The Chaos of Empire

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The Chaos of Empire Page 63

by Jon Wilson


  and mutual blame, 330

  and photography, 319–20

  and public works, 270–2, 292

  and WW2, 447

  relief camps, 319–21, 328–30, 347

  Famine Commission, 338 (see also Famine)

  Fatehgarh, 177, 415, 416, 420, 421

  Faviell, William, 282–3, 284

  Fawkes, Guy, 34

  film (see also photography), and Delhi Durbar, 372

  Finch, Heneage, 34–5

  fingerprinting, 304–5

  Finnis, Col., 240–1

  Fort St David, 64

  Fort William:

  building of, 56

  and rebellion of 1857–8, 254

  French East India Company, 39, 84, 92, 97

  at Arcot, 87

  British conquer fort of, 97

  Madras occupied by, 86

  French Revolution, 131, 132, 162

  Frere, Sir Bartle, 285–6

  Gadgil, D. R, 457

  Gaekwad, Manaji Rao, 170

  Gandhi, Indira, 486

  Gandhi, Mohandas Karamchand, 169, 360, 364, 378–9, 386, 403–4, 409–10, 450

  Jallianwalagh Bagh massacre, see Jallianwalagh Bagh massacre

  assassination of, 476–7

  assurance of, to Allies, 452

  becomes leader of nationwide protest, 407

  and Burma in WW2, 449–50

  call for sacrifices by, 460

  Churchill’s rage against, 436

  fasting by, 414, 425, 443, 476

  first political pamphlet of, 375

  and Hindu–Muslim unity, 407, 425

  jailed, 414, 436

  khadi championed by, 410, 421

  London visit of, 436

  military recruitment by, 404

  ‘naïve’ label applied to, 412

  and Nehru, 438

  and Nehru committee, 425

  non-cooperation movement suspended by, 413, 414 (see also India: non-cooperation movement in)

  on Bengal partition, 376

  on constitutional reform of 1919, 405

  on federalism, 430–1

  on impending civil war, 470

  on Lajpat Rai assault, 428

  on violence, 413

  penance of, after Chauri Chaura, 414

  political work in India begun by, 403

  and Punjab, 406

  Quit India movement launched by, 450

  restraining efforts of, 429

  and salt laws, 435

  in South Africa, 378

  Ganesh, 367, 368

  Ganges, 11, 12, 13, 46, 92, 173, 217, 235, 243

  estuaries of, 39

  irrigation system on, 275, 290

  gated communities, 485

  Gaudi Saraswati, 368

  Genghiz Khan, 15, 340

  Geology of India, 11

  George V, 386, 398, 423, 503

  Ghose, Girish Chunder, 254

  Ghosh, Aurobindo, 376, 379

  Ghulam Hussein Khan, 141–2

  Gladstone, William, 296

  Glorious Revolution, 51

  Goa, Portuguese power centred in, 23

  Godavari, 13, 123, 148, 272, 277

  Godhra, rioting in, 425

  Godrej, V. B., 384

  Government of India Act (1833), see Charter Act

  Government of India Act (1919), 404

  Government of India Act (1935), 437–8, 439

  Grant Duff, James, 178–9, 185

  graves:

  European, 1–3, 5

  of children, 2

  Great Case of Monopolies, 34

  Great Depression, 432

  Great Eastern Railway Company, 279

  Great Exhibition, 268, 269

  Great Indian Peninsula Railway Company, 280–1, 282–3, 284

  Great Trigonometric Survey, 221, 222

  Great Western Railway Company, 279

  Grenville, George, 118

  Grotius, Hugo, 23

  Guha, Ranajit, 4, 22

  Gujarat, 13–14, 22, 197, 295, 319, 353–4, 435

  Gujarat College, 356

  Gujars, 242

  Gujranwala, 393

  Gurkhas, 394, 413

  Gwalior, 170, 174, 195, 249

  Gyfford (formerly Chown, formerly Harvey, née Cooke), Katherine, 56–7, 58, 59, 72, 80–1

