Page 1
MAHARASHTRA ON THE EVE OF 1848
INTRODUCTION
Maharashtra was a part and parcel of erstwhile Bombay
state along with Gujarat. It was popularly known as Bombay
Presidency, which was created by the British when they became
undisputed power of the Western part of India. Maharashtra came
into existence on 1
st
May1960, as a separate state on the linguistic
basis. It has Gujarat to its northern side, Madhya Pradesh to its
north east and eastern borders, Goa and Karnataka are on its
southern side whereas the Arabian Sea is nestled in the Western
border. Maharashtra covers almost 3, 06,059 square Kilometers
area of the country.
In Maharashtra the Maratha community is dominant, which is
the direct result of the Aryan penetration from the north east and
the north. It subsequently mixed with the strong local population
and absorbed local words and expressions into their language. V.
MAHARASHTRA ON THE EVE OF 1848
Page 2
MAHARASHTRA ON THE EVE OF 1848
INTRODUCTION
Maharashtra was a part and parcel of erstwhile Bombay
state along with Gujarat. It was popularly known as Bombay
Presidency, which was created by the British when they became
undisputed power of the Western part of India. Maharashtra came
into existence on 1
st
May1960, as a separate state on the linguistic
basis. It has Gujarat to its northern side, Madhya Pradesh to its
north east and eastern borders, Goa and Karnataka are on its
southern side whereas the Arabian Sea is nestled in the Western
border. Maharashtra covers almost 3, 06,059 square Kilometers
area of the country.
In Maharashtra the Maratha community is dominant, which is
the direct result of the Aryan penetration from the north east and
the north. It subsequently mixed with the strong local population
and absorbed local words and expressions into their language. V.
MAHARASHTRA ON THE EVE OF 1848
P. Dandekar says that Aryans advanced towards the great forest,
which came to be known as Mahakantara or Dandakaranya in the
seventh century B.C. during the third century B. C. there were the
small kingdoms of Bhild, Katkaries Thakurs, Kolis and Nagas who
were the aboriginals of Maharashtra. It means the Dravidians were,
the inhabitants of Maharashtra before the advent of the Aryans.
Maharashtra was a part and parcel of the Mauryan empire during
the period of 321 B. C. and 184 B. C. in which the Buddhism and
Jainism rooted herein, which is clear from the Damal (1095 A. D)
and Miraj (1110 A. D) inscriptions. These cave inscriptions show
that the several sections in the society in Maharashtra were
devotees of Buddhism and Jainism.
P. V. Kane says that Maharashtra is called after the name of
the great track of forest land Mahakantara during the period of
Satvahana in 200 B. C. He derived the word Maharashtra from
MAHAN RASTRA means a great nation. Historian R. G.
Bhandarkar derived the word Maharashtra from the people
RASTRAIKAS or RATTAS. Marathi, the language spoken in
Maharashtra belongs to the group of languages derived from
Sanskrit language, which was spoken language but it was ceased
and Prakrit became the language of people during the 5th century
B. C. The Prakrit dialect of Maharashtra was Maharastri in use for
many centuries and finally it became a distinct and established
Marathi language in the 8
th
century A. D. R. G. Harse says that
there are some epigraphical records in connection with the Marathi
language but they are of later age as one them is Sravan Belgola
the inscription of Camundaraja, The Prime Minister of Ganga King
of 983 A. D. The second reference is of Marathi song in the popular
work Manasollasa or Abhilasitarthacintamani of Someshwara III,
which was written in 1130 A. D.
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF MAHARASHTRA
The early political history of Maharashtra is traced from the
4
th
century B. C. There is Mora port on the Karanja Island near
Mumbai. It is named after the Mauryan suzerainty over the area.
