Rise of The EIC
Rise of The EIC
Rise of The EIC
4. English EIC as the Dominant Political Force in the Indo Pak Sub Continent
With the death of Aurungzeb, the Mughal Empire started to decline and to take advantage of the vanity of the successors
of Aurungzeb, the EIC sent its agents to Delhi. Farrukh Syar issued three firmans to the EIC in 1713 which granted them
the right to duty free and tax free trade in Calcutta, Madras and Bombay. But without a strong Emperor at the center,
local rulers started to become independent, and refused to recognize any settlement the EIC had entered into with the
Mughal Emperor at Delhi. In 1717, Murshid Quli Khan became the first independent Nawab of Bengal. His successors –
Alivardi Khan and Siraj ud Daula – followed his line in taking a hard stance against the British over the matter of non-
payment of taxes and fortifications of their factories.
a. Battles of Plassey and Buxar: Nawab Siraj ud Daula attacked and took Calcutta from the British in 1756 and EIC
under Robert Clive took it back. But instead of waiting for an opportune moment, Clive took the initiative and
turned Siraj ud Daula’s commander in chief, Mir Jaffar, against him. Clive defeated Siraj ud Daula in the Battle of
Plassey in 1757, effectively making EIC the kingmaker in Bengal. EIC replaced a number of Nawabs within a few
months. One of them, Mir Qasim, showed independent tendencies, forged an alliance with Nawab Shuja ud Daula
of Oudh with whom resided at the time, the Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II, and faced the EIC in the Battle of Buxar
in 1764. EIC emerged victorious and got diwani rights in Bengal i.e. the right to collect taxes. This effectively made
the EIC, the supreme power in Bengal for all practical purposes.
b. EIC’s Domination of South India: Southern India posed a different challenge for the EIC. Opposition in this region
was organized and there were multiple forces to be dealt with including the Mysorean Dynasty led by Haider Ali
and then his son, Tipu Sultan; the Nizam of Hyderabad; the Marathas who with the help of the French, were
expanding towards Central India from the West, challenging the British who were approaching Delhi from the
East; and the French East India Company which initially led by Dupleix had defeated the EIC on every diplomatic
front. But the tide began to turn with Robert Clive’s victory at Arcot in 1751 after which despite a few temporary
setbacks that ended in treaties of restitution with the rulers of Mysore, there was no stopping the EIC, who settled
their rivalry with the French for all practical purposes at the Battle of Wandiwash in 1760, followed by a defeat of
the Dutch, and a decisive victory over the Mysorean Dynasty in a series of four Anglo-Mysore Wars fought by
various Governor Generals of the EIC between 1767 and 1799.
c. EIC’s Conquest of Central India: after the assassination of Narayan Rao, the fifth Peshwa of the Marathas, the
largest and most powerful confederacy in India had been busy in a civil war. The British saw this as an opportunity
to interfere in the internal matters of the Marathas and weaken them from the inside – classic divide and rule
tactics that the British were so good at. In the Maratha civil wars of 1775 and 1803, the British sided with the
weaker claimant to the office of Peshwa but failed to achieve a decisive settlement in their favour. It was only in
1818 when the British faced them for the third time that the British emerged victorious. The third battle with the
Marathas had been a result of the refusal of the Marathas to help the British against the Pindaris in 1817. In the
absence of French support and decline in Maratha power due to continuous internal strife, they proved to be no
match for the British. In 1818, after the third Anglo-Maratha war, the office of the Peshwa was abolished. There
was no other serious contender for Delhi after that.
d. EIC’s Control of Delhi: by the time Akbar Shah II, the second last Mughal Emperor was on the throne in 1806,
Mughal control of the Red Fort at Delhi was only in name since the EIC had its regent placed at the Red Fort. Even
within Delhi, the city to which the extent of the Mughal Empire was restricted, law and order was maintained by
the EIC and taxes were also collected by the EIC. The final blow was to come later in the form of a failed attempt
at a revolution in 1857 when the EIC was replaced by the British Crown. Till then, EIC did as it pleased in India. Its
internal and external sovereignty was unchallenged in India for a while.
e. EIC’s Annexation of Sindh after the Failure in Afghanistan: frontier regions of India were of special interest to the
English East India Company, especially once the EIC was convinced that the Southward expansion of Tsarist Russia
under the Romanovs was a threat to its own imperial/colonial interests. When diplomatic missions to Afghanistan
failed, the EIC organized its “Army of the Indus” to invade Afghanistan in 1839 and replace the Afghan Emir Dost
Muhammad with Shah Shuja. While the army was successful at first, the Afghans rose up in rebellion against the
alien invaders and drove the British out in 1842. To rescue the Englishmen left behind in Afghanistan, the EIC
organized another “Army of Retribution” in 1843 and rescued the Englishmen whom the Afghans had taken as
prisoners. With the conclusion of the First Anglo-Afghan War, the EIC wanted to have a secure launching board in
Sindh, not to mention that it wanted to cut its military costs of maintaining an army in Sindh. Thus, Sindh was
annexed though many saw it as a move to emphasize the EIC’s dominant position in India – the company did not
want the Indians to take the disaster in Afghanistan as a sign of EIC’s weakness and wanted them to know that it
could still do with India whatever it wanted.
f. The Sale of Kashmir and EIC’s Annexation of Punjab: one of the strongest successor Kingdoms of the Mughal
Empire was the Sikh Kingdom under Maharaja Ranjit Singh who had founded it officially after the occupation of
Lahore in 1799. EIC entered into an agreement with Ranjit Singh in 1809 according to which the Sutlej was
demarcated as the boundary between the EIC’s possessions in India and the Sikh Kingdom. This was respected by
both sides till the death of Ranjit Singh in 1839 after which the Sikh Kingdom stated to weaken and disintegrate.
As the EIC posted its troops on the South-East bank of Sutlej to prevent a spillover effect and the Sikhs posted
their soldiers on the North-West bank of Sutlej as a precaution against a possible invasion by the EIC, both armies
launched a preemptive attack on each other due to mutual suspicions. The First Anglo-Sikh War led to a Sikh
defeat after which Kashmir was stripped off from the Sikh Kingdom and sold off to Gulab Singh Dogra in 1846.
Two years later, a small quarrel between the locals and the EIC officials in Multan spiraled into the Second Anglo-
Sikh War which concluded in 1849 with a decisive EIC victory as a result of which Punjab was annexed by the EIC.
Starting off in Eastern India and moving towards Western India, the EIC had Delhi and Agra surrounded by the time the
War of Independence broke out, because of which the uprising remained confined to Central India. Other factors too
played their part but they all had to do with the political and economic might of the EIC which was restrained not by some
Indian force but by its own imperial overstretch that led to practices inviting the attention and involvement of the British
Government which took over the Indian possessions of the EIC in 1858.