Page 1
Introduction:
How, When and Where
1
How Important are Dates?
There was a time when historians were
fascinated with dates. There were heated
debates about the dates on which rulers
were crowned or battles were fought. In
the common-sense notion, history was
synonymous with dates. You may have
heard people say, “I find history boring
because it is all about memorising
dates.” Is such a conception true?
History is certainly about changes
that occur over time. It is about
finding out how things were in the
past and how things have changed.
As soon as we compare the past with
the present, we refer to time, we talk of
“before” and “after”.
Living in the world we do not always
ask historical questions about what
we see around us. We take things for
granted, as if what we see has always
been in the world we inhabit. But most of
us have our moments of wonder, when we are
curious, and we ask questions that actually are historical.
Watching someone sip a cup of tea at a roadside tea stall,
you may wonder – when did people begin to drink tea or
coffee? Looking out of the window of a train you may ask
yourself – when were railways built and how did people
travel long distances before the age of railways? Reading
the newspaper in the morning you may be curious to know
how people got to hear about things before newspapers
began to be printed.
Fig. 1 – Brahmans offering the
Shastras to Britannia, frontispiece
to the first map produced by
James Rennel, 1782
Rennel was asked by Robert Clive
to produce maps of Hindustan.
An enthusiastic supporter
of British conquest of India,
Rennel saw preparation of maps
as essential to the process of
domination. The picture here
tries to suggest that Indians
willingly gave over their ancient
texts to Britannia – the symbol of
British power – as if asking her
to become the protector of Indian
culture.
Activity
Look carefully at Fig.1 and write a paragraph explaining
how this image projects an imperial perception.
?
chap 1-4.indd 1 6/6/2022 12:36:43 PM
Reprint 2024-25
Page 2
Introduction:
How, When and Where
1
How Important are Dates?
There was a time when historians were
fascinated with dates. There were heated
debates about the dates on which rulers
were crowned or battles were fought. In
the common-sense notion, history was
synonymous with dates. You may have
heard people say, “I find history boring
because it is all about memorising
dates.” Is such a conception true?
History is certainly about changes
that occur over time. It is about
finding out how things were in the
past and how things have changed.
As soon as we compare the past with
the present, we refer to time, we talk of
“before” and “after”.
Living in the world we do not always
ask historical questions about what
we see around us. We take things for
granted, as if what we see has always
been in the world we inhabit. But most of
us have our moments of wonder, when we are
curious, and we ask questions that actually are historical.
Watching someone sip a cup of tea at a roadside tea stall,
you may wonder – when did people begin to drink tea or
coffee? Looking out of the window of a train you may ask
yourself – when were railways built and how did people
travel long distances before the age of railways? Reading
the newspaper in the morning you may be curious to know
how people got to hear about things before newspapers
began to be printed.
Fig. 1 – Brahmans offering the
Shastras to Britannia, frontispiece
to the first map produced by
James Rennel, 1782
Rennel was asked by Robert Clive
to produce maps of Hindustan.
An enthusiastic supporter
of British conquest of India,
Rennel saw preparation of maps
as essential to the process of
domination. The picture here
tries to suggest that Indians
willingly gave over their ancient
texts to Britannia – the symbol of
British power – as if asking her
to become the protector of Indian
culture.
Activity
Look carefully at Fig.1 and write a paragraph explaining
how this image projects an imperial perception.
?
chap 1-4.indd 1 6/6/2022 12:36:43 PM
Reprint 2024-25
2 OUR PASTS – III
All such historical questions refer us back to
notions of time. But time does not have to be always
precisely dated in terms of a particular year or a month.
Sometimes it is actually incorrect to fix precise dates
to processes that happen over a period of time. People
in India did not begin drinking tea one fine day; they
developed a taste for it over time. There can be no
one clear date for a process such as this. Similarly,
we cannot fix one single date on which British rule
was established, or the national movement started, or
changes took place within the economy and society. All
these things happened over a stretch of time. We can
only refer to a span of time, an approximate period over
which particular changes became visible.
