The Chaos of Empire

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The Chaos of Empire Page 64

by Jon Wilson


  Delhi abandons responsibility for, 476

  ‘fanaticism’ perceived in, 294

  fatawa issued by, 369

  and food, 244

  and Hindus, and de facto partition, 445

  and Hindus, and survival in Bengal, 458

  jihad against Japanese declared by, 452

  and khilafah, 407

  and Moplah rebellion, 412, 413

  and Mughal rule, 17

  Nehru’s fear of alienating, 445

  and pan-Islamism, 367

  religion’s focus for assertion of autonomy among, 367

  religiously rooted laws of, 214

  roots of, in India, 13

  and Shia–Sunni conflict, 462

  Sufis, 249–50

  and war with Hindus, 252–3

  Mysore, 88, 118, 158, 164–5, 176, 195, 203, 479

  expensive wars between British and, 159

  Haidar’s coup in, 164

  handed back, 170

  and toy tiger, 164, 165

  Nader Shah, 82–4, 91, 96, 102, 251

  Nadia, 92

  Nagpur, 173, 174, 319, 410

  Nairs, 13

  Najibabad, 251

  Nana Sahib, 233, 243

  Nana, Sannat, 259

  Naoroji, Dadabhai, 335–7, 349, 355

  Napier, Sir Charles, 499

  Narayan, Jayaprakash, 407–8

  Nehru, Gangadhar, 256

  Nehru, Jawaharlal, 408, 424, 438–42, 459–60, 471–2, 478

  and army nationalization, 465

  diplomatic relations established by, 465

  and Gandhi, 438

  new constitution condemned by, 439

  Parliament speech of, 438–40

  pre-prime-ministerial role of, 464

  prison sentence of, 438

  Nehru, Kamala, 438

  Nehru, Motilal, 424

  Neill, Brig. Gen. James, 260

  Netherlands, as challenge to Portugal, 24

  Nethersole, Michael, 422

  New Delhi, 387–8, 479, 503 (see also Delhi)

  foundation of, 387–8, 503

  Viceroy’s Palace in, 5

  Nicholson, John, 255, 256

  Non-cooperation campaign, 407–15, 426, 436

  Gandhi suspends, 413, 414

  government’s depiction of, 412

  and officials’ resignations, 411

  and renunciation of titles, 410

  and withholding of taxes, 410

  Normam, Sir Montagu, 433

  north Indian rebellion, 3

  North, Lord, 129–30

  Norton, John, 299

  Ochterlony, Sir David, 180, 181

  O’Dwyer, Sir Michael, 401, 422

  Oldfield, John, 314

  On Liberty (Mill), 287–8

  opium, 148, 208, 216, 219

  Opium Wars, 219, 390

  Orissa, 91, 174

  Orme, Robert, 90, 94

  Orr, J.W., 493

  Ottoman Empire, 23, 32, 393, 407

  Pabna, uprising in, 339

  Pakistan:

  authoritarian rule in, 486–7

  economy of, 488

  enclaves of well-defended prosperity in, 485

  first war between India and, 431, 482

  Jinnah believes in creation of, 463

  migration between India and, 318

  Muslims march to support creation of, 467

  and partition, see under India

  public/civil servants remain in, post-independence, 492

  Pal, Bipin Chandra, 375, 376, 379

  Palmer, John, 154–5

  Palmerston, Lord, 261

  Pandey, Gyan, 476

  Panikkar, K. M., 73, 472

  Paniotty brothers, 145, 146

  Panipat, Battles of, 15, 109, 170

  Panni, Da’ud Khan, 64

  Pant, Govind Ballabh, 444–5

  Parameshwar Das, 39–40

  and Hedges, 40–1

  ‘villainous tricks’ of, 43

  Partition, 431, 446–7, 471–6, 478 (see also Pakistan)

  announcement of, 473

  Congress accepts, 471–2

  de facto (1937), 445

  violence prior to, 431, 473–6

  Patel, Vallabhbhai, 461, 466–7, 469, 472, 482, 501

  Paterson, J. D., 143

  Patha, Gopal, 468

  Patna, 99, 103–4

  Pazhassi Varma, 166

  Pearkes, Paul, 104, 105

  Pearl Harbor, 453

  Pearson, Michael, 24

  peasant protest, 20, 78, 124, 149–51, 242–43, 338–44, 407–11, 419, 438, 472

  People’s Association of Allahabad, 332

  Pethick-Lawrence, Lord, 471

  Phadke, Vasudev Balwant, 295–6, 298–9, 307

  photography (see also film):

  and Delhi Durbar, 372

  and famine, 319–20

  Pillai, Ananda Ranga, 84

  pilgrimage, 192, 193–4

  Pindaris, 180, 183, 184–5

  Pitt, Thomas, 28–9, 38, 43, 44

  and customs and taxes, 40

  Pitt, William, 117, 161, 176

  Plassey, Battle of, see Siraj-ad-Daula: plot to oust

  Polavaram, 123–7

  Poligar wars, 166

  Pollexfen, Henry, 34–5

  Pondicherry, 64, 86

  Portuguese:

