Awards and Honours of India
Classification
| Category | Awards |
|---|---|
| Highest Civilian | Bharat Ratna |
| Civilian (Padma series) | Padma Vibhushan, Padma Bhushan, Padma Shri |
| Cinema | National Film Awards, Dadasaheb Phalke Award |
| Literary (Government) | Sahitya Akademi Award, Sahitya Akademi Fellowship, Bhasha Samman, Translation Award |
| Literary (Private) | Jnanpith Award, Saraswati Samman, Vyas Samman |
| International | Fukuoka Prize |
Bharat Ratna
- Meaning: 'Jewel of India'
- Status: Highest Civilian award of the Republic of India
- First awarded: 1954
- Original scope: Art, Science, Literature, Public Service
- Expanded scope: December 2011 — extended to 'any field of human endeavour'
- Recommendation: Prime Minister recommends to the President
- Number per year: President chooses not more than 3 in a year
- Prize: No money — recipients receive a peepal-leaf shaped medal and a certificate (Sanad)
- Order of Precedence: Bharat Ratna recipients are ranked 7th
- Constitutional restriction: Cannot be used as prefix or suffix to the recipient's name — Article 18(1) of the Constitution
- First posthumous awardee: Lal Bahadur Shastri (1966)
Notable Bharat Ratna Awardees
| Year | Awardee | Distinction |
|---|---|---|
| 1954 (First) | C. Rajagopalachari | Last Governor-General of India |
| 1954 (First) | Dr. C.V. Raman | Physicist |
| 1954 (First) | Dr. S. Radhakrishnan | First VP + Second President of India |
| 1955 | Jawaharlal Nehru | First Prime Minister of India |
| 1962 | Rajendra Prasad | First President of India |
| 1966 | Lal Bahadur Shastri | First posthumous awardee; 2nd PM |
| 1971 | Indira Gandhi | Third PM of India |
| 1980 | Mother Teresa | Founder, Missionaries of Charity |
| 1990 | B.R. Ambedkar |
Note: Mahatma Gandhi has NOT been awarded the Bharat Ratna.
Padma Awards
- Introduced: 1954
- Announcement: Names declared on Republic Day (26th January) every year
- Exceptions (not given): 1977, 1980, and 1993–1997
- Conferring authority: President of India (ceremony at Rashtrapati Bhawan, March/April)
Three Categories
| Award | Description | Degree |
|---|---|---|
| Padma Vibhushan | For exceptional and distinguished service | 2nd Degree Honour |
| Padma Bhushan | For distinguished service of a high order | 3rd Degree Honour |
| Padma Shri | For distinguished service | 4th Degree Honour |
Key Rules
- To receive a higher degree from a lower one: minimum 5 years gap required
- Awards are rarely given posthumously (exceptions possible in deserving cases)
- Must include an element of public service — excellence alone is insufficient
- Government servants (including PSU employees) are not eligible, EXCEPT doctors and scientists
- No cash prize — recipients receive a certificate and medal
Medal Design Details
- Padma Vibhushan: Lotus flower in middle; words 'Desh Seva' embossed on obverse
- Padma Shri: Three-leafed flower on one side; 'Padma' (lotus) and 'Shri' written in Devanagiri script on obverse
National Film Awards
- Started: 1954
- Organising body: Directorate of Film Festivals (assigned in 1973)
- Ministry: Ministry of Information and Broadcasting
- Presenting authority: President of India
- Selection: National selection panel appointed by Government
- Coverage: Bollywood + regional cinema
Award Categories
| Award | Also Known As | Sub-categories |
|---|---|---|
| Swarna Kamal | Golden Lotus Award | 5 categories: Best Feature Film, Best Direction, Best Children's Film, Best Popular Film (wholesome entertainment), Indira Gandhi Award for Best Debutant Director |
| Rajat Kamal | Silver Lotus Award | 25 major categories |
| Best Feature Film (Schedule VIII languages) | — | 12 categories (Hindi, Bengali, etc.) |
| Best Feature Film (Non-Schedule VIII) | — | 5 categories (English, Bhojpuri, Kokborok, Monpa, Tulu) |
Dadasaheb Phalke Lifetime Achievement Award
- Part of National Film Awards
- Given for lifetime contribution to Indian Cinema
- Also given: Best Book on Cinema Award, Best Film Critic on Cinema Award
Dadasaheb Phalke Award
- Introduced: 1969
- Status: India's highest award in cinema
