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The Great Revolt of 1857: I. Causes

The document provides details about the Great Revolt of 1857 in India, also known as the Indian Rebellion of 1857 or First War of Indian Independence. It discusses the various causes of the revolt including military, political, economic and socio-religious factors. It outlines the important centers of revolt and their Indian leaders. It also examines whether the revolt should be considered a Sepoy Mutiny or the First War of Indian Independence. Finally, it analyzes the reasons for the failure of the revolt and the outcomes, including the Government of India Act of 1858 which transferred control of India from the East India Company to the British Crown.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
231 views3 pages

The Great Revolt of 1857: I. Causes

The document provides details about the Great Revolt of 1857 in India, also known as the Indian Rebellion of 1857 or First War of Indian Independence. It discusses the various causes of the revolt including military, political, economic and socio-religious factors. It outlines the important centers of revolt and their Indian leaders. It also examines whether the revolt should be considered a Sepoy Mutiny or the First War of Indian Independence. Finally, it analyzes the reasons for the failure of the revolt and the outcomes, including the Government of India Act of 1858 which transferred control of India from the East India Company to the British Crown.

Uploaded by

mahima sharma
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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UPSC NOTES

The  Great  Revolt  of  1857

I. Causes

(i) Military
– Uses  of  cartridges  made  from  cow  and  pig  fat  (rumored)  in  new  Enfield  rifle  replaced  the  older
Brown  Bess.  This  use  of  fat  was  respectively  offensive  to  the  Hindus  and  Muslims
– Overseas  deployment,  which  was  against  the  belief  of  Hindus  in  not  crossing  the  seas
– Differences  in  salaries  for  equal  ranks  (Refusal  to  pay  Batta  (allowance)  to  Indian  soldiers).  Special
provisions  for  European  soldiers
-­‐  Religious  identities  seemed  to  be  in  crisis,  under  the  threat  of  conversion
– Regular  humiliation  at  the  hands  of  British  officers

(ii) Political  cause


– Doctrine  of  Lapse  (by  Lord  Dalhousie)  –  states  under  this  revolted
Nana  Sahib  was  refused  pension,  as  he  was  the  adopted  son  of  Peshwa  BajiRao  II.  Awadh  was
annexed  in  1856,  on  charges  of  mal-­‐administration.  Satara,  Jhansi,  Nagpur  and  Sambhalpur  were
annexed  owing  to  Doctrine  of  lapse

(iii) Economic  causes


– High  rate  of  taxation
– Discriminatory  tariff  policy  against  Indian  products  and  destruction  of  traditional  handicrafts
resulted  into  deindustrialization  which  resulted  in  unemployment
(iv) Socio-­‐  Religious  causes
– Some  reforms  like  Anti  Sati  Resolution  (1829),  Widow  Remarriage  Act  (1856)  were  unpopular  among
orthodox  Hindus.
– Racial  discrimination  by  British  against  Indians,  Forceful  conversion  to  Christianity

Muslim  
  Elite  [Ashraf  in  Persian]   Mangal  Pandey  
–Before  
  British,  they  held  top  position  in  Army,  Civil –was  a  sepoy  in  34thBengal    Native
services,  
  Judiciary. Infantry  regiment  of  E.I.C.
–Persian  
.   being  replaced  by  English  as  official  language – known  for  his  involvement  in  the
affected  
  t hem  a  lot. initial  stages  of  revolt  of  1857.
–   Some  Muslim  elite  joined  the  revolt  thinking  they – originally  from  Awadh.
could  
  re-­‐establish  the  old  system. – 1stperson  to  revolt,  at  Barrackpore.

 
Sepoy   Mutiny  or  First  War  of  Indian  Independence?  
Not  just  a  Sepoy  Mutiny  -­‐it  was  not  just  confined  to  the  sepoys  or  soldiers,  but  was  much  broader  in  base.  
The  civilian  population,  aristocracy,  peasants,  religious  leaders  etc  played  active  role  in  the  revolt.  

Not  completely  the  First  War  of  Independence  –  India  was  merely  a  geographical  term  then,  leaders  fought  
for  their  own  personal  reasons  to  get  back  what  they  had  lost;  there  was  no  broad  vision  of  a  unified  India  
Therefore,  the  exact  nature  of  the  revolt  was  somewhat  between  these  extreme  views.  
II. Important  centres  and  their  leaders

Centre   Indian  Leader(s)  

Delhi   Bahadur  Shah  II  ‘Zafar’  and  Bakht  Khan  

Bareilly   Khan  Bahadur  Khan  


Kanpur   1. Nana  Saheb  [adopted  son  of  BajiRao  II]
2  .Tantia  Tope  [accountant  of  Nana  Saheb]  
3. AzeemUllah  Khan

