Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
Tags: #Oxford University Press, #9780195304312, #Inc
could buy him respectability, Clive found that he could not escape
the imperial origins of his wealth. Although he acquired a seat in
Parliament, a knighthood, and a lesser Irish title as Baron Clive of
Plassey in the Kingdom of Ireland, his ambitions fl oundered on a
controversy surrounding the Bengali
jagir
that remained his primary source of income. It was understandably awkward to explain
to members of Parliament that the Mughal feudal system made him
the EIC’s superior. Moreover, he became the personifi cation of imperial corruption as reports of the nabobs’ abuses reached London.
Frustrated and facing greater scrutiny of his personal fortune, Clive
accepted the directors’ plan to be rid of their upstart employee by
sending him back to India for a second term as the governor and
commander-in-chief of Bengal.
Arriving in Calcutta in 1764, Clive consolidated and reorganized
the Company’s conquests. He also addressed the reports of nabob corruption that had caused a stir in London by banning private trading
by Company employees and capping the gifts they could accept from
Indian rulers at one thousand rupees. Conveniently forgetting the
origins of his own fortune, he piously cited the need to improve the
Company’s reputation in India as a justifi cation for the crackdown on
nabobism: “the name of the English stink in the nostrils of a gentoo
or a mussalman.”19
Yet Clive still did not move explicitly to turn the EIC into a sovereign power. Seeking the returns of revenue collection without incurring the heavy costs of direct rule, he tried to co-opt the
nawab
s’
administrative machinery. Under what became known as the dual
194 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
system, roughly four hundred Europeans looked after the Company’s
interests and left the expensive and messy details of revenue collection, law and order, and day-to-day governance to Mughal bureaucrats and
zamindars
. A senior Bengali offi cial named Muhammad
Reza Khan supervised the operation. This was the standard imperial
template of indirect rule employed by earlier generations of empire
builders in the Andes, Iberia, and Britain, and it also explains why
Bengali
ryots
and weavers initially failed to realize the signifi cance
of Plassey.
Although he disavowed explicit imperial pretensions, Clive
remained enough of an opportunist to grasp the possibilities of the
Company’s victory over the Mughal emperor at Buxar. Faced with
the loss of Bengali tribute and needing allies to remain in power, in
1765 Shah Alam II made the Company responsible for revenue collection in most of eastern India. Securing this
diwani
for the EIC was
one of Clive’s greatest coups. In return for paying the emperor less
than two hundred thousand pounds per year, he promised the court
of directors an annual return of two to four million pounds. The British government’s share of this bounty was a guaranteed payment
of four hundred thousand pounds per year, which helped keep the
Crown solvent during the Seven Years’ War and American Revolution. The promise of full and unfettered access to the wealth of Bengal
also led to a run on the EIC’s stock. Pressure from speculators pushed
up dividends, and the court of directors sent detailed instructions to
Clive on how to spend the expected windfall.20
Ultimately, the people of Bengal bore the cost of Clive’s grand
promises. His ambitious revenue guarantees depended on the Company’s ability to bypass the hierarchal Bengali system of tribute collection to gain direct access to the wealth of local communities. This
was a feat that had eluded the Mughal
jagir
holders and
zamindars
for centuries. While Akbar’s
zabt
survey documented roughly half of
the tribute obligations in the wider empire, more than 90 percent of
Bengali villages remained unassessed at the turn of the eighteenth
century. The Company could not make good on Clive’s guarantees
if it did not know how much wealth each village produced or how
much the
zamindars
skimmed off before passing it on to their superiors. In 1769, therefore, Company offi cials tried in vain to conduct a
thorough survey of Bengali revenues. Handcuffed by their ignorance
of local circumstances, they had to base their revenue projections on
Company
India 195
estimates and speculation. Clive may have promised metropolitan
Britons that the
diwani
would yield two to four million pounds a
year in revenue, but in reality his men had no clear picture of Bengal’s productive capacity.
At a time when most Bengali tribute came from just twelve large
zamindaris
, Company offi cials looked for ways to rationalize and
streamline revenue collection. In the original Twenty-Four Parganas,
they fi rst tried collecting revenue directly, but when this failed to
bring suffi cient returns they auctioned off the task to private Bengali
“revenue farmers” on three-year terms. Many of the successful bidders were so brutal in their pursuit of profi t that
ryots
and laborers
fl ed to territories outside the EIC’s reach, thereby further depressing the Company’s returns. Similarly, the independent local brokers
responsible for channeling goods to the EIC’s Indian buyers blocked
the Company from taking full control of Bengal’s handicraft sector.
As a result, Company offi cials could not make good on Clive’s
assurances that Bengal would yield millions of pounds in profi t.
Struggling under the expense of becoming a territorial and military power and the annual payments to the metropolitan treasury, they had to squeeze as much revenue as possible out of their
subjects. For centuries common Bengalis had borne the weight
of imperial tribute, but the EIC’s escalating revenue assessments
were unprecedented in their rapacity. In 1769 and 1770, the Company’s demands tragically exacerbated one of the widespread famines that affl icted the region periodically. Born of fl ooding, crop
failures, and British commercial meddling, the catastrophe killed
roughly three million people. Adam Smith and other critics suggested that some Company offi cials shamelessly profi ted from the
famine by manipulating rice prices, but the EIC’s main culpability
in the loss of so many lives lay in its unceasing revenue demands
on collapsing rural economies.