After the decline of Mauryan Empire, the Satavahanas came to
power in Deccan, that ruled Maharashtra from Pratisthana, the
present Paithan a Tahsil Headquarter in Aurangabad district, which
came to an end in the year 218. The Traikutakas came to power in
Maharashtra and ruled some of the parts like vidarbha from 250
onwards. After the decline of Traikutkas, the Vakatakas controlled
whole Maharashtra. Subsequently, the Kalacuris and the
Chalukyas came to power respectively and ruled Maharashtra up to
1180 A. D. from Badami as their capital, which is in the present
state of Karnataka. Dantidurga the first King of Chalakya dynasty
conquered the whole Deccan. Krishna, the successor of Dantidurga
Page 3
MAHARASHTRA ON THE EVE OF 1848
INTRODUCTION
Maharashtra was a part and parcel of erstwhile Bombay
state along with Gujarat. It was popularly known as Bombay
Presidency, which was created by the British when they became
undisputed power of the Western part of India. Maharashtra came
into existence on 1
st
May1960, as a separate state on the linguistic
basis. It has Gujarat to its northern side, Madhya Pradesh to its
north east and eastern borders, Goa and Karnataka are on its
southern side whereas the Arabian Sea is nestled in the Western
border. Maharashtra covers almost 3, 06,059 square Kilometers
area of the country.
In Maharashtra the Maratha community is dominant, which is
the direct result of the Aryan penetration from the north east and
the north. It subsequently mixed with the strong local population
and absorbed local words and expressions into their language. V.
MAHARASHTRA ON THE EVE OF 1848
P. Dandekar says that Aryans advanced towards the great forest,
which came to be known as Mahakantara or Dandakaranya in the
seventh century B.C. during the third century B. C. there were the
small kingdoms of Bhild, Katkaries Thakurs, Kolis and Nagas who
were the aboriginals of Maharashtra. It means the Dravidians were,
the inhabitants of Maharashtra before the advent of the Aryans.
Maharashtra was a part and parcel of the Mauryan empire during
the period of 321 B. C. and 184 B. C. in which the Buddhism and
Jainism rooted herein, which is clear from the Damal (1095 A. D)
and Miraj (1110 A. D) inscriptions. These cave inscriptions show
that the several sections in the society in Maharashtra were
devotees of Buddhism and Jainism.
P. V. Kane says that Maharashtra is called after the name of
the great track of forest land Mahakantara during the period of
Satvahana in 200 B. C. He derived the word Maharashtra from
MAHAN RASTRA means a great nation. Historian R. G.
Bhandarkar derived the word Maharashtra from the people
RASTRAIKAS or RATTAS. Marathi, the language spoken in
Maharashtra belongs to the group of languages derived from
Sanskrit language, which was spoken language but it was ceased
and Prakrit became the language of people during the 5th century
B. C. The Prakrit dialect of Maharashtra was Maharastri in use for
many centuries and finally it became a distinct and established
Marathi language in the 8
th
century A. D. R. G. Harse says that
there are some epigraphical records in connection with the Marathi
language but they are of later age as one them is Sravan Belgola
the inscription of Camundaraja, The Prime Minister of Ganga King
of 983 A. D. The second reference is of Marathi song in the popular
work Manasollasa or Abhilasitarthacintamani of Someshwara III,
which was written in 1130 A. D.
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF MAHARASHTRA
The early political history of Maharashtra is traced from the
4
th
century B. C. There is Mora port on the Karanja Island near
Mumbai. It is named after the Mauryan suzerainty over the area.
After the decline of Mauryan Empire, the Satavahanas came to
power in Deccan, that ruled Maharashtra from Pratisthana, the
present Paithan a Tahsil Headquarter in Aurangabad district, which
came to an end in the year 218. The Traikutakas came to power in
Maharashtra and ruled some of the parts like vidarbha from 250
onwards. After the decline of Traikutkas, the Vakatakas controlled
whole Maharashtra. Subsequently, the Kalacuris and the
Chalukyas came to power respectively and ruled Maharashtra up to
1180 A. D. from Badami as their capital, which is in the present
state of Karnataka. Dantidurga the first King of Chalakya dynasty
conquered the whole Deccan. Krishna, the successor of Dantidurga
extended the borders of Maharashtra to the Vindya Mountains in
the north to Canjeevaram in the sourth. As the Vakatakas carved
the beautiful cave no. 16, 17 and 19 at the Ajanta caves during their
period, the Chalukya King Krishna built the beautiful Kaitas temple
at the Ellora caves.
