Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
Tags: #Oxford University Press, #9780195304312, #Inc
Although this Five-Year Settlement was more ordered and systematic than Clive’s dismal attempts to make the
diwani
work, it also
fl oundered on the Company’s inability to exert control at the local
level. The collectors were too ignorant of Bengali tribute relations to
be effective, and Hastings had to replace them with their Indian deputies. Moreover, unreasonably high agricultural prices after the 1770
famine led many of the new revenue collectors to overpay for their
concessions. They therefore failed to maintain the irrigation systems
that sustained Bengali agriculture and continued to drive off
ryots
with their unreasonable demands for revenue.
Faced with pronounced revenue shortfalls and rising administrative and military costs, Hastings correctly recognized that real authority in Bengal required more intimate knowledge of local conditions.
Investigations in some of the largest and most important
zamindaris
hinted at widespread fraud in tribute collection and suggested that
large tracts of valuable land were underassessed or not assessed at all.
Like earlier generations of empire builders, Company offi cials found,
much to their frustration, that effi cient imperial extraction hinged
on the cooperation of local authority. The nabobs’ personal fortunes,
the EIC’s balance sheet, and the metropolitan British government’s
fi nances all depended on their ability to make the
diwani
pay by
exploiting common Bengalis.
Company
India 199
Hastings therefore tried to circumvent the complex Bengali hierarchical system of revenue collection by gathering taxes directly
from the
ryots
. This would have allowed him to dispense with the
services of the petty
zamindars
and bureaucratic middlemen who
took a share of the tribute in return for their services. In 1776, he
appointed a special commission to conduct a new comprehensive survey of Bengal with an eye to revising revenue assessments when the
fi ve-year concessions expired in 1777. The architects of Akbar’s
zabt
survey had tried and failed to accomplish much the same thing several centuries earlier, and the commissioners struggled to fulfi ll their
charge because local authorities made it diffi cult for them to get their
hands on district revenue records. Nevertheless, they concluded that
the lower-level
zamindars
and tributaries were intentionally underreporting the value of their holdings, and they blamed the unreasonable demands of the new revenue speculators, who had replaced the
Mughal
jagir
holders, for depressing production.
Both charges were largely accurate.
Zamindars
had no reason to
let Company assessors know how much wealth they actually took
from
ryots
and craftsmen in their concessions, and the speculative
revenue farmers who had overbid for the right to collect tribute from
them needed draconian tactics to meet their infl ated obligations to the
Company. Their desperate attempts to avoid default invariably drove
some communities to revolt. This was the case in Rangpur in 1783,
when an outsider named Devi Singh tried make up for a 30 percent
shortfall in his collection quota by jailing noncompliant
ryots
and
selling off communal land allocated to schools, mosques, and temples.
Led by minor
zamindars
who also felt the weight of his demands,
the tenants burned revenue records and looted storehouses. Interestingly, they appealed to the Company for redress and appointed their
own administrators and revenue collectors. The Bengal Presidency
removed Devi Singh and abolished his extra taxes, but it could not
allow this expression of local autonomy to go unpunished. The forces
it sent to Rangpur made quick work of
ryots
armed with sticks and
farm tools, but Company troops had to remain in the district to provide the law and order needed to restart revenue collection.
Garrisoning Rangpur was a considerable drain on the EIC’s limited resources, and the nabobs’ empire would have become unworkable if the revolt had spread. The Bengal Presidency could deal with
direct and isolated challenges, but like all empire builders, Company
200 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
offi cials were acutely aware of how little actual control they had
over the countryside. Clive created special paramilitary battalions
to enforce revenue collection, but Hastings disbanded them when it
became clear the troops were preying on rural communities. In the
1780s, the Company stripped the
zamindars
of responsibility for local
law and order and divided Bengal into twenty-square-mile police districts where British magistrates oversaw Indian inspectors and constables. These new security arrangements had little popular support
and were ineffective in dealing with the banditry and burglary that
spread as discharged Indian soldiers and village watchmen turned to
crime to support themselves. Ultimately, violent intimidation was the
most effective means of forcing common Indians to acknowledge the
Company’s imperial authority. After burning several villages that
had rebelled against an EIC’s client ruler in 1782, Major J. Gilpin
candidly admitted: “Knowing from long experience no other means
would prevail, I did this by way of example to [strike] a degree of terror into others, and deter them from rebellion.”23
This was an honest acknowledgment of the inherent terror that
lay below the surface of all imperial enterprises. Although the nabobs
cloaked their conquests in the garb of civilization and good government, it was impossible to conceal the corruption and unalloyed
self-interest that led them to turn the East India Company into an
empire. Clive built his fortune through extortion, shameless stock
speculation, and the “oriental despotism” of his
jagir
. He was reasonably moderate in his personal behavior, but many young Company
offi cials were seduced by the wealth, power, and personal freedom
of empire. As the growing capital of the Bengal Presidency, Calcutta
acquired a reputation as a South Asian Sodom where aspiring nabobs
gambled, drank, smoked opium, and fought duels.
At least the nabobs were less judgmental of their subjects than
were the more staid Company bureaucrats who built on their conquests in the nineteenth century. Aspiring nabobs needed Indian
help in making their fortunes and were relatively unconcerned with
marking and enforcing clear boundaries between imperial citizen and
subject. While they could be ruthless in demanding tribute, they also
appreciated the fi ner qualities of high Mughal culture. Once-lowly
Company clerks learned Indian languages, wore Indian clothes, and
ate Indian food. Like the Pizarrists in the Andes, they often took local
women as wives and mistresses because there were extremely few
Company
India 201
available European women. The opportunities for sexual exploitation
in these relationships are obvious, but it was also relatively common
for them to acknowledge the legitimacy of their Indian spouses and
children in their wills.
