12-Relations with indigenous people Flashcards
1
Q
Challenges in India?
A
- In the 1890s the British found opposition in the Indian Professional classes and nationalist newspapers
- Tilak the editor of ‘Kesari’ and Paranjape who founded ‘Kaal’ in 1898 were sentenced to imprisonment for stirring up hostility in 1908 - released in 1910
- Kaal was banned
- The Young India organisation, founded in 1903, became the home of political activists who planned and carried out assassinations of British officials, including Arthur Jackson a magistrate
- The partition of Bengal started the swadeshi campaign when carried out protests and most importantly boycotts of British goods, Bengal was reunited in 1911
2
Q
Challenges in Africa(Somaliland)?
A
- Sayyid Hassan, religious warrior built up a force of 20,00 Dervish forces armed with Ottoman Empire weapons
- Wanted to drive all Christians into the sea
- From 1900 his forces raided British Somaliland
- The British joined forces with the Emperor of Ethiopia but did not stop the raiders until after the First World War
- The British lost the battle of Dul Madoba in August 1913 with their Camel Constabulary
3
Q
Challenges in Africa (Zanzibar)?
A
- August 1896, suspicious death of pro-British leader Sultan Hamoud
- Khalid bin Barghash assumed control of Zanzibar with his 6000 troops
- The British heavily bombarded the city from ships anchored nearby and the war was over in less than two days
4
Q
Challenges in Africa(West Africa)
A
- Colonel Cardew introduced the ‘hut tax’ and instead local chiefs maintained the roads
- The locals resisted this
- Cardew started a ‘scorched earth’ policy and hung 96 of the chief’s warriors
- The primary adversary Chief Brueh was defeated in November 1898
5
Q
Challenges in the Sudan?
A
- Kitchener’s conquest of the Sudan was covered by the Daily Mail as the fall of ‘the worst tyranny in the world’
- Battle of Omdurman and the fall of Khartoum 1898
- Many Sudanese welcomed the fall of the Mahdist Regime as the Sudanese economy had declined and 50% of the population died through famine, disease and warfare.
- Took British more than 30 years to subdue the tribes in the south of Sudan
- The Sudanese did not agree with the implementation of a modern government, lad tenure rules and taxation
- Tribes refused to pay tax or renounce their customs, the British acted heavily
- 33 British punitive expeditions
- Mahdist uprisings in 1902-03, 1904, 1908
- Public hangings without trial for the rebels
- British increased economic development, telegraph poles and railway lines in the north of Sudan, Port Sudan opened in 1906, 1911 Gezira Scheme to provide high quality cotton for Britian
6
Q
Causes of the Second Boer War
A
- Cecil Rhodes became Prime Minster of the Cape in 1890 and heavily pushed for the collection of the Boer Republics into a South African Federation, in which the British and Cape would influence - stemmed from the Transvaal hurting his business with higher tariffs and from his personal hatred of Paul Kruger
- Transvaal was strong since 1886 discovery of gold on the Rand and then it opened a rail network to Portuguese-controlled port of Lourenco Marques
- Chamberlain and Rhodes worried about Britain losing its dominance in the region
- They then supported the Jameson raid which failed in 1895
- Continued clashes over the voting rights of Uitlanders
- Alfred Milner, South African High Commissioner from 1897, was very aggressive with Kruger and at the Bloemfontein Conference of May-June 1899 he demanded voting rights to the Uitlanders, Kruger refused
- In October 1899 Kruger issued an ultimatum which Milner refused and so the Boers attacked the Cape initiating war
7
Q
Consequences of the Second Boer War?
A
- Kitchener started a ‘scorched earth policy’ and burnt farms and livestock
- Boer families (mainly women and children) and black Africans were placed in concentration camps (20,000 died)
- Boers surrendered in May 1902
- War dragged on for over 2 and a half years
- Cost £230,000
- Involved 400,000 troops
- 22,000 British were killed
- 6000 Boer troops killed
- Showed the vulnerability of the British imperial control
- Had to call on troops from all over the Empire, mainly India, leaving other colonies badly defended
- Dampened jingoism and led to a need for national efficiency
- Treaty of Vereenigin May 1902 granted the Boers £3 million compensation for their farms
- Milner worked to integrate Boer and British economies
- Transvaal given self-governing status in 1906
- Orange River Colony given self-governing status 1907
- Union of South Africa 1910, a British dominion