In the 12
th
century A. D. the Chalukyan Empire was divided
into the three dynasties as the Yadavas, the Hoysalas and the
Kakatiyas. The Yadavas ruled from Devgiri i.e. Daulatabad a
Taluka Headquarter in present Aurangabad District. The Hoysalas
from the area of present Karnataka and the Kakatiyas ruled
Talangana, which is one of the important divisions of todays Andra
Pradesh. In the last decade of the Thirteenth Century, Ala-uddin
Khilji reached Devgiri and recovered huge indemnity from the
Devgiri ruler, which made Devgiri a vassal state. The other Maratha
warriors, who did not submit to the Muslim, were driven towards
Maval, the eastern ranges of Sahyadri. In the second half of the
fifteenth century, the Muslim rulers of Deccan became tolerant
towards the Hindus. As the result the Maratha chieftains began to
accept services under such Muslim rulers and received attractive
rewards for their bravery.
In the Seventeenth Century, the Maratha in Maval, Konkan,
Karad, Pune and Ahmednager regions got independence under the
leadership of Chhatrapati Shivaji, a great military and political
genius, who crowned himself as the Maratha King in 1674. V. S.
Bendrey says that Chhatrapati Shivaji infused national spirit in the
Maratha people, which led them to protect themselves from the
foreign aggression and save their culture and religion from such
onslaughts. Chhatrapati Shivaji was a great visionary for which his
whole regime was the most important evidence. After the death of
Chhatrapati Shivaji, the brutal policies of Aurangjeb forced the
Marathas to declare the Maratha war of independence, which led to
concentrate the Maratha power in the hands of Peshwas who
resided at Pune and increased the Maratha power day after day
throughout the country. In the middle of the eighteenth century, the
several Maratha nobles established themselves firmly at Baroda,
Indore, Gwalior, Nagpur and many other places. They also tried to
establish the Maratha confedency at Delhi as the sovereign power
of India in place of the Mughal but the Battle of 1761 brought out a
complete disaster for them. The Marathas tried to recover
themselves under the leadership of Madhavrao but could not
receive their former prestige. It was festered with the internal
disunity and finally it submitted to the British in 1818.
The Britishy East India Company had already come to India
for trade, regarding which the charter was sanctioned by the British
Queen Elizabeth on 31
st
December, 1600. It established their first
trading centre at Surat in 1613. The British got Bombay in 1661 as
Page 4
MAHARASHTRA ON THE EVE OF 1848
INTRODUCTION
Maharashtra was a part and parcel of erstwhile Bombay
state along with Gujarat. It was popularly known as Bombay
Presidency, which was created by the British when they became
undisputed power of the Western part of India. Maharashtra came
into existence on 1
st
May1960, as a separate state on the linguistic
basis. It has Gujarat to its northern side, Madhya Pradesh to its
north east and eastern borders, Goa and Karnataka are on its
southern side whereas the Arabian Sea is nestled in the Western
border. Maharashtra covers almost 3, 06,059 square Kilometers
area of the country.
In Maharashtra the Maratha community is dominant, which is
the direct result of the Aryan penetration from the north east and
the north. It subsequently mixed with the strong local population
and absorbed local words and expressions into their language. V.
MAHARASHTRA ON THE EVE OF 1848
P. Dandekar says that Aryans advanced towards the great forest,
which came to be known as Mahakantara or Dandakaranya in the
seventh century B.C. during the third century B. C. there were the
small kingdoms of Bhild, Katkaries Thakurs, Kolis and Nagas who
were the aboriginals of Maharashtra. It means the Dravidians were,
the inhabitants of Maharashtra before the advent of the Aryans.
Maharashtra was a part and parcel of the Mauryan empire during
the period of 321 B. C. and 184 B. C. in which the Buddhism and
Jainism rooted herein, which is clear from the Damal (1095 A. D)
and Miraj (1110 A. D) inscriptions. These cave inscriptions show
that the several sections in the society in Maharashtra were
devotees of Buddhism and Jainism.
P. V. Kane says that Maharashtra is called after the name of
the great track of forest land Mahakantara during the period of
Satvahana in 200 B. C. He derived the word Maharashtra from
MAHAN RASTRA means a great nation. Historian R. G.