- Named after: Dadasaheb Phalke (1870–1944) — made India's first full-length feature film Raja Harishchandra (1913)
- Awarded by: Directorate of Film Festivals, under Ministry of Information and Broadcasting
- Prize (as of 2017): Swarna Kamal (Golden Lotus) medallion + cash prize of ₹10 lakh
- Selection: Committee of eminent film industry personalities
Sahitya Akademi Award
- Instituted: 1954
- Given by: Sahitya Akademi = National Academy of Letters of India
- Frequency: Annual
- Language coverage: 24 major languages recognised by the Akademi
- 22 languages of 8th Schedule + English + Rajasthani (specially recognised by Akademi)
- Prize: Cash prize of ₹1 lakh + a plaque inscribed with 'Sahitya' in Devanagiri script
- Plaque designer: Satyajit Ray (renowned Indian filmmaker)
Notable Sahitya Akademi Awardees
| Year | Awardee | Language |
|---|---|---|
| 1959 | Ramdhari Singh Dinkar | Hindi |
| 1960 | R.K. Narayan | English |
| 1956 | Amrita Pritam | Punjabi |
| 1968 | Harivansh Rai Bachchan | Hindi |
| 1988 | Vikram Seth | English |
| 1975 | Kaifi Azmi | Urdu |
| 2004 | Ghulam Nabi Firaq | Kashmiri |
| 1967 | Buddhadeb Basu | Bengali |
| 2012 | K. Satchidanandan | Malayalam |
Sahitya Akademi Fellowship
- Highest honour conferred by Sahitya Akademi (higher than the Sahitya Akademi Award itself)
- Awarded to 'Fellows and Honorary Fellows' for outstanding contribution to literary arts
Bhasha Samman
- Also given by Sahitya Akademi
- For contribution to Indian languages OTHER than the 24 covered by Sahitya Akademi award
- Also for contribution to classical and medieval literature
- Prize: Plaque + ₹1,20,000
- First awardees: Dharikshan Mishra (Bhojpuri), Chandra Kanta Mura Singh (Kokborok), Bansi Ram Sharma & M.R. Thakur (Pahari/Himachali), K. Jathappa Rai & Mandara Keshava Bhat (Tulu)
Translation Awards (Sahitya Akademi)
- For translation of major works into the 24 major languages
- Special emphasis on ancient and medieval literature
- Prize: ₹50,000 + plaque
Jnanpith Award (Gyanpeeth Award)
- Meaning: 'Seat of Knowledge'
- Purpose: Outstanding literary achievement
- Instituted: 1961
- Instituted by: Bharatiya Jnanpith — a trust run by the Jain family (founders of The Times of India)
- Language eligibility: 22 languages of Schedule VIII of Indian Constitution + English = 23 languages
- NOT given posthumously
- Prize: Plaque + ₹11 lakh cash + bronze statue of Goddess Saraswati
Saraswati Samman
- Instituted: 1991
- Instituted by: K.K. Birla Foundation
- Purpose: Outstanding prose or poetry in any of the 22 Indian languages of Schedule VIII
- Prize: ₹15 lakh + citation + plaque
- Eligibility window: Literary works published in the previous 10 years
- Selection: Panel of scholars and former award winners
- Status: Among the highest literary awards in India
Vyas Samman
- Instituted: 1991
- Instituted by: K.K. Birla Foundation
- Language: Hindi only
- Prize: ₹2,50,000 (₹2.5 lakh)
- Eligibility window: Literary work published in the previous 10 years
Fukuoka Prize
- Established by: City of Fukuoka, Japan
- Purpose: Honour outstanding work in preserving or creating Asian culture
- Three categories: Grand Prize, Academic Prize, Arts & Culture Prize
- Indian winners: A.R. Rahman (2016), Ramchandra Guha (2015), Romila Thapar (1997), Amjad Ali Khan (2004)
Comparison Table: Literary Awards
| Feature | Jnanpith | Sahitya Akademi | Saraswati Samman | Vyas Samman |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Instituted | 1961 | 1954 | 1991 | 1991 |
| By | Bharatiya Jnanpith (Jain family) | Govt (Sahitya Akademi) | K.K. Birla Foundation | K.K. Birla Foundation |
| Languages | 22 Sch. VIII + English (23) | 24 (22 + English + Rajasthani) | 22 (Sch. VIII) | Hindi only |
| Cash Prize | ₹11 lakh | ₹1 lakh | ₹15 lakh | ₹2.5 lakh |
| Extra | Bronze statue of Saraswati | Plaque (designed by Satyajit Ray) |
Applied Anchors
- Cultural Recognition: India's award ecosystem institutionalises its commitment to recognising excellence across arts, letters, cinema, and science — reflecting the state's role as a patron of culture.