  Angre’s war with, 59

  and Chittagong, 45

  and India’s seaborne trade, 23

  sea power of, 23–4

  ‘white and very beautiful people’, 22

  Post Office, 221, 223, 289

  Potter, David, 400

  Pouchedepass, Jacques, 403

  Powell, Enoch, 496–8, 499, 500

  Prasad, Beni, 430, 431, 474

  Prasad, Rajendra, 408

  Prinsep, H. T., 182, 185, 220

  propaganda, British wartime, 455

  public works, 215, 266–92 passim

  barracks, 288, 289

  canals and irrigation, 268, 270–4, 275–6, 277, 288, 289–90, 291–2, 419

  dams, 268, 292

  department of, 274

  and engineering class, 276

  expansion of, 290

  and famine, 270

  Government of India classifies, 289

  hydro-electric projects, 419

  increased funding for, 270, 274

  railways, 266–9, 274, 275, 278–86, 288–90, 292, 320, 326, 336

  roads, 215, 268, 274, 288, 320

  telegraph, 268

  Public Works Administration, 3

  Public Works in India (Cotton), 274, 275

  Pune, 61, 66, 171, 172, 177, 180, 188, 194, 196–7, 295, 298, 333–4, 485

  cholera in, 334

  plague in, 345

  and religion, 366–7

  Pune Sarvajanik Sabha, 294, 295, 296, 299, 332, 334, 335, 341–2, 344–6

  British cease to recognize, 344

  Punjab, 12, 232, 233–4, 240, 254, 291–2, 455, 479 (see also Sikhs)

  becomes British province, 234

  cloth boycott in, 435

  disorder in, 401, 406

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

  Gandhi visits, 406

  ‘newly emerging frontier’, 361

  and partition, 472

  violence prior to, 473–4

  and self-reliance, 360

  student walkouts in, 427

  Punjab Boundary Force, 476

  Punjab National Bank, 363–4, 383

  Qasin, Mir, 107–8

  Qidwai, Begum Anees, 476

  Quit India movement, 450, 451

  Raghunath, Moro, 194, 196–9, 206

  Rai, Lajpat, 362–3, 364–6, 375, 399, 402, 411–12, 426–8

  death of, 428, 434

  Raj, see British Raj

  Rajahmundry, 123, 125–6, 127, 135, 147, 271, 375, 386

  Rajasthan, 12, 174, 178, 182, 482

  Rajshahi, Rani of, 19

  Ramji, Manmohandas, 351<
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  Ramsay, Allan, 119

  Ranade, Mahadev Govind, 294–5

  Rand, W. C., 345

  Rangpur, 150–2

  Rao, Daulat, 183, 184

  Rao, Kolachalam Srinivasa, 322

  Rao, Murari, 88

  Rao, Nanjangud Subba, 442–3

  Rao, Peshwa Baji II, 179–80

  Rao, Peshwa Balaji, 88

  Rao, Peshwa Madhav, 171

  Rao, Raja Gangadhar, 233

  Rao, Yashwant, 174, 177, 184

  Ray, Prafulla Chandra, 383

  Raz, Ram, 206

  Rebellion of 1857-8

  Agra, 243, 255

  beginnings of, 226–7

  Calcutta, 253–4

  civilians join, 241

  commentators on cause of, 229, 232, 238–9

  Delhi, 227, 241, 248, 255–7, 258

  early explanations for, 227–8

  and eating preferences, 244

  first Indian account of, 238

  ‘illusion of permanence’ created by, 264

  as insurgency against Company power, 228–9

  Kanpur, 243

  Lucknow, 226, 227, 243, 248

  Meerut, 227, 240, 241–2

  Muttra, 243

  and people’s lack of voice, 246

  and plurality, 244

  and public works, 285 (see also India: public works in)

  and reconquest, 257–62

  and conciliation, 262–5

  Delhi, 258–9

  desire for vengeance during, 258

  Zafar’s support for, 242–3

  Reddy, Mangapati Devi, 124–6, 127, 147

  Reflections on the Revolution in France (Burke), 132

  Reform Act (1832), 194

  Religious revivalism, 366–7 (see also Hindus; Muslims)

