05. WHEN
PEOPLE REBEL-1857 AND AFTER
POLICIES AND THE PEOPLE
The policies of the East India Company and
the effect they had on different people. Kings, queens, peasants, landlords,
tribals, soldiers were all affected in different ways. We also know how people
resist policies and actions that harm their interests or go against their
sentiments.
Nawabs lose their power
·
Since the
mid-eighteenth century, nawabs and rajas had seen their power erode. They had
gradually lost their authority and honour. Residents had been stationed in many
courts, the freedom of the rulers reduced, their armed forces disbanded, and
their revenues and territories taken away by stages.
·
Many ruling
families tried to negotiate with the Company to protect their interests. For example,
Rani Lakshmibai of Jhansi wanted the Company to recognise her adopted son as
the heir to the kingdom after the death of her husband.
·
Nana Saheb, the
adopted son of Peshwa Baji Rao II, pleaded that he be given his father’s
pension when the latter died. However, the Company, confident of its
superiority and military powers, turned down these pleas.
·
Awadh was one of
the last territories to be annexed. In 1801, a subsidiary alliance was imposed
on Awadh, and in 1856 it was taken over. Governor-General Dalhousie declared
that the territory was being misgoverned and British rule was needed to ensure
proper administration.
·
The Company even
began to plan how to bring the Mughal dynasty to an end. The name of the Mughal
king was removed from the coins minted by the Company.
·
In 1849,
Governor-General Dalhousie announced that after the death of Bahadur Shah
Zafar, the family of the king would be shifted out of the Red Fort and given
another place in Delhi to reside in.
·
In 1856,
Governor-General Canning decided that Bahadur Shah Zafar would be the last
Mughal king and after his death none of his descendants would be recognised as
kings – they would just be called princes.
The peasants and the sepoys
·
In the countryside
peasants and zamindars resented the high taxes and the rigid methods of revenue
collection. Many failed to pay back their loans to the moneylenders and
gradually lost the lands they had tilled for generations.
·
The Indian sepoys
in the employ of the Company also had reasons for discontent. They were unhappy
about their pay, allowances and conditions of service.
·
Some of the new
rules, moreover, violated their religious sensibilities and beliefs. Did you
know that in those days many people in the country believed that if they
crossed the sea they would lose their religion and caste? So when in 1824 the
sepoys were told to go to Burma by the sea route to fight for the Company, they
refused to follow the order, though they agreed to go by the land route.
·
They were severely
punished, and since the issue did not die down, in 1856 the Company passed a
new law which stated that every new person who took up employment in the
Company’s army had to agree to serve overseas if required.
·
Sepoys also reacted
to what was happening in the countryside. Many of them were peasants and had
families living in the villages. So the anger of the peasants quickly spread
among the sepoys.
Responses to reforms
·
The British
believed that Indian society had to be reformed. Laws were passed to stop the
practice of sati and to encourage the remarriage of widows.
·
English-language
education was actively promoted. After 1830, the Company allowed Christian
missionaries to function freely in its domain and even own land and property.
·
In 1850, a new law
was passed to make conversion to Christianity easier. This law allowed an
Indian who had converted to Christianity to inherit the property of his
ancestors.
·
Many Indians began
to feel that the British were destroying their religion, their social customs
and their traditional way of life.
A Mutiny Becomes a Popular Rebellion
·
Though struggles
between rulers and the ruled are not unusual, sometimes such struggles become
quite widespread as a popular resistance so that the power of the state breaks
down.
·
A very large number
of people begin to believe that they have a common enemy and rise up against
the enemy at the same time. For such a situation to develop people have to
organise, communicate, take initiative and display the confidence to turn the
situation around.
·
Such a situation
developed in the northern parts of India in 1857. After a hundred years of
conquest and administration, the English East India Company faced a massive
rebellion that started in May 1857 and threatened the Company’s very presence
in India.