  Gyfford, William (President at Madras), 43, 44, 76

  Gyfford, William (Chief at Anjengo), 72–3, 75, 76, 77, 80

  Haidar Ali, 158, 164, 168

  Haidar, Amjad Ghazi-ud-din, 216

  Hamid, Maj. Gen. Shahid, 470

  Hamilton, Alexander, 53

  Hamilton, Sir Frederick, 157

  Hansom, Joseph, 281

  Hardinge, Lord, 387, 389, 399

  Harvey, John, 56, 62

  Harvey, Katherine, see Gyfford, Katherine

  Hastings, Marquess of, 25

  Hastings, Warren, 8, 34, 107, 130–3, 149–50

  corruption allegations against, 131, 132

  and new Mughal style of government, 130–1

  recalled, 132

  Havelock, Gen. Sir Henry, 25, 243, 248, 257, 499

  Hayman, Francis, 116–17, 119–20

  Heath, Captain, 47

  Hedges, Susannah, 38

  Hedges, William (see also British East India Company):

  becomes Company chief in Bengal, 38

  diary of, 44

  failure of mission of, 43

  Mughal officers’ fractious relationship with, 39–40

  and Parameshwar, 40–1

  return of, to Britain, 43–4

  rises through Company hierarchy, 37–8

  sacked, 43

  and Shaista Khan, 28–9, 41–2

  Henry VIII, 31

  Herschel, William, 304–5

  High Commissioner, British appointed to India, 464–5

  Himalayas, 11, 13

  Hind Swaraj (Gandhi), 375, 378

  Hindu Mahasabha, 426, 445, 458, 476

  Hindus:

  Arya Samaj, 361–3, 369, 377

  Brahmo Samaj, 363

  and Congress, fear of ‘Hindu Raj’ in, 445, 446, 452, 468

  and cow’s sacred status, 368, 370

  and Dayananda’s preaching, 360–1

  destroyed temples of, 17

  and food, 244

  and Ganesh, 367, 368

  hostile ‘national sentiment’ perceived in, 294

  Mahatmas, 362

  and Muslims, and de facto partition, 445

  and Muslims, and survival in Bengal, 458

  Muslims view as ‘tyranny’, 463

  religiously rooted laws of, 214

  and sati, 214, 228

  and Vedas, 360

  and war with Muslims, 252–3

  The History of British India (Mill), 202–3, 274

  The History of the Cotton Famine (Arnold), 324–5

  The History of England (Mill), 210

  A History of the Mahrattas (Grant Duff), 178–9, 185

  A History of the Sepoy War (Kaye), 228

  Hodson, Capt. William, 256–7

  Holkar, Ahilyabhai, 171, 174, 175, 178, 179

  Houghton, Douglas, 460

  Hubli, 62

  Hughli, 24, 33, 38–40, 96

  Humayun, Emperor, 16

  Hume, David, 119

  Hunter, Lord William, 395

  Hunter, Sir William, 297, 340

  Hutchins, Francis, 264

  Hyderabad, 60, 61, 249, 482–3, 484

  autonomy of, 89

  growing population of, 349

  Hyderabad, Nizam of, 89

  Ibrahim Khan, 53

  Shaista Khan replaced by, 52

  Ilbert Bill, 311, 312, 313, 333

  Independence of India, 478 (see also Indian National Congress; Nehru, Jawaharlal)

  British personnel’s retreat prior to, 465–6, 470

  disposal of documents prior to, 466

  gained, 3

  King’s Speech promises, 461

  ministry handovers pre
cede, 464

  and Muslims’ Direct Action Day, 467

  riots prior to, 467–70, 471

  India Acts, 132

  India House, London, 376

  India in 1880 (Temple), 296–7

  India Office, 384, 388

  Indian Association, 341

  Indian Bank, 383

  Indian Civil Service (ICS), 291, 309, 334, 340, 350, 415–16, 459–60, 492–3

  Indian Communist Party, 448

  Indian Companies Act, 302, 306

  Indian Institute of Technology, 276–7

  Indian National Army, 451

  Indian National Congress:

  Ahmad Khan criticizes, 364

  and alcohol, 419

  and Amritsar, see Amritsar

  arrests of leaders of, 450

  banned volunteer organizations of, 412–13

  cotton discussed by, 357

  election success of, 462

  first conference of, 332–5, 337–8

  founders of, 333

  full non-cooperation programme agreed by, 410

  general strikes declared by, 393, 407

  growing support for, 443

  and ‘Hindu Raj’, 445, 446, 452, 468

  as interim government, 464 (see also Nehru, Jawaharlal)