The nabobs’ avarice also left them open to manipulation by
wealthy Indians with the means to satisfy their appetite for treasure
and luxury. Nawab Muhammad Ali of Arcot even infl uenced metropolitan British politics by giving George Pigot, the former governor
of Madras, three hundred thousand pounds to help sympathetic politicians buy seats in Parliament. Reasoning that he was secure if the
nabobs had a personal stake in his rule, Muhammad Ali also bought
the cooperation of Company offi cials with bonds backed by tribute
collection. These bonds paid 20 percent interest while their holders
remained in India, but the
nawab
tended to allow them to go into
default when his domesticated nabobs returned to Britain. In 1775,
the outraged creditors sent Pigot back to Madras to force Muhammad Ali to pay up, but the
nawab
ensured that his former client was
arrested and died in jail by making two million pounds’ worth of
“presents” to the Madras presidential council.24
It was only a matter of time before these kinds of outrages provoked a backlash in Britain. The nabobs’ greed and licentiousness
fed fears that the contagion of empire would spread to the metropole. Assuming that all Indians were inherently corrupt, moralists
charged that the embrace of their women and luxurious culture contaminated young Company men. The ability of the nabobs to buy
their way into Parliament produced fears that the wealth of India
was undermining the political order in Britain. Rumors that Indian
princes controlled these MPs led William Pitt to warn the House of
Lords: “The riches of Asia have been poured in upon us, and brought
with them not only Asiatic luxury, but, I fear, Asiatic principles of
government.”25 Imperial critics in Rome, Damascus, and Madrid
would have understood this complaint.
Equally alarming, the nabobs’ purchase of great landed estates
appeared to threaten the aristocratic foundations of metropolitan
society. Hastings built a grand house for himself in the English midlands that was topped with a Mughal dome and furnished with Indian
art and amenities. These sorts of oriental excesses inspired Pitt to
lament that “without connections, without any natural interest in the
soil, the importers of foreign gold forced their way into Parliament
202 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
by such a torrent of corruption, as no private hereditary fortune can
resist.”26 Similarly, Edmund Burke noted that Company men used
Mughal wealth to buy their way into the British elite aristocracy.
Sounding an alarm, he warned his fellow gentlemen: “[The nabobs]
marry into your families; they enter into your senate; they ease your
estates by loans.”27
In 1772, Samuel Foote staged a play called
The Nabob
that captured the growing public alarm over the sudden rise of men such as
Clive and Hastings. In it the mayor of “Bribe’em” negotiates the sale
of his borough’s parliamentary seats to the nabob Sir Matthew Mite.
Asked the origins of Mite’s fortune, the nabob’s underling Touchit
explains how Company men arrived in Indian states as merchants
but “cunningly encroach and fortify little by little, till at length, we
grow too strong for the natives, we turn them out of their lands, and
take possession of their money and jewels.” Touchit reassures the
mayor that the displaced Indian rulers were “little better than Tartars
or Turks,” to which the mayor replies, “No, no, Mr. Touchit; just the
reverse; it is they have caught the Tartars in us.”28
The nabobs’ Tartarism invariably raised questions about the actual
value of the Company’s new Indian empire. Critics charged that metropolitan taxes paid to defend it from the French, thereby infl ating
the national debt. The economist Adam Smith went even further by
pointing out that Clive’s failure to make the
diwani
pay demonstrated
that Company directors could not balance the dual role of merchant
and imperial ruler. “Since they became sovereigns . . . they have been
obliged to beg extraordinary assistance of government in order to
avoid immediate bankruptcy. In their former situation, their servants
in India considered themselves as the clerks of merchants: in their
present situation, those servants consider themselves as the ministers
of sovereigns.”29 Smith’s criticism refl ected widespread concerns that
the Company had become uncontrollable, and rumors fl ew in 1784
that Hastings was planning to declare it an independent state.
It was only a matter of time before the metropolitan authorities
brought the East India Company under tighter supervision. Just as
the Spanish Crown prosecuted Hernando Pizarro for slipping the
bonds of propriety in the Andes, the Company’s enemies struck back
against the nabobs. In some cases they were motivated by civic concern, but more often than not the architects of the counterstroke were
Company men themselves who had been on the losing end of power
Company
India 203
struggles in India. Even Edmund Burke, who was the most eloquent
metropolitan critic of the EIC, speculated in the Company’s stock and
suffered heavy loses during the crash of 1769.
Inevitably Clive, as the most famous nabob and the hero of
Plassey, bore the brunt of the backlash. In 1773, his enemies in the
House of Commons accused him of corruption and proposed to strip
him of any illegally acquired wealth. In an impassioned defense Clive
pointed out that his stock speculation was legal and offered a careful
accounting of his fi nances to demonstrate that he had not accepted
any private gifts during his second term as governor of Bengal. He
made no mention of his conduct after Plassey. Clive justifi ed his
jagir
as a reward for service from a grateful Mir Jafar and suggested that it
spared the Company the expense of pensioning him. Wrapping himself in the newly spun garb of patriotic nationalism, he depicted himself as a loyal servant of the emerging British nation. Clive beat back
the attack, but the parliamentary inquiry was humiliating. In 1774,