·
Sepoys mutinied in
several places beginning from Meerut and a large number of people from
different sections of society rose up in rebellion. Some regard it as the
biggest armed resistance to colonialism in the nineteenth century anywhere in
the world.
From Meerut to Delhi
·
On 29 March 1857, a
young soldier, Mangal Pandey, was hanged to death for attacking his officers in
Barrackpore. Some days later, some sepoys of the regiment at Meerut refused to
do the army drill using the new cartridges, which were suspected of being
coated with the fat of cows and pigs.
·
Eighty-five sepoys
were dismissed from service and sentenced to ten years in jail for disobeying
their officers. This happened on 9 May 1857.
·
On 10 May, the
soldiers marched to the jail in Meerut and released the imprisoned sepoys. They
attacked and killed British officers. They captured guns and ammunition and set
fire to the buildings and properties of the British and declared war on the firangis.
·
The soldiers were
determined to bring an end to their rule in the country. But who would rule the
land instead? The soldiers had an answer to this question – the Mughal emperor
Bahadur Shah Zafar.
·
The sepoys of
Meerut rode all night of 10 May to reach Delhi in the early hours next morning.
As news of their arrival spread, the regiments stationed in Delhi also rose up
in rebellion. Again British officers were killed, arms and ammunition seized,
buildings set on fire.
·
Triumphant soldiers
gathered around the walls of the Red Fort where the Badshah lived, demanding to
meet him. The emperor was not quite willing to challenge the mighty British
power but the soldiers persisted. They forced their way into the palace and
proclaimed Bahadur Shah Zafar as their leader.
·
The ageing emperor
had to accept this demand. He wrote letters to all the chiefs and rulers of the
country to come forward and organise a confederacy of Indian states to fight
the British. This single step taken by Bahadur Shah had great implications.
·
The Mughal dynasty
had ruled over a very large part of the country. Most smaller rulers and
chieftains controlled different territories on behalf of the Mughal ruler.
·
Threatened by the
expansion of British rule, many of them felt that if the Mughal emperor could
rule again, they too would be able to rule their own territories once more,
under Mughal authority.
·
The British had not
expected this to happen. They thought the disturbance caused by the issue of
the cartridges would die down. But Bahadur Shah Zafar’s decision to bless the
rebellion changed the entire situation dramatically. Often when people see an
alternative possibility they feel inspired and enthused. It gives them the
courage, hope and confidence to act.
The rebellion spreads
·
After the British
were routed from Delhi, there was no uprising for almost a week. It took that
much time for news to travel. Then, a spurt of mutinies began.
·
Regiment after
regiment mutinied and took off to join other troops at nodal points like Delhi,
Kanpur and Lucknow.
·
After them, the
people of the towns and villages also rose up in rebellion and rallied around
local leaders, zamindars and chiefs who were prepared to establish their
authority and fight the British.
·
Nana Saheb, the adopted son of the late Peshwa Baji Rao who lived
near Kanpur, gathered armed forces and expelled the British garrison
from the city. He proclaimed himself Peshwa. He declared that he was a governor
under Emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar.
·
In Lucknow, Birjis
Qadr, the son of the deposed Nawab Wajid Ali Shah, was
proclaimed the new Nawab. He too acknowledged the suzerainty of Bahadur Shah
Zafar. His mother Begum Hazrat Mahal took an active part in organising the
uprising against the British.
·
In Jhansi, Rani
Lakshmibai joined the rebel sepoys
and fought the British along with Tantia Tope, the general of Nana Saheb.
·
The British were
greatly outnumbered by the rebel forces. They were defeated in a number of
battles. This convinced the people that the rule of the British had collapsed
for good and gave them the confidence to take the plunge and join the
rebellion.
·
A situation of
widespread popular rebellion developed in the region of Awadh in particular. On
6 August 1857, we find a telegram sent by Lieutenant Colonel Tytler to his
Commander-in-Chief expressing the fear felt by the British: “Our men are cowed
by the numbers opposed to them and the endless fighting. Every village is held
against us, the zamindars have risen to oppose us.”
