India 1857-1890 Flashcards
1
Q
British view towards India
A
- India was seen as “the jewel in the crown” of the British empire
- It was seen as the most valuable part of the Empire
- Indians were incorporated into British cultures, but they were still seen as inferior to the British
- The British enjoyed and embraced some parts of Indian culture
2
Q
Early British colonial development in India
A
- The first British people arrived in India as traders rather than invaders
- They embraced the Indian culture
- East India company joined in traditional Indian acts such as bathing in lakes
- Holiness and civilisation were seen in India
- The British felt that some people in Europe should use Indian customs
- The traders of the East India company embraced the culture and socialised with the Indians
- The East India company members formed good relationships with the Indians
- The Anglo-Indians were the people of British and Indian descent. This was mainly due to East India company men marrying Indian women (known as Bibis)
- It wasn’t long before Victorian values arrived in India
- These values came through the missionaries
- Parts of India began to turn into places in Britain such as Surrey
- There was a great shift in attitudes which was mainly caused by women
- The British became much more distant from Indian cultures and began to be rude to the Indians
- The British women had the job of trying to make the Indians more civilised
- Many British women and children died not long after moving to India due to disease
- Death rates in India were 3 times that of in Britain
3
Q
The east India company
A
- It was initially created in 1600 to serve as a trading body for English merchants
- It was formed for the exploitation of trade with East and Southeast Asia ans India
- Its main purpose was to allow England to participate in the East Indian spice trade
- It also traded cotton, silk, indigo, saltpetre and tea and transported slaves
- Was founded by John Watts
- The English merchants put £70,000 of their own money to start the company
4
Q
Activities of the East India company
A
- Its main activity was being involved in the east Indian spice trade
- They became a major political power in India through the battle of Plassey in 1759
- They had responsibilities for law, trade, defence and administration in India
5
Q
Growth of the east India company
A
- Robert Clive’s victory in the nettle of Plassey in 1759 gave the company broad taxation powers in Bengal (which was one of the richest provinces in India) and effectively turned the company into a fully-fledged empire
- This gave the company great power through their responsibilities for law and administration
6
Q
Structure of the East India company
A
- the company may best be described as having a strongly hierarchical structure based on traditional military models
- the decision-making mechanisms took the form of a centralized and decentralized structure where each battalion had to operate within the objectives set out by the court directs but unit leaders were responsible for the actions
7
Q
impact of the east India company on India
A
- as they gained more land, the company increased taxes which forced locals to stop growing crops for themselves but instead grow crops which they could sell in order to be able to pay their taxes
- once the company became under the control of the British government, the policy of westernisation was introduced which had a largely negative impact on the Indian people as the British attempted to develop Indian along British lines (force British culture and traditions upon Indians)
8
Q
How the East India Company gained so much control in India
A
- Traders from the East India company were granted a Royal Charter in 1600 by Queen Elizabeth I which started Britain’s rise to dominance in India
- The Company then rapidly established a series of trading areas during the 17th century whilst recruiting Indian soldiers to protect their economic interest
- The British rule then expanded btu at the expense of the Muslim Mughal emperor
- The annexation of Bengal, following the nettle of Plassey in 1759, resulted in a real drive to extend British interests in India
- Robert Clive then brought Calcutta and Bengal under company control
- By the late 18th century, the east India company not only had a monopoly over European trade with India, but had also emerged as a major political power in India with responsibilities for law, trade, defence, and administration
- This monopoly of trading came about due to Robert Clive pushing the French out of India and persuading the Mughal emperor to grant the company with these trading rights
- In the late 18th century, this began to change as the British began to take more control of India
9
Q
How the situation changed in the late 18th century
A
- the state of affairs in India provoked criticism in Britain with parliament demanding greater supervision of the company.
