Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Results of the Indian
rebellion
- Longer term lessons of the rebellion
- The modernising agenda of Bentinck and Macauley had been misjudged
- Saw India as an important source of wealth but
were less inclined to develop Indians
- Modernisation in terms of infrastructure instead
- By 1861, 1588 miles
of railway track had
been built
- Changes to the Indian Army
- The proportion of Indian sepoys in the army way reduced by
40% and British troops increased by 50% so that the ratio
became 3:1 rather than 9:1
- Sepoys recruited from more loyal areas such as the Sikh Punjab
- Troops could use whatever grease they preferred for cartridges
- Mix of ethnicities in order to stop the spread of mutineering
- Punishment of rebels
- Cawnpore: public hangings and forced to eat beef
- Peshawar: 40 men strapped to barrels and blown apart
- Delhi: shooting of Bahadur Shah's three sons
- End of Company rule
- The Government of India Act was passed on 2 August 1858
- British India was directly ruled by Britain through the medium of a viceroy
- Royal proclamation with conciliatory tone which promised the Indians religious freedom and equal protection under the law
- Bahadur Shah II sent into exile in Burma
- In Awadh, accomodation was made with the rebellious talukdars and from then on the British steered clear of land reform which challenged feudal ties
- Cost of rebellion had been £50 million
- British were far more cautious about cultural reform
- The age of marriage for girls was not increased until 1891
- However London Missionary Society still tried to send 20 missionaries
- The massacre at Cawnpore meant that racial prejudice, segregation and racial hatred grew amongst the side imperialists of the British Empire