Chapter ISOCIO ECONOMIC BACKGROUND OF THE
DESCENDENTS OF THE NAWABS OF AVADH
INTRODUCTION
The culture and pattern of life which developed during the
magnificent era of Mughals, in the sixteenth century in Delhi during the
reign of Akbar, after its disintegration started to diffuse across the
Avadh (Oudh) as certain leading figures left Delhi and eventually found
a new home in Lucknow, where the independent court of Avadh was
established in 1753. The highly developed culture brought by them was
further refined in Lucknow to the level of sophistication scarcely
paralleled in any other Indo- Islamic society.
Pahle –Aap ‘after you’ was a phrase of welcome in old Lucknow
and especially imbued with the mannerism of Lucknow’s past usually
associated with the Nawabs. Arabic Nawab, plural of Naib: ‘Deputy’,
but used honorifically as a title. Under the Mughal government the title
of Nawab was prefixed to the name of a high official and the Viceroy or
Governor of a Province. At the time of disintegration of the Mughal
Empire, some of the Nawabs became independent rulers, hence the word
came to a common title for a Muslim sovereign in India. The title was
retained by the British Government of India who would confer it upon a
Muslim of a high rank or a dignitary without any office being attached
to it. In 1947, the Republic of India, abolished the creation of new
Nawabs of Avadh had the title prefixed to the names of all the members
of the family including the women. This practice continued among the
Muslim aristocracy in Lucknow, even after the demise of the ruling
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dynasty. It actually survived, however, as long as the feudal system
survived in Uttar Pradesh- that is until the British left India in 1947.
Since then, as expected, the process of evolution has transformed
the physical, social and cultural landscape of the people of Lucknow,
especially the Nawab families, whom ancestors were regarded as the
richest and endowed with mannerism and finesse. The culture of
Lucknow like that of other countries at different times and places
couldn’t retain its status quo. It required a constant re-examination of its
value system for the quest of new goals in order to infuse fresh vitality
in the society, which seems to have ended at the death of Nawab Saadat
Ali Khan. Its depreciatory effect over a period of time disturbed the
apparent tenous internal equilibrium people had acquired between
humans, morals and society. From the external side, a slight push from
the British proved to be a sufficient catalyst for its destruction. People
appeared to have neither the will not the strength to strip away the layers
of style before substance.
Hence the social institutions and the economic status kept on
degrading for the whole society and also of the Nawabs as well. Thus,
the present study on the socio economic profiles of the descendents of
Nawabs, traces the sociological analyses of their economic life. The
study also contributes to the linking of micro levels of analysis of
money management which has helped many Nawab families today to
manage their resources, when the whole world seems to be reeling under
severe economic stress, caused by recession. It traces facts like how the
researched families are able to survive and asking questions, for
instance- do they compromise on the education of their children or do
they make compromises on the health front? To an extent yes – Nawab
families reeling under extreme poverty make compromises on all fronts-
education, health and the quantity of food they eat daily. Each day of
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their life is spent in struggling to earn a living, so that the children at
home don’t sleep hungry and hence the big question remains, what keeps
them afloat? This study along with many other important issues tries to
focus the research on management of money resources while
maintaining their social life intact and healthy. Moreover it also
highlights some very pertinent issues related to the modern way of
living in an urban setting, which includes diaries of finances of the
descendents of Nawabs in Lucknow and tracks penny by penny how
specific households manage their money. The stories of these families
are often surprising and inspiring. Most households do not live hand to
mouth, spending what they earn in a bid to keep afloat. Instead they
employ financial tools many linked to informal social networks and
family ties.
Therefore, the present study attempts the following objectives:
1. To document the socio-economic profiles of the descendents of
Nawabs in Lucknow.
2. To analyze the social structure, economic cooperation and cultural
practices related to economic management.
3. To study the linking of micro levels of analysis of money
management by creating financial portfolios of specific households
among the Nawabs descendents.
4. Analyze the dimensions of social networks and ties among the
members of the neighbourhood where they sometimes even employ
financial tools, many linked to informal networks and family ties to
manage their money
Through the above objectives, an attempt has been made in the
following pages to document the problems the descendents are facing
today on their financial fronts along with their effective ways and social
methods employed by them to manage their monetary resources during
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such hard times where the whole world is reeling under intense stress.
Social networks and social capital are particularly very important in this
regard.
Research Area
Map 1.0. Research Area Ghazi Mandi and Raees Manzil in Lucknow,India
Map 2.0. (Research Areas Raees Manzil and Ghazi Mandi in Old Lucknow)
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Methodology
The most important sources for the findings reported in this
research are the words and actions of the poor themselves. In particular,
I have relied on a yearlong observation with indepth interviewing having
both structured and unstructured interview schedules. A total of sixty
households belonging to the descendents of Nawabs were selected on a
random basis from the list which was provided by the Office of
Husainabad Trust, which still maintains a register which holds the
names and addresses of all the surviving Nawabs of Lucknow. Two
research areas were selected which had a majority of Nawabs ,were
Raees Manzil near Husainabad and Ghazi Mandi(See pic.1,2,3) in old
city area of Lucknow.
The intensity of getting to know the characters in the research
gave an indepth insights into the socio economic mode of life and as
well as their financial behaviour though out the year. Stress was laid to
gain a deeper and more personal understanding of the families of
Nawabs and how they were coping with their present financial
conditions. Money is powerful, particularly when you don’t have a lot of
it, and it was only through this fieldwork and interacting with them it
was felt that we could understand how and why the Nawabs who were
poor, managed their money.
It is a well know fact that very few systematic researchers have
been conducted to gain insights into the socio-economic behaviour of
the poor and here in this case no study has been done to analyse the
financial/economic conditions of Nawabs in light of culture. Qualitative
work by anthropologists such as Shirley Ardener and Clifford Geertz
described intricate saving clubs as long as the 1960’s and gruesome
accounts of the predations of money lenders can be found in the
otherwise dry reports of the British officers in the nineteenth century
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colonial India and elsewhere. Other studies have focussed on the
mechanisms and products of the informal money markets, notably Fritz
Bouman’s Small, Short and Unsecured which deals with informal
finance in the Indian State of Maharashtra.At the other end of the
spectrum are quantitative surveys that ask questions about loans and
savings, but these mostly ignore or underreport about social life,
informal devices and services and offer only a summarised snapshot of
the household’s financial behaviour.
Thus keeping this in mind a complete qualitative analysis was
used to capture the richness and complexity of poor Nawab’s financial
lives while being systematic enough in data collection, just to prevent it
from being dismissed as a set of mere anecdotes. Purposive sampling
was done and only those households were covered which were managing
their finances through informal Beesi networks. Criterion Sampling was
also done to select the Beesi networks that had a majority Nawabs
attached to Zardozi (embroidery), so as to target the most poorest and
most vulnerable occupational group of the city who are living for a
pittance, as they earn less than $2 a day on an average throughout the
year.
At the initial level a household census which included all the
social indicators – education, migration, health and household assets,
consumption of essential commodities was taken up. Emphasis was
given to the financial behaviour of a household- on the money they
borrowed and repaid, saved and invested, the amount of expenses
incurred on health, education, household electricity, rent, religious
festivals, daily food consumption, and the financial instruments used for
money management.
Participant observation along with narrative and in-depth
interviewing, with open ended and fixed response questions were taken
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up. Participants were free to elaborate or take the interview in new but
related directions. Here an attempt was made to unravel the management
of the economic portfolio of the household, along with uncovering their
biographical accounts and allowing them to recount specific events
related to their lives. Women from each household were interviewed to
construct data as to what they did with their money on a weekly basis.
This helped in getting an overview of how much income flowed and
when and where it was spent and how the money was saved. Women are
better indicators of the household expenditures, as they know exactly the
household requirements.
Here in this research a new concept of financial diaries has been
introduced to research into the complex life of the Nawabs who are
mostly poor. The concept of creating a set of diaries that would strike
this balance belongs to David Hulme, professor of development studies
at the University of Manchester, who has written extensively on poverty
and on financial services for poor people.
In the 2000 India study, Orlanda Ruthven sought to understand
financial lives in the context of the livelihood of the households that
used them, and to do so she collected more detailed income and
expenditure data alongside the financial data. In the 2004 South African
diaries, Daryl Collins shifted the emphasis to the quantitative, in order
to subject our data to a broader range of financial analysis, creating a
system that allows an expansion of the sample size to the point where
statistical analysis becomes more feasible. Throughout much of the
fieldwork of the financial diaries, Jonathan Morduch, an economist with
an expertise on microfinance and poverty, advised and commented on
the work.
The basic concept behind the financial diaries is that finance is
the relationship between time and money, and to understand it fully,
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time and money must be observed together. The best description of how
we have managed to do this is to call this method a "diary", a term that
appropriately conveys the sense that we are tracking intimate details of
financial management over time. However, the financial diaries are not
diaries in the literal sense, because not only were many of the district’s
illiterate, but the detail of information that collected was far beyond
what households would have the patience or time to keep track of
himself.
The gathering of such intimate information meant that we had to
be clear about whom in the household would be interviewed.
Establishing the most appropriate "unit of research" is a common
problem in social research. I decided to follow a well-trodden
convention and treat the household as our unit. While many one-off
surveys would only interview the household head, I wanted to talk to
each of its adult members as often as possible if not at each and every
visit. Because of the likelihood of situations that not all members of the
households were aware of, or of members concealing information from
each other, I had to be very sensitive. This was part of the considerable
effort made to establish a friendly relationship with everyone in the
household and to allow a comfortable environment that would encourage
respondents to be open.
I was ever mindful that this was a very sensitive relationship –
with householders revealing their most intimate financial details to us,
we did not take our role as "confessor" lightly. This meant playing down
the role of the interviews as "work" for which respondents would be
paid, and presenting them as conversations that would help both parties
understand how people were managing their money. I took care not to
overwhelm those respondents who left they needed to offer us traditional
hospitality in the form of tea and biscuits, for example, by taking along
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our own fruit, biscuits and money for tea from the local stall. I listened
empathetically to respondents who were distraught with events in their
lives. But I tried to maintain my role as observer. I took care not to offer
advice or judgement, and I tried not to interfere or burden the
households. Interviews often took place while the interviewees got on
with their everyday work, cooking lunch or feeding the cow, and were
often interrupted by other visitors.
I also tried to explore the emotions that accompanied the
transactions, to elicit comments on the different devices used and to
estimate the degree to which the householders saw financial activity as
an important or as a trivial part of their lives. I recorded, verbatim,
especially striking comments. The result was a simultaneous mixed
method – a means of capturing both quantitative and qualitative data in
the moment, across time.
The limitations of the diary method are the mirror image of its
strengths: above all, as we have said, the number of households I worked
with was too small to represent whole population. There is also a doubt
as to whether participating in the diaries changed the behaviour of some
respondents. In some cases it may have done so. I was tipped off by the
thanks I received from some respondents during the final interview;
when respondents told me that "I had helped them so much." Wonderful,
I said with a sigh. It was difficult to determine if these thanks came from
the companionship I provided during the year, or if respondents saw a
real benefit to recounting their financial transactions to me. It may have
been that, as with weight watchers, being constantly asked about
financial transactions guided my households into behaving differently
than they would have otherwise. However, without a different type of
study design, it is difficult to tease out exactly how much of an influence
I might have had.
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The sharp focus of the financial diaries on the users of financial
services and devices also means that I have less to say directly about the
providers of those services. The diaries do not help us to engage in some
of the fierce debates that are raging in the world of the finances of the
poor – debates about sustainability and the role of subsidies. But we can
bring a fresh perspective to another debate that ought to be at the top of
the list for financial providers, an understanding of the socio-economics
of the poor who so many constraints in their day to day lives.
Map 3.0. Awadh in 1857
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Chapter IIHISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF LUCKNOW AND
NAWABS OF AVADH
There was a time when Lucknow was led to believe that its rulers
were the emperors or the world, second to none. The glitter and the
glory were not to last long: the story of the Shia Nawabs of Awadh
(1722-1857) would end in disaster-but the period fascinates. It has left
lingering memories in the minds of men, especially in Lucknow itself. It
still has a lot to tell us, when we consider the formidable clash of
cultures which characterizes the history of the province in pre-British
times, the kinds of adjustment and compromise which were arrived at
under the colonial rule, and the spirit of mutual tolerance and
understanding which was never denied to Lakhnavis, even though
outsiders would prefer to mock their deblitating, decadent culture rather
than admire the deep-rooted and unfailing courtesy.
Is it surprising that in 1947 Lucknow was one of the towns where
communal harmony survived the traumas of Partition? Yet the local
Muslim elites had played such a role in the emergence of Luckow that it
was impossible for their people to escape the consequences. Refugees
from the Punjab took the place of those who departed. It was the end of
an era. A new way of life, more aggressive, more dynamic also, took
over. Step by step the old cherished symbols and values were eroded,
and the triumphant Congres system, because of its own internal
constraints and divisions, was not especially prepared to help. It would
take another forty-five years of bitter caste and communal struggles for
the wheel to turn full circle. In 1775, the Shia rulers had left Faizabad-
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Ayodhya to settle on the Gomti. In 1991, rulers were back in Ayodhya:
they now carried trishuls and saffron flags.
Putting together a set of articles on a theme is difficult and if the
theme is an Indian town, it is doubly difficult. Indian towns have been
around for centuries. Their architectural histories and morphologies,
however, are often badly fractured, and many of the records and
structures have disappeared. Their social history is often studied only
tangentially, in terms of the histories of castes or communities, or of
wider processes. Towns as prisms do reflect regional and national
changes, but many of them also have social or morphological features
which are uniquely specific. Indians have clear notions of the sense of
place, of the charm/ repulsiveness, warmth/coldness, snobbery/open
ness, of a particular town, but not many have written these down.
Foreign travellers, in the pre-photography days, did describe places
vividly, but often in stereotyped images, making it easier for us to study
the history of perceptions about a town, than the town itself.
Lucknow has enjoyed more attention than most South Asian
towns, except for Calcutta, the 1990 tercentenary of which inspired
many books and articles. A striking example of a post-medieval town,
with a considerable capital of architecture, dance, music and creative
writing, enhanced by a tantalising flavour of a gracious lifestyle,
Lucknow excites the imagination. The metaphor that writers employ for
Lucknow is invariably that of an elusive chiaroscuro. The town-glows
bright when the sun of Delhi and Agra is setting; it is in turn outshone
by Calcutta; after the revolt of 1857-58, the lamp flickers and sputters;
in 1920, the candle burns bright when Lucknow is made the capital of
the United Provinces, but with the advent of Independence and Partition
in 1947 it is dimmed.
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This town on the river Gomti has been in existence since the
sixteenth century at least. Lucknow was a 'natural' urban site,
equidistant between Gonda in the south and Ayodhya in the north, and,
on a wider concentric circle, between the important centres of
Gorakhpur, Varanasi and Allahabad. It was as vital a link in the
eastward expansion of the Mughal Empire as Hyderabad was in the
southward thrust. Under Akbar Lucknow was chosen as the capital of
the suba of Awadh. A century later Emperor Aurangzeb gave it the
status of a university town by establishing a seminary in the escheated
estate of a Dutch merchant. This became known as Firangi Mahal, and
played a key role in twentieth-century politics. The two provinces of
Hyderabad and Awadh worked their way towards autonomy from the
Mughals from the middle of the eighteenth century. The narrrative of the
changing relations between the Nawabs of Awadh and the Badshahs at
Delhi, and the very specific features of the Nawabi regime, have been
traced here and elsewhere by Alam (1986: chapter 1) and Barnett
(1980). Encouraged by the increasing feebleness of the Delhi court, the
Nawab, Saadat Khan (1722-39), began to treat Awadh as his family fief.
His nephew and son-in-law Safdarjang (1739-50) was worsted by a rival
at the Mughal court and, somewhat against his will, was cast in the role
of rebel against the Emperor. He was eventually buried not in Awadh
but in the beautiful mausoleum he had designed for himself in the family
estate at Aliganj, equidistant between Mehrauli (the old Delhi), and the
Mughal capital of Shahjahanabad, in a straight line eastward to the tomb
of Emperor Humayun.
The eighteenth century saw a decline in the population of the
Mughal cities of Lahore, Agra and Delhi, and the growth of towns like
Lucknow and Varanasi. It was under the successors of Saadat Khan and
Safdarjang that Faizabad (the twin city to Ayodhya) and Lucknow
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expanded into distinctive baroque capitals, celebrated in sketches and
word pictures. The dynasty that built these towns was hot native to
Awadh. The Shia family of Saadat Khan had migrated from Nishapur,
the home of Omar Khayyam, in north-eastern Iran. They were in the
tradition of many individuals of talent and enterprise who had carved out
niches for themselves at the courts of Delhi and Agra in the Gangetic
plain, and Hyderabad and Bijapur in the Deccan. Lucknow welcomed
many such immigrants during its second and more lasting spell of
life .as the capital of Awadh (1775-1856). Like Agra, Hyderabad and
Seringapatam, Lucknow was cosmopolitan, home to a number of
Europeans, who created here a part-European dilettante, part-Indian
courtier life style (Lafont, chapter 4). Fisher (chapter 2) highlights the
differences of culture and life-style between the rural zamindars of
Awadh and the urban nobility.
SAADAT KHAN, BURHAN-UL-MULK (1722-1739)
With the accession of Muhammad Shah (the "Frivolous") to the
throne in 1719, Meer Muhammad Ameen of Naishapur (Iran) found an
ample scope for his talents. He came from a distinguished Syed family
which was highly respected in his home-town. The effete and corrupt
rule of the later Safawids of Iran, however, alienated the sympathies of
the nobility and the gentry so much so that they preferred to leave their
homeland and seek their fortune in the neighbouring country of
Hindustan.
Meer Muhammad Naseer (Ameen's father), accompanied by his
eldest son Meer Muhammad Baqar, came to Hindustan during the reign
of Emperor Bahadur Shah-I and after landing in Bengal finally settled at
Patna. Meer Muhammad Ameen, the more promising member of family,
came to Patna in 1708-9 to see his father and his elder brother, but the
former was already dead.
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Meer Muhammad Ameen came to Delhi and, being a brilliant
youngman, found ample scope for his talents in those troubled times. He
became Faujdar of Hinduan and Bayana "situated in the Jaipur and
Bharatpur divisions of Rajasthan and at a distance of fifty to sixty miles
south-west of Agra", in the beginning of November 1719.
After the victory of Emperor Muhammad Shah over the Sayyid
brothers Meer Muhammad Ameen was ennobled by the Emperor with
the title of Saadat Khan Bahadur and later, on 15 th October 1720, he was
appointed Governor of the province of Akbarabad (Agra).
The Empire of Akbar was divided into fourteen provinces and
Awadh (Audh or Oudh) was one of them. The name of capital was
Awadh (Audh), later Faizabad, and it was situated on the river Sarju, a
tributary of Ghagra.
Rajputs of Awadh
When Saadat Khan was appointed the Subedar of Awadh on 9 th
September 1722, he found it to be a "land of semi-independent feudal
barons of varying degrees of strength and political importance". For
centuries past the province had been the seat of martial races specially
of the Rajputs who "are found everywhere, from the Indus to Bihar, but
their original homes were two, Rajputana and the south of Oudh. They
made their first appearance in the eighh and ninth centuries; most of the
greater clans took possession of their future seats between A.D. 800 and
850..............About the same time (tenth century) they spread north and
east from Southern Oudh, and during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries
they made themselves masters of the Centrl Himalayas. Each of the
chiefs had a garhi (strongly built brick or mud fort) ensconced in a
village surrounded by a thick belt of bamboo forest, so thick cannon-
balls could not penetrate it.
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In 1722 Saadat Khan marched to Lucknow, crossed the Gomti at
Gaughat and captured it from the Shaikhzadas, who had defied the might
of the empire since the days of Akbar the Great, and pulled down (or, as,
some say, cut down) the naked sword hanging at the Shaikhan Darwaza
(the main entrance to the fort), to mark their prowess and defiance, and
took possession of their palace, Pachmahla.
Raja of Tiloi vanquished
The capture of the town and district of Lucknow sent a thrill
through the whole province, but the haughty and arrogant Rajput chiefs
would still not accept the overlordship of the newly appointed Subedar.
Saadat Khan, however, was not to be dismayed. He set about, with
characteristic zeal, in bringing peace to the distracted province but the
bolder spirits would not easily submit. Raja Mohan Singh Tiloi was the
most redoubtable and refractory chief and took pride in defying the
Imperial Governor. Saadat Khan decided to crush him and in the battle
that ensued, sometime in the beginning of 1723, Raja Mohan Singh died
on the battlefield, fighting to the last.
Malhar Rao Holkar defeated
Inspite of the sensible but bold advice of Saadat Khan not to
encourage the presumptions of the Marhattas by accepting their
growing demands, Khan-e-Dauran and Jai Singh advised the Emperor
to the contrary and the imbecile Emperor Muhammad Shah was too
frightened to reject it. Afterwards the Marhatta inroads in Northern
India became frequent and the imbecile Court was helpless to avert
danger. "The imperial preparations - as Grant Duff the historian of
the Mahrattas observes - 'commended in bombast and ended in
ridicule. In the meantime Saadat Khan had received the Emperor's
summons to cooperate with the Wazeer and Mir Bakshi against the
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Marhattas, and had started from Faizabad with Safdar Jung and Sher
Jung and a big army.
"The Persian immigrant, Saadat Khan, the Vicerory of Audh,
though as a politician only distinguished by his superior astuteness, was a
far more resolute soldier than the degenerate nobles of Hindustan; His
spirit burned within him to see the central regions of the Empire thus
profaned and thus defended. Moving from Lucknow with a fine force of
infantry, and calling for assistance from the Bangash of Farokhabad, he
moved up the Duab. At Etawa he found a division of the Marhatta army
under Malhar Rao Holkar, whom he attacked and routed with terrible
carnage. Thence proceeding north he drove the advanced Marhatta
columns out of Jalesar (on 23 rd March 1737) and Saidabad, beyond Agra;
and, as the scattered fugitives rallied to the Peshwa near Gwalior, he
pursued them as far as Dholpur on the Chambal, half-way on the high
road between the two cites. He would probably have crossed the river
and completed their ruin had he not been checked, first by letters from
the Khan Dauran, and afterwards by the arrival of that officer. Khan
Dauran was destined to die a soldier's death; but we cannot avoid seeing
that he appears in an unfavouring light throughout the present business.
Unwilling or unable to expel the Southerners himself, he grew jealous of
a better man, and impeded his movements when a blow might have been
struck that would have had important consequences".
Battle of Karnal
"The conduct of the Nizam-ul-Mulk when Nadir Shah actually
invaded Hindustan," writes Basu, "lends support to the suspicion that he
incited him to invade the country". The same Muhammadan historian
who forms our authority on the subject of Nadir Shah's invasion and
Nizam-ul-Mulk's treachery writes:
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"On the first intelligence of Nadir Shah's having entered the
province of Cabul, Khan Dowran and Nizam-ul-Mulk were ordered to
march out to oppose him; but they contented themselves with wasting
their time in the city, after spreading reports of their intention to proceed,
which they thought a piece of very refined policy".
Nadir Shah, after crossing the Indus on 21 st January 1739,
proceeded towards Delhi. The Imperial Court was divided into the two
main factions-the Turani and the Hindustani-headed by Nizam-ul-Mulk
Asaf Jah and Khan-e-Dauran Samsam-ud-Daulah respectively. The
Imperial Court, being honeycombed with intrigues, was so helpless that
even after the fall of Ghazni, on 10th June, 1738, it remained absolutely
inactive due to mutual jealousies. At long last Qamrudden Khan, the
Wazeer and Khan-e-Dauran, the Meer Bakshi arrived at Panipat on 28 th
January 1739 to oppose Nadir Shah.
Saadat Khan Burhan-ul-Mulk, in obedience to the Court summons,
left Fyzabad, in January 1739, "with a well-equipped army of 30,000
horse, a good part of artillery and vast stores of materials of war", and
reached Delhi, "although suffering from a wound in his leg", on 17 th
February and Panipat on the 21 st February 1739. Next day, before
midnight, he reached the Imperial Camp at Karnal.
Next day, on 23rd February 1739, when Saadat Khan was paying
respects to the Emperor, he learnt that the Persians had attacked his
camp-followers, looted his baggage and were carrying away 500 of his
loaded camels. Impatiently he got up and sought permission from the
Emperor to go the rescue of his men. The Emperor and the Nobles tried
to pacify Saadat Khan and advised patience "for his troops were fatigued
on account of one month's continuous journey and the day also was far
spent". But the would not listen. "Issuing out of the Imperial tents with
one thousand horse and a few hundred foot that were in attendance upon
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him, he made a rash advance against the enemy in complete disregard of
artillery or any other preparation". Saadat Khan charged the Persians
vigorously but they "retreated towards their main army, discharging their
arrows and muskets all the way and drawing Saadat Khan to the abuscade
prepared beforehand, about three miles east of Muhammad Shah's camp".
Saadat Khan bravely stood his ground but at last he was captured and,
ultimately, submitted to the Persian monarch. But as Nizam-ul-Mulk and
Saadat Khan could not satisfy the demands of Nadir Shah, for which they
were insulted, Saadat Khan took poison and died on 20 th March 1739;
while Nizam-ul-Mulk, simulating suicide, "drank a cup of water mixed
with sugar, covered himself with a sheet and went to sleep" and thus
escaped the tragic end of his rival Saadat Khan Burhan-ul-Mulk.
Whatever be the merits or demerits of the two rival nobleman -
Saadat Khan Burhan-ul-Mulk and Nizam-ul-Mulk- "And here it is to be
remarked that the Nizam and he were two able and prudent
contemporaries, who-though rivals - discovered a modus vivendi that
subsisted for nearly twenty years, and was, in fact, only terminated by
Saadat's death. The consequence of such unusual self-restraint on the
part of rival politicians was that both founded dynasties that rose on the
ruins of the empire".
Able Administrator
"Once he had regarded himself as the sole master of Awadh", says
Srivastava, "Saadat Khan identified himself with it and spent most of his
time within its limits. He suppressed lawlessness and established a
stable government in the province. He could not, of course, "root out"
all the big landlords, but he succeeded in keeping them thoroughly in
check and reconcilling them to his rule by his wise and tolerant policy.
The smaller zemindars and the peasantry welcomed his rule, as it
afforded them protection from spoliation by powerful chiefs, and from
[ 19 ]
Chapter -II
plunder and anarchy attendant on the frequent changes of governors.
And well did Saadat Khan repay the people. We have no details to form
a correct idea of his internal policy; but from the general statements of
the Persian authorities, it seems pretty certain that his policy was to
cherish the peasantry and to protect it from oppression and tyranny.
"Saadat Khan was something than a mere successful soldier. He
had some notion of civil government. Contemporary historians bear
testimony to the fact that Awadh was much better governed under him
than under any governor since the last quarter of the 17 th century, and
the people were contented and prosperous. Without rack-renting the
peasantry he greatly increased the revenue and put his finances in
order..................Saadat Khan left behind him nine crores of Rupees in
hard cash."
ABDUL MANSUR KHAN, SAFDAR JUNG (1739-54)
Mirza Muhammad Muqeem, better known in history as Safdar
Jang, was the son of Burhan-ul-Mulk's eldest sister. He came from
Naishapur at the invitation of his maternal uncle (Burhan-ul-Mulk) in
1723 when he was only fifteen years old and was married to Sadr-un-
Nisa, alias Nawab Begum, the eldest daughter of his uncle. The loving
father-in-law made him his Deputy-Governor (1724-1739) and the
Emperor bestowed on him the title of Abul Mansur Khan. Later, on the
death of his uncle in 1739, he was confirmed as Subedar of Awadh, with
all its Sarkars and Jageers held by his uncle, Burhan-ul-Mulk, by the
Emperor Muhammad Shah who also bestowed on him the title of Safdar
Jang.
Safdar Jang had received military training under his uncle Saadat
Khan, Burhan-ul-Mulk and proved to be an adept pupil and a successful
military tactician:
[ 20 ]
Chapter -II
"In March 1737, he outwitted Malhar Rao Holkar and his troops
near the town of Jalesar by drawing them slowly to near Saadat Khan's
main force whose one cavalry charge scattered the Marhattas about and
drove them out of the field".
Brilliant Career
"In June 1737, he (Safdar Jang) quelled an insurrection in
southern Awadh by defeating a combination of several Rajput chiefs led
by their leader Nawal Singh, Raja of Tiloi...........and the stronghold
(Amethi fort) was captured by the deputy-governor's men........
"Early in 1738, Abulmansur Khan undertook an expedition to
Jaunpur to deprive Rustam Ali Khan of the four districts of Jaunpur,
Mirzapur, Ghazipur and Banaras. Though no fighting was done, he was
able to achieve his object by diplomacy, backed by force, and Rustam
Ali Khan had to seek refuge by flight".
On Burhan-ul-Mulk's death, Awadh rose in revold against the new
Subedar. Safdar Jang acted promptly. He defeated the rebellious
landlords of Amethid Bandagi (near Lucknow), Rajput rulers of
Hasanpur, Tiloi and Garh Amethi (District Sultanpur) and Pathans of
Jagdishpur (Near Tiloi).
In 1741, Safdar, Jang moved against Nabinagar and Katesar
(District Sitapur), whose ruler, Raja Nawal Singh Gaur, had "meditated
open independence and refused to pay the government revenue". He was
surrounded in his forts, defeated and reduced to such straits that he fled
from "the fort during the night of 19 th March, 1741." Later the submitted
and "his territory was restored to him.
[ 21 ]
Chapter -II
Summoned to Court
After the departure of Nadir Shah, the Emperor Muhammad Shah
had become suspicious of the Turani party, headed by Nizam-ul-Mulk
and Qamar-ud-deen Khan (the Wazeer) and "Towards the end of August
1743, Muhammad Shah, desirous of strengthening the Irani faction,
summoned Amir Khan and Safdur Jung from their respective provinces
of Allahabad and Awadh to Court".
In obedience to the Imperial summons Safdar Jung, taking with
him Hidayat Ali Khan and his son, Ghulam Husain Khan (author of
Siyar-ul-Matakhereen), marched for Delhi in the third week of October
1743. When he sighted the Imperial fort by the third week of November,
he performed the salutation ceremony from the bank of the Jumna.
Ghulam Husain Khan, who had been an eye-witness to the whole show,
has given the following interesting description:
"Having arrived at the bank of Yamuna on a date which passes out
of my memory at this time, Safdar Jang thought it advisable to make his
appearance with some pomp and magnificence. Leaving his heavy
baggage in his Camp, he marched on in military array opposite to the
Imperial fort at Delhi. He had with him over ten thousand horses, all
well-mounted and well- armed, the Hindustanis upon horses of value of
their own country, while the Mughals dressed in scarlet uniforms were
upon Persian horses, adorned with silver trapping. Besides, these were
some elephants caparisoned with clothes worked in threads of silver and
gold and having amaries covered over with silver and gold platings. Of
the elephants three bore the Nawabs's standards. Luckily it had rained
during the previous night and the morning proved fair and pleasant.
When Safdar Jang reached opposite to the Octagonal Tower (Musamman
Burf) of the Hall Private Audience, which, being richly gilt, was shining
like the sun, the alighted from his elephant, bowed low according to
[ 22 ]
Chapter -II
custom and stood a while in a respectful posture. After having received
some roses sent by the Emperor (in answer to his bow) through an
eunuch of his Court, he mounted again and returned to his camp, leaving
the Emperor, who was sitting inside the Tower, much pleased with the
show and the warlike appearance of his troops.
Safdar Jang Promoted
The Emperor being pleased with Safdar Jang appointed him, on
21st March 1744, Mir Atish (Superintendent of the Imperial Artillery),
"one of whose duties was the protection of the persons of the Emperor
and his family" and as such "took up his residence in the Imperial fort
and organised the artillery on proper lines".
"Safdar Jang now rose fast in the Imperial favour. In addition to
this former posts, he was appointed Governor of Kashmir on 4 th October,
1744."
Shuja-ud-Daulah's Marriage (1745)
The Emperor himself negotiated the marriage of Safdar Jang's
son, (Jalal-ud-deen Haider) with Bahu Begum, the sister of Isqhaq Khan
Najm-ud-daulah (son of Ishaq Khan Motaman-ud-daulah). It took place
at the end of 1745. The importance of the marriage was all the more
increased when the Emperor declared that Bahu Begum was his
daughter. The lavish scale on which the marriage was arranged can be
imagined from the fact "that forty-six lakhs of rupees were spent in the
marriage, while in Dara's marriage, the most costly among those of the
Mughal princes, only thirty-one lakhs of rupees were spent."
Safdar Jang was now the most important Ameer in the empire and.
"leader of the Irani party'1. "The Wazir Qamruddin Khan being
immersed in degrading pleasure and the Nizam awaiting his fast
approaching end in the Deccan, Safdar Jang now leapt to the front in the
[ 23 ]
Chapter -II
Mughal peerage, and in the midst of youthful mediocrities he began to
be considered as the only powerful, experienced and sober minded noble
at the Imperial court. He acquired an important place in Muhammad
Shah's estimation and delicate state business, like the diplomatic
relations with the Marathas, began to be transacted through him".
Enters Abdali
In the beginning of 1748 the province of Punjab was the scene of
a fratricidal was between the sons of Zakaria Khan (Yahiya Khan and
Shah Nawaz Khan) which was raging since 1745. On Zakaria Khan's
death his eldest son, Yahiya Khan, the son-in-law of the Wazeer Qamar-
ud-deen Khan, "was appointed Deputy-Governor of Lahore and Multan
in September 1745. Shah Nawaz Khan defeated his elder brother Yahiya
Khan and put him in prison. On 25 th December 1747, Yahiya Khan
escaped from the prison and fled to his father-in-law, the Wazeer. Shah
Nawaz Khan, on his part, implored the assistance of Ahmad Shah
Abdali, a former officer of Nadir Shah who, on the latter's murder on
19th June 1747, had enthroned himself as King at Qandahar "in July or
August 1747."
Ahmad Shah invaded India and crossed the Ravi on the 10 th
January 1748. Lahore was taken, and the Afghan invader "plundered the
outskirts and subrubs of the city, particularly Mohallah Mughalpura, but
spared the city for a ransom of thirty lakhs."
On the 18 th January (1748) an army was dispatched against the
invader under Qamaruddin Khan, the Wazeer, Safdar Jang, ^ Mir Atish and
other nobles. After the fall of Lahore Prince Ahmad Shah *** sent» on **
February, as the nominal leader of the army. He reached Panip at on 20<h
February 1748. Having arranged the army in fighting order the procee ded
towards Sarhind ^d. putting a part of his treasure and heavy baggage there, he
[ 24 ]
Chapter -II
advanced towards the north. Ahmad Shah Abdali, in the meantime,
captured Sarhind on 12 th March.
Having heard the disastrous news of the loss of Sarhind, the
Prince retraced his steps to Manupur on 13 th March, and &°m me next ^ ^ ^°
armies came close to each other and daily skirmishes commenced
between the two advance-guards. On 21 st March, the day of battle, the
Wazeer Qamruddin Khan was struck with a cannon-ball, while reciting
Pravers (Wazayqf) in his tent, and dried. After commencement of the war
Ish^a" sia& of Jaipur, who was in charge of the left wing, fled from the
field wi* Ws 20'000 Rajputs. Mir Mannu fought with great valour but he
lost some of *e chief officers and was wounded himself while "the Abdali
pressed on and jt appeared that a great disaster was going to befall the
Mughal army."
Safdar Jang defeats Abdali (1748)
The only ray of hope in the otherwise glootftf P'cture came from
the right wing of the Mughal army. It was under Safdar Jang whose
"men rushed at the enemy, fired their long guns, slew most of the
Afghans and captured the hillock with all the enemy camels and guns.
The remnant of the enemy fled and were charged by Safdar Jang's
Qlizibashes who captured all their swivels and camels." In the
meantime, the Afghans attacked the Imperial van and centre and reduced
them to a sorry plight. Safdar Jang acted quickly and "Throwing himself,
his troops and artillery between Mir Mannu and the Afghan force, he
brought the latter to a stand. Already fatigued, the enemy found
themselves suddenly assaulted by a body of fresh Irani troops who
poured murderous fire on them............. Baffled in his attempts to rally
them, Ahmad Shah Abdali prudently left the field after his army was
broken and his men had fled to their encampment...............in the
morning of the 26 th (March, 1748) the Indian army mounted for battle,
[ 25 ]
Chapter -II
when, to their surprise and joy, they found that the enemy had fled
previous night, leaving a part of his artillery and heavy baggage in the
garden outside Sarhind".
Safdar Jang appointed Wazeer (1748)
The Emperor Muhammad Shah died on 25 th April 1748, and was
succeeded by his son Ahmad Shah who appointed Safdar Jang as Wazeer
of the Empire on 29 th June 1748, and conferred on him the titles of
Jamat-ul-Mulk, Abul-Mansur Khan Bahadur Safdar Jang, Sipah-salar,
besides loading him with rich gifts etc. But the new post was not a bed
of roses and "The Empire which had once embraced practically the
whole of the continent of India had dwindled into insignificance and
most of the provinces had shaken off its yoke.........The Mughal territory
being thus confined from Agra to Attock, the term "empire had become
a misnomer."
Ruheles collude with Abdali
The fratricidal skirmishes, plots and counter-plots, between the
Irani and Turani nobles in the Durbar sapped the strength of the nobility
and encouraged fissiparous tendencies throughout the Empire. But the
most fatal malaise of the time was lack of patriotic feeling among the
various sections of the country so much so that "In treacherous alliance
with him (Ahmad Shah Abdali) were the Ruhelas of Ruhelkhand whose
object was the establishment of Afghan supremacy in Hindustan."
At first Safdar Jang conceived ambitious schemes of restoring the
old frontiers of the empire and converting in into a homogenous, well-
knit kingdom of the Timurids by uprooting "the colonies of the Jats and
of the Bangash and Ruhela Afghans" from whom he anticipated trouble
in the near future. He even "urged the new Emperor not to enter the
capital, but follow up his recent success against Abdali, march beyond
[ 26 ]
Chapter -II
the Indus, and recover Afghanistan. But instigated by Javed Khan,
Ahmad Shah preferred the life of slotful ease to one of perilous
enterprise."
Abdali's Second Invasion (1749-1750)
Smarting under the disgrace of the previous defeat at the hands of
Safdar Jang in 1748, Ahmad Shah Abdali found the conditions at Delhi
propitious to wipe off his former ignominy. He crossed the Indus by the
end of 1749 and, by successive marches, reached near Lahore. Mir
Mannu (Muin-ul-Mulk) bought off the Shah by promising Rs. 14,000
annually as the surplus revenue of the four districts viz., Sialkot,
Aurangabad, Gujrat and Pasrur. Ahmad Shah Abdali went back to his
barren country and left the Delhi nobleman to continue or start afresh
the game of self-annihilation to the bitter end.
Abdali's Third Invasion (1752)
While Safdar Jang was away from Delhi Ahmad Shah Abdali
attacked for the third time, inl752, to realise the promised but
unremitted revenues of four districts. Mir Mannu tried to oppose Abdali
but failed. At last he "surrendered himself to the King of Afghans; and
the latter, pleased with Muin's dignified conduct and frank talk,
appointed him Governor of Lahore and Multan on his own behalf and
issued orders to his men not to plunder or molest any body."
Punjab ceded to Abdali
In the meantime Ahmad Shah Abdali sent his envoy, Qalandar
Beg, to Emperor Ahmad Shah of Delhi for the cession of the Punjab.
"The Emperor granted audience to the envoy in the Diwan-i-Khas on the
13th April 1752, and dismissed him by putting his seal to the Treaty thus
losing the most important frontier province of the Mughal Empire."
Safdar Jang's death (1754)
[ 27 ]
Chapter -II
Worn out and exhausted by the never-ending Court intrigues
which received encouragement from the vacillating Emperor, Safdar
Jang died at Paparghat on the Gomti on 5* October 1754 (17 th Zil Hijjah,
1167 H).
His personality and character
"Like his predecessor, Saadat Khan, and all his descendants on the
masnad of Awadh," writes Dr. Srivastava, "Nawab Wazir Abul Mansur
Khan Safdar Jang possessed a handsome and imposing appearance -
broad forehead, long nose, bright eyes, white complexion and a thick
beard. To his natural gifts of intelligence and ready wit he combined a
cultured disposition, charming manners and a refined taste..........Highly
educated as he was, he wrote Persian with flexibility and ease.........
Himself a lover of literature, he patronised scholars, procured titles for
them and granted them suitable allowances and rewards.......
Dr. Srivastava further writes: "We are in possession of numerous
letters written by Safdar Jang to his Naibs and amils ordering them to
return the Jagirs or restore subsistence allowances to pious Sayyids and
other ancient families of Awadh who had been unjustly deprived of them
by local officers."
Looking to the laxity of morals in his age and to the seraglios of
contemporary nobles teeming with women, Safdar Jang was head and
shoulders above the dissolute Muslim noblemen of the day. "Safdar
Jang's private life was marked," says Dr. Srivastava, "by a high standard
of morality , extremely rare in the class to which he belonged and in the
age in which he lived. He married only one wife to whom he was
ardently attached, and he had no mistress, courtesan or concubine. 'His
natural modesty and sense of good conduct........did not make him desire
the company of any woman except that of that illustrious and chaste lady
[ 28 ]
Chapter -II
(Sadrun-nisa)', writes Ghulam Ali of Lucknow. He was also a loving
father, a kind relation and a faithful friend..........To his Maratha allies
he remained ever faithful, and although they were sometimes guilty of
double dealing, he held firm firmly to their alliance till they openly
made a bid for subas of Awadh and Allahabad and threw in their lot
with his implacable enemy, Ghazi-ud-din Khan Imad-ul-Mulk."
"His greatest achievement was a lasting peace "writes Dr.
Srivastava "that he gave to Awadh and Allahabad.........In an age when
all parts of India were bowing low before the relentless might of
Maharashtra, Awadh and Allahabad were the only provinces which were
still unvisited by their plundering hordes."
'Lucknow Culture'
"The lasting peace and uniform justice, which kept the strong and
the unruly in check and created a feeling of security of life and property,
gave as impetus, for the development of liberal arts and profitable
industries, and made Awadh evolve a distinct type of civilization, known
throughout India as the 'Lucknow Culture'. When all other provinces
were sinking into a state of degeneration and anarchy, Awadh
progressed to rival Delhi in wealth, magnificence and culture in the time
of Safdar Jang's son and Grandsons.
"Though not a successful Wazir, Safdar Jang filled the office with
dignity and firmness, and proved more consistent and hardworking than
this predecessor, the slothful Qamar-ud-din Knan. And he was
undoubtedly more loyal and successful than any of his numerous
successors from Intizam-ud-Daulah downward, who disgraced the
exalted office of Wazir from the later days of Ahmad Shah's reign to the
time of Bahadur Shah II, the last prince of the house of Babur who sat
on the throne of Delhi."
[ 29 ]
Chapter -II
SHUJA-UD-DAULAH (1754-1775)
On Safdar Jang's death his only son, M* za Mal-ud-deen Haider,
better known to history as Shuja-ud-Daulah, succeeded to the
Governorship of the two important provinces of Awadh and Allah abad
when he was only twenty-two years old-an age of irresponsible
immaturity'
The tortuous politics of the Delhi Court had thrown up the
'notorious' Ghazi-ud-deen Khan Imad-ul-Mulk, the adopts son of Safdar
Jang and the turban-exchanged brother of Shuja-ud-daulab, as the
implacable enemy of his patron Safdar Jang and his son. He was even
trying to wrest the two provinces of Awadh and Allahabad from the
hands of Safdar Jang but his highly ambitious moves alarmed even his
own supporters. The intriguing Wazeer, Intizam-ud-Daulah, and the
vacillating Emperor Ahmad Shah counter-acted his moves secretly.
Balwant Singh of Banaras
While Safdar Jang was busy with Delhi Politics Balwant Sing' the
ambitious Raja Banaras, had been extending & Possessions to the
surrounding areas. After the patched up peace with the Emperor, Safdar
Jang reached Banaras on 17 th February 1754 to chastise the recalcitrant
Raja. But before he could fulfil his task Safdar Jang "received urgent
messages from the Emperor and Intizam-ul-Daulah summoning him to
western Awadh to join them in an expedition against their common and
much-hated foes, the Marathas and Imad-ul-mulk," Safdar Jang
complied with the Royal summons, and Balwant Singh was free to
indulge in his pranks.
Shuja as Subahdar
[ 30 ]
Chapter -II
Safdar Jang died on 5 th October 1754, and Emperor Alamgir-II
"wrote with his own hand a special note to Shuja-ud-daulah, condoling
with him on his father's demise and appointing him Subahdar of
Awadh..........and Allahabad, too, like Awadh, passed quietly into Shuja-
ud-daulah's hands as inheritance from his deceased father."
Shuja-ud-daulah on assuming the Subahdari found a number of
ticklish problems facing his nascent administration. The first serious
challenge to his statesmanship was religious fanaticism which flared up
in the important pilgrim-city of Banaras. "Determined to revive the long
forgotten days of Aurangzeb," says Dr. Srivastava, "the Qazi (Judge of
Muslim Canon Law) and muhtasib (Censor of Morals) of the town
Banaras, rallied a party of fanatical Muslims and demolished the sacred
temple of Visheshwar Mahadeva, situated near the Alamgiri mosque, on
22nd September 1755." Naturally there was an outburst of religious
frenzy, which might have ended in disaster for the new Governor; but
saner counsels prevailed, and Peshwa Balaji Rao's Guru, who had gone
on hunger-strike, broke his fast and normally returned.
Shuja-ud-daulah moves against Balwant
Shuja-ud-daulah, by the end of 1756, marched towards Banaras to
restore communal harmony among Hindus and Muslims and to punish
Balwant Singh for his traitorous moves to capture the fort of Chunar,
situated on the Ganges, 20 miles due east of Mirzapur. While Shuja-ud-
daulah was thus engaged in eastern Awadh, "news from Delhi confirmed
the alarming reportes that Ahmad Shah Abdali accompanied by a
formidable force had swooped down upon the Punjap and had
triumphantly entered the capital of India. So great was the panic at Delhi
that its residents began flee to places of safety and the Wazir issued
frantic appeals to Shuja-ud-daulah and other notables to come speedily
to his assistance." A peace was patched up with Balwant Singh, and
[ 31 ]
Chapter -II
Shuja-ud-daulah began his return march to Faizabad in February-March,
1757.
Shuja becomes Prime Minister
On 15 th February 1762 (21st Rajab, 1175 H.) "Shah Alam was glad
to invest him (Shuja-ud-daulah) formally with the role of the Prime
Minister post, although he had been nominated Wazeer as far back as
24th December 1759 by Shah Alam when he had become the Emperor
after the murder of his father Alamgir-II.
British traders warned
The foolish and criminally selfish moves of Imad-ul-Mulk, devoid
of all sense of patriotism, had torn to shreds the already crumbling
fabric of the Timurid Empire. As Wazeer of the Empire, instead of
supporting and sustaining the hands of the Emperor, he reduce him to a
cypher even in the management of his own household. Unnoticed by the
egocentric, squabbling Indian noblemen the Britishers, under the mask
of a trading Company, became the most potent political power in the
subcontinent.