·
Many new leaders
came up. For example, Ahmadullah Shah, a maulvi from Faizabad, prophesied that
the rule of the British would come to an end soon. He caught the imagination of
the people and raised a huge force of supporters. He came to Lucknow to fight
the British.
·
Bakht Khan, a
soldier from Bareilly, took charge of a large force of fighters who came to
Delhi. He became a key military leader of the rebellion. In Bihar, an old
zamindar, Kunwar Singh, joined the rebel sepoys and battled with the British
for many months. Leaders and fighters from across the land joined the fight.
The Company Fights Back
·
Unnerved by the
scale of the upheaval, the Company decided to repress the revolt with all its
might. It brought reinforcements from England, passed new laws so that the
rebels could be convicted with ease, and then moved into the storm centres of
the revolt.
·
Delhi was
recaptured from the rebel forces in September 1857.
·
The last Mughal
emperor, Bahadur Shah Zafar was tried in court and sentenced to life
imprisonment. His sons were shot dead before his eyes. He and his wife Begum
Zinat Mahal were sent to prison in Rangoon in October 1858. Bahadur Shah Zafar
died in the Rangoon jail in November 1862.
·
The recapture of
Delhi, however, did not mean that the rebellion died down after that. People
continued to resist and battle the British.
·
The British had to
fight for two years to suppress the massive forces of popular rebellion.
·
Lucknow was taken
in March 1858.
·
Rani Lakshmibai was
defeated and killed in June 1858.
·
Tantia Tope escaped
to the jungles of central India and continued to fight a guerrilla war with the
support of many tribal and peasant leaders. He was captured, tried and killed
in April 1859.
·
Just as victories
against the British had earlier encouraged rebellion, the defeat of rebel
forces encouraged desertions. The British also tried their best to win back the
loyalty of the people. They announced rewards for loyal landholders would be
allowed to continue to enjoy traditional rights over their lands.
·
Those who had
rebelled were told that if they submitted to the British, and if they had not
killed any white people, they would remain safe and their rights and claims to
land would not be denied. Nevertheless, hundreds of sepoys, rebels, nawabs and
rajas were tried and hanged.
Aftermath
The British had regained control of the
country by the end of 1859, but they could not carry on ruling the land with
the same policies any more.
Given below are the important changes that
were introduced by the British.
1.
The British
Parliament passed a new Act in 1858 and transferred the powers of the East
India Company to the British Crown in order to ensure a more responsible
management of Indian affairs. A member of the British Cabinet was appointed
Secretary of State for India and made responsible for all matters related to
the governance of India. He was given a council to advise him, called the India
Council. The Governor-General of India was given the title of Viceroy, that is,
a personal representative of the Crown. Through these measures the British
government accepted direct responsibility for ruling India.
2.
All ruling chiefs
of the country were assured that their territory would never be annexed in
future. They were allowed to pass on their kingdoms to their heirs, including
adopted sons. However, they were made to acknowledge the British Queen as their
Sovereign Paramount. Thus the Indian rulers were to hold their kingdoms as
subordinates of the British Crown.
3.
It was decided that
the proportion of Indian soldiers in the army would be reduced and the number
of European soldiers would be increased. It was also decided that instead of
recruiting soldiers from Awadh, Bihar, central India and south India, more
soldiers would be recruited from among the Gurkhas, Sikhs and Pathans.
4.
The land and
property of Muslims was confiscated on a large scale and they were treated with
suspicion and hostility. The British believed that they were responsible for
the rebellion in a big way.
5.
The British decided
to respect the customary religious and social practices of the people in India.
6.
Policies were made
to protect landlords and zamindars and give them security of rights over their
lands.
Thus a new phase of
history began after 1857.
…... the end………
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