  Lahore strike organized by, 428

  ministry resignations in, after WW2 declared, 447

  most popular political body, 443

  Muslim League’s meeting with, 401

  Muslim League’s ‘parting of the ways’ with, 426

  and new councils, 407, 418

  poverty discussed by, 335

  and provincial-ministries election success of, 444

  seen as upper-caste body, 443–4

  and United Provinces, 444, 445

  Indian Railways (Andrew), 282

  Indian Rebellion. 1857–8, see Rebellion of 1857–8

  Indigo Act, 339

  Indigo Riots, 338

  industrialisation, 323, 349, 352–7, 434

  Irwin, Lord, 436

  Islam, see Muslims

  Ispahani, M. M., 458

  Iyer, C. Sabapathy, 330–1

  Jafar, Mir, 100, 101, 102, 106–7, 120

  enthroned, 103

  mutiny against, 107

  treaty signed with, 106

  Jaggayya, Koccharlakota, 126–7

  Jaipur, 61

  Jallianwala Bagh massacre, 392–7, 422

  constitutional changes in wake of, 396

  Hunter report into, 395, 406

  James II/VII, 36, 37, 51

  Jamsetjee, Jeejeebhoy, 279, 283

  Jamshedpur, 385, 386

  Jamuna, 13, 173, 235, 275

  Japan, 434, 448–9, 451–2, 456

  defeat of, 459

  and Pearl Harbor, 453

  Jauhar Khan, Sidi, 65

  Jews, Edward I expels, 36

  Jinnah, Muhammad Ali, 426, 463, 472

  authorized to negotiate, 446

  Direct Action Day announced by, 467

  Quit India movement condemned by, 452

  joint-stock companies, regulation of, 303, 306

  Kabul, 15

  Kadapah., 328

  Kamath, Rama, 69–71

  jailed, 71

  Kamtekar, Indivar, 448

  Kanara, 159–61, 167, 192, 203

  banks open in, 358–9

  Kanpur, 146, 243, 260, 484, 492

  expanding textile production in, 352–3

  growing population of, 349, 352–3

  Kapila, Shruti, 377

  Kashmir, 84, 482

  Kasim, Haji Abdulla Haji, 358–9, 360, 386, 410

  Kasim, Sidi, 48–9, 50, 59

  Kasimbazar, 39, 63

  Kattaboma Nayakkar, 166

  Kaye, J. W., 228, 259–60

  Kelsall, John, 327

  Kelve-Mahim, 344

  Kerala, 23, 32, 73, 79, 166, 409

  Moplah rebellion in, 412, 413

  khadi, 410, 421

  Khan, Abdul Majid, 62

  Khan, Yasmin, 451, 473

  Khanderi, 69

  Khattalwada, 341–2, 343

  Kheda, 403

  Khilnani, Sunil, 355

  Khyber Pass, 12

  Kipling, Rudyard, 54, 312

  Kittur, 187–90

  Kolff, D. H. A., 135

  Kolkata, 38, 46, 502 (see also Calcutta)

  Krishna river, 290

  Krishnavarma, Shyamji, 376–8

  Kurnool, 328

  Kyffen, John, 75

  Lahore, 61, 294, 426, 484, 485

  Noakhali Day in, 469

  strike in, 428

  Lake, Gen. Gerard, 173

  Lakshmibhai, Rani, 233, 239

  Lal, Munnoo, 276

  Lari, Z. H., 472–3

  Lashkari, Bechardas, 357

  law, 140–45, 194–200, 219–317 passim

  codification, 299–302

  Indianisation of legal profession, 309–10

  Law, Jean, 97

  Lawrence, Sir Henry, 226, 227

  Lechmere-Oertel, Frederick, 319–20

  Lee Commission, 422–3

  Lindsay, Hugh, 218

  Linlithgow Commission, 423

  Linlithgow, Lord, 452, 453

  Lion beer, 392

  Lloyd George, David, 416

  on India’s ‘steel frame’, 8, 416

  Long, Breckenbridge, 453

  Long, James, 339

  The Lost Dominion (Carthill), 421–2

  Lucknow, 61, 226, 227, 243, 247, 248, 255

  Lutyens, Edwin, 5

  Lytton, Lord, 7, 310, 333

  Macaulay, Thomas, 155, 209–11, 258

  and new laws for India, 213–15

  Mackintosh, Lt, 59

  Macmillan, Harold, 495, 501

  Madras, 33, 89, 136, 208, 294, 375

  associations formed in, 332

  Company fortifications in, 64

  Cotton hired in, 273

  and famine, 283 (see also India: famines in)