In March 1764 when Shuja-ud-daulah, in support of Meer Qasim,
reached the confines of Banaras with the Emperor, Vansittart threatened
war against him. Cut to the quick, Shuja-ud-daulah, besides his warning
to the President and Council sent the following letter to Carnac:
"Agreeably to His Majesty's care for the welfare of the people I
now write to you, consider how the Kings of Indostan have given your
Company settlements and factories, exempted them from duties, and
conferred greater favours upon them than other Europeans or the
merchants of their own dominions. Since then, notwithstanding all those
favour, you have been guilty of ingratitude to the Court, since you have
turned from your former paths and on the contrary have been continually
[ 32 ]
Chapter -II
marching your troops into the King's country and since you have
presumed to remove the officers of the Imperial Court and to turn out
and establish Nabobs, what kind of behaviour is that? In case you have
your King's or your Company's orders for these proceedings, be pleased
to inform me of it that I may shew a suitable resentment, but if it is
through your own inclinations that you have plundered villages
belonging to Allahabad and that you entertain your evil designs
notwithstanding the approach of the Royal standards, it is proper you
should desist from such proceedings and represent your desires to me. In
case of your obedience our favours shall be conferred upon you,
otherwise the guilty and disobedient shall be utterly destroyed".
Treacherous Moves
After this bold challenges of Shuja-ud-daulah, perhaps first of its
kind given by any Indian Prince to the English, war became inevitable
between the two powers. The English, as usual, started raising traitors in
the Awadh camp and Balwant Singh Banaras was the first to earn the un-
enviable distinction of being a traitor to his own master, Shuja-ud-
daulah. Balwant Singh was promised, naturally, by the British,
protection and independence of his liege-lord then and for all times to
come.
Although Shuja-ud-daulah had espoused the cause of Mir Qasim
with the consent of the Emperor, still none of them was sincere to the
Nawab Wazeer. It is strange to find that "the Emperor was at cross
purposes with his Wazir and was secretly corresponding with the
English who were anxious to foment differences between the two and
had written to Carnac to encourage the King's party in its opposition to
Shuja-ud-daulah. In spite of the fact that Mir Qasim's well being
depended upon the success of the expedition the Ex-Nawab did not
cheerfully cooperate with the Chief Commander (Shuja-ud-daulah) and
[ 33 ]
Chapter -II
take an active part in the campaign, to the great annoyance of Shuja-ud-
daulah. Such an army with such leaders was hardly likely to succeed
against British talent, discipline and military science".
Nawab's Officers tempted
Shuja-ud-daulah's rivals and enemies were approached to form
a confederacy against him. Major Carnac, and later, Hector Munro
made all sorts of promises to the Nawab's troops and military
officers for rise in pay, big chunks of the Nawab's territory and, if
the Nawab was arrested and handed over to the British, even the
Governorship of one of the two provinces of Shuja-ud-daulah was
promised to Muhammad Baqir Khan, one of the leading Generals of
the Nawab-Wazeer. The Mughal officers of Shuja-ud-daulah's army
had already colluded with the British, but, as their terms had not
been accepted, they remained in the Nawab's army except Asad
Khan, an important leader, who with his followers went over and
joined Munro before the Battle of Baksar took place.
Battle of Baksar (1764)
Before the fateful battle was fought on 23 rd October, 1764 at
Baksar, the successful diplomacy of the British had already made the
result a foregone conclusion. Besides Balwant Singh even Rajah
Beni Bahadur, the Naib-Subah, had "eagerly listened to the English
overtures and decided to back up their cause" with the result that in
the midst of the fight and Baksar, Beni Bahadur "suddenly changed
his mind, and turned his face from the field, followed by his men,
including Ghalib Khan and his son". Balwant Singh, on his part,
instead of guarding the post entrusted to him, by Shuja-ud-daulah,
and fighting against the British, had invited the Company's soldiers
to enter the Nawab's camp through his Morcha (post). Naturally the
[ 34 ]
Chapter -II
battle was lost and shuja-ud-daulah . left the field. Later the British
handed over all the letters to the Nawab that were written by his
officers to the Company's commanders, which proved how
completely Shuja-ud-daulah's army was honeycombed with
treachery. The defeat at Baksar decided the fate of Northern India
once and for all because there was none left to oppose the march of
the British to their destined goal. After the battle, "The Viceroy
(Shuja-ud-daulah) withdrew his forces in good order; though it was
not till some time after that, accepting the situation, he allied himself
permanently with the conquerors. The Emperor, f° r n's P^ yielded
much more promptly; coming the very next day into the British camp
and concluding a treaty whereby the conquerors for the first time
attained a legal position in the country".
It is astounding to note the while the Wazeer of the Empire
(Shuja-ud-daulah) was fighting to maintain the dignity of his
suzerain, the Emperor himself had thrown himself, with such
indecent haste, at the mercy of his enemies. What must have been the
feelings of Shuja-ud-daulah can better be imagined than described!
Historians' tribute to Shuja
"We must also admit", says Malleson, "that never before had
they (the English) encountered an enemy in all respects so
formidable. Shuja-du-daulah, Nuwab Vazir of Awadh, was the most
killed native leader of soldiers in India. Contemporary writers
declare that if he had lived in the palmy days of the Mughulus, his
force of character, his astuteness, and, above all, his qualities as a
general, would have placed him in the front rank...................He
cannot be held responsible for the mistakes of Shuja Kuli Khan and
of Benni Bahadur -mistakes, the first of which ensured his defeat,
[ 35 ]
Chapter -II
and the second made of the defeat a rout. Again, his men, especially
his cavalry, fought most bravely".
British moves against Shuja
The English were, as usual, lavish with their promises. The British
"Commander-in-Chief waited upon Shah Alam, assured him of the
loyalty of the English and gave him hopes of his being put in possession
of the Wazir's territory"; and at the same time Major Munro wrote to
Rajah Beni Bahadur, who was carrying on negotiations on behalf of
Shuja-ud-daulah, "Separate yourself from him (Shuja-du-daulah) and in
consideration of your friendship for the English, we shall establish you
in the Subadarry in his room, according to the ancient custom. The
Wazeer's dominions were promised by the deceitful British to Shah
Alam and Beni Bahadur at one and the same time!
In order to weaken Shuja-du-daulah still further, the British raised
a host of enemies by making lavish promises at his expenses against the
Awadh Ruler. Balwant Singh, the traitorous Zamindar of Banaras, was
won over when "The Council approved of the terms of the agreement,
but directed the Major (Munro) to procure from the Emperor a Sanad of
the Zamindari of Balwant in the name of the Company, so as to have
power and authority over the Rajah". But it was not enough, as Shuja-
du-daulah would not surrender Meer Qasim to the British. "Munro made
the Emperor write to the Wazir's two great enemies, Mirza Najaf Khan
and Ahmad Khan Bangash of Farrukhabad, investing the one with the
management of the Subah of Awadh, and the other with that of the
Allahabad province. All the important chiefs in the two provinces were
directed by the Emperor to afford no shelter to the rebel Wazir, but to
drive him out without delay".
Shuja's last efforts
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Chapter -II
Although deserted by almost everybody (The Emperor, Balwant
Singh and deserters from his own army had joined the British against
him), Shuja-du-daulah did not lose heat and challenged the British once
more. But he was defeated. Even then he did not lose heart. 'The Nawab
nevertheless made one more effort for delivering a second battle,' writes
Madec,..........'but after the first effort terror seized our army and the
Nawab retreated in disorder on seeing himself abandoned by his
men.........' It fact he was betrayed by his faithless. Mughals who wanted
to deliver him up to the English. Two of the prominent Mughal deserters
were Abdur Rahim Khan and Muhammad Ali Khan who had some time
before been sent by the Wazir to negotiable peace with the English
Commander at Banaras. These two Mughal commanders offered to place
themselves with 6000 troops at the disposal of Major Fletcher very soon
after the battle of 18 th January".
Shuja attempts an Anti-British Coalition
Shuja-du-daulah "endeavoured to form a coalition of several
important chiefs to drive out the English, whom he represented as
cherishing designs on the Empire. Leaving Lucknow on 31 sl January, as
we have seen", says Dr. Srivastava, "he took the road to Bareilly where
Hafiz Rahmat Khan received him with apparent cordiality. But the
Wazir's proposal for an offensive alliance against the foreign intruders
met with an evasive reply from this hoary Afghan politician, who would
not risk a war with the victorious and mighty English". Najib-ud-daulah
"excused himself on the plea that he was too much occupied with the
Jat War. Worse still," Shuja-du-daulah, returning to Bareilly, found the
Ruhelas unfriendly and even plotting to attack the fugitive Wazir's small
and dwindling retinue and plunder his treasure, or to capture and hand
him over to the English. The Ruhelas as a whole looked upon Shuja-du-
daulah as then-hereditary foe".
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Chapter -II
Ruhelas refused to join
Advised by "Saadullah Khan, who was on friendly terms with the
Wazir", Shuja-ud-daulah proceeded to Farrukhabad to "seek the
assistance of Ahmad Khan Bangash," but the latter "would not joint the
proposed confederacy on the ground of ill health and lameness".
Abandoned by his fellow-religionists Shuja-du-daulah had to fall back
for help on the Hindu Marhattas.
Marhattas join Shuja
Sadly disappointed, Shuja-ud-daulah who had already written to
the Marhattas for help, agreed to their terms. "Malhar Rao........... with
30,000 troops set out from Malwa, and a little later Shuja-ud-daulah also
began his march with Imad-ul-mulk, but without any of the Ruhela
chieftains who evaded joining him on one pretext or another, and both
proceeded in the direction of Kora Jahanabad with as much expedition
as possible."
Shuja disillusioned
Shuja-ud-daulah had put great faith in the Marhatta army but
"Holkar's men, though numerically superior, could not stand the close
and steady fire from the British guns, and a few rounds speedily threw
ranks into confusion. Without waiting to reply, the Marhattas drew off
and retreated in disorder towards Kalpi. A general panic among his
troops.......... exasperated Malhar Rao................Shuja-ud-daulah's men
fared no better"............Shuja-ud-daulah was "confounded at the Maratha
defeat and flight. The action at Kora on 3 rd May 1765, and the
subsequent one at Kalpi, were not battles, not even well-matched
skirmishes; they were mere routs".
It seems that Shuja-ud-daulah was sadly disillusioned at the
reception he had received in Rohilkhand. Sweet words were not spared,
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Chapter -II
no doubt,.but it was crystal-clear to him that the Ruhelas would not join
him in any action against the British. And his attempt to put up a
combined opposition against the Britishers, whom he represented "as
cherishing designs on the Empire", did not move the Ruhelas. He had
already made a suggestion to satisfy the Ruhelas. "The Wazir seems to
have also proposed that Ahmad Shah Abdali of Kabul might be invited
to head the confederacy (as he had done against the Marhattas in 1761),
and the intermediary between the Wazir and Najib was the well-known
Durrani agent, named Yaqub Khan, who had met Shuja-ud-daulah on
13th March. But nothing tangible came out of this mission, as Najib
excused himself on the plea he was too much occupied with the Jat war."
Najib-ud-daulah's refusal must have been "the most unkindest cut
of all" and "having met with an indifferent reception from Ahmad Khan
Bangash. Hafiz Rahmat Khan and other Ruhelas, who were not in the
least willing to make a common cause with him, Shuja-ud-daulah's
hopes were now shattered and his spirits were completely broken. He
turned his attention once more to obtaining terms, and this time by
throwing himself absolutely at the mercy of the English."
Ruhelas' "deceitful promises"
"After the battle of Buxar", writes, Mill, "the Vazir had sent his
women and treasures to Bareilly, the strong fort of a Rohilla Chief;
and............. endeavoured to obtain assistance from Ghazi-ud-Khan,
from the Rohilla Chiefs, and a body of Mahattas, who were at that time
under Malhar Rao in the vicinity of Gualior (Gwalior). The Marhattas,
and Ghazi-ud-din, Khan, with a handful of followers, the meserable
remains of his former power, had, in reality joined him. But the Rohillas
had amused him with only deceitful promises; and he had been
abandoned even by Sumroo: who, with a body of about 300 Europeans
[ 39 ]
Chapter -II
of various nations, and a few thousand Sepoys, was negotiating for
service with the Jats".
After the two battles of Kora and Kalpi, on the 3 rd and 22nd May
1765, respectively, "The Vizir, impelled on the one side'by the desperate
state of his affairs, on the other by hopes of moderate treatment from the
English, resolved to throw himself entirely upon their generosity, by
placing his person in their hands. On the 19 th of May, General Carnac
received, written partly by the Nabob with his own hand, a letter, in
which he informed that officer that he was on his way to meet him. The
General received him with highest marks of distinction; and all parties
recommended a delicate and liberal treatment. The final settlement of
the terms of pacification was reserved for the presence of Clive. As it
was unanimously agreed, that it would cost the Company more to defend
the country of the Vizir, than it would yield in revenue; that Shuja-ud-
daulah was more capable of defending it than the Emperor, to whom it
had been formerly promised, or than any other chief who could be set
up; and that in the hands of the Vizir it might form a barrier against the
Marhattas and Afghans; it was determined to restore to him to whole of
his dominions, with the exception of Allahabad and Corah, which were
to be reserved to the Emperor".
Trade Permission refused
Shuja-ud-daulah was, naturally, grateful for restoration of his
dominions "and readily agreed to the payment of fifty lacks of rupees
demanded in compensation for the expenses of the war (at the first
Conference held on 2" August, 1765): but, when it was proposed to him
to permit the English to trade, free from duties, and erect factories in his
dominions, he represented so earnestly the abuses which, under the
name of trade, the Company's servants and their agents had perpetrated
in the provinces of Bengal, Bihar and Orissa, and expressed with so
[ 40 ]
Chapter -II
much vehemence his apprehension of disputes, and the impossibility
they would create of long preserving the blessings of peace, that Clive
agreed, in the terms of the treaty, to omit the very names of trade and
factories."
Shuja's generous treatment
Shuja-ud-daulah is blamed for anti-Ruhela feelings, but the critics
conveniently forget the role of the Pathans, after the Battle of Chatauni
in 1750 when they temporarily occupied Lucknow, before they were
routed and expelled by the Sheikhzadas. Students of history also cannot
forget the ill-treatment of Shuja-ud-daulah by the Ruhelas when he went
to Rohilkhand, after the Battle of Baksar in 1764, to organise a coalition
against the British foreigners. The Ruheles, in their animosity towards
the Nawab-Wazeer forgot all canons of hospitality towards a brother
Muslim Prince and plotted "to attack the fugitive Wazir's small and
dwindling retinue and plunder his treasure, or to capture and hand him
over to the English. The Rohilas as a whole looked upon Shuja-ud-
daulah as their hereditary foe". He had gone to them for help but, as Mill
says, "the Rohillas had amused him with only deceitful promises".
Inspite of all these ill-treatments which he experienced at the hands of
the Ruhelas, Shuja-daulah's treatment of his vanquished foes was more
than generous.
Much capital has been made out of the death of Hafiz Rahmat in
the Battle of Miranpur-Katra on 23 rd April, 1774, by Anti-Awadh
writers. M. Najmul Ghani Rampuri has devoted thirty-nine (39) pages to
highlights the most trivial details of the battle ant its effects on the
defeated Ruhelas. At the same time he has not missed any opportunity to
ascribe all sorts of motives to Nawab-Wazeer Shuja-ud-daulah, the
victor of the day. But not a word has been said about Shuja-ud-daulah's
generous behaviour towards the Ruhela Chiefs families or the pensions
[ 41 ]
Chapter -II
that he gave to Mohubbat Khan, son of Hafiz Rahmat Khan, and other
members of the family at Bareilly. Not even a grudging admission has
been made by Najmul Ghani Rampuri and other writers of the patronage
meted out to the Ruhela Sardars by Awadh Rulers up to the Indian
National upsurge in 1857-1859.
The Awadh Rulers' friendly behaviour and generous financial
assistance to the families of their vanquished foes is proved by the
British official record.
Long before this victory over Hafiz Rahmat Khan, Shuja-ud-
daulah had begun to feel the full significance of the British traders'
"sincere friendship and firm union". By the first treaty, executed on 16 th
August 1765, he had to pay 50,00,000 lakhs of rupees (besides other
concessions); by the treaty of 29 th November 1768, his forces were
reduced to 35,000 men only; by "a couple of treaties, both dated the 20 th
of March 1772, Chunar was taken and Allahabad was kept; and thus,
during the lifetime of Shooja-ood-Dowlah, two steps were taken in
advance of the treaty of August, 1765; that is to say, his forces were
restricted, his forts were appropriated", and by the treaty of 7 th
September 1773, he paid 50,00,000 lakhs of rupees in lieu of which,
"shall he possess Corah and Currah, and Allahabad, for ever".
The last treaty (7 th September 1773) "was followed by a
proceedings, on the part of Shooja-ood-Dowlah, by which he provided
against its infringement in his lifetime, that is to say, in the year 1775 he
died, and so escaped the further demands of his pertinacious Allies".
British ingratitude
[ 42 ]
Chapter -II
The death of Shuja-ud-daulah saved him from "the demands of his
pertinacious Allies" no doubt, but everyone of his descendants had to
work as a 'wet-nurse' to the British ever after and at the end the last
representative of the family was repaid with the annexation of the
country itself! The British victory at Baksar "bound the rulers of Awadh
to the conqueror", says Col. Malleson, "by ties of admiration, of
gratitude, of absolute reliance and trust, ties which made them for the
ninety-four years that followed the friends of his friends and the enemies
of his enemies. For that constancy of friendship English repaid them in
1855-56."
Macaulay on Hastings and Company Directors
Shuja-ud-daulah, unfortunately, had to deal with unprincipled
persons like, Hastings and Directors of the East India Company. How
apposite are the remarks of Macaulay.
"The principle which directed Hastings' dealings with his
neighbours", says Macaulay, "is fully expressed by the old motto of one
of the great predatory families of Teviotdale: 'Thou shall want ere I
want'. He seems to have laid it down, as a fundamental proposition
which could not be disputed, that, when he had not as many lacs of
rupees as the public service required, he was to take them from anybody
who had.........The Directors, it is true, never enjoined or appluaded any
crime. Far from it. Whoever examines their letters written at that time,
will find there many just and humane sentiments, many excellent
precepts-in short, an admirable code of political ethics. But every
exhortation is modified or nullified by a demand for money. 'Govern
leniently, and send more money; 'Practise strict justice and moderation
towards neighbouring powers, and send more money-' this is in truth
sum of all the instructions that Hastings ever received from
home.......The Directors dealt with India as the Church, in the good old
[ 43 ]
Chapter -II
times, dealt with a heretic. They delivered the victim over to the
executioners, with a earnest request that all possible tenderness might be
shown".
Shuja's death irreparable loss
Shuja-ud-daulah dominated the contemporary Indian stage like a
colossus and naturally raised a host of enemies among his rivals who
were jealous of his power and position. As for his military skill, inspite
of Champion's vituperations, Col. Malleson says: "we must also admit
that never before had they (the English) encountered an enemy in all
respects so formidable" (quoted earlier).
His untimely death removed "the most skilled native leader of
soldiers in India". According to his countrymen "since his death
prosperity, happiness and brilliance have departed from the world", so
observes Harcharan.
"In spite of the failures and weaknesses of Shuja-ud-daulah his
real claims to greatness cannot be denied", says Dr. Qidwai, "He raised
the prestige of Awadh during his time to an amazing height. He won a
reputation "among country powers that has not been equalled by any
ruler of Awadh. He aroused a dread in his English contemporaries which
is no doubt a tribute to his personal power and a testimony to his
sagacity".
[ 44 ]
Chapter -II
ASAF-UD-DAULAH (1775-1797)
Shuja-ud-daulah died an unhappy man on 29 th January 1774. "His
army was restricted; his fortress were occupied; by every fresh
arrangement he was brought more directly", says Major Bird, "under the
influence and control of the East India Company".
He was succeeded by his son, Mirza Yahya Khan Bahadur, better
known by his title Asaf-ud-daulah. "The accession of a Prince", writes
on Englishman, "was just one of those occasions which the Company
rarely failed to improve; and it was improved on this occasion without
the slightest reluctance".
The treaties of 16 th August 1765 and of 7 th September 1773 with
the late Nawab-Wazeer Shuja-ud-daulah were declared by the Council
"to have ceased with his death", although it was laid down by the latter
Treaty (Articles: I) that "This Agreement shall be observed by all the
English Chiefs, gentlemen of the Council, and by the Company, nor
shall it ever be broken or deviated from". A fresh treaty was signed with
the new Nawab-Wazeer on 21 st May 1775. Once of the fruits of this
treaty was that the cost of the Brigade was raised from Rs. 2,10,000 per
month to Rs. 2,60,000 per month; moreover the Circars of Benares,
Ghazipure, Chunar etc., were perpetually ceded to the 'Honourable
Company1; "and now, by this cession," says Major Bird, "the tribute was
carried directly into the coffers of the Company. Thus, while the
Company were requiring increased contributions from their Ally, they
curtailed the resources out of which he was to pay them. They burnt
their candle at both ends, with consistent indifference, seeing that the
cost was, in this instance, defrayed by the tallow-chandler".
For Balwant Singh's treachery at the Battle of Baksar (1764) he
was protected by the Company from the wrath of Shuja-ud-daulah, and
[ 45 ]
Chapter -II
Shuja-ud-daulah had to sign a 'Qaulnama' or Agreement on 6 th
September 1773, by which all the Zamindary, Mahals etc.. "which were
under the charge of Rajah Bulwant singh, deceased, I do hereby grant
and confirm unto you (Rajah Cheyt Singh) upon their former footing
etc".
Cheyt Singh, the son of the traitor of Baksar (Balwant Singh) was
confirmed in his patrimony by the Nawab's Qaulnam referred to above.
But the British, only true to their own interests, would not leave the son
of even their traitorous ally in peace. By the Article of the Treaty of 21 st
May 1775, Asaf-ud-daulah was made to declare that "he has given up of
his own free will and accord, unto the English Company, all the districts
dependent on the Raja Cheyt Sing, together with the land and water
duties, and the sovereignty of the said districts in perpetuity".
Nawab saddled with debts
Moreover Asaf-ud-daulah was made to sign an Agreement on the
same date, which laid down:
"In case of any persons having any demands, or having received
tuncaws on Rajah Cheyt Singh, or on the districts under him, agreeable
to my order, such demands or tuncaws do not depend on the said Rajah,
or on the said district, but are due from myself.
"The possession and sovereignty, in perpetuity, of the said
districts under the said Rajah, without encumbrances, delays, dues,
debts, tuncaws, etc., I wholly give up to the English Company at the
expiration of one month and a half."
Treaty of Fyzabad : Effects
This treaty of 21 st May 1775 was called the "Treaty of Fyzabad"
and we should thank Mukhtarud-daulah (Syed Murtuza Khan) for it. "It
provided the cession of the Zamindari of Banaras in its full sovereignty
[ 46 ]
Chapter -II
to the Company", says Dr. Qidwai, "This injury which Murtuza Khan
did to the state was irreparable as it paved the way for the disintegration
of the Kingdom of Awadh".
The Company's officers, including members of the Court of
Directors, had no moral scruples. They looked only to their interests and
changed their opinions as the occasion demanded.
"The conduct of the Directors, as connected with this Treaty, was
peculiar" writes M. Maseeh-ud-deen Khan. "In their letter of the 15 th
December 1775, remarking upon the resolution of the Council to
disregard the Treaties concluded with the late Nawab of Oude, they say,
'Although the death of Shooja-ood-Dowlah may render it necessary to
make new arrangements with his successors, we cannot agree with our
Council that our treaties with the state of Oude expired with the death of
that Nabob'. No sooner, however, were they made acquainted with the
new grant of revenue, and the new allowance on account of the troops,
than they thus wrote in their letter of the 24 th of December 1776:
'It is with singular satisfaction we observe, at any time, the
attention paid by our servants to the great interests of their employers;
and it is with pecular pleasure we here signify our entire approbation of
the late treaty concluded with Asoph-ood-Dowlah, successor of Shooja-
ood-Dowlah, by which such terms are procured as seem to promise us
solid and permanent advantages (Banaras yielding) "about seventy lakhs
of rupees per annum and bringing into the Company's coffers nearly
twenty-five lakhs of rupees net profit."
Much has been written about misery and oppression of the Awadh
people during the Native rule, but few people know the withering effect
of British supremacy supplanting that of the Nawab-Wazeer in Banaras.
During the fostering reigns of Shuja-ud-daulah and Asaf-ud-daulah the
people of Awadh, including that of Banaras, were happy and the country
[ 47 ]
Chapter -II
prosperous, admits Torrens...... "the peasantry fearless of unjust exaction
of personal wrong, cultivated their fields like gardens, and throve on the
fruits of their industry". But all this changed during the British rule.
Under the Company all the ruling powers of the Rajah of Banaras were
vested in the British Resident and the annual tribute payable to the
Company was raised to Rs 20 lakhs. The condition of the people can
best be described in the words of Torrens:
"Misery and distraction took the place which had recently been
occupied by comfort and content...........two years later, when Hastings
revisited the scene..........he found it one of desolattion.
The general condition of Awadh may best be imagined by the
following quotation from James Mill:
"Before the connection between the English and Oude", Writes
Mill, "the revenue had exceeded three millions sterling, and was levied
without being accused of deteriorating the country. In the year 1779
(during Asaf-ud-daulah's reign), it did not exceed one-half of that sum,
and in the subsequent years fell far below it, while the rate of taxation
was increased, and the country exhibited every mark of oppressive
exaction."
Notwithstanding the falling revenue and "oppressive exactions",
there was no abatement of the burdens with which the country was
saddled from year to year. Let us recapitulate: By the treaty of 7 th"
September 1773 (between Shuja-ud-daulah and the Company) it was laid
down that he should pay 2,10,000 Sicca rupees per month for one
brigade. By the new treaty signed with his son, Asaf-ud-daulah (on 21 st
May 1775), the Company increased the amount of Rs. 2,60,000 i.e. by
50,000 rupees more per month. But this was not all.
In 1777 "To the first (brigade) was added.... a second, called the
Temporary Brigade, because the express condition of it was, that the
[ 48 ]
Chapter -II
expenses should be charged on the Nawab 'for so long a time only as he
should require the corps for his service." As if it was not enough load
for poor Asaf-ud-daulah, he was further burdened with more
expenditure. "Several detached corps, in the Company's service, were
also placed in his pay," says Mill, "and a great part of his own native
troops were put under the command of British Officers...
"In the year 1779, the expense of the temporary brigade, and that
of the country troops under British Officers increased", writes Mill, "the
one to the amount of more than eighty, the other of more than forty
thousand pounds sterling, above the estimate. These particulars,
however, constituted only the military part of his English expense. The
civil expense resulted from an establishment under the Resident, which,
without an authority from the Court of Directors, or any record in the
books of the Council, had gradually and secretly swelled to a great
amount: and was increased by another establishment for another agent of
the Company, and be pensions, allowances, and large occasional gifts, to
various persons in the Company's service".
Nawab complains of excessive expenses
It seems that Asaf-ud-daulah could bear it no longer and, like the
proverbial worm, turned and blurted out:
"In that year, viz., 1779, the Nabob complained", says Mill, "that
the pressure was more than he was able to endure. "During the years
past", said he, "the expense occasioned by the troops in brigade, and
others commanded by European officers, has much distressed the
support of my household; insomuch, that the allowances made to the
seraglio and children of the deceased Nabob have been reduced to one-
fourth of what it had been, upon which they have subsisted in a very
distressed manner for two years past. The attendants, writers, and
servants, etc., of my Court, have received no pay for two years past; and
[ 49 ]
Chapter -II
there is at present no part of the country that can be allotted to the
payment of my father's private creditors, whose applications are daily
pressing upon me. All these difficulties I have for these three years past
struggled through and found this consolation therein, that it was
complying with the pleasure of the Honourable Company, and in the
hope that this Supreme Council would make inquiry from impartial
persons into distressed situation; but I am now forced to a
representation. From the great increase of expense, the revenues were
necessarily farmed out a high rate, and deficiencies followed yearly. The
country and cultivation is abandoned. And this year, in particular, from
the excessive droughts, deduction of many lacs have been allowed the
farmers, who are still unsatisfied. I have received but just sufficient to
support my absolute necessities, the revenues being deficient to the
amount of fifteen lacs ("stated by the resident, in his letter, dated 13 th
December 1779 to amount to twenty-five lacs, 250,000 pounds); and for
this reason, many of the old chieftains, with their troops, and the useful
attendants of the Court, were forced to leave it, and there is now only a
few foot and horse for the collection of my revenues; and should the
Zemindars be refractory, there is not left a sufficient number to reduce
them to obedience.' In consequences of these distressing circumstances,
the Nabob prayed, that, the assignments for the new brigade, and the
other detached bodies of the Company's troops. Might not be required,
declaring that these troops were not only quite useless to his
government, but, moreover, the cause of much loss, both to the 'revenues
and customs; and that the detached bodies of troops, under the European
officers, brought nothing but confusion into the affairs of his
government, and were entirely their own masters".
"This representation", according to Mill, "which events proved to
be hardly an exaggeration, and the prayer by which it was followed, the
[ 50 ]
Chapter -II
Governor-General received, with tokens of the highest indignation and
resentment. 'These demands, he said, 'the tone in which they are
asserted, and the season in which they are made, are all equally
alarming.' In the letter which was despatched in his words to the
Resident, the grounds on which the Nabob petitioned for relief are
declared to be 'totally inadmissible.'
t is further noted by Mill that "the complaint of the Vazir that they
and their officers (troops in addition to the brigade) acted as the masters
in his country, and as a source both of expense and of disorder, is
confirmed by Mr. Francis, who, in Council, pronounced it 'notorious that
the English army had devoured his revenues, and his country, under
colour of defending it.' Hastings' arguments in defence were declared to
be 'only a varnish placed upon injustice by fraud.'
o heed was paid to the genuine protests of the Nawab-Wazeer with
the result that "the debt with which he (Asaf-ud-daulah) stood charged
in 1780 amounted to the sum of 1,400,000 pound sterling. The Supreme
Council continued pressing their demands. The Nabob, protesting that he
had given up everything, that 'in the country no further resources
remained; and that he was without a subsistence,' continued sinking
more deeply in arrear: till the time when the resolution of Mr. Hastings
was adopted, to proceed to make with him a new arrangement on the
spot."
Hastings meets Asaf at Chunar
Sadr Jahan Begam and Amat-uz-zahra, better known as Bahu
Begam Saheba, the grandmother and mother respectively of Asaf-ud-
daulah, were peaceful living at Fyzabad. They were under the "special
protection" of the East India Company headed by Warren Hastings who
had "accepted the trust". The ladies were passing their days, bestowing
charities on the deserving and the needy, in the palace bequeathed to
[ 51 ]
Chapter -II
them by Shuja-ud-daulah but, unfortunately, "were supposed to have
derived under his will vast treasures". The increasing demands of the
Company had exhausted the Awadh treasury so much so that even
Barwell, a member of the Supreme Council of Bengal, had to admit that
the "impoverished state of the country loudly pleaded for a reduction of
the revenue, as absolutely requisite for its future welfare."
Hastings met the Nawab-Wazeer at Chunar on 11 th September
1781, "when the Nabob was, by treaty, allowed to seize the property of
the Princesses, and of others his relations; and, on the condition of
bestowing that property upon the English, actually rewarded for the
seizure, by obtaining relief from a permanent and oppressive expense."
But it is interesting to find that the above Treaty of 11 th September
1781 by which Asaf-ud-daulah was "allowed to seize the property of the
Princesses, and of others his relations".... for "bestowing that property
upon the English" has not been printed in the "collection of Treaties,
Engagements and Sanads" by Aitchison. The only reason for omission
seems to be that it portrays the East India Company in its true colours.
Hastings had hit upon a diabolical scheme which, in the words of
Torrens, was sordid "device for replenihsing the exhcequer of Calcutta
without exhausting that at Lucknow" (simply because the Lucknow
treasury was already exhausted!). Discussing the Chunar agreement Lord
Macaulay says: "It was, simply this that the Governor-General and the
Nawab Vazier should join to rob a third party, and the third party whom
they determined to rob was the parent (mother) of one of the robbers."
Attachment Orders
Macaulary, as usual with English writers, has cleverly tried to put
the odium of robbing the Begams on Asaf-ud-daulah and concealed the
real facts. It is on the authority of no less a historian than James Mill
that Hastings ordered Middleton, the Resident, who "issued parwanahs
[ 52 ]
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and then only Nawab attached the property under compulsion." It is on
record that Middleton issued parwanahs for attachment of Begams's
property and wrote to Hastings in his letter dated 9 th December 1781:
"His Excellency appeared to be very much hurt and incensed at
the measure; and loudly complains of the treachery of his ministers,
first, in giving you any hopes that such a measure would be adopted;
and, secondly, in promising me their whole support in carrying it
through. But as I apprehended rather than suffer it to appear that the
point had been carried in opposition to his will, he at length yielded a
nominal acquiescence, and has this day issued his own parwanahs to that
effct; declaring, however, at the same time, both to me and his
ministers, that it is an act of compulsion. But how strange that these
lamentations did not attract the attention of Macaulay!
The tortures applied to Jawahir Alii Khan and Bahar Ali Khan, the
confidential eunuchs of the Begams, to seize their treasures and other
activities of Hastings, at last, compelled the Court of Directors to take
notice of their Governor-General's activities in India. They did not agree
with Hastings as far as his dealings with the Begams were concerned
and in their letter, dated 14 th February 1783, ordered an inquiry into the
Begam's case but it was opposed by Warren Hastings.
Restoration of Jagheers opposed
After one year the helpless Asaf-ud-daulah formally applied to the
Governor-General "requesting that he might be permitted to restore, to
his grandmother and other relations, the jaghires which were taken from
them in the beginning of last year; the authority of the Governor-General
was sufficient to prevent, at the present time, the adoption of any
measure in their favour. And Poor Asaf-ud-daulah has ever since been
blammed for his supposed unfilial act of robbing his own mother and
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grandmother, and nobody speaks of Hastings' compulsion and, later, his
preventing Asaf-ud-daulah from restoring the Jagheers to the Begams!
"From the Ist of February 1774 to the end of September 1783,"
writes Major Bird, "within a period of little more than nine years (as is
admitted in a dispatch of the Court of Directors, dated 18 th April 1789),
the Company had squeezed out of their Wuzier ally two crores and thirty
lakhs of rupees (£ 2,300,000 sterling), and the Directors allowed that the
dominions of the Wuzier were reduced to a deplorable condition in
consequence... Even Warren Hastings himself, speaking of the conduct
of the Company towards Oude," says Maseeh-ud-deen Khan, "remarks
'the number, influence, and enormous amount of the salaries, pensions,
and emoluments of the Company's service, civil and military, in the
Vizier's service, have become an intolerable burden upon the revenue
and authority of His Excellency, and exposed us to the envy and
resentment of the whole country, by excluding the native servants
and adherents of the Vizier from the rewards of their services and
attachment." Upon these tardy admissions of Warren Hastings, who
played the leading role in this tragic drams, how apt are the comments of
Major Bird, who says, "In short, it was evident to the factors themselves
that their milch cow was getting low in flesh, and that it must have
careful nursing unless they were ready once for all to realize the value
of its famished remains" and consequently the Residency was abolished
on 31st December, 1783.
Warren Hastings' Character
Warren Hastings, throughout his career in India, showed a
behaviour which, in the words of Edmund Burke, "broadly displays a
want of sense, a want of feeling, a want of decorum; a behaviour which
indicates an habitual depravity of mind, that has no sentiment of
propriety, no feeling for the relations of life, no conformity to the
[ 54 ]
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circumstances of human affairs...but the audacity of hardened, habitual,
shameless guilt; affording legitimate grounds for inferring, a very
defective education, very evil society, or every vicious habits of life."
But I cannot close this chapter of inquites without quoting from
Henry Dundas, President of the Secret Committee, who referring the
reports of the Secret Committee to a Committee of the House, on 9th
April, 1782:
"Expatiated on the misconduct of Indian Presidencies, and of the
Court of Directors; of the former, because they plunged the nation into
wars for the sake of conquest, contemned and violated the engagement
of Treaties, and plundered and oppressed the people of India; of the
latter, because they blamed misconduct only when it was unattended
with profit, but exercised a very constant forbearance towards the
greatest delinquency, as often as it was productive of a temporary gain".
How true!
Cornwallis lightens the burden
Warren Hastings left India in 1785, and was impeached before the
Parliament for robbing the Begams of Awadh and other charges (He was
ultimately acquitted). He was replaced by Cornwallis in 1786. He made
some remissions in the exactions and in the interference of the
Company. "The annual payments by the Wuzier to the Company
required by treaty amounted to little more than thirty-four lakhs per
annum; but in respect of the additional brigade thrust upon him by
Hastings, and on other pretexts," says Major Bird, "these payments had
been actually raised to as much as eighty-four lakhs. It was now agreed
that they should be reduced again to fifty lakhs, a sum still beyond the
stipulations of former treaties, but bearable in comparison with the
exactions which preceded it, and coupled with the assurance (to be
violated hereafter), that from the date of this agreement His Excellency
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should not be charged with any excess on this sum, and no further
demands should be made.
"And though, at that time, Oudh was threatened with no particular
danger, and the expense attending the continuance of the Brigade at
Futtyghur exceeded the sum which he was entitled to exact of the Nabon
(Asaf-ud-daulah), he adhered to the resolution that the troops should not
be removed.
Shore succeeds Cornwall's: Agreements violated
Sir John Shore came to India as Governor-General in 1793 and the
solemnly ratified agreements of his predecessor, Cornwallis, were
shamefully violated. "Sir John Shore, required 'the wretched Vizier' (to
use the language of Mr. Mill) to add to his former subsidy the expense
of one European and one native regiment of cavalry' provided the annual
amount should not exceed five and a half lakhs of rupees. Thus the
agreement of Lord Cornwallis was shamefully violated."
Sir John Shore had gone to Lucknow on 20 th March 1797, and "by
means of threats, artifices," forced Asaf-ud-daulah to sign the above
agreement. Interestingly enough, the Agreement laid down that the
Nawab-Wazeer would pay for the "two regiments (the amount of which
expenses, however; the Governor-General cannot at present specify)
provided they shall not exceed upon any account five lakhs and a half of
rupees per annum."
Awadh continued to suffer from the "crooked politics and
shameless breaches of faith" of the Company's representatives.
Asaf-ud-daulah felt the methods used and the treatment mated out
to him by Sir John Shore, "who possessed the .reputation of being
sanctimonious in appearance and a lover of peace," and the drain on his
country so much that he fell ill, but would not take medicine till the
'cultured sway of Asaf-ud-daulah' came to an end. He died on 21 st
[ 56 ]
Chapter -II
September 1797 "and left the Company, as their custom was, to improve
the incident of a fresh succession."
[ 57 ]
Chapter -II
SAADAT ALT KAN (1798-1814)
Saadat Ali Khan Succeeds
Asaf-ud-daulah was succeeded by Wazeer Ali and formally
acknowledged by the Governor General as the former's son, without any
enquiry about his paternity, although it was very easy to do so, since
there was:
"a Resident at the Court of Lucknow whose duty it was to watch
and to report to the government, which the represented, everything of
the slightest public importance, the general disbelief of the claim of the
recognised son of the sovereign to the inheritance for which he was
destined should have been either unknown or disregarded by the British
Government."
Later Sir John Shore, the then Governor-General "discovered that
Saadat Ali was more eligible to the throne of Oude than Vazir Ali.
Saadat Ali was a brother of the last ruler and was living as a pensioner
at Benares...
"Sir John (Shore) opined for Saadat Ali, but he had not yet made
up his mind, or he had not yet ascertained what price Saadat Ali would
pay to the Company for his elevation to the musnad. Warren Hastings
had been accused of holding an auction at Lucknow, but Sir John, now
figured more in the light of an auctioneer in that city". In the words of
Major Bird:
"Seeing that a better bargain could be made with a brother of the
deceased Wuzier, Sir John Shore repaired to Benares, and proposed to
the latter, who was named Saadat Allie, to dethrone Vizier Allie,
offering the support of the Company on the intelligible condition that
the subsidy should be largely increased, and their support should be paid
for otherwise in money and kind.. To this stipulation, bold and
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barefaced, the aspirant to the princedom 'cheerfully consented', and,
after a preliminary process at Lucknow, termed in the "Parliamentary
Return of Treaties" 'a full investigation', and purporting to be an inquiry
into the spuriousness of Vizier Allie's birth, Prince was deposed, and
Saadat Allie was proclaimed in his stead, at Lucknow, on the 21 st
January 1798". He ascended the throne with the title of Yameen-ud-
daulah.
A fresh treaty of seventeen articles was signed "in its principles
stipulations absolutely stinking of rupees" on 21 st February 1798 a list of
"Kistbundi (or Installment) for the payment of the Annual Subsidy"
totalling Rs. 76,00,000-0-0.
Company's Enormous Gains
"We append in a note", says Major Bird, "the substance of the
various articles seriatim, and the trial of rupees will be found to run
through them with a latitude and profusion which leaves to doubt as to
the motives of one of the parties to the document. The Wuzier is to pay
up arrears. The Wuzier is required to give up the fort of Allahabad, and
to pay eight lakhs of rupees to put it in repair for the presentees. The
Wazier is to pay three lakhs for repairing fort Furry Ghur (Fatehgarh).
The Wuzier is to pay expenses of moving troops, the number of lakhs
being as yet indefinite. The Wuzier is to pay the Company twelve lakhs
in consideration of their expenses in establishing his right. The Wuzier
is to pay a pension of one lakh and a half to his deposed rival. And
lastly, by Article 2, the annual subsidy paid by the Wuzier, and which
amounted to something over fifty-six lakhs, is now raised to seventy-six
lakhs, that is to say, from about £ 555000 a year, the subsidy is screwed
upto 760,000. In all, a million sterling, and the fort of Allahabad are
obtained in a single year by the East India Company, half of it in
violation of the engagement of Lord Cornwallis, and in virtue of the
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union now growing firmer between themselves and the victim in their
coils. A few months later they even attempted to dispossess the latter of
the Doab country, and sir John Shore, then Lord Teignmouth, wrote a
letter, dated, October 3, 1798, to the Resident at Lucknow, with this
object. 'If, said he, 'we cannot take it as rulers and sovereigns, we might
manage to take on a lease, in the same manner as it is held by Almas
Allie Khan, and on his death we will take possession of the whole1. The
Resident was also instructed to induce the Nawaub Wuzier to disband
his own army, and replace it by Company's troops.
'People Sold'
Not unnaturally Sir Henry Lawrence caustically remarked:
"What will perhaps most strike the English reader of Sir John
Shore's treaty is the entire omission of the slightest provision for othe
good government of Oudh. The people seemed as it were sold to the
highest bidder. Vizier AM was young, dissolute, and needy; Saadat Ali
was middle-aged, known to be prudent, and believed to be rich. Being of
penurious habits, he had, even on his petty allowance as a younger son,
amassed several lakhs of rupees; and, in short a more promising sponge
to squeeze, than his nephew. From the general tenor of Sir John Shore's
life, we believe that his heart was in the right place, though this his
diplomatic transaction, might, if taken alone, lead us to a different
conclusion. Wherever his heart was, his head at least must have been
woolgathering. He set a bad precedent. He made the Masnad of Oudh a
mere transferable property in the hands of the British Governor and he
left the people of Oudh at the mercy of a shackled and guaranteed ruler.
This may have been liberality, but it was a liberality of a very spurious
sort. Much as we admire Lord Teignmouth's domestic character, we are
obliged entirely to condemn the whole tenor of Oudh negotiations.
Historians have hitherto let him down slightly, but his Lordship may be
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judged by the same standard as other public officers; by the right or by
the wrong that he committed, and not by his supposed motives, or by his
private character."
After obtaining one million sterling and the fort of Allahabad, in
one single year, in violation of the engagement of Lord Cornwallis, the
lust for land was whetted and Lord Teignmouth intended to dispossess
Saadat Ali Khan, the ally of the East India Company, of the Doab
(Rohilkhand). Although the Treatly of 21 st February 1798, emphasized
"the mutual conditions of friendship and unity previously subsisting, and
also the former treaties, as far as consistent with the present, are
upheld", Lord Teignmouth (former Sir John Shore) wrote a letter
on .October 3,1798, to the Resident at Lucknow: in which he says:
"If we cannot take it (the Doab country) as rulers and sovereigns,
we might manage to take it on a lease, in the same manner as it is held
by Almas Allie Khan, and on his death we will take possession of the
whole".
Nawab to pay for Company's Army
This clearly gives away the Governor-General and proves,
unequivocally, the East India Company's policy of land-grabbing, by
hook or by crook! Not content with this the Governor-General also
directed the Resident to "induce" the Nawab-Wazeer to disband his army
which should be replaced by the Company's troops. The rumours of
Zaman Shah's invasion of India gave the necessary pretext to the
Christian Governor-General to force the "necessary reforms" although:
"From the correspondence which passed between the Governor-
General of India in Council and the Court of Directors, from the 17 th
April 1798 to the 15* May, 1799, it is perfectly clear and evident that
the Oude Government was under no apprehensions of any enemy either
from without or within, and therefore did not stand in need of any
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alliance, either offensive or defensive, with the Indian Government.
Such being the state of things, the Home authorities directed the Local
Government to disband the new troops they had raised in Oude, as from
there being no occasion for their services, they were only un-necessary
expense to the Government of that country. The Indian authorities,
however, did not think is proper to break up the strength of their Indian
army, but at the same time, anxious to exempt the Company from the
expenses occasioned by it, they saddled the Nawaub Vizier with them."
Awadh financially drained
"They drained the territory of Oude", says Major Bird, "of every
rupee they could wring from it. They played the part of great dacoits on
a scale most oppressive to its frugal ryots and industrious cultivators.
The plundered the revenues of Wuzier, nobles and people, on the plea of
defending those who were competent to defend themselves against the
force of any native adversary, and they appropriated their soldiers and
military resources, while they charged them tribute for the bereavement.
They took territory as well as revenues, and they curtailed income as
they increased expenditure. By the treaty of the 20 th March 1772, they
took the fort of chunar: by that of the 21 st May 1775, they took the
districts of Banares, Gazeepore, Caunpore etc. They had taken the fort
of Futty Guhr (Fatehgarh) in 1787. They took the fort of Allahabad in
1798; and they were now preparing to take the Doab, if they could
manage to get in on a lease - if, in short, they could get only a right of
entry. At the same time, through the instrumentality of a Resident, they
were admonishing, meddling, making, unmaking, and degrading , as far
as they could, the Princes of Oude into puppets after they had suceeded
in converting their dominions into a farm. At this stage they began to
remonstrate, and recommend reforms, with the sententious air of
benevolent bystanders, as if they, and they alone, were not entirely
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answerable for the mischief thus caused and which ever after they
persisted in as mischievously exaggerating".
Pretext for interference
Major R.W. Bird, being an Assistant Resident at Lucknow, has
correctly painted the picture of the Residents' interference by
"admonishing, meddling, making, unmaking, and degrading.......the
Princes of Oude into puppets" and thus creating, intentionally,
administrative confusion in the country to offer a pretext for the
Company to interfere. And these conditions were not peculiar to Awadh.
The Residents saw to it that conditions should prevail, mutatis mutandis,
in each Indian State for the benefit of the Honourable East India
Company.
