Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
Tags: #Oxford University Press, #9780195304312, #Inc
Metropolitan politicians consequently agreed that the Company
had to go. In 1858, Parliament passed an India Bill that fi nally abolished the EIC and transferred all of its holdings to the Crown. The
court of directors met for the last time in September of that same
year, and the Company’s stock stopped paying dividends fi ve years
later. In its place the British government created a new administrative
imperial entity known as the Raj (from the Hindi word for “government”) to assert direct control over India. In London, the secretary of
state for India, assisted by the India Offi ce, appointed and supervised
a viceroy who presided over a unifi ed Indian bureaucracy. The India
224 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
Bill dispensed with the archaic Bengal, Bombay, and Madras presidencies and the Company’s outdated civil administration. The new Indian
Civil Service (ICS) was theoretically a meritocracy open to educated
Indians, but the practice of holding the competitive entrance exams
in London ensured that only a handful of subject peoples entered its
senior ranks in the nineteenth century.
Like the EIC, the Raj remained an imperial state in its own right.
Its reconstituted armed forces were still separate from the regular
British army, and the viceroys still had considerable autonomy in setting its foreign policy. The reformers used Bahadur Shah’s cooperation with the mutineers as an excuse to fi nally abolish the Mughal
Empire, and in his place Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli made
Victoria queen-empress of India in 1876. As her fi rst viceroy, Lord
Canning sought to win popular local support for the new imperial
regime by giving carefully chosen Indians seats on the viceregal and
provincial advisory councils. Assuming that the mutiny had demonstrated the ineffectiveness of western-educated Indians as allies and
intermediaries, Canning hoped to turn Indian nobles and aristocrats
into a primary prop of British rule. He ended the practice of annexing
the kingdoms of childless rulers and invented a grandiose array of
titles, coats of arms, and chivalric orders to reward princes who swore
allegiance to the Raj. Finally, he angered revenge-minded Britons and
earned himself the nickname of “Clemency Canning” by pardoning
former mutineers and rebels who were not directly implicated in the
killing of Europeans.
These reforms actually did very little to alter the realities of imperial governance and exploitation in India. The Raj was still concerned
primarily with generating and extracting wealth, and British offi cials
still believed that they could remake Indian society to increase their
returns by raising agricultural production. Formal taxation replaced
tribute collection, and investment instruments became important
new revenue sources as South Asia became more tightly integrated
into global capital markets. Ultimately, though, the wealth of India
still lay in the countryside, which forced the British to continue to
search for ways to make imperial extraction pay without provoking
further rebellions through their economic and social meddling.
The Raj also remained equally committed to defending the
boundaries of imperial subjecthood despite its loudly and piously
proclaimed commitment to opening government and commerce to
Company
India 225
qualifi ed Indians. Most British offi cials and their families lived within
the segregated confi nes of opulent hill stations and fortifi ed urban
enclaves. Ever conscious that the mutiny had exposed their vulnerability as a privileged imperial elite, they became even more obsessed
with protecting their personal safety under the guise of upholding
law and order. A larger garrison of regular British forces provided
a counterbalance to the reorganized Indian army, and the expanded
railway network ensured that troops could deal quickly with potential threats. As a late nineteenth-century state, the Raj had the means
to keep closer track of the Indian majority through a more modern
police force, better censuses, and public health legislation that provided a legal cover for keeping Europeans segregated from the Indian
majority. Angry Indians still occasionally attacked and murdered
British offi cials, but these measures ensured that there would be no
more uprisings on the scale of the 1857 mutiny.
As the threat of overt violent resistance receded, the westerneducated Indian professionals and civil servants, whom the British continued to dismiss at best as an isolated elite and at worst as
semi-European baboos, emerged as the most serious threat to the
Raj. Frustrated by the smothering racism that still permeated imperial society, they refused to become permanent imperial subjects. In
fact, their command of British law and culture was more dangerous
to the Raj than any mutinous
sepoy
because they had means and
opportunity to call attention to how the inherent exploitation and
hypocrisy of imperial rule confl icted with the ideals of a western
liberal democracy.
To this end, Indian lawyers and members of the civil service turned
the Indian National Congress (INC), which a retired British bureaucrat founded in the 1880s as a supervised outlet for Indian political
aspirations, into a powerful anti-imperial movement. Shifting from
their initial goal of ending discrimination in the civil service, the INC
leadership demanded political representation, judicial reform, and the
abolition of the exploitive economic policies that they believed were
draining India’s wealth to Britain. These educated elites remained
divided by region, caste, and religion, but they were far more successful in organizing popular resistance to the Raj than the British had
ever imagined possible.
Belatedly recognizing the scope of the threat, imperial offi cials
tried to appease them with a series of constitutional reforms that
226 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
slowly expanded Indian participation in advisory councils that evolved
gradually into provincial legislatures in the early twentieth century.
But these stopgap measures were doomed because Mohandas Gandhi,
a London-educated lawyer, and other INC leaders fi nally convinced
the Indian majority to withdraw the tacit consent that had allowed
foreigners to rule South Asia for almost two centuries. Recognizing
that they were losing their grip on India following the First World
War, desperate British offi cials subverted their own reformist agenda
by resorting to coercive and illiberal extralegal measures to deal with
dissent. When these tactics sparked even larger widespread popular
opposition, Brigadier General Reginald Dyer took matters into his
own hands by ordering his men to open fi re on a peaceful protest
in the Punjabi city of Amritsar. Pizarro would have approved, but
the murder of almost four hundred unarmed demonstrators turned
even more Indians against the Raj. In convincing enough Indians to
think collectively, if not nationally, rather than locally or communally, Gandhi and his allies created suffi cient social unity to render
British India ungovernable through their noncooperation campaigns.