- The British government also began to doubt whether it was right for a trading company to have such enormous responsibility for such a large part of the empire
- During this time, the company also began to struggle with the costs of looking after such a large area (administering and defence costs) causing debts to increase
- In 1773, the company called on the British government for help to rule the areas under its control
- In response to this call for help, the British government took several measures between 1773 and 1833 which put the east India company in a subservient (less important) role
- The India act of 1774 gave the British government “the power of guiding the politics of India with as little means of corrupt influence as possible”
- The company still kept their ownership rights of their captured territories, a trade monopoly and existing responsibilities over civil administration and defence
- A British governor general was given overall political, legal, and diplomatic control over British territory in India
- In 1784, an Indian board of control was set up to supervise Indian affairs and in 1813, the British government ended the company’s monopoly over Indian trade, with the exception of the trading of tea with china which was still present until 1833
- It was argued that Britain broke the trade monopoly over the east India company after 1773 because the company was corrupt and inefficient, however, it is now believed that the company was vibrant capitalist enterprise which generated wealth and the British government only took greater control due to pressure from people with business interests who felt the Indian market was vital for their own expansion
- Form 1773-1858, the British government ruled India through the agency of the east Indian company princely states (states with native rulers which had entered into treaty relations with the British)
- By 1860, Britain had taken control of some parts of India but more than half of India was not under British control
- this meant that there would have been a large religious divide in India, at this time, with many different religions still being present in India
10
Q
expansion of British control
A
- after 1815, successive governor generals expanded British rule in India
- the Mughal empire was clearly in a state of decay and there was a resulting power vacuum (when someone in power has lost control but no one has taken over from them) with many local princes asserting their independence which created instability in some areas
- as the British attempted to defend their interests, they frequently used armed resistance which often led to punitive (actions intended to be a punishment) expeditions and annexations
- the rapid expansion of British rule was accompanied by economic, social and political changes
- the Governor-General, Lord William Bentinck, introduced the policy of Westernisation which involved developing Indian along British lines meaning British culture was almost forced upon the Indian people
- English was made the official language, several traditional Indian religious customs, such as Suttee (the Hindu practice of throwing widows onto the flaming funeral pyres of their dead husbands) and the human sacrifices and rituals of several secret societies, were outlawed
- The policy of westernisation disregarded cherished Indian religious, social, and regional customs in a way which had never happened before
- This resulted in increased resentment among the Indian people towards British rule which led to the Indian mutiny of 1857
11
Q
The Indian mutiny
A
- Long standing grievances among the Indian population sparked a rebellion of Indian sepoys serving in the British East India Company in 1857
- The rebellion lasted a year and caused thousands of deaths
- The dispatch of the British troops to support the East India Company Army demonstrated the British desire to retain control of India at all costs.
- After the rebellion had been violently quashed and ruthlessly punished, the British government determined that a change of rule was necessary, in part, to prevent any recurrence
- Thus, in 1858, the British government took control of India from the East India Company, which as entirely dissolved
Sowars = mounted soldiers Sepoys = infantry soldiers
It is now described as a rebellion and not a mutiny because it was not just soldiers that were involved and therefore, by definition, is not a mutiny
12
Q
Main reasons for the outbreak of the mutiny
A
- The sepoys in the Indian army mutinied in 1857 after refusing to bite cartridges before loading them into the newly introduced Enfield rifle as they contained cow and pig grease. This was done on religious grounds because cow is sacred to Hindus and pig is considered to be unclean by Muslims
- After the monopoly of the east India company had been ended in 1813, India was opened up to the competition of British industrialists and merchants. Therefore, Indian markets were swamped by cheap British goods and British property developers brought up land, introduced a land lord system and imposed high rents. As a result of this, Indian producers of export goods (tea, indigo and spices) received very low prices for their products which caused major economic grievances from the Indian people
- Territorial expansion was also greatly resented, especially the latest set of annexations (Punjab and Sind in 1843, Berar in 1853 and Oudh in 1856).
- In addition, the policy of westernisation also caused concern because it clearly has a large impact on everyday life. Hundreds of village schools, a central legal council, national laws, universities and a postal service of English style were all established, and roads and canals were also built (which obviously had the advantage of more efficient trade). Many Indians felt they were being forced to accept an “alien” culture.