Why, then, do we continue to associate history with
a string of dates? This association has a reason. There
was a time when history was an account of battles and big
events. It was about rulers and their policies. Historians
wrote about the year a king was crowned, the year he
married, the year he had a child, the year he fought a
particular war, the year he died, and the year the next
ruler succeeded to the throne. For events such as these,
specific dates can be determined, and in histories such
as these, debates about dates continue to be important.
As you have seen in the history textbooks of the past
two years, historians now write about a host of other
issues, and other questions. They look at how people
earned their livelihood, what they produced and ate, how
cities developed and markets came up, how kingdoms
were formed and new ideas spread, and how cultures
and society changed.
Which dates?
By what criteria do we choose a set of dates as
important? The dates we select, the dates around which
we compose our story of the past, are not important
on their own. They become vital because we focus on
a particular set of events as important. If our focus of
study changes, if we begin to look at new issues, a new
set of dates will appear significant.
Consider an example. In the histories written by
British historians in India, the rule of each Governor-
General was important. These histories began with the
rule of the first Governor-General, Warren Hastings,
and ended with the last Viceroy, Lord Mountbatten. In
separate chapters, we read about the deeds of others —
Hastings, Wellesley, Bentinck, Dalhousie, Canning,
Fig. 2 – Advertisements help
create taste
Old advertisements help us
understand how markets for new
products were created and new
tastes were popularised. This
1922 advertisement for Lipton tea
suggests that royalty all over the
world is associated with this tea.
In the background you see the
outer wall of an Indian palace,
while in the foreground, seated
on horseback is the third son of
Queen Victoria of Britain, Prince
Arthur, who was given the title
Duke of Connaught.
chap 1-4.indd 2 4/22/2022 2:49:16 PM
Reprint 2024-25
Page 3
Introduction:
How, When and Where
1
How Important are Dates?
There was a time when historians were
fascinated with dates. There were heated
debates about the dates on which rulers
were crowned or battles were fought. In
the common-sense notion, history was
synonymous with dates. You may have
heard people say, “I find history boring
because it is all about memorising
dates.” Is such a conception true?
History is certainly about changes
that occur over time. It is about
finding out how things were in the
past and how things have changed.
As soon as we compare the past with
the present, we refer to time, we talk of
“before” and “after”.
Living in the world we do not always
ask historical questions about what
we see around us. We take things for
granted, as if what we see has always
been in the world we inhabit. But most of
us have our moments of wonder, when we are
curious, and we ask questions that actually are historical.
Watching someone sip a cup of tea at a roadside tea stall,
you may wonder – when did people begin to drink tea or
coffee? Looking out of the window of a train you may ask
yourself – when were railways built and how did people
travel long distances before the age of railways? Reading
the newspaper in the morning you may be curious to know
how people got to hear about things before newspapers
began to be printed.
Fig. 1 – Brahmans offering the
Shastras to Britannia, frontispiece
to the first map produced by
James Rennel, 1782
Rennel was asked by Robert Clive
to produce maps of Hindustan.
An enthusiastic supporter
of British conquest of India,
Rennel saw preparation of maps
as essential to the process of
domination. The picture here
tries to suggest that Indians
willingly gave over their ancient
texts to Britannia – the symbol of
British power – as if asking her
to become the protector of Indian
culture.
Activity
Look carefully at Fig.1 and write a paragraph explaining
how this image projects an imperial perception.
?
chap 1-4.indd 1 6/6/2022 12:36:43 PM
Reprint 2024-25
2 OUR PASTS – III
All such historical questions refer us back to
notions of time. But time does not have to be always
precisely dated in terms of a particular year or a month.
