms only increased. In 1970, the Government of India appointed a new commission to enquire into the "disappea...

    Sources

    1. Bandyopādhyāẏa, Śekhara (2004), From Plassey to Partition: A History of Modern India, Orient Blackswan, ISBN 978-81-250-2596-2, retrieved 21 September2013 2. Bhattacharjee, CS (14 February 2012), "Photo triggers questions on Netaji's confinement in Russia", The Sunday Indian, archived from the original on 6 January 2018, retrieved 25 July2018 3. Bayly, Christopher; Harper, Timothy (2007), Forgotten Wars: Freedom and Revolution in Southeast Asia, Harvard University Press, ISBN 978-0-674-021...

    Further reading

    1. Bayly, Christopher; Harper, Timothy (2005), Forgotten Armies: The Fall of British Asia, 1941–1945, Harvard University Press, ISBN 978-0-674-01748-1, retrieved 22 September2013 2. McLynn, Frank (2011), The Burma Campaign: Disaster Into Triumph, 1942–45, New Haven: Yale University Press, ISBN 978-0-300-17162-4, retrieved 13 November2013 3. Wolpert, Stanley (2009), Shameful Flight: The Last Years of the British Empire in India, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-539394-1, retrieved 21 Sep...

  4. N. Subash Chandrabose is a male Indian producer who is known for his work in Tamil cinema. He has produced numerous films and has received several accolades, including awards from Filmfare, national honors, and South Indian international movie awards.

    • Producer
    • 01/01
    • Chennai, Tamil Nadu
    • N. Subash Chandrabose
  5. Subhash Chandra Bose was one of the most celebrated freedom fighters of India. He was a charismatic influencer of the youth and earned the epithet ‘Netaji’ by establishing and leading the Indian National Army (INA) during India’s struggle for independence.

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  7. May 27, 2024 · Subhas Chandra Bose, Indian revolutionary prominent in the independence movement against British rule. Supported by Japan, he led an Indian national force of around 40,000 troops against the Western powers during World War II but was defeated and forced to retreat.