- The British not only ignored Indian feelings, they also failed to recognise the weakness of their own situation. British security depended on Indian sepoys recruited from the local Indian community. The reliance on Indians is shown by, in 1857, the British Indian army, of 270,000 men, only had 40,000 men of European origin. Therefore, some 90% of the men in the army were Indian
- We can see that the row over the Enfield rifle “tapped a nerve” in the sepoys which was connected to broader concerns about British rule. British attempts at westernisation from the 1830s contributed to fears of cultural and religious attack, inflamed by caste-breaking (break down of Hindu society) rules in the Indian army
- The mutiny began as the sepoys refused to obey orders in Bengal in February 1857 and turned on their British officers at Meerut in May 1857 and were given long jail sentences however, this resulted in the entire Sepoy army in Meerut mutinying and killing all of the British officers.
- Mangal Pandey was an Indian sepoy who had a key impact on the events that started the mutiny. On the 29th of March 1857, Pandey attacked a British officer in his regiment and his fellow soldiers refused to stop him. He was executed by hanging as a result of this, on the 8th of April 1857. His execution was seen as a factor in spread of rebellion among the sepoys which caused the mutiny
- The mutiny quickly spread to Delhi, Oudh, Cawnpore, and Lucknow
- The mutiny began in Meerut
- Then spreads to Delhi
- Then to Lucknow and Cawnpore
13
Q
The events of the mutiny
A
- The mutiny was an extremely brutal affair which lasted just over a year
- Sepoys seized control in most northern cities, including Agra, Lucknow and Cawnpore, and there was a short-lived attempt to resurrect the old Mughal empire as a figurehead
- The sepoys were joined by sections of both the urban and rural populations as well as being joined by many discontented landowners who had lost out under British rule. Other rebels were peasants who resented taxation or joined the rebellion to get back at neighbours they had disputes with.
- It took three months for British troops to restore order at Delhi where 40,000 sepoys had revolted
- The attempt to gain power in Lucknow, the capital of Oud, lasted 12 months before the British finally regained control against 60,000 mutineers
- A very bitter struggle took place at Cawnpore
- 70,000 fresh troops were sent to India armed with the latest colt revolvers to defend against the mutiny.
- The British gave swift and brutal revenge as Muslim mutineers were captured and sewn into pig skins (pig is haram for Muslims) before they were hung, forced to lick up blood or blown from the barrel of a cannon
- Not all regiments joined the rebellion. Gurkhas, Sikhs and Pathan regiments remained loyal to Britain
- British rule was not entirely reasserted until June 1858 following the battle of Gwalior
14
Q
The Cawnpore massacre
A
- A small group of fewer than 1000 British men, women and children were starved into submission (obeying a superior force or authority). 200 British women and children were brutally killed
- Orders were given by General Neil, a British army commander, to slaughter all men, take no prisoners and hang all sepoys who were found without papers from regiments that have mutinied, in order to gain revenge for the torture of the British people.
- 30,000 British troops were sent to Cawnpore on the 10th of June 1857, however the sepoys refused to surrender
- The women who had been captured by the mutineers were made to drink water mixed with blood
- On the 12th of June the hospital block in Cawnpore was set on fire
- On the 25th of June, the British agreed to leave however, as they were leaving, their boats were set on fire
- In total, around 500 people died, 200 of them being defenceless women and children
- Only about 120 of the 1000 people who were captured survived
- The initial survivors retreated to Bibighar where they ended up being massacred
- Around 180 women and children were in prison and were suffering from illness and diseases.
- These prisoners were then attacked by the mutineers and their bodies were thrown down a well – no matter if they were dead or alive
- Britain’s new rifles helped them to pick off the rebels at long range which resulted in a British victory as they crushed the revolt
- The British gave swift and brutal revenge as Muslim mutineers were captured and sewn into pig skins (pig is haram for Muslims) before they were hung, forced to lick up blood or blown from the barrel of a cannon
- The British people were outraged and horrified by what they had found
- The Britain’s who had conquered India were shameful
- This event had such a large impact due to the fact that the main victims were defenceless women and children
15
Q
Why the mutiny was eventually defeated
A
- The sepoys were not all united against Britain as some sections did not even get involved
- Britain had a bigger more experienced military than the sepoys
- Britain had better resources and weapons
- The rebellion was not supported by the entirety of India