Mornington as Governor-General
Mornington, better known as Marquis Wellesley, arrived as
Governor-General at Calcutta in May 1798. He was not slow to move. In
October, the same year, he had "under his consideration the best means
of securing the regular payment of the subsidy from Oude, and of
reforming the Nawab's army". But it was nothing but a series of
"pretentious strictures" and the real motive was different. " 'This
reform', says Hale, 'really meant the disbandment of the Nawab's regular
army, except as far as portions of it might be wanted for purposes of
state, or for the collection of the revenue, and the substitution of an
increased number of the Company's regiments of infantry and cavalry;
to be relieved from time to time, and to be paid by the Nawaub. The
Nawaub Wuzier, however, in alarm at this proposal, spoke of abdicating.
Lord Wellesly on this at once stated the grand object which he
considered the Company had in view, and this was 'The acquisition by
the Company of the exclusive authority, civil and military, over the
dominions of Oude.' With this a treaty was ultimately drawn up, the first
[ 63 ]
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article of which involved the virtual abdication of the Nawaub. But on
this being presented to him, the Nawaub positively refused to sign any
such agreement. The Governor-General entered into negotiations which
extended over several months, in the course of which he admitted that
'his original object was not merely to secure the subsidiary funds, but to
extinguish the Nawaub's military power' ". Wellesley was simply
following the "bad precedent set" by Shore.
Troops ordered into Awadh
It is interesting to note the peremptory attitude adopted by Wellesley
and his indecent haste:
"Without allowing the Nawaub time to draw up the remonstrance
above -mentioned, the additional troops had been actually ordered into
Oude; and the ground on which this measure was attempted to be
justified was this: that, as the Company was bound by Lord
Teignmouth's treaty to defend the Nawaub's possessions, that treaty
must be understood to confer upon them, by implication, the power of
augmenting the British forces stationed in Oude entirely at their
pleasure, and even in spite of the Nawaub's assent, whenever they
should think such a measure necessary to the discharge of their
defensive engagements with the Nawaub. It was further contended that
the latter was bound to maintain any number of troops which the
Company might station in his dominions, because one article of the
treaty obliges him so to do whenever any augmentation of his British
military force 'should be thought necessary'. As soon, therefore, as one
division of the troops, destined by the British authorities, in the manner
above described, to occupy certain portions of the Oude dominions, had
been stationed there, and the Nawaub had been compelled to become
responsible for their pay, and while another body was ordered to hold
[ 64 ]
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itself in readiness to march after them, the Nawaub Wuzier Saadat Allie
addressed the following memorial to the Governor-General."
Saadat Ali Khan remonstrates
Saadat Ali Khan, being a well-read, intelligent and efficient
administrator, saw through Wellesley's game and, on 11 th Januay 1800,
sent a well-argued memorial. After describing the dangers which
threatened his brother (Asaf-ud-daulah), he says:
"Notwithstanding these circumstances, it never once entered the
imagination of the British rulers to introduce such innovations, and carry
into effect such arrangements, as those now suggested by your
Lordship.... It will then be evident to every person, that the Company,
no longer putting confidence in the sincerity of my friendship, deprived
me of the direction of my own army, and spread their toops over my
dominions......my authority in these provinces could be annihilated; nor
would my orders be attended to on any occasion, whether trifling or of
moment....
"By a reference to this (the second) article, it will be evident to
your Lordship, that, on acession to the musnud, the force designed for
the defence of these dominions was increased beyond what it had been
in any former period, whilst, on my part, I agreed to defray the expense
of the said augmentation. But in no part of the said article is it written or
hinted, that after the lapse of a certain number of years a further
permanent augmentation should take place; and to deviate in any degree
from the said treaty appears to me unnecessary...
After the conclusion of the treaty in question, no further
augmentation is to be made, excepting in case of necessity; and that the
increase is to be proportioned to the emergency, and endure but as long
as necessity exists. An 'augmentation' of the troops, without existing
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necessity, and making me answerable for the expense 'attending the
increase', is in consistent with the treaty, and seems inexpedient.
It is stipulated, "that all transactions between the two States shall
be carried on with the greatest cordiality and hormony; and that the said
Nawaub shall posses full authority over his household affairs, hereditary
dominions, his troops, and his subjects.' Should the management of the
army be taken from under my direction, I ask where is my authority over
my household affairs, hereditary dominions, over my troops, and my
subjects?"
Unable to meet the arguments Wellesley made it "a pretext for
treating it as an insult" and simply declined to "making any remarks on
the paper" (the Nawab's memorial) and moved by 'righteous' indigation
declared, "in a letter to Lieut-Colonel Scott, the Resident at Lucknow:
Para 2- "His Lordship not thinking proper to receive, in its present
form, the written communication made to you by the Nawaub Vizier on
the 11 inst., as an answer to His Lordship's letter of the 5 th of November
last to His Excellency (Saadat Ali Khan), directs that you lose no time in
returning the original of the communication of His Excellency,
accompanying the delivery of it with the following observations, in the
name of the Governor-General.
Para 3- "The mode adopted in the present instance by His Excellency,
of replying to a public letter from the Governor-General, attested by His
Lordhip's seal and signature, and written on a subject of the most
momentous concern to the mutual interests of the Company and of His
Excellency, besides indicating a levity unsuitable to the occasion, is
highly deficient in the respect due from His Excellency to the first
British authority in India.
Para 4- "His Lordship, therefore, declines making any remarks on the
paper which you have transmitted, and desires that the Nawaub Vizier
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may be called on to reply to His Lordship's letter of the 5 th of November,
in the manne prescribed, no less by reason than by established usage.
"If, in formally answering His Lordship's letter, His Excellency
should think proper to impeach the honour and justice of the British
Government, in similar terms to those employed in the paper delivered
to you (the Resident) on the 11 th instant, the Governor-General will
than> consider how such unfounded calumnies and gross
misrepresentations, both of facts and arguments, deserve to be noticed."
James Mills' Verdict
I will simply quote the verdict of the eminent historian, James
Mill, on the above correspondence, and leave the reader to form his own
independent opinion on the merit of the case:
"A party to a treaty", says Mill "fulfills all its conditions with a
punctuality, which, in his case, was altogether unexampled; a gross
infringement of that treaty, or at least, what appears to him a gross
infringements, is about to be committed on the other side; he points out
clearly, but in the most humble language, savouring of abjectness much
more than disrespect, the inconsistency which appears to him to exist
between the treaty and the conduct; this is represented by the other party
as an impeachment of their honour and justice; and if no guilt existed
before to form a ground for punishing the party who declines
compliance with their will, a guilt is now contracted which hardly any
punishment can expiate. This, it is evident, is a course by which no
infringement of a treaty can ever be destitute of a justification. If the
party injured submits without a word, his consent is alleged. If he
complains, he is treated as impeaching the honour and justice of his
superior; a crime of so prodigious a magnitude, as to set the superior
above all obligation to such a worthless connection."
Forcible Possession
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Chapter -II
In another letter of 22nd January 1801 Wellesley asked the Nawab-
Wazeer either to abdicate and accept and annual stipend or to cede one-
half of his territorial possessions to indemnify for the expenses of the
two bodies of troops with which he had been saddled. The Nawab
protested but to no avail. The Governor-General in a letter to the
Resident, dated 28 th April 1801, authorised him "in the event of the
Wuzier not consenting to make over the said provinces to the Company,
to take forcible possession of the same." It is interesting to note the
reasons given by Wellesley (which were often repeated in future and
specially in the case of Wajid Ali Shah) as a justification for taking over
the country:
"I am satisfied", says Lord Wellesley, "that no "effectual security
can be provided agaisnt the ruin of the provice of Oude, until the
exclusive management of the civil and military government of that
country shall be transferred intact to the Company, under suitable
provisions for the maintenance of His Excellency and of his family. No
other remedy can effect any considerably improvement in the resources
of the state, or can ultimately secure its external safety and internal
peace."
Saadat Ali Khan, on hearing Wellesley's decision to take half of
his dominions exclaimed, "If such be, indeed, the case it will not be long
ere the remaining portions of the country will be wrested for me."
Forced Treaty (1801)
Without wasting any more time in lengthy dispatches the
Governor-General sent his brother and Private Secretary, the Hon'ble
Henry Wellesly, "to persuade" the Nawab-Wazeer. He arrived at
Lucknow on the 3rd September 1801, and saw the Wazeer on the
e^instant. At long last Saadat Ali Khan had to sign a treaty on the 10 th
November 1801, ratified by the Governor-General on the 14 th instant at
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Banaras by which territories yielding an annual revenue of Rs.
1,35,23,474 were "ceded" to the Company. The treaty was imposed to
have a legal justification of the loot; otherwise "to put the matter in its
true light," according to Major Bird, "they took away half his
possessions because they had exhausted his purse, and in token of their
'friendship and union' they made him bound to them- by a halter".
"Ceded Districts"
The above Treaty of 1801 (Ten Articles) laid down that "the
Nabob Vizier hereby cedes to the Honourable the East India Company,
in perpetual sovereignty, the under mentioned portions of his territorial
possessions".
STATEMET OF THE JUMMA
1. ChuklaKorah, Kurrah, and Chukla Etawah : 55,48,577-11-9
2. Kehr and others : 05,33,374-0-6
3. Furrackabad and others : 04,50,001-0-0
4. Khairaghur and others : 02,10,0001-0-0
5. Azimghur and others, Azimghur, Mownaut: 06,95,624- 7-6
Bunjun
6. Goruckpore and others and Butwul : 05,49,854- 3-0
7. Soubah of Allahabad and others : 09,34,963-1-3
8. Chuckla Bareilly, Asophabad, and Kelpoory : 43,13,457-11-3
9. Nabob Gunje, Kehly, and others : 01,19,242-12-0
10. Mohoul and others, with the exception of the : 01,68,378-4-0
Talo ok of Arwul
Total: 1,35,23,474-
8-3
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The above territories were euphemistically called "Ceded
Districts" -Although they were grabbed at the point of the bayonet-
and later formed a part of the North-Western province (with its
capital at Agra). On a reference to the map of India it will be found
that the remaining territories of Awadh were now surrounded on
three sides by the Company. On the eastern side only its frontier
marched with the swampy areas of Nepal, locally called, the 'Tarai'.
Thus Awadh became a pocket-state inside the British dominions.
Wellesley, not a believer in procrastination, appointed - on the
same day when he signed the treaty- a Board of Commissioners and,
with indecent haste, nominated his own, brother, Henry Wellesly, its
President and Lieutenant-Governor of the new province. The Board
was to look after the "provisional administration and settlement of
the Ceded Districts."
"The Governor-General performed another duty on the same
day" (when the Treaty was signed), writes Mil, "which was that of
giving the home authorities, along with the intelligence of the
conclusion of the treaty, an intimation of the several advantages
which he wished them to believe it carried in its bosom. These were,
'the entire extinction of the military power of the Nawaub,' the
maintenance of a great part of the Bengal; army at the Nawaub's
expense; deliverance of the subsidy from all the accidents with which
it was liable to be affected 'by the corruption, imbecility, and abuse
of that vicious and incorrigible system of vexation and misrule,
which constituted the government of Oude'; The power acquired by
the Company of becoming 'the instrument of restoring to affluence
and prosperity one of the most fertile regions of the globe, now
reduced to the most afflicting misery and desolation, by the depraved
administration of the native government,: deliverance from the stain
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'on the reputation and honour of the British nation in India,
upholding by the terror of their name, and the immediate force of
their arms, a system so disgraceful in its principles, and ruinous in its
effects.'
Saadat poisoned
The Earl of Moira, on landing at Madras as the Governor-
General of India on 11 th September 1813, sent a letter to the Nawab-
Wazeer through Lt.-Col. Baillie, the Resident, who had harassed the
former for a number of years. Having known Saadat Ali Khan so
long and having dealt with him Baillie feared that he, being in the
good books of the new Governor-General, would have the whip-hand
now and he (Baillie) must atone for his past misdeeds. A stray
remark, on the receipt of the Governor-General's letter, strengthened
the suspicious of his enemies. A diabolical conspiracy was hatched
and Saadat Ali Khan, the most learned and efficient administrator
who ruled Awadh (barring Saadat Khan Burhan-ul-Mulk), was
poisoned to death on 11 th 1814.
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GHAZI-DEEN HAIDER
(Nawab-Wazeer 1814-1819: H.M. the King 1819-1827)
Ghazee-ud-deen Haider succeeded his father, Saadat Ali Khan,
in 1814 without "the usual incidence of the sacrifice of a fertile
province or of a hillock of rupees as the price of his succession" not
due to any generous impulse on the part of the English Company but
because, says Major Bird, "so much had been squeezed out of the
reluctant parent that really there was no hope of a further bargain
with himself. The "usuall mutual recognitions of existing treaties
were executed on the accession of the new savereign" and "it was
agreed that they should 'be observed and kept till the end of time'".
Whatever be the causes of non-interference, probably the
British did not wish to kill the goose for the golden egg and having
mulcted his father (Saadat Ali Khan) of half the dominions thought it
politic to give him the long rope to strut about. Ghazee-ud-deen had
to deal with the new Governor-General, the Earl of Moira, who after
the Nepalese War became the Marquis of Hastings.
"Trinity of Empire-Builders:
"Wellesley, Hastings and Dalhousie constitute the Trinity of
empire-builders in the Christian administration of India during the
nineteenth century". He was "as unscrupulous as Lord Wellesley"
because he admitted to have "followed in the footsteps of the
Marquess Wellesley".
An interesting light is thrown on the character and conduct of
the then highest representatives of the Company who came out to
govern its possessions in the subcontinent; this will also,
incidentally, explain the quick and easy manner in which the
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unsuspecting Indian Princes were defeated by the ungrateful
Britishers on the political front.
It is intriguing to know that the late Saadat Ali Khan had
helped the Earl of Moira, whose "Chief claims to fame had been his
friendship with the Prince Regent and his reputation for prodigal
expenditure", by sending six lakhs of rupees to him in London. This
timely princely donation had helped Moira to wipe off his
debts..........., in consequences, to be appointed as the Governor-
General of India. In recognition of this opportune help Moira took
the unusual step of addressing him (Saadat All Khan) his first letter
direct from Madras instead of adopting the usual procedure of
sending the despatch from Calcutta. Suspicious of the Resident
(Baillie) were roused, which were confirmed by some stray remarks
of the Nawab-Wazeer himself and he was poisoned to death on 11 th
July 1814.
When Moira came to Lucknow in October 1814, Ghazi-ud-
deen Haider (who had succeeded his father in the previous July)
duped by the hopes given out by Moira though indirectly, in his letter
to his late father of settling satisfactory the pending matters,
complained to the Governor-General about Baillie's undue
interference in day-to-day administration and his abnoxious
behaviour. The Governor-General knowing full well the truth of the
complaints, as his own Journal shows "under date, October 13,
1814", did not give any relief. On the contrary his reaction was
typical:
"Nawab Vizeer had reckoned" writes the Governor-General,
with somewhat impish pleasure, in his Private Journal on October,
13,1814 "on being emancipated from the imperious dominations of
Major Baillie under which His Excellency groaned every hour, but
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that / have riveted him in his position. Major Baillie dictated to him
in the merest trifles, broke upon him at his palace without notice,
whensoever he (Major Baillie) and anything to prescribe, fixed his
(Baillie's) creatures upon His Excellency with large salaries, to be
spies upon his actions; and above all lowered, His Excellency in the
eyes of his family and his subjects by the magisterial tone he
constantly assumed".
"Uncle" paid back with ingratitude
Now Nawab Saadat Ali Khan (father of Ghazi-ud-deen Haider)
had, as mentioned earlier, paid off and cleared the debts of this
"prodigal" friend of the Prince Regent. Had it not been for the
unprecedented munificence of Saadat Ali Khan, Moira cold not have
cleared his mortgages and come out as the Governor-General of
India. Moved with a temporary sense of gratitude, perhaps, Moira
wrote the fateful letter to Saadat Ali Khan giving some hopes of
looking into his grievances withcost him his life. Later, when the
"hand that had fed him" was removed by poison, Moira thought
himself absolved of all feelings of gratitude towards the son. And
when Ghazi-ud-deen Haider believing the sentiments expressed by
the Governor-General in his letter, whom he addressed as "my
respected uncle," complained to him about "the imperious
domination of Major Baillie under which his Excellency groaned
every hour", the "respected uncle" instead of giving his confinding
'nephew' any relief, "riveted him in his position"!.
"Oudh Loans"
Before we can fully appreciate the metamorphosis in the
attitude of the British Governor-General later, we should recall a few
salient political facts. The Earl of Moira (later Marquess of Hastings)
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arrived as Governor-General of India on the 1 st October 1813, and his
first military move was the war against Nepal. Before the declared
the war, while at Lucknow, on 1 st November 1814, the Blue Book
records that:
"At a conference between the Earl of Moira (then Governor-
General) and the Wuzeer, on the 14 th October 1814, His Highness
offered One Crore of rupees as a gift to the Company. It was refused
as a gift but accepted as a loan. The financial pressure, caused by the
protracted prosecution of the Nepaul war led the Governor-General
to ask the Vizier for another loan of One Crore, which obtained."
It is very interesting to find the Earl of Moira having turned
down the complaints of the Nawab-Wazeer against the Resident,
which were all true as admitted by him in his Private Journal, and
having "riveted him in his position", had not the least hesitation in
turning to the same person the very next day for no less a sum than
One Crore of rupees to prosecute the Nepal War.
The First Crore: Gift or Loan?
It must have been noted that the Blue Book records that
Ghazee-ud-deen Haider had offered the sum of One Crore as a gift to
the Company but the Governor-General accepted it as a loan and not
as a gift. But the facts are quite the contrary.
Lt.-Col. Baillie, in a letter, dated Lucknow 10 th January 1815,
to CM. Ricketts, Secretary to Government, writes:
"By the way, I have no recollection of the circumstances of his
Excellency's former offer of Second Crore of rupees. It was certainly not
made to me, nor his Lordship distinctly in my presence.... You told me, I
also remember, and so did Swinton and Adam, that at a conference from
which I was absent, his Excellency had offered the first Crore as a gift
[ 75 ]
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instead of a loan, and as much more as might be wanted; but his
Excellency's written offer to me of a Crore was expressed in by no
means so liberal terms; and as the paper is still with me, I insert a
translation of it here:
"You mentioned yesterday the necessity of a supply of cash for
the extra-ordinary charges of the Company. As far as a Crore of rupees I
shall certainly furnish by way of loan, but beyond that sum is
impossible, and a voucher for this sum must be given', & c.
This clearly proves that the statement, printed and published
officially, in the Oude Blue Book that "on the 14 th October 1814, his
Highness offered one crore of rupees as a gift to the Company" was a
total falsehood published simply to hood-wing the world!
Molar's Commitments
It seems that Ghazee-ud-deen Haider was suspicious of the
Company's intentions and had no faith in its representative in India.
Having ingratiated himself in the eyes of his "respected uncle" by
pouring One Crore of rupees, in the Company's treasury, Ghazee-ud-
deen Haider submitted to the Governor-General, on 12 th November 1814,
Ghazee-ud-deen Haider submitted to the Governor-General, on 12 th
November 1814, seven propositions out of which only "the first and
fifth" are given below "with the immediate answers and the further
promises which they elicited".
"Pro 1: Whatever portion of territory was held by me late father
(Saadat Ali Khan), until the hour of his decease, and by your Lordship's
placing me on the musnud, has described as an inheritance to me: let my
power and authority the exercised over it, as in the time of my father,
and let not a pergunnah or a village, therefore, on any occasion, or by
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any change, be separated from my rule, but let it be confirmed to me and
my posterity to the latest generation.
"The following is the Governor-General's reply:
"I have no other view", he says, "than the placing the Nawaub
Vizier in that relative situation, with regard to the British Government,
which clear and undeniable justice demands, and which, therefore, must
be the wish of our nation. The effect of my procedure would be,
undoubtedly, to give to His Excellency's Government character and
efficiency in a degree which could not fail to satisfy all His Excellency's
wishes on that head".
Prop. 5: if any one of my relations, dependants, servants, or subjects,
shall to to your Lordship or to Calcutta to complain, any little attention
or regard to the subject of his complaint will be the cause of impairing
my dignity and consequence, and will excite others to follow the same
course, and be a source of trouble to your Lordship. I hope that
immediately on their being heard, this answer will be given to them:-
That they must go and refer their complaint to their own Sovereign. In
the event of their persevering and being urgent, let them be turned away
with a sharp reprimand, that this my authority and dignity may be
upheld, and the door be shut against evil; for three degrees of adawlut
(courts of judicature) have been established here; and if,
notwithstanding this, a person seeks to go from here, it is a proof that
his claim is unjust.
"Answer- 'I can have no hesitation in promising this in the fullest
manner, with no other reservation that what may be necessary for the
fulfilment of the engagement of the British Government, in cases where
its guarantee is pledged".
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Chapter -II
"The last paragraph but one of the Governor-General's letter, containing
the answers to the proposition, and which is dated Camp. Mahonah, 12 th
of November 1814, contains, moreover, the following promise.
Nawab's independence emphasized
"The British Government is perfectly disposed to render the
succession to the musnud of Oude in the family of the present Nawaub
Vizier secure and unquestionable. If the line of that succession, as
defined by the law, and recognized in principle by the country, be
certified to the Governor-General, the British Government will have no
hesitation to guarantee it."
On the same date J. Adam, Secretary to the Government addressed
a letter (dated Camp, Mahonah, 12 th November 1814) to Baillie, the
Resident at Lucknow, in which the Secretary to the Government
distinctly says: "The reservations by treaty of a right to interfere with
advice or remonstrance upon any management of affairs within the
Nawaub's reserved dominions, which may injuriously affect the British
interests, clearly implies that, in all other respects, the administration of
the Nawaub is to be free; but indeed, it is evident from the whole tenor
of the treaty, that an uninterrupted exercise of his own authority within
the reserved dominions, was assured to him in order to justify the very
strong step which we took in appropriating to ourselves (as an exchange
for the subsidy) so large a portion of his territories. The Nawaub, is,
consequently, to be treated in all public observances as an independent
Prince. Essentially he must be subservient to the British Government;
but in proportion as that point is secure, personal attentions to him
involve no inconvenience, and on the other hand they cannot but be
productive of advantage'. "
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Chapter -II
The real independence of the Nawab-Vazeer, within the Reserved
Dominions, was further emphasized by the Governor-General in Section
83 of the Minute dated 3 rd February 1816.
"When the heavily reluctant assent of Saadat Allie was obtained
for the cession of a large portion of his dominion, in- commutation of
the pecuniary contributions which he was bound to pay for the
Subsidiary Force, the most distinct assurance was pledged to him by
treaty, for his independent exercise of authority within the remainder to
his territories.. The punctual observance of this contract was
imperiously binding on our honour, our probity, and our interests'.
The Governor-General further says in Section 86 of the same
Minute: "The policy which appeared to me recommened, no less by our
convenience than by our good faith, was to observe strictly the true and
obvious spirit of our engagements with the Sovereign of Oude, by
leaving him a free agent in the internal government of his own
dominions, interfering with that advice which to him must be injunction,
only in cases where the real importance of our mutual interests required
it.
The Second Crore
It seems that having received one crore of rupees from his
obliging 'nephew', Moira thought it proper to listen to Ghazee-ud-deen
Haider's genuine complaints against Baillie. But he was already feeling
the financial strain of the Nepalese War and "as without another Crore
Government may experience the most serious embarrassment" Moira
naturally thought fit to accept the complaints from the Nawab Wazeer in
the form of Propositions, and consider them favourably.
After putting the Nawab Wazeer in an expansive mood by
emphasizing "his independent exercise of authority within the remainder
[ 79 ]
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of his territories", Moira cautiously approached the Nawab Wazeer for
another crore of rupees.
On 18* February 1815, Q.M. Rickets, Secretary to Government;
again wrote to Baillie, the Resident at Lucknow:
" His Lordship is most anxious to hear the result of your
negotiations withthe Nawaub for furtehr pecuniary aid, as without
another crore: Government may experience the most serious
embarrassment. The war extraordinatires, indeed, are likely to press so
heavily upon our finances that his Lordship apprehends that the
additional core will be insufficient to meet the demands, and he will be
thankful, therefore, with reference to what you wrote about the Fyzabad
Begum, by your endeavouring to get her to advance a sum of money' ".
It seems that Ghazi-ud-deen Haider was not a simpleton as he has
been made out to be by writers on Awadh affairs. He was wide awake
and well-informed about the Company's dealings and proved, in writing,
that Moira's position was untenable, as is admitted by the following
letter Ricketts, dated 23 rd Febuary, 1815:
" I have received yours of the ll" 1, and Swinton has submitted to
his Lordship the Vizier's offer to advances an additional fifty lacks of
rupees. Lord Moira, however, hesitates about accepting the offeras....and
at the time of making the request his Excellency must have been aware
that we had not expended his first crore, and that in his the Nawaub's
letter he makes us apparently blow hot and cold in one breath, for he
says that we decline the offer of his troops because the urgency of the
case did not require it, but that we solicit pecuniary aid because a
necessity has occurred of raising troops....
" 'The times are, in truth, most critical. There is no hope of
subscriptions to a six per cent loan; and to open a public loan upon
[ 80 ]
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higher terms would be most unjust and unwarrantable procedure towards
the six per cent creditors; and yet, according to a statement just received
by his Lordship from Edmonstone, nearly three crores in addition to our
surplus revenue will be required to meet the war expenditure
extraordinary up to the 30 th April, 1816...
Moira's falsehood exposed
The first crore of rupees, which was negotiated in a conference
between Lord Moira and the Nawab-Wazeer, on 14 th October, 1814, was
obtained in November 1814. Writing about it to Sir George Nugent,
K.B. Vice-President in Council, the Governor-General Lord Moira says:
" 'At a subsequent conference his Excellency solicited my
acceptance of the sum as a free gift to the Honourable Company, but for
reasons which will be obvious to your Excellency in Council, I declared,
with suitable expressions of my sense of this additional proof of his
Excellency's friendship, my inability to receive the accommodation
except as a loan' ".
But, as stated earlier, Baillie his proved, by documentary
evidence, that the above statement of the Governor-General was nothing
but down-right falsehood!
As for the Second Crore of Rupees, offered in a letter dated 18 th
March, 1815, it "was obtained before long, whether by allurements or
menaces, or by the spontaneous goodwill of the Wuzier, it is vain now to
inquire; and the Governor-General expressed his high approbation of the
ability and address with which Colonel Baillie had conducted the
negotiations to this result".
When the Second Crore of Rupees was paid in the Company's
treasury Moira had not yet decided how to pay off the debt because
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Chapter -II
Ricketts writing to Baillie from Shikaubad (Shikohabad), 4 th March,
1815, says:
"....... With regard to the proposed boon to the Vizier of
Khyreegurh much is to be said pro and con, and what his Lordship may
finally determines upon, either Adam or I will shortly inform you. It
would be more desirable to give the Nawaub some of the Nepaul low
lands (when we get them) instead of any of our own districts".
The "Honest Broker"
The Earl of Moira belonged to the nobility of England; and being
an "honest broker" would not accept even the second loan gratuitously
on behalf of the East India Company! The Nepal War was being
prosecuted with the loans from Awadh; and so why not pay off Nawab-
Wazeer with the Nepalese territories to be acquired in future? So argued
the noble Lord. In the meantime the Nawab-Wazeer could wait. The
Nepal War came to an end in March 1816, and
"On the 1st of May 1816, a treaty was entered into between the
Company and the Nawaub Vizier, consisting of four articles; by the first
of which the Company cedes to the Vizier the district of Khyreegarh,
also the low lands between Khyreegarh and the hills, and those between
His Excellency's territory further to the eastward and the hills. By the
second article the Nawaub Vizier, 'in return for the cession mentioned in
the preceding article, hereby annuls the debt of the British Government
to his Excellency of One Crore of Rupees, being the total amount of his
Excellency's second loan to the Company during the last year.'"
So the noble Lord robbed the Nepalese to pay the Nawab-Wazeer,
for the sum pocketted by the Company, with a territory over which the
East India Company had no claim till then because, according to
Aitchison (Article 1), "The Goorka orders of surrender of that tract will
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Chapter -II
accordingly be made over to His Excellency the Vizier, and the British
Government hereby engages of establish His Excellency's authority in
the above-mentioned territory, the expense of which, most probably, the
Nawab-Wazeer must have paid. A very fine deal indeed!
It may be mentioned here, anticipating the historical events, that
"though this district was conveyed to the Wazier by a treaty dated in
1816, it was taken from his heirs by Lord Dalhousie, under a.
proclamation based on the treaty of 1801. Included in the common spoil
of the King's (Wajid Ali Shah) dominions, though it had been purchased
from his British allies out of his ancestor's savings, these same allies
having long since spent the million sterling they received as its purchase
money, now resumed the land they sold in virtue of a treaty made fifteen
years before the sale was effected.' "
Baillie Removed
After receiving Two Crores of rupees from the Nawab-Vazeer the
justice of his complaints against the Resident, which were already in the
personal knowledge of the Governor-General (as admitted by him in his
Journal) dawned upon the sublime mind of the Earl of Moira, and now
he considered them to be strong enough to be redressed. But, I think, the
real cause that tipped the scales of justice against the Resident was not
Ghazee-ud-deen Haider's remonstrance's but Resident Baillie's own
indiscretion. In his letter to Ricketts dated 10 th January 1815, Baillie has
clearly asserted that the first sum of Rupees One Crore was given "by
way of loan" and not offered as a gift as mentioned by the Earl of Moira
to Sir George Nugent and suported it by documentary evidence in his
possession. The Governor-General's palpable falsehood had been
exposed by record and it could not be condoned. Baillie was
consequently removed from Lucknow on 1 st October 1815.
[ 83 ]
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"A final representation was made by the Nawab", says James Mill,
"the objects of which were to secure the integrity of his dominions, and
to reserve the right of ruling his down territories, of determining the
cause to be followed in fislocal and judicial administration, and of
electing the persons to be employed; to deprecate the attention of the
Government to complaints against his measures preferred by his
relations and dependants, to be allowed permission to bestow charitable
endowments, and to have the privilege of going out on hunting-parties
whenever so inclined. The requests were generally granted, and, in
communicating the correspondence to the Resident, instructions
were added with regard to the spirit in which his functions were to be
exercised, and the connection with the Nawab maintained......The Nawab
was consequently to be treated in al public observations as 'an
independent Prince'. Agreeably to this recognition, the conduct of the
Resident was to be regulated by the deference due to regal rank, and to
be characterised by a respectful urbanity and a strict fulfillment of
establishment ceremonials. In an especial manner he was to refrain from
countenancing or encouraging any servant of the Nawab in
contumacious opposition to his master, and from recommending any
person from his own household for reception into the Nawab's
immediate service... With these monitory instructions the inquiry
terminated.... The Resident.... offended by the removal from the Nawab's
councils of persons whom he supported, and upon whom he relied, and
weakened in influence as well as wounded in feeling by the distrust
implied in Lord Moira's private inquires, and public injunctions, could
no longer restrain his indignation.
Baillie's letter to Moira
"A letter, dated the 29 th of April, but not transmitted till the 20 th of
September, was addressed by him to the Governor-General, in which he
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vindicated his conduct, and ascribed the proceedings of the Nawab to
factious intrigues, encouraged by the prejudice cherished against him by
Lord Moira. The Governor-General thought it incumbent upon him to
reply, and exonerate himself from the imputation of unfairness, or
prejudice against the Resident., but avowing his conviction of his
having, in his intercourse with both the late and the present Nawab,
exhibiting a grasping and domineering disposition, which justified the
jealousy and resentment felt by both the Princes... The Governor-
General, with the concurrence of his Council, removed Major Baillie
from his office, and left the Nawab of Oude to the uncontrolled
constitution of his own Cabinet, and the absolute direction of his own
domestic administration...
"But it is clear from Major Bailli's own language, as exhibited in
his correspondences, that he took little care to soften the harshness of
his public acts by the suavity of his private manners. He is ever
importunate and dictatorial; not unfrequently disrespectful, and
occasionally insulting. This is most manifest in his intercourse with
Saadat Ali. The evidence is less ample in regard to Ghazi-ud-deen......It
was not to be expected, however, that the degree of independence, which
he had acknowledged in the Nawab, would dispose that dispose that
Prince to follow his recommendation, or would be palatable to the
political representative who, long fortified by the unqualified confidence
of the Government, had possessed little less than regal sway, throughout
the principality of Oude. His retirement was, therefore, unavoidable for
the preservation of a good understanding with the Court of Lucknow."
Title of "King": Coins struck
After the termination of the Nepal war in 1816 the Governor-
General (hitherto Earl of Moira) was created Marquis of Hastings in
1817. Probably, in the fullness of heart, he thought of showing some
[ 85 ]
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spectacular favour to Ghazee-ud-deen Haider, which would not cost
anything to the East India Company but would rather further its political
designs, that would bind him in further bonds of loyality and vassalage
to the British. The King of Delhi, Akbar II, had rejected the request of
the Governor-General to allow him to sit in the Royal Presence and so
he devised the scheme of belittling the King of Delhi and obliging his
generous 'nephew' by bestowing on him the empty title of "King". "The
Nawab Gazi-ud-deen Haider", writes Sir Henry Lawrence, "was
encouraged to assume the title of King; Lord Hastings calculated on thus
exciting a rivalry between the Oudh and Delhi families".
"Little advantage to the principality (of Awadh) was to be
expected from a change which took place at this season (October 1819)
in the designation of its sovereign," says James Mill, "who, with the
consent of the Governor-General assumed the title and the style of
King".
"He had prepared the way for this elevation a year before",
continues Mill, "by striking coins in his own name, instead of that of the
King of Delhi-an invasion of the privileges of the Mogul which had not
yet been committed even by the East India Company. This elevation was
received with extreme indignation at Delhi..
Lord William Amherst (1823-1828)
Lord William Amherst, who had succeeded Hastings, reached
Calcutta and was installed as Governor-General on 1 st August 1823. "He
was brought in by a political shuffle in London rather than by any
particular merits and Canning excused him as amiable....upon the whole
he is a good a barren choice as could have been made.
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Perpetual loan of one crore
The financial exigencies occasioned by the Burmese and
Bhurtpore wars induced the British Government to make another
application to the King of Oude for pecuniary aid, and accordingly a
treaty, dated September 08, 1825, was entered into between His Majesty
and the Company, in which it was stipulated by Article-1 "His Majesty
has given as a loan, forever, to the Honourable Company One Crore of
rupees, the interest of being five lakhs of rupees per annum will be paid
from 1st of Mahurrum, 1241, Hegira, to the persons hereafter
particularized...."
By Article-2 it was agreed, that "this loan is made in perpetuity;
the soverigns of the Kingdom of Oude shall never have the power to
take it back, nor shall they exercise any interference with its interest.
Referring to the above loan Lord Amherst, in a Khureeta (letter to a
Prince), dated October 14 th, 1825, says:
"It is now some time since I conveyed to Your Majesty, through
the Resideint, Mr. Mordaunt Rickets, my 'codial thanks for the instance
you have given me of your friendship, by advancing, upon certain
conditions, by way of loan, the sum of one Crore of rupees (£ 1,000.000
sterling), in case of extreme emergency and need, the Burmese war
having cost enormous sums of money.... the benefits and fruits of our
amity, which have existed from days of yore, are impressed upon the
heart of every Englishman, both here and Europe, as indelibly as if they
had been engraven upon adamant; nor will lapse of time or change of
circumstances efface from the memory of the British nation so
irrefragable a proof, so irresistible an argument, of the fraternal
sentiments of your Majesty".
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Loan of fifty lakhs
Lord Amherst in a letter dated 23 rd June 1826 to His Majesty Ghazee-ud-
deen Haider writes:
"On hearing that your Majesty, who imparts luster to the throne
and dignity to the State, has with the greatest courtesy and kindness lent
to the Honourable Company the sum of fifty lakhs of rupees, Lucknow
coin, which the officers of your Majesty's Government have duly
delivered into the treasury of the Lucknow Residency, I was greatly
delighted and obliged beyond expression, and herewith express my
grateful thanks for the same. May God Almighty keep your Majesty (The
Mine of Munificence) under his eternal protectionl"
Another fifty lakhs
Lord Amherst's second letter dated 23 rd of June 1826 to H.M. Ghazee-
oodeen, Padsha of Oude:
"I, your sincere well-wisher, having learnt that your Majesty, the
ornament of the throne of splendour and exalted dignity, has, out of your
great attachment and friendship, lent the sum of fifty lakhs of Lucknow
coin (5,000,000 rupees = £ 500,000 sterling) to the Honourable East
India company, and that your Majest's servants have accordingly
conveyed and deposited the same in perfect safety and security in the
Residency treasury, beg to assure your Majesty of my deep obligation,
and to acknowledge that I owe your Majesty a debt of heartfelt thanks
and boundless gratitude".
It may not be out of place to note here that M: Maseeh-ud-deen
Khan says that "this letter and the preceding one refer to two distinct
loans advanced by Ghazee-ood-deen to the East India Company, which
meant that on 23 rd June 1826, Ghazee-ud-deen Haider had lent Rupees.
One Crore to the Company. Probably the sum of money was deposited in
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two different installments, but on the same date i.e. 23rd June 1826, and
therefore they have been acknowledged in two different letters by the
Governor-General.
"The 'Mine of Munificence' was thus worked", says Major Bird,
"with cautious approaches, and pious ejaculations, and every fresh shaft
was opened with official prayer... In 1827 Ghazee-ood-deen died, and
paid the debt of nature, in addition to his other payments, as the
Company's productive 'Mine of Munifecience".
A talented King
"Ghazee-ood-den died in 1827. Although his education had been
exclusively Asiatic, this prince evinced talents of no mean order, talents
which the considerably improved by literary and scientific pursuits",
says Maseeh-ud-deen Khan. "He was deeply read in Oriental philology
and philosophy, and well acquainted with Mechanics and Chemistry. Of
a mild and benevolent disposition, he was so averse to acts of tyranny
that not a single one of oppression of violence has ever been laid to his
charge, or been known to have been perpetrated with his sanction".
Awadh prosperous
Company's officials, including Governor-General and English
writers, with very few exceptions, have generally painted Awadh as a
desolate and depopulated country. But the above mentioned loans
prove that "they were created by the economics of a State whose
income was in excess of its expenditure, at the time when it was
protected from meddling on the part of the Residents".
Apart from his remarks that "abstinence from interposition had
been attended by the happiest consequences" the Marquis of Hastings in
his letter of 1st April 1818, while on his way from Lucknow to
Goruckpore assured "the Nawaub (Ghazee-ud-deen Haider who was not
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yet created a King) of his unqualified approbation and satisfaction a
witnessing the high state of cultivation in which he found the country, as
well as its increased populous ness, and at the happiness and comfort of
all His Excellency's subjects".
Country: "A perfect garden"
"Lord Amherst left Calcutta in the beginning of August (Agust 4,
1826)," says James Mill, "and arrived at Cawnpore on the 16 th of
November (1826), where all the petty chiefs of Bundlekhand waited
upon him; and he visited by the King of Oude. In return, the Governor-
General repaired to Lucknow; and an opportunity was afforded him of a
confidential communication with the King with respect to the
management of his country. However well disposed towards his allies,
and receiving the Governor-General with the most cordial hospitality,
Ghazi-ud-din Hyder continued to deny the necessity of any interposition
in his affairs; appealing to the flourishing appearance of his country in
proof of the success of his administration. In truth, with occasional
exceptions, the lands were covered with cultivation, and the people
appeared to be contented. The assessment was light; and the revenues
were levied without difficulty, although the system of farming them was
adhered to, and tended to perpetuate extortion. The unfavourable
accounts of the condition of Oude had been much exaggerated and had
principally originated in the turbulent spirit which prevailed upon the
confines of the Kingdom bordering on the British districts, where a race
of refractory landholders, Rajputs by tribe and soldiers by profession,
considered it a disgrace to comply peaceably with the demands of the
State, and paid then-revenue only to military collectors. The belief that
the evil was, in a great measure, of limited extent, and the strong
objections of the King, had latterly induced the government to refrain
from urging suggestions of reform; and their forbearance had been
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requited by the opportune assistance of the hoarded treasures of Sadat
Ali."
"Ghazi-ud-din Hyder, although indolent and addicted to habits of
intemperance, was not devoid of sagacity or judgment; he perfectly well
understood the nature of the connexion with the British Government;
and in his correspondence with the Governor-General, had not
infrequently the advantage. He was encourager of letters and the arts;
was of a kind and conciliating disposition, and cultivated a friendly
familiarity with the successive Residents at his Court. He was too much
under the influence of self-interested advisers, the ministers, and his
Begums; but his reign was unstained by violence or cruelty; and he
afforded a not unfavourably specimen of an Asiatic prince".
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Chapter -II
KING NASEER-UD-DEEN HAIDER (1827-1837)
On the death of his father (King Ghazi-ud-deen Haider), Naseer-
ud-deen Haider ascended the throne on 18 th October 1827 as the second
King of Awadh at the young age of 25 years.
Loan not returned
In 1829, two years after his accession, "the 'Government
consented to receive by a treaty "as a special loan the sum of 62,40,000
rupees".... says Major Bird.... "but neither Parliament nor the public are
informed at the same time that Government never consented to repay it.
Nor did they pay the lapsed pension to His Majesty according to the
fifth article of the treaty, which was made in this behalf. Although
repeated applications were made for it, not one farthing ever found its
way into the royal treasury. No reply was ever vouchsafed to these
repeated applications, except upon one occasion, when an answer was
received from Sir Charles Metcalfe, dated the 10 th April 1834, stating
that he had instructed Major John Low, the Resident, who would give
full information on the subject to His Majesty. But Major low gave no
information; still less did the Company give back any rupees. They
consented, in short, to retain as a gift, the moneys they had consented to
receive as a loan, and in either case their consent was given as easily as
the consent of a Robson or a Redpath to a similar series of
transactions".
Observatory, Poor House, Hospital etc.
On November 4, 1830, Muntazim-ud-daulah Hakim Mehdi
became the Prime Minister. He was an educated, intelligent and
experienced administrator. He helped the King in establishing a Royal
Observatory in Moti Mahal grounds under Captain Herbet, which,
according to the author of Qaiser-ut-Tawareekh, was the best in the
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whole of India. Mouvi Ismail, who later led a mission to England,
became its head and S. Kamal-ud-deen Haider, author of the well-known
history Qaisar-ul-Tawareekh was also on the staff of the Observatory.
On 12 th December 1833, King Naseer-ud-deen Haider placed in
the Residency treasury rupees three lakhs at 4 per cent as a loan to the
British Government "in order that the interest of 12,000 rupees, or 1,000
rupees per month, might under the superintendence of the Resident of
their representatives, be distributed to the lame, the maimed, the blind,
the helpless aged, the lepers, and those who are destitute, and he further
agrees that 'it shall not be optional with the future Rulers of Oude, or
with may power whatever, to resume this money, or to appropriate it to
any other purpose; on the contrary, it is placed under the guarantee of
the British Government, for the express end that it may for ever remain
to be distributed to the poor, in the name of his present Majesty, and its
denomination shall be the charity of TSIusseer-ood-deen Hyder, King of
Oude."
He also established a Hospital called "Dar-us-shifa" with two,
separate sections, Allopathic and Unani, the former was under the
superintendence of Dr. Stevenson, and the later section was placed under
the supervision of Hakeem Mirza Ali Akbar.
The Royal Lithographic Press came into existence, probably for
the first time in Awadh, and one Mr. Archer was appointed to look after
it. He was paid Rs. 500 per month.
Slavery prohibited
"During his (Naseer-ud-deen) short reign", writes Major Bird, "he
granted a monthly allowance of 3,000 rupees to the students of Lucknow
College; he established hospitals for dispensing medicines and food to
the sick, poor; and he prohibited, by royal proclamation, the buying and
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Chapter -II
selling of human beings, a practice which, though it had substantially
ceased in Oudh, still obtained in several parts of Hindostan".
King Naseer-ud-deen Haider's Zeal for public works so much
impressed even Col. W.H. Sleeman, when he was to Lucknow (1849-
54), that he expressed that wish:
"Had I come here when the treasury was full, and Nasee-ud-Deen
Hyder was anxious to spend his money in the manner best calculated to
do good and please our Government, I might have covered Oude with
useful public works".
Major Bird further says that "He made, moreover, such zealous
efforts to suppress and exterminate Thugs and Dacoits, and to provide
for the protection and security of his subjects, that his reputation on this
was known througout India".
Lord William Bentinck (1825-1835)
The British had already started casting covetous eyes on the rich
and fertile plains of Awadh; and when Lord William Bentinck assumed
charge as Governor-General of July 4,1828, Naseer-ud-deen Haider had
already been the King for nine months only. Bentinck, who "was a
candidate for the appointment of Governor-General (and was "only the
Sixth choice"!), was determined to please his masters by following "the
main principle of the British Government: profit to themselves and their
masters at the expense of people of India".
It had been decided to take over the Kingdom of Awadh, but to
conceal the unjust step a bit of window-dressing was necessary; and so
Bentinck paid a visit to Lucknow in 1831 and met the King Naseer-ud-
deen Haider. On July 11, 1831, he wrote:
"I thought it right to declares to his Majesty beforehand that the
opinion I should offer to the home authorities would be, that unless a
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decided reform in the administration should take place, there would be
no remedy left except in the direct assumption of the management of the
Oudh territories by the British Government".
Awadh-Target of New Policy
"The Company's abstention from interference in this native state,
whose government was discredited by many great and inherent defects,
had led to a crisis in which the home government, in April 1834, put into
practice the theory enunciated by Jones. After prolonged consideration,
grant, with the full consent of the Secret Committee, decided that the
Government of Oudh had so far deteriorated that it was incumbent upon
the Company to assume the government of that state. Instruction on
these lines were sent to the Governor-General, although their execution
was left to his discretion. By the time they reached India the general
aspect of affairs in Oudh was such as to justify the Governor-General in
refraining from applying them.
"Nevertheless, the revolution in the home government's attitude
towards the Company's subordinate allies was complete, and it had no
hesitation in sanctioning the annexation of the small states of Jaintia,
Cachar and Coorg, and in advising the Bengal Government to observe an
increasingly careful scrutiny of succession".
Why Awadh spared?
The previous pages conclusively prove that the 'black picture
painted of Awadh was simply to serve as a pretext to justify annexation
of the country. Highest authorities have been quoted earlier to show that
Awadh was populous, well-cultivated and the people contended. But
suppose, what the Company's propagandists and tried to make out ("that
the Government of Oude had so far deteriorated that it was incumbent
upon the Company to assume the government of that state") was true,
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and, therefore, "Instructions on these lines were sent to the Governor-
General". Now if the conditions were really so bad, as stated above, then
why government of the country was not taken over as those of Jainta,
Cachar and Coorg? Was there any underhand reason that stopped the
powers that be to stay their hands?
The tragic scene
King Naseer-ud-deen Haider had acknowledged two youths,
Kaiwan Jah and (Mirza Rafi-ud-deen Faredun Bakht, alias, Muhammad
Mehdi Moona Jan) Moonna Jan, as his sons but later repudiated them.
Padshah Begam, the Dowager Queen, had adopted Moonna Jan and was,
therefore, determined to make him the King. But the British, in
pursuance of their policy, did not with to see young, intelligent person
on the throne who could be expected to prove an efficient administrator
and had the expectations of a long and useful career before him. That
was the reason why Col. Low, the Resident, did not recognise Moona
Jan as the heir of Naseer-ud-deen Haider. What happened afterwards has
been revealed in a letter, dated Lucknow, July 9,1837, and published in
the Asiatic Journal of the same year.
