Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
Tags: #Oxford University Press, #9780195304312, #Inc
of everyday Indian society and culture, and the pernicious racism that
steadily permeated their Indian empire in the nineteenth century.
It is therefore not surprising that Indians of every social station
rejected this smothering, racially bounded subjecthood. As the educated and respectable classes attacked the inequities of British rule
in print, the Company had to impose press censorship in spite of
the utilitarians’ commitment to the free fl ow of ideas. The courts
also offered some relief from inequitable Company policies, which
explains the baboos’ reputation for litigiousness.
For common people, however, direct, often violent resistance was
the only option. Landed interests sometimes thwarted the Permanent
Settlement by using threats and intimidation to scare off the Calcutta merchants who considered buying up foreclosed
zamindaris
.
Local communities countered Christian proselytizing by ostracizing
and sometimes killing the small handful of converts won over by
the missionaries. The original Baptist mission station at Semaphore
Company
India 219
needed government protection to operate, and in the 1820s the Wesleyan Missionary Society shut down its operation in Calcutta after
one of its converts was murdered. There was actually very little that
British authorities could do about such incidents. As in most empires,
the Company’s ability to exert real authority in the countryside was
quite limited.
The peasant revolt also retained its potency during the fi nal
decades of the Company empire. British police offi cers developed a
fairly extensive rural surveillance system to uncover plots in their
infancy, but village headmen, Hindu and Muslim religious fi gures,
and discharged soldiers and militiamen still tapped into widespread
popular anger to organize uprisings. As a result, rebellions continued to fl are up in Bengal throughout the fi rst half of the nineteenth
century. None of these incidents were large enough to threaten the
imperial regime, but they demonstrated that the Company’s hold
on the Indian countryside remained tenuous despite its evolution
from a chartered commercial concern into a more conventional territorial empire.
Indeed, the precariousness of British imperial rule became all too
apparent when almost the entire Indian soldiery in Bengal rebelled en
masse in 1857.
Sepoys
had revolted periodically over issues ranging
from uniforms, beards, pay, and heavy campaigning since the EIC’s
army became a more conventional military formation in the 1770s.
In this case, the Company provoked the
sepoys
by requiring them to
serve overseas, cutting their pay and benefi ts, and lowering the status
and privileges of the military profession. This came at a time when
the revenue demands of the Permanent Settlement bit heavily, and
soldiers from Awadh were embittered by the EIC’s annexation of the
rest of their province.
The revolt began in May 1857 when three regiments at Meerut
executed their offi cers and marched on Delhi to restore the Mughal
emperor. It then spread quickly to neighboring garrisons. The smaller
armies of the Madras and Bombay presidencies were largely unaffected, but by the end of the year only about 8,000 troops of the
139,000-man Bengal army still obeyed British orders.39 As a result,
the EIC lost control of most of the Ganges River valley.
The mutiny of 1857 was unprecedented in its scope and threatened the very foundations of the Company empire. This breakdown
of imperial law and order gave local communities an opportunity to
220 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
reassert their autonomy as the unrest spread to the civilian population. Indian nationalists referred to this massive upheaval as the
“First War of Indian Independence,” but they were getting ahead of
themselves. In reality, unconnected and largely uncoordinated popular local and regional rebellions followed the mutiny at Meerut.
To be sure, the rebels shared a deep hatred of British imperial
rule. The communities that joined the revolt were in the regions that
faced the heaviest revenue demands and foreclosures as a result of the
Company’s reforms. Many also experienced considerable economic
and social instability resulting from agricultural commercialization
and the spread of private land tenure. But in other cases popular Muslim religious fi gures stirred up revolts by calling for a jihad against
Christian British rule. Finally, the Company’s practice of annexing
the kingdoms of rulers who did not produce a biological heir led some
princes to join the uprising.
A faction of the rebels looked backward in attempting to use the
elderly emperor Bahadur Shah to bring unity to the revolt, but others recognized that a century of British rule had effectively destroyed
the old Mughal order. Of these, some looked to the last Maratha king,
Nana Sahib, for leadership, while local leaders drew on the Company
itself in imaging a new postimperial world. The village
zamindar
Shah Mal set up a “hall of justice” in the local British irrigation offi cer’s bungalow, and the peasant leader Devi Singh created an elaborate village administrative system complete with a supreme court, a
board of revenue, magistrates, and a superintendent of police.40
While most outbreaks of unrest during the “mutiny” had distinctly local origins, they merged into an enormous challenge to the
Company empire, and it took more than a year for British forces to
regain control of the Ganges heartland. The rebels exposed the inherent weakness of the Company as an imperial power, but they were
too divided to win a decisive military victory. While they shared a
common desire to escape their subjecthood, they could not agree
on a vision for the postimperial order. Hindus distrusted Muslims,
while the Muslims themselves fell out along Sunni-Shi’a lines. Sikhs
had no interest in seeing a revival of the Mughal Empire, which
had oppressed them for centuries, and Indian princes looked at the
populist rural uprisings with alarm. Many Indians remained neutral
because they calculated correctly that British power was not broken,
which helps explain why
sepoys
in Bombay and Madras refused to
Company
India 221
join the mutiny. This allowed relief forces from the regular British
and presidential armies to defeat the last of the rebels in 1858.
