Why Did The Indian Mutiny Happen? | National Army Museum
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Why did the Indian Rebellion happen? In 1857, Indian soldiers rose up against their British commanders. They were joined by native rulers and thousands of ordinary people in a struggle that threatened to destroy British colonial power on the Indian subcontinent. The reasons behind the rebellion stretch back to the very origins of British involvement in Indian affairs.7 minute read
Indian Mutiny Asia India 1800s Empire School Essentials Global Role
View this object Rebel sepoys, 1857
East India Company
In the mid-19th century, India was very different from the nation state we know today. It didn't exist as a country, but instead consisted of different territories controlled by a variety of rulers. The most powerful of these was the British East India Company, which governed two thirds of the subcontinent.
Originally formed in 1600, purely to trade with the Mughal Empire, the Company needed to secure its commercial posts at Calcutta (Kolkata), Bombay (Mumbai) and Madras (Chennai). It purchased land from Indian rulers to build its settlements on, and recruited local armed forces to protect them. Eventually, these evolved into the Bengal, Bombay and Madras Armies.
View this object Major-General Lord Robert Clive, 1764
View this object Bengal Army Troops, 1785
Rise to power
By the mid-18th century, the previously dominant Mughal Empire was collapsing as local rivals and European states attempted to carve out their own power bases.
After successfully battling the French for trading supremacy, and simultaneously involving itself in local politics, the Company became India’s leading power in the wake of Robert Clive’s victory at Plassey in 1757.
In the years that followed, it expanded its Indian domains.
Culture clash
From the early 1800s, the Company attempted to develop the Indian economy and legal system. Some changes, such as outlawing 'sati' (a widow's suicide by fire) and child marriage, may have been well-intentioned. But the British imposed them without any regard for Indian culture.
Fears that the British were also trying to force conversion to Christianity upon the Indian people led to widespread concerns that the traditional way of life was under threat.
View this object A sepoy and his wife, 1810
Troop numbers
After taking over the Punjab in 1849, the Company reduced the number of British Army regiments in India. This was for reasons of economy and to free up men to serve in the Crimean War (1854-56).
Of the 159,000 men on the Bengal Army establishment in 1857, 24,000 were European and 135,000 were Indian sepoys (infantry) and sowars (cavalry). This ratio was especially problematic given that discipline in the Bengal Army had for some time been inferior to that in the Company's other armies.
View this object Sepoys at rifle practice, 1857
Discontent
Poor terms of service and pensions, bad pay, lack of promotion, and increased cultural and racial insensitivity from British officers all contributed to the feelings of discontent among the Indian soldiers of the Bengal Army.
Many high-caste Hindu sepoys also viewed attempts during the 1840s to extend recruitment to lower-caste Hindus, Sikhs and Muslims as a threat to the traditional social hierarchy.
No single factor was in itself enough to start a rebellion. But the cumulative effect meant that the only thing needed was a catalyst to turn quiet discontent into a much more serious affair.
New cartridges
The simmering tension eventually boiled over following the introduction of the Pattern 1853 Enfield Rifle. Rumours quickly spread that the cartridges for the new rifle were greased with pig and cow fat, making them offensive to both Muslims and Hindus. This added weight to existing concerns about forced conversion to Christianity.
View this object Enfield Pattern 1853 Percussion Rifle cartridges, 1857
View this object Disarming of the 11th Cavalry at Berhampore, 1857
Outbreak
On 29 March 1857, at Barrackpore (just north of Calcutta), Sepoy Mangal Pandey of the 34th Bengal Native Infantry attacked his officers. When his comrades were ordered to restrain him, they refused. But they stopped short of joining him in open revolt.
Despite only a handful of soldiers having been involved, the entire regiment was disbanded in disgrace. Many sepoys elsewhere thought this too harsh a punishment.
The Rebellion began in earnest at Meerut (near Delhi) on 10 May 1857. Eighty-five members of the 3rd Bengal Light Cavalry, who had been jailed for refusing to use rifle cartridges they believed to be at odds with their religion, were broken out of prison by their comrades. They ransacked the nearby military station, killing any Europeans they could find.
View this object Regimental colour centre of the 41st Native Infantry who attacked their officers and other Europeans at Sitapur on 3 June 1857
Sergeant Hewson, 'the first British casualty of the Mutiny', who was attacked by Mangal Pandey at Barrackpore, c1875
Trouble spreads
The situation rapidly escalated and the British response was slow. The following day, Delhi fell to the mutineers.
News of these events spread, encouraging further mutinies elsewhere. Eventually, all 10 of the Bengal Army's light cavalry regiments and most of its 74 native infantry regiments were affected.Some units were disarmed before they had the chance to mutiny. In other cases, British officers refused to believe their men would rebel until it was too late.
Not everyone who mutinied took up arms against the British. Many simply went home and refused to assist either side.
Captain Charles Gough winning the Victoria Cross at Khurkowhah, 1857
Confined to Bengal
At the outbreak of the rebellion, there were only 35,000 British soldiers in the entire Indian subcontinent, and these were widely scattered. Reinforcements took months to arrive.
Fortunately for the British, it was almost exclusively soldiers of the Bengal Army who mutinied. The Company’s Madras and Bombay Armies were relatively unaffected. Other Indian units - including Sikhs, Punjabi Muslims and Gurkhas - supported the British.
This loyalty was partly out of fear of a return to Mughal rule. But they also had little in common with the high-caste Hindu sepoys of the Bengal Army.
View this object Sikh and British officers of Hodson’s Horse, 1858
Rulers join the rising
Discontent was also high among local rulers, who were angry at the Company’s annexation of native states. Most notorious was the 1856 deposition of the Nawab of Oudh on the grounds that he was unfit to rule.
Equally unpopular was the policy of lapse, which said that the lands of any ruler who died without a male heir would be forfeit to the Company. Princes and maharajahs, along with their courtiers and soldiers, found themselves unemployed and humiliated.
These marginalised people, seen as having the authority to lead a campaign of rebellion, were in many cases a natural focal point for mutineers. And while they may have preferred to deal differently with the British, the arrival of rebel sepoys at their gates often forced them to take up the cause.
Other rulers remained neutral or felt that more could be gained by supporting the British.
View this object The Rani of Jhansi: lost her lands when her husband died without a male heir, and failed to regain them in the British courts
View this object The Nawab of Farrukhabad: reluctantly joined the revolt after sepoys arrived at his palace in June 1857
Religious and social revolt
Thousands of ordinary people joined the uprising: some for religious reasons; others out of loyalty to their old rulers or simply to engage in looting.
Many wanted to destroy the system by which the Company collected taxes. Peasants, who had been forced to switch from subsistence farming to export crops in order to meet increasing tax demands, needed little encouragement to rebel.
Rebel divisions
This was by no means a unified revolt. While all the rebels wanted the British gone, notions of ‘Indian-ness’ were rare. Most of the sepoys hoped to restore Mughal rule under Bahadur Shah. But the inhabitants of Oudh wanted their Nawab back, and the people of Jhansi wanted their old state restored.
The revolt was also divided on religious lines. Most sepoys were Hindus, but other rebels were Muslims fighting a holy war.
View this object Indian troops allied to the British, 1857
Decisive events
Following the outbreak at Meerut, uprisings by soldiers and civilians alike occurred across northern and central India. But the main centres of rebellion were Delhi, Cawnpore (now Kanpur), Lucknow, Jhansi and Gwalior. The future of India would be decided on these battlefields.
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