Sometimes it is actually incorrect to fix precise dates
to processes that happen over a period of time. People
in India did not begin drinking tea one fine day; they
developed a taste for it over time. There can be no
one clear date for a process such as this. Similarly,
we cannot fix one single date on which British rule
was established, or the national movement started, or
changes took place within the economy and society. All
these things happened over a stretch of time. We can
only refer to a span of time, an approximate period over
which particular changes became visible.
Why, then, do we continue to associate history with
a string of dates? This association has a reason. There
was a time when history was an account of battles and big
events. It was about rulers and their policies. Historians
wrote about the year a king was crowned, the year he
married, the year he had a child, the year he fought a
particular war, the year he died, and the year the next
ruler succeeded to the throne. For events such as these,
specific dates can be determined, and in histories such
as these, debates about dates continue to be important.
As you have seen in the history textbooks of the past
two years, historians now write about a host of other
issues, and other questions. They look at how people
earned their livelihood, what they produced and ate, how
cities developed and markets came up, how kingdoms
were formed and new ideas spread, and how cultures
and society changed.
Which dates?
By what criteria do we choose a set of dates as
important? The dates we select, the dates around which
we compose our story of the past, are not important
on their own. They become vital because we focus on
a particular set of events as important. If our focus of
study changes, if we begin to look at new issues, a new
set of dates will appear significant.
Consider an example. In the histories written by
British historians in India, the rule of each Governor-
General was important. These histories began with the
rule of the first Governor-General, Warren Hastings,
and ended with the last Viceroy, Lord Mountbatten. In
separate chapters, we read about the deeds of others —
Hastings, Wellesley, Bentinck, Dalhousie, Canning,
Fig. 2 – Advertisements help
create taste
Old advertisements help us
understand how markets for new
products were created and new
tastes were popularised. This
1922 advertisement for Lipton tea
suggests that royalty all over the
world is associated with this tea.
In the background you see the
outer wall of an Indian palace,
while in the foreground, seated
on horseback is the third son of
Queen Victoria of Britain, Prince
Arthur, who was given the title
Duke of Connaught.
chap 1-4.indd 2 4/22/2022 2:49:16 PM
Reprint 2024-25
INTRODUCTION: HOW, WHEN AND WHERE 3
Lawrence, Lytton, Ripon, Curzon, Harding, Irwin. It
was a seemingly never-ending succession of Governor-
Generals and Viceroys. All the dates in these history books
were linked to these personalities – to their activities,
policies and achievements. It was as if there was nothing
outside their lives that was important for us to know. The
chronology of their lives marked the different chapters of
the history of British India.
Can we not write about the history of this period in a
different way? How do we focus on the activities of different
groups and classes in Indian society within the format of
this history of Governor-Generals?
When we write history, or a story, we divide it into
chapters. Why do we do this? It is to give each chapter
some coherence. It is to tell a story in a way that makes
some sense and can be followed. In the process we focus
only on those events that help us to give shape to the story
we are telling. In the histories that revolve around the life
of British Governor-Generals, the activities of Indians
simply do not fit, they have no space. What, then, do we
do? Clearly, we need another format for our history. This
would mean that the old dates will no longer have the
significance they earlier had. A new set of dates will become
more important for us to know.
How do we periodise?
In 1817, James Mill, a Scottish economist and political
philosopher, published a massive three-volume work,
A History of British India. In this, he divided Indian
history into three periods – Hindu, Muslim and British.
This periodisation came to be widely accepted. Can
you think of any problem with this way of looking at
Indian history?
Why do we try and divide history into different periods?
We do so in an attempt to capture the characteristics of
a time, its central features as they appear to us. So the
terms through which we periodise – that is, demarcate
the difference between periods – become important. They
reflect our ideas about the past. They show how we see
the significance of the change from one period to the next.