Taken as a whole, the events of 1857 stand as one of the largest
popular anti-imperial uprisings in the history of empire. The mass
slave insurrections of the later Roman Republic were probably larger
and bloodier, but Spartacus and his men were not conventional imperial subjects. In later eras, neither the Umayyads nor the Spaniards
ever had to contend with mass violent unrest on the scale of the Indian
Mutiny. For good reason, the scope and ferocity of the rebellion terrifi ed the tiny British minority in India. Bringing to life the deepest fears of all empire builders, the rebels slaughtered their imperial
masters and Indian auxiliaries whenever they could fi nd them. The
Meerut
sepoys
murdered every Indian Christian in Delhi, and the
followers of Nana Sahib massacred more than two hundred British
men, women, and children at Kanpur after the offi cers of the garrison
surrendered to spare their families a prolonged siege.
Newspaper reports of the rebels cutting down European women
and children with clubs and bayonets enraged the British public and
appeared to confi rm the worst imperial stereotypes of Indian barbarism. Although later investigations revealed that the women at Kanpur had been murdered but not raped, the idea that Nana Sahib’s men
had violently crossed the boundaries of subjecthood by putting their
hands on virtuous and vulnerable “white” women ensured an equally
violent and brutal British response to the mutiny. Relief forces killed
suspected rebels on sight. Armed with the legal authority to impose
summary punishment without the due process of law, they cut down
civilians at will and forced accused Muslim and Hindu mutineers to
defi le themselves by eating pork or beef before blowing them out of
cannons. There are no accurate estimates for the resulting Indian loss
of life, but the fi gures must surely run to the tens of thousands if not
hundreds of thousands.
Equally troubling for a “civilized” imperial power, British commanders motivated their European and Indian troops to rush to the
defense of besieged garrisons by promising them loot. But the imperial troops often did not bother to distinguish friend from foe during
the chaos of the mutiny. A junior British offi cer candidly described
what happened after the recapture of Delhi: “Sometimes [the British
prize agent] fi nds a rich old nigger in his house, and he immediately
takes him into a little room and puts a pistol to his head and tells him
222 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
that he will shoot him if he doesn’t tell him where the treasure is
upon which the nigger takes him to some part of the house and tells
him to dig, and then we sometimes fi nd 10,000 or 100,000 Rupees
hid.”41 In acknowledging that “our object is to make an example and
terrify others,” the governor of the Punjab admitted that more than
a simple desire for revenge drove these brutal tactics. In punishing
entire communities and classes for their mass defi ance of imperial
authority, British empire builders sought desperately to rebuild the
boundaries of subjecthood that had tottered and then collapsed during the anarchy of 1857.
The vicious retribution that Britain visited upon its rebellious
subjects did indeed restore its authority in India for another nine
decades, but the uprising demonstrated that the East India Company had outlived its usefulness as a proxy imperial power. It took
thirty-six million pounds and more than eleven thousand military casualties for the metropolitan government to regain control of Bengal. This enormous commitment of men and material
resources exposed the hidden costs of empire and raised diffi cult
questions about the overall value of India to Britain. Although it
took decades for most Britons to feel remorse for the bloody conduct of their soldiers, it was clear enough in 1858 that their representatives in Indian had not behaved as benevolent and humane
imperial rulers.
As tempers cooled, it was an open question whether the moral toll
of empire was worth the cost. The metropolitan government, however,
never considered withdrawing from South Asia as it faced increased
political and economic competition from around the world. The captive Indian market became the world’s largest recipient of Britain’s
exports by the end of the nineteenth century and was a major supplier of cotton to its textile mills. With overall British exports declining in the face of competition from newly industrialized powers, the
international sale of Indian raw materials helped balance Britain’s
trade defi cit with Europe and the United States. Furthermore, railway construction after the mutiny helped make India second only
to Canada as a primary recipient of imperial investment. India also
provided high salaries and generous retirement benefi ts for British
civil servants, and Indian taxpayers funded the reconstituted Indian
army, which remained an important prop of British imperial power
throughout the world.
Company
India 223
The full scope of these economic and strategic realities was not
fully apparent in 1858, but the British government understood that
quitting India was not an option. Instead, Prime Minister Palmerston
set out once again to “reform” the Indian empire. The fi rst step was
to restore its moral veneer after the brutal realities of imperial governance and control were laid bare for all to see in the aftermath of
the mutiny. Just as parliamentary investigations of Clive and Hastings helped wipe away the embarrassment of the nabobs’ blatantly
venial and corrupt empire building, metropolitan observers of every
political stripe agreed that their nineteenth-century successors were
to blame for the 1857 uprising.
Concluding that the utilitarians’ modernist meddling and the
evangelicals’ proselytizing had provoked the fanatical and irrational Indian majority, Tory conservatives blamed the rebellion on the
reformist lobby. They were particularly dismissive of Macaulay’s educated auxiliaries, who failed to persuade their superstitious kinsmen
to embrace British rule. Certain that Indians were not ready to live
in the modern world, the conservatives cited reports that the
sepoys
rebelled in response to rumors that the cartridges for their new LeeEnfi eld rifl es were greased with pork and beef fat, thereby defi ling
Hindu and Muslims soldiers who had to rip open the paper casings
with their teeth. Few stopped to consider that the Indian soldiery’s
supposed religious prejudices and superstition did not prevent them
from using those same rifl es and cartridges against the British. Liberals, on the other hand, still believed that empires could be instruments of reform, but they joined the attack on the EIC by accusing
Company offi cials of blocking progress and inciting the mutiny by
failing to properly safeguard Indian property rights under the Permanent Settlement.