Bhandarkar derived the word Maharashtra from the people
RASTRAIKAS or RATTAS. Marathi, the language spoken in
Maharashtra belongs to the group of languages derived from
Sanskrit language, which was spoken language but it was ceased
and Prakrit became the language of people during the 5th century
B. C. The Prakrit dialect of Maharashtra was Maharastri in use for
many centuries and finally it became a distinct and established
Marathi language in the 8
th
century A. D. R. G. Harse says that
there are some epigraphical records in connection with the Marathi
language but they are of later age as one them is Sravan Belgola
the inscription of Camundaraja, The Prime Minister of Ganga King
of 983 A. D. The second reference is of Marathi song in the popular
work Manasollasa or Abhilasitarthacintamani of Someshwara III,
which was written in 1130 A. D.
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF MAHARASHTRA
The early political history of Maharashtra is traced from the
4
th
century B. C. There is Mora port on the Karanja Island near
Mumbai. It is named after the Mauryan suzerainty over the area.
After the decline of Mauryan Empire, the Satavahanas came to
power in Deccan, that ruled Maharashtra from Pratisthana, the
present Paithan a Tahsil Headquarter in Aurangabad district, which
came to an end in the year 218. The Traikutakas came to power in
Maharashtra and ruled some of the parts like vidarbha from 250
onwards. After the decline of Traikutkas, the Vakatakas controlled
whole Maharashtra. Subsequently, the Kalacuris and the
Chalukyas came to power respectively and ruled Maharashtra up to
1180 A. D. from Badami as their capital, which is in the present
state of Karnataka. Dantidurga the first King of Chalakya dynasty
conquered the whole Deccan. Krishna, the successor of Dantidurga
extended the borders of Maharashtra to the Vindya Mountains in
the north to Canjeevaram in the sourth. As the Vakatakas carved
the beautiful cave no. 16, 17 and 19 at the Ajanta caves during their
period, the Chalukya King Krishna built the beautiful Kaitas temple
at the Ellora caves.
In the 12
th
century A. D. the Chalukyan Empire was divided
into the three dynasties as the Yadavas, the Hoysalas and the
Kakatiyas. The Yadavas ruled from Devgiri i.e. Daulatabad a
Taluka Headquarter in present Aurangabad District. The Hoysalas
from the area of present Karnataka and the Kakatiyas ruled
Talangana, which is one of the important divisions of todays Andra
Pradesh. In the last decade of the Thirteenth Century, Ala-uddin
Khilji reached Devgiri and recovered huge indemnity from the
Devgiri ruler, which made Devgiri a vassal state. The other Maratha
warriors, who did not submit to the Muslim, were driven towards
Maval, the eastern ranges of Sahyadri. In the second half of the
fifteenth century, the Muslim rulers of Deccan became tolerant
towards the Hindus. As the result the Maratha chieftains began to
accept services under such Muslim rulers and received attractive
rewards for their bravery.
In the Seventeenth Century, the Maratha in Maval, Konkan,
Karad, Pune and Ahmednager regions got independence under the
leadership of Chhatrapati Shivaji, a great military and political
genius, who crowned himself as the Maratha King in 1674. V. S.
Bendrey says that Chhatrapati Shivaji infused national spirit in the
Maratha people, which led them to protect themselves from the
foreign aggression and save their culture and religion from such
onslaughts. Chhatrapati Shivaji was a great visionary for which his
whole regime was the most important evidence. After the death of
Chhatrapati Shivaji, the brutal policies of Aurangjeb forced the
Marathas to declare the Maratha war of independence, which led to
concentrate the Maratha power in the hands of Peshwas who
resided at Pune and increased the Maratha power day after day
throughout the country. In the middle of the eighteenth century, the
several Maratha nobles established themselves firmly at Baroda,
Indore, Gwalior, Nagpur and many other places. They also tried to
establish the Maratha confedency at Delhi as the sovereign power
of India in place of the Mughal but the Battle of 1761 brought out a
complete disaster for them. The Marathas tried to recover
themselves under the leadership of Madhavrao but could not
receive their former prestige. It was festered with the internal
disunity and finally it submitted to the British in 1818.
The Britishy East India Company had already come to India
for trade, regarding which the charter was sanctioned by the British
Queen Elizabeth on 31
st
December, 1600. It established their first
trading centre at Surat in 1613. The British got Bombay in 1661 as
a part of the dowry of Catherine of Bragnza, who married Charles
II, the British King. He rented Bombay to the East India Company
for 10. The company shifted it’s headquarter in Western India from
Surat to Bombay in 1687. They converted Bombay, Calcutta and
Madras from trading centers to the centers of political and military
operations.