"This morning, a tragic scene occurred here, on account of death
of the King, in consequence of his son forcibly taking the sovereignty of
the kingdom, in opposition to the sanction of the British Government,
who selected an uncle of the late King, instead of his son. The British
troops were ordered down from cantonments to the Palace, and the
Resident (Col. Low) allowed the Queen Dowager (Badshah Begam) and
the young Prince five minutes to leave the throne, where they were
seated, and in the event of not complying, threatened to raze the Palace
to the ground. They did not pay my respect to this instruction, upon
which Colonel Low gave orders for the artillery to open a destructive
fire on the Palace and the people. The loss of life on the occasion was of
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life on the occasion was lamentable, that is, on the part to the young
Prince and Queen Dowager.... The struggle ended in confining the
Prince and the Queen, and seating upon the throne the King's uncle. I
was present at the time, and the plunder made by the Company's sepoys
was immense; the throne was entirely stripped of its valuable gems".
Official Version
Another interesting account of the King's death and the following
events is given by Ursula Low, grand-daughter of Col. John Low, the
then Resident in Lucknow, from family papers:
"Three days later - a little before midnight on July 7 th - a
messenger was dispatched in all haste to the Residence to say that the
King was dying.
"Foul play was suspected. Nasir-ud-deen, in hourly fear of death,
had of late carried round his neck, night and day, the key of a private
well, from which only his two sisters were allowed to draw his drinking
water.
"John Low, accompanied by the Residency Surgeon, a Scotchman,
named Stephenson, and his First Assistant, Captain Paton, at once
started for the palace. They found Nasir-ud-deen's body laid out on a
bed. The doctor opened a vein; blood flowed freely, and it was evident
that death had only just occurred. It was rumoured later that one of his
sisters had been bribed to put poison into his last drink of Sherbet, but
he had been long in bad health, and from the expression, death appeared
to have been painless.
Naseer-ud-Daulah: "A prudent man"
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Chapter -II
"The situation was critical. The heir-apparent, the late King's
uncle, Nasir-ud-daulah, was not persona grata to a large faction at the
Court and in the city. He was known to be a prudent, some what
parsimonious old man, and fears were entertained that on accession he
would insist on the disgorgement of much ill-gotten wealth.
"The history of the next twelve hours has been fully and concisely
told in a memorandum which John Shakespeare drew up for his chief,
and which the latter endorsed and forwarded with his second report to
Government. At the moment the total number of British troops available
amounted to two and a half companies, one of which constituted the
Residency Escort. These men were left at the palace under the command
of Captain Paton, with instructions to distribute them at the inner doors
of the building and at the Treasury, and jewels and other valuables were
hastily sealed up, while the Resident returned home to draw up an
Agreement in Persian for the King-elect to sign.
"This was conveyed to the latter's house, about a mile away, by
John Shakespeare. Nasir-ud-daulah read it through and willingly affixed
his seal, and on receiving back the document, my grand-father returned
to the Farhat-Baksh to await his arrival, having dispatched both Captain
Paton and Lieutenant Shakespeare to conduct him to the palace.
"All the proceedings had taken time, and it was three ro' clock in
the morning of the 8 th before the did man arrived, accompanied by his
sons and other relatives and attendants.
"He was in very feeble health, and was conducted to an inner
room to repose on a couch for an hour or two before undergoing the
fatigue of the coronation ceremonies.
Padshah Begam arrives
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Chapter -II
"The three British officers meanwhile retired to an outer verandah
overlooking the Gumti, to confer about the arrangements for his
installation on the "Gaddi," when news was brought that the Padshaw
Begum was making for the palace, surrounded by this bodyguard and
followed by a large armed rabble. The possibility of this occurrence had
been foreseen, and the Resident, on the King's death, had dispatched a
native official, accompanied by two troopers, to enjoin the lady strictly
not to leave her palace, which was four miles distant...
"The Begum, however, knew exactly what she wanted.
Accompanied by her charge, the boy Moona Jan, her procession of
disorderly followers gathering fresh recruits all along the route, she
swept onwards, and on passing the house of the Kotwal (Head of the
City Policy), summoned him to attend the enthronement of his new
sovereign. The latter, however, after consenting, thought it more prudent
to retire and await the final outcome.
"On hearing the noise of a large approaching body of men,
Captain Paton rushed to the north-west gate, accompanied by a few
sepoys, just as the Begum was thundering for admission. He attempted
to parley, but –
"Before he could get a reply, the insurgents brought up an
elephant to force in the gate with his head. The first failed in the attempt
and drew back with a frightful roar.
"A second, urged on by a furious driver, broke in the gate; one
half fell with a cresh to the ground, and the elephant plunged in after
it...."
"The furious and confused mass rushed through the half-opened
gate, and beat Captain Paton to the ground with their bludgeons, the
hilts of their swords and their muskets.
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Chapter -II
"To the last minute the injured man tried to reason with his
assailants, but by the time one of his faithful sepoys had succeeded in
pushing his way through the crowd to meet the companies of the 35
Regiment under Colonel Monteith, which jad just arrived, he was
insensible from his wounds".
Moonna Jan on the throne
"John Low........demanded to be conducted to the Begum. By this
time, not only the palace, but the courtyard and the great hall of state (it
consisted of four vast halls, in one of which the throne was erected)
were filled by an armed rabble, by some computed" at 2,000 men.
"The child had already been placed on the throne, at the foot of
which the Begum had installed herself in a covered palanquin.
"A scene more wild, more utterly bizarre than the Farhat Baksh
palace presented from midnight to morning, can hardly be imagined.
"'The dead King lay in one chamber, the respectable but decrepit
Nasir-un-daulah, sat cowering in fear of his life in another, while a
furious mob of matchlock men and dancing girls filled the Burradurree,
of great hall of state with mad acclamations in honour of Moona Jan and
the Padshaw Begum' ".
"As the Resident entered, accompanied by John Shakespear
".....The band struck up "God save the King", answered by a
salute of blunderbusses within, and a double royal salute from the guns
in the northern courtyard through which the Begum had passed. Other
guns, which had been collected in the confusion to salute somebody
(though those who commanded and served them knew not whom)
continued the salute through the stress without.
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Chapter -II
".......At the same time the crowd, within and without, shouted
their congratulations at the tops of their voices, and every man who had
a sword, musket or matchlock, flourished it in the air amidst a thousand
torches.
"In the midst of all this, the Resident and his Assistants remained
cool under all kinds of foul abuse and threats from a multitude resolved
to force them to commit some act or make use of some expression that
might seem to justify their murder. The fired muskets close to their ears,
pointed others loaded and cocked, close to their breasts and faces, but all
in vain.
"The Resident in the midst of all this confusion, pointed out to the
Begum the impossibility of her ultimately suceeding in her attemp, - and
that if he and his Assistants were killed, his Government would soon
send others to carry out their orders.
" 'I am1 ", she said " 'in my right place, and so is the young King,
my grandson, and so are you. Why do you talk to me or anybody else of
leaving the throne and the Burradurree?'
"But some of her furious followers, afraid that she might yield,
seized him by the neck-cloth, and dragged him towards the throne, and
commanded him to present his offerings and congratulations on the
threat of instant death.
"At this juncture, the Begum's Vakeel, seeing that he gave no sign
of compliance, and realizing better than his imperious mistress the
consequences that would inevitably follow their assassination, rushed
forward, and shouting that it was by her order, safely conducted them
both into the garden, where colonel Monteith was stationed.
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Chapter -II
"A very disgraceful incident occurred about this time; a British
officer commanding a brigade in the late King's service, presented his
offerings to the throne, and then withdrew to await the turn of events.
Who poisoned Naseer-ud-deen Haider?
".....Hardly anyone at Lucknow at present doubts that the minister
and his associates caued the King to be poisoned, and employed Duljeet
and the two sisters, Dhunneea and Dulwee, for the purpose, in
expectation that the British Government would take upon itself the Oude
administration, as the only possible means of improving it".
Col: Sleeman clearly mentions two important facts:
(1) that "Moona Jan was his (Nasir-ud-deen Haider's) son" on the
authority of "a good many of the members of the royal family,
who were brought up from childhood with the deceased King,
Nusseer-ud-Deen Hyder, and near his person to the last"; and
(2) according to Col. Sleeman:
"Hardly any one at Lucknow at present doubts that the
minister and his associate caused the King to be poisoned, and
employed Duljeet and the two sisters Dhunnea and Dulwee, for
the purpose".
King Naseer-ud-deen Haider dismissed Hakim Mehdi, and "all
hope of permanent improvement departed with him. He was succeeded
in office by Roshan-ud-dowla, a person of respectability, but of little
talent, and unused to business."
According to Kamal-ud-deen Haider the King was not on good
terms with his Prime Minister (Roshan-ud-daulah) and he had serious
suspicions in his mind (against him) and would not take food or water
(the drinks and water for the King were in the custody of the Prime
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Minister) from anyone except the trusted ones. On Friday evening the
King drank water-melon beverage brought (by Afzal-un-nisa Khanum)
from the Prime Minister's house and died shortly after. Kamal-ud-deen
Haider clearly says that "Many things are said about the death, but who
can prove it".
Najmul Ghani is more explicit about the incident. He clearly says
that Roshan-ud-daulah had become very powerful due to his alliance
with the British, and everybody used to obey him.
When the Resident, at the instance of the Governor-General
(Bentinck), put pressure on the Prime Minister (Roshan-ud-daulah) to
improve the administration of the country, the Minister, in self-defence,
stated his difficulties. But Roshan-ud-daulah, in the end told the
Resident Col. Low, that he would "cure the maladies of the sick man
(meaning the King Naseer-ud-deen Haider) for ever provided that he
(the Resident) would save his life and honour". The Resident (Col. Low)
simply said: "Adopt that policy which would be in the interests of the
Riaya (subjects) and for the good of the people........
Dhunnea and Dulwee, were absolutely loyal to Roshan-ud-
daulah......Dhunnea and others gave him (the King) water-melon drink
mixed with poison."
From the above conversation between Roshan-ud-daulah (who
was the Resident's man) and Col. John Low it is clear that the latter if
not the originator was an accomplice in the diabolical scheme of doing
away with Naseer-ud-deen Haider by poisoning, of which he (Naseer-
ud-deen Haider) had ample premonitions and tried to guard against it.
No enquiry-the reason
Everybody in Lucknow knew that the King had been poisoned to
death by Roshan-ud-daulah through his minions Daljeet and the two
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sisters Dhunneea and Dulwee, as admitted by Col. Sleman about fifteen
years later in his Diary, which was secretly printed in the Lucknow
Residency in 1852, but no step was taken to punish the culprits.
The only reason for not holding any enquiry in the murder-case
was that Roshan-ud-daulah would have been convicted of the crime.
And Col. John Low did not wish it because, in the words of Sleeman
again, Naseer-ud-deen Haider had been poisoned to death, "in-
expectation that the British Government would take upon itself the Oude
administration, as the only possible means of improving it".
If we keep in view the progress of British domination in the
subcontinent and the stealthy step taken by the HonTjle (!) Company in
toplling the Indian States, one after the other, it is not difficult to
discern the same British pattern here. The political events fall in places
and fit in completely.
Links leading to murder:
(1) Resident Maddock reported to the Governor-General
(Bentinck) that Moonna Jan was not the son of Naseer-ud-deen
Haider, as admitted by him, on 1 st January 1831.
(2) Bentinck comes to Lucknow in April 1831, and on 11 th
July 1831 he warned the King that "unless a decided reform in
the administration should take place" the British Government
would assume the direct "management of the Oudh territories".
(3) Col. John Low, who joined the Lucknow Residency
in October 1831, also reported to the Governor-General Bentinck
on the admission of the King himself, that Moonna Jan was not
his son, so the legal position was that if Naseer-ud-deen Haider
was removed, either by deposition or by death, he had no lineal
descendant to succeed him.
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(4) An abortive attempt was made to arrest the King and
depose him but if failed.
(5) Col. Low was more ingenious and, therefore, successful
in having the King removed (by poison) through Roshan-ud-
daulah. Naturally he did riot hold any enquiry in the King's
death, which was an open talk of the town and the murderers
were pointed out by name, as he would have been personally
exposed. So far so good. But now the pertinent question arises as
to why the British Government did not directly assume the
"management of the Oudh territories" as threatened by Bentinck
in July 1831? Bentinck's foreign policy
In order to understand the reason why the British stayed their
hands, after all these preparations - declaration that Moonna Jan was not
the son of King Naseer-ud-deen Haider and Residents Maddock and
Low's reports inl831-1832-We will have to find out the British foreign
policy at the time.
It is well-known that after visiting Lucknow in April 1831, Lord
William Bentinck, the Governor-General, went to the Punjab and met
Maharajah, Ranjit Singh at Rupar on the Sutlej on October 22, 1831,
"The meeting at Rupar", says Major Basu, "in the latter end of 1831, of
Bentinck with Ranjit Singh, was a covert attempt to spy out the military
strength of Ranjit Singh."
Russian threat to India
The panic that was created among the British politicians, from the
dreaded invasion of the subcontinent by Russia, was the secret of all the
British moves at the time.
"Lord William Bentinck, "says a modern writer, "was the first
Governor-General of India who was called upon to make suitable
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provision against the Russian invasion of India........Accordingly, the
main objects of his policy in this quarter was, "to convert the Indus into
the ditch of British India.... to associate the Sikhs and the Sind Valley
with us in its defence and to create a friendly Afghanistan as a buffer
State between India and any possible invader'."
It was in the interest of greater stakes the Awadh was spared at
the time and a make-shift arrangement was made by putting Naseer-ud-
daulah (Muhammed All Shah) on the throne.
Ursula Low, true to the usual pattern of British writers, has called
Moonna Jan "a vicious lad, who had been encouraged in habits of
atrocious cruelty by the Begum". But a higher authority has given a
direct lie to it so far as the character of Moonna Jan is concerned.
Moonna Jan of "Spotless Character"
Benjamin Disrareli, later Lord Beaconsfield (Prime Minister of
England) speaking on the Oudh question in the House of Commons of
July 27, 1857, said:
"And there was another reason why the Government of India
ought to have looked with indulgence on the personal conduct of the late
Sovereign of Oude (Wajid Ali Shah); because the Government of India
changed the line of succession in Oude, and placed the father of the late
King on the throne instead of the prince, who by custom and by law
ought to have succeeded. Of that prince I have some knowledge by the
informaiton I received some years ago from men most competent to
speak of him. He lives in a distant eastern city upon a pension allotted to
him by the Indian Government, and he was commended to me long
before the question of Oude interested public attention as a man of
spotlss character, englightened and amiable, and more competent,
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perhaps, to become a benevolent and judicious prince than, perhaps, any
other ■ that ever existed in the East".
This clearly explainis the reason why the Residents and the
Governors-General always preferred to ignore the claims of intelligent
and energetic young men who could be expected to run the country
efficiently. If, contrary to all expectations, the hand-picked wastrels and
drivellers tried to improve the administration then the "all-powerful,
meddling" Resident would peremptorily ask him, under various pretexts,
to stop doing so and have full confidence "in the friendship and good
faith of the Honourable Company"!
The end of Moonna Jan
Moonna Jan and Badshah Begam were arrested and deported first
to Cawnpore on 12 th July 1837 (8 th Rabi 11, 1253 H.) with eighteen
cartloads of goods and eighteen female slaves and Afzal Mahal, the
mother of Moonna Jan. Later, on 15 th October 1837 they were shifted to
the Fort Chunargarh (Mirzapur). A monthly stipend of Rupees Two
Thousand and Four Hundred (Rupees Sixteen Hundred to Badshah
Begam and Rupees Eight Hundred to Moonna Jan) was paid to them
from the Lucknow Treasury.
Monna Jan died on 15 th January 1846, and he was followed, about
one month later, by Badshah Begum. Both were buried at Chunargarh.
Moona Jan left behind two sons and a daughter who were granted a
pension of Rs. 300 per month. They were brought back to Lucknow by
the order of King Amjad Ali Shah (Wajid Ali Shah's father).
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KING MUHAMMAD ALI SHAH (1837-1842)
King Naseer-ud-deen Haider on the night intervening 7 th and 8 th
July 1837. Let us turn to the description of the events as given by the
Resident Col. John Low in a Memorandum submitted on 10 th July:
"Memorandum of the events which took place on the night of the
7th and morning of the 8 th July 1837, at the Palace of His Majesty, the
King of Oude".
"After giving an account of the death of Nusser-ood-deen Hyder
on the night of the 7 th of July, the writer proceeds to state:
"The Resident, with Doctor Stevenson, after inspecting the body
of his late Majesty, and issuing some necessary orders, returned, to the
Residency, leaving Captain Paton at the place to superintend the sealing
up of the royal property;. ..the Resident next had a short Persian paper
written out, to which he proposed to require Nuseer-ood-dowlah's
consent signature, previous to inviting him to the place.
"All this took some time, and it must have been about 1 A.M. of
the 8th instant, when the Resident directed his Second Assistant,
Lieutenant Shakespeare, to proceed along with the Residency Meer
Moonshee Iltifaut Hossain Khan, Bahadoor, and Moulvee Ghoolam
Yahea Khan, the Durbar Vakeel, to the house of Nawaub Nuseer-ood-
Dowlah, taking with him the Persian agreement above mentioned; these
three persons accordingly proceeded to the said place of residence, and
after some delay, which was caused by the visit being sudden and
unexpected on the part of Nawaub, they obtained audience. Lieutenant
Sakeshpeare presented and caused to be read to the Nawaub, the Persian
Agreement to which his signature was requested; the Nawaub willingly,
and without any hesitation, when it was read over to him, affixed his
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seal thereto and expressed his perfect acquiescence to the terms therein
mentioned".
Was it signed 'willingly'?
With regard to the signing of the Persian translation of the
Agreement, Major Bird says:
"This averment, however, is contradicted by the author of "How to
Make and How to Break a Treaty", who says, " 'When this treaty was
first proposed by the Resident, then Colonel Low, to His Majesty, the
King wrote a letter, in which he stated although personally willing to
make every sacrifice for the East India Company he could not sign this
treaty because he felt he was signing away the kingdom from his
children. That the terms systematic oppression, anarchy, and misrule,
&c, were so general that they would be difficult to define. To this,
Colonel Low replied that such things were not likely to happen in His
Majesty's reign. The documents will be produced in due course, and
show the repugnance of the poor King and the persuasion of the
Resident. The King knew the Treaty of 1801 did not give power to the
E.I. Government of interference quite as well as the Resident and
dreaded the result of the new Treaty of 1837'."
The Deed of Engagement which was asserted by the Resident John
Low, to have been signed by "the Nawaub willingly, and without any
hesitation" but has been contradicted by the author "How to Make and
How to Break a Treaty" in the most convincing manner, is given below
and speaks for itself:
"DEED OF ENGAGEMENT"
"Translation of a Deed of Engagement executed by Nawaub
Nusseer-ood-Dowlah, on the night of the 7 th July, 1837
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"Lieutenant-Colonel John Low, the Resident, has apprised me,
through Lieutenant Shakespeare, his second assistant, of the death of
Nusseer-ood-Deen Hyder, King of Oude. The Resident has also
communicated to me the substance of the orders of the Government of
India respecting the necessity of new engagements on the (Part of the?)
Company's Government with the Oude State; and I hereby declare, that
in the case of my being placed on the throne, I will agree to sign any
new Treaty that the Governor-General may dictate.
(True Translation) (Signed) J. Low, Resident".
"N.B. At the foot of the Persian paper, the present King wrote the
words "Cubool wo Munzoor ust" (It is accepted and agreed upon), and
affixed the impression of his seal".
"The Engagement recited above", says Major Bird, "with the
circumstances under which it was obtained, will doubtless be thought a
sufficient answer to the preamble of the Treaty of 1837, as far as the
latter testifies to the misgovernment of the Oude Princes".
Naseer-ud-Daulah becomes the king
Naseer-ud-daulah, a decrepit old man of 63 years with shaking
head and limbs, became the King, with the title of Muhammad Ali Shah,
on July 8, 1837. The new King, though infirm in health, possessed a
keen intellect and having been trained under the vigilant eye of his
father, Nawab-Wazeer Saadat Ali Khan, Yameen-ud-daulah, who had
proved himself to be an astute politician and had defeated Lord
Wellesley in polemics, was not a novice in State affairs or in
interpreting State documents. The very fact that he had raised objections
to the Resident John Low's document "that he felt that he was signing
away the kingdom from his children. That the terms systematic
oppression, anarchy, and misrule, &c, were so general that they would
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be difficult to define" showed that he possessed a penetrating mind
which could fully grasp the import and connotation of the various
clauses in a document. Time proved that he was quick enough to catch,
through the language of a State Paper, the deception caused by the
Governor-General and was bold enough to throw back the document in
the face of the Great Satrap himself!
Treaty of 1837
King Muhammad Ali Shah had been hardly two months on the
throne, after the Deed of Engagement, when he was made to sign a
Treaty of nine articles. It was executed at Lucknow on 11 th September
1837 (10th Jamadi-ud-Sanee, 1253 H) and was signed by Auckland A.
Ross, W. Morison and H. Shakespeare. The Treaty was "ratified by the
Governor-General of India in Council, at Fort William in Bengal" on
18th September, 1837, and bears the signature of W.H. Macnaghten,
Secretary to the Government of India.
The Preamble in keeping with the usual propaganda against
Awadh, refers to "the infraction of this essential engagement of the
Treaty (1801), and inattention to the duty of a Sovereign on the part of
several successive Rulers of Oude, have been continued and notorious."
Referring to this Major Bird says "The Engagement cited above,
with the circumstances under which it was obtained, will doubtless the
thought a sufficient answer to the preamble of the treaty of 1837, as far
the latter testifies to the misgovernment of the Oude Princes"
The most important Articles of this Treaty of 1837 are the 7 th and
the 8 th:
"Article : In modification of Article 6 th of the Treaty above referred to
(of 1801), it is hereby provided that the King of Oudh will take into his
immediate and earnest consideration, in concert with the British
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Resident, the best means of remedying the existing defects in the Police,
and in the Judcial and Revenue Administrations of his dominions, and
that if His Majesty should neglect to attend to the advice and counsel of
the British Government or its local representative, and if (which God
forbid) gross and systematic oppression, anarchy and misrule should
hereafter at any time prevail within the Oudh dominions, such as
seriously to endanger the public tranquility, the British Government
reserves to itself the right of appointing its own officers to the
management of whatsoever portions of the Oudh territory, either to a
small or to a great extent, in which such misrule as that above alluded to
may have occurred, for so long a period as it may deem necessary; the
surplus receipts in such case, defraying all charges, to be paid into the
King's treasury, and a true and faithful account rendered to His Majesty
of the receipt and expenditure of the territories so assumed.
"Article : And it is hereby further agreed, that in case the Governor-
General of India in Council should be compelled to resort to the exercise
of the authority vested in him by Article 7 th of this Treaty, he will
endeavour as far as possible to maintain (with such improvements as
they may admit of) the native institutions and forms of administration
within the assumed territories, so as to facilitate the restoration of those
territories to the Sovereign ofOude when the proper period for such
restoration shall arrive".
The most important point to consider about this treaty is, whether
the whole Treaty of 1837 was disallowed by the Home Government, as
is made out by Lord Dalhousie and his apologists, or "as the
Parliamentary Return mentions, "the Home Government disapproved of
that part of the above treaty which imposed on the Oudh State the
expense of the auxiliary force, and on the 8 th July, 1839, the King was
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informed that he was relieved from the cost of maintaining the auxillay
force, which the British Government had taken upon itself."
Poor Auckland has been blamed for concealing the fact that the
said Treaty, as a whole, was not approved by the Home Government, but
I cannot understand why Ellenborough and Hardinge (who has
specifically referred to the Treaty of 1837) who followed Auckland did
not speak out the truth and correct the wrong impression created by
Auckland's suppression?
Another loan of Rs. Seventeen lakhs
On 22nd November 1838, a Deed of Engagement (No. LXVI) was
executed by which "His Majesty the King of Oude has paid, and the
Right Honourable the Governor-General of India, on the part of the East
India Company, has received, in perpetuity, the sum of Lucknow Sicca
Rupees Seventeen Lakhs (17,00,000)". This loan was given at the rate of
four per cent annum and the total of the yearly interest amounted to
sixty-eight thousand (68,000) Lucknow rupees. "This shall be paid in
pension in four equal instalments, and in the proportions specified to the
following persons, and to their heirs, in perpetuity, on their receipts,
under their seals".
"Given at Lucknow, this Twenty-Second day of November, in the
year of Our Lord One Thousand Eight Hundred, and Thirty-Eight
corresponding with the third of Ramzan, one Thousand Two Hundred
and Fifty-Four Hajira.
L. Low, Lieut,-Colonel, Political Resident at Lucknow"
Reforms introduced
"Notwithstanding his (King Muhammad Ali Shah's) advanced age
and many infirmities", says Major Bird, "he, however, greatly improved
the state of his kingdom, ameliorated the condition of the agriculturist,
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introduced reforms in the police, revenue, judicial, and finance
departments, encouraged commerce, erected several public works of
great utility, such as schools, colleges, serais or resting places for
travellers; dug tanks, wells, and filled the coffers of his treasury.
Colonel Low, the then Resident at Lucknow, reposed so much
confidence in His Majesty's wisdon and other statesmanlike qualities
that he told him, more than once, that it was not necessary for His
Majesty to consult him every point, possessing, as His Majesty did, so
much information, judgment, and knowledge of business."
Husainabad Imambara Trust
The most important construction of his time is the Imambara at
Husainabad, Lucknow (formerly) known as Jamania Bagh), popularly
known as Chota Imambara (in contradistinction to the Imambara of
Asaf-ud-daulah which is known as the Bara Imambara), and he also laid
out a first-class (from the Rumi Darwaza, the imposing gate of the Bara
Imambara) to his own Imambara at Husainabad (Lucknow).
On 23rd November 1839 King Muhammad Ali Shah executed a
Trust Deed No. LXVII) "at the rate of four (4) per cent annum"... by
which he deposited the sum of Rs. 12,00,000 "in perpetuity in the
Honourable Company's Treasury at the Residency of Lucknow, and the
interest amounting to forty-eight thousand (48,000) Lucknow Sicca
Rupees per annum has been bestowed as a gift upon the persons herein
mentioned, and for the expenses of Hossainabad Moobaruk, &c."
Similarly on 26 th January 1840, he executed a Trust Deed (No.
LXVIII) for the interests of Two Promissory Notes (One at 5 per cent
per annum and the other at 4 per cent annum) amounting to Rs. 3,40,800
which declared "I given and bequeath for the expenditure of the Hospital
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established in the time of the late King (Naseer-ud-deen Haider), in the
capital of Lucknow".
"ARTICLE 2nd, (of. No. LXVIII): "It is very necessary that the
whole of the interest arising from the above-mentioned sum may now
and hereafter be laid out in providing medicine and food for the sick
poor. Those patients who may prefer native medicines will be treated by
native physicians, who will be appointed by the Government; and those
who may desire European medicine will be treated by Dr. Steveson, and
after him by any gengleman who may be in the service of this
Government".
King Muhammad Ali Shah was so careful about the maintenance
and upkeep of the objects of the Trust that he mentioned in the above
Trust-deed specifically"
"For the expenses of Hossainabad Moobaruk, the Inn and the Tank and their
dependencies, as follows:
"For the expenses of Hossainabad
Mooobaruk per annum and its
Dependencies
:
Rs. 24,000
"For the repairs of the new Road Rs. 06,000 per
annum Rs. 30,000 per annum
The King also intended to construct a Meenar, probably
similar to the historic Qutub Meenar of Delhi but on less ambitious
scale, of seven storeis only. But he could not complete it; and the
four Khands (or stories), near the Hussainabad Tank, are still visible,
unfinished and unplastered, as a sad reminder of the good intentions
of this sagacious and benevolent King.
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Similarly he started constructing a Jamey Masjid behind his
Imambara at Husainabad on an ambitious scale, it could not be
completed within his lifetime either. It is also, like the Sat-Khandra,
a mute reminder of the King's religious disposition.
King Muhammad Ali Shah died on 7 th May 1842 and was
buried in his own Imambara at Husainabad, Lucknow.
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KING AMJAD ALI SHAH (1842-1847)
King Amjad Ali Shah succeeded his father, Muhammad Ali Shah,
at the age of 43 years and some months. "This Prince", according to
Masih-ud-deen Khan, "whose natural and acquired talents were of a very
high order, applied hiself assidously to the management and
administration of his dominions. Like his ancestors, he did all in his
power to conciliate and secure the friendship and support of the British
Government. Thus, when the Punjaub was broke out, His Majesty
manifested his steadfast adherence and fidelity as an ally by assisting
the Company with pecuniary advances, and by placing at their disposal a
considerable number of well-armed and disciplined troops, both horse
and foot".
Ever since the death of Ranjit Singh, on June 27, 1839, there had
been no settled Government in the Punjab. "There had, in fact, been
little more than anarchy," according to Henry Morris, "Chieftains and
ministers had been murdered, and all real power was in the hands of the
army." As early as February 1844, Lord Ellenborough, the then
Governor-General ,wrote. "It is to be hoped that the state of the Punjab
may not render necessary in December next an operation beyond the
Sutlej". In December 1845, Sir Henry Hardinge, the then Governor-
General, had to meet the challenge of the Sikhs in the sanguinary battles
of Ferozeshah, Mudki, and later at Aliwal, Sobroan etc. The resources of
the British Government were strained to the utmost, and it was touch
and go with the British power in the subcontinent. At this critical
moment the Awadh King came to its much needed help.
Punjab war & Awadh help
"It was during the Residency of Mr. I.R. Davidson that the first
Panjaub campaign was raging, All India was looking in terror at the
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fierce and uncertain contest. The enemies of the East India Government
did not hesitate to scheme and make proposals for the overthrow of their
Government'", writes the author of "How to Make and How to Break a
Treaty".
" 'Dinapore and Benaras were rife with intrigue. Whispered
messages to Napaul were daily increasing the uncertain position of the
East India Company. The government paper, that certain criterion of the
state of public feeling, was at the lowest point ever known. There was
then everything to induce the Oudh Government to assert their
independence, or at any rate give themselves airs. One move in that
direction, and the East India rule would have been thrown back one
hujdred years and who shall say to what extent the loss might not have
extended. But no; Oudh was firm. In the East India Government's peril
was clearly seen Oudh's constancy. Her men cheerfully given from her
own any for the Company. Her horses at the servcie of the Irregular
Corps, then being raised in hot haste, and her minister directed to tender
every and any aid that the East India Company might require (The
Minister Nawab Ameenood Dowlah received a letter of thanks on this
occassion). These are not wild, enthusiastic flatteries. These are the
accounts of well-known realities. If Lord Hardings has but an iota of the
magnanimity for which we give him credit, he will not fail to bear
witness to the gallant conduct of Oudh on this occsion, and we look to
him for it'. The author was not aware, when he made this appeal, how
impossible it was that his appeal could be answered."
Administration
Amjad Ali Shah was a strictly religious person and followed the
dictates of religion scrupulously. He performed his prayers and fasts etc.
which he never missed. He, for the first time probably, started
distribution of Zakat (amounting to lakhs of rupees) to those who were
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found qualified to receive it under the Islamic Law. The Mujtahid-ul-Asr
was the overall Superior for the purpose. He had appointed men of
learning and piety, who had confidence of the public, in various quarters
of the city, who looked after the distribution of the Zakat-money to the
orphans, widows, the needy and the 'Mustaheq 1.
It will be remembered that Ghazi-ud-deen Haider had already
mentioned in his Proposals to the Earl of Moira, on 12 th November 1814,
that "three degrees of Adawlut (Courts of Judicature) have been
established here". The appellate courts were looked after by the two
leading Mujtahids of Lucknow viz. Moulana Syed Muhammad (Sultan-
ul-ulema) and Moulana Syed Hussain (Syed-ul-ulema). Moulana Syed
Muhammad's eldest son, Moulana Syed Muhammad Baqir, was
appointed with the title of Munsif-ud-daulah to look after the Civil and
Criminal courts, and a Mufti was posted with every Nazim in a district.
Madrasah & Observatory
Amjad Ali Shah established a Madrassah (which is still existing in
Lucknow under the title of Sultan-ul-Madaris) which had hundreds of
students on its rolls. Every student used to get a stipend of rupees five
per month, and every twenty students had teacher to look after them, a
much better teacher-student ratio than what is prevailing in modern
times.
The Observatory (which took full ten years) was also completed
by King Amjad Ali Shah. Col. Wilcox, the Superintendent of the
Observatory, had drawn up a plan to publish important astronomical
works in a Press at Allahabad. Seven thousand rupees had already been
paid to him but, unfortunately, he deid and the whole scheme fizzled
out.
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"Haft Qulzum"
It has been mentioned by Dr. A. Sprenger in his thired report,
dated 13 th March 1849, which was submitted by him to Lord Dalhousie,
the then Governor-General. Dr. Sprenger found seven volumes in the
Farah Baksh Library at Lucknow which were the Errata of the original
volumes which were not printed till then.
Oude frontier police force & a church
"At the request of the European inhabitants of Lucknow, he (the
King) presented them with a piece of ground for the erection of a
Church for public worship, and supplied them with the greater part of
the materials. During his reign, also, the requistion of the British
Government for an Oude Frontier Police Force, to be under the direction
of the Resident, under the command of the officer in the Thuggee.
Dacoitee Office, and officered by persons of his selection, was promptly
met; and this force, consisting of four companies of infantry, and two
troops of some fifty cavalry each, has been from that time maintained by
the Oude Government. In organising this force, the Oude Government
raised no difficulties about the employment of British officers, nor urged
that such was contrary to the treaty of 1801- a difficulty which Lord
Dalhousie subsequently brought forwardas a reason for dispensing with
this and all other treaties. On the contrary," says Major Bird, "the Oude
Government then, as always, complied with the requests of its allies, and
did everything that could be reasonably expected to promote their
objects."
He tried to develop Lucknow and provide for the public weal
within his limited means, during the short period of five years, and "had
by his amiable character and superior endowments won for himself the
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golden opinions, not only of his own subjects and of Indians in general,
but also of the English."
King Amjad Ali Shah died on 13 February 1847 and was succeded
by his son, King Wajid Ali Shah, the last occupant of the Awadh throne.
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SULTAN-E-ALAM KING WAJID ALI SHAH (1847-1856)
"There are many statements of history which it is immaterial to
substantiate or disprove", says Frattan. "Splendid pictures of public
virtue have often produced their good if once received as fact. But when
private character is at stake, every consientious writer or reader will
cherish his 'historic doubts'; when he reflects on the facility with which
calumny is sent abroad, the avidity with which it is received, and the
careless ease with which men credit what it costs little to invent and
progagate, but required an age of trouble and an almost impossible
conjunction of opportunities effectually to refute."
The above warning given by Fratten in his History of Netherlands
should not be forgotten. It should be thrice remembered, speciality, by
those who wish to know the facts about Wajid Ali Shah, as distinct from
the fiction woven round that unfortunately King by his British traducers-
the great 'Falsifiers of History' and their henchman.
Wajid Ali Shah was born on 30 th July 1822 when his grand-father
Naseer-ud-daulah (later King Muhammad Ali Shah) had no chance of
succeeding to the throne. He was given the title of Nazim-ud-daulah,
Mirza Muhamad Wajid Ali, Khan Bahadur. When his father became the
King he received the titles of Abul Mansoor, Sikandar Jah, Sulaiman
Hashm, Sahab 'Alam Waliahd, Mirza Muhammad Wajid Ali Khan
Bahadur.
He succeeded his father (Amjad Ali Shah), after the formal
confirmation of his death by the Residency Surgeon Dr. Logan, on
February 13, 1847 (26 th Safar, 1263, A.H.), at the young age of 25 only:
He went to the Baradari and, as usual, entered the Special
Chamber
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where after offering Prayers (of Thanks giving) he ascended the
throne. The
Resident, Col. Richmond, put the Crown on his head and
proclaimed Wajid Ali
Shah as the King of Awadh. Ameen-ud-daulah, the Prime
Minister, was the first to offer the Nazr and others followed. The
Resident remained seated below the throne, while the other British
officers remained standing all the time. The first signature he put as a
King, was to the names of five Sadat-e-Hasani (descendants of Imam
Hasan, the second Imam of the Shia faith) to mark the propitious
beginning of his reign. After remaining seated on the throne for one
hour he was escorted to the Takht-e-Rawan by the Resident and the
Brigadier of the force, which took him to the Mahalsara.
Education
On attaining the age of discretion (generally four to six years
when private tutors were appointed, in Awadh, to initiate the children in
the mystereis of knowledge with the Quran Shareef), Nawab Ameen-ud-
doulah Syed Husain Khan was appointed Ataleeq to the young
Murshidzadah.
His father, King Amjad Ali Shah, who himself was a very
religious man (who was the fist and perhaps the only King except Wajid
Ali Shah) who distributed Zakat and Khums on his yearly income, gave
him a sound religious education. Nawab Ameen-ud-daulah, his Ataleeq,
was also a religious person who observed practically all the injunctions
of his faith. He regarded Music and Dancing as Haram (forbidden under
the Canonical law); but ironically enough, Wajid Ali Shah was born
with a love for the Muses. Neither the admonitions of the loving father
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nor the chastisements of his Ataleeq could wean away the young Prince
from his devotion to Music.
An Erudite Scholar
Although no details are available about his tutors who gave him
lessons in the different branches of learning, he was regarded as a great
scholar by his contemporaries. His writings also show high proficiency
in the subjects on which he wrote, with great facility, both an Urdu and
Persian. Moulana Abdul Haleem Sharar, the well-known Urdu novelist,
who had spent his childhood and youth "under the protection of the
King" at Matia Burj (Calcutta), speaks very highly of his literary
attainments. Moulan Sharar says that "Wajid Ali Shah's literary taste
was of a very high order. In fact, he had a natural gift for (i) Literature
and Poetry, and (ii) for Music... His literary attainments were very high.
Although not an Arabic Scholar, but in Persian he was probbly a little
less proficient than Abul Fazl (of Akbar's Court, the well-known author
of Aleen-Akbari). He could write, in a very short tme, Persian prose of
the highest diction which would remind one of the best classical writers
in that language. Similarly, it was difficult to find another more
naturally gifted poet than Wajid Ali Shah. He composed hundreds of
Marsias, Salams etc., and wrote so many books in prose and poetry that
it is difficult to remember them now; and every composition had a
different and natural style.... He could dictate Marsia and Salam, to two
different scribes simultaneously......
Munshi Muhammad Maseeh-ud-deen Khan Bahadur, Special
envoy of King Wajid Ali Shah, accompanied the Oudh Commission to
England to represent the King's case, against the annexation of Awadh,
to Queen Victoria and the British public. He says:
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"His present Majesty (Wajid Ali Shah), who has received a liberal
Eastern education, is well versed in ancient and modern history and
literature, and, besides being the author of several Persian and Oordoo
poems of considerable merit, has written many useful and popular works
which are to be found in most of the public libraries of Europe.
"Of an amiable disposition, rendered still more attrative by affable
and engaging manners, Wajid Allie is much beloved and respected by
his subjects, from the highest to the lowest, from the rajah to the ryot,
and this the more so, as he has ever discharged the duties of his high
office justice tempered by mercy".
"In a lecture of M. Garcin de Tassy, member of the French
Institute, and Professor of Hindostani at the Ecole Imperiale, and which
lecture was deliverd at the opening of his course in December last
(probably 1856), this distinguished scholar thus spoke of these literary
productions of His Majesty":
(Translation of the original French): 'I do not want merely an
appreciation of this resoltion which is politically oriented; neither do I
want to estiamate the qualities and faults of Wajid Ali, as a Soverign;
but I am interested in him as a distinguished literary figure and an
eminent Hindustani poet."
S. Ameer Ali Khan was leading Vakeel of the Sudder Diwani
Adalat, Calcutta. He was appointed Minister (with the tittle of Wazeer-
us-Sultan) by the King, at Matia Burj, and was in close touch with him.
He also says that eminent scholars and Ataleeqs were appointed to
educate and train Wajid Ali Shah in his childhood and, being very
intelligent, he mastered the subjects in a very short time.
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Administrative Experience
Wajid Ali Shah's training in administrative affairs was also not
neglected. Following the custom prevailing in the Awadh Royal Family,
his father gave him administrative training by selecting him as a
Minister dealing with administrative matters. Wajid Ali Shah himself
says: "The author (of this book) was selected at the age of fifteen, by my
father as his Heir-apparent and was made a Minister. At the age of
twenty I sat on the throne.........and at the age of thirty, without
committing any oppression, or injustic of any injury to the ryots, or for
any fault whatsoever, I was deprived of my throne....
Literary attainments
When Wajid Ali Shah ascended the throne in 1847 he was, besides
having administrative experience, well-versed in those branches of
learning which were then in vogue in the upper circles. His literary
attainments in Persian and Urdu must be accepted to be a very high
order which has been specially stressed by eminent scholars and writes
like Munshi Maseeh-ud-deen Khan, Mir Munshi of the Persian
Department of the Governor-General's Secretariate; M. Garcin de Tassy,
member of the French Institute and Professor of Hindustani at the Ecole
Imperiale (Paris); S. Ameer Ali Khan (Wazeer-us-Sultan), and last but
not the least, Moulana Abdul Haleem Sharar, the eminent Urdu novelist,
who had unique opportunisties of watching the King and studying his
literary compositions at close quarters.
As an example of his chaste Persian prose his book 'Bahr-e-
Hidayet' may be cited. It is no more than a compilation of questions on
Fiqh (Canonical law), submitted by him, during his childhood, to the
Mujtahid-ul-asr (Sultan-ul-Ulema), and their answers. The questions are
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in Persian, which he submitted for answers. They show not only a grasp
of the subjects discussed but also a complete mastery of the language.
Civil and military reforms
After the usual funeral ceremonies of the late King were over, the
first thing that attracted Wajid Ali Shah's attention was the deplorable
condition of the Army.
He started by enlisting a few regiments of Infantry and Cavalry.
They were given new uniforms and arms. The Troops of Cavalry were
called "Banka" and "Tircha", while Infantary regiments were named
"Ghangghore", "Akhtari" and "Nadiri". He introduced words of
command in Persian and went to the Paradeground early in the morning,
on his favourite horse, and supervised the military manoeuvres for three
or four hours at a stretch "in the heat of the sun and amidst clouds of
dust", and watched the movements and tactics of the cavalry and the
regiments with a critical eye. The creditable performances of the army
were recognised with proper rewards and sometimes with suitable titles
too.
Complaint Boxes
In order to improve the administration of the country and to
receive public complaints, at first hand, he introduced Complaint Boxes.
They were placed in the public streets "for the reception of complaints
and petitions". Two silver boxes were also carrried in front of his
processions. They had apertures, like letter-boxes, to put in complaints
and petitions. The keys of the Complaint Boxes were kept by the King
himself who opened them with his own hands and passed appropriate
orders. This was called Mashghala-e-Nausherwani or, as some have
mentioned, Mashghala-e-Sultani.
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After Royal orders were passed and signatures were affixed all the
petitions and complaints were sent to the Despatch Section daily, to be
issued. And, after a "fixed period", without any delay the despatch
orders and their receipts were submitted to the King.
I do not think any contemporary of Wajid Ali Shah, Indian of
European, could have done better. Was there any appreciation of his
efforts to improve the administration? No, it rather invited the wrath of
the British!
Anticipating the events, let us turn to Paragraph 15 of Major-
General Outram's Report, dated Lucknow Residency, March 15, 1855,
which says;
"The King has not, since the Governor-General's visit in October
1847, shown any signs of 'being fully aware of the responsibility he
incurs',..... In fact, I do not think that His Majesty can ever be brought to
feel the responsibility of sovereignty strong enough to be induced to
bear that portion of the burden of its duties which must necessarily
devolve upon him"....
Again Outram, on the same page, says:
"His Majesty has ulterly disregarded the advice then given by the
Governor-General (Hardinge): he has done nothing to improve the
administration, abstained from no personal indulgence, given no
attention whatever to public affairs."
This was one of those charges, (others will be dealth with later)
which were levelled against Wajid Ali Shah in all seriousness, and
which formed the basis of Lord Dalhousie's Minute of June 18, 1855, in
which all such allegations are paraded with suitable embellishments.
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King's reply to above
It will be seen that even the highest representatives of the British
Imperialists in India, not to speak of their agents called Residents who
were planted with a set purpose in the local Durbars, would not feel the
least qualms of conscience in distorting the truth.
Wajid Ali Shah, when he received a copy of the Oude Blue from
London in the-closing months of 1856 at Matia Burj (Calcutta), has
answered each and every charge with a wealth of details that is simply
astounding. To the above he says:
"The fact is, that after ascending the throne, it appeared fit to me
to examine and understand all public affairs to correct what appear to
require revision, and, after upholding what required confirmation, to
establish a proper system of administration, in order that business should
be properly transacted. It is evident I did not assume the charge of a new
Kingdom which required new modelling, but which had an established
system, which only required to be put in force. I, therefore, applied
myself from the very commencement to test the manner in which justice
was administered. I had boxes for the reception of complaints and
petitions placed in the public streets, and on referring to those petitions,
I found that our long established Courts of Justice were unimpeachable,
and that justice was administered to the rich and the poor in confirmity
to the precepts of Mahomedan Law; no such case, in which injustice
could be established, having been brought to light. It also appeared that
the Judges were men of ability, acquainted with Mahomedan Law, and
of upright character. Hence I unhesitatingly affirmed things as they
were.
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Re-organization of the army
"Subsequently I intended to have re-organized the Army, and
infact reinstead several officers who had served my predecessors, and
who had been removed; and I also purposed to have inspected the entire
forces in person, and made some arrangements regarding them, but the
Residents Colonel Richmond and Golonel Sleeman, immediately
complained and spoke to me about it. Considering that even if I re-
orgaized a small body of troops, the English Government would be
displeased, and suspicion might, arise, and relying upon the friendship
of the Honourable East India Company, on whom rested the entire
responsibility for preserving the kingdom from domestic and foreign
foes, I at once abandoned this project, and devoted my attention to
public affairs."
From the above it is quite clear that immediately after ascending
the throne Wajid Ali Shah Started, as he has asserted in so many words,
reorganizing the Army and improving the administration of the country.
After being stopped from carrying out reforms in the Administration and
the Army, by the British Residents at the behests of the Governors-
General, Wajid Ali Shah made one more effort. Not being "sunk in the
uttermost abysses of enfeebling debauchery", as Sir John Kaye, the
Secretary of the Political and Secret Department of the India Office in
England says, Wajid Al Shah devoted his attention, as he categorically
affirms, "to public affairs". But the British with ulterior motives
thwarted him as will be seen later, even in this attempt. And all these
years, since 1847, the stagements of the Residents have been flaunted
before, us, with suitable frills, that Wajid Ali Shah "has done nothing to
improve the administration; abstained from no personal indulgence;
given no attention whatever to public, affair"; while they knew, all the
time, that they were uttering nothing but downright falsehood!
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Before proceeding any further let us cast a look behind to see, at a
glance, what were the conditions prevailing in the country before King
Wajid Ali Shah came to the throne inl847; whether Awadh was ruined
by anarchy and choas, or the people were living orderly and peaceful
lives.
Pre-1847 Awadh
A series of reports were submitted by the Residents at Lucknow to
the Governors-General about the misgovernment and ruin of the
territories of Awadh according to a set design. "These complaints are
paraded in Lord Dalhousie's Minute of June, 18, 1855; but they are not
set forth at length, and their historical context is not exhibited; while
there is no recognition of the counter-statements which we have already
cited, and to which it would be easy to append many additional ones",
says the author of Dacoitee in Excelsis, "There is the testimony, for
instance, of Captain Shakespeare, who preceeded Mr. Davidson as
Resident, and who, having risen through almost every grade of the Civil
Service, was better qualified to take a more extended veiw than the
generality of such officers, yet who reported to the effect that he had not
found more crime and violence in Oude than in those portions of the
East India Company's own dominions which he had superintended.