Mill thought that all Asian societies were at a lower
level of civilisation than Europe. According to his telling
of history, before the British came to India, Hindu and
Muslim despots ruled the country. Religious intolerance,
caste taboos and superstitious practices dominated
social life. British rule, Mill felt, could civilise India. To do
Fig. 3 – Warren Hastings became
the first Governor-General in 1773
While history books narrated
the deeds of Governor-Generals,
biographies glorified them as
persons, and paintings projected
them as powerful figures.
Interview your mother
or another member of
your family to find out
about their life. Now
divide their life into
different periods and
list out the significant
events in each period.
Explain the basis of your
periodisation.
Activity
?
chap 1-4.indd 3 6/14/2022 2:38:32 PM
Reprint 2024-25
Page 4
Introduction:
How, When and Where
1
How Important are Dates?
There was a time when historians were
fascinated with dates. There were heated
debates about the dates on which rulers
were crowned or battles were fought. In
the common-sense notion, history was
synonymous with dates. You may have
heard people say, “I find history boring
because it is all about memorising
dates.” Is such a conception true?
History is certainly about changes
that occur over time. It is about
finding out how things were in the
past and how things have changed.
As soon as we compare the past with
the present, we refer to time, we talk of
“before” and “after”.
Living in the world we do not always
ask historical questions about what
we see around us. We take things for
granted, as if what we see has always
been in the world we inhabit. But most of
us have our moments of wonder, when we are
curious, and we ask questions that actually are historical.
Watching someone sip a cup of tea at a roadside tea stall,
you may wonder – when did people begin to drink tea or
coffee? Looking out of the window of a train you may ask
yourself – when were railways built and how did people
travel long distances before the age of railways? Reading
the newspaper in the morning you may be curious to know
how people got to hear about things before newspapers
began to be printed.
Fig. 1 – Brahmans offering the
Shastras to Britannia, frontispiece
to the first map produced by
James Rennel, 1782
Rennel was asked by Robert Clive
to produce maps of Hindustan.
An enthusiastic supporter
of British conquest of India,
Rennel saw preparation of maps
as essential to the process of
domination. The picture here
tries to suggest that Indians
willingly gave over their ancient
texts to Britannia – the symbol of
British power – as if asking her
to become the protector of Indian
culture.
Activity
Look carefully at Fig.1 and write a paragraph explaining
how this image projects an imperial perception.
?
chap 1-4.indd 1 6/6/2022 12:36:43 PM
Reprint 2024-25
2 OUR PASTS – III
All such historical questions refer us back to
notions of time. But time does not have to be always
precisely dated in terms of a particular year or a month.
Sometimes it is actually incorrect to fix precise dates
to processes that happen over a period of time. People
in India did not begin drinking tea one fine day; they
developed a taste for it over time. There can be no
one clear date for a process such as this. Similarly,
we cannot fix one single date on which British rule
was established, or the national movement started, or
changes took place within the economy and society. All
these things happened over a stretch of time. We can
only refer to a span of time, an approximate period over
which particular changes became visible.
Why, then, do we continue to associate history with
a string of dates? This association has a reason. There
was a time when history was an account of battles and big
events. It was about rulers and their policies. Historians
wrote about the year a king was crowned, the year he
married, the year he had a child, the year he fought a
particular war, the year he died, and the year the next
ruler succeeded to the throne. For events such as these,
specific dates can be determined, and in histories such
as these, debates about dates continue to be important.
As you have seen in the history textbooks of the past
two years, historians now write about a host of other
issues, and other questions. They look at how people
earned their livelihood, what they produced and ate, how
cities developed and markets came up, how kingdoms
were formed and new ideas spread, and how cultures
and society changed.
Which dates?
By what criteria do we choose a set of dates as
important? The dates we select, the dates around which
we compose our story of the past, are not important
on their own. They become vital because we focus on
a particular set of events as important. If our focus of
study changes, if we begin to look at new issues, a new
set of dates will appear significant.