  Revenue collection, 89, 109, 110–12, 123, 143, 271, 417, 274, 415, 417–18, 419 (see also diwani)

  intensification of, 231

  raiyatwar system, 168, 169–70

  via stamped documents, 223–5

  Revolution, year of, 407–8

  Ripon, Lord, 311, 313, 333

  Risley, Herbert, 373

  Roorkee, 276–7, 320

  Roosevelt, Franklin D., 453

  Roy, Rammohan, 142, 153–7, 206, 229, 363, 381

  Royal Indian Naval mutiny, 460–1

  Russian Revolution, 403

  Sa’adat Pattan, 64

  Sa’adatullah Khan, 63–5

  Saheb, Chanda, 86–8

  Sakarlal, Ambalal, 357

  Salimullah, 63

  Salimullah Khan, Khwaja, 374

  Salt laws, 435

  saltpetre, 26, 39, 43, 46, 104

  Sambrooke, Jeremy, 38

  Sandys, Thomas, 34–5, 38, 132

  Santipur, 381

  Sarkar, Sumit, 380

  Satara, 233

  Satara, Raja of, 197, 233

  Sathe, Achyut Sitaram, 342, 343, 344

  Savanur, 62

  Savile, Sir George, 129

  scientific infrastructure, 454

  Seal, Anil, 309

  Secunderabad, 484

  Seeley, Sir John R., 297, 307–8

  Setalvad, C. H., 395

  Shahjahanabad, 387

  Shahu, 58, 59, 66

  Shaista Khan, 21, 27–8, 42, 44

  Heath’s threatening letters to, 47

  and Hedges, 28–9, 41–2

  replacement for, 52

  weavers’ dispute comes before, 39

  Shinde, Mahadji, 170, 171, 173, 174, 175, 181

  Shivaji, 20–1, 27, 50, 233, 345

  Shore, John, 114

  Shuja ud-din, 90

  Sikhs, 234, 361, 394, 409 (see also Punjab)

  Simon Commission, 423–4, 426, 434

  protests against, 428

  Simon, Sir John, 423

  Sindh, 84, 232

  Singapore, 448, 451

  Singh, Maharaja Ranjit, 233

  Singh, Umed, 259

  Singha, Radhika, 186

  Siraj-ad-Daula, 78, 92–3, 94, 95, 97–101, 388

  Calcutta occupied by, 78, 93

  Clive’s letter to, 98

  killed, 103

  peace treaty signed by, 96

  plot to oust, 99–102

  and victory for British, 102

  Sircar, Nalinbihari, 376

  Sleeman, William, 185, 236

  Smiles, Samuel, 255, 256

  Smythe, Thomas, 32

  Spear, Percival, 102

  Spence, William, 209

  spices, 12, 22, 23, 32, 33, 73, 74, 75

  Sriringapatam, 164–5

  Star of India order, 263

  Steam vessels, 215, 216–20

  Steel, 383–6, 434, 487

  Steer, Valentia, 371

  Stephen, James FitzJames, 300–2, 307, 311

  Stephenson, Rowland, 280, 282

  Stern, Philip J., 31

  Stevens, Frederick, 5

  Stokes, Eric, 186–7, 200, 203, 242

  Strachan, Hew, 390

  Strachey, Edward, 170

  Strachey family, 7

  Strachey, Sir John, 297, 307

  Strachey, Lytton, 7–8

  Suez Canal, 289–90

  Sullivan, Robert, 211

  Surat, 48

  surveillance, 304

  Sutanati, 46, 52

  Swadeshi movement, 358–9, 378, 379, 380–3 passim, 410

  Swadeshi Steamship Company, 383

  swaraj (self-mastery), 377–8, 404, 412

  Sylhet, 105

  Tagore, Darpanarayan, 152

  Tagore, Dwarkanath, 154, 229, 279

  Tagore, Sir Jotindra Mohun, 311

  Tagore, Prosanna Kumar, 152

  Tagore, Rabindranath, 154, 359, 380, 410

  Tancred (Disraeli), 6–7

  Tanjore, 88

  Tarabai, 58

  Tata, Dorabji, 384–5, 487

  Tata, Jamsetji, 384

  Tata Steel, 383–5

  Taylor, Miles, 262

  Telang, K. T., 337

  Temple, Sir Richard, 296–7, 299, 319, 329, 330

  textiles, 12, 20, 24, 26, 32, 33, 39, 43, 62, 123, 208, 280, 321, 323–5, 336, 390, 433, 492