Lord Wellesley, who came to India as Governor General got
the benefit of the internal feud and disunity of the Marathas. Bajirao
II, who became Peshwa, was a good friend of Daulatrao Shinde.
He advised Daulatrao to kill Vithoji Holkar near Pandharpur, the
brother of Yashwantrao Holkar. This led Yashwantrao to attack on
the conbined forces of Daulat Rao Shinde & Bajirao II and defeat
them at Hadapsar near Pune in October, 1802. Bajirao II fled in
terror from Pune and sought aid of the British. He signed the Treaty
of Bassein on December 31, 1802 with the British Company and
entered into the defamous subsidiary Alliance system. The
company assured him protection and restored him to the Peshwa
ship. The Daulatrao Shinde and the Bhosales of Nagpur did not
approve the Treaty of Bassein and incurred the wrath of the
Company. The Company started the II Anglo-Maratha war and
defeated them one by one. In December, 1803 Bhosales signed the
Treaty of Deogaon, parted with Cuttack and accepted the
subsidiary Alliance system of the Company. In the same way,
Shinde surrendered Brooach, Ahmednagar and other areas to the
British and accepted the Subsidiary Alliance system by the Treaty
of Surji Anjangaon. Bajirao II became uneasy due to the crushing
policies of the British tried to be free from them and urged secretly
to other Maratha chiefs to help him in his endeavours. But he could
not succeed in it. The British crushed the Peshwa in the Third
Anglo – Maratha war in 1817-1818. Bajirao II was deposed and his
territories were annexed. The Bhosales of Nagpur also met the
same fate. Although, the Holkars had accepted the subsidiary
Alliance system of the British in January, 1818, the dynasties of
Holkar, Shinde and Gaikawad continued to rule their respective
sates till the reorganization of states in independent India on the
linguistic basis. Despite these nobles and the Maratha sardars
there were same other centers of power in Maharashtra as the
descendents of Chhatrapati Shivaji, who were at Satara and
Kolhapur. Although, the Maratha power was exercised by the
Peshwas, these royal descendents commanded the respect and
esteem of the people. In addition to these Sawantwadi was one
more political power centre under the Regent ship of Rani
Durgabai. The last but not the least was the state of Janjira, which
was under the Siddis, who were in league of the Company and
often acted against the Marathas. Another place of political
importance was Raigad, the then popularly known as Kolaba, which
was under the traditional Maratha admirals, Angrias. Pune was the
Page 5
MAHARASHTRA ON THE EVE OF 1848
INTRODUCTION
Maharashtra was a part and parcel of erstwhile Bombay
state along with Gujarat. It was popularly known as Bombay
Presidency, which was created by the British when they became
undisputed power of the Western part of India. Maharashtra came
into existence on 1
st
May1960, as a separate state on the linguistic
basis. It has Gujarat to its northern side, Madhya Pradesh to its
north east and eastern borders, Goa and Karnataka are on its
southern side whereas the Arabian Sea is nestled in the Western
border. Maharashtra covers almost 3, 06,059 square Kilometers
area of the country.
In Maharashtra the Maratha community is dominant, which is
the direct result of the Aryan penetration from the north east and
the north. It subsequently mixed with the strong local population
and absorbed local words and expressions into their language. V.
MAHARASHTRA ON THE EVE OF 1848
P. Dandekar says that Aryans advanced towards the great forest,
which came to be known as Mahakantara or Dandakaranya in the
seventh century B.C. during the third century B. C. there were the
small kingdoms of Bhild, Katkaries Thakurs, Kolis and Nagas who
were the aboriginals of Maharashtra. It means the Dravidians were,
the inhabitants of Maharashtra before the advent of the Aryans.
Maharashtra was a part and parcel of the Mauryan empire during
the period of 321 B. C. and 184 B. C. in which the Buddhism and
Jainism rooted herein, which is clear from the Damal (1095 A. D)
and Miraj (1110 A. D) inscriptions. These cave inscriptions show
that the several sections in the society in Maharashtra were
devotees of Buddhism and Jainism.
P. V. Kane says that Maharashtra is called after the name of
the great track of forest land Mahakantara during the period of
Satvahana in 200 B. C. He derived the word Maharashtra from
MAHAN RASTRA means a great nation. Historian R. G.