Consider an example. In the histories written by
British historians in India, the rule of each Governor-
General was important. These histories began with the
rule of the first Governor-General, Warren Hastings,
and ended with the last Viceroy, Lord Mountbatten. In
separate chapters, we read about the deeds of others —
Hastings, Wellesley, Bentinck, Dalhousie, Canning,
Fig. 2 – Advertisements help
create taste
Old advertisements help us
understand how markets for new
products were created and new
tastes were popularised. This
1922 advertisement for Lipton tea
suggests that royalty all over the
world is associated with this tea.
In the background you see the
outer wall of an Indian palace,
while in the foreground, seated
on horseback is the third son of
Queen Victoria of Britain, Prince
Arthur, who was given the title
Duke of Connaught.
chap 1-4.indd 2 4/22/2022 2:49:16 PM
Reprint 2024-25
INTRODUCTION: HOW, WHEN AND WHERE 3
Lawrence, Lytton, Ripon, Curzon, Harding, Irwin. It
was a seemingly never-ending succession of Governor-
Generals and Viceroys. All the dates in these history books
were linked to these personalities – to their activities,
policies and achievements. It was as if there was nothing
outside their lives that was important for us to know. The
chronology of their lives marked the different chapters of
the history of British India.
Can we not write about the history of this period in a
different way? How do we focus on the activities of different
groups and classes in Indian society within the format of
this history of Governor-Generals?
When we write history, or a story, we divide it into
chapters. Why do we do this? It is to give each chapter
some coherence. It is to tell a story in a way that makes
some sense and can be followed. In the process we focus
only on those events that help us to give shape to the story
we are telling. In the histories that revolve around the life
of British Governor-Generals, the activities of Indians
simply do not fit, they have no space. What, then, do we
do? Clearly, we need another format for our history. This
would mean that the old dates will no longer have the
significance they earlier had. A new set of dates will become
more important for us to know.
How do we periodise?
In 1817, James Mill, a Scottish economist and political
philosopher, published a massive three-volume work,
A History of British India. In this, he divided Indian
history into three periods – Hindu, Muslim and British.
This periodisation came to be widely accepted. Can
you think of any problem with this way of looking at
Indian history?
Why do we try and divide history into different periods?
We do so in an attempt to capture the characteristics of
a time, its central features as they appear to us. So the
terms through which we periodise – that is, demarcate
the difference between periods – become important. They
reflect our ideas about the past. They show how we see
the significance of the change from one period to the next.
Mill thought that all Asian societies were at a lower
level of civilisation than Europe. According to his telling
of history, before the British came to India, Hindu and
Muslim despots ruled the country. Religious intolerance,
caste taboos and superstitious practices dominated
social life. British rule, Mill felt, could civilise India. To do
Fig. 3 – Warren Hastings became
the first Governor-General in 1773
While history books narrated
the deeds of Governor-Generals,
biographies glorified them as
persons, and paintings projected
them as powerful figures.
Interview your mother
or another member of
your family to find out
about their life. Now
divide their life into
different periods and
list out the significant
events in each period.
Explain the basis of your
periodisation.
Activity
?
chap 1-4.indd 3 6/14/2022 2:38:32 PM
Reprint 2024-25
4 OUR PASTS – III
this, it was necessary to introduce European manners, arts,
institutions and laws in India. Mill, in fact, suggested that the
British should conquer all the territories in India to ensure
the enlightenment and happiness of the Indian people. For
India was not capable of progress without British help.
In this idea of history, British rule represented all the forces
of progress and civilisation. The period before British rule was
one of darkness. Can such a conception be accepted today?
In any case, can we refer to any period of history as “Hindu”
or “Muslim”? Did not a variety of faiths exist simultaneously
in these periods? Why should we characterise an age only
through the religion of the rulers of the time? To do so is to
suggest that the lives and practices of the others do not really
matter. We should also remember that even rulers in ancient
India did not all share the same faith.
