The Great Revolt of 1857: I. Causes
The Great Revolt of 1857: I. Causes
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
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
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.
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.
The Sepoy Mutiny & the rebellion of 1857 R.C. Mazumdar