Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
Tags: #Oxford University Press, #9780195304312, #Inc
of the eighteenth century and disrupted the commercial networks
that were central to the Mughal economy.
These dire conditions spurred Aurangzeb’s decision to abandon
the accommodationist policies of his predecessors. Short of money to
pay his troops and desperate to shore up his legitimacy, the emperor
alienated his Hindu subjects by retreating to the relative security
of Islamic orthodoxy. His wasteful and intolerant policies sent the
empire into a downward spiral that enabled the EIC to gain its political foothold in India. His death in 1707 touched off a three-decadelong power struggle among his heirs that allowed a variety of power
brokers to play the role of kingmaker in enthroning and deposing a
succession of increasingly pathetic Mughal princelings. Alamgir II,
the reigning emperor when Clive won his victory at Plassey, was a
puppet of his chief minister, who ordered his assassination to keep
him from falling into the hands of rivals. Alamgir’s son Shah Alam II
survived in power until his death in 1806 by attaching himself to
the
nawab
of Awadh, the Marathas, invading Afghan Rohillas (who
blinded him), and fi nally the EIC.
The Mughal Empire was a hollow shell by the mid-eighteenth
century, but it did not meet the fate of its Inkan counterpart by falling
to a direct western invasion. Instead, the East India Company became
an Indian power by winning the scramble to fi ll the vacuum left by
the Mughal Empire’s collapse. The EIC’s primary rivals were Mughal
functionaries and governors who founded autonomous states in Bengal, Awadh, and Hyderabad on the Deccan Plateau. Additionally, new
powers like the Marathas, Afghan Rohillas, and Sikhs also carved out
Company
India 189
states as the empire lost control of its hinterlands. In southern India,
which was never under direct Mughal rule, a military adventurer in
Mysore named Hyder Ali made himself a dangerous threat to the
Company by allying with the French. Yet this political disorder did
not do too much damage to the integrated commercial economy of
South Asia. Indeed, credit was widely available, and a network of
bankers funded many of the regional powers.
Bengal in particular was one of the most prosperous regions in
South Asia in the decades before Plassey. Enriched by imports of
American silver and the export of textiles and raw silk, sugar, pepper, opium, and other cash crops, the province had became one of
the most valuable territories in the Mughal Empire at the turn of
the eighteenth century. Most important, its highly commercialized
cash-based economy allowed
zamindars
to collect tribute in rupees.
The Mughals thus had a strong incentive to retain the province.
Responding to a 1698 revolt by the local
zamindars
, Aurangzeb
installed one of his grandsons as
nazim
(governor) and sent an exslave named Kartalab Khan to be the
diwan
(fi scal offi cer). Assisted by
a contingent of expatriate Hindu clerks, this able bureaucrat updated
the revenue rolls, removed embezzling
jagir
holders, and tortured
defaulting
zamindars
into fulfi lling their tribute obligations. In short
order his ruthless tactics produced more than ten million rupees for
the imperial treasury, which led the grateful Aurangzeb to ennoble
him as Murshid Quli Khan. In time, the collapse of Mughal authority made this former slave the semi-independent
nawab
of Bengal,
but he never stopped making tribute payments to the Mughal treasury in Delhi.
Murshid Quli Khan’s stern but effi cient rule spared Bengal much
of the turmoil of the early eighteenth century, but his death in 1727
opened the way for a succession struggle among his would-be heirs.
His son-in-law initially emerged victorious, but in 1740 a lesser offi cial named Alivardi Khan seized the
nawab
ship with the backing of
the Hindu bureaucracy, the powerful Jagat Seth banking family, and
a personal guard of northern Indian Pathans. Alivardi Khan almost
lost the province to a Maratha invasion, but he left Bengal relatively
secure when died in 1756. His grandson Siraj-ud-Daula was Clive’s
opponent at Plassey.
It is entirely understandable that Bengali
nawabs
were not prepared to deal with the unexpectedly assertive East India Company.
190 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
The EIC’s board of directors certainly was not interested the politics of the province, but at a time when it took six months to send
orders from London, the Bengal Presidency made the decision to
purchase
zamindari
rights in Calcutta’s hinterlands entirely on its
own. Becoming Mughal vassals by moving from trade into revenue
collection was highly profi table, but it embroiled Company employees in the competition to succeed the Mughals in the province. The
resulting private empire was thus the individual handiwork of ambitious Company employees, the most successful of whom eighteenthcentury Britons nicknamed nabobs. As an English corruption of the
Mughal title
nawab
, the term meant an extravagantly wealthy and
powerful person who made his fortune by exploiting Indians. Far
from being an honorifi c, it was a satirical expression of derision for
grasping imperial entrepreneurs who were corrupted by greed and
shameless orientalism.
Clive was the nabob personifi ed. The son of a Shropshire squire
and attorney of limited means, he arrived in India as an eighteenyear-old clerk with the unapologetic intention of acquiring a fortune. By the turn of the eighteenth century, it had become clear to
ambitious social climbers that the chaos that gripped Mughal India
offered opportunities to acquire wealth and status that were simply
unavailable in Britain. But it also took fame and publicity to propel
a junior clerk of common origins into the oligarchic ranks of landed
gentlemen who dominated metropolitan politics and society. Clive’s
opportunity came in 1747 after he transferred to the military arm
of the Company and distinguished himself by turning back a French
attack on an important Indian ally of the Madras Presidency. The
grateful
nawab
of Arcot awarded him the title Sabut Jang Bahadur,
“fi rm in war,” which made him a Mughal nobleman with a
zat
rank
signifying the command of ten thousand soldiers and horsemen.13
More signifi cant, his exploits made him a minor celebrity in Britain
and won him the leadership of the relief force that recaptured Calcutta from the
nawab
of Bengal.