Moving away from British classification, historians
have usually divided Indian history into ‘ancient’, ‘medieval’
and ‘modern’. This division too has its problems. It is a
periodisation that is borrowed from the West where the
modern period was associated with the growth of all the
forces of modernity – science, reason, democracy, liberty
and equality. Medieval was a term used to describe a society
where these features of modern society did not exist. Can
we uncritically accept this characterisation of the modern
period to describe the period of our study? As you will see in
this book, under British rule people did not have equality,
freedom or liberty. Nor was the period one of economic
growth and progress.
Many historians therefore refer to this period as ‘colonial’.
What is colonial?
In this book, you will read about the way the British came
to conquer the country and establish their rule, subjugating
local nawabs and rajas. You will see how they established
control over the economy and society, collected revenue to
meet all their expenses, bought the goods they wanted at low
prices, produced crops they needed for export, and you will
understand the changes that came about as a consequence.
You will also come to know about the changes British rule
brought about in values and tastes, customs and practices.
When the subjugation of one country by another leads to these
kinds of political, economic, social and cultural changes, we
refer to the process as colonisation.
You will, however, find that all classes and groups did not
experience these changes in the same way. That is why, the
book is called Our Pasts in the plural.
chap 1-4.indd 4 4/22/2022 2:49:18 PM
Reprint 2024-25
Page 5
Introduction:
How, When and Where
1
How Important are Dates?
There was a time when historians were
fascinated with dates. There were heated
debates about the dates on which rulers
were crowned or battles were fought. In
the common-sense notion, history was
synonymous with dates. You may have
heard people say, “I find history boring
because it is all about memorising
dates.” Is such a conception true?
History is certainly about changes
that occur over time. It is about
finding out how things were in the
past and how things have changed.
As soon as we compare the past with
the present, we refer to time, we talk of
“before” and “after”.
Living in the world we do not always
ask historical questions about what
we see around us. We take things for
granted, as if what we see has always
been in the world we inhabit. But most of
us have our moments of wonder, when we are
curious, and we ask questions that actually are historical.
Watching someone sip a cup of tea at a roadside tea stall,
you may wonder – when did people begin to drink tea or
coffee? Looking out of the window of a train you may ask
yourself – when were railways built and how did people
travel long distances before the age of railways? Reading
the newspaper in the morning you may be curious to know
how people got to hear about things before newspapers
began to be printed.
Fig. 1 – Brahmans offering the
Shastras to Britannia, frontispiece
to the first map produced by
James Rennel, 1782
Rennel was asked by Robert Clive
to produce maps of Hindustan.
An enthusiastic supporter
of British conquest of India,
Rennel saw preparation of maps
as essential to the process of
domination. The picture here
tries to suggest that Indians
willingly gave over their ancient
texts to Britannia – the symbol of
British power – as if asking her
to become the protector of Indian
culture.
Activity
Look carefully at Fig.1 and write a paragraph explaining
how this image projects an imperial perception.
?
chap 1-4.indd 1 6/6/2022 12:36:43 PM
Reprint 2024-25
2 OUR PASTS – III
All such historical questions refer us back to
notions of time. But time does not have to be always
precisely dated in terms of a particular year or a month.
Sometimes it is actually incorrect to fix precise dates
to processes that happen over a period of time. People
in India did not begin drinking tea one fine day; they
developed a taste for it over time. There can be no
one clear date for a process such as this. Similarly,
we cannot fix one single date on which British rule
was established, or the national movement started, or
changes took place within the economy and society. All
these things happened over a stretch of time. We can
only refer to a span of time, an approximate period over
which particular changes became visible.
Why, then, do we continue to associate history with
a string of dates? This association has a reason. There
was a time when history was an account of battles and big
events. It was about rulers and their policies. Historians
wrote about the year a king was crowned, the year he
married, the year he had a child, the year he fought a
particular war, the year he died, and the year the next
ruler succeeded to the throne. For events such as these,
specific dates can be determined, and in histories such
as these, debates about dates continue to be important.