Lucknow   Begum  HazratMahal,  mother  of  BirjisQadar  


Jhansi   Rani  LaxmiBai  
Faizabad   Maulvi  Ahmadullah  Shah  (Leader  of  Wahabi  movement)  

Allahabad   Liyaqat  Ali  


Jagdishpur  (Bihar)   Kunwar  Singh  and  Amar  Singh  

Patna   MaulviPir  Ali  (leader  of  Wahabi  movement)  

 
Sepoy   Mutiny  (May  10,  1857)   Wahabi  Movement  
 
–Bloody   uprising  at  the  garrison  in  Meerut – The  most  serious  and  well-­‐planned  challenge  to
 
–Sepoys   marched  to  Delhi  and  “placed British  supremacy  in  India  from  1830's  to  1860's
themselves  
  under  the  leadership”  of  the -­‐  Led  by  Syed  Ahmed  of  Rae  Bareilly
Mughal  
    E mperor   Bahadur  Shah. -­‐  Influenced  by  the  teachings  of  Abdul  Wahab  and
– The  
  b ewildered   E mperor  reluctantly Shah  Waliullah
accepted  the  sepoy’s  allegiance  and  agreed  to –Actively  supported  the  revolt  of  1857
 
give  his  countenance  to  the  rebellion. – Gave  the  slogan  of  ‘Jihad’.
 
– The  Mughal  Emperor  announced  Bakht -­‐  declared  India  as  ‘dar-­‐ul-­‐harb’  meaning  land  of
Khan  as  commander-­‐in-­‐chief. infidels  –  to  be  converted  to  ‘’dar-­‐ul-­‐Islam’  meaning
land  of  peace.

III. Reasons  for  Failure  of  the  Revolt

British  forces  were  better  equipped  with  technology  and  equipment  as  compared  to  the  revolutionaries.  
It  had  some  brilliant  officers  which  played  key  role  in  suppressing  the  revolt.  
The  revolt  didn’t  spread  to  entire  country.  South  India  remained  quiet  and  Punjab  and  Bengal  were  only  
marginally  affected.  
There   was   no   vision   for   the   post   mutiny   institutions   and   the   leaders   didn’t   have   any   forward   looking  
program.  
Lack  of  complete  nationalism-­‐Scindias,  Holkars,  Nizam  and  others  actively  helped  the  British.  
Lack  of  coordination  between  sepoys,  peasants,  zamindars  and  other  classes.  

IV. Outcomes
The  Govt.  of  India  Act  1858  
The  Government  of  India  Act  1858.   – Company’s  territories  in  India  were  to  be
Secretary  of  State  of  India  appointed  with  a  council   vested  in  the  Queen  and  be  governed  by  her.
of  15  members  to  assist  him.   – The  Queen’s  Secretary  of  State  received  the
Viceroy  to  be  appointed.   power  and  duties  of  the  company’s  Court  of
Directors.
ü Viceroy  –  Representative  of  British – The  Crown  was  empowered  to  appoint  a
Crown   governor  general  &  governor  of  presidencies.  
ü Governor  General  –  Head  of – Provision  created  for  Indian  Civil  Services  under
Government  of  India the  S.O.S
– All  property  of  E.L.C  were  transferred  to  the
1st  Secretary  of  State  –  Charter  Wood   Crown  
1st  Governor  General  –  Lord  Warren  Hastings  
Queen’s  Proclamation  
1st  Governor  General  of  India  –  Lord  William  
Queen  Victoria  Proclaimed  
Bentinck  
– No  state  would  be  annexed.
Last  Governor  General  of  India  –    
– No  more  intervention  in  religious  matters.
C  Rajagopalachari  
– No  conversion  in  religion  by  force.
1st  Viceroy  &  Governor  General  –  Lord  Canning  
–No  discrimination  in  recruitment  of  Army  Services.

Measures  Adopted  by  British  After  1857  


Appease  certain  sections  of  Indian  Society  –  ‘divide  and  rule’  policy  
Strategically  change  the  army  
ü The  proportion  of  Europeans  to  Indians  in  the  army  was  raised  and  fixed  at  one  to  two  in  the
Bengal  army  and  two  to  five  in  the  Madras  and  Bombay  armies
ü All  sensitive  posts  were  only  for  the  Europeans
ü Caste  based  battalions  were  raised
The  British  government  decided  not  to  interfere  in  the  matter  of  religion  of  Indians.  This  derailed  the  
socio-­‐religious  reforms  by  government  
Important  Books  on  the  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

1857   S.N.  Sen  

Causes  of  Indian  Revolt   Saiyed  Ahmad  Khan  

The  First  War  of  Indian  Independence   V.D.  Savarkar

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