From 395 articles to 448, 106 amendments, and a Constituent Assembly of 299 members debating 7,635 proposals over 166 days—India's Constitution has dynamically adapted through Parliament's changing composition. This numerical lens reveals its resilience amid population growth and shifting representation.
Evolutionary Milestones
Adopted on November 26, 1949, the Constitution began as the world's longest written charter at 90,000 words with 315 draft articles across 8 schedules. The Constituent Assembly, spanning 11 sessions in 2 years and 11 months, refined it into 395 articles. Today, it boasts 448 articles and 12 schedules, reflecting Parliament's role in modernization.
Parliamentary Transformation
Parliament's size expanded from 525 to 545 seats via amendments like the 31st, accommodating population surges—yet each MP now represents far larger constituencies. Women's Lok Sabha representation has risen gradually, while sittings shortened and ordinances proliferated, underscoring the document's adaptability to governance shifts.
Key Highlights
Draft to Final: 315 articles → 7,635 amendments → 395 articles (original); now 448 articles, 12 schedules.
Assembly Stats: 299 members (229 elected, 70 nominated); 15 women; diverse faiths (148 Hindus, 23 Muslims).
Amendments: 106 total as of July 2025, balancing rigidity and flexibility under Article 368.
Parliament Growth: Seats rose periodically; 543 in 2019 post Anglo-Indian abolition.
Legislative Trends: Fewer Bills, more ordinances by decade; dynamic "living document."
Sources: The Indian Express, Wikipedia Amendments List, Byju's IAS Prep.