As you have seen in the history textbooks of the past
two years, historians now write about a host of other
issues, and other questions. They look at how people
earned their livelihood, what they produced and ate, how
cities developed and markets came up, how kingdoms
were formed and new ideas spread, and how cultures
and society changed.
Which dates?
By what criteria do we choose a set of dates as
important? The dates we select, the dates around which
we compose our story of the past, are not important
on their own. They become vital because we focus on
a particular set of events as important. If our focus of
study changes, if we begin to look at new issues, a new
set of dates will appear significant.
Consider an example. In the histories written by
British historians in India, the rule of each Governor-
General was important. These histories began with the
rule of the first Governor-General, Warren Hastings,
and ended with the last Viceroy, Lord Mountbatten. In
separate chapters, we read about the deeds of others —
Hastings, Wellesley, Bentinck, Dalhousie, Canning,
Fig. 2 – Advertisements help
create taste
Old advertisements help us
understand how markets for new
products were created and new
tastes were popularised. This
1922 advertisement for Lipton tea
suggests that royalty all over the
world is associated with this tea.
In the background you see the
outer wall of an Indian palace,
while in the foreground, seated
on horseback is the third son of
Queen Victoria of Britain, Prince
Arthur, who was given the title
Duke of Connaught.
chap 1-4.indd 2 4/22/2022 2:49:16 PM
Reprint 2024-25
INTRODUCTION: HOW, WHEN AND WHERE 3
Lawrence, Lytton, Ripon, Curzon, Harding, Irwin. It
was a seemingly never-ending succession of Governor-
Generals and Viceroys. All the dates in these history books
were linked to these personalities – to their activities,
policies and achievements. It was as if there was nothing
outside their lives that was important for us to know. The
chronology of their lives marked the different chapters of
the history of British India.
Can we not write about the history of this period in a
different way? How do we focus on the activities of different
groups and classes in Indian society within the format of
this history of Governor-Generals?
When we write history, or a story, we divide it into
chapters. Why do we do this? It is to give each chapter
some coherence. It is to tell a story in a way that makes
some sense and can be followed. In the process we focus
only on those events that help us to give shape to the story
we are telling. In the histories that revolve around the life
of British Governor-Generals, the activities of Indians
simply do not fit, they have no space. What, then, do we
do? Clearly, we need another format for our history. This
would mean that the old dates will no longer have the
significance they earlier had. A new set of dates will become
more important for us to know.
How do we periodise?
In 1817, James Mill, a Scottish economist and political
philosopher, published a massive three-volume work,
A History of British India. In this, he divided Indian
history into three periods – Hindu, Muslim and British.
This periodisation came to be widely accepted. Can
you think of any problem with this way of looking at
Indian history?
Why do we try and divide history into different periods?
We do so in an attempt to capture the characteristics of
a time, its central features as they appear to us. So the
terms through which we periodise – that is, demarcate
the difference between periods – become important. They
reflect our ideas about the past. They show how we see
the significance of the change from one period to the next.
Mill thought that all Asian societies were at a lower
level of civilisation than Europe. According to his telling
of history, before the British came to India, Hindu and
Muslim despots ruled the country. Religious intolerance,
caste taboos and superstitious practices dominated
social life. British rule, Mill felt, could civilise India. To do
Fig. 3 – Warren Hastings became
the first Governor-General in 1773
While history books narrated
the deeds of Governor-Generals,
biographies glorified them as
persons, and paintings projected
them as powerful figures.
Interview your mother
or another member of
your family to find out
about their life. Now
divide their life into
different periods and
list out the significant
events in each period.
Explain the basis of your
periodisation.
Activity
?
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4 OUR PASTS – III
this, it was necessary to introduce European manners, arts,
institutions and laws in India. Mill, in fact, suggested that the
British should conquer all the territories in India to ensure
the enlightenment and happiness of the Indian people. For
India was not capable of progress without British help.
