History, asked by vishal484, 1 year ago

how did the religious and economic reforms of British alienate orthodox Indians

Answers

Answered by Shaizakincsem
30

Answer:

The detail is given below:

Explanation:

Orthodox is the acceptance of religion and orthodox Indians refers to the adherent communities in India mostly in the west.

The economic reform turned away the orthodox Indian in a way when British rulers proclaimed some rules and fixed the revenues with a very high amount. It was out of the range of many average people.

People at that time follow the term ''Sati'' and the British diminish that term and this is how this affected the religious reform of Orthodox Indians.

Answered by deva9847
8

Answer:

Explanation:

Orthodox is the acceptance of religion and orthodox Indians refers to the adherent communities in India mostly in the west.

The economic reform turned away the orthodox Indian in a way when British rulers proclaimed some rules and fixed the revenues with a very high amount. It was out of the range of many average people.

People at that time follow the term ''Sati'' and the British diminish that term and this is how this affected the religious reform of Orthodox Indians.

Similar questions