History, asked by faizulhaq141, 10 months ago

What are the socio-religious changes that the British brought in india when it become a major political and military power?

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Answered by shramonamarik2002
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Answer:

Explanation:The Company banned some Hindu practices like sati and thuggee, which they found particularly abhorrent, and began to allow Hindu widows to remarry in 1856.Governor-General Dalhousie had begun to allow Christian converts to inherit ancestral property starting in 1850. Though overall, the East India Company men were not "eager to anglicise India, fearing to offend the educated class on whose support they depended, and arouse religious antagonism."] In 1813, though they had been forced to admit Christian missionaries, the Company tried to avoid being seen as a proponent of the missions. A publication during the Indian Mutiny of 1857 states that the East India Company even manifested disfavour towards Christianity to obtain the confidence of Hindus.

Examining religion from a more political aspect, the Company codified Muslim and Hindu law to take the flexibility out of the law’s traditional practice, to strengthen the Company’s indirect rule and entrench the local elites.] Initially, the British in the East India Company favoured the Hindus over the Muslims as government agents because the Hindus were generally less hostile to their presence; the Company systematically removed Muslims from positions of power over its tenure in India.However, by 1893 Hindu power in the Indian National Congress was growing at rate disquieting to the British, so they reversed their traditional policies and began encouraging Muslims to enter the political process to make the body less effective.

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