There is the testimony, dated 29 th May, 1846, and which has not hitherto
been published, of his successor Mr. Davidson, a most honourable
gentleman, to the comparative ordierliness of the Oudh population and
territories. To Mr. Davidson succeeded Colonal Richmond, during
whose Residency his present Majesty (Wajid Ali Shah), at the age of
twenty-five years, ascended the throne. This officer may have had
differences with the King upon minor questions, but the harmonious
terms which subsisted between them, and at which Lord Hardinge, at his
visit in 1847, to be mentioned presently, expressed his great
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satisfaction, is a conclusive proof that he saw nothing in the Royal
Government to warrant the lurid colouring bestowed on it by Lord
Dalhousie."
The testimony of three British Residents viz., Shakespeare,
Davidson and Richmond have been quoted, from official reports, to
show that crime and violence in Awadh were not more than "in those
portions of the East India Company's own dominions which he
(Shakespeare) had superintended."
Then there is the testimony of Davidson, dated 29 th May, 1846 "to
the comparative orderliness of the Oude population and territories." But
these testimonies have been suppressed because, if published, they
would have given the direct lie to the case made out by Dalhousie for
annexing the country.
Hardinge's visit to Awadh
"On his return journey to Calcutta", writes Henry Morris, "Lord
Hardinge paid a visit to the Nawab of Oudh at Lucknow for the purpose
of remonstrating with him regarding the mismanagement of his
dominions, which in fact, amounted almost to anarchy".
On 1st November 1847 (21st Ziqaad 1263) Mr. Elliot, Secretary to
the Governor-General, arrived at Lucknow and, with the Resident Col.
Richmond, saw the King. Elliot remained at Lucknow for a week and,
after selecting the most important historical works, which was his usual
practice wherever he went, from the Royal Library, he went back to
Kanpur.
On 2nd November (22nd Ziqaad 1263) Mirza Wasi Ali Khan, with
the necessary 'Julus' was sent ahead to Kanpur for making necessary
arrangements for the tea-party to the Governor-General. He received a
Khillat of elevan pieces.
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On Thursday the 4 th November (24 th Ziqaad 1263) news was
received of the Governor-General's arrival of Kanpur.
On Saturday the 6 th November 1847 (26 th Ziaqaad 1263) the King,
Wajid Ali Shah, in the morning went to the Camp laid out on this side of
the Ganges (in the Awadh territory). The Camp was beautiful arranged
by Rajah Darshan Singh Ghalib Jung which specially pleased the King.
The King reached the Camp at about 1-0 P.M. when it was raining
heavily. The rains continued till Monday, the 8 th November.
When the rains did not cease even on Monday, the whole day, the
King came out of his tent, at about one hour to sunset, and prayed to
God for cessation of the rains in accordance with the form prescribed for
the purpose in religious books, and "the God's creatures were saved from
ravages of the storm."
On Tuesday the 9 th November, Mr. Elliot, Secretary to the
Governor-General, with two sons of Lord Hardinge, came to see the
King in the afternoon for the final approval of the arrangements of his
visit on the next day.
On Wednesday morning, the 10 th November 1847, General Saheb
(the King's brother), Mirza Khurram Bakht Bahadur etc. preceeded the
Royal Cavalcade. The King, half an hour later, proceeded in a golden
Nalki. On crossing the bridge of boats on the River Ganges the King
mounted an elephant and, as usual, rupees were showered on the King as
charity for the poor people who had surrounded the King's elephant.
Even British soldiers came out of their barracks and struggled with the
Shodas (professional beggars who used to follow rich people's
conveyances to get the alms) and had the worst of it. The Resident
seeing the plight of his countrymen (which probably wounded his racial
feelings) made a sign to the King to have it stopped. It is said that the
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total amount distributed as charity in such a short time came to Rs.
3,465.
Hardings receive the King
The Governor-General received him (the King on an elephant and,
after seating the King next to him, entered his Camp. The entry in the
Governor-General's Camp was with tickets. There were 26 ticket-
holders. Mirza Wasi Ali Khan was in charge of the tea arrangements.
After an hour, Secretary Elliot requested the King, on behalf of the
Governor-General, to join the banquet.
In his banquest speech the Governor-General referred to the old
friendly relations between the two States, to the Resident as his
spokesman for proper advice and that the King was, after all, the
undisputed master of his country.
On departure Governor-General put a necklace of pearls, with his
own hands, round the King's neck and 51 trays of costly woolens were
presented to the King; 30 trays were presented to the Heir-Apparent and
26 to Mirza Sikandar Hashmat (King's brother). Beside elephants, horses
and a tray full of jewels was also presented to the King.
King receives Hardinge
On Thursday the 11 th November 1847, the Governor-General
crossed into Awadh at 9-0 in the morning, and was received by the King
and, after seating the distinguished guest him on the same elephant, the
King arrived at the Camp which was sumptuously decorated. After an
hour when the Governor-General departed, the King, likewise, put a
necklace of pearls round Lord Hardinge's neck; his sons and ladies were
also given chains of pearls, and 51 trays of costly cloths etc. were also
presented.
Handings in Lucknow
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On Wednesday the 17 th November 1847, Lord Hardings entered
Lucknow and, after the usual festivities, met the King in private.
After meeting Wajid Ali Shah on 22nd November 1847 at 3-0 p.m.
when they were closeted together for two hours, Hardings left Lucknow
the next day in the moring for Kanpur.
HARDINGS DISPATCH
No. 33 Dated 2nd December 1847
Later, on 2nd December 1847, he addressed a Dispatch (No. 33) to
the Court of Directors from "Soonamookhee Yacht, on the Ganges off
Monghyr".
This Dispatch of 38 paragraphs is important in more than on
respect because it deals, while discussing the future of the Kingdom of
Awadh and its King, with the British policy towards the Muslims in and
outside India. That this Dispatch is highly important is also evident from
the fact that so far it has been kept a closely guarded secret and, as far
as I know, it has also not seen light of the day.
In view of the importance of the Dispatch we will discuss some of
the paragraphs in detail.
The 'warning'
Hardinge mentions the "Note, of what passed between us at the
interview on the 22nd November (1847), appended to the Memorandum"
(para 30).
It seems that before he left Lucknow, Hardings signed the later
containing the much publicised 'warning' because we find that 'the
warning letter of Lord Hardinge, above mentioned, was dated 23 rd
November 1847".
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The Dispatch is very important for the reason that when Wajid Ali
Shah ascended the throne on 13 th February 1847, Lord Hardinge was the
Governor-General of India. Hardinge had the following reprot of
Captain Shakeshpeare about the then Heir-Apparent (i.e. Wajid Ali
Shah) before him:
Shakespeare' Report
"The incapacity of the King (j.e Wajid Ali Shah) for the duties of
his high position was early foreseen by Captain Sakespeare, the
officiating Resident', says General Outram, "who, on the 29 th of
September 1845 (when Hardinge was the Governor-General) thus
alluded to His Majesty, then Heir Apparent:
"The prospect which the present reign offers is truly a melancholy
one, and in case of anything happening to the King, I should much dread
that the future will become still more clouded. The Heir Apparent's
character holds out no prospect of good. By all accounts his temper is
capricious and fickle. His days and nights are passed in the female
apartments, and he appears wholly to have resigned himself to
debauchery, dissipation and low pursuits".
This lurid picture, painted by the offciating Resident, was before
the Governor-General. If he believed the aspersions cast on Wajid Ali
Shah's character by Shakespeare, he should not have consented to his
ascending the throne. His elder step-brother, Mustafa Ali Khan or his
son, Mirza Waliahd Bahadur, should have been put on the throne, as the
Queen-Mother, Malka Kishwar, suggested during her interview with the
Resident, Major-General Outram, on 1 st February 1856.
Lord Hardings having consented to Wajid Ali Shah's succession to
his father as the King of Awadh, indirectly admitted that he did not
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believe in the strories submitted by the Resident. They were put in store
to be utilized, if necessary, on suitable occasions in future.
"Your Hon'ble Court will have perceived by the correspondence
which has passed between me and the Resident during the last eight
months since the King's accession to the throne in February 1847 I have
great reason to be dissatisfied with the manner in which the Government
of the country has been carried on; and that much of the evil complained
of is attributable to the weakness of character and misconduct of the
King".
Hardinge's falsehood exposed
During this crucial period i.e. "the last eight months since the
King's accession to the throne in February 1847", Wajid Ali Shah tried,
as best as he could, to improve his Army (or whatever he was allowed to
maintain by the British) and the Administration, a fact which has been
admitted by all writers on Awadh history, even by Syed Ameer Ali
Khan, who was said to be a British Agent planted to keep an eye on
Wajid Ali Shah at Matia Burj (Culcutta).
Moreover, the fact that Wajid Ali Shah was prevented through the
Resident, Col. Richmond, from carrying out his reforms has been stated
in so many words by Wajid Ali Shah himself in his Reply to the Oude
Blue Book and even by that rabid anti-Awadh writer Najm-ul-Ghani
Rampuri. The fact that reports about Wajid Ali Shah's attempts at
reforms were submitted by the Resident to Lord Hardinge cannot be
denied because Col. Sleeman two years later, in his Report dated June
21, 1849, mentioned these facts, still Lord Hardinge had the hardihood
to write that "I have had great reason to be dissatisfied with the manner
in which the Government of the country has been carried on; and that
much of the evil complained of is attributable to the weakness of
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character and misconduct of the King". These remarks of the Governor-
General clearly show that he was working according to a certain pre -
determined policy. Hardinge would not allow Wajid Ali Shah, from the
very first day of his succesion to the throne, to introduce reforms for
improving the administration of the country and still attribute all the ills
of the Kingdom to the "misconduct of the King".
"It became evident shortly after His Majesty came to the throne
that his authority was not exercised through his Minister, but through
the influence of singing and Dancing men with whom His Majesty
passes the greater portion of his time".
"These men made overtures to the Minister, promising him their
support if he would engage to share the patronage and profit of his
office with them; and on the rejection of these proposals, they proceeded
to issue orders in his Majesty's name, without the knowledge of the
Minister, for the purpose of compelling him to resign."
The above two paragraphs, besides being contrary to actual facts,
are contradictory in terms also.
Hardinge says that "shortly after His Majesty came to the throne
that his authority was not exercised through his Minister". Now, it been
shown above, from reliable and authentic sources that Wajid Ali Shah
personally attended to public affairs and tried to introduce reforms in the
administrative machinery and Army but was stopped by the British
themselves. Moreover, in the first few months Ameen-ud-daulah was the
Minister who, according to Hardinge himself, was an illiterate opium
eater and "was unqualified for several hours of each day for transacting
the public business". Therefore, there was no question of exercising any
"authority" through such a person or making "Overtures to the Minister,
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promising him the support if he would engage to share the patronage and
profit of his office with them",
Destruction of Hindu temples
"This proof of the power they had obtained over the King, was
shown in a very marked manner by the order issued by these men in His
Majesty's name for the destruction of Hindoo Temples, on false reports
made by persons totaly unworthy of credit. The Minister was kept
waiting at the Palace and denied access to the King of public business,
with the knowledge that His Majesty was engaged in low and degrading
amusements with his favourites".
This paragraph is an astounding proof of the fact that even the
Governor-General could stoop to the lowest and meanest tacties to give
a bad name to Wajid Ali Shah.
The facts of incident, as given by M. Najmul Ghani Rampuri who
by no stretch of imagination can be accused of being partial towards
Wajid Ali Shah, are as follow:
During the ministership of Ameen-ud-daulah (the illiterate opium
eater) the news was conveyed to the King that Gulab Rai Jeweller, who
was the cashier and companion of Ameen-ud-daulah had constructed a
big new temple. On that day idol would be installed.in the temple and,
therefore, a Brahmin boy would be offered as a sacrifice. The Knig
became very angry, and Meer Mahdi was ordered to take proper steps.
He (Meer Mahdi) dismantled the newly constructed dome (of the
temple). Moreover, in mohalla Haider Ganj, near his own house, Meer
Mahdi started dismantling two Shivalas and issued an order to demolish
a temple in Mohalla Bhadewan although the King had not given orders
to demolish these temples.
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Temples reconstructed
The Hindus became very agitated and took a procession to the
King's Palace. On enquiry Meer Mahdi was found at fault. He was
arrested and interned in his house, and the King gave orders for re-
constructing the temples and the Shivalas, at the State expense.
The most interesting point is that Meer Mahdi was neither a Dom
nor a Mirsai (i.e. a professional singer or a dancer) but highly
resepectable Syed and was appointed a Minister. The King had asked
him to stop human sacrifice, but he went much beyond his assignment.
Wajid Ali Shah once took proper steps. The offender (Meer Mahdi) was
interned and the temples and Shivalas were reconstructed. What else
could Wajid Ali Shah do?
According to another report, the jewellers (Hindus) took a
procession to the Resdient at the Mandion cantonment (in the suburbs of
Lucknow) and complained about it. One of the jewellers, Gulab Rai, was
the factotum of Ameen-ud-daulah. This displeased the King. The
Resident did not interfere in the matter at all but simply sent a report to
Calcutta.
This clearly proves that Ameen-ud-daulah was the protege of the
Resident, and therefore, he did not take any notice of it. But Hardinge
has thrown the blame on the King and absolved Ameen-ud-daulah by
saying. "The Minister was kept waiting at the Palace and denied access
to the King on public business, with the knowledge that His Majesty was
engaged in low and degrading amusements with his favorites".
What a travesty of facts! Ameen-udrdaulah's Case
Only two months after Wajid Ali Shah's succession to the throne
the Minister, Ameen-ud-daulah (a favourite of the last King), was
assaulted publicly in broad daylight in the month of April 1847. He was
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dismissed by Wajid Ali Shah and replaced by Ali Naqi Khan as his
Prime Minister.
This incident has been much publicised as an instance of
maladministration. Ameen-ud-daulah's dismissal has even been citied by
the writers as the main cause of the Resident's displeasure. Hardinge
also refers to the incident in above paragraph in these words:
"The Resident's advice to retain him (Ameen-ud-daulah) as his
Minister was rejected by the King, and I deemed it expedient not to
force His Majesty to adopt this advice against his will, so long as His
Majesty was held responsible for the good Government of his
Kingdom."
Ameen-ud-daulah being an incompetent person knew that he
would not be continued in his office by the new King. Wajid Ali Shah
knew his habits since his childhood when Ameen-ud-daulah was his
Ataleeq. Therefore, on the very next day of Wajid Ali Shah's 'Julus'
(coronation) he approached the Resident (Richmond) to see that he was
not dismissed by the new soverign. He also approached King's mother
and grand-mohther. Wajid Ali Shah listened to the Resident's
recommendation, but after the public assault he was dismissed. The
question is: why the Resident was so much interested in Ameen-ud-
daulah that after being beaten in a public thoroughfare, in broad
daylight, the Resident wanted him to be retained as a Minister? He even
wrote to the Governor-General about it as mentioned by Hardinge in the
above paragraph.
I should also be noted that after the assault on Ameen-ud-daulah
in the public street in April 1847, he was not dismissed rightaway.
Wajid Ali Shah continued him in his post for three months more.
Ameen-ud-daulah remained at his post for five months. When he was
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found absolutely incompetent and incapable of discharging the duties of
his office he was dismissed on Saturday the 9 th July 1847. Meer Mahdi,
alias Meeran (Amir-ul-Umara), was tried as a Minister but as he
mishandled the Temple case he was discarded. Later Ali Naqi Khan was
appointed to the post on 5 th August 1847.
All the writers on Awadh history have extolled the virtues of
Ameen-ud-daulah. He was a God-fearing person devoted to religious
practices. In short, he was an able man who, due to the 'capricious and
fickle temper' of the new King who had 'wholly resigned himself to
debauchery, dissipation and low pursuits', as Hardinge put if, could not
be tolerated in the new environment. But luckily for us Hardinge has, in
an unguarded moment, himself raised the curtain from the habits and
attaiments of Ameen-ud-daulah. In Paragraph 8 he says:
"Mr. Davidson about this time had proceeded to Lucknow and
after a residence of eight months he reported on the 29 th May 1846 that
the Minister thus removed by the King was quite unfit for his ojfice-that
he could neither read nor write-and being on Opium Eater, was
disqualified for several hours of each day for transacting the public
business."
Now this was the man who was being thrust upon Wajid Ali Shah
as Minister by the Resident Richmond; and when his 'advice' was
rejected by the King, he (Richmond) complained to the Governor-
General. Richmond was interested in Ameen-ud-daulah because the
latter was the Resident's spy on the King and entirely in his grip. The
Resident was the only person in the whole of Awadh who could force
the king to accept even such as his minister. Wajid Ali Shah showed, in
this case (as in others to be mentiond later), sufficient strength of
character to defy the 'all powerful' Resident and rejected his 'advice 1.
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In the next paragraph Hardinge says: "I notice these conflicting
opinions so recently reported, in order to show the difficulty of arriving
at just conclusions in matters where the judegment must in a great
degree be formed on the information of others liable to be misled by
parties interested in concealing the truth". The Governor-General, here
at least, admits that there were "parties interested in concealing the
truth" in the Lucknow Residency. He further says that "The Resident is
stationary at the capital and has no Agents whom he can depute to visit
the interior of the country and to report faithfully from personal
observation its real state". This a clear hint to depute special emissaries
in the intetior to collect 'evidence' against the local authorities which
was acted upon by Dalhousie through Saleeman.
In above paragraph Hardinge goes on to reveal:
"The Resident in a letter of May 1847, suggested the propriety of
my addressing a letter to the King, recommending His Majesty to attend
to the advice of the Resident and to avoid the low companies by whom
he was surrounded- I declined to do so by letter; but as the Resident's
Despatches described the King's character and conduct in unfavourable
terms, I determined to pay His Majesty a visit on my way to Culccutta
and to endeavour to ascertain by personal enquiries and observation that
real state of affairs in Oude".
The above paragraph reveals two facts:
(1) British Resident was so much master of the situation that he
wanted the King to attend to his 'advice'- which was
practically 'commands' issued by the Resident to be meekly
followed by the King.
(2) Richmond tried to have the permission of the Governor-
General to interfere in the King's private affairs. By dubbing
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the King's courtiers as "low companions" Richmond tried to
have them dismissed and surround the King with his 'own
men'. But this was too big a pill to swallow even for
Hardinge! H did not like to commit himself in writing and,
therefore, "decline to do so by letter". Instead he decided to
visit Lucnow, assess the situation on the spot personally, and
after detailed discussion with the Resident to give him oral
directions to suit exigencies of the time.
In Paragaph II Hardinge again repeats: "It was evident that the
King's Government had during the last eight months since his father's
death, rapidly declined in public estimation and in the power to enforce
obedience;" but Hardinge being and Honourable (!) man does not
mention the King's efforts at reforms of the Army and Administration
which he himself stopped through the Resident, Col. Richmond!
Hardinge further adds: "and that this change was chiefly to be
attributed to the weakness and contempt felt for a Ruler who was known
to be given up to debauchery and governed by low disreputable men".
Wajid Ali Shah's so-called debauchery will be discussed in a later
chapter; and as to the 'contempt felt' for him, it was amply shown by the
gallant people of his dominions who rose againt the British to avenge
the insult meted out to their King, and the revenge was swift even for
the British. G.W. Forrest admits: "In the course of ten days, English
administration in Oudh had vanished like a dream, and not left a wrack
behind."
The Governor-General then asked the Resident and the District
Officers, as the mentions in above paragraph, "to report their sentiments
as to the present and past state of the country".
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Taking the cue from the Governor-General, the Resident and the
British Magistrates and Collectors of British frontier districts vied with
one another in building up a case against Wajid Ali Shah and his
government. In above paragraphs 13 to 22 (whcih should actually be 24
because three paragraphs have been numbered as 16) instances of
mismanagement and maladministration, based on the Resident and
Dstrict Officer's Reports, have been cited. They will be dealt with when
the historic Minute of Lord Dalhousie, dated June 18,1855 will be
discussed.
In paragraph 23 the Governor-General comes to the concisions, on
the basis of the hearsay evidence quoted above,*'that "altho' these
reports are necessarily made on the observations and statements of
others, the evidence is sufficiently strong to leave no doubt that the state
of the country since February 1847 (the date of Wajid Ali Shah's
succession) is in a much worse condition than then when Mr. Davidson
made his report in May 1846 (during the reign of Amjad Ali Shah, the
father of Wajid Ali Shah), which upon the whole was of a satisfactory
charcter". This statement will also be dealt with when discussing The
Minute of Dalhousie dated June 18,1855 mentioned above.
In paragaraph 24 Col. Richmond, the Resident, is quoted for the
assumption that 1,00,000 people perpetually in conflict with the King's
forces. Naturally the country is at a great disadvantage when compared
with "the system of Law and Order which we have substituted in our
Provinces".
In paragraph 25 the Governor-General says: "There are however
many influential classes of the community who would prefer the
continuance of this state of anarchy in Oude to the ease and security
which the great mass of the
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•people enjoy in our Provinces from just and equal laws..........but
on the other hand the cultivators of the soil, the small traders and shop-
keepers, who firm the great mass of the people, would rejoice in being
delivered from the bondage in which they live......."
According to Hardinge the influential classes did not leave Awadh
because they enjoyed the prevailing anarchy as it benefitted them. As for
"the cultivators of the soil, small traders and shopkeepers...........(they)
would rejoice in being delivered from the bondage in which they live",
but independent witness tell a different tale.
Rev. Reginald Heber, Lord Bishop of Calcutta, paid a visit to
Lucknow during the reign of King Ghazi-ud-deen Haider in 1824.
Among other things he says:
"I asked also if the people thus oppressed desired, as I had been
assured they did, to be placed under English government? Captain
Lockitt said that he had heard the same thing; but on his way this year to
Lucknow, and conversing, as his admirable knowledge of Hindoostanee
enables him to do, familiarly with the the Suwarrs who accompanied
him, and who spoke out, like all the rest of their countrymen, on the
weakness of the King and the wickedness of the Government, he fairly
put the question to them, when the Jemautdar, joining his hands, said,
with great fervency, "Miserable as we are, of all miseries keep us from
that!"
A good word for Lucknow
It is surprising to find Hardinge, side-stepping from the long
diatribe on 'misgovernment and maladministration', bestowing some
praise on Lucknow. In above paragraph 26 Hardinge admits: "I have
come, after the perusal of the evidence, to the conclusion; that since the
present King's accession the administration has fallen into greater
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disorganisation that of late years, altho' as far as the properity of the
Capital is concerned there is no appearance of mis rule. The expenditure
of the Court is great the presence of Troops and a numerous Police
keeps the people in awe and Lucknow shows no signs of a bad
Government in the state of the steets, the Bazaars and the Public
Buildings, which are all kept in the most prefet order- and I understant
the proportion of crime, does not exceed that of Cities in our own
Provinces".
This is the first tardy admission of the Governor-General that, at
least, "as far as the prosperity of the Capital is concerned there is no
appearance of mis-rule"........"and Lucknow shows no signs of bad
Government in the state of streets, the Bazaars and the Public Buildings,
which are all kept in the most perfect order". But the most important
admission is about the Law and Order situtation. The Governor-General
unequivocally admits: / understand the proportion of crime does not
exceed that of Cities in our own Provinces". In other words. Wajid AH
Shah was a good administrator as far as Lucknow was concerned; but
the opinion the Hardinge, he was a 'hopeless imbecile' when he had to
deal with the rest of the country!
The subsequent paragraphs deal with the personal misconduct;
Treaty of 1801; Two years of grace; Interview with the King (given
above para); Secret Committee Despatch of 1838 - to be discussed later,
but here I wish to draw the attention of the reader to the following
paragraphs particularly.
In above paragraph Hardinge clearly says: "/ should strongly
deprecate any policy which would deprive the reigning family of its just
power under the Treaty of 1801. It is most desirable to maintain the
reputation of the East India Company for good faith in their transactions
with Native Princes and States-the fame of our rule is a Tower of
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strength, not only as regards our connection with the Native States of
Asia, but also with Europeans powers: and / am confident your Hon'ble
Court would repudiate any compulsory arrangements by which the
British Government could be accused by deriving a profit at the expense
of a faithful but powerless ally. No Native state has ever made greater
pecuniary and territorial sacrifices to secure British protection than the
Kingdom of Oude, and its Princes during the century have shown in
every genertion, a fidlity to the Brtish alliance which has never been
suspected. In short the sovereign by his loyality to us is entitled to every
consideration consistant with the duty which we owe to the people as
guaranteed to them by Treaty, and I can see no reason why forbearance
and generosity to the Prince, cannot be reconciled with mercy and
justice to three millions of his people."
In the above paragraph Hardinge admits the sustained loyality and
"territorial and pecuniary sacrifices" of the Rulers of Awadh to the Eash
India Company. Hardinge, as clever politician, was anxious "to maintain
the reputation of the East India Company for good faith in their
transactions with Native Princes and States". He, therefore, deprecated
"any policy which woud deprive the reigning family of its just power
under the treaty of 1801". But as a British politician, he would not
oppose the annexationist policy of his masters. He, therefore, as a
plausible excuse trots out the "duty which we owe to the people as
guaranteed to them by Treaty". How far the British themselves observed
the terms of the Treaty (of 1801) is a different story!
This clearly shows that the "Annexationist Lobby" (to be
discussed later) in London had already decided to take over the
Kingdom of Awadh. And the decision was made, if not earlier, at least
in 1847-the very year when Wajid Ali Shah ascended the throne. The
only question remained was to find ways and mans to execute the
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deicision. Hardings might have gone to Lucknow under orders from
above but he foresaw the resultant evils and raised his voice against the
step. He tried to soften the blow as much as possible.
Reliance on Shia-Sunni dissensions
The Machiavellian policy of the British administrators in India is
clearly proved by his answer to the objection that "however absolute the
necessity of our interference, our motives will be misunderstood, and we
shall be accused of usurpation by all Native States".
To the above objection Hardinge replies in above paragraph: "If
the charge of usurpation be confined to Mahomedan States and people,
and that British interference in Oude would exasperate Mussulman
bigotry and hatred, to the former answer may be added the fact that the
King's Family being of the Shiah sect is the most unpopular amongst the
great body of the Mussulmans of Hindoostan, and that in our present
state of power, even if any religious sympathy, with an incapable King
of Oude could be raised it would really not deserve our consideration,
provided the course we were pursuing be just to the people and in
confirmity with existing Treaties."
This shows that Shia-Sunni differences were exploited to the full
by the cunning British and they considered themselves safe in following
any policy, however unjust, towards the Shia rulers and Awadh.
Who knows how many unsuspecting simple-minded Muslims were
not carried away by sectarian prejudices of which some stray instances
are found in works of history, to have a fling at poor Wajid Ali Shah and
earn a reward from their Brtish masters besides the hope of some
recompense in the World to come!
Polical Inconvenience
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Another reason for extinguishing this Muslim Kingdom, given by
Hardinge in paragraph 35 is as follows:
"The Policy of maintaining a Mahomedan Dynasty and
Government in Oude, situated, as that Kingdom is, so far inland, is fully
admitted-whilst on the other hand, nothing could me more inconvenient
than to increase the importance and the power of the Mussulman
population in the North-West Frontier, and on the Indus, bringing us
into close contact with the Mussulman Tribes of Central Asia, by the
only enterance, through all the invasions of India have been made".Z
The Governor-General was encouraged to interface directly as he
was convinced that "the occassion is favourable, and the power of the
Government ample, to correct any error which may unintentionally be
committed".
RESUME OF THE ABOVE PARAGRAPHS
After carefully perusing the above Despatch of 2 nd December,
1847, we find that Lord Hardinge followed the old principle of divide et
impera:
(1) Hindu-Muslim feelings (Aboveparagraph)
He has tried to excite the Hindu-Muslim feelings by referring to
"the destruction of Hindu Temples on false reports".
(2) Shia-Sunni differences (Above paragraph)
In above given paragraph he has also tried to show that "the
King's Family being of the Shiah sect is the most unpopular amongst the
great body of the Mussulmans of Hindoostan, and, that in our present
state of power, even if any religious smpathy with an incapable King of
Oude could be raised, it would be really not deserve our consideration".
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Hardinge was sure that even if injustice was done to the King of
Oude the Mussulmans were too divided among themselves, by sectarian
prejudices, to combine for his cause; and even if they did, "in our
present state of Power.... it would really not deserve our consideration".
(3) Grievances of Sepoy pensioners (Aboveparagraph)
As for the Hindu subjects of Wajid Ali Shah, the Governor-
General had already mentioned "the destruction of Hindoo temples on
false reports" but to make it doubly sure that anti-Muslim feelings were
raised to the highest pitch, the Governor-General refers to the neglect of
cases of Sepoy Pensioners who were mostly Hindus. In above given
paragraph, he says: "there are in round numbers, 16,000 of our Pesioners
residing within the Oude territory entitled to
British protection.............Their grievances and the imputed
neglect of the British Government in affording them protection..........are
calculated...........to lower the confidence of the solidiery in the power of
the British Government to protect their families against Mussulman
oppression".
(4) Protection of Bengal Army Sepoys (Above paragarph)
One more reason has been added, by Hardinge, for annexing
Awadh viz., the duty of the British Government to protect Sepoy
Pensioners of the Bengal Army, residing in Awadh, and "their families
against Mussulman Oppression".
(5) King's weakness & misconduct
As for Wajid Ali Shah, the less said about him the better!
Hardinge says"
(a) Above para: "During the last eight months since the King's accession
to the throne in February 1847, that I have had great reason to be
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dissatisfied with the manner in which the Government of the country has
been carried on; and that much of the evil complained of is attributable
to the weakness of character and misconduct of the King".
Singer & Dancers (Above given para)
(b) Above para: "It became evident shortly after His Majesty came to the
Throne that his authority was not exercised through his Minister, but
through the influence of Singing and Dancing men with whom his
Majesty passes the greater portion of his time".
King's low companions (Above given para)
(c) Above para: "The Resident in a letter of May 1847 suggested the
propriety of my addressing a letter to the King recommending His
Majesty to attend to the advice of the Resident and to avoid the low
companions by whom he was surrounded...I declined to do so by letter"
(This was after the incident of Ameen-ud-daulah, when Wajid Ali Shah
rejected the 'advice' of the Resident to reinstate him as the Minister).
King "given up to debauchery"
(d) Above para: "It was evident that the King's Government had during
the last eight month since his father's death, rapidly declined in public
estimation and in the power to enforce obedience, and that this change
was chiefly to be attributed to the weakness and contempt felt for a
Ruler who was known to be given up to debauchery and governed by the
disreputable men."
State of the country worse
(e) Above para: "...............the evidence is sufficiently strong to leave no
doubt that the state of the country since February 1847 is in a much
worse condition than when Mr. Dadivdson made his Report in May
1846, which upon the whole was of a satisfactory character".
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People in "most abject wretchedness"
(f) Above para: "............Nevertheless as regards the interior of the
country, every report is clear and consistent that the people are in a state
of the most abject wretchedness and under an incapable Ruler there is no
hope or chance of recovery.....there can be no doubt that the interests of
three millions of people, whom the British Government is bound protect,
ought not to be sacrificied out of consideration for a Prince, whose
authority and dignity we are anxious to up-hold, but whose personal
misconduct is in a great degree the cause of the evil complained of."
Supreme power should be with Resident
(g) (h) Above para: "I do not think the present King, or his Minister, has
the energy and ability to reform abuses and secure good Government in
Oude by Native Agency. If in the course of the next year.... the state of
the country should become worse, I am of opinion no system will suceed
which does not entrust the Supreme Power to a British Resident assisted
by British Agents, controlling every Department of the State."
The 'Period of Grace'
Much has been made of the 'period of Grace' (two years) given by
Hardinge to the King "in the attempt to rescue the country from its
degraded condition".
In order to grasp the full significance of this magnanimous gesture
(the 'Period of Grace'), let us read above paragraph a bit carefully.
Above paragraph: "Under this conviction that British inteference
would shortly become inevitable, I drew up the Memorandum addressed
to the King. In that Paper I assured His Majesty that the British
Government would give him and his Minister a fair trial, in the attempt
to rescue the country from its degraded condition and every possible
assistance in carrying the Minister's measures into effect. I deemed it
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prudent to specify the period of two years, because within that period
the succes or failure of the attempt could be ascertained, affording time
to the Government of India during the interval te collect further
ezidence of the state of country and to devise such remediel measures as
the case may require."
Hardinge was clear in his mind and it was his "conviction" that
"British interference would shortly become inevitable". It was simply to
afford "time to the Government of India during the interval to collect
furtehr evidence of the state of the country and to devise such remedial
measures as the case may require."
But what could have stopped Hardings from annexing the country
rightway and saving "the people (who) are in a state of the most abject
wretchedness and under an incapable Ruler"?
Reason behind the Period of Grace
The real reason behind the magnimous gesture, which stayed
Harding's hand, was that the Governor-General was convinced that the
war-clouds in the Punjab had not cleared away and, very soon, there
would be a bloody contest with the Sikhs again. The treaties (of Lahore
and Bhairowal) of 1846 had humbled the Sikhs but not crushed them.
Writing the above Despatch on December 2, 1847, Hardinge knew that
the Britishers would be involved, very shortly, in a life-and-death
struggle with the Sikhs. He depended on the province of'Oudh, the
nursery of soldiers' for its man-power to carry the Union Jack to Punjab
and therefore, by announcing the 'Two Years of Grace', he gained two
objects; he gained breathing time for the final contest in the Punjab. And
as he knew that there was not evidence against Wajid AM Shah, he
afforded an opportunity to his successor, Lord Dalhousie, to collect
'grievances' against the Government of the country, rake up old decided
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cases of the Sepoy pensioners or trumped up cases to give a bad name to
Wajid Ali Shah and his government. Events proved that Hardings was
correct in his prognosis. Dalhousie reached Calcutta on January 12,
1848, and by April he was involved in the Multan incident which led to
the Second Sikh War and on "the 29 th March, 1849, his Lordship issued a
proclamation tolling the death-knell of the Sikh Raj".
Hardinge must have discussed the Awadh case with Dalhousie
who took charge on January 12, 1848, while Hardinge left on 18 th
January 1848. They were together for 6 days and must have discussed
the future action regarding this province.
We find that Dalhousie, like on obedient pupil, acted on the
advice suggested by Hardinge that the two years 'Period of Grace' should
be utilised by the Government of India in collecting "further evidence of
the state of the country and to device such remedial measure as the case
may require".
Intentional vagueness
As regards Memorandum given to the King, Hardinge says:
Above para: "I have endeavoured to word the Memorandum as not
to compromise, the future action of the Government of India. In
substance it carries into effect the intentions of the Home Authorities,
that on any failure in His Majesty's duty, he should be solemnly warned
of the consequence he may entail upon himself by a systematic neglect
of the Resident's advice, to which he is bound by Treaty to
conform..........
Despatch to assume direct management
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"A period of sixteen years has elapsed since Lord William
Bentinck addressed Your Hon'ble Court", continues Hardinge, "and
received a discretionary power to assume the direct management of
affairs in Oude by your despatch of the 16 th July 1834. That despatch
appears to me to provide for any serious case of necessity which may
arise, justifyin British interference and to contain a very full and clear
expositoin of the measures which ought to be adopted".
After reading the above paragraph it is clear that Lord Hardinge
kept the language of the Memorandum vague so as "not to compromise
the future action of the Government of India" and further that "it carries
into effect the intentions of the Home Authorities".
Those who blame Wajid Ali Shah for inability, inefficiency,
neglect of administration due to engrossing devotion to the Muses and
what not, of course taking the cue from the British propagandists, would
be shocked to know that the course of action regarding the Kingdom of
Awadh was decided and communicated to the Indian Authorities as far
back as 1834, i.e. thirteen years before Wajid Ali Shah came to the
throne!
Annexation delayed by King's death
The next above paragraph deals with the Court of Directors'
despatch of 11 th April 183 8 and the Secret Committee's communication
of 10 th April. They will be discussed later along with other despatches
and treaties.
Above para: "If apprehensions be entertained that our direct interference
will do more harm than good to the people whom we mean to assist, I
must observe that our interference has on several occasions been found
most beneficial in correcting the abuses which the Subsidiary, or double
system of Government, may be assumed to have entailed in Native
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States-and that the reform of a positive and grievous evil ought to be
neglected, when the occasion is favourable, and the power of the
Government ample, to correct any error may unintentionally be
committed."
Hardinge thus admits that there abuses in the Subsidiary System
forced on Indian Princes by Wellesley. Hardinge, very naively, suggests
that the abuses of the Subsidiary Alliance have been corrected by "our
interfernce" and, therefore, is should be resorted to.
It seems that after 'making out a case for the annexation of the
country1 under orders from the Court of Directors, Hardinge had some
qualms of conscience; and as he could not silence the 'Inner Voice', he
blurted out the real truth, and nothing but the truth.
In above paragraph of the Despatch, Hardinge unequivocally
admits:
"If the evidence of the misrule in Oude were stronger and more
specific than that contained in the annexed Documents, I should
nevertheless have considered it an indispensable act of justice not to
have held the King responsible for the abuses which had grown up under
His Majesty's predecessors".
Nothing could be more clear and authoritative in wiping out the
stains of abuses with which the fair name of Wajid Ali Shah has been, so
far, unjustly tarnished than the above explicity written verdict of Lord
Hardinge himself, who Two years' Period of Grace, has so much been
made of by Dalhousie and the British propagandists. Hardinge calls it
"an indispensable act of justice not to have held the King responsible for
the abuses which had grown up under His Majesty's predecessors".
Wajid Ali Shah's name has become, thanks to British propaganda,
synonymous with misrule, oppression, debauchery etc. We must be
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thankful to Hardinge for being honest enough, at least for once, for
raising the curtain from British official policy and revealing the truth.
No better evidence can be adduced to hold Wajid All Shah 'not
guilty' at the bar of public opinion.
Lord Hardinge in the last paragraph of this most important
Despatch suggests the fatuer programme for the benefit of his successor.
The details that have been left out this pulic document must have been
discussed, in the light of the retiring Governor-General's experience,
during the last six days (from 12 th January to 18 th January 1848) when
Hardinge was with Dalhousie in Calcutta:
Above para: "I am in daily expectation of receiving the King's answer,
which will probably not require the Government of India to issue any
orders before the end of this month; at the same time it appears to me
essential in the present condition of the Country that no time should be
lost in employing competent persons in the course of this autumn to
traverse the country under instructions from the Resident, in order to
obtain the most accurate information of the real state of the Ryots and of
the agriculture. The next year will probably disclose whether any and
what further it may be expedient to adopt."
The most important points to be noted in this paragraph are that
Hardinge chalks out the following programme for the benefit of
Dalhousie, the succeeding Governor-General. He suggests that
(1) Dalhousie should employ "competent persons in the course of this
autumn to traverse the country under instructions from the Resident, in
order to obtain the most accurate information of the real state of the
Ryots and of the agriculture". Hardinge further suggests that
(2) "The next year will probably disclose whether any and what further
measures it may be expedient to adopt"
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So here we have the future course charted out for Dalhousie. Who
were the "competent persons" employed to "obtain the most accurate
information of the real state of the Ryots", and why Awadh was annexed
in 1856 and not in 1849, as suggested by Hardinge, are questions to be
dealth with in the next chapter wherein we will examine the
administration of Dalhousie and the methods followed by him in
painting the subcontinent red.
THE MARQUIS OF DALHOUSIE (1848-1856) The new Governor-
General
Before we proposed any further let us try to understand the
character and temperament of this highest functionary of the East India
Company in India. "The native of Scotland bearing the surname of
Ramsay but better known as Lord Dalhousie, was the last maker of the
British Indian Empire proper, for after him no other portion of India has
been dyed red.
"The Scotch nobleman was unscrupulous in the extreme", says
Major Basu "and he believed, as an Occidental diplomatist and follower
of Machiavelli that the end justifies the meas. But perhaps he is not so
much to be blamed as his masters, whose faithful though unscrupulous
servant he was ".
"One of his successors in the Governor-Generalship of India- a
compatriot of his enjoying the name of Earl Elgin, and did not hesitate
to declare from his place, in the Supreme Legislative Council of India
that the representative of the Sovereign of England in India has no
policy of his own but has to act upon the 'mandate' he receives from the
Secretary of State for
India..........If we remember this theory of the 'mandate', we shall
be able to understand the land grabbing policy of the period during
which Dalhousie was the Governor-General of this country".
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Dalhousie's Ex-convict uncle
As luck would have it, "Unfortunately for India, the man charged
with the porfolio, of Indian affairs during Lord Dalhousie's Governor-
Generalship, writes Major, Basu, "was an ex-convict and an
unscrupulous politician who, before being ennobled as Lord Boughton,
was known as Sir John Hobhouse. Regarding Habbousse's antecedents, it
is recorded by an English historian that he was a man of ability but
wanting in discretion, who had once been imprisoned for breach of
privilege. The Ex-convict Hobhouse......was an unch of Dalhousie".
About Dalhousie's temperament and conviction, says Smith:
"He believed, that the promotion of civilization meant the
promotion ol western reforms that western administration and western
institutions were as superior to Indian as Western arms had proved more
potent...........His temperament suited his convictions and combined with
the growing self-confidence of the British in India to impart a certain
arrogance to official benevolecne and a certain hardness to the tone of
the government. The consiousness of conquest competed with the sense
of moral mission and increasingly combined with the latter to produe a
sense of ingrained superiority. The old sense of caution and humility in
the presence of the problems of a subcontinent was now submerged in
the flood of military success, and by the self-confidence of a people who
believed that their civilization was superior to all others in actual
achievements, and by virtue of its discovery of the secret of progress,
increasing its lead year by year. .......
Dalhousie's guiding principle
"When Dalhousie arrived," continues Smith, "misgovernment was
more widespread and humanitarian opinion stronger than ever
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before Dalhousie believed that Brisith administration was immensely
better than the contemporary India; he regarded states as obsolete in the
new India he envisaged, and he was very sensitive to the charge of
princely misgovernment, which he considered a slur on the name of
British rule in India..... His predecessors had acted on the principle of
avoiding annexation if it could be avoided. Dalhousie acted on the
general principle of annexing if he could do so legitimately."
Dalhousie and his wife reached Calcutta on January 12, 1848.
"The contrast between the new Governor-General and the departing one
was very striking. The one was the veteran hero of a hundred battles,
who had grown old in his Sovereign's serive, and who was new eager to
retire, if he could be permitted to do so, into the quiet of private life.
The other, in the prime of manhood, the youngest man who had yet
undertaken the responsibility of a Government such as that of the Indian
Empire; but full of projects for its benefit, and anticipations of peaceful
progress. The personal contrast between the two was equally striking.
Both were of rather short stature; but, while one was grey and worm
from length of honourable service, the other had a fresh and youthful
look, with an aristocratic and even haughty bearing, and a manner which
showed that he was not to be lightly trifled with or opposed. The two
spent nearly a week together, and the Governor-General had the
advantage of hearing from Lord Hardinge's own lips his views and
impressions of public affairs, and it is pleasing to learn from the son of
the latter than their discussions led to a satisfactory concurrence
ofopnion.
The above extract has been quoted in extenso to understand the
man who was now selected has been objects of the Court of Directors. It
is also clear that the discussions between Dalhousie and Hardinge, for a
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week, "led to a satisfactory concurrence of opinion". So, no change in
policy could be expected.
Having peeped into the mind of Dalhousie and knowing his
temperament, convictions and the guiding principle, it is easy to follow
his triumphal march against the Indian states.
Three "planks" of annexation
"The first part of his annexation policy was the doctrine of
Lapse.......
The second plank, as it were, in Dalhousie's annexation platform
was misgovernment.... The third plank of the annexation platform was
the abolition of titular sovereignties which Dalhosie regarded as
absolete.
Armed with these self-evolved "planks of annexation" Dalhousie
started his campaign of swallowing up the Indian states from one end of
the country to the other. The first to be gobbled up was the Hindu state
of Satara:
But we note here about Dalhousie's annexation desire of Awadh
which is concerned to my own 'Topic'.
AWADH (1856)
Dalhousie having disposed of states and claims was now ready for
the final pounce, "his Waterloo-the crowning victory of annexation".
It will be shown, later, that Dalhousie had an eye on "Awadh'
from the day he set his foot on the Indian soil. The cupidity of the
Scotch was stirred by the fertile country and a full Treasury. As for
rulers of the Kingdom of Awadh, let us quote Major-General Sir John
Low, a member of Dalhousie's own Supreme Council at Calcutta:
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"It will be admitted, I think", writes Major-General Low, "that I
have had good opportunistic of knowing the real characters of those five
Princes, when I state the fact that I have been personally acqainted with
them all, and that, with three of them, I have been very intimataly
acquainted, and have transacted much public business with those three
Princes, in the course of the eleven years that I held the office of
Resident at Lucknow.
"So much has been published in newspapers respecting real and
alleged misrule in Oude, during the last thirty years, with no one to
write on the opposite side, or explain misstatements, and it is, moreover,
so frequent a habit on the part of many of my countrymen who have
never sojourned in native States, to lay the blame of all acts of violence
that occur in those States on the individual native Ruler at the head of it,
that it has occasionally happened, to my positie knowledge, that the
Kings of Oude have been spoken of in English society as merciless
tyrants over their own subjects, and as men who had no feeling of
gratitude for the protection, or the forbearance, of the British
Government.
"Now, that sort of language is positively untrue, as regards every
one of the last five Kings' they have sadly mismanaged their own affairs,
I admit; and I also admit fully that it has become quite necessary to
deprive them of all political power; but their general conduct towards
us, both as useful public allies of our Government, and as individual
Princes conducting business in a regular, attentive, courteous, and
friendly manner with our public functionaries, has been unusually and
praiseworthy; and we have gained so many solid advantages from that
conduct on the part of those Kings, that, in my opinion, the present King
(if he shall sign the Treaty we propose to him), and his heirs and
successors after him, are well entitled to most libeal treatment in a
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pecuniary point of view, after we shall have deprived them of the power,
and dignity, and freedom, and wealth, which heretofore have belonged
to their position as Sovereigns of Oude".
General Low' testimony
No better testimony could be adduced than that of General Low,
who has been for eleven years Resident at Lucknow, about the character
and conduct of the "last five Kings" i.e. Ghazi-ud-deen Haider (1814-
1827); Naseer-ud-deen Haider (1827-1837); Muhammad Ali Shah
(1837-1842); Amjad Ali Shah (1842-1847) and Wajid Ali Shah (1847-
1856).
The long, velifying campaign agaisnt the rulers of Awadh was
carried on with so much zeal and persistence that people not conversant
with the mysteries of British diplomacy began to believe all the half-
truths and falsehoods dished out by the Government machinery for
public consumpsion. General Low clearly asserts that "So much has
been published in newspapers respecting real and alleged misrule in
Oude, during the last thirty years, with no one to write on the oppsite
side, or explain misstatements... that the Kings of Oude have been
spoken of in English society as merciless tyrants over their own
subjects.......".
"That sort of language is positively untrue" says General Low, "as
regards every one of the last five Kings.........their general conduct
towards us, both as useful public allies of our Government, and as
individual Princes conducting business in a regular, attentive, courteous,
and friendly manner with our public functionaires, has been unsually
meritorious and praiseworthy".