  and American Civil War, 325, 355

  imports of, 321, 323–4, 325–6

  and population growth, 349, 352–3

  prices paid to weavers for, 39

  and steam power, 323

  Thackeray, St John, 188–9

  Thackeray, Thomas, 127

  Thomas, James, 138–9

  Thomas, Julia, 138–9

  Thompson, George, 281

  Tilak, Bal Gangadhar, 7, 298–9, 341

  jailed, 344, 345

  Timur, 15

  Tipu Sultan, 158–9, 164, 167, 168

  Tirhoot, 253

  Tonk, 177, 182, 195, 249, 482

  Travancore, 73, 79, 473, 482

  Travers, Robert, 112

  Tredwell, Alice, 284–5

  Tredwell, Solomon, 284

  Trichinopoly, 87, 88, 89

  United Nations, 465

  United Provinces, 416, 418, 450

  Congress government in, 444, 445

  United States (see also American Civil War):

  and Indian infrastructure, 454

  WW1 entered by, 402

  WW2 entered by, 453

  University of Punjab, 412

  Universities, 381–2, 411, 412

  untouchables, 443

  utilitarianism, 200–2, 203–4, 210

  Uzbekistan, 15

  Vanjamutta, 75, 76, 77

  Venkatachar, C. S., 415–16, 417, 420, 421, 436

  Verelst, Henry, 113

  Victoria, Queen, 237, 262–3, 264, 501, 503

  declared Empress of India, 293

  memorial to, 388

  Vincent, Mathew, 38

  Vishwanath, Balaji, 59–60, 61, 66, 88

  death of, 71

  Wagner, Kim, 240

  Wajid Ali Shah, 235–6, 237, 254

  Wakefield,
Edward, 494

  Waliullah, Syed, 479–80

  Wallis, John, 74, 75, 78

  Washbrook, David, 231

  Watson, Adm. James, 94, 96, 100

  Watts, William, 99

  Waugh, Edwin, 335

  Wavell, Lord Archibald, 453, 455–6, 458, 463–4, 466–7, 470–1

  Wellesley, Arthur, see Wellington, Duke of

  Wellesley, Richard, 1st Marquess, 161–4, 171, 175–6

  quits, 176

  Wellington, Duke of (Arthur Wellesley), 25, 161, 162–3, 165, 171, 172, 173, 176, 262

  and Amir Khan, 177

  seek-and-destroy mission of, 173–4

  Western Ghats, 11, 23, 24, 73, 266, 267

  Westminster Hall, 34

  White, Adam, 185

  William III (of Orange), 46–51

  William IV, 155

  Williams, Rushbrook, 412, 413

  Wilson, Horace Hayman, 190

  Wilson, Woodrow, 402

  Wodeyar, Sir Krishnaraja, 385

  Wood, Charles, 325

  Wordsworth, James, 143

  World War One, 8, 353, 393, 398–401, 402–3, 491

  British Empire expanded as result of, 402–3

  declared, 398

  money and matériel supplied by India to, 399

  restrictions extended in India during, 393

  US joins, 402

  World War Two, 353, 430, 431, 447–60 passim, 479, 490, 491

  division accelerated by, 447

  and Gandhi’s rage against British, 449–50

  US joins, 453–4

  Zafar, Bahadur Shah, Emperor, 227, 242–3, 248–9, 250, 258–9

  exiled, 259

  surrender of, 257

  JON WILSON was educated at Oxford University and the New School for Social Research in New York, and has taught history at King’s College London since 1999. He directs Historians in Residence and also comments in a range of media on contemporary British and South Asian politics and government.

  Photo by Farhad Chowdhury

  PublicAffairs is a publishing house founded in 1997. It is a tribute to the standards, values, and flair of three persons who have served as mentors to countless reporters, writers, editors, and book people of all kinds, including me.

  I. F. STONE, proprietor of I. F. Stone’s Weekly, combined a commitment to the First Amendment with entrepreneurial zeal and reporting skill and became one of the great independent journalists in American history. At the age of eighty, Izzy published The Trial of Socrates, which was a national bestseller. He wrote the book after he taught himself ancient Greek.

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