Zusammenfassung der Ressource
COLONIAL EXPANSION IN THE 19TH CENTURY
- Lord Wellesley and Tipu Sultan: The
Battle of Seringapatnam, 1799
- EIC acted as a state,
administering the
Permanent Settlement and
its attendant
administrative, executive,
and judicial structures
- Wellesley's Governor
Generalship launched
the next phase of
colonial expansion
- Under subsidiary alliance, the
Company got an annual fee
from the state in exchange for
the protection of Company
troops
- Though ruler still remains in power
by name, he is required to disband
his army
- military, revenue
streams and trade
expanded
- In Deccan Plateau, great
state of Mysore was
founded by Haider Ali
- Ruled by son, Tipu
Sultan, by
Wellesley's time
- rule of father and son
described as prosperity,
stability and reform
- eliminated revenue
farming and intermediary
by collecting directly from
peasants
- created formidable and
skilled army of 60,000
- Tipu Sultan fought EIC troops
to a draw at Battle of Poligur
in 1784
- 2nd war in 1791, Tipu
suffered minor damage
- 1799, Tipu was fully defeated
- Tipu died fighting
the English
- After his defeat, the
British restored former
rulers
- British created a treaty in which their
military protection was the reward for the
British giving their land back
- The Next Phase of
Colonial Expansion
- Maratha power was less simple to
dismember
- Ruling a collection of sub-kingdoms
under head at Poona
- Maratha kings were constructing
arms factories
- Company utilized the lack of
Maratha Unity
- Treaty of Bassein signed in 1802
forced the Marathas to submit to a
subsidiary alliance
- 1818, Maratha court mobilized
against the British, resulting into
Maratha total defeat
- in early 1840s, EIC
launched a disastrous war
in Afghanistan
- 1842, EIC realized it could control
a lot of territory but not take it all
- 16,000 soldiers died at
Kabul and only one
returned to Britain
- 1842, EIC was able to annex Sindh
- After failure in Afghan, turned to Punjab
because great Sikh ruler (Ranjit Singh)
died in 1839
- won at the 1st Sikh
War in 1845
- allowed the Company to
install a resident at the court
in Lahore
- rewarded Hindu King
of neighboring Jammu
with the valley
kingdom of Kashmir
- Treaty of Amritsar of 1846
granted these terms with other
rewards
- 1848-49 Company annexed
Ranjit's kingdom
- "the Punjab school"
- emphasized strict rule and a large scope for
British knowledge of Indians
- Awadh
- After Battle of
Buxar and
Treaty of
Allahabad in
1765
- classic subsidiary alliance
- Nawab had to
cut into his own
bases to meet
the Company's
demand
- the bases that kept him
in power
- fell deeper in debt
- 1801, gave
up eastern
territory to
EIC
- 1818, Nawab
declared
himself king
but no use
- 1856, British under
Dalhousie annexed
Oudh completely
- sparked
Indian
Rebellion in
1857-8
- 1819, took Singapore
- 1839, British
took port city
of Aden on
Arabian Sea
- Indirect Rule and Princely India
- Governor-General
Dalhousie arrived in
India in 1848
- convinced westernizer
- two priorities
- wanted to dramatically
expand communication
- transport
infrastructure in India
- created a legal device that allowed
Britain to take further control
- if ruler didn't bear a son,
then Company can take over
- came to be known as
the Doctrine of Lapse
- under doctrine Satara, Jhansi, and
Nagpur were annexed to Britain
- whole enterprise operated on a theory of
paramountcy, in which ultimately the
Company was the paramount power in India
- Infrastructure and Economy
- Eastern India,
opium took hold as
staple crop
- used by Company to pay for Chinese tea
- 1830s opium provided 15%
of Company's total revenue
- EIC declared itself monopolistic
holder of rights to cultivate opium
- smuggled it into
China for profits
- another cash
crop was indigo
- dye clothing blue in Europe
- European planters provided
cash advances to peasants to
grow indigo
- boom and bust nature of
indigo market left many
peasants hard-pressed when
market failed in 1827 and 1847
- colonial state had to use coercion
to force peasants to plant indigo
- led to "Blue Mutiny" in 1859-60 in Bengal
- prompted change
- no mutiny in Bihar; indigo "Planter
Raj" or Planter rule lasted until 1917
- weavers
- position declined because
of Industrial revolution
- manufactured textiles not as
pretty as hand woven but couldn't
keep up with the number of orders
- other
commodities
- jute
- sugar
- rice
- grains
- timber
- advancements in India
- railways
- built for 2 purposes
- move raw materials to ports
and manufacturing centers
- quickly move troops
and material
- telegraph
- completed
in India
- 1st deep sea
telegraph laid in
Calcutta
- irrigation
- Dalhouise pushed forward
irrigation in agrarian land
- 500 miles of canal