  fear of Japanese occupation in, 448

  French occupation of, 86

  graves in, 2

  and railways, 282

  reduced revenues in, 419

  registrations in, 303

  trading importance of, 65

  Madras Irrigation Company, 290

  Madras Native Association, 332, 333

  Maghi, Trimbakji, 67

  Maharashtra, 14

  Maharatna, Arup, 347

  Mahatmas, 362

  Mahmood, Sayyid, 307–9, 313–15, 317, 379

  death of, 317

  Mahmud Khan, 251–2, 253

  Maine, Sir Henry Sumner, 300–1, 302, 307

  Majidpur, 62

  Malcolm, Sir John, 163, 172, 177, 179, 184, 185, 193, 196–8 passim, 203–4, 205, 216

  death of, 211

  Malheiros, Ignatius, 75, 77

  Mangalore, 160, 359, 369, 386

  Gandhi visits, 410

  Manjeshwar, 158–9, 160, 192

  Mansergh, Nicholas, 470

  mapping, 221, 222

  Marathas:

  almost extinguished, 22

  Arcot raided over five years by, 86

  beginnings of, 20

  British compared with, 98

  British paranoia concerning, 170, 171

  civil war among, 58, 59, 60

  Clive supported by, 88

  councils of, 204

  and ‘doctrine of lapse’, 233

  establishment of stable regime of, 58

  fragmentation of regime of, 170

  influence extended by, 90

  invading armies of, 85

  Mughal-style statecraft adopted by, 91

  Mughals compared to, 20–1

  Ranade’s essay on, 294

  rebirth of regime of, 60

  rebuilt state of, 58

  revenues claimed by, 85–6, 90

  sea power of, 66

  small towns and villages plundered by, 91

  stable Mughal relationship
with, 66

  suggested federation of, 179

  and war finances, 177

  and wars with British, see Anglo-Maratha wars

  Wellington’s seek-and-destroy mission against, 173–4

  Marshall, P. J., 92

  Martin, Montgomery, 229–30

  Mary II, 51

  Massie, William, 145

  Matthews, Commodore Thomas, 71, 80

  Meerut, 227, 240, 241–2, 255

  Menon, Dilip, 73

  Menon, V. K. Krishna, 465

  Metcalfe, Sir Charles, 163, 169, 190, 203–4

  Midnapur, 107

  migration, 15, 308, 318, 474–76

  Mildmay, William, 69–70, 80

  Mill, James, 201, 202–3, 210–11, 274

  Mill, John Stuart, 128, 286–8

  Milner, Viscount, 388

  Mitra, Dinabandhu, 339

  Mody, Sir Homi, 433

  Moira, Earl of, 179

  Montagu, Edwin, 394, 401–2, 404, 417, 422

  inquiry into reforms of, 423–4

  Montgomery, Henry, 271

  Mookerjee, Shyama Prasad, 469

  Moplah rebellion, 412, 413

  Morley, John, 388

  Mountbatten, Lord Louis, 4, 471, 475–6

  Mudeliar, Sabapathy, 331–2, 338

  Mudiman Commission, 423

  Mughal state, 15–22

  English East India Company seeks favour of, 28–9

  and capital–government relationship, 61–2

  Company wishes to pursue war against, 46–7

  and decade of war (1690s), 53

  declining capitals of, 61

  gifts exchanged between rulers and subjects of, 19

  Mahmood criticizes, 307

  Marathas’ challenge to, 20–2

  and Nader, see Nader Shah

  and Persian invasion, 83

  and rebellion of 1857–8, see Indian Rebellion

  reconfiguration of, 60–1

  restoration of, 246–7

  shrinking scope of power of, 82

  as skilled, elite class, 17

  stable Maratha relationship with, 66

  Muhammad Ali Khan, 87, 88–9, 95

  Muhammad Shah, 84, 90

  Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental College, 317

  Mukerjee, Ashutosh, 382

  Muliyar, Sabapathy, 323, 325

  Mumbai (formerly Bombay, q.v.), 484

  municipal corporations, 309

  as nationalist stronghold, 420

  Munro, Lt Col. Thomas, 159–61, 163, 166–9, 170, 172, 188, 326

  Murshid Quli Khan, 62–3, 92

  Murshidabad, 61, 63, 99, 103, 108, 150, 370

  burned-down capital of, 90

  Muslim League, 426, 444, 458, 462–3

  catastrophic election result for, 446

  Congress’s meeting with, 401

  Congress’s ‘parting of the ways’ with, 426

  and Direct Action Day, 467

  and partition, 472

  poor election showing of, 462

  rival to Congress envisaged by, 446

  and ‘tyranny of the Hindu majority’, 463

  war cabinet joined by, 452

  Muslims:

  called to oppose British power, 367

  and Darul Uloom, 368, 369

 

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