The Company resorted to direct military confrontation when it saw a threat to its political or economic interests. This can be illustrated with the case of the southern Indian state of Mysore.
Mysore had grown in strength under the leadership of powerful rulers like Haidar Ali (ruled from 1761 to 1782) and his famous son Tipu Sultan (ruled from 1782 to 1799).
Mysore controlled the profitable trade of the Malabar coast where the Company purchased pepper and cardamom. In 1785 Tipu Sultan stopped the export of sandalwood, pepper and cardamom through the ports of his kingdom, and disallowed local merchants from trading with the Company. He also established a close relationship with the French in India, and modernized his army with their help.
The British were furious. They saw Haidar and Tipu as ambitious, arrogant and dangerous – rulers who had to be controlled and crushed. Four wars were fought with Mysore (1767-69, 1780-84, 1790-92 and 1799).
Fig: Tipu Sultan:Tiger of Mysore.
Only in the last – the Battle of Seringapatam – did the Company ultimately win a victory. Tipu Sultan was killed defending his capital Seringapatam, Mysore was placed under the former ruling dynasty of the Wodeyars and a subsidiary alliance was imposed on the state.
From the late eighteenth century the Company also sought to curb and eventually destroy Maratha power.
With their defeat in the Third Battle of Panipat in 1761, the Marathas’ dream of ruling from Delhi was shattered. They were divided into many states under different chiefs
(sardars) belonging to dynasties such as Sindhia, Holkar, Gaikwad and Bhonsle. These chiefs were held together in a confederacy under a Peshwa (Principal Minister) who became its effective military and administrative head based in Pune. Mahadji Sindhia and Nana Phadnis were two famous Maratha soldiers and statesmen of the late eighteenth century.
Fig: Third Battle of Panipat.
The Marathas were subdued in a series of wars. In the first war that ended in 1782 with the Treaty of Salbai, there was no clear victor. The Second Anglo- Maratha War (1803-05) was fought on different fronts, resulting in the British gaining Orissa and the territories north of the Yamuna river including Agra and Delhi.
Finally, the Third Anglo-Maratha War of 1817-19 crushed Maratha power. The Peshwa was removed and sent away to Bithur near Kanpur with a pension. The Company now had complete control over the territories south of the Vindhyas.
Fig: Anglo- Maratha war.
The claim to paramountcy under Lord Hastings (Governor-General from 1813 to 1823) marked the start of a new policy. The Company asserted that its authority was supreme, meaning it considered its power to be greater than that of Indian states. To safeguard its interests, the Company believed it had the right to annex or threaten to annex any Indian kingdom. This perspective continued to shape British policies in the years that followed.
In the late 1830s, the East India Company grew concerned about Russia. They feared Russia might expand across Asia and threaten India from the north-west. In response to this fear, the British sought to strengthen their control over the north-west, leading to the:
After Ranjit Singh's death in 1839, the British engaged in the:
Ultimately, after the Second Anglo-Sikh War, Punjab was annexed in 1849.
Fig: Maharaja Ranjit Singh.
After his death in 1839, two prolonged wars were fought with the Sikh kingdom. Ultimately, in 1849, Punjab was annexed.
66 videos|428 docs|46 tests
|
1. Maratha Samrajya ki sthaapna kaise hui? | ![]() |
2. Marathaon aur Mughals ke beech ka yudh kyun hua? | ![]() |
3. War with the Marathas mein kaunse pramukh yuddh hue? | ![]() |
4. Marathaon ki yuddh neeti kya thi? | ![]() |
5. War with the Marathas ka parinaam kya tha? | ![]() |