This was the considered opinionof Genral Low about Wajid Ali
Shah, besdies the otehr four Kings, while writing the "Note A, dated
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August 15, 1855," to his Minute on Oude, Affairs, as a member of Lord
Dalhousie's Supreme Council at Calcutta. It becomes all the more
important when we learn that this Note of Low's was submitted to the
Court of Directors along with "the Minutes of the members of the
Council at Calcutta on the Minute recorded by the Governor-General".
After this unbiased evidence of personal knowledge, recorded by
General Low and corroborated by other independent witnesses, Wajid
Ali Shah should have been exonerated of the charges, generally of
'maladministration' and "alleged misrule in Oude", but we find that he
was not only deposed but his country was annexed. And in order to
conceal the enormity of the guilt the character of Wajid Ali Shah has
been besmirched as much as possible.
Unlike Delhi, Agra and Jaipur, Lucknow was an un-walled town
that expanded along the banks of the river. It had neither the formal
avenues of Shahjahanabad, nor a Jama Mas)id dominating the skyline.
The Nawabs and the Europeans raised buildings in no apparent order
(Blom-field, 1992). Llewellyn-Jones (chapter 3) describes the
architecture of Nawab Asaf-ud-Daula and his successors after 1775—not
of marble and sandstone, but stucco and gilt, as attractive without being
awesome. This 'baroque' architecture could be described as post-modern,
for its catholic borrowing of styles ranged even more widely than the
provenances of the various courtiers. The grand Rumi Darwaza was a
copy of a gateway at Istanbul, while the facades of some palaces
reminded Fanny Parks of Naples and Rome (Parks, 1850, 1: 184).
Between 1775 and 1856, the successive riverside palace-complexes—the
Macchi Bhawan, the Daulat Khana and the Chattar Manzil—were
supplemented by a formal garden-complex (Kaiserbagh) and a
ceremonial street (Hazratganj). But as early as the end of the eighteenth
century, the distinctive architectural feature of Lucknow, the Imambaras
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(ceremonial halls used during Mohurram) had been built. The French
merchant-soldier, Claude Martin, was engaged in the construction of
Constantia, the mansion which became his.mausoleum (Llewellyn-Jones,
1985 and 1992), The British Residency was built as soon as the capital
was moved to Lucknow, in 1775 and was located, with the Nawab's
friendly acquiescence, not at a distance but very near the first pa lace-
complex, the Machhi Bhawan (1766). In 1857 it was Indian rebels who
Beesieged (but could not capture) the Residency, in contrast with Delhi,
where it was British forces that Beesieged the walled city
(Shahjahanabad) which was held by the rebels. The overall result of the
architectural experiments was to produce a surprisingly beautiful city.
Bishop Heber found Lucknow more impressive than Moscow, and
William Russell found time to admire it even in the tense days of 1858,
before so much of it was destroyed. The mood typically depicted was
that of a city at dusk, when the lights shone out. 'We were delighted with
the place and the scene altogether—the time being even ing, and the
streets crowded with natives' (Parks, 1850 I: 179). In Hindustani people
spoke of subah-e-Banaras, shaam-e-Awadh and shab-e-Malwa (the
morning light of Benaras, the evening light of Lucknow, and the beauty
of night in Malwa).
The development of Lucknow as a prime centre of baroque
architecture continued, remarkably unaffected by the political
vicissitudes through which Awadh passed. In 1764, the East India
Company's troops had defeated a coalition which included the Nawab
along with the Mughal Emperor who, by a bizarre reversal of roles, had
been made the Nawab's protege. From then, the East India Company
made frequent demands on the Nawab. Later, in 1801, a humiliating
treaty was forced on Awadh, by which the Nawab ceded still more
territory and became a 'subsidiary' of the Company (Fisher, 1987;
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Chapter -II
Mukherjee, 1982). The final coup de gracewzs to come in 1856, when
Awadh was annexed and the Nawab deposed. In the same period, the
Mughal capital, Delhi, also underwent successive crises. The Afghans
defeated the Mughal-Maraiha armies near Delhi in .1761. After a brief
exile in Allahabad, the Mughal Emperor returned to his capital but had
to rule with the Maratha chief, Scindia, standing behind his throne. In
1803 the Company's forces defeated another Mughal-Maratha army on
the east bank of the Yamuna across from Delhi; the Emperor entered
perforce into an alliance which put him under the control of the local
British Resident. Viceroy Dalhousie intended the Mughal dynasty to
come to an end when the Emperor Bahadur Shah died. Delhi would have
had the same fate as Lucknow had the Revolt of 1857 not intervened.
When conditions at the court of Delhi deteriorated, poets, artists
and craftsmen left for alternative centres of patronage like the relatively
sheltered Lucknow, which could offer asylum and appreciation. As a
result 'Nawabi' Lucknow developed a distinctive culture, unforgettably
delineated by the novelist Abdul Halim Sharar (1860-1926), who spent
his youth in the company of the sons of Wajid Ali Shah, the last Nawab,
in their exile in Calcutta (Sharar, 1975).
More than the city's compellingly beautiful appearance, it was a
rich culture that made Lucknow distinctive, and gave a special meaning
to the adjective Lakhnavu used pejoratively, this term suggests
foppishness, fastidiousness, mannerist behaviour, reflected in costume
and over-elaborate etiquette—the idle preoccupations of a powerless
aristocracy with a surfeit of enforced leisure (Premchand, 1978). In
today's frazzled urban landscape, there is something soothing and
agreeable about this lifestyle, even if we can enjoy it only vicariously,
by reading about it.
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Lucknow's culture was shaped equally by men and women. In
general women of aristocratic families enjoyed positions of dignity at
the court. Several among them commanded great wealth, which they
spent on works of charity or religious rituals. The role of the Begums of
the Nawabi family in reinforcing Shia ceremonial (Juan Cole, chapter 5)
anticipated Begum Hazrat Mahal, another woman of great will-power
who controlled Lucknow in the difficult days of 1857-58 (Mukherjee,
1984). The courtesans too shaped much of the culture of Lucknow. The
term is particularly appropriate since it was the connection with the
court which enabled them to develop their skills in music and dance,
while their counterparts in Orissa and Tamilnadu refined techniques of
dance under the auspices of the temples. The Lucknow tawaif survived
with some difficulty the onslaught of Victorian morality in the later
nineteenth century (Oldenburg, chapter 8). Carefully trained in social
graces and confident in their ability to set fashions in dress and
accessories, they helped to develop music and dance forms, and even
influenced the spoken language. The quarter known as the Chowk was
associated with them, and they owned considerable properties. They
served as a link between town and country, and were able to build
bridges between Hindus and Muslims, between the Awadhi and Urdu
languages, and between the bhakticults (particularly that of Krishna) and
Shi'ism. Unlike the aristocratic Begums of the court, the courtesans were
usually girls who had been kidnapped from the countryside and brought
to Lucknow (Ruswa, 1961). Their training supplemented the skills of the
innumerable music-groups the rulers patronised, ranging from minstrels,
to those who sang in the Tansen tradition, from kathaks to classical
musicians (Kippen, chapter 11; Neuman, 1980, and Wajid Ali Shah's
own plays and writings on music). The formative period of modern
Hindustani music was the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.
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Chapter -II
Lucknow was synonymous with music in the same way as were Dharwar
and Tanjore in the south of India. The courts of these towns provided
points of intersection between cultural zones as well as between urban
and oral traditions. The gharanas of Lucknow are legendary, and first
impressions of the town were as mucli oral as visual. 'From all parts of
the old town, we heard, the sound of music and the jingle of anklets'
wrote Ashu Chattopadhyaya (1993), describing his arrival in, Lucknow
at dusk on a day in 1938.
After the Revolt of 1857 was quelled, the Nawab's family was 'de -
ported' to Matia Burj in Calcutta, where together with their entourage,
they-.created a vivid mini-Lucknow, replete with musical traditions
(shreepantha). A bizarre side-result was that Lucknow's khayal and
thumri were exported to Trinidad when some of these exiles opted for a
more distant exile. Although they departed as indentured labourers, they
stubbornly refused to do manual labour, since they were 'artistes'
(Samaroo, forthcoming). The preoccupation of the Nawabs with music,
dance and the Krishna cult exasperated officers like William Sleeman,
who saw in it only 'intrigue', corruption, depravity and neglect of duty
and abuse of authority (Sleeman, quoted in Penible, 1977: 97). Urdu,
which had evolved principally in Hyderabad and Delhi, was the court
language at Lucknow. In the days before printing, poetry was
'performed' for an audience. When political crises left Delhi poets bereft
of patronage, they-migrated to Lucknow. The unhappy Mir Taqi Mir and
Sauda are the best known. Sauda went to Lucknow in 1770 and lived
there till his death in 1781; Mir was invited by the Nawab in 1775 and
remained in Lucknow, all the while pining for Delhi, till he died in
1810. The ruins of Shahjahanabad were ten times better than Lucknow.
Oh that I had stayed there to die; not come to live distracted here
(Haque, 1992; Russell and Islam, 1969). Like most of the Mughal rulers,
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the Nawabs themselves were enthusiastic amateur poets, able to
commandeer the help of gifted ustads. Lakhnavi Urdu became a
distinctive tongue (Nairn and Petievich, chapter 10).
Another distinctive feature of Lucknow was its Shia culture. In
number the Shias were a minority amongst Sunnis and Hindus, but they
were more visible and, until 1856, dominant at the court. Shia scholars
in Lucknow had close links with seminaries in Iran, thus reinforcing the
early link. But this did not mean that the Shias went intolerant of others.
The Nawabs were cordial to Hindus and Sunnis, and the Shia
ceremonials, particularly Mohurram, were shared by all communities
(Hasan, chapter 7). Reminiscent of medieval munazara (public debates)
at Baghdad and Sikri were the munazara between Christian preachers
and Muslims at the court of the Nawab, with the British Resident in
attendance, in 1833 (Powell, 1993).
Even though the Nawabs were controlled by the East India Company,
Lucknow was luckier than Delhi in that it was never 'invaded' or
ravaged. It was also fortunate in that it did not become a deserted town
after being affected with the blight of military defeat, in 1801 (as had
Siraj-ud-Daula's Murshidabad and Tipu Sulran's Srirangapattanam
around that time). The Revolt of 1857 took many people by surprise
(Nilsson and Gupta, 1992). But soon after it began, and certainly after it
was crushed, the British were quite convinced that Lucknow had brought
her troubles on herself, and deserved punishment. Even over a century
after the event, Pemble could write, with Old Testament severity. So
Lucknow, Babylon of India, lay prostrate before her vanquishers,
condemned to a chastisement doubly severe now that she had added the
sin of defiance to those of luxury and vice (Pemble, 1977:230; also see
Farrell, 1985). The culture of me court was described as dissolute, and
the very architecture that only a few years earlier had been admired, was
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labelled decadent. The retribution was on a truly awful scale, wholly
disproportionate to the offence. To British contemporaries, however, it
seemed that justice was being done, so traumatised were they by the
long drawn-out siege (Pouchepadass, chapter 6). As in Delhi and
Kanpur, the people of Lucknow were to be made to realise how terrible
had been their 'crime'. There were mass hangings. As in Delhi, residents
watched helplessly as a great swathe was cut through their city, and the
cantonment was relocated from north of the river to the southwest
(Oldenburg, 1984; Gupta, 1981). Many palaces and many areas were
bulldozed, and many individuals reduced to penury.
But no town can be destroyed, unless it is uprooted or levelled to
the ground. The Chowk still meant a great deal to the people of
Lucknow. As for music and dance, its artistes found patrons in the
taluqdars who were now the new elite (Oldenburg, 1984). The town was
bisected by a railway line. The plaster Indo-Saracenic Charbagh railway
station was the Public Works Department's contribution to Lucknow's
architectural wealth. Hazratganj became a fashionable European-style
shopping precinct (see Ahmad, chapter 15, on the joys of 'gunj-ing, akin
to New Delhi's 'Going to C.P.', i.e. Connaught Place). Very similar
changes occurred at the same time and for the same reasons in post-
Revolt Delhi. Both towns were 'disgraced' by being officially reduced to
the status of mofussil. Half a century later, in 1912, Delhi recovered its
importance when the capital was transferred there. Lucknow replaced
Allahabad as the capital of the United Provinces in 1920, thanks to
energetic canvassing by Sir Harcourt Butler. While Baker and Lutyens
were designing the city of New Delhi, Butler concentrated not on
building another urban complex, but on planning the development of
Lucknow for the next fifty years (Robinson, chapter 12). He had the
privilege of receiving help from the planner Patrick Geddes, whose
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services at the time were in great demand in many Indian towns. In the
1920s, the Legislative Council Chamber (its architect was A. V.
Lanchester, an associate of Geddes), and the Courts, as well as the
University (made possible by contributions from the taluqdars) were
built. One wonders whether Asaf-ud-Daula would have admired these
buildings. 'New Lucknow', like 'New Delhi', created a new snobbery, but
because the two areas were not separate, as in the case of Delhi, the
'Nawabi' and the British areas did have considerable interaction.
In the aftermath of'the Revolt of 1857 poets and writers connected
with the erstwhile Awadh court had good reason to mourn the eclipse of
their benefactors. Recalcitrant rajas and Nawabs., some of whom had
revolted against the British and were consequently humbled, bemoaned
the passing of an era. The ulama and the mashaikh spent sleepless nights
worrying about the future of Islamic tenets in a society dominated by
Western ideas and institutions. (Such apprehensions had, in fact, led
Maulvi Fazl-i-Haq Khairabadi, a reputed scholar, to take part in the
1857 revolt).
It is hard to imagine anyone in Lucknow or its environs not being
influenced by colonial rule or by the effects of the Great Western Trans -
mutation. Some were haunted by the prospect of Western thought
undermining the moral and spiritual basis of their society. They had no
cause to celebrate Great Britain's political hegemony in an area that had
broadly remained insulated from the changes taking place in parts of
Eastern and Western India. But most were prepared, albeit grudgingly,
to make the colonial government work, seek adjustments within existing
institutions and secure benefits from the newly-created administrative
and bureaucratic structures. They were inclined to arrive at a workable
modus vivendi with the new rulers and carve out new channels of as -
pirations and spiritual creativity. Hence the growth of schools and col -
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leges, the bold steps taken by some forward looking Muslim
personalities (Minault, chapter 9), the incentive to join the 'heaven
born1, and the clamour for a share in decision-making bodies.
The Nadwat al-ulama, founded in 1894, symbolised this spirit of
compromise. Its founder, Shibli Nomani, was sensitive to the winds of
change and chose Lucknow as the locale for synthesising the traditional
system of learning with Western methods. The Firangi Mahal, also in
Lucknow and a reputed centre of Islamic education, reflected the same
spirit of compromise. The traditional ulama maintained their eclectic
character and refused to be drawn into sectarian conflict (Hasan, chapter
7). Maulana Abdul Bari, heir to Firangi Mahal's lively intellectual
traditions, played a crucial part in fostering a Congress-Muslim League
entente during the Khilafat and Non-Cooperation movements.
By the turn of the century, there remained a few hard nuts to
crack. But the colonial government thwarted their challenge through
conciliation and compromise and a policy of balance and rule between
what they conceived as the two great communities, the Hindu and the
Muslim. Members of landed families and of service communities,
principally Kayasthas and Kashmiri Pandits, were integrated into the
extensive ad-ministrative apparatus with Lucknow as the focal point.
Traders and commercial men vastly benefitted from the infrastructure
created to serve imperial interests. They turned to Lucknow for
inspiration and -legitimacy, though the changing fortunes of Lucknow
(traced by Reeves, chapter 13) culminated in its formal recognition as
the state capital only in 1947.
Lucknow was, as Robinson underlines (chapter 12), a great centre
of landed power. In 1900, the taluqdars numbered well over 250, con -
trolled two-thirds of the territory of Awadh and realised one-sixth of the
toral revenue of the province. Their position was fortified by a series of
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legislative enactments. But not for long. The stormy peasant unrest in
the early 1920s, organised by the Kisan Sabhas and the Congress in U.
P., was a warning signal to the complacent rajas and Nawabs who
presided over their durbars with scant regard for the impoverished raiyat
(peasant) and the mounting dissatisfaction in their own taluqdaris. James
Meston and Harcourt Butler, chief architects of a pro-landlord policy in
U.P. alerted them to the dangers. But they were unmoved and paid no
heed to their warnings.
In die 1930s, the Congress movement, having accorded high
priority to the agrarian agenda, systematically eroded the economic and
political base of the taluqdars. The landlords' party was routed in the
1937 elections. The message embodied in the U.P. Tenancy Ace of 1939
was loud and clear. The disappearance of the zamindari system in 1951
stripped the large landlords of the bulk of their estates and awarded the
land to the cultivators.
Not many shed tears over the collapse of an exploitative land
system. The Awadh taluqdars, as also their counterparts in Western
U.P., lost their raison d'etre in a society that was rapidly changing under
the influence of mass politics, the gradual -introduction of adult
suffrage, the emergence of'new classes' poised to stake their political
and economic claims, and the political awakening in the countryside.
The kisan agitations generated, often independently of the Congress,
unprecedented consciousness among the peasants and sensitized them to
the inequities of the system to which they were subjected. The Gandhian
movements, starting with the Rowlatt Satyagraha in 1919, infused
confidence in the kisan's ability to protest, agitate and eventually
undermine the exploitative land system as well as the authority of its
beneficiaries.
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The eclipse of the taluqdars, many of whom had built their
palaces, havelis and imambaras in Lucknow and flirted with the British
India Association or the National Agriculturist Party, did not
substantially influence the political currents in Lucknow and its
neighbouring districts. Lucknow had, after all, served as the venue of
important national gatherings, especially those connected with the
Congress, and the centre of several critical agitations. The protest
against Anthony Macdonnel's Nagri resolution (April 1900), which
triggered off the Hindi-Urdu controversy in North .India, was
masterminded in Lucknow. The historic Congress-Muslim League
session was held at Baradari in December 1916 and was hosted by the
Raja of Mahmudabad, one of the early supporters of the Home Rule
movement and a patron of Raja Ghularn Husain, editor of New Era,
Syed Wazir Hasan, lawyer-politician with nationalist leanings, and
Choudhrry Khaliquzzaman, an up-coming lawyer linked with the Nehru
household. The Raja also played host to Annie Besant, Tej Bahadur
Sapru and Motilal Nehru at Mahmudabad House in Qaiser Bagh.
Finally, the presiding genius of the pan-Islamic enterprises lived
in Firangi Mahal, playing host to Gandhi, the Alt brothers and other
Congress leaders and devising plans to mount pressure on the
government to redress the Muslim grievances over the Khilafat and the
safety of the Holy Places.
The city was, for decades, the home of prominent public
figures, .successful lawyers, newspaper editors, Urdu and Hindi writers
and poets. Some were born and brought up in Lucknow; others had
moved out of neighbouring qasbas in search of a better career. They
carried with them the graces of and the refinements associated with
qasbati living. They read poetry and classical literature, and listened to
music with friends or in the company of the courtesans in Chowk. They
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moved about regardless of caste and community barriers. They shared
food, customs, practices and traditions. They celebrated both Id and
Diwali, and observed Muharram with equal solemnity. There can be no
doubt that this degree of composite living imposed an unmistakable
imprint on, and led to the creation of, a composite political culture in
Lucknow. Religious differences surfaced time and again, but they did
not weaken the intercommunity networks. Shuddhi and sangathan sabhas
and tabliqh and tanzim societies imposed severe strains on secular
loyalties but did not destroy the secular underpinnings of Lucknow
society. Even when most parts of the country were rocked by Hindu-
Muslim violence during the early 1920s and on the eve of India's
Partition and thereafter, Lucknow remained an island of peace and
sanity. Its record, barrring some isolated and sporadic incidents, has not
been tarnished since Independence.
Lucknow's political equilibrium was disturbed by the elections in
1937 and the controversies thereafter. The Congress and the Muslim
League fell apart over the coalition issue, with Choudhary
Khaliquzzaman, the Raja of Mahmudabad and Nawab Mohammad Ismail
Khan opting to revive the defunct Muslim League in the United
Provinces. In fact the U.P. Muslim League emerged as a political factor
after and not before the coalition impasse. The formation of the
Congress Ministry also triggered off disputes and conflicts of a wide-
ranging nature. The landlords were up in arms against the U.P. Tenancy
Bills, so were the kisans who staged demonstrations in Lucknow against
the agrarian policies of the Congress Ministry. The Shias and Sunnis
fought their battles on the streets of Lucknow; the magnificent
imambaras were a mute witness to the depth of sectarian feelings in a
city that had set exemplary standards of harmonious living for its
citizens. Yet, Lucknow continued to provide the lead, remained the main
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arena and the focal point of nationalist activities. It was the home of an
impressive generation of Congress leaders, who championed the cause
of freedom with remarkable tenacity. They were active in the local
arena, as also in provincial and nationalist poli tics. Kamalapathi
Tripathi, G.B. Pant, Sampurnanand, Charan Singh, Rafi Ahmad Kidwai
and H.N. Bahuguna were tutored in the political traditions of Lucknow,
which bore the stamp of its history, cul ture and ethos. Some upheld
those composite political traditions after independence; others chose not
to do so.
Independence brought joy and raised hopes if a better future, but
it was, also, accompanied with the partition of the country. Lucknow so -
ciety was split and fragmented; the Lakhnavi culture was bruised. Fami -
lies were divided, some deciding to stay while, others elected to migrate
to Luckow. Lakhnavis were tormented by the1 happenings around, but
could do little to stem the tide of hate, anger and violence. An Abdul
Halim Sharar, who took great pride in his city, would have surely
bemoaned the collapse of a composite social and intellectual order that
the Lakhnavis had so assiduously built since 1857. A nation was born
but a nation was also divided, casting its long shadows on a wounded
culture and civilisation. The civilisational rhythm of the subcontinent
was broken, a fact Mir Anis, Lucknow's legendary poet, would have be -
moaned in his mamyas (elegies). Yet, the Lakhnavis who had lived
through the vicissitudes of history and had experienced many traumatic
changes were able, after Independence, to get their act together and
surge ahead, along with other fellow-citizens, in their quest for a better
life. Bitter memories were shrugged aside in search of a prosperous
future.
Lucknow in those years was not an isolated case. The whole
country was surging forward and, even in the cities which had been torn
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apart by the tragedies of partition, people were neither sceptical, nor
disillusioned. They retained faith in their leaders. The giants of the
freedom struggle were in full command- In violence-haunted Calcutta,
Dr. .B.C. Roy had the necessary authority to lay the foundations of the
truncated State of West Bengal. In the more peaceful Lucknow,
G.B.Pant, the Chief Minister, was able to demonstrate that he was not
only a formidable administrator but also a tough politician.
Let us recall this early period. At an All-India level, the Congress
party was going through a transitory phase of adjustment. The members
of its socialist wing having been forced out, two major group tendencies
stood face to face, strangely enough with the exception of Sardar Patel,
most of the protagonists belonged to Uttar Pradesh. Accordingly, from
the very first days of Independence, Lucknow appeared as a privileged
arena for national politics (Weiner, 1957; Brass, 1968).
As far as old promises regarding land ownership were concerned,
there were no major differences within the leadership. In UP, contrary to
what was to happen in Bihar, land reforms were pushed vigorously; they
were to affect deeply the relationships in the rural areas. Peasant middle
castes, now concerned with political power, emerged as a direct threat to
the hegemony of the upper castes, and changed completely the fortunes
of the Congress party.
The early conflicts in UP had been of a different nature. They had
crystallized in 1950—31 around the personality and views of the newly
elected Congress President, Purushortam Das Tandon, the spiritual heir
of Pandit Madan Mohan Malawiya, the founder of Benares Hindu Uni -
versity, and the progressives, who appeared to have won the day. How -
ever, theirs was a short-lived victory, and later political leaders
espoused progressively more reactionary Hindu views. In the 1952
general elections, a new party claiming to speak for the Hindu nation,
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the Bharatiya Jan Sangh (BJS), managed to secure many votes (see
charts in Graff pp. 258-68). In the State Assembly, its number of seats
increased steadily. It was left to Prime Minister Nehru to allay the fears
of the Muslims, whose position after Partition was extremely difficult.
The Congress was to rule supreme until 1967 when, for the first
time, various caste groups and also a number of Muslims, rebelled
against the dominance of the ruling party and tried to assert themselves,
as Dr Sampurnanand, who had warned his colleagues against 'opening
the doors (of the Congress) to the backward classes', had foreseen in the
fifties. There followed tumultuous years, which saw the diminishing
fortunes of the Congress parry and the increasing volatility of the
electorate: chequered coalitions, saffron crusades, and, in the end, an
entirely new political landscape (Graff, chapter 14).
How much has Lucknow itself been affected by these
developments? One is tempted to say that it has simply carried on,
trying to survive the successive traumas, while fighting rather feebly to
retain the old cherished atmosphere. The result is a strange mixture.
True, the city still has the graces that an industrial towns like Kanpur
lacks, but it has not remained unaffected by the passing of time, the
carelessness of the municipal corporation, the lack of funds, the
indifferent behaviour of the new elites whose culture, in the judgement
of old Lakhnavis, is 'no culture', and the huge increase in population. Is
it then surprising that old Lakhnvis remember with nostalgia the
Lucknow that was. Fortunately there are places where it is possible to
reconcile the past and Chattar Manzil, the palace of Nawabi fame,
shelters today one of the most famous institutes of modern India. Claude
Martin can rest in peace in the vault of La Martiniere.
Present Lucknow
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Lucknow is the capital of India’s most populous State, Uttar Pradesh and
is situated about 500 km southeast of New Delhi in the heart of the state.
The City has a humid subtropical climate with a cool dry winter from
December to February and a hot summer from April to June. The
temperature extremes vary from about 45degrees Celsius in the summer
to 3 degrees Celsius in the winter. The City receives about 100 cm of
annual rainfall mostly from the southwest monsoons between July and
September. The city lies at an average altitude of 110 meters above
mean sea level and generally slopes to the east. Lateral slopes are
towards the River Gomti, which flows from north-west to south-east
through the heart of the city, dividing it into the Trans-Gomti and Cis-
Gomti regions.
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Map.4.0 Present Lucknow
The more densely populated areas of the city are on the southern
bank of the River Gomti and several planned residential colonies have
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been developed to the north of the River. Lucknow is known for its
cultural heritage.
Demographic and Social Profile
Lucknow Urban Agglomeration (LUA) became a million-plus city
in 1981. Beesides the areas underjurisdiction of the Lucknow Municipal
Corporation, the agglomeration also includes the Lucknow Cantonment.
Census 2001 estimated the population of the Lucknow Urban
agglomeration at 22.46 lakhs. This included an estimate of about 60,000
as population of the Lucknow Cantonment and 21.85 lakh population of
Lucknow City. The population of the Lucknow Cantonment has
remained constant in the last three decades.
Demographic data for the Lucknow Urban Agglomeration and
Lucknow City from Census 2001 and other available documents was
analysed to understand the growth patterns. Growth rates have been
arrived at through projecting geometric growth, arithmetic growth and
incremental growth rate methods and adding an additional population of
100,000 every five years for additional areas that might get incorporated
within the city. This seems a conservative estimate however, given the
current pace of real estate development and the intention of government
to attract new investment in Lucknow.
Migration into Lucknow accounts for 36% increase in population
over the last decade. Of the 5.76-lakh people added to the LUA during
1991-2001, about 2 lakh were migrants. In comparison, the natural
growth was 3.68 lakh.
Lucknow offers better social and physical infrastructure and
amenities compared to other cities in the state. With a population
density of 67 persons per hectare, Lucknow is recognized as a low-
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density - low-rise city with open spaces and greenery. The City is also
comparatively cleaner than most other cities in the state.
The City offers better employment opportunities and education
facilities. Lucknow’s position as a city bordered by smaller towns like
Hardoi and Sitapur in the northwest; Bara Banki in the northeast, Rae
Bareli in the south-east and Unnao in the south west attracts migrants in
search of better employment opportunities and higher order services like
education and health. According to the census, 22% of the migrants from
rural areas and 27% from urban areas cited ‘employment’ as the reason
for migration. The other reasons for migration include business reasons,
education opportunities, marriage etc.
Gender Ratio
In the Lucknow Municipal Corporation, in 2002, there has been a
steady increase in the number of women per 1000 men – from 829 in
1971 to 849 in 1981, 862 in 1991 to 893 in 2001. While this rise is
attributable partly to natural growth, discussions with the LDA identify
the cause as being the ‘security’ that the city offers and the good
education facilities – factors that have meant that a lot of women and
children are staying in Lucknow even when the male members of the
family are working elsewhere. An additional factor could be that entire
rural families are migrating in search of employment instead of the
general practice of only men migrating.
Literacy
Despite comparative economic prosperity and better infrastructure
and education facilities, literacy levels in the City vary from those in
other cities of similar size. The literacy rate in the Lucknow Municipal
Corporation area recorded in 2001 was 67.46% .However, within the
state the City has a relatively high level of literacy – as could be
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expected in line with general trends about differences between urban and
rural areas.
Key Demographic Issues
Although current levels of migration are lower compared to cities
of similar size, population growth in Lucknow City growth over the next
few years will likely be somewhat higher than elsewhere (around 4
percent). The majority of migrants are coming from the surrounding
districts. The upward trend needs to be taken into account in city
planning.
The city’s demographic profile has shown an increase in the
number of women relative to men, and an increase in female literacy and
employment. The social and economic implications may be significant
and would need to be taken into consideration in the planning and
preparation of projects, as well as arrangements to involve citizens in
city governance.
Economic Base
The major industries in the Lucknow Urban Agglomeration
include aeronautics, machine tools, distillery chemicals, furniture and
chikan embroidery. Lucknow has traditionally been associated with
chikan embroidery work on readymade garments, sarees, etc. with most
units being small-scale and household based and located in the old city
area.
Lucknow is also a major centre for research and development
(R&D) and an education centre. Prominent R&D centres located in the
city, include the National Milk Grid of the National Dairy Development
Board, Central Drug Research Institute (CDRI), Central Institute of
Medical and Aromatic Plants (CIMAP), Industrial Toxicology Research
Centre (ITRC), National Botanical Research Centre Institute (NBRI),
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National Handloom Development Corporation (NHDC) Ltd., Pradeshik
Cooperative Dairy Federation Ltd (PCDF), Research Design and
Standards Organisation (RDSO), and U P Export Corporation.
The Principal educational institutions in the City include the
University of Lucknow, King GeorgeMedical College, Indian Institute
of Management, Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeo-Botany, the Board of
Technical Education, Institute of Engineering and Technology, Institute
of JudicialTraining and Research, Sanjay Gandhi Post Graduate Institute
of Medical Sciences (SGPGIMS),the Bathkhande University of Indian
Music, the Central Veterinary Research Laboratory and theBuilding and
Road Research Station and Indian Institute of Sugarcane Research.
Lucknow, being a tehsil headquarter, a divisional headquarter and
the state capital, is a prominent administrative and commercial centre of
the state. The proportion of working population of Lucknow has
remained more or less constant since 1981, at around 28%
Heritage
Lucknow is known for its rich history and culture – manifest not
just in its many magnificent monuments but an intrinsic part of its
lifestyle. While the city has archaeological remains dating back to 3000
BC, the first documented reference to Lucknow is from the thirteenth
century when Emperor Akbar divided the Mughal Empire into twelve
provinces and chose Lucknow as the seat of Government for Oudh - the
most prosperous province of the empire.
In the late 18th century, the Shia Nawabs of Lucknow built
several imposing structures, commercial and trading centres that
increased the grandeur and opulence of the city. At the time of the first
war of independence in 1857, the city suffered a lot of damages and the
old past was replaced with new developments during the British period.
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After independence the city experienced tremendous growth and the
distinct “Lucknow” culture – composite, refined, rich and vibrant is
slowly disappearing. While there are many magnificent monuments
symbolising the glorious past of the city, the following are the better-
known monuments.
[ 186 ]
Chapter IIITHEORY OF SOCIO-ECONOMICS IN
SOCIOLOGY
Economic sociology constitutes its own distinct subfield in
sociology and can be briefly defined as the sociological analysis of
economic phenomena. Economic sociology has a rich intellectual
tradition and traces its roots to the founding fathers ofsociology,
especially to Max Weber and his Economyand Society (see Swedberg
1998). It should be noted that not only sociologists but also economists
have made important contributions to economic sociology. This is
particularly true for today’s economic sociology, which is the result of
works not only by sociologists (such as Mark Granovetter and Harrison
White) but also by economists (such as Gary Becker and Oliver
Williamson).
To define economic sociology as ‘‘the sociological analysis of
economic phenomena’’ may seem bland and even tautological. It is
therefore important to stress that it entails a definite conception of what
topics may be studied by sociologists; that it implies a certain division
of labor between economists and sociologists; and that it also has direct
consequences for how the relationship between economic theory and
sociology is conceived. That this is the case becomes very clear if we
contrast this definition with two other ones that are commonly used: (1)
that economic sociology primarily deals with a particular dimension of
economic phenomena, namely their social dimension; and
(2) that economic sociology is the study of social structures and
organizations in the economy.
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That economic sociology deals with economic phenomena in
general (our definition) means that it addresses issues not only at the
periphery of the economy (such as, say, the influence of religious values
on the economy or of ethnicity on entrepreneurship) but also at its core
(such as the way markets operate or investment decisions are made).
Sociological theory here emerges as either an alternative to economic
theory or as a direct challenge to it. To look at the social dimension of
economic phenomena (the first alternative definition) means, on the
other hand, that sociologists only look at a limited number of economic
issues, usually those that are left over once the economists have finished
with their analyses. Economists may, for example, decide with the help
of standard economic theory what salaries and prices are like in a certain
industry, while sociologists, by looking at a factory or a work group as a
social system, may then add some additional information. Economic
theory is not challenged by this type of economic sociology, since it
only deals with those topics for which there is no economic theory. That
economic sociology focuses on social structures or on organizations in
the economy (the second alternative definition) means that a purely
economic analysis may be regarded as economic sociology as long as it
deals with certain topics. Why a firm rather than the market is used for a
specific type of transaction may, for example, be explained by the fact
that transaction costs are higher in this specific case in the market. This
type of economic sociology is close to economic theory and basically
dispenses with traditional sociology (although not necessarily with
rational choice sociology; see, e.g., Coleman 1990).
These three ways of looking at economic sociology all have their
followers. The one which emphasizes that the sociological perspective in
principle can be applied to all types of economic phenomena is,
however, the one that has been used most frequently throughout the
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history of economic sociology. That this is the case will become clear
from the following brief overview ofthe field. That the two other
definitions—economic sociology as the analysis of the social dimension
of economic phenomena, and economic sociology as the study of social
structures and organizations in the economy—also have their adherents
will become obvious as well.
Since the mid-1980s economic sociology hasbeen going through
something of a renaissance in the sociological profession, not only in the
United States but also in other countries. The advent of what is usually
referred to as ‘‘new economic sociology’’ represents one of the most
dynamic areas in contemporary sociology. Before the mid- 1980s three
separate attempts had been made to create a vigorous economic
sociology, and something needs to be said about these. The first attempt
was made in the early twentieth century by a group of German scholars
of whom Max Weber is the most important. The second attempt was
made during the same time period by Emile Durkheim and his followers
in France. And the third attempt was made by some American
sociologists, such as Talcott Parsons and Neil Smelser, in the 1950s. A
few words shall be said about each of these attemptsbefore we discuss
the contemporary situation.
HISTORICAL ATTEMPTS AT ECONOMIC SOCIOLOGY
The first significant attempt to create a solid economic sociology
was made in Germany during the period 1890–1930 by a group of
scholars who were all trained in economics. The three key figureswere
Max Weber, Werner Sombart, and Joseph Schumpeter. A major reason
that economic sociology developed so forcefully in German-speaking
academia was probably its strong tradition of historical economics.
There was also the fact that toward the end of the nineteenth century
Gustav von Schmoller, the leader of the historical school of economics,
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became embroiled in a bitter academic fight with Carl Menger, one of
the founders of marginal utility analysis. By the time Weber and
Sombart became active, German economics had been polarized into two
camps through the socalled battle of the methods, or the Methodenstreit:
one that was overly theoretical and one that was overly historical. The
idea of ‘‘economic sociology’’ was conceived by both Sombart and
Weber as an attempt to get out of this dead end and to function as a kind
of bridge between economic history and economic theory. Economic
sociology should be analytical in nature, but historically grounded.
While Sombart, however, wanted economic sociology to totally replace
economic theory, Weber thought differently. In his mind, a healthy
science of economics (Weber used the term Sozialoekonomie, or ‘‘social
economics’’) should be broad and simultaneously draw on economic
theory, economic history, and economic sociology (Weber 1949).
Schumpeter basically shared Weber’s opinion, although economic theory
would always rank higher in his mind than in Weber’s. The idea of such
a broad-based social economics, however, never caught on. Weber,
Sombart, and Schumpeter all made a series of first-rate contributions to
economic sociology.
For one thing, all of them produced major studies of capitalism:
Weber ([1921-22] 1978) in Economy and Society; Sombart ([1902]
1987) in Dermoderne Kapitalismus; and Schumpeter ([1942] 1976) in
Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy . Weber emphasized that
capitalism was becoming increasingly rationalized; Sombart was
particularly interested in looking at the different historical stages of
capitalism; and Schumpeter argued that modern capitalism was digging
its own grave and was soon to be replaced by socialism. These visions of
capitalism still dominate our thinking and are therefore of great interest.
And so are many of the shorter studies by Weber, Sombart, and
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Schumpeter, such as Sombart’s ([1906] 1976) study of why there is no
socialism in the United States, Weber’s ([1904–5] 1930) analysis of the
relationship between Protestantism and the spirit of capitalism,and
Schumpeter’s ([1919] 1954, [1918] 1971) two superb articles on
imperialism and the tax state.
A special mention must also be made of Georg Simmel’s ([1907]
1990) The Philosophy of Money.This work contains an ingenious
analysis of money that ranges from philosophy to sociology. No general
theory of money is developed, but the author takes on a series of
interesting topics, including credit, checks, and small change. Simmel
should not only be credited with having made a serious attempt to
develop a sociological approach of money; he was also the first
sociologist to realize what an important role trust plays in economic life.
The only one to make a sustained effort to lay a theoretical
foundation for economic sociology, however, was Max Weber. He did
this in a chapter of Economy and Society (Weber [1921–22] 1978)
entitled ‘‘Sociological Categories of Economic Action.’’
When Weber lectured on this chapter to his students, they found
his analysis abstract and dry. He therefore decided to give a lecture
course in economic history to supplement his theoretical ideas. This
course became what is today known as General Economic History
(Weber [1923] 1981), and it should be read together with Economy and
Society. In the latter work Weber carefully constructs the various
analytical categories that are needed in economic sociology. He starts
with ‘‘the concept of economic action’’ and ends with macroeconomic
phenomena, such as ‘‘market economies and planned economies.’’ He
also defines and discusses such basic concepts as trade, money, and the
market—all from a sociological perspective. At various points in his
discussion Weber carefully underlines when economic theory and
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economic sociology differ. It is, for example, imperative for economic
sociologists to use the concept of economic power in their analyses,
while this plays no role in marginal utility theory. In economic theory it
is assumed that consumers are price givers, but economic sociology
assumes that they are price takers. In economic theory it is usually
assumed that prices are simply the result of demand and supply, while in
economic sociology it is necessary to look at the strength of the various
social groups in order to understand the unfolding of the ‘‘price
struggle.’’ Finally, in economic sociology economic action must in
principle be oriented to the behavior of others. Economists exclusively
study rational economic action, Weber concludes, while sociologists
have a much broader focus.
During about the same time that Weber, Sombart, and Schumpeter
were active in Germany, a similar, though independent, effort to create
an economic sociology was made in France. The key figures here are
Emile Durkheim, Marcel Mauss, and François Simiand. All three felt
that since economic theory is not a social theory (in the sense that it
does not assign analytical priority to society as opposed to the
individual), it should be replaced by a sociological approach to the
economy or, more precisely, by economic sociology. In this they echoed
Auguste Comte’s critique in the early 1800s of economic theorists for
ignoring the fact that the economy is part of society and that, as a
consequence, there is no need for a separate economic theory (Swedberg
1987). The two most important studies in the French school of
economicsociology are The Division of Labor in Society by Durkheim
([1893] 1964) and The Gift by Marcel Mauss ([1925] 1969) (see also
Simiand 1932). The latter work not only covers gift-giving but also
contains a series of brilliant remarks on credit, interest, and
consumption. In The Division of Labor in Society Durkheim raises the
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question of how to bring about solidarity in industrial society. His
answer, which is further elaborated in other works (see especially
Durkheim [1928] 1962, [1950] 1983), is that no society in which the
economic element predominates can survive. Economic life has to be
restrained by a moral element; without a common morality, all persons
would be at war with one another.
Both German and French economic sociology petered out in the
1930s. At around this time European sociology was exhausting itself,
while U.S. sociology was in ascendency. Among the multiple subfields
that appeared at that time, several are of interest to economic sociology,
such as industrial sociology, the sociology of professions, and
stratification theory. None of these, however, dealt with core economic
problems or with economic theory. Instead there was a firm division of
labor in U.S. social science at this time between economists, who only
studied economic topics,and sociologists, who only studied social
topics. In the 1950s, however, some sociologists decided to challenge
this division of labor, and their efforts have become known as the
‘‘economy and society approach,’’ so called both because two works
with this title now appeared (Moore 1955; Parsons and Smelser 1956)
and because a conscious effort was made to bring closer together two
bodies of thought in the social sciences—economics and sociology—that
most social scientists felt should be kept separate (see also Polanyi et al.
1957). Talcott Parsons and Neil Smelser (1956) argued, for example,
that the economy is part of society or, in their terminology, ‘‘the
economic sub-system’’ is part of ‘‘the social system.’’ In this sense they
assigned a certain priority to society and implicitly to sociology. On the
other hand, they also felt that economic theory was essentially correct-
even if it needed to be complemented by a sociological approach.
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NEW ECONOMIC SOCIOLOGY
During the late 1960s and the 1970s little of interest happened in
economic sociology. Since the mid-1980s, however, there has been a
sharp increase of interest in this topic, and a new type of economic
sociology has come into being (see Friedland and Robertson 1990;
Granovetter 1990; Zukin and DiMaggio 1990). Not only sociologists but
also economists have contributed to this development.
Since the mid-1970s mainstream economists have become
increasingly interested in the role of social structures and organizations
in the economy. This has led to a movement usually referred to as ‘‘new
institutional economics’’ (e.g.,Eggertsson 1990). Sources of inspiration
for this new institutionalism include transaction cost economics,
agency–principal theory, and game theory.
Gary Becker (1976), for example, has convinced many economists
that social phenomena can be analyzed with the help of the economist’s
tools; Kenneth Arrow has written about the role of organizations in the
economy; Thomas Schelling (1960) has used game theory to develop a
science of ‘‘interdependent decision’’; and Oliver Williamson (1975)
has popularized the concept of transaction costs through his best-selling
Markets and Hierarchies (see also Coase 1937; Swedberg 1990). Three
Nobel Prizes have also been awarded to economists who in one way or
another focus on the social aspects of the economy: R.H. Coase (1991),
Gary Becker (1992), and Douglass North (1993).
As a result of these and other events, mainstream economists
today are interested not only in traditional issues relating to price
formation but also in economic institutions and how these change. The
last time this happened in the United States was in the early twentieth
century, when American institutionalism was born (see, e.g.,
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Commmons 1924; Gruchy 1947; Veblen [1899] 1973). There exists,
however, an important difference between the old form of
institutionalism and new institutional economics. While Thorstein
Veblen and his contemporaries tried to analyze economic institutions
with the help of an approach that was very close to that of sociology,
Becker and other current theorists claim that the reason economic
institutions work the way they do can be analyzed with the help of the
economist’s traditional tools (efficiency, rational choice, etc.). This
approach has been severely criticized by some sociologists on the
grounds that it simplifies and distorts the analysis (e.g., Etzioni 1988;
Granovetter 1985).
Since the mid-1980s, as already mentioned, there has been a major
revival of economic sociology, and what is usually referred to as ‘‘new
economic sociology’’ has come into being. The date of birth of this
movement is usually set to 1985, since that year a highly influential
article, which was to create much interest in economic sociology, was
published. This was Mark Granovetter’s ‘‘Economic Action and Social
Structure: The Problem of Embeddedness,’’ published in The American
Journal of Sociology. The very same year, it can be added, Granovetter
introduced the notion of ‘‘new economic sociology’’ in a brief paper at
the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association.
In his 1985 article on embeddedness, Granovetter sharply attacked
the attempts by economists to explain the functioning of social
institutions and accused them of simplicity. Just as economists have a
tendency to ignore social relations through an ‘‘undersocialized concept
of man,’’ Granovetter said, some sociologists view the individual as a
reflex of the social structure, and they consequently have an
‘‘oversocialized concept of man.’’ The proper way to proceed,
Granovetter suggested, is to tread a middle way between these two
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opposites, and this can best be done by assuming that individual actions
are always ‘‘embedded’’ in social networks.
Granovetter’s article has been followed by a minor avalanche of
writings in economic sociology, and there exist good reasons for arguing
that new economic sociology today constitutes a minor school of its
own. A large number of articles and quite a few monographs have been
produced; a couple of introductory readers can be found on the market;
and in the mid-1990s a huge Handbook of Economic Sociology was
published (Smelser and Swedberg 1994). Other signs that a certain
institutionalization of economic sociology has taken place is that a
section in economic sociology has been organized at the American
Sociological Association, which has also published a volume with
course outlines and similar teaching materials (Green and Myhre 1996).
Before saying something about the concrete studies that have been
produced since the mid- 1980s, it should be pointed out that new
economic sociology is primarily a creation of North American
sociologists. In Europe and elsewhere in the world there also exists an
interest in economic sociology, but it tends to manifest itself in a less
cohesive form than in the United States, and it is not held together
through recurring conferences and the like. This is especially true for
Europe.
Most of the major European sociologists have written on
economic topics in some work or another,but this is rarely perceived as
an interest in economic sociology (e.g., Boltanski 1987; Bourdieu 1986;
Luhmann 1988). There also exist articles and monographs by European
sociologists who identify themselves as economic sociologists—but, to
repeat, these tend not to be much noticed, since they are not held
together by a strong and selfconscious tradition (e.g., Beckert 1997;
Dodd 1994; Gislain and Steiner 1995). Finally, quite a bit of economic
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sociology has also been produced under the auspices of the section on
economy and society within the International Sociological Association
(e.g., Martinelli and Smelser 1990).
New economic sociology has advanced the understanding of
economic phenomena in a number of ways, and it has especially been
successful in analyzing the following three topics: (1) the role that
networks play in the economy, (2) the way that culture and values
influence the economy, and (3)what causes firms to be organized the
way they are.
Something will be said about each of these topics,but before doing
so it should be noted that some interesting advances have also been
made in many other areas, such as consumption, finance, and the role of
gender in the economy (e.g., Abolafia 1996; Biggart 1989; Warde 1997).
Finally, social capital is a topic that has attracted attention from
sociologists as well as from political scientists and economists (e.g.,
Bourdieu 1986a; Coleman 1988; for an overview, see Woolcock 1998).