The resulting degradation and depopulation of key agricultural
areas further undercut the EIC’s revenues and brought it to the brink
of bankruptcy. In London, news of the famine burst the speculative
bubble that Clive had carefully nurtured with his wild overestimates
of the
diwani
’s value, but not before he made more than fi fty thousand pounds speculating in Company stock. Metropolitan taxpayers also suffered in the crash, for it took a loan from the treasury of
1.4 million pounds to keep the Company solvent.21
196 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
Obviously things had to change, and it fell to Warren Hastings,
Clive’s successor as governor, to sort out the complexities of the
diwani
and imperial administration. But Hastings was just as much
of a nabob as Clive. Both men arrived in India as clerks and won
fame after transferring to the Company army. Where Clive was the
hero of wars with the French in Arcot, Hastings made his reputation
defending Bombay from a Maratha invasion. Governing Bengal from
1772 to 1885, he brought Clive’s dual system to an end by replacing Mughal administrators and judges with Company employees. He
also sought more direct control over the
zamindars
and other local
authorities.
In effect, Hastings’s reforms acknowledged that the EIC had
acquired an empire, and he sought to establish the Company’s legitimacy as an Indian power by codifying and systematizing indigenous
administrative and legal institutions. Assuming that Bengal had fallen
into decline under “foreign” Mughal despotism, Hastings and his
lieutenants sought to revive its “authentic” high Hindu culture. They
hired Brahmin scholars to commit “ancient” legal codes to paper, kept
court records in local dialects, and became dedicated students of Sanskrit and Hindu literature and history. The reformers also became
the patrons of Hindu shrines, festivals, and graves as they became
increasingly enmeshed in running Bengal.
Hastings’s orientalist program also recognized the value of Mughal
bureaucratic institutions. The EIC adopted Persian, the Mughals’
court language, as the lingua franca of day-to-day governance and
reserved English for internal Company correspondence. Company
courts adapted Mughal statutes to try criminal cases and used British
interpretations of Hindu and Muslim law for civil matters. The new
generation of young Company employee/administrators labored
to learn Persian, which meant that Mughal clerks and translators
remained infl uential. Recognizing the vital role that these intermediaries played in imperial administration, Hasting founded the Calcutta
Madrassa to train Muslim elites for the civil service. Similarly, the
Company continued to play its role as a dutiful Mughal vassal by
sending tribute to the increasingly impotent imperial court in Delhi
and minted coins bearing the emperors’ portraits until well into the
nineteenth century.
Despite these efforts, Company bureaucrats struggled to make
sense of the enormous diversity of South Asia. Although there were
Company
India 197
broad political, religious, and cultural continuities that were common
reference points at this time, most people identifi ed themselves primarily on the basis of locality, lineage, family, occupation, and religion. Company offi cials, however, believed that Indians were most
fundamentally defi ned by “caste.” The actual term was in fact a European import. Based on the Latin
castus
, it had the same etymological
origins as the term
castas
, which the Spanish used to describe the
hybrid social categories that emerged in their New World empire.
The Portuguese introduced the term to South Asia, and the Dutch
and British then used it to delineate a range of Indian identities associated with Hindu religious texts and everyday life.22
Briefl y, the notion of caste came to describe a uniquely South
Asian form of ranked identity. It was based on the four
varnas
of
Brahmin priests, Kshatriya warriors, Vaishya merchants, and Shudra
cultivators outlined in Hindu scripture, as well as thousands of much
more localized occupational categories (
jatis
) that were theoretically
determined by birth. These nested identities gave Indians ways to
assert authority, mobilize resources, and unite for mutual defense.
Nomadic and foraging peoples were largely outside the bounds of
caste, but settled Indians who converted to Islam still lived within
its realities because in diverse and multiethnic village societies caste
helped create order and stability.
British imperial observers believed that Indian caste, religious,
and tribal identities were fi xed by religion, tradition, and birth, but
in fact these norms were relatively fl exible and malleable, particularly in rural communities where different groups lived side by side;
they were far too fl uid to serve as effective instruments of imperial
exploitation. Company offi cials needed to make better sense of Indian
identity and foster sharper social boundaries to rule effectively. They
therefore recruited Indian scholars and religious experts, who shared
their interest in making local identities less fl uid, to develop caste into
a more rigid and coherent social category where communities, rather
than individuals, had rights.
Nationalists and imperial critics accuse British offi cials of imposing caste on India as part of a larger strategy of divide and rule. In
practice, no empire, least of all the East India Company, was ever even
remotely powerful enough to impose new identities on an unwilling
people. Instead, the EIC’s empire created a new reality by introducing better communications, standardizing laws, expanding the market
198 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
economy, and reducing the isolation of rural communities. This
inspired Indians to reimagine personal and caste identities and codify
formerly diverse and fl exible religious customs and practices. Indian
community leaders and legal and religious experts often cooperated
with the Company’s efforts to create clearly defi ned caste identities
because it enhanced their own authority and social prestige.
Company offi cials never fully grasped the complexities of Bengali society, which explains why Hastings lacked the intimate
knowledge of the
zamindaris
that he needed to make imperial rule
in Bengal pay. In 1772 he took another stab at making the
diwani
live up to Clive’s promises by fi xing revenue assessments for a fi veyear period and by auctioning off tribute collection rights. He also
tried to avoid the abuses of the 1760s by supervising the new revenue farmers more closely. A Committee of Circuit oversaw the new
system, and young British offi cials (known as collectors) assisted by
“native offi cers” gathered the EIC’s allotted tribute from the winning bidders.