History, asked by haniasheerazpcmmrk, 1 month ago

C) How far was the indian resistance to British expansion in the subcontinent successful before 1850 ?/14​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

The British were almost completely successful in taking control of lands in the S.C between 1750 and 1856. The British had come to India for trade and to increase and ensure their trade they found it necessary to have political control of lands in the sub-continent.

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Answered by iliosbii
4

here !! :)

Explanation:

in this question, you can write about the battle of Plassey that was fought between Siraj ud doula and Robert clive you can also include the battle of buxar. then the resistance by tipu sultan and the anglo Mysorean wars. then of the annexation of sindh and the resistance by the amirs. how the maratha were defeated by the british and lastly the defeat of the sikh empire.

here are some notes from pakistanstudies.pk

The British were almost completely successful in taking control of lands in the S.C between 1750 and 1856. The British had come to India for trade and to increase and ensure their trade they found it necessary to have political control of lands in the sub-continent. The first opportunity came in 1757 when battle of Plassey took place. In this battle the forces of the East India Company under Robert Clive met the army of Siraj-ud-Doula, the Nawabs of Bengal. Clive had 800 Europeans and 2200 Indians whereas Siraj-ud-doula in his entrenched camp at Plassey was said to have about 50,000 men with a train of heavy artillery. Unfortunately Mir Jafar, met with Clive, and the greater number of the Nawabs soldiers were bribed to throw away their weapons, surrender prematurely, and even turn their arms against their own army. Siraj-ud-Doula was defeated. Battle of Plassey marked the first major military success for British East India Company.

It was followed by the battle of Buxar. Mir Kasim the Nawab of Bengal took help from Nawab Shuja-ud– daulah and the Emperor Shah Alam II. But the English under General-Major Hector Munro at Buxar defeated the combined army on 22 October 1764. Mir Kasim fled and died in 1777. After winning the Battle of Buxar, the British had earned the right to collect land revenue in Bengal, Bihar and Orissa. This development set the foundations of British political rule in India. After the victory of

the English in Buxar, Robert Clive was appointed the governor and commander in chief of the English army in Bengal in 1765. He is claimed as the founder of the British political dominion in India. Robert Clive also brought reforms in the administration of the company and the organization of the army.

The British wanted full control of south India to ensure their spice trade. Lord Wellesley became the Governor-General of India in 1798. Tipu Sultan tried to secure an alliance with the French against the English in India. Wellesley questioned Tipu’s relationship with the French and attacked Mysore in 1799. The fourth Anglo-Mysore War was of short duration and decisive and ended with Tipu’s death on May 4, 1799, who was killed fighting to save his capital.

Besides that Marathas were also defeated and Maratha's power was destroyed by the British in several wars during 1817- 1818. Holkar’s forces were routed at Mahidpur on December 21, 1817, and Baji Rao II, who was trying to consolidate Marathas, finally surrendered in June 1818. British abolished the position of Peshwa and Marathas were limited to the small kingdom of Satara. This ended the mighty Maratha's power.

British wanted to make sure that Afghanistan didn’t fall into Russian hands. British agreed with Ranjit Singh (ruler of Punjab) that Afghanistan should remain independent. A rebellion broke out in Afghanistan in 1841 in which British troops were killed. British felt that their pride had been hurt in Afghanistan and decided to turn in Sindh. Sindh was ruled by a collection of Amirs who had signed a treaty with the British in 1809. British General Sir Charles Napier provoked the Amirs of Sindh so much that they attacked British residency in 1843. Amirs were defeated and Sindh was annexed by the British.

Punjab was the next target. Ranjit Singh had signed a perpetual friendship in 1809 but after his death in 1839, the rival chiefs argued themselves over who should be a king. The army attacked British possessions south of River Sutlej and provoked the British to invade Punjab. War began but the British remained victorious. Gulab Singh Dogra, a chief who helped the British and was given Kashmir as a reward. In 1849, after a revolt against the British, Punjab, NWFP was annexed and became part of the British Empire on 30 March 1849. Hyderabad, Deccan, Oudh and the local Nawabs had been forced to sign treaties with EIC; this gave their external affairs to Britain.

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