Network Analyses
Network analyses are often empirical in nature and sophisticated
in their methodology, and this is also true for network studies in
economic sociology. This latter type of studies made its first
appeareance in the 1970s, something which Granovetter’s well-known
Getting a Job (1974) is a reminder of. The same is true for studies of
interlocks, that is, studies of the kind of links that emerge when some
individual is a member of more than one corporate board. Interlock
studies became popular with Marxist sociologists, who felt that they had
found a way to document how the ruling class controls corporations
(e.g., Mintz and Schwartz 1985). A more subtle version of this argument
can be found in Michael Useem’s The Inner Circle (1984), based on
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interviews with chief executive officers (CEOs), whose main point is
that CEOs who are members of several boards have a better overview of
the economy, something that enables them to better defend their
interests.
The simplistic type of interlock studies have been severely
critized, primarily on the grounds that it is unclear what the
consequences are of the fact that two or more corporations are connected
through interlocks. In one interesting study, it was also argued that if for
some reason a link between two corporations was severed, it would have
to be reconstituted relatively soon if this type of link indeed is as
important as is often claimed. This study showed that only a minority of
so-called broken ties were actually re-created (Palmer 1983; see also the
discussion in Stearns and Mizruchi 1986). As of today, the opinion of
many economic sociologists is that interlock studies can be quite
valuable, but only on condition that they are complemented with other
material, such as historical studies, interviews, and the like.
A few words must be said about Granovetter’s Getting a Job
(1974), since it represents a particularly fine example of what an
empirically sophisticated and theoretically interesting study in economic
sociology can look like. As Granovetter notes in the second edition of
this work from 1995, his study has inspired quite a bit of research since
its original publication in the 1970s. The main thrust of the study is to
challenge the notion of mainstream economics that social relations can
be abstracted from an analysis of how people get jobs.
Through network data he had collected in a Boston suburb,
Granovetter succeeded in showing that information about openings in
the job market travels through social networks, and the more networks
you belong to, the more likely you are to find this type of information.
Having a few very close and helpful friends is not as effective in terms
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of getting information as being linked to many different networks (‘‘the
strength of weak ties’’). A corollary of this thesis, Granovetter shows, is
that people who have had several jobs are more likely to find a new
position when they become unemployed than those who have had only
one employer.
Since the mid-1980s network studies have become very popular in
economic sociology, and a number of advances have been made (see the
studies cited in Powell and Smith-Doerr 1994).
Several new topics have also been added to the repertoire,
including industrial regions and ethnic entrepreneurship. A special
mention should be made of Ronald Burt’s Structural Holes (1992), in
which competition and entrepreneurship are analyzed from a network
perspective. Burt’s study is centered around the argument that when an
actor is the one and only link between two networks, he or she is in a
good position to exploit this situation ( tertius gaudens, or ‘‘the third
who benefits,’’ in Simmel’s terminology). Granovetter (1994) has also
suggested that the network approach can be used to study so-called
business groups, that is, the kind of social formations that are made up
of corporations that are bound together in some formal or informal way
and that display a certain amount of solidarity. The applicability of the
notion of business groups to the Korean chaebol or to the Japanese
keiretsu is obvious, but it also appears that business groups exist in most
Western countries.
The Influence of Culture and Values.
A few economic sociologists have approached the study of the
economy from a different perspective and emphasize the way that
culture and values influence economic phenomena. The two most
prominent contributors to this type of economic sociology are Paul
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DiMaggio (1994) and Viviana Zelizer (1979, 1985, 1994); the studies
they have produced are of two kinds-general theoretical statements and
empirical studies of a historical and qualitative character. Zelizer (1988)
has sharply critiqued what she sees as an attempt in much of current
economic sociology to eliminate values and to reduce everything to
networks. Economic sociology, she argues, needs to introduce culture
and values into the analysis, while simultaneously paying attention to
the social structure.
Zelizer has also produced three empirical studies in which she
attempts to show the impact of culture and values on economic
phenomena. In the first of these, Zelizer (1979) looks at the development
of the life insurance industry in the United States, showing how difficult
it was to get people to accept that an individual’s life can be evaluated
in purely monetary terms. In her second study, Zelizer (1985) looks at
the same development but, so to speak, in reverse-namely, how
something that had an economic value at one time in history can turn
into something that has a sacred value at another. In the nineteenth
century, as she shows, children were often seen as having an economic
value, while today they have an exclusively emotional value. In her
latest study, Zelizer (1994) looks at money, arguing that people usually
distinguish between different types of money. Money- and this is the
main point-is not some kind of homogeneous, asocial medium, as
economists claim, but is social to its very core. Pin money, for example,
differs from the kind of money that is set aside for ordinary expenses;
and when money is given away as a gift, an effort is usually made to
disguise its nature as money.
Organization Theory
For a number of reasons there exists a clear affinity between
organization theory and economic sociology. One reason for this, no
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doubt, is that sociologists of organization often analyze economic
organizations; another is that organization theory was to incorporate
much of industrial sociology when this field disappeared in the 1970s.
And, finally, roughly during the 1990s, business schools often hired
sociologists to teach organization theory. Three schools or perspectives
in organization theory have been of much importance to economic
sociology: resource dependency, population ecology, and new
institutionalism.
The basic idea of resource dependency is that an organization is
dependent on resources in its environment to survive. This perspective,
as especially Ronald Burt has shown, can be of some help in
understanding how the economy works. At the center of Burt’s work on
resource dependency is his concept of structural autonomy, or the idea
that a corporation has more room to maneuver the fewer competitors it
has and the more suppliers and the more customers there are. That a
corporation has more power if it is in a monopoly position is clear; from
this it follows that suppliers as well as customers are less powerful the
more competitors they have. If Corporation A, for example, has only one
supplier and one customer, both of these can wield quite a bit of power
over Corporation A. Using a huge input–output data set for U.S.
industry, Burt has also shown that the idea of structural autonomy has
some support in empirical reality; in brief, the more structurally
autonomous a corporation is, the more likely it is that profits will
increase (Burt 1983).
Population ecology, as opposed to resource dependency, uses as
its unit of analysis not the single corporation but whole populations of
organizations. That these populations go through fairly distinct phases
of growth and decline has been shown through a number of empirical
studies, many of which are highly relevant to economic sociology since
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the organizations being studied are often economic organizations.
Population ecology also looks at competition between organizations and
the processes through which new organizational forms become accepted.
The fact that population ecology typically looks at large populations of
organizations means that relatively high powered statistical methods are
used. There is, however, little theoretical renewal going on in population
ecology, and unless this changes, this perspective risks being exhausted
in a few years.
A considerably higher degree of flexibility and creativity
characterizes new institutionalism, or the kind of organization theory
that has emerged around the work of John Meyer (e.g., Meyer and
Rowan 1977; cf. DiMaggio and Powell 1991). A fundamental thesis in
this approach is that rationality is often only a thin veneer and that
organizations usually look the way they do for other than rational
reasons. There also exist more or less distinct models for what a certain
type of organization should look like, and these models are typically
diffused through imitation. Since new institutionalism has such a
flexible core, it can be used to analyze a variety of topics, in contrast to
population ecology, which is considerably more limited in scope.
Two studies that illustrate this flexibility are Neil Fligstein’s The
Transformation of Corporate Control (1990) and Frank Dobbin’s
Forging Industrial Policy (1994). The former is a study of the huge
American corporation since the end of the nineteenth century that
challenges several of Alfred Chandler’s theses. According to Fligstein,
U.S. corporations have created different concepts of control during
different periods of time; by control, he means the general strategy that
corporations follow for surviving and making money.
While cartels, for example, represented a common strategy around
the turn of the century in the United States, they were later replaced by
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vertical integration, the idea of conglomerates, and other concepts of
control. Fligstein also shows not only that the famous multidivisional
form was a response to the economic environment, as Chandler claimed,
but also that it was diffused through imitation.
Fligstein, as opposed to Chandler, also points out that the state
influences the way corporations operate and the way they decide on a
certain concept of control. Dobbin makes a similar point in Forging
Industrial Policy (1994), but the emphasis in this study is primarily on
regulatory or industrial policy cultures. Drawing on empirical material
of a historical character from France, England, and the United States in
the nineteenth century, Dobbin shows how each of these countries
developed different regulatory and industrial policy cultures, and in
particular how they treated railroads in different ways. The state, for
example, was actively involved in the railroad business in France but
played a more passive role in England and the United States. Dobbin
argues convincingly that there exists no single best way of doing things
in the economy, as mainstream economists seem to think; what may
seem natural and rational to do in one country does not seem so in
another.
New economic sociology has also made some interesting progress
in the analysis of the market. The reason this topic has attracted quite a
bit of attention among sociologists is that the theory of the market
constitutes the very heart of mainstream economics; and to challenge
mainstream economics one first and foremost has to challenge its theory
of the market. Of the empirical studies that sociologists have produced,
the most innovative may well be Mitchell Abolafia’s Making Markets
(1996) (see also Uzzi 1996). Abolafia has investigated three important
markets on Wall Street (bonds, stocks, and futures markets) through
participant observation; in particular, he has looked at the way that these
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are regulated. His major conclusion is that markets are social
constructions and that regulation is related to ‘‘cycles of opportunism.’’
When the existing regulation of a market is mild, opportunistic
actors will take advantage of this fact, which will lead to a tightening of
the rules; when regulation has been strong and effective for some time,
demands are likely to be raised that milder rules should be introduced.
While most empirical studies of the market have focused on some
aspect of the market rather than on its core, there do exist a few
theoretical attempts by sociologists to explain the very nature of the
market. Two of these are particularly interesting, namely, the analyses
of Harrison White (1981) and of Neil Fligstein (1996). White’s
argument, which takes its departure in the typical production market
with only a handful of actors, can be summarized in the following way:
When a few actors produce similar products at similar prices, they may,
by watching one another, come to realize that they make up a market
and also behave according to this perception. More precisely, it is by
watching the terms-of-trade schedule that this process takes place; and
as long as the producers feel that they fit into this schedule, the market
will continue to exist. By modeling his argument about the terms-of-
trade schedule, White is also able to show under which theoretical
conditions a market can come into being and when it will unravel.
While only a few attempts have been made to work directly with
White’s so-called W(y)-model, its general impact has been large in new
economic sociology, especially through White’s argument that a market
comes into being when actors orient their behavior to one another in a
role like manner.
The most suggestive of the studies that have been influenced in a
general way by the W(y)-model is Fligstein’s theory of markets. Like
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White, Fligstein uses the typical production market as his point of
departure, but the emphasis in his theory is quite different. Market
actors, according to Fligstein, fear competition, since this makes it hard
to predict what will happen, and they therefore attempt to introduce
stability into the market. This can be done in different ways, and for
empirical illustration Fligstein draws on his study of the evolution of the
huge American corporation (Fligstein 1990). In certain situations,
competition can nonetheless be very strong, but this is usually
accompanied by attempts to stabilize the market. As examples of this,
Fligstein mentions the situation when a new market is coming into
being, when a major innovation is introduced into an already existing
market, and when some major social disturbance takes place.
POSSIBLE FUTURE DIRECTIONS
If one were to summarize the situation in economic sociology at
the end of the twentieth century, it could be said that economic
sociology, which played such an important role in the classic works of
sociology, has once again come alive. New and provocative studies have
been produced, and a steadily growing number of sociologists are
becoming interested in economic sociology. If one adds to this that
mainstream economists are increasingly realizing the importance of
institutions in the economy, it may well be the case that economic
sociology will become one of the most interesting fields in sociology
during the twenty first century.
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Plate 1. Fig.1 : A child of a Nawab family working on a piece of cloth for Rs 30 a week.
Fig. 2 : A Nawab explaining his day to day life problems
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Chapter IVTHE DAILY GRIND: DAY TO DAY PROBLEMS OF
THE NAWABS
The global recession might end soon, but there are no signs of
settling down of the woes of the poor in third world countries. The
impact of recession is huge- there are definite signs of job losses, loss of
income, high expenditures and an unusual increase in food prices. It then
becomes just unimaginable when we take into account the poor from the
third world countries, whose life depends upon the earnings, which are
vulnerable to economic fluctuations and seasonality. This dilemma of
poverty becomes more pathetic when these earnings are just less than
2$, working for more than eight hours a day. Living on less than two
dollars a day for a household is nothing but misery which is
compounded when their earnings are marred by seasonal fluctuations
and irregularities. Their daily diet, education of their children and the
health of the household members are often compromised with. These
impacts are invisible, but in the truest sense – are irreversible for the
dent they make in the future of their families. Their choices are minimal
which makes it impossible for them to plan out expenditure and
calculate one’s own capacity to save or repay. Thus, the present study is
an ethnographic account of the Shia population, especially in this
context the descendents of Nawabs attached to Zardozi (embroidery) in
Lucknow, who are reeling under intense poverty and suffering as a result
of living on pittance.
Subir belonging to a family of Nawabs in Husainabad was 37
when I met him and his wife Mumtaz only 29, though their oldest son
Iqbal was by then at least 14. They had three more children, all sons,
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and Mumtaz was pregnant again and delivered her fifth son midway
through the research year ("No more!" she told us). Day by day, Subir
and Mumtaz focused on managing life on a dollar a day per head – and
sometimes less. Their strategies, and those of other interviewers, are the
subject of this chapter. I will see how their money management respond
to the challenges of living on income that is both low and uncertain, and
how doing so determines much of their financial lives.
Our opening chapter assert that it is not just the low value, but
also the uncertain timing of their incomes that makes money
management so important for poor households, and so it was for Subir
and Mumtaz. Institutions such as the United Nations and the World
Bank usually focus on explaining why incomes, totaled over the year,
are so low, and what can be done to raise them. But the unpredictable
ups and downs of income are also an important part of what it is to be
poor, and they cause many of the specific challenges faced by the
households I came to know.
The low returns and uncertain availability of work opportunities
lead households like Subir's to patch livelihoods together from different
sources, each irregular and unpredictable. For a while, Subir, who
generally pedaled a hired rickshaw. On good days, he earned Rs112.5 $
2.50. Most of the time, though, he pedaled a rickshaw – extremely
demanding work that only the very fittest can do day after day. Subir,
like most men of his age, found it too exhausting to do for more than
four days a week. Even when he was working, his earnings fluctuated
with weather conditions, political strife, harassment by the police, and
simple good and bad luck.
Towards the end of the year, their teenage son, Iqbal, got a job in
a garment factory at Rs 1215 ($ 27) a month, Iqbal, who had never
attended school regularly, then gave up scavenging for scrap materials
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for a dealer in their area. His younger brother Salauddin, 10 continued to
rag-pick, and earned Rs 270 ($ 6) in a good month. After the new baby
was born, Mumtaz returned to a job working as a maid, earning some Rs
450 ($10) a month. Taken together, total house-hold income peaked at
an average of Rs 141.3 ($ 3.14) a day for the seven of them. In bad
times, it fell as low as Rs 85.5 ($ 1.90) a day.
Making these uncertain income flows deliver a stable home life
was a constant preoccupation for Sabir and Mumtaz. Most of the time
they succeeded. They never had to beg, but they did skip meals and the
quality of their food varied. Sometimes I found them eating hot meals
three times a day – mostly rice and lentils, sometimes a bit of fish, or, as
a rare treat, beef. Usually, though, they ate twice, and in really bad times
just once a day. But at least they ate something every day, and it is a
tribute to their resourcefulness that they managed that.
Subir and Mumtaz and their family survived thanks in part to
financial tools. In the year I spent with them, Subir and Mumtaz did not,
for example seek a "microcredit" loan to fund the expansion of a small
business. True, Subir could have earned more if he owned his rickshaw
rather than renting, and a loan would have hastened the purchase. But, as
I show below, he had good reasons not to do so. Others looking at the
couple's situation might instead stress the importance of helping people
like them to save to build up meaningfully large assets. Borrowing and
saving for the long term are indeed important to poor households, as
later chapters show but long-term goals Ire not the primary financial
concern of most households I met. Instead households like that of Subir
and Mumtaz borroId and saved mostly to meet pressing short-term
needs, their main objective was cash-flow management. Being able to
manage immediate needs is a precondition for considering long-term
ambitions – but the way that poor people achieve it has received scant
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attention from policymakers and others arguing for financial access for
the poor.
The most basic objective for households like that of Subir and
Mumtaz is to make sure that there's food on the table every day, and not
just on days when income flows in. The poor households I met actively
employ financial tools not despite being poor but because they are poor.
When it came to managing money, Subir and Mumtaz put a premium on
the flexibility and convenience of their financial tools, even though
those tools Ire not always reliable. Their juggling reminds us that money
is fungible – it can be split and combined in a number of ways. I argue
in the concluding section that embracing this flexibility of money can
open vistas for financial providers looking for better ways to serve poor
households.
The next section of this chapter describes the importance of
frequent and small transactions used for basic money management. The
sections that follow show why this pattern holds: multiple occupations
leading to low incomes – often patched together from uncertain parts –
result in a "triple whammy" of incomes that are not just small but also
irregular, and that, have to be managed with financial instrument that do
not always fit the household's cash flow patterns. The balance of the
chapter describes how households cope with the triple whammy – and
where hidden costs lie. The concluding sections brings together ideas on
ways to help poor households cope with their most basic, daily
challenges.
SMALL BALANCES, LARGE CASH FLOWS
The story is revealed when I look at cash flows rather than
balance sheets. During the year, all of the households pushed and pulled
through financial instruments amounts far greater than their year-end net
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worth. By "push" I mean deposit, lend, or repay. By "pull" I mean
withdraw, borrow, or accept deposits. If cash flowing into the household
is not immediately consumed or invested, it is pushed or pulled through
a financial instrument in one way or another. I use the expression
"turnover" to mean the total sum of money being "pushed" into
instruments plus the money being "pulled" out of them.
Subir and Mumtaz's portfolio for the research year 2007-2008 is
given in greater detail in Table 1.0. For each of the categories of
instruments they used I show the closing balances.
Table 1.0: Portfolio Summary for Subir and Mumtaz over the Research Year
Closing Balance TurnoverFinancial AssetsSemiformal InformalMicrofinance savings 10.20 49.40Private loans out 30.00 117.00Home savings 5.00 18.00Subtotal Rs2034($45.20) ($184.40)
Rs8298Financial LiabilitiesSemiformal InformalMicrofinance loan 30.00Interest free loan 14.00Private loan 15.00Pawn loan 0Money guarding 2.00Shop credit 4.00Subtotal ($865.00) Rs
38925Financial net worth –$19.80Total Turnover Rs24588 $546.40
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I also show the total turnover during the year (the flows in and out
of each class of instrument). By placing the balances and the flows
alongside each other, I highlight one of the big points made above:
balances are small relative to flows.
Balances are sometimes so small that one might conclude this is
not a "portfolio" at all, in the sense in which a modern financial adviser
would use the term. Nevertheless, the fact that there are many different
instruments and that the flows are relatively large, shows, clearly, that
Subir and Mumtaz, and households like them, are financially active. I
need to pause for a moment and adjust our perspective if I are to
understand the real importance of these poor-owned portfolios.
Multiple and Uncertain Occupations
Understanding the reasons for high turnovers is the starting point
for understanding the financial lives of these households. I move to that
task by showing how, despite a wide variety of occupations, the income
characteristics of diary households led them to the predicament that I
call the "triple whammy".
Some of my diary households are headed by someone with a long-
term permanent waged or salaried job. But these are the exceptions. For
example, there are only two households out of 60 that obtain most of
their income from a single permanent job: both are private car drivers
living in Lucknow. There are other waged jobs – are like Subir and
Mumtaz and have one or more members of the household working in the
Zardozi karkhana – but as with that couple, these jobs provide only part
of the total household income, the rest coming from self-employment,
casual employment, or petty businesses. Jobs that appear permanent may
turn out not to be. There also many women from the Nawab households
who are involved in Chikan kari (embroiderywork) working from inside
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Plate II : Fig 3. A woman working on chikan embroidery
Fig. 4 : Women from Nawab households help their male counterparts in
the household finances.
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Chapter -IV
their houses they earn small amount to help out ease their day to day
challenges. Widely portrayed as a leisure-time activity, embroidery
production employs poor. Muslim women workers on piece rates. The
embroiderers' distinctiveness is used to shore up primarily urban,
middle-class ideals about tradition and heritage that are necessary in
order to create demand for handicraft products.
What is surprising is the comparative scarcity of sociological or
historical accounts that take a more critical approach, not only to the
understanding of poverty and handicrafts as economic activity, but also
to the kind of rhetoric that has arisen around them.
Using insights drawn variously from socialist-feminist and
Marxist-feminist theory, it argues that the cultural value of women's
work depends upon, and at the same time denies, the alienated
production of handicraft commodities for the market. I start with an
example drawn from my own research on chikan embroidery production
in Lucknow, India.- where analysis of the relationship between
productive conditions and discourse provides a model and framework for
the examination of other women's crafts and how it has helped the
Nawabs to sustain their livelihoods since the past three decades.
Chikan is a major manufacturing industry in the city of Lucknow,
located in north India, with an output made up mostly of embroidered
garments. Chikan is made in stages. Male workers dominate all the
stages but the embroidery itself, where over 90% of workers are Muslim
women. Female embroiderers are differentiated primarily in terms of
skill. Inside the old city and in well-established mohallas
(neighbourhoods) on the north bank of the river that transects Lucknow.
a small number of women belonging to the Nawab househ olds make
embroidery to sustain their livelihoods.
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Chapter -IV
Highly skilled embroiderers know many stitches, and they use
complex mental and manual abilities to design and execute embroidery.
They conceive of chikan in a completely different way from the low-
skilled, deploying their knowledge and ability in a way not at all unlike
the craftspeople whose integrated skills gave way to the fragmented
labour processes of the European industrial revolution. None, however,
relies solely upon sale of line work to make a living: demand for fine
work is a small component of the market, and is subordinated to fonns of
embroidery that can be rapidly mass-produced. This kind of work is
entirely controlled by independent traders and shopkeepers, who pay
piecework wages to craftspeople at all stages of production of chikan.
Low-skilled women., who make up the vast majority of embroiderers
learn to make one stitch only, an instance of de-stitching that is
consistent with the intensification of production for a mass-market. The
latter are relatively new to the industry, whereas the highly skilled have
family histories of embroidering going back two to three generations, as
far as the time when men (who remain a small minority of chikan
embroiderers today) dominated the ranks of fine embroiderers.
Embroidery knowledge is kept within families, and so the low skilled
have few social opportunities to come into contact with, still less learn,
higher level skills. Yet the core of skilled embroiderers' subsistence
come from subcontracting cheap work fusing one kind of stitch) to
women with lesser skills than their own, either in the neighbourhood, or
in more far-flung communities.
Taking no account of these social variables-of which they are
certainly not unaware-embroidery traders (those who coordinate
production and sell the product) persistently describe the work of all
female embroiderers as 'free-time' labour, intrinsically incapable of
rising to the heights of professionally-made (i.e.literally 'man'-made
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chikan). They are not alone in this view: it is encountered among
middle-class residents of Lucknow of all kinds, as well as government
officials, and is printed in the pages of books and magazines about
chikan. Its apparent plausibility stems from several distinct but related
discourses about craft, women, and Lucknow itself: crafts have been
corrupted by modernity and the market: contemporary Muslim, female
embroiderers are incapable of matching their predecessors in the quality
of their work: and Lucknow has undergone an absolute decline in its
status as a cultural and artistic centre.
Some nineteenth-century accounts suggest that Lucknow chikan
was not made by embroiderers for their personal use. but primarily, if
not exclusively, for exchange.'' The differentiation of fine from cheap
work was evident well over 100 years ago. William Hoey's account of
northern Indian industries and George Watt's catalogue of the 1903
Delhi handicrafts exhibit some 20 years later allude to women (and
children) as the makers of cheap work, meaning that all other workers,
by default, must have been men.-- Men appear to have tnade fine work
to order in their karkhanas (workshops), while women and children
worked at home under their direction on cheap piece work, typically
containing only one kind of stilch (as the cheapest work does today).
Possibly, early female embroiderers were upper-class women whose
families fell on hard times following the Uprising of 1857, although
whether they were applying a skill previously adapted to use value
production or only encountered embroidery as exchange value
production is unknown.'' Fine work was made on a contract basis for an
elite local clientele. Aristocratic men, ordering caps and angarkhas
(long, embroidered coats) were important consumers of fine chikan”
Sharar (1975).
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Chapter -IV
Oral accounts and scattered written sources suggest that a critical
shift in chikan production took place in the 1920s. Workshops closed
and embroidery production withdrew into the household, where the
labour of male non-relatives was replaced by the cheaper labour of
female relatives. It is difficult to determine what caused this labour
restructuring; however, that it coincided with a period of global
economic depression is suggestive. There is little question that elite
consumption declined.
Cross-cultural studies collected in volumes written over the past
15 years reveal commonalities in home-based work and household
subcontracting that apply with equal force to chikan. Since women are
home-based workers, their embroidery is regarded by men and
officialdom as one of a range of subsistence practices. In contrast, male
workers in the chikan industry are typically found in publicly accessible
workplaces and the status of their work—as work—is unchallenged.
Female workers execute the stage of production that makes the final
product distinct, but they are rendered invisible because their efforts are
not acknowledged in socially sanctioned ways.
Their invisibility is compounded by cultural rules governing male-
female interaction that limit the latter's public participation in the work
process. Female embroiderers arc constrained to some degree or another
by the demands of purdah (seclusion from, or veiling in front of non-
related men). Most women depend upon agents, the majority of whom
are men. to bring work to them (a service for which a substantial portion
of the wage may be extracted).
Publicly, debasement of the work and the worker can be framed in
two ways: embroiderers are either naive or ignorant, or they lack taste
and discernment. In the first instance, portraying chikan as a domestic
pastime rooted in the glorious days when Lucknow was ruled by Nawabs
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{king, ruler; title of rulers of the province of Awadh) but that is now
ripe for revival by non-govemmental organisations (NGOs). Government
institutions and private designers, depends upon the public construction
of a sequestered and simple embroiderer who needs to be told what to
do. She consciously practices a domestic art inherited without break
from a remote, courtly ancestor, but now corrupted by commercialism.
Even the highly skilled must be brought under the wings of
sophisticated designers and development agents. Attempting to oppose
this received wisdom docs the highly skilled embroiderer little good.
Officially, they are positioned as mere technicians who execute the
designer or developer's vision.
Significantly, when embroiderers appear in advertising or
marketing media, they are depicted as overtly Muslim women (see
Figures ). Chikan work has been described as 'a hereditary craft
practiced by the most backward Muslim classes in Lucknow ... [that has
today] passed into the hands of the women folk of the backward Muslim
communities, an additional labour in ill-lit rooms behind the purdah".'"
The photograph reproduced in Figure I is evidently staged, since the
embroiderer is shown working on an embroidery that has already been
finished. Moreover, portraits of women embroidering while wearing
burqas {enveloping garments that conceal the body) are inherently odd
since embroiderers wear the garment to go outside their homes, and
embroidery, as home-based work, is rarely done out of doors.
In these depictions, chikan is portrayed not just as the archetypal
artefact of Lucknow, but one produced by a marked and, to middle-class
Indian and foreign consumers, exotic group; that is, women in purdah.
Such portrayals essentially position embroiderers in impossible
situations, staged to communicate about women and their work in ways
that emphasize their profound connection to tradition. Portrayals of this
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kind directly sustain middle-class, urban and, ultimately, global
stereotypes of heritage. The embroiderer's difference from the viewer is
presented here as primarily religious and cultural in nature, rather than
sociocconomic and class-based. These depictions entrench notions of
embroiderer backwardness, of the guileless and ignorant embroiderer
thoughtlessly acquiescent in the debasement of chikan work who must
be educated in the authentic production of her craft. The result of a
century's development of a manufacturing industry in which women
have been deployed as the primary labour source for the advantages that
their home-based labour provides to capital is reconceived as the retreat
into backward homes of an art form once practiced at the highest levels
of society.
Unpredictability and Low Incomes
When occupations are intermittent, part-time, casual, or multiple,
and where children may also work, it is not easy to measure total
household income. There I focused on financial transactions and income
and expenditure flows, I have estimates of income based on periodic
enquiries.
To give some meaning to these statistics, I include an extensive
table in the chapter ahead that shows daily per capita income data for a
selection of households chosen to illustrate their varying sizes, locations
and occupational patterns, with notes about ways in which the value and
nature of the income intersects with their financial behaviour as noted in
the diaries.
The first element of the triple whammy that poor households face,
then, is low incomes. The second element, the uncertain timing of cash
flows, is Ill brought out by the diary methodology.
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Seasonal variations in income affected many households. Based
on diary sample, shows the income of Nawabs who are involved in
Zardozi (embroidery) as an occupation. I am highlighting Zardozi
(embroidery) here for a simple fact that almost all the households had
atleast one member who was involved in Zardozi (embroidery).
Therefore it was important to discuss and reveal the soci economic
problems faced by these people on a day to day basis. In the following
paragraphs an attempt has also been made to unravel the process of
Zardozi (embroidery) along with the problems related to it.
Zardozi and the Nawabs
Zardozi is not merely a needlecraft but a vestige of an opulent
bygone era. An embroidered extravaganza in gold and silver threads
embellished with precious stones and crystals patterned on velvet,
chiffon, crepe, silk, evoking the nostalgia of an exotic past – of Shia
‘Nawabs’ (used honorifically as a title by the rulers of Avadh after the
disintegration of the Mughal Empire) and nobility, court life and
courtesans as described by Sharar (1975) in a “collection of essays
which originally appeared under the title of Hindustan men Mashriqi
Tamaddun ka Akhri Namuna (literally, ‘The Last Phase of Oriental
Culture in India’) in the Lucknow journal ‘Dil Gudaz’ over a period
from 1913 onwards” (in Harcourt and Husain, 1994, p.25). Not
surprisingly even today every Zardoz (artisan) proudly claims to be the
practitioner of this heritage. The pride of the craftsmen is incidentally
not just confined to the craft’s true-blue status, but applies to its origin
as well. The Zardoz claim the genesis of this art to prophet
Yosuf/Joseph, when he decorated his aba (robe) in a similar fashion.
With the end of the feudal era the demand for this embroidery
came down, but remained a part of the Shia culture of Lucknow. During
the last three decades one has witnessed a resurgence in the production
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of Zardozi embroidered clothes after their induction as ethnic couture in
the bridal wear, fashion and glamour industry of India and abroad. This
has created a huge local demand and a boom in exports to the Middle
East and Europe, along with creating an extraordinary inclination within
the Muslim community towards learning this art from their predecessors.
The migration of Zardoz from Lucknow to Saudi Arabia and Dubai has
also been a common phenomenon since then.
Today, the scenario is that approximately more than 80,000
artisans from the Shia community are associated with this work, but are
reeling under intense poverty and suffering as a result of living on a
pittance. What is interesting to note here is that most of the Nawab
families have attached themselves to this art and are now practising it on
a full time basis. What attaches them to Zardozi (embroidery) is their
need for money and their inability to perform any other skilled labour.
This can be attributed to the cultural notions of dignity whereby the Shia
community distances itself from any other skilled occupations like
butchery, confectionery or cooking, thus avoiding a stigma associated
with lower caste occupational groups.
So both small regular monthly incomes and modest seasonal
incomes produce a need for intermediation, explaining why poor
households that experience these patterns in income tend to hold
portfolios of transactions and relationships.
But there is no doubt that irregularity, and above all
unpredictability, of income causes even more serious challenges in cash-
flow management, resulting in ever more innovation in trying to address
them.
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Fig.6: Karigar (labourer) making powdered chalk
Fig.7: Chalk is being mixed with kerosene oil
Fig.8: The solution of chalk and kerosene is rubbed on to the Khaka (design) which has minute holes.
Fig 9: A group of Nawab Karigars working on a piece of cloth.
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The family needs for food, shelter, education of their children and
health concerns are all taken care of from whatever is earned on a
weekly basis. Either the Zardoz are self employed or they are Karigar at
a certain Karkhana. Being self employed, the Zardoz brings work from
local boutiques or Offices (who bag orders from exporters and
showrooms in metros). These Offices are sometimes run by a
Karkhandar (person who employs wage labourers in his Karkhana for
Zardozi, at a certain Nafri. As the orders are huge, they in turn distribute
the work to their Branches (group of Zardoz working for a particular
Karkhandar). But these days, in local Zardozi parlance, the term Office
refers to a place for getting the work, and the person distributing the
work to the Zardoz, might not be a Karkhandar himself.
The distribution of work is based on the work skills of the Zardoz
concerned and their interpersonal understandings. The Office makes sure
that the self employed Zardoz embroidering a piece of cloth does it at
the lowest possible rate. It is at the time of negotiations that the cloth
and design in the form of a printed picture or a Khaka (Fig.1 handmade
design on a butter paper) is given to the Zardoz, who then tries to
quantify the number of Nafri which will be needed in order to prepare
the piece of cloth. The rates are then decided at that moment, but the
dilemma remains that the Nafri might exceed the amount negotiated with
the Office, which happens quite often. Many a times the Office rejects
the completed piece of cloth in case housefly excreta or decolouration of
threads is spotted at the time of delivery. The Zardoz is helpless as he
has to keep the completed Nag (rejected embroidered piece) with
himself and has to pay the Nafri from his own purse to all those Zardozi
Karigars employed during the completion of the embroidered piece. The
Office in turn cuts the cost of the cloth from the payment amount kept
as dues. These dues guard the Office against losses which could incur
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due to the decolouration or any other patches which reduces the quality
of the completed fabric.
Syed Sajid Husain (50 ) a self employed Zardoz works in his
own Karkhana, along with his two sons- Shahzade, (21) and Raja (10).
Sajid tries to give insights into the intricacies and work principles
involved in Zardozi and reasons as to why the Zardoz are not able to
get the work directly from the metro cities and shops, and have to
depend upon the Offices for work. Sajid states that-
We (Zardoz) cannot bring the work directly from metro cities like
Delhi and Mumbai for a simple reason- it requires a lot of capital
investment, which we can’t afford to do. The Offices bag orders from
Delhi, Punjab, Mumbai and local shops. Apart from this, businessmen
from different cities across India come directly to these Offices to get
their pieces embroidered. Offices get bulk orders i.e. 500-1000 pieces in
a Season... They (Offices) get their payment only after all the pieces are
cleared and checked by the shops or business houses. It takes time for
their dues to get cleared; on an average, an Office gets back its dues
after a minimum of 90 days. Only Offices can afford to invest such huge
sums of money with risk. Offices themselves do the sampling (get the
designs embroidered at their own Karkhanas) and in this way they know
the cost of the material and Nafri being put into a particular design.
When they distribute this design to their Branches or Karkhandars, they
negotiate at rates which are much below than the actual. For example, if
the Office has done a sample for Rs.1000 ($ 20.83), then the negotiated
amount with the Branch will be Rs.900 ($ 18.75). We all know that the
design could not be prepared at those rates, but our problem is poverty,
lack of capital and cut throat competition and we cannot keep our
children without food. We need work and money at the end of the
week...and moreover, if we don’t pick up that piece on the wishes of the
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Office, then there is always someone ready to do it at a much lower rate.
Many a times our Nafri along with the material used exceeds the amount
negotiated with the Office. In that case even if I plead with the Office
about my losses incurred, the Office will pay no heed to my pains and
suffering. They usually tell us that the same piece is being prepared at a
much lower rate by some other Zardoz …We get our payments on a
weekly basis after there is a deduction of 3% per piece. This is the
courier charge deducted by the Office from our payment. Late payments
also traumatise the life of a Zardoz. Offices hold on to some portion of
the payments and pay back on Chand Raat or before Moharram (First
month of Islamic Calendar). Sometimes to minimise the loss on a piece
of cloth, we transfer that piece to our Branch, who does it for on even a
lesser amount i.e. Rs 800- Rs 850($ 16.66- $ 17.70). But, I try to avoid
this practice, because at times the Branches have ruined some of my
pieces and on account of that I had to bear the brunt of the loss... All the
Offices which are raking profits and getting wealthier are drenched in
malpractices and malice. They have a sole objective of utilising the
helpless poor Zardoz for their own benefits....
Tahir (51) is canny while dealing with the Office, he manipulates
designs in such a way that it is impossible for the Office to notice any
visible alteration in design and stitches. He reveals-
If the Karkhandar is bent on decreasing the prices, then we,
Zardoz also decrease some patterns which are not noticeable and also
decrease the quality of material used, for instance if there are six
stitches, we decrease it to four stitches and sometimes reduces the
design by giving in only two stitches...We also make compromises on
the material being used in Zardozi. Material comes in three qualities-
one packet is of Rs 1800 ($ 37.5), the other is Rs 400 ($ 8.33) and Rs
200 ($ 4.16) respectively.
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The apathy remains in its place, where a poor Zardoz remains at
whelm of affairs, and can’t do much about what’s happening around
them. These shocks and losses create a market where the Zardoz from
Lucknow, in order to bag contracts from the Offices, bring down the
market rates per embroidered cloth and hence there is also a fall in the
Nafri.
A few voices have been raised during the last couple of years to
increase the Nafri, but to no avail. The government has turned a blind
eye to the demands of this poor artisan class. The Zardoz leadership is
confronted by many constraints such as disunity amongst this artisan
community, where they are unable to take a stand and share a common
platform for their rights. Secondly, because the leaders are self
proclaimed with no support from the majority Zardoz community, they
remain voiceless. The issue of sectarian violence in Lucknow between-
Shia and Sunnis, has also created a rift which acts as a limiting factor
when leadership issues are brought forth. To unite the Zardoz,
‘Anjumane-e- Zardozaan’ (Zardoz Association having both Shia and
Sunni members) has been organising Presidents and Vice Presidents on a
rotation basis, i.e. a Shia President and a Sunni Vice President and vice
versa the next year. But this association remains paralysed due to a lack
of commitment and an inability to come forward and protest.
I quote Bahar Alam (45), a Zardoz by profession and a candid
person of Ghazi Mandi research area. He says –
Our Union was very strong and once a year, there used to be a
General Body Meeting of the Anjuman which dealt with the various
grievances of the Zardoz community, along with issuing orders to
increase the Nafri. The Karkhandars/Offices were asked to increase the
rates they got from the shop keepers, so as to give an increased Nafri to
the Zardozi Karigar. No response from the shopkeepers regarding the
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Nafri led to strikes. During strikes the shopkeepers tried to get their
work done through some Zardoz by giving them extra money. But, as the
Union was strong, the Union members were informed about such ill
practices, and the Union then raided the Karkhanas to take into custody
all the embroidered pieces of that shopkeeper. Such raids were very
common throughout the city and all the seized cloth was returned back
when demands were met. The Union also gave full rights to the Zardoz
to tear one’s cloth, if it was found that a design had been copied or
cheated. Thus, it protected the interests of the Zardoz to the maximum.
Whilst the Union was strong the Zardoz were very happy. To run the
Union, Rs10 ($ 0.20) per week was collected. But now no one
contributes even a single penny to the Union. No one cares about the
Union and with the lack of funds it went on getting weaker and weaker.
Now the scenario is that when the Union calls a meeting, no one bothers
to attend it.
There has been an inability on the part of the leadership to act,
and this has now generated a spurt in area wise local groups of Zardoz
trying to voice their demands to the government. Here, I am quoting in
verbatim, some striking lines from a joint petition of Shia and Sunni
Zardoz leaders, submitted to the government of the State – In 1977, a
construction wage labourer used to get Rs 4 ($ .083) and a Zardoz got a
Nafri of Rs 10 ($ .20), whereas in 1988 the wages increased and a
construction wage labourer got Rs 25 ($ .52) and the Nafri of a Zardoz
was Rs 35 ($ .72). Similarly in 1992 both a construction labourer as well
as a Zardoz were getting a wage of Rs 80 ($ 1.66), but now in 2009, the
wages of a construction labourer have shot up to Rs250 ($5.20), whereas
the Nafri of a Zardoz is stagnant at Rs 80 ($ 1.66) for 8 hours of work.
There has been no increase in the Nafri since then. Where should we go?
When we ask the shopkeepers/boutiques and Offices/ Karkhandars to
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increase their returns on the prepared cloth, they simply argue that when
they are not getting higher returns from their clients, then how could
they increase the amount on a prepared material. If these conditions
prevail then the Zardoz will have no option but to leave this art of
embroidery to do some other work. Therefore, it’s a humble request that
the government should find a solution to our problems, so that our
minimum Nafri is Rs 250 ($5.20) for 8 hours of work..... Our work goes
to foreign destinations and our country men also wear our embroidered
cloth. In all fashion shows only our embroidered clothes are worn by the
models on the ramp. The government should levy tax from the
shopkeepers and then should give help us from the money generated as
tax.
Seasonal Earnings of Nawab Households attached to Zardozi
The average income for a household in Raees Manzil (Fig.5)
during the Madda and Season this year was Rs 2582.98 ($53.79) and Rs
6150.73 ($128.13) respectively, while that of Ghazi Mandi (Fig. 6) area
during the Madda was Rs 3762.40 ($78.39) while Rs7567.77 ($157.66)
in the Season.
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Graph 1.1: Seasonal household variations in US Dollar -Raes Manzil
Graph 1.2: Seasonal household variations in earnings-Ghazi Mandi
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Chapter -IV
These averages don’t show the true picture of earnings because
these are not individual earnings per month, but an average of a
composite aggregate of all the household members working on Zardozi.
The wage for a Zardoz depends upon the depth of their skill and
the movement of the ‘Muthiya’ while making a design. A skilled Zardoz
while hiring a Karigar gives a piece of cloth with a design and comes
to know about his Zardozi skills by assessing the speed of the ‘Muthiya’
for making that particular design. The agility, craft and ability to
embroider intricate designs are the main determinants of the wage. A
child learning the art gets around Rs 10 to Rs 20 ($ 0.21 to $0.42) a
week, while a more skilled Zardozi Karigar ekes out Rs 80 to Rs 90
($1.67 to $1.88) for complete 8 hours of work. I f he continues with the
work for another 4 hours then the wage is doubled i.e., he will be paid
Rs Rs.160 – Rs.180 ($ 3.33 to $ 3.75). But certain inhibiting factors
curtail these working hours on a daily basis. Electricity cuts and
household liabilities are the two main reasons which hamper a Zardoz in
getting his full Nafri.
Electricity usage on an illegal basis is quite rampant in both the
field areas. Out of the 60 researched households, 39 households were
using a ‘Katiya’ (see Fig.7,8,9) a hook connected to the main line on the
street to draw illegal electricity). Some of these illegal connections were
of previous defaulters who had outstanding bills ranging between
Rs.6000 ($ 125) to Rs.6 lakhs ($ 12500). Amongst the rest, 19
households were supplied electricity using a connection that was on
rent. People hire connections from households paying their bills on time.
These households mostly belong to friends in the neighbourhood. For a
hired connection each household was paying on an average of Rs 350 ($
7.29) per month. Only two households were paying their bills on time
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Fig.10: Use of Katiya to draw illegal electricity from the main electric line
Fig.11: Katiya is being used by a NawabZardoz and a house
Fig 12: Electricity theft at Ghazi Mandi by Katiya connection.
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Chapter -IV
and had electricity meters to their names.
The vigilant squad of the Uttar Pradesh Power Corporation
Limited (UPPCL) conducts raids, but the people of the neighbourhood
alert all the other households in the vicinity, to pull off/terminate their
connections from the main electricity terminal. The neighbourhood is
quite sensitive to the needs of their friends and relatives, especially as
they know this would directly hamper the economic prospects of the
households -Zardozi gets affected by the lack of proper lighting.
Moreover, power theft is a crime and if anyone gets caught they would
not only get charged for their crime, but also fall into the police net.
There have been numerous cases where the households are informed of
such raids. Tahir Bhai says –
Katiya connections are common everywhere in the old city. It is
not only the poor who are stealing electricity for their benefit, but also
the rich who can easily pay up their instalments but are thriving on such
illegal connections. If the rich get caught they can get away by giving a
bribe, but when we get trapped, then there is no one to help us. The
children of our area and young adolescents remain alert and they easily
spread the word for any danger regarding the Departmental
checkups....Many of us use Katiya connections for making Zardozi
designs which have intricate details and require a lot of concentration.
Electricity failure on a day to day basis hurts the Nafri of a Zardozi
Karigar as well as the Karkhandar. The Zardozi Karigar will not get a
full Nafri as he can’t work without electricity and the Karkhandar will
suffers for his payments from the Office, as his work will finish late...
The Offices tend to hold on the payments of the Karkhandar for a week;
if their pieces are not submitted on time i.e. the Office wants completed
embroidered pieces on Saturday. Power crises loom every year in the
summers, there is a huge electricity deficit due to power pilferage. For
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those of our neighbours, friends and relatives who have been caught, I
really feel pity for them. They could have done nothing, as they have to
survive and for survival electricity is a must...But who cares for the poor
and who can understand what goes behind such acts of desperation to
survive.
Migration to cities like Chandigarh, Delhi, Mumbai and
Hyderabad and in the Middle East to Saudi Arabia and Dubai, remains
an alternative to dipping incomes. Being experts in Zardozi they easily
get work with a Nafri that is triple the amount of their present income in
Lucknow. But family liabilities and loneliness abroad limits the Zardoz
propensity to settle abroad permanently to earn a better living. There
have been numerous instances where the Zardoz Karigars in spite of
earning much more than their current incomes have returned back to
their native land. Babbu (27) has a different story to tell. He never
wanted to come back from Jeddah (Saudi Arabia) where he had earned
in lakhs after just staying for four years as an illegal immigrant. But his
luck ran out and he was deported back along with many Zardozi
Karigars from different parts of the city.
He narrates that-
Living in Saudi for me was a dream come true. Since my
childhood I had seen people going to Saudi in search of greener pastures
and earn handsome money in quick time. If you work in Saudi for just a
year then you can easily build a full house from the earned income?
Working conditions and Nafri is totally different from Lucknow. Here,
the Office can cheat, lose your bills and give you just pennies for your
hard work, but in Saudi, the stringent rules and regulations and harsh
penalties help you reap benefits from your tireless attitude and hard
work....We can go to Saudi either by Umrah visa giving just Rs 40000 ($
833.33) or through a company visa where we paid Rs1.5 lakhs ($ 3125).
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Babbu is now back to Jeddah again after getting a work visa for
Rs 1.5lakhs ($ 3125). This time he can work freely and can send
remittances which will benefit his family and brother who still works as
a Karkhandar at a small Karkhana in Ghazi Mandi.
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Graph 1.3: Average Weekly Expenditure and Earning –Raees Manzi
Note: USD 1 = Rs 48
Graph 1.4: Average Weekly Expenditure and Earning- Ghazi Mandi
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In fact out of all the commonalities, the most fundamental one is
that the households are coping with incomes that are not just low, but
also irregular and unpredictable and that too few financial instruments
are available to effectively manage these uneven flows. But there is no
doubt that this irregularity, and above all unpredictability of income
causes even more serious challenges to cash-flow management, resulting
in ever more innovative measures to try and address them.
SPENDINGS ON RITUALS AND FESTIVALS BY THE POOR
NAWABS
Although not a devout Shia, Baqar also attends the Anjuman-e-
Nasrul Aza (a religious group), formed by the people of the Nakhas
locality where he was born and lived for years, before moving to
Thakurgunj locality. Anjuman-e- Nasrul Aza usually performs matam
(self flagellation) and recites to the rhythm of a special chant known as
nawha (elegy) after the Majlis (mourning session) to remember the
martyrdom of Imam Husain, the grandson of the Prophet Muhammad, at
the Battle of Karbala. A young man takes the microphone and begins to
chant one of the special nawha (elegies) that are a trademark of each
group in the city. As he does so, the members of the group including
Baqar Khan, fling their arms in the air and begin to beat their breasts
with a heavy rhythmical thud.
