British rule
Transcript of British rule
WELCOME TO MY PRESENTATION
Prepared By ,Mehedi Hasan
MuradID: 120303018
Prepared To,Md.Amzad Hossain
LecturerDepartment of
Sociology & Anthropology
BRITISH RULE
1757-1947 India was British colony
1498 – European arrival (Portugal)
Vasco da Gama Portugal
1500-1700s – Dutch, French, British follow
End of Mughal Rule 1600s, the British East India Company set up trading posts at Bombay, Madras, and Calcutta.
At first, India’s ruling Mughal Dynasty kept European traders under control.
By 1707, however, the Mughal Empire was collapsing. Dozens of small states, each headed by a ruler or maharajah, broke away from Mughal control.
MUGHAL EMPIRE
The battle 0f plassey
Nawab siraj-ud-daulah
Robert Clive (1725-1774) The battle Opposing force :
British East India Company :950 Europeans, 2100 Indians,few guns.
Nawab of bengal :a total of 50,000 men with some heavy artillery. (arti
llery operated by about 40 French soilders) (16,000 men under Mir jafar
,others under Yar Latif and Raj Durlabh) (almost all the major comman -
ders were conspirators, except Mir Madan ) Only about 15,000 men from the nawab’s army participated in the battle.
The battle opened at 7:00 a.m. on 23 june 1757 the nawab soon become apprehensive as his generals were not participating Nawab force
mad some gains but finally losse because of betrayed of Mir jafar and british back attack on broking war rule………
British East India Company A British company that basically ran India
Gained control after a decisive victory at the Battle of Plassey in 1757
Controlled an area that included modern BD, most of southern
India, and nearly all the territory along the Ganges River in the north.
During the 1700’s and 1800’s the East India Company slowly
took control of India
As the Mughal Empire grew weak, the East India Company
grew in economic and political strength and began to build its
own military force
The military force mainly consisted of sepoys, Indian soldiers,
led by British commanders
1600 – British East India Company
Cotton
Silk
Tea
Sir Warren Hastings
r. 1773 - 1784
Lord Cornwallis
r. 1786 - 1793
Lord Bentinck
r. 1828 - 1835
Lord Dalhousie
r. 1848 - 1856
East India Company rule Became like a foreign gov’t.
Took more land
Forced Indian rulers to sign treaties granting it power
Collected taxes from Indians
Est. law code & courts
Robert Clive (1725-1774)
Traditional rivalries kept Indian rulers from uniting against the British.
The British encouraged disunity among Indian leaders
East India Company controlled some land directly, others indirectly
through local princes
East India Company earned the right to collect taxes, set up a law code, set
up a court system
Indians had many grievances against British rule.
British outlawed Hindu ritual suicide by widows
British imposed high taxes
Christian missionaries tried to convert Hindus
The Sepoys• Ninety-six percent of the company's of army of 300,000 men in India were native to India
• British believed they were superior and looked down upon their dark-skinned compatriots
• In the military, Sepoys could not be promoted to high ranks and the pay was miserable.
• British did not respect Indian cultural or religious traditions and beliefs.
• The controversy over the use of the Enfield rifle
The Attack of Mutineers, July 30, 1857In 1857, new cartridges were issued to Indian troops of the British East
Indian Army. The cartridges were rumored to have been greased with
cow or pig grease; as such, they were forbidden to the Indian troops
because of their religious beliefs. Moslems believe that pigs are unholy,
and Hindus believe that it is unholy to kill a cow. The cartridges of this
time required a soldier to tear open the cartridge with his teeth, and pour
the powder & bullet down the barrel of the gun. This process would have
caused the Sepoys to get soul polluting grease directly into their bodies.
After refusing to use the new cartrdiges, a whole regiment of Sepoy troops were imprisoned by the British. Other Sepoys attempted
to free these prisoners and it snowballed into a revolt across all of northern India. There were many massacres where hundreds Of
Europeans were killed by Sepoys who were bent on revenge and on kicking the British out of India.
1857 – Sepoy Rebellion
The Results of the Sepoy RebellionThe mutiny marked a turning point in Indian history.
As a result of the mutiny, in 1858 the British government took direct command of India.
The part of India that was under direct British rule was called the Raj. The term Raj referred to British rule over India from 1757 until 1914.
Tie them to a cannon, and fire the cannon.
Treatment Of Indian Soldiers After The Sepoy Mutiny
Resentment of British Rule second-class citizens in their own country.
Even Indians with a European education faced discrimination.
barred from top posts in the Indian Civil Service.
paid less than Europeans.
1858-1947 – British colonial rule
BRITISH COLONY SET UP IN 1858British government took over India as a colony.
British ruled most of India directly but a third was still ruled by local princes who
signed treaties giving Britain control of foreign and military affairs.
Britain reformed the law code and set up its own court system.
Britain set up its own civil service, body of officials, to rule the colony.
The Britsh East India Company ruled India with little interference from the
British government.The company even had its own army, led by British officers
and staffed by sepoys, or Indian soldiers. Most of the company's troops were
Hindus or Muslims. About one in six was British. Yet, only the British could be
commissioned officers; no Indian could reach a higher rank than that of petty
officer.
So the British government decided that The East India Company had done a
bad job of ruling India. The government officially took over. Queen Victoria
officially became the Empress of India. You can see in this cartoon that she is
trading in her own crown for an even better one. The person giving it to her
is the prime minister of India. But he is dressed like a magician. I don’t know
what the expression on her face means. But she doesn’t seem too happy.
Economic Restrictions
The British held much of the political and economic power. British policies called for India to produce raw materials for British
manufacturing and to buy British manufactured goods.