Their progress toward independence in 1947 was halting and tragically bloody, but the Raj’s relatively short life span in comparison to
earlier empires demonstrated that the realities of empire had changed
radically in the twentieth century.
Lasting from the victory at Plassey in 1757 to the violent partition of the Raj in 1947, Britain’s South Asian empire appeared to be
an imperial achievement on par with Umayyad Al-Andalus and the
Spanish Andes in its coherency and durability. Yet there were actually three successive but very different British empires in India: the
empire of the nabobs, the reformed Company empire, and the Raj.
In retrospect, Britain’s greatest imperial achievement in India was
extending the shelf life of an archaic proxy empire from the early
modern era into an age of nationalism and transnational global capitalist integration.
The original Company empire began as a commercial enterprise
that had operated in South Asia for over a century before metastasizing into an empire. The nabobs built their Indian empire without
the authorization of either the court of directors or the metropolitan British government. This set them apart from the conquistadors,
whose New World empire building at least had the formal sanction
of the Spanish Crown. Clive certainly matched Pizarro in his greed
Company
India 227
and ambition, but Mughal administrative and economic institutions
proved suffi ciently co-optable and adaptable to spare Company offi cials from having to adopt the conquistador commander’s brutal tactics. Clive and his fellow Company servants did not have to concern
themselves with fi nding ways to extract wealth from their subjects.
The Mughal imperial institutions largely did it for them.
Therefore Plassey was not a nabobist Cajamarca. Instead it was
a relatively minor battle that allowed Clive to supplant the
nawabs
as the imperial overlords of Bengal. This also explains why common
Bengalis did not initially recognize that they had acquired a new and
more ambitiously rapacious imperial master. It is fruitless to try to
determine if there was more rural unrest under Mughal,
nawab
, or
Company rule, but it is clear that
ryots
and craftsmen learned that
their subjecthood had changed for the worse when the Company’s
rising tribute demands led to famine and destitution in the decades
after Plassey.
In the short term, however, Clive’s
jagir
was representative of the
orientalist trappings that allowed the nabobs to pose as Indian rulers
and conceal the full extent of their empire building from their superiors in London. Working through indigenous institutions of imperial
governance, tribute, and commerce allowed them to form mutually
benefi cial alliances with key local Bengalis. These
banians, zamindars
,
and
sepoys
did not betray a larger Indian nation in helping to build
the Company empire; no such entity existed in eighteenth-century
South Asia. The peoples of the British Isles were only just beginning
to think of themselves as a nation during this period, but their stronger collective identity gave them an enormous advantage in India
were identities were still primarily local, occupational, communal, or
confessional. Moreover, the emergence of popular British patriotism
allowed Clive and Hastings to escape censure for their excesses by
wrapping themselves in the garb of national service.
The most successful nabobs became fabulously wealthy by transferring the real costs of empire to the metropole. Clive may have
hoped that the Bengali
diwani
would generate millions of pounds of
revenue each year, but it was little more than a cover for tribute collecting and stock speculation. The administrative and military costs of
becoming an imperial power nearly bankrupted the Company, while
Clive and his fellow nabobs made their fortunes. Bengali farmers and
craftsmen of course bore the real cost of nabobism in the form of
228 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
rising tribute obligations and famine, but British landed aristocrats
and taxpayers also came to consider themselves its victims. From a
metropolitan standpoint, the nabobs’ greatest sins were forcing the
treasury to rescue the Company from insolvency and disrupting the
gentlemanly social order with their ill-gotten wealth.
The British authorities accordingly realized that empire was too
lucrative and destabilizing to be left in the hands of private entrepreneurs. From one perspective, Parliament’s move to assert more
direct control over a territory that it had never originally intended
to acquire was an inevitable sequence in the standard narrative of
imperial history. Just as the Umayyad caliphs recalled Tariq ibn Ziyad
and Musa ibn Nusayr from Iberia and the Spanish Crown sent Don
Francisco de Toledo to mop up the Pizarrist mess in the Andes, the
1784 India Act put an end to nabobism by stripping the East India
Company of most of its mercantile functions. Although its stock and
court of directors made it still look like a commercial enterprise, the
EIC essentially became a more closely regulated imperial state that
allowed the metropolitan government to control India without incurring the heavy moral and economic cost of imperial governance and
extraction.
The Romans, Umayyads, and Spaniards would have been well satisfi ed with such arrangements, but the proxy Company empire also
introduced a new complication into the mechanism of imperial rule.
Under pressure from the metropolitan reformist lobby, Company
offi cials actually had to make at least a show of putting their selfserving humanitarian legitimizing ideologies of empire into practice.
Although they may have been bigots by contemporary standards,
British liberals, utilitarians, and evangelicals actually believed they
could remake Indian society to the mutual benefi t and profi t of themselves and their subjects. Their public depiction of empire as moral
and benevolent helped win support for the imperial enterprise in