Every Shia locality has its own Anjuman (religious group) which
specifically consists of people from that area. Baqar also moves with
Anjuman-e- Raunaqe Deene Islam (Group of Glittering Islam) which
operates from Ghazi Mandi research area and is composed of mainly
Zardoz. Similarly Anjuman- e -Ghunchai Mahdia (Group of flowers
from the garden of the Mahdi- who before the Day of Resurrection,
alongside Jesus, will rid the world of wrongdoing, injustice and tyranny)
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consists of the people from the Raees Manzil research area, including
Zardoz and various other occupational groups.
Baqar remains reluctant when moving with the Anjumans, for it is
only after the Karkhanas get closed, that the Zardoz come out to move to
houses from where they have got a Wada, (invitation) for the Nauha
Khwani (elegy recitation). But because, there are almost all the Zardoz
in the Anjuman, he makes sure that he doesn’t miss many outings with
the Anjuman.
Baqar works with full dedication on Zardozi and makes sure to
repay all borrowed moneys to the grocers and his friends. To meet
pressing short-term needs, his main objective is cash-flow management.
Being able to manage immediate needs is a precondition for considering
long-term ambitions, and hence his emphasis is on the flexibility and
convenience of the financial tools, even if those tools were not always
reliable – reminding us that money is fungible.
The Zardoz is never short of spending money in annual religious
festivals like Moharram where they commemorate the martyrdom of
Imam Husain- grandson of Prophet Mohammed for over two months,
Eid
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Chapter -IV
Graph 1.5: Household Spendings in Moharram Raees Manzil
Graph 1.6:Shia Nawab Zardoz families spend most of their Savings in Moharram
on Rituals.
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Chapter -IV
ul Fit r (Festivity after the conclusion of the fast), Eid ul Adha (Festival
of Sacrifice), along with Nazr (Nyaz) - "an offering" every Thursday and
on special Islamic calendar dates. In each case they require large sums
of money and require huge savings to accomplish these rituals.
SMALL SCALE LENDING AND BORROWING
To manage day to day, the diary households patched and stretched
their savings and their loans, a strategy that was called into play
whenever an employer failed to pay on time, a spell of unemployment
hit, or a visitor suddenly arrived, to name just a handful of reasons.
Perhaps because saving is something that an individual or a household
can do without involving others, virtually every household saved. For
example, not a single one of the 60 households, even the very poorest,
was without some form of do it yourself saving. And yet for none of
these households was saving-at-home a sufficient strategy: all of them
had to turn to others in their community to bolster their capacity to
manage their money. So while saving was the most ubiquitous
instrument, much more cash food through loans, when I looked at all
withdrawals from saving and loans taken by the households, including
the very smallest transactions of each type, loans outnumbered savings
withdrawals by four to one.
Overwhelmingly, the loans were taken locally, in the "informal
market". 88 percent of all borrowing deals were informal, a figure that
climbs to 92 percent for the poorest part of the sample.
While moneylenders loom large as lenders of last resort, charging
fees that can stretch the capacities of borrowers, informal-sector
borrowing usually means paying zero interest, and in general the smaller
the sum the more likely is to be the case.
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After home savings, interest free borrowings was by far the most
frequently used financial instrument in all three countries. It
complements rather than contrasts with the households' attempts to save
at home, because interest free borrowing and lending is in essence a way
of harnessing the savings power of a neighbourhood or family network
to address the cash-flow problems of its individual members. To tap into
this network the diary households needed to be part of it: the portfolios
of the poor are thus portfolios of transactions and relationships. Better-
off people might manage money on an everyday basis with a credit card.
For the poor households in our study, the main strategy was to turn to
each other, using one-on-one lending and borrowing between friends,
family, and neighbours.
These interest free borrowings and lendings were ubiquitous
among all the households. Interest free borrowing and interest free
lending relate to each other in interesting ways. Often there is an
understanding that the borrower will return the favor and lend when the
need arises: I call this "reciprocal" lending and borrowing. In other
cases, the borrowing flows one way and the creditor in one deal is
unlikely to become the debtor in the next: this might be called
"obligatory" lending since it depends on the lender's sense that he or she
is obliged to help out the borrower with a loan. "Obligatory" lending
appears to be common in where there are many fewer reports of interest-
free lending by the diary households themselves than of interest-free
borrowing. This suggests that many poor people go to wealthier people
(people outside the range of our enquiry) for such loans – better off
family members or employers, for example, who feel some sense of
responsibility to help out.
To smooth their consumption, then, poor people often lean on
those around them with marginally more resources, and this is true not
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only in purely cash transactions, but also in groceries taken on credit, in
rent payments delayed, and in advances taken against wages. All these
transactions have in common that the advance (whether in goods,
services, or payment for labor) is given within an existing relationship
that reduces the risk to both borrower and lender.
[ 241 ]
Chapter VNAWAB HOUSEHOLD PARTICIPATION IN THE
INFORMAL SAVING MECHANISMS
The global recession might end soon, but there are no signs of the
woes of the poor in third world countries settling down. The impact of
the recession is huge- there are definite signs of job losses, loss of
income, high expenditures and an unusual increase in food prices. It then
becomes just unimaginable when we take into account the poor from the
third world countries, whose lives depend upon earnings which are
vulnerable to economic fluctuations and seasonality. This dilemma of
poverty becomes more pathetic when these earnings are just less than
$2, working for more than eight hours a day. How can one survive in
such conditions of haplessness and misery? Do they compromise on the
education of their children or do they make compromises on the health
front? To an extent yes - families reeling under extreme poverty make
compromises on all fronts- education, health and the quantity of food
stuff they eat daily. Every day of their lives is spent struggling to earn a
living, so that the children at home don’t sleep hungry and hence the big
question remains, what keeps them afloat?
The answer lies somewhere in their social structure, which helps
in maintaining strong social networks and ties among the members of
the neighbourhood and sometimes even employing financial tools, many
linked to informal networks and family ties, which according to
Coleman (1990) is the social capital of the society - a ‘glue’ that binds
people together (Putnam, 1993; Putnam, 1995; Portes, 1998; Shuksmith,
2000). Social capital consists of norms, networks and horizontal
associations (Putnam, Leonardi and Nanetti, 1993), that have important
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economic consequences for development outcomes including growth,
poverty and poverty alleviation (Gootaert, 1996).
Local social capital
Within a local community there are people, organizations and
companies from all three economic systems operating alongside each
other. Small businesses and corner shops (of the private sector) provide
local services to the communities and employ local people; community
councils and local authority offices (of the public sector) do the same.
And voluntary and community organizations, (of the third sector)
provide a web of social networks and also create paid and unpaid jobs.
All this activity by the sectors and between the sectors adds to the
overall development of the community and a better quality of life for
residents. Together they generate and maintain local social capital. At a
neighbourhood level the three sectors tend to be close and operate in a
closely integrated way.
At this local level, social capital plays a significant role in the
development of the local economy across the sectors. For example, it
can reduce transaction costs such that there can be unwritten agreements
and mutual understanding instead of the need for formal contracts. The
role of social enterprises running managed workspaces and offering
training and advice to the self-employed on behalf of a local authority is
a good example of the three sectors working together and building local
social capital for the benefit of the community. Similarly it is noticeable
how much of the work in which social enterprises are engaged is work
based on trust: childcare, domiciliary care, estate security, etc. The
quality of this work is enhanced also by local knowledge and a sense of
belonging to the community: local people doing local work.
This is not to suggest that social capital is not apparent at
regional/district, national or global levels. It manifests itself wherever
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there are networks and relationships between individuals and
organizations. Social capital currently thrives within the apparently
close relationships between multinational companies and government
ministers and officials just as much as it can enthusiastically be used by
the manager of a social enterprise and the local shopkeeper and the local
librarian. The importance is in the relationship and how that is used to
develop trust, which may lead on to reciprocal assistance.
Social Networks
These networks are structures of relationships linking social
actors-and are ubiquitous in contemporary society, especially among the
poor in third world countries. They regulate the flow of information, the
formation of social norms, the establishment of authority and the
administration of sanctions against anti normative behaviour, and trust
plays a fundamental role in these processes (Coleman, 1988; Burt, 1993;
Lin, 1999; Putnam, 2000).
Networks not only provide emotional support in times of crisis,
but are also, an instrumental aid for individuals whose social and
economic disadvantages place them “beyond the frontier” of formal
finance (Von Pischke, 1991), successful financial intermediation is often
accompanied by social intermediation. Social intermediation prepares
marginalised groups or individuals to enter into informal networks often
known as Rotating Services and Credit Associations (ROSCA’s) which
are groups developed by their members at the grass root level. They
bear different names in different countries, for example, in West Africa
they are tontines, paris, or susus; in South Africa they are stokvels; in
Egypt they are gam’iyas; in Guatemala they are cuchubales; in Mexico
they are tandas (Krahnen and Schmidt, 1994), hui in Taipei (Armendariz
de Aghion and Murdoch, 2005) and in Lucknow, India they are Beesi.
As Geertz (1962) points out, these associations serve as efficient
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institutions for amassing savings for small capital expenditures- an
important aid to economic development.
Social intermediation also creates a sense of trust and solidarity
among individuals in informal networks and hence borrowing and
lending on a day to day basis also marks an important component used
for settling small money crunches. Neighbours, friends and relatives are
the ones who come forward for support and in this way each ‘‘favour’’
is expected to be repaid, and those who can provide ‘‘favours’’ are
expected to do so when requested. It is only in the worst scenario when
credit needs are unavoidable that the poor are forced to borrow from
money lenders at usurious interest rates or sell their assets. This social
intrermediation leads to the formation of saving mechanisms among the
poor and leading to the formation of social capital.
Savings Mechanisms
Savings are an important determinant of wellbeing at both the
individual and national levels. For individuals, savings may be
motivated by life-cycle considerations, investment opportunities, the
desire to smooth consumption in the face of volatile incomes,or the need
to accumulate resources for large purchases. From an aggregate
perspective, savings help determine the supply of funds for investment.
And while the precise relationship between savings and growth is still a
subject of debate, for low-income countries financial development and
“deepening” are likely to have important implications for economic
growth and the effectiveness of monetary policy.
Households in low-income countries have a variety of
mechanisms available for saving. These mechanisms range from formal
institutions such as banks and credit unions to less formal mechanisms
such as holding cash, asset accumulation, and participation in rotating-
savings-and-credit-associations (ROSCAs). These mechanisms differ in
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important ways that have significant micro- and macroeconomic
implications. Yet very little is known about the micro-level determinants
of household participation in the various instruments. In this paper, I
discuss a simple framework for thinking about this choice, and provide
empirical evidence from Luckow. I focus on the choice between formal
market savings, specifically banks and postal savings, and informal
savings committees (beesi, a Indian ROSCA). Though somewhat
restrictive, I focus on these mechanisms because they represent
intermediated funds, are the most prevalent forms of savings in
Lucknow among the Nawabs, and because other savings are notoriously
difficult to measure.
Focusing on the distinction between formal and informal
institutions is important for several reasons. Informal finance
mechanisms are quite prevalent in low-income countries, and are
successful in meeting some specific financial needs. The advantage of
informal mechanisms such as ROSCAs (Rotating Services and Credit
Associations) is the ability to overcome some of the information and
enforcement problems that often lead to the absence of formal markets.
Because savings groups tend to be localized, agents on both sides of
transactions often know each other personally. Therefore, informational
problems such as adverse selection, moral hazard, monitoring, and
verification are less serious. Further, because participants in informal
savings committees typically share a common social bond (for example,
they tend to form among friends, family, neighbors, and coworkers), the
desire to maintain the capital embodied in those bonds provides
incentives against voluntary default.
HoIver, the fact that such institutions tend to be localized means
they are less able to exploit scale economies and are more vulnerable to
local economic shocks affecting all group members. The formal sector is
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superior on these grounds, and provides some additional advantages
over the informal sector, both for the individual and the economy. For
depositors, government insurance reduces the default risk of banking. In
the aggregate, funds intermediated through the banking sector can be
lent over a greater geographical area, equalizing the marginal product of
investment and enhancing efficiency. A further distinction between the
formal and informal sectors is that effective monetary policy typically
relies on central bank or government control over the banking system. A
large informal financial sector may compromise this ability.
Beesi Savings Committees Among the Poor
Beesi are informal savings committees structured like ROSCAs, as
discussed and analyzedby Besley et al. (1993, 1994). Individuals
voluntarily form groups and meet at regular intervals. At each meeting,
members contribute a fixed amount to a central pot, and take turns
receiving the pot. The order of receipt is determined either by lottery or
through agreement of the members. One motivation for such committees
is as as hort-term accumulation instrument to facilitate the purchase of
durables. Besley and Levenson (1996) discuss the role of the hui in
Taiwan in the accumulation of durable goods. With repeated
participation, or very large groups, these committees can also function
as a longer-term savings instrument. For instance, in Lucknow, the mean
group size is around 20 (bees is the Urdu word meaning twenty) and
most groups meet monthly. Thus, some members wait nearly two years
before they “withdraw” their deposits from the committee. Late
recipients are typically compensated for their delay, and thus many
individuals purposefully view these committees as savings instruments
that may yield high returns. While the order of receipt is typically
determined in advance, exceptions to the ordering may be made when a
member has a specific need, enhancing the liquidity of what is otherwise
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Chapter -V
a fairly rigid instrument. However, covariant shocks among group
members make it likely that a time of need for one member will also be
a time of need for other members. Thus, security is more of a concern
for depositors to Beesi savings committees.
One additional important characteristic of Beesi is that they tend
to form around social groupings, with members of a given group
typically residing or working near each other. These connections allow
the groups to overcome problems of information and enforcement.
However, it is precisely this “closeness” that renders these committees
vulnerable to group-wide income shocks that cause members to default
and threaten the solvency of the committee.
Banks vs Beesi, Accessibility
Aside from the primary differences regarding return on deposits,
security, and liquidity, these two financial organizations differ in terms
of accessibility. For banks, access depends first on physical access
(having a branch nearby). This typically means that rural households are
at a disadvantage, as the distance to a bank branch can be great, and can
involve substantial transportation costs. And while there are no explicit
restrictions on participation for any groups, physical distance and travel
can provide barriers to participation by women in particular, since the
observance of purdah restricts movement outside of the household. And
quite aside from physical access, participation in the banking sector also
depends on education; in order to open and operate an account, basic
skills such as reading, writing, and keeping track of the account are
necessary.
The literacy rate is just 30%, which will limit participation of a
substantial number of men and women. Access to Beesi savings
committees entails other factors; first, a group must exist, and second an
individual must be selected for participation in a group.A number of
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Chapter -V
factors determine whether a savings group exits. First, there must be a
sufficiently large number of people, living in close physical proximity,
who want to participate. Thus, areas with low population densities will
be less likely to sustain groups. Income sources and variability are
additional critical factors in group formation. In places with variable
income, or where most people are employed in seasonal activities such
as agriculture, it is unlikely that there will be enough individuals able to
make the regular contributions required for the group.
An additional factor regarding access is that, even if a group
exists, individuals must be selected for or admitted into the group. Beesi
are private groups, and membership of specific individuals is determined
by the group, either at the time of formation or when an individual asks
to join the group. In either case, there is likely to be a substantial
amount of screening by group members. Individuals who may pose
problems for the functioning of the group are unlikely to be admitted;
for example, individuals with very low or extremely variable incomes
are likely to have difficulty making regular payments.
However, unlike banks, Beesi are typically located locally and do
not involve substantial travel. And while groups form along social,
ethnic or religious lines, there tend to be multiple groups in any given
area. Further, some groups consist exclusively of women; combined with
reduced travel, this means that women have greater access to Beesi. And
finally, unlike banks, the functioning of the group does not require
literacy or numeracy of all the members. Typically a leader is chosen to
keep track of payments and records, and this is the only person within
the group who must be literate.
Case Study of two Women who Belong to the Nawab Families
This study reveals two such operating Beesi networks run by
women, each one from Ghazi Mandi organised by Shafia (female, 38)
[ 249 ]
Chapter -V
and at Raees Manzil by Sultana (female, 48). The Zardoz find saving in
Beesi to be uncomplicated, localized and efficient, in the absence of any
other saving mechanism. The risk levels are low and agents on both
sides of transactions mostly know each other personally. Therefore,
informational problems such as adverse selection, monitoring and
verification are less serious. Furthermore, because the participants in
Beesi network share a common social bond being neighbours, friends,
family members and co-workers, the desire to maintain the capital
embodied in those bonds provides incentives against voluntary default.
Moreover, if defaults occur, then the responsibility to pay the dues of
the participant falls upon the Organiser of these Beesi. The Organiser of
the Beesi pays all the dues, which have been defaulted by the member. It
is also noticed that the members also take into consideration the
genuineness of the Organiser and how he/she has managed the members’
money during his/her stint as a Beesi Organiser. I have noticed that the
trust levels of people in Raees Manzil is quite low and that they look at
each other with suspicion and doubt, especially when money is at stake.
Hence, running a Beesi is a big task for the Organiser, and what I
conclude is that although the people don’t trust each other, they back the
Organiser hoping that if someone defaults then the money will be paid
by the Organiser. The Organisers remain on their toes when receiving
the weekly or monthly instalments from the members. One can see
ferocious altercations with participants in case the instalments are not on
time. No one is spared, even blood relatives when payments are at stake.
[ 250 ]
Chapter -V
Fig.13: Shafia receiving her Beesi instalment from his husband, who is also a member
of the network
Fig 14: Shafia paying out the ‘pot’ of Rs 23000 ($479.16) to a member on her turn.
The word Beesi comes from the word Urdu word ‘Bees’ meaning
twenty participants who have agreed to pay a certain sum in instalments
[ 251 ]
Chapter -V
to an Organiser, who himself/herself is one of the participants in the
network. But these days these Beesi networks need not have twenty
participants. There can be many more participants according to the
amount of money being invested and the duration of the Beesi. The mean
group size of the Beesi network is 23 Nawab families in Ghazi Mandi
while it is 60 in Raees Manzil. Out of these 60 members only 37
members belonging to the Nawab families were involved in Zardozi
were researched upon. The Ghazi Mandi groups meets at an interval of
one month and the instalment for each participant of the network is Rs
1000 ($20.83) receiving Rs 23000 ($ 479.166), (see fig.20&21) while
the Raees Manzil Beesi network has 60 members who meet every week
for a draw and saves Rs100 $ (2.08) per week, each member getting Rs
6000 ($ 125). This weekly draw, according to the participants, creates a
sort of interest among all the participants who are interested in the pot.
In both cases the draw of the recipients is done in front of all the
members present through a lottery.
The Organisers (Shafia and Sultana) in both these Beesi networks
take away the first Beesi (pot). In case of a financial emergency, the
participants negotiate and switch their numbers. Hence based on mutual
understanding the Beesi money is transferred to the needier person.
Surprisingly over time a large proportion of income gets managed this
way by a poor household.
Surprisingly both the Beesi networks were established for the sake of
self interest and a need for money for their own household businesses,
but they have different stories to tell on what led them to organise a
Beesi in their respective areas.
Shafia started organising the Beesi in Ghazi Mandi soon after her
marriage. Before her marriage she had never organised anything like
that, and it was the need for money which led her to venture into the
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formation of a network, which since 17 years has not shown any default.
Starting a Bessi was a joint effort of Shafia and her sister Nikhat Bano
who wanted some money for the construction of her house. It was by
virtue of her novel idea that Shiafia’s first Beesi network was
established in 1993, which had 70 members each contributing Rs100 per
week to the pot. The group drew predominantly Ghareelu (household)
women of Ghazi Mandi, and that created her reputation as an Organiser
in this area. Shafia tells-
I enjoy a very healthy reputation among the members of the Beesi
and people come from far flung localities in Lucknow to join my Beesi
now. Earlier this was not the case, it was tough as I was also new to this
area and knew very few people, but luckily as the women were very
responsible and were in dire need for money they trusted me and this led
to the formation of a strong network....The first pot is mine and this is
the advantage of being the Organiser and this makes me a de facto
borrower from the other members of the Beesi and thus I take up full
responsibilities as an Organiser to turn up at subsequent meetings to
repay their debt obligations..... People put money in Beesi because they
need someone to save money for them and here they are under
obligation to save money as instalments, which otherwise they are not
bound to do so. Participants use their money for their daily use, buying
jewellery, education, building a house and most importantly for repaying
debts etc. Many women who participate in my Beesi seek to get money
out of their household without letting their husband know about it and
they find putting money into Beesi more profitable rather than saving in
the bank. Moreover as their autonomy is restricted due to the notion of
modesty they prefer coming and dealing with a woman...” Selecting the
members is a bit of a tough process and requires a careful knowledge of
your neighbourhood- who is doing what? I usually approach those
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people who are from my neighbourhood and are working hard to earn a
living. The prerequisite is that they should be running a Zardozi
Karkhana and earning well...Those people who don’t do any work and
loiter around are usually the only ones who will never be included in my
Beesi, even if they come on their own. There are people who in my
network sometimes complain about other members, but I don’t go by
what they say to me. I remain confident of my choice and I believe in
my eyes and don’t go by what other members are telling me. In a very
recent incident, my friend was complaining about her own brother and
argued that he should not be included in the Beesi network or else he
will default and the rest of the members will suffer. Her concern was
that her brother plays Ludoo (board game) and gambles with his earned
money... I told her it’s up to me to get the instalments from him. Now he
is submitting the Beesi on time, before the 5th of every month... I
include only those relatives who live very close to my house for it is
easy to pursue them. I am liable to all the members too for ensuring all
the payments get in on time and if the members do not send their
instalments on time, then I feel responsible for this. I don’t want such a
behaviour to creep in, then it will be impossible for me to run this Beesi,
and it will destabilise the whole set up...The message is clear, loud and
simple- the instalments should reach me by the 5 th of every month as the
payments are to be made on 10 th. Those who resist my orders are
omitted. For instance I have not spared even my blood relatives – my
father’s brother’s wife (chachi), my mother’s brother (mamu) because
they never paid the instalments on time... Most of the people come and
give their money at my home on their own, but at times I also have to go
to their houses to get the money. Even if the instalments are late, they
are not later than 8 th of every month...My husband is a bit lousy in
money matters, but I remain alert and every month I go and give the
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payment on time to the respective client’s house. I don’t depend on my
husband..
Shafia’s daughters help their mother in her tasks of making chits
and jotting down the names of the members who will be participating in
the Beesi. Her eldest daughter Noor Jahan (19) prepares the chits with
numbers written on them. These numbers represent the months on which
the participant who has picked up the chit will be getting the ‘pot’.
Participants are invited for the random lottery at the start of the cycle
and then allowed one by one to pick up the chits. As they pick, the
numbers which denote their months are jotted down on a diary. This is
done in the presence of all the members to avoid any conflict regarding
their allotted months or numbers. The problem of enforcements like
penalties never seems to happen in Shafia’s Beesi. Members pay their
Beesi on time for they also seem responsible for the instalments on time.
There arises a question of whether in Shafia’s Beesi a problem of
enforcement could evolve once the order of the pot is determined as
those participants who are very last in the line will be at a disadvantage,
as that participant is better off saving up on his own? According to
Shafia this is an inherent problem but participating members do tend to
shuffle their order if someone has an intense need for money. Mutual
consultations are very common, but this happens only between members
who are close friends or relatives. There is a possibility that if a member
shuffles and gives his number to the needy member and later on that
needy member could default, although this has not happened in her
Beesi, but the possibilities are numerous and anything can happen. She
has passed specific instructions to the members that each one of them is
[ 255 ]
Chapter -V
Fig. 14: Simple book keeping procedure showing the names of the
members who have given their Beesi Instalment.
[ 256 ]
Chapter -V
responsible for himself or herself when interchanging their numbers
with any other existing members. But as the people are well acquainted
with each other, with most of them belonging to the same
neighbourhood, such a possibility is next to nil.
Shafia has included a Sunni member to her Beesi who resides just
next to her house. She knows him well and argues that she never
discriminates between people when money is at stake. Even when
tensions were high some years ago between the two sects Shafia was
least bothered about any Sunni member in her Beesi. She says that she
would love to have more Sunni members participating in her Beesi-that
will eventually help in her cause to save more for her household. It can
easily be said that people tend to trust Shafia (Organizer) and even trust
each other, and give way to form a wider network of relationships,
where everyone is for himself and is also for others.
Similarly, Sultana (48) Organiser of Raees Manzil Beesi, also
belonging to a Nawab family has 5 children- three daughters and two
sons. Two of her daughters are married and the boys help their father
Raees in his business of making pillows. Some 23 years ago, Sultana
used to work on Kamdani and stitched clothes to eke out her living, but
saving and organising a Beesi has changed her life. She narrates her
story that one day her 6 year old daughter Daisy brought home Rs1
which she and some other friends of her class had collected in
denominations of Rs .25 each. Daisy’s class mates had told her that
every day we all will contribute Rs 0.25 ($ .0052) and one of us turn by
turn will get this collected money. When Daisy brought that collected
money home, Sultana enquired from where she had brought that money.
Sultana had never known what it was, but some of her family members
told her that this was similar to Beesi and suggested she also start a
network in her neighbourhood where one of the members will receive
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the pot on a weekly basis. Thus, Sultana’s first Beesi was started with
Rs 5 ($0.10).
Sultana says –
I don’t keep members who live far away from Raees Manzil.
Almost all the members are from Raes Manzil and neighbouring
localities. If any of the members are unable to give their instalments on
time then a fine of Rs 5 ($ 0.10) is imposed per day and that money is
transferred to the member who gets the pot that month. Fines are given
by the members and in case the instalment comes and the fine doesn’t
then in that case I put in some Rs.5-Rs.10 ($0.10-$ 0.20) if I know that
the household paying out the fine is poor and doesn’t have much
monetary resources in hand then sometimes I payout the fine by letting
them know about it. Most of the members here in Raees Manzil are poor
Zardoz who earn very little on a weekly basis. Hence, keeping in mind
the weekly payment system of the Zardozi occupational group, I have
started organising the Beesi where the payments of the pot are
distributed on weekends and this suits their lifestyle. We have to use the
Beesi money for paying out the debts of the members as many have
defaulted and left the network.. From the money which I saved for Beesi
I have arranged for the dowry of my two elder daughters for their
marriage. I have also fixed some money in ‘Marriage Endowment
Policy’ for my younger daughter Daisy (17) and also have kept
additional money for her education....”
Sultana knows the behaviour of the people in her neighbourhood
for they are poor and can default. Many people from her neighbourhood
have defaulted after getting the Beesi payments, due to which debts of
Rs.1.5 lakhs ($3125) have accumulated on her shoulders to be paid to
the members. She is paying her debts through the Beesi, but remains
silent on the names of these people for she follows strict principles, and
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never leaks any information of her members to anyone. She refuses the
absconders and defaulters from access to future cycles of Beesi.
People turn up in anticipation of the pot which according to
Anderson, Baland and Moene (2003) is the “early pot motive” for
ROSCA (Rotating Services and Credit Association). According to
Beatriz Armendariz de Aghion and Morduch (2005), the assumption of
impatience also matters to the early pot story; otherwise households
would be content to save up on their own.
Sultana remains non indulgent which creates a situation in which
members say ‘they don’t eat themselves but pay the instalment for
Sultana’s Beesi’. She was not like this, but when members defaulted she
had no option but to enforce payments. She relates an incident of a
young man who had started a barber’s shop adjacent to Raees Manzil.
As he had been there in the neighbourhood Sultana and his husband
Raees developed a sense trust with him. He became a member and the
mistake they did was not to scrutinize his credentials. The barber kept
on paying up his instalments regularly on time but one day he came to
them and asked that he wanted someone’s pot as he was in need of
money. He promised to take only Rs. 40,000 ($833.33) on a pot that was
of 50,000 ($ 1041.66) – which would profit the member a whopping
Rs10, 000($208.33). Sultana had already told everyone that it will not be
her responsibility if there is any exchange of pots between members. He
somehow pursued Babba Jani, a member, and was able to dupe him. He
took the money from Babba Jani on the condition that when he gets the
pot he will pay up 50,000 ($1041.66). Since the day he took that money
he never returned and because of which Sultana had to pay Babba Jani
his dues in instalments.
The beauty of saving through Beesi is that it empowers people
with a mechanism which is simple and does not require any collateral.
[ 259 ]
Chapter -V
Women particularly feel empowered as it can help them save sums of
money in secret which are not possible to obtain from their husbands. It
is a boon for the poor who need lump sum amounts for making large
purchases, by translating small bits and pieces of their hard earned
money into a large chunk that can be used to fund a major purchase.
The narratives presented through this research paper are evocative
and tend to present before us real life experiences and situations which
have been a part of one’s life. The hard realities are mind boggling and
are a representation of how people fight with poverty and forge ways to
survive in even the harshest of conditions.
[ 260 ]
Chapter VICONCLUSION
Stark realities emerge from this research and that has always
bewildered me for several reasons- the foremost being how people are
able to survive with such low incomes. One of the biggest challenges of
living on two dollar a day is that it doesn’t always come, which makes it
impossible to plan out future expenditure and calculate one’s own
capacity to save or repay. My concern remains with how these Nawabs
will be able to meet the challenges which the world will be posing for
them in the near future? Expenses are mounting, inflation in India is
unstoppable and showing an upward trend, education and health remains
unattended due to a poor household economy.
We have seen through out the research that a sense of a strong
social capital is found among the members of the Nawab community and
other poor living in the same neighbourhood. Beesi is such an example
where people come forward and manage their financial resources with
outmost responsibility. Social capital gains its important throughout the
discussion in previous chapters. One can think of social capital
particularly social networls as an asset that people accumulate largely by
spending time building relationships with helping others. Some returns
on this asset-such affection for some relationships-are certain ,while
other returns depend on the state of the world.
The existence of seemingly archaic forms of production does not
mean they resist capitalism, or have not already been assimilated by it. It
is vitally important to acknowledge that scarcely any handicraft
production in South Asia has been unaffected by commoditization.
While the pace of capitalist intervention in crafts has increased in the
[ 261 ]
Chapter -VI
past 20-25 years or so,'' there is growing evidence that transformations
were taking place in 'traditional industries’ by the end of the nineteenth
century. The possibility that changes were also going on in other crafts
is very strong. For example, from its inception Chikan and Zardozi
embroidery production has resembled what Marx termed 'industrial
manufacture’ since all finished pieces of chikan and Zardozi embroidery
are made in a multi-stage process where laborers at each stage rely upon
workers in other stages to complete their own tasks. In other words,
there are virtually no independent labourers in the industry. Manufacture
entails the break-up of a production process into stages, a division of
labour with interdependent workers, a decline in skilled labour and the
systematic extraction of surplus labour. A single workplace is
unnecessary for manufacture to take place. Indeed, dispersed workplaces
afford many advantages to capital, including tbe need to comply with
labour laws and workplace safeguards, likelihood of labour organisation
and bypassing of fixed capital commitments.- The idealised form of
handicrafts production—home or workshop-based, low technology,
seemingly self-reliant artisans—coincides neatly with the very form
contemporary capitalism dictates.
While home-working women are at a disadvantage all over the
world, and in many different industries, handicrafts have the potential to
work especially pernicious effects because of the ideological dimensions
of the commodities themselves. The depiction of women's labour as
part-time or use-value production, or women as mere helpers of men,
permits an air of tradition and authenticity to attach itself to their work.
The preservation of handicrafts in an idealised form cannot be done in
any other way than by making them commercially successful.
Constructing a gendered domain of production obscures this
paradox, because commodities are seen to be made in ways that are
[ 262 ]
Chapter -VI
conceived as morally and culturally traditional. Such a construction also
serves as the means by which any commercial success achieved can be
kept from the very women who ensure it, by denying their status both as
workers and intelligent creators. It is, in summary, impossible to efface
the contradiction between crafts as symbols of tradition and their status
as commodities produced by alienated workers. This contradiction lies at
the very core of what contemporary craftwork is, and deserves more
serious attention from South Asia social scientist
From my conversations with the Nawabs they have an urge to
move forward and free themselves from the clutches of the
Offices/Boutiques/Shops who, with their corrupt practices, are pushing
them over the edge. They believe there is nothing wrong with the
profession, but traditionally, the way the Nawabs are victimized by a
handful of middle men who have controlled their access to markets,
dictated business terms, and siphoned off profits, creates images in their
minds which are full of misery filled with an intense feeling to shun this
occupation. There have been instances where the Nawabs have requested
me to look for alternative jobs, so that at least the younger generation
can move out and earn without being crushed on a daily basis for a few
bucks.
They are fighting a lone battle for their families but they need
help in order to educate their children in inexpensive computing and
some basic education about the internet. From the data collected the
Nawabs remains insensitive to the changing paradigm of the world
which is led by IT (Information Technology). The curriculum at Schools
remains unpractical towards the needs of the present economy and what
puts the household under severe stress is the extra charges which
government and private institutions charge from the children when they
opt for computers, which sometimes forces them to leave the subject.
[ 263 ]
Chapter -VI
Initiatives have to be taken to inculcate the poor with ideas, that they
can also move forward and defeat poverty by taking bold initiatives for
their lives. There might be skeptics who think the poor economies are
incapable of using IT as a fulcrum for growth -only small initiatives
will lead to positive results. Recently India unveiled a Rs 1,500 (around
$30) computer designed specifically for students which would be made
available to students in 2011- a ray of hope for poor students. This can
surely open up new vistas for poor Zardoz who can upload their designs
onto their self designed web pages or websites and book orders directly
after full payments into their business accounts. I feel really optimistic
that change can happen if the right initiatives are taken with willingness
and determination.
We see that this Informal finance, once the preserve of
anthropologists and sociologists, is progressively capturing the attention
of a growing number of economists see EBOUE [1988],). There are
probably two reasons for this growing interest. First, the findings from
field research in several developing countries suggest that the role of
informal finance in resource mobilization and resource allocation is
quantitatively significant: in many cases, there are indications that
informal financeintermediates amounts comparable to these raised by
formal institutions(SCHRIEDER and CUEVAS [1989] for Cameroon,
IZUMIDA [1989] for Japan in early XXth
century, SANDERATNE [1989] for Sri Lanka, ONCHAN [1989]
for Thailand). Second, and perhaps more importantly, there is a growing
awareness that 'informal finance persists and often flourishes because it
resolves important problems that are handled poorly or not at all by most
formal financial systems' in developing countries (ADAMS, 1989,p. 11)
Disappointment with the effectiveness of 'formal' financial systems in
fostering economic growth has led to a reevaluation of the role of
[ 264 ]
Chapter -VI
informal finance. One of the most ubiquous 'informal' institutions is the
so-called Rotating Saving and Credit Association (Roscas),here in this
case is Beesi.
The Zardoz Nawabs households face challenges of poverty that
impact not only their livelihoods but make them suffer on many fronts –
literacy, health, income. Having been left with little choice on their
economic front, they remain unaware of how to save money and which
financial instruments to use for their small savings. Without access to
proper savings instruments and financial literacy, they remain at risks.
For instance, when health crises strike which leads to broader economic
problems, they have rely on friends, neighbours and relatives for small
sums of money. The results also show that the poor have room in their
budget for savings and understand the need to save and its prime
example is the use of Beesi, which gives them the opportunity to save
over a long span of time. The lump sum amounts received through Beesi
are well planned for spending on various needs ranging from small day
to day needs to life cycle needs, emergencies and investment
opportunities and of course in their religious life. Beesi tend to blur the
distinction between saving and borrowing. Members are transformed ,
one by one from net savers into net borrowers. This happens because the
basic mechanism is the intermediation of a series of small pay-ins into a
single large payout, and this mechanism is true for savers and
borrowers.
Although the Zardoz households are under intense pressure to
earn night and day, each member does his bit which keeps them far from
hand to mouth. They remain close to their neighbours helping them
when emergencies strike, but when bringing designs and orders from the
Office they tend to hide it even from their closest friend- for now it is
their livelihood at stake.
[ 265 ]
Chapter -VI
The role of the government is crucial for it needs to curb inflation
which is rising and fuelling the poverty in third world countries. Food
prices have reached their peak in the last one year, and never seem to
bottom out. The data collected from the households was in the summer
of 2009, and since then there has been a substantial increase in the
prices of essential commodities.
Reducing the plight of these poor Nawabs will require access to
alternative jobs and they need to learn skills which they can apply when
they have no work. A steady economic foundation is the need of the
hour, along with helping them save money through instruments that are
safe and easy to use. The lack of financial literacy remains a concern for
them. The informal instruments they use are effective but unreliable.
Moreover, if we look at Beesi then neither the size of the pot nor the size
of the contributions is flexible within the life of the Beesi, thus creating
many problems for those who want to quit. Lump sum amounts can be
achieved from a Beesi, but a larger pot needs to recruit more members,
which can lead to defaults and management problems. The lifespan of a
Beesi also tends to increase and can be a problem for those with
insufficient flow of capital on a regular basis. It is for this reason that
not many Zardoz participate in Beesi and shy away from it.
It is now for the financial houses and development agencies to
step in and address poverty issues by directly working with the poor and
exploring new possibilities of banking services for the poor. All that we
need is a shift in emphasis from ‘concern’ with general services to a
‘sharper focus’ on improving the financial lives of the poor, so that they
may enjoy the freedom of life without being financially insecure.
There is a need to provide some additional financial tools so that
they can get ‘better save their bits and pieces properly on a day to day
basis’. They spend heavily on rituals and in festivals and follow an
[ 266 ]
Chapter -VI
urban lifestyle which is full of show. People need to curb their spending
on festivities and small invisible expenses which remain unaccounted
for- tobacco, tea with friends, recreation, cell phone etc. Reduction of
poverty will take more than the financial sector development for there is
a need for jobs and the development of alternative skills which can
produce a household that can switch to some other work for their day to
day earnings.
A better understanding of how the poor wish to manage their
money, and a shift in emphasis from a concern with general
development objectives to a sharper focus on improving the financial
services might mean that many more poor people could get improved
help to manage their money.
Creating better financial services for the poor starts with
having a clear idea of just what constitutes good services.
The message of this essay is that financial services for the poor
help them swap their savings for lump sums of cash. It follows that good
financial services for the poor are those that perform this swap well.
This requires above all:
1. Products that suit the poor’s capacity to save and their needs for
lump sums:
So that they can save (or repay) in small sums, of varied value, as
frequently as possible so that they can access the lump sums (through
withdrawals or through loans) when they need them: short term for some
consumption and emergency needs, medium term for investment
opportunities and some recurrent life-cycle needs, longer term for other
life-cycle needs like marriage, health-care, education and old age.
2. Product delivery systems that are convenient for the poor:
[ 267 ]
Chapter -VI
that are local, frequent and quick
that are not burdened with paperwork and other transaction costs
that are transparent in a way that is easy for illiterate people to
grasp
Although this conclusion is not, essentially, about institutions, our
recapitulation of what constitutes good financial services for poor
people would not be complete without some further reference to the
‘promoters’ and ‘providers’
We need-
3. Institutions adapted to delivering good products:
that are committed to serving the poor
that are cost-effective
and
4. A healthy environment for financial services for the poor:
stable macro-economic and financial management by government
the rule of law
helpful rather than restrictive legislation governing promoters and
providers of financial services for the poor.
Moreover there are also clear implications for governments and
local authorities who wish to create policies to strengthen the social
economy.
At a local level, policies could be developed that encourage local
people to get together and form social networks. The formation of
voluntary organizations along with trading schemes, mentoring,
volunteering, and so on will contribute directly to the building of local
social capital. Institutions and programmes that foster a sense of
[ 268 ]
Chapter -VI
community and help articulate shared values can be encouraged.
Strengthening the community ownership of public assets such as village
halls and community centres is a practical way of promoting growth in
local social capital (Performance and Innovation Unit, 2002).
At regional there should perhaps be further research into new
structures that support the development of social capital. This research
has to be closely followed by support for national organizations that put
organizations in touch with each other and encourage networking and
exchange internationally as well as nationally.
These values can connect and thus link the smallest
neighbourhood enterprise to the largest mutual organization. Second,
providing support to networking organizations will improve networking
and help build trust such that organizations, which at present emphasize
their differences, can start to see the common ground that unites them.
Social capital, the social economy and community development
once trust develops, then mutual help and working together will follow.
Further research is required to look at ways in which social capital may
be measured, perhaps through an extension of social accounting and
audit. Finally, the levels of social capital within society generally need
to be monitored. If it begins to reduce or if it is used to exclude, steps
must to be taken to counter this, to ensure that social capital is used to
create a healthy, balanced and equitable society. A high level of social
capital will of itself achieve nothing. It has to be used, by people
working through their organizations and structures, in short through
civil society.
Undoubtedly, social capital is – and always has been – an
important concept. As our understanding of how things work and do not
work within communities becomes clearer, we recognize that society is
[ 269 ]
Chapter -VI
made up of connections just as much as it is made up of money,
materials resources and human resources.
The above suggestions can be a part of the discussion on how to
eradicate poverty and misery of the Nawabs of Lucknow who remain
depressed and are living in complete misery and problems. After the
partition they have not yet been able to find a right place for themselves.
They have gone down in education and economic resources. Living on
pittance and low wages around the year has shattered their will power
and health. A lot need to be done to enhance their lifestyle which
includes providing better jobs and taking care of the education of the
children. Children should be the focus of developmental agencies for if
they remain uneducated and trapped in Zardozi, this vicious cycle of
poverty will never break up. We need to be more proactive as
researchers and indeed this research is a medium through which I have
tried to instill vigor in the minds of the reader to look around and see
how much apathy is surrounding the people, who once used to rule the
province of Avadh.
[ 270 ]
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[ 279 ]
SOCIO-ECONOMIC BACKGROUND OF THE DESCENDENTS OF THE
NAWABS OF AVADH
Thesis submitted to the University of Lucknow
for the award of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy
ByBy
Syed Aasim RizviSyed Aasim Rizvi
DEPARTMENT OF SOCIOLOGYDEPARTMENT OF SOCIOLOGYUNIVERSITY OF LUCKNOWUNIVERSITY OF LUCKNOW
LUCKNOW - 226007LUCKNOW - 226007
DeclarationDeclarationThis thesis is an original investigation whilst a research scholar in the Department of Sociology, University of Lucknow and has been carried out under the supervision of Prof.Ram Gadesh Yadav. It has not been submitted in part or full to this or any other University, for any other Degree or Diploma.
____________________________
SYED AASIM RIZVISYED AASIM RIZVIResearch Scholar
__________________________________
PROF. RAPROF. RAM GADESH YADAVM GADESH YADAVResearch SupervisorHead of the Department
Department of SociologyUniversity of Lucknow
Lucknow- 226007
AcknowledgementsAcknowledgements
I sincerely extend my profound gratitude and indebtedness to my
supervisor Prof. Ram Gadesh Yadav, Head, Department of Sociology,
Lucknow University, Lucknow for his esteemed supervision and keen
interest in my research. It was entirely his patient and insightful
guidance, invaluable advises and constructive criticism that has enabled
me to complete the present study. The faith he showed in me by giving
me flexibility and independence to work is also highly appreciated.
I am grateful to Dr.Syed Aiman Raza, (Assistant Professor,
Department of Anthropology, Shia PG College) Dr.Mirza Mohd Abu
Tayyab Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, Shia PG College
and Dr. Pradeep Sharma Department of Sociology, Shia PG College,
Dr.Sanobar Haider, (Assistant Professor, Department of History,Govt
Degree College Kalan Kheeri, Palai & Mohd Haider, Advocate for their
kind co-operation, help and encouragement. I have benefited from all of
them, but while I am willing to share with them the credit for any virtues
the research may have, I jealously guard my sole ownership of its faults.
While regretting my inability to thank everyone individually, his
or her contributions and wishes towards accomplishing the presently
undertaken task, are genuinely acknowledged with gratitude.
Syed Aasim RizviSyed Aasim Rizvi
CONTENTSCONTENTS
List of Photographs
List of Graph and Tables
Chapter I INTRODUCTIONINTRODUCTION 1-10
Methodology 5
Chapter II HISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF LUCKNOW AND NAWABS OF AWADH
11-186
Present Lucknow 180
Demographic and Social Profile 182
Gender Ratio 183
Literacy 183
Key Demographic Issues 184
Economic Base 184
Heritage 185
Chapter III THEORY OF SOCIO-ECONOMICS IN THEORY OF SOCIO-ECONOMICS IN SOCIOLOGYSOCIOLOGY
187-206
Historical Attempts at Economic Sociology 189
New Economic Sociology 194
Network Analyses 197
The Influence of Culture and Values 199
Organization Theory 200
Possible Future Directions 205
Chapter IV THE DAILY GRIND:DAY TO DAYTHE DAILY GRIND:DAY TO DAY PROBLEMS OF THE NAWABS PROBLEMS OF THE NAWABS
207-241
Small Balances and Large Cash Flows 210
Multiple and Uncertain Occupations 212
Unpredictability and Low Incomes 219
Zardozi and the Nawabs 220
Contents
Seasonal Earnings of Nawab Households attached to Zardozi
228
Spendings On Rituals and Festivals By The Poor Nawabs
236
Small Scale Lending and Borrowing 239
Chapter V NAWAB HOUSEHOLD PARTICIPATION IN THE INFORMAL SAVING MECHANISMS
242-260
Savings Mechanisms 245
Beesi Savings Committees Among the Poor 247
Banks vs Beesi, Accessibility 248
Case Study of two Women who Belong to the Nawab Families
249
Chapter VI CONCLUSIONCONCLUSION 261-270
REFERENCESREFERENCES 271-279
LIST OF FIGURES
Map: 1.0 Research Area Ghazi Mandi and Raees Manzil in Lucknow, India
4
Map: 2.0 Research Areas Raees Manzil and Ghazi Mandi in Old Lucknow
4
Map: 3.0 Awadh in 1857 10
Map 4.0 Present Lucknow 181
Plate: I Fig.No.1 A child of a Nawab family working on a piece of cloth for Rs 30 a week.
206
Fig No. 2 A Nawab explaining his day to day life problems
206
Plate: II Fig.No.3 A woman working on chikan embroidery 213
Fig No.4 Women from Nawab households help their male counterparts in the household finances.
213
Plate: III Fig.6 A Karigar (labourer) making powdered chalk
222
Fig.7 Chalk is being mixed with kerosene oil 222
Fig.8 The solution of chalk and kerosene is rubbed on to the Khaka (design) which has minute holes.
222
Fig No.9 A group of Nawab Karigars working on a piece of cloth
222
Plate: IV Fig.10 Use of Katiya to draw illegal electricity 231
Fig.11 Katiya is being used by a NawabZardoz and a house from the main electric line
231
Fig 12. Electricity theft at Ghazi Mandi by Katiya connection.
231
Plate: V Fig.13 Shafia receiving her Beesi instalment from his husband, who is also a member of the network
251
Fig 14 Shafia paying out the ‘pot’ of Rs 23000 ($479.16) to a member on her turn.
251
Fig.14 Simple book keeping procedure showing the names of the members who have given their Beesi Instalment.
256
List of Graphs and Tables
Table No. 1.0 Portfolio Summary for Subir and Mumtaz over the Research Year
211
Graph No. 1.1 Seasonal household variations in US Dollar -Raes Manzil
229
Graph No. 1.2 Seasonal household variations in earnings-Ghazi Mandi
229
Graph No.1.3 Average Weekly Expenditure and Earning –Raees Manzi
235
Graph No. 1.4 Average Weekly Expenditure and Earning- Ghazi Mandi
235
Graph No. 1.5 Household Spendings in Moharram Raees Manzil.
238
Graph No.1.6 Shia Nawab Zardoz families spend most of their Savings in Moharram on Rituals
238