In this idea of history, British rule represented all the forces
of progress and civilisation. The period before British rule was
one of darkness. Can such a conception be accepted today?
In any case, can we refer to any period of history as “Hindu”
or “Muslim”? Did not a variety of faiths exist simultaneously
in these periods? Why should we characterise an age only
through the religion of the rulers of the time? To do so is to
suggest that the lives and practices of the others do not really
matter. We should also remember that even rulers in ancient
India did not all share the same faith.
Moving away from British classification, historians
have usually divided Indian history into ‘ancient’, ‘medieval’
and ‘modern’. This division too has its problems. It is a
periodisation that is borrowed from the West where the
modern period was associated with the growth of all the
forces of modernity – science, reason, democracy, liberty
and equality. Medieval was a term used to describe a society
where these features of modern society did not exist. Can
we uncritically accept this characterisation of the modern
period to describe the period of our study? As you will see in
this book, under British rule people did not have equality,
freedom or liberty. Nor was the period one of economic
growth and progress.
Many historians therefore refer to this period as ‘colonial’.
What is colonial?
In this book, you will read about the way the British came
to conquer the country and establish their rule, subjugating
local nawabs and rajas. You will see how they established
control over the economy and society, collected revenue to
meet all their expenses, bought the goods they wanted at low
prices, produced crops they needed for export, and you will
understand the changes that came about as a consequence.
You will also come to know about the changes British rule
brought about in values and tastes, customs and practices.
When the subjugation of one country by another leads to these
kinds of political, economic, social and cultural changes, we
refer to the process as colonisation.
You will, however, find that all classes and groups did not
experience these changes in the same way. That is why, the
book is called Our Pasts in the plural.
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INTRODUCTION: HOW, WHEN AND WHERE 5
How do We Know?
What sources do historians use in writing about the last
250 years of Indian history?
Administration produces records
One important source is the official records of the British
administration. The British believed that the act of writing
was important. Every instruction, plan, policy decision,
agreement, investigation had to be clearly written up. Once
this was done, things could be properly studied and debated.
This conviction produced an administrative culture of
memos, notings and reports.
The British also felt that all important documents
and letters needed to be carefully preserved. So they
set up record rooms attached to all administrative
institutions. The village tahsildar’s office, the collectorate,
the commissioner’s office, the provincial secretariats,
the lawcourts – all had their record rooms. Specialised
institutions like archives and museums were also
established to preserve important records.
Letters and memos that moved fr om one branch
of the administration to another in the early years
of the nineteenth century can still be read in the
archives. You can also study the notes and reports
that district officials prepared, or the instructions
and directives that were sent by officials at the top to
provincial administrators.
In the early years of the nineteenth century, these
documents were carefully copied out and beautifully
written by calligraphists – that is, by those who specialised
in the art of beautiful writing. By the middle of the
nineteenth century, with the spread of printing, multiple
copies of these records were printed as proceedings of each
government department.
Source 1
Reports to the
Home Department
In 1946 the colonial
government in India was
trying to put down a mutiny
that broke out on the ships
of the Royal Indian Navy.
Here is a sample of the
kind of reports the Home
Department got from the
different dockyards:
Bombay: Arrangements
have been made for the
Army to take over ships
and establishment. Royal
Navy ships are remaining
outside the harbour.
Karachi: 301 mutineers
are under arrest and a few
more strongly suspected
are to be arrested … All
establishments … are
under military guard.
Vizagapatnam: The
positionis completely
under control and no
violence has occurred.
Military guards have
been placed on ships
and establishments.
No further trouble is
expected except that
a few men may refuse
to work.
Director of Intelligence, HQ. India
Command, Situation Report No. 7.
File No. 5/21/46 Home (Political),
Government of India
Fig. 4 – The National Archives of India came up in the 1920s
When New Delhi was built, the National Museum and the National
Archives were both located close to the Viceregal Palace. This location
reflects the importance these institutions had in British imagination.
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