Bhandarkar derived the word Maharashtra from the people
RASTRAIKAS or RATTAS. Marathi, the language spoken in
Maharashtra belongs to the group of languages derived from
Sanskrit language, which was spoken language but it was ceased
and Prakrit became the language of people during the 5th century
B. C. The Prakrit dialect of Maharashtra was Maharastri in use for
many centuries and finally it became a distinct and established
Marathi language in the 8
th
century A. D. R. G. Harse says that
there are some epigraphical records in connection with the Marathi
language but they are of later age as one them is Sravan Belgola
the inscription of Camundaraja, The Prime Minister of Ganga King
of 983 A. D. The second reference is of Marathi song in the popular
work Manasollasa or Abhilasitarthacintamani of Someshwara III,
which was written in 1130 A. D.
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF MAHARASHTRA
The early political history of Maharashtra is traced from the
4
th
century B. C. There is Mora port on the Karanja Island near
Mumbai. It is named after the Mauryan suzerainty over the area.
After the decline of Mauryan Empire, the Satavahanas came to
power in Deccan, that ruled Maharashtra from Pratisthana, the
present Paithan a Tahsil Headquarter in Aurangabad district, which
came to an end in the year 218. The Traikutakas came to power in
Maharashtra and ruled some of the parts like vidarbha from 250
onwards. After the decline of Traikutkas, the Vakatakas controlled
whole Maharashtra. Subsequently, the Kalacuris and the
Chalukyas came to power respectively and ruled Maharashtra up to
1180 A. D. from Badami as their capital, which is in the present
state of Karnataka. Dantidurga the first King of Chalakya dynasty
conquered the whole Deccan. Krishna, the successor of Dantidurga
extended the borders of Maharashtra to the Vindya Mountains in
the north to Canjeevaram in the sourth. As the Vakatakas carved
the beautiful cave no. 16, 17 and 19 at the Ajanta caves during their
period, the Chalukya King Krishna built the beautiful Kaitas temple
at the Ellora caves.
In the 12
th
century A. D. the Chalukyan Empire was divided
into the three dynasties as the Yadavas, the Hoysalas and the
Kakatiyas. The Yadavas ruled from Devgiri i.e. Daulatabad a
Taluka Headquarter in present Aurangabad District. The Hoysalas
from the area of present Karnataka and the Kakatiyas ruled
Talangana, which is one of the important divisions of todays Andra
Pradesh. In the last decade of the Thirteenth Century, Ala-uddin
Khilji reached Devgiri and recovered huge indemnity from the
Devgiri ruler, which made Devgiri a vassal state. The other Maratha
warriors, who did not submit to the Muslim, were driven towards
Maval, the eastern ranges of Sahyadri. In the second half of the
fifteenth century, the Muslim rulers of Deccan became tolerant
towards the Hindus. As the result the Maratha chieftains began to
accept services under such Muslim rulers and received attractive
rewards for their bravery.
In the Seventeenth Century, the Maratha in Maval, Konkan,
Karad, Pune and Ahmednager regions got independence under the
leadership of Chhatrapati Shivaji, a great military and political
genius, who crowned himself as the Maratha King in 1674. V. S.
Bendrey says that Chhatrapati Shivaji infused national spirit in the
Maratha people, which led them to protect themselves from the
foreign aggression and save their culture and religion from such
onslaughts. Chhatrapati Shivaji was a great visionary for which his
whole regime was the most important evidence. After the death of
Chhatrapati Shivaji, the brutal policies of Aurangjeb forced the
Marathas to declare the Maratha war of independence, which led to
concentrate the Maratha power in the hands of Peshwas who
resided at Pune and increased the Maratha power day after day
throughout the country. In the middle of the eighteenth century, the
several Maratha nobles established themselves firmly at Baroda,
Indore, Gwalior, Nagpur and many other places. They also tried to
establish the Maratha confedency at Delhi as the sovereign power
of India in place of the Mughal but the Battle of 1761 brought out a
complete disaster for them. The Marathas tried to recover
themselves under the leadership of Madhavrao but could not
receive their former prestige. It was festered with the internal
disunity and finally it submitted to the British in 1818.