- Literary Pluralism: The Sahitya Akademi's recognition of 24 languages (22 + English + Rajasthani) and the Jnanpith's coverage of 23 languages embody India's linguistic diversity and constitutional recognition of minority languages.
- Cinema as Heritage: The Dadasaheb Phalke Award and National Film Awards underscore cinema's status as a major pillar of Indian cultural identity since 1913 (Raja Harishchandra).
- Private Patronage: The K.K. Birla Foundation (Saraswati Samman, Vyas Samman) and the Bharatiya Jnanpith Trust (Jnanpith Award) represent India's tradition of private literary patronage.
- Global Recognition: The Fukuoka Prize links Indian cultural achievements to Asia's broader civilisational heritage.
- Interlinks: Awards ↔ Constitutional Framework (Article 18, Schedule VIII) ↔ India's linguistic policy ↔ National identity
Exam Traps
- Bharat Ratna — NO cash prize. It is a common trap. Only medal (peepal-leaf shaped) + certificate (Sanad) is given.
- Bharat Ratna — not more than 3 per year (NOT 5 or unlimited).
- Mahatma Gandhi has NEVER received the Bharat Ratna — this is a very common trap. He was nominated 5 times but never awarded.
- First Bharat Ratna (1954) had THREE recipients simultaneously: C. Rajagopalachari, C.V. Raman, S. Radhakrishnan.
- First posthumous Bharat Ratna: Lal Bahadur Shastri (1966) — NOT Gandhi.
- Padma Vibhushan is 2nd highest (not 3rd). Padma Bhushan is 3rd; Padma Shri is 4th.
- Padma Awards announced on Republic Day (26 Jan), NOT Independence Day.
- Government servants not eligible for Padma — EXCEPT doctors and scientists.
- Sahitya Akademi covers 24 languages (22 Sch. VIII + English + Rajasthani); Jnanpith covers 23 (22 + English only); Saraswati Samman covers only 22 (Sch. VIII).
- Jnanpith NOT given posthumously — key distinguishing rule.
- Jnanpith prize includes a bronze statue of Goddess Saraswati — not just cash + plaque.
- Sahitya Akademi plaque was designed by Satyajit Ray — not related to the award itself being a film-related honour.
- Sahitya Akademi Fellowship > Sahitya Akademi Award in prestige — do NOT confuse hierarchy.
- Bhasha Samman covers languages OUTSIDE the 24 of the Sahitya Akademi award — it is an Akademi award but for lesser-covered languages.
- Vyas Samman is Hindi-only — do not confuse with Saraswati Samman which covers 22 languages.
Quick Revision Points
- Bharat Ratna: First 1954; peepal-leaf medal + sanad; no cash; max 3/year; 7th in Order of Precedence; Article 18(1)
- First 3 Bharat Ratna: C. Rajagopalachari, C.V. Raman, S. Radhakrishnan (all 1954)
- First posthumous: Lal Bahadur Shastri (1966); Mahatma Gandhi NEVER received it
- Padma Vibhushan (2nd) > Padma Bhushan (3rd) > Padma Shri (4th); announced Republic Day; no cash; govt servants ineligible except doctors & scientists
- National Film Awards: started 1954; Directorate of Film Festivals from 1973; President presents; Swarna Kamal (Golden Lotus) = top 5 categories; Rajat Kamal (Silver Lotus) = 25 categories
- Dadasaheb Phalke: 1969; highest cinema award; ₹10 lakh + Swarna Kamal; commemorates Raja Harishchandra (1913)
- Sahitya Akademi: 1954; 24 languages (22 + English + Rajasthani); ₹1 lakh + plaque (designed by Satyajit Ray); Fellowship = higher than Award
- Bhasha Samman: Sahitya Akademi; languages OUTSIDE 24; ₹1.2 lakh
- Translation Award: Sahitya Akademi; ₹50,000
- Jnanpith: 1961; Bharatiya Jnanpith/Jain family (Times of India); 23 languages (22 Sch. VIII + English); ₹11 lakh + Saraswati bronze statue; NOT posthumous
- Saraswati Samman: 1991; K.K. Birla Foundation; 22 Sch. VIII languages; ₹15 lakh; past 10 years
- Vyas Samman: 1991; K.K. Birla Foundation; Hindi ONLY; ₹2.5 lakh; past 10 years
- Fukuoka Prize: Fukuoka city, Japan; 3 categories; preserving/creating Asian culture
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