In addition, Indian competition with British goods was prohibited. For example, India's own handloom textile industry was almost put
out of business by British textiles. Cheap cloth and ready-made clothes from England flooded the Indian market and drove out local
producers.
To pay for British imports, Indians had to raise cash crops such as tea, pepper, coffee, and cotton. As Indian farmers grew less food,
famines became frequent and widespread.
Also, under the imperial control of the East India Company, an increasing number of small Indian states were forced to pay dues to the
Company for military protection.
The lessening of Company profits and a need to recoup debts generated by military efforts, produced a need for higher revenues. Peasant
landowners, required to pay their taxes in cash, increasingly had to turn to moneylenders who seized much of this land for nonpayment
of loans.
Amritsar Massacre, 1919
379 dead; over 1200 wounded!
Salt March, 1930
Making Salt
Indian weaving was ruined by the competition of British machine-made textiles!
I’m going to play a clip from a popular 2000 Hindi film called Lagaan .In this scene the king of the area comes to the British captain who is in
charge of the region. He asks the king to forgive the tax for the farmers, because it has not rained, and they cannot pay this year. The Captain
agrees to forgive the tax, but on one condition. You will see what that condition is. Also notice the setting in which the discussion is taking
place. They are basically having an english tea party. You remember that picture that I showed you from before, with the women riding the
horses. The British tried to isolate themselves from everywhere else in India. Basically making a version of England in India. Which included
dressing up in fancy clothes, which are completely inappropriate for the Indian heat, and having tea parties. A couple of things to watch for.
Notice how the English captain talks about protecting the Indians with his army. He says that he is protecting the king from the neighboring
king, who also happens to be his cousin. Pay attention to the way the Captain tries to destroy the honor of the Hindu king. And remember.
The Hindu king rules in name only. He is allowed to stay because the British let him. The British are the ones who are in control.
Positive Effects - India the world’s third largest railroad network was a major British achievement.
railroads enabled India to develop a modern economy and brought unity to the connected regions.
a modern road network, telephone and telegraph lines, dams, bridges, and irrigation canals
Sanitation and public health improved.
Schools and colleges were founded, and literacy increased.
British troops cleared central India of bandits
End to local warfare among competing local rulers.
Under the rule of the British, the laying of the world's third largest railroad network was accomplished.
The railroads allowed the British to transport raw materials from the interior to the ports and manufactured goods back again.
The majority of the raw materials were agricultural products produced on plantations. Plantation crops included tea, indigo, coffee,
cotton, and jute. Another crop was opium. The British shipped opium to China and exchanged it for tea, which they then sold in England.
Advancements In Transportation
1815 print showing Hindu religious custom of sati
British officer: “This Custom tho ' shocking to humanity we still allow in consequence of the revenue it brings in, which is of importance. I have
also private reasons for not suppressing the burning system immediately.”
British bishop: “Why my Lord, with a view to [O]economy under existing circumstances it might be imprudent to press the
measure at present. Besides I think I feel also the private motives which actuates your Lordship.”
Sati (Su-thi , a.k.a. suttee) is the traditional Hindu practice of a widow throwing herself on her husband's funeral pyre.
Sati was prevalent among certain sects of the society in ancient India, who either took the vow or deemed it a great honor to die on the funeral pyres of their husbands.
“Inoculation against Plague, Bombay,” postcard, early 20th c.
In India during the 1860s, marriage meant girls getting married below 8 or 9 years
old. It wasn’t until 1880 that child marriage as a problem became a public issue
in India and examples of young wives being killed and or raped by their
“husbands” brought the tradition to an end.
Child Marriages
“Christmas in India,” 1881
Britain introduced changes that affected Indian society. Improved health care and sanitary conditions led to population growth.
The British set up schools and colleges to educate higher-caste Indians. The course of study stressed English language and culture.
Social Changes
Negative Impact for India Harsh and racist actions against Indians British held much of the political and economic power. Restricted Indian-owned industries such as cotton textiles.
Conversion to cash crops reduced food production, causing famines in the late 1800s.
Loss of cultural practices and language
Famine victims, 1877
Social changes in India during the British presence.Some good, some not so good
“Apartheid” “In India every European, be he German, or Pole or Rumanian, is automatically a member of the ruling race. Railway carriages,
station retiring rooms, benches in parks, etc. are marked 'For Europeans Only.‘ This is bad enough in South Africa or elsewhere, but to
have to put up with it in one's own country is a humiliating and exasperating reminder of one's enslaved condition.” – Jawaharlal
Nehru, Indian nationalist and first Prime Minister
What did the British get?
To bring raw materials, especially cotton, to ports for shipment to England.
To bring manufactured goods from England for sale in an expanding Indian market.
British-owned Indian industry expanded from 1880 to 1914, but not Indian.
spread British language, customs and Christian religion
Took many artworks – sculpture, paintings and other Indian artifacts - that can be seen in many British museums today
What was negative for British?
Paid for infrastructure (roads, telephone, railroads, etc.) development
Paid for education improvement
Money spent on military and government in India
The Indian National Congress 1885 The Indian National Congress was founded in Bombay.
swaraj “independence.”
the goal of the movement.
1905 partition of Bengal based on religions and languages.
1906 creation of the Muslim League.
1876 - 1948
1869 - 1948
The Muslim League
1889 - 1964
Mohammed Ali Jinnah
Jawaharlal nehru
Bal Gangadhar Tilak
1856 - 1920
Young Mohandas K.Gandhi,1876
Last Viceroy of India
Lord Louis & Lady Edwina Montbatten
Lord Louis & Lady Edwina Montbatten
The end of raj: August 15,1947
Pakista
n
India