The Britishy East India Company had already come to India
for trade, regarding which the charter was sanctioned by the British
Queen Elizabeth on 31
st
December, 1600. It established their first
trading centre at Surat in 1613. The British got Bombay in 1661 as
a part of the dowry of Catherine of Bragnza, who married Charles
II, the British King. He rented Bombay to the East India Company
for 10. The company shifted it’s headquarter in Western India from
Surat to Bombay in 1687. They converted Bombay, Calcutta and
Madras from trading centers to the centers of political and military
operations.
Lord Wellesley, who came to India as Governor General got
the benefit of the internal feud and disunity of the Marathas. Bajirao
II, who became Peshwa, was a good friend of Daulatrao Shinde.
He advised Daulatrao to kill Vithoji Holkar near Pandharpur, the
brother of Yashwantrao Holkar. This led Yashwantrao to attack on
the conbined forces of Daulat Rao Shinde & Bajirao II and defeat
them at Hadapsar near Pune in October, 1802. Bajirao II fled in
terror from Pune and sought aid of the British. He signed the Treaty
of Bassein on December 31, 1802 with the British Company and
entered into the defamous subsidiary Alliance system. The
company assured him protection and restored him to the Peshwa
ship. The Daulatrao Shinde and the Bhosales of Nagpur did not
approve the Treaty of Bassein and incurred the wrath of the
Company. The Company started the II Anglo-Maratha war and
defeated them one by one. In December, 1803 Bhosales signed the
Treaty of Deogaon, parted with Cuttack and accepted the
subsidiary Alliance system of the Company. In the same way,
Shinde surrendered Brooach, Ahmednagar and other areas to the
British and accepted the Subsidiary Alliance system by the Treaty
of Surji Anjangaon. Bajirao II became uneasy due to the crushing
policies of the British tried to be free from them and urged secretly
to other Maratha chiefs to help him in his endeavours. But he could
not succeed in it. The British crushed the Peshwa in the Third
Anglo – Maratha war in 1817-1818. Bajirao II was deposed and his
territories were annexed. The Bhosales of Nagpur also met the
same fate. Although, the Holkars had accepted the subsidiary
Alliance system of the British in January, 1818, the dynasties of
Holkar, Shinde and Gaikawad continued to rule their respective
sates till the reorganization of states in independent India on the
linguistic basis. Despite these nobles and the Maratha sardars
there were same other centers of power in Maharashtra as the
descendents of Chhatrapati Shivaji, who were at Satara and
Kolhapur. Although, the Maratha power was exercised by the
Peshwas, these royal descendents commanded the respect and
esteem of the people. In addition to these Sawantwadi was one
more political power centre under the Regent ship of Rani
Durgabai. The last but not the least was the state of Janjira, which
was under the Siddis, who were in league of the Company and
often acted against the Marathas. Another place of political
importance was Raigad, the then popularly known as Kolaba, which
was under the traditional Maratha admirals, Angrias. Pune was the
capital city of the Peshwas which experienced the administrations
from the Peshwas to the Kotwals like Ghashiram and Anandrao.
SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC CONDITIONS OF
MAHARASHTRA
Under the Marathas, the population was not more than thirty
five to forty lakhs people in the tradition bound society of
Maharashtra. It was a conservative and religion dominated society.
G.S. Sardesai says that the Maratha society was a superstitious
and believed in various social practices advocated by the Bhagvat
religion. Dr. Gavali in his book the Peshwekalin Ashprashta says
that it was a caste ridden society and it practiced systems like
Bonded Labour, which came into society from the Medieval Mughal
social set up. It was inequal in inflicting punishments to members of
the lower castes. It never allowed the lower castes to invoke any
law for their protection or welfare because they were treated as
good as criminals.
a) Social Condition
The social life was dominated by the village communities,
which had Patil as the head of the village; he was supported by the
village accountant or Kulkarni, who kept village record upto date
and village watchman. There was Chaugule, who worked as
assistant to Patil. This team worked in consonance of each other
and became a special feature of the Maratha social life.
There was a joint family system under the Marathas. The
eldest member was the head of the family. It was a patriarchal
family system property of the family was in the name of head of the
family. He was to look after the family but all members were to help
him equally. There was a system of arranged marriage in society.
Naturally, systems like child marriage, prohibition of widow
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