The revolt of 1857 was a result of combination of political, economic, socio-religious and military causes.
The old aristocracy was alienated by British Raj on various pretexts. This alienation reached at its apex level during the reign of Lord Dalhausie. He annexed various states and Doctrine of Lapse became the most powerful instrument in annexation of Indian states. According to Doctrine of Lapse, an Indian state was annexed by British if the ruler had no natural heir. As a result the aristocracy was in the favor of uprooting the British Raj.
The leaders of the revolt were mainly from the aristocracy and had multiple grievances against the British rule. For example, Nana Sahib was refused pension, as he was the adopted son of Peshwa Baji Rao II. Avadh was annexed in 1856, on charges of mal-administration. Satara, Jhansi, Nagpur and Sambhalpur were annexed owing to Doctrine of lapse.
The economic policy of the British Raj destroyed the Indian economy on all fronts.
The exorbitant tax rates from the cultivators, introduction of new land revenue arrangements in India without proper understanding of the ground realities, forcibly evictions and cruel methods to extract the land revenue resulted in breakdown of traditional agrarian economy.
Discriminatory tariff policy against Indian products and destruction of traditional handicrafts resulted into deindustrialization and thousands of artisans suffered.
The drain of wealth from India to Britain without any quid-pro-quo and distorted pattern of foreign trade, wherein the raw material were exported from India while finished goods were imported had serious implications.
The racial discrimination by British against Indians, forceful conversion to Christianity and social reforms like abolition of Sati, 1829; legalization of widow remarriage, 1856 etc. offended the orthodox elements of Indian society.
British discriminated against the Indian soldiers and adopted the policy of exclusion in the service conditions and promotion by which the high and key posts were reserved only for the Europeans.
The introduction of Enfield greased rifles whose cartridges were said to have a greased cover made of beef and pork sparked off the revolt. It antagonized both Hindu and Muslim soldiers
Major Centres of Revolt of 1857 and the events:
S. No. |
Centre
| Date of Beginning | Date of Ending | Indian Leader | British officer |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Delhi
| 11 May, 1857 | 20 Sep.,1857 | Bahadur Shah II ‘Zafar’ and Bakht Khan | John Nicholson |
2 | Kanpur
| 4 June, 1857 | 6 Dec., 1857 | Nana Sahib and his loyal Commander Tantiya Tope | Colin Campbell |
3 | Lucknow | 4 June, 1857 | 21 Mar., 1858 | Begum Hazrat Mahal | Colin Campbell |
4 | Jhansi | 4 June, 1857 | 18 June, 1858 | Rani Laxmi Bai | Huge Rose |
5 | Allahabad | 5 June, 1857 | March, 1858 | Liyaqat Ali | Colonel Neil |
6 | Jagdishpur | Aug., 1857 | Dec., 1858 | Kuer Singh and Amar Singh | William Taylor and Vincet Eyre. |
As per the British historians the revolt was merely a “Sepoy mutiny”, on the other hand as per the Indian scholars it was the first war of independence. However, the exact nature of the revolt was somewhat between these extreme views.
It has been said that dead Julius Caesar was more powerful than Julius Caesar alive. The same may be said about the Revolt of 1857. Whatever might have been its original character; it soon became a symbol of challenge to the mighty British Empire in India and remained a shining star for the rise and growth of the Indian national movement.
The following were the causes of failure:
Important books on revolt of 1857
Book | Author |
The First Indian War of Independence-1857-59 | Karl Marx |
Rebellion, 1857 : A Symposium | P.C. Joshi |
The Sepoy Mutiny & the rebellion of 1857 | R.C. Mazumdar |
Civil Rebellion in Indian Mutinies | S.B. Chowdhury |
1857 | S.N. Sen |
Causes of Indian Revolt | Sayed Ahmad Khan |
The First War of Indian Independence | V.D. Savarkar |
S. No. | Tribe | Year | Leaders | Cause |
1 | Chuar | 1766 | Raja Jagannath | Excess Revenue demand, Bengal famine |
2 | Bhills | 1817 | Sewaram | Agrarian hardship |
3 | Hos | 1820 | ………… | British occupation of Singhbhum |
4 | Ramosi | 1822 | Chittur Singh, Pratap Singh, Dattaraya Patkar
| British Rule |
5 | Kolis | 1824 | …….. | Dismantle of forests |
6 | Ahom | 1828-33 | Gomadhar kunwar | British occupation |
7 | Khasi | 1829-32 | Tiruth Singh | British occupation |
8 | Kol | 1831-32 | Buddhu Bhagat | Land transfer to outsiders |
9 | Santhals | 1855-56 | Sidhu & Kanhu | British Rule |
10 | Naikda | 1858 | Rup Singh | For Dharma Raj against ban Joria Bhagat on grazing and timber |
11 | Bhuyan & Juang | 1867-68 | Ratna Nayak | Installation of British |
12 |
| 1891 | Dharni Nayak | protégé on throne |
13 | Kacha Nagas | 1882 | Sambhuden | British intervention |
14 | Munda (Ulgulam) | 1899 | Birsa Munda | Land system, Missionary activity and Forced labour |
15 | Bhills | 1913 | Govind Guru | A temperance and purification movement |
16 | Oraons (Tana Bhagat)
| 1914 | Jatra Bhagat & Other Bhagats | Religious Reason |
17 | Chenchus | 1921-22 | ------------ | British control of forests. |
18 | Koyas/ Rampas | 1922-24 | Alluri Sitaram Raju | British Rule |
19 | Naga | 1932 | Jadunang (1905-31) and Rani Gaidinliu | A reformist movement later directed against excess of British rule |
The civil revolts under British rule
Peasant movements under British Raj
S. No. | Movement | Place | Year | Leaders |
1 | Indigo Revolt | Bengal | 1859 | Bishnu and Digambar Biswas |
2 | Pabna | Bengal | 1870 | Ishwar Roy, Sabu Pal, Khoodi Mollah |
3 | Deccan Riots | Maharashtra | 1875 |
|
4 | Ramosi Movement | Maharashtra | 1879 | Vasudev Balwant Phadke |
5 | Bijolia | Rajasthan | 1913 | Sitaram Das, Vijay Pathik Singh |
6 | Champaran
| Bihar | 1917 | Gandhiji |
7 | Kheda | Gujarat | 1918 | Gandhiji and Vallabh Bhai Patel |
8 | UP Kisan Sabha
| Uttar Pradesh | 1918 | Indra Narayan Dwivedi and Gauri Shankar Mishra |
9 | Avadh Kisan Sabha | Uttar Pradesh | 1920 | Baba Ramachandra |
10 | Moplah | Kerala | 1921 | Sayyad Ali and Sayyid Fazl |
11 | Eka Movement | Avadh | 1921 | Madari Pasi |
12 | Bordoli/Borsad | Gujarat | 1928 | Vallabh Bhai Patel |
13 | Forest Satyagrah | South India | 1931 | NV Rama Naidu, NG Ranga |
14 | All India Kisan Sabha
| Lucknow | 1936 | Sahajanada Saraswati |
15 | Tebhaga | Bengal | 1946 | Kamparan Singh, Nyamat Ali |
16 | Punnapra-Waylar | Kerala | 1946 |
|
17 | Telengana | Andhra Pradesh | 1946 | Kumaraiya and Sundaraiya |
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1. What were the main causes of the Revolts of 1857 in India? |
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