Although Plassey was a minor battle in military terms, Clive’s victory brought him the fortune and celebrity that had drawn him to
India. With Mir Jafar fi rmly in his pocket, and assured of the support
of the main Bengali merchant and banking families, he beat back a
military challenge from the increasingly impotent Dutch East India
Company and forced his pet
nawab
to grant the EIC
zamindari
rights
Company
India 191
over twenty-four more subdistricts (
parganas
) in eastern Bengal. Two
years later, he took the enormously audacious step of secretly convincing Mir Jafar and the Mughal emperor to grant him a
jagir
over
this territory, which effectively made him the Company’s superior in
Bengal under the terms of Mughal feudalism. Although the tribute
from the Twenty-Four Parganas was substantial, the EIC was entitled
to keep only 10 percent of it before turning the rest over to Clive as the
recognized
jagir
holder. On average, the
jagir
netted the rising nabob a
staggering annual income of twenty-seven thousand pounds.14
Clive’s peers used similar tactics in the Madras and Bombay presidencies. In southern India, the Company became the dominant force
in Madras after vanquishing the French East India Company and
its local allies during the Seven Years’ War. With the French threat
waning and profi ts from conventional trade on the decline, Company employees sought fortunes in tribute collecting, loan-sharking,
mercenary service to local powers, and soliciting bribes from Indian
princes. Loans from Indian bankers gave them additional means to
fi nance private trading schemes and military adventures.
In Bengal, the nabobs wrung approximately two million pounds
out of the province by looting its treasury and extorting gifts from
provincial elites. In 1760, Clive arrived in Britain as a conquering hero
with thirty thousand pounds’ worth of diamonds, Company bills of
exchange totaling fi fty thousand pounds, and, interestingly, two hundred and thirty thousand pounds’ worth of bills issued by the rival
Dutch East India Company.15 Apparently his imperial enthusiasm did
not prevent him from traffi cking with the EIC’s archrival.
Clive’s departure left Mir Jafar and his fellow Bengali conspirators
in the hands of Henry Vansittart and a cabal of senior Company offi cials who wasted little time in following Clive’s example in exploiting
their privileged position. Although
zamindari
rights in the TwentyFour Parganas entailed only the authority to gather tribute, the EIC’s
dependence on revenue collection forced it to intervene more aggressively in the political and commercial life of Bengal. This gave Company employees more opportunities to seek personal fortunes, but
it did not mean that they intended to carve out an empire in eastern
India. They merely joined the other Mughal vassals and clients who
sought to profi t from the empire’s collapse.
In this sense they were not very different from Mir Jafar and his Bengali backers. However, the inept old Mughal soldier was a poor custodian
192 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
of the Company’s interests and nearly bankrupted the province making
good on his fi nancial promises to the nabobs. The EIC therefore replaced
him with his father-in-law, Mir Kasim, on the condition that the new
nawab
bestow an additional tens of thousands of pounds’ worth of
“presents” on Vansittart and other senior Company offi cials.
Once in power, Mir Kasim moved his power base beyond the
Company’s reach to western Bengal. Recognizing the shifting military balance in the post-Plassey era, he tried to free himself from
British oversight by upgrading his army and executing fi fty-six
Company employees. In the ensuing war, he formed an alliance with
the Mughal emperor Shah Alam II and the
nawab
of the neighboring
kingdom of Awadh. The defeat of their combined forces at Buxar by
Company troops in 1764 fi rmly established the EIC as the supreme
political and military power in eastern India, which allowed Vansittart to reinstate Mir Jafar as
nawab
.
With its beachhead in Bengal secure, the East India Company
forced the
nawab
of Awadh to become a client by admitting a Company supervisor into his court. This “resident” took control of his
diplomatic and military affairs, which brought the kingdom squarely
into the EIC’s sphere of infl uence. Additionally, the
nawab
had to pay
for the support of a Bengal army garrison. Over time, the Company’s
informal relationships with these sorts of Indian princes developed
into the residency system, which gave it control of nominally independent rulers without adding the expense of imperial conquest and
direct administration to its balance sheet.
In Bengal, however, the
nawabs
lost what remained of their
authority and became simple fi gureheads after Mir Jafar died in 1765.
The Company disbanded their armies, placed them on an allowance,
and chose their heirs. Like the Inka nobility, the Bengali ruling classes
suffered the disorienting loss of status that befalls vanquished imperial elites. In dismantling the
nawabs
’ military and court, the Company dried up an important source of patronage, thereby threatening
tens of thousands of aristocratic cavalrymen with impoverishment.
Although Plassey did not produce a shock on par with Pizarro’s stroke
at Cajamarca, Mughal intellectuals used the Arabic and Persian term
inqilab
, a sudden “inversion of the existing order,” to describe how
the fall of Bengal had turned their world upside down.16
Company offi cials played down their imperial intentions by pretending to rule as Mughal vassals, but their reliance on relatively
Company
India 193
common Indian intermediaries disrupted the established social order.
Becoming a successful nabob required local allies serving as interpreters, trading partners, and fi nanciers. Far from being mere pawns, these
banians
grew wealthy on the EIC’s empire building.17 Most were new
men whose infl uence and status humiliated the older Mughal nobility. Ghulam Hussain Khan, the son of an aristocratic court family
who served both Mir Jafar and the EIC, was disgusted by the
banians
’
ability to exploit the greed and ignorance of the nabobs. Writing in
1781, he complained that the young “beardless” upstarts who attached
themselves to Company offi cials “have no view but that of their own
benefi t, and think of only pleasing their English masters.”18
The nabobs owed their fortunes to these upstarts. Yet just as Hernando Pizarro discovered that no amount of looted Inka treasure