Answer :

Answer:

Creating a flow chart for the division of British territories into Presidencies involves visualizing the hierarchical structure and geographical organization. Here’s a textual representation of how the flow chart could be organized. You can draw this using any flowchart tool or software.

### Flow Chart: Division of British Territories into Presidencies

1. **British India (Under British Rule)**:

- **Presidency of Bengal**

- Established: 1765

- Capital: Calcutta (now Kolkata)

- Sub-divisions:

- Bihar

- Orissa (now Odisha)

- Assam

- **Presidency of Bombay (Mumbai)**

- Established: 1687

- Capital: Bombay (now Mumbai)

- Sub-divisions:

- Gujarat

- Sind (now part of Pakistan)

- Northern Deccan

- **Presidency of Madras (Chennai)**

- Established: 1653

- Capital: Madras (now Chennai)

- Sub-divisions:

- Andhra Pradesh

- Karnataka

- Tamil Nadu

- Northern Circars

2. **Additional Territories (Governed Separately)**:

- **North-Western Provinces and Oudh**

- Established: 1836

- Capital: Agra (later Allahabad, now Prayagraj)

- Includes: Present-day Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand

- **Punjab**

- Established: 1849

- Capital: Lahore (now in Pakistan)

- Includes: Punjab, Haryana, parts of Himachal Pradesh

- **Burma (Myanmar)**

- Annexed: 1886

- Capital: Rangoon (now Yangon)

- **Central Provinces and Berar**

- Established: 1861

- Capital: Nagpur

- Includes: Parts of Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra

### Visual Representation:

**Start**

→ **British India**

→ **Bengal Presidency**

→ Bihar

→ Orissa

→ Assam

→ **Bombay Presidency**

→ Gujarat

→ Sind

→ Northern Deccan

→ **Madras Presidency**

→ Andhra Pradesh

→ Karnataka

→ Tamil Nadu

→ Northern Circars

→ **North-Western Provinces and Oudh**

→ Uttar Pradesh

→ Uttarakhand

→ **Punjab**

→ Punjab

→ Haryana

→ Himachal Pradesh

→ **Burma**

→ Myanmar

→ **Central Provinces and Berar**

→ Madhya Pradesh

→ Maharashtra

This flow chart represents the hierarchical and geographical structure of the British administrative divisions in India. Each presidency and territory had its own subdivisions and was governed separately under the British colonial administration.