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RULING THE COUNTRY SIDE
DONE BY
ARJUN.P
VIII.C
KENDRIYA VIDHALAYA SAP
CAMP
Chapter-3
The first English ship salied towards
India on 18th century
Grant of Diwani and Financial
Powers
 The East India Company was made the
Diwan of Bengal on 12 August 1765; by then
Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II. Thus, the
Company became of the chief financial
administrator of the territory of Bengal.
 The Company officials understood one
important aspect of expanding their base in
India. They understood the importance of
those who had ruled the countryside in the
past, and had enjoyed authority and prestige.
The Company wanted to be careful not to
annoy those people.
 Growth of Revenue: Initially, the Company
was just interested in collecting revenue so
that its trade and other expenses could be
financed. But the Company was not
interested in setting up any regular system of
assessment and collection. The revenue was
enough to double the purchase by Company
within five years.
 Growth of Problems for Common People: But
the Bengal economy was facing a deep
crisis. Artisans were being forced to sell their
goods to the Company at low prices and
hence most of them were deserting their
villages. Peasants were not able to pay the
dues. Production by artisans declined and
farm production also declined. In 1770, a
terrible famine hit Bengal. It killed 10 million
people.
Robert Clive accepting the Diwani of Bengal
Robert clive
 Robert Clive, 1st Baron
Clive also known as Clive of
India, Commander-in-Chief of
British India, was
a British officer and soldier of
fortune who established the
military and political
supremacy of the East India
Company in
 Together with Warren
Hastings he was one of the
key early figures in the creation
of British India. He also sat for
two boroughs as
a Tory Member of
Parliament in Great Britain.
 Modern historians have
criticised him for atrocities and
pillaging of treasures which
occurred
in Bengal and India due to high
taxation he instituted and for
Permanent Settlement
 The Company had to take some steps to
improve agriculture by improving investment
in land. The Permanent Settlement was
introduced in 1793. According to this, the
rajas and taluqdars were recognized as
zamindars and were given the responsibility
of revenue collection from the peasants. The
amount to be paid was fixed permanently and
hence the name Permanent Settlement. The
Company officials felt that it would ensure a
regular flow of revenue. They also felt that
this would motivate the zamindars to invest in
improving the land. The zamindars would
benefit from increased production because
the revenue demand would not be increased.
The Problem of Permanent
Settlement
 The revenue was fixed at such a high
level that the zamindars found it difficult
to pay. A zamindar who failed to pay the
revenue lost his zamindari. Hence,
zamindars were not investing in the
improvement of land.
 But the situation changed by the first
decade of the nineteenth century. There
was price rise and expansion in
cultivation. The income of the zamindars
increased but it did not result in any gain
for the Company because of fixed
 The zamindars preferred to earn as
much profit as they could and seldom
bothered about investing in land. They
were just happy to lease out the land to
tenants.
 The system was extremely oppressive
for the cultivator. He had to pay a high
rent to the zamindar but there was no
security of his right on the land. Cultivator
often had to take loan from the
moneylender, to pay rent. Failure of
payment of the rental meant eviction for
the cultivator from the land.
Mahalwari Settlement
◦ By the early nineteenth century, the Company officials
were planning to change the revenue system. A new
system was devised Holt Mackenzie. Mackenzie was
convinced about the importance of village in the north
Indian society. He wanted to preserve this important
social institution. He sent collectors to different
villages to take a survey. Data regarding land size
and type and customs and rights of different groups
were collected. The revenue estimation was done for
each village.
 The village was known as mahal and hence
this system was known as Mahalwari System. It
was also decided to revise the revenue demand
periodically. The village headman was given the
responsibility of revenue collection.
The Munro System
 This system was also known as the ryotwari
system. It was first tried on a small scale by
Captain Alexander Read. He tried it in some
of those areas which were taken over after
the defeat of Tipu Sultan. This system was
subsequently developed by Thomas Munro.
This system was gradually implemented all
over south India.
 There were no traditional zamindars in the
south. Hence, the settlement had to be
directly made with the cultivators (ryot). The
ryots had been tilling the land for generations.
Their fields were carefully surveyed to make
the revenue assessment.
Thomas Munro, Governor of
Madras (1819 -26)
 Sir Thomas Munro, 1st
Baronet KCB (27 May
1761 – 6 July 1827) was a
Scottish soldier and
colonial administrator. He
was an East India
Company Army officer and
statesman.
 He served with his
regiment during the hard-
fought war against Haidar
Ali (1780–1783), serving
under his older and distant
relation Major Sir Hector
Munro, 8th of Novar.
Problems of Excessive Revenue
Demand
 The revenue officials wanted to
increase the income from land. Hence,
they fixed very high revenue demand.
 Peasants were not able to pay the
revenue. The ryots fled the
countryside and villages became
deserted in many regions.
Crops for Europe
 By the late eighteenth century, the
Company was also trying to expand
the cultivation of opium and indigo.
 In the subsequent 150 years, the
British also persuaded or forced the
cultivators to produce other crops; like
jute, tea, sugarcane, cotton, wheat
and rice; to be supplied to Europe.
Old Court House, Fort William,
Calcutta, c1760-1774
High Demand of Indigo
 The tropical climate is good for indigo plantation.
By the thirteenth century, Indian indigo was being
used in Italy, France and Britain. But the price of
indigo was very high and hence a small amount
of Indian indigo could reach the European
market.
 Woad is another plant which is used for making
violet and blue dyes. Wood is a plant of
temperate zones and hence was easily available
in Europe. Woad was grown in northern Italy,
southern France and in parts of Germany and
Britain. The woad producers in Europe were
worried by the competition from indigo and hence
pressurized their governments to ban the import
of indigo.
 But indigo was preferred by the cloth dyers. While
indigo produced a rich blue colour, woad produced
pale and dull blue. By the seventeenth century,
European cloth producers pressurized their
governments to relax the ban on indigo import.
 Indigo cultivation was started by the French in St
Dominique in the Caribbean islands. Similarly, the
Portuguese began indigo cultivation in Brazil, the
British in Jamaica and the Spanish in Venezuela.
Indigo plantations were also started in many parts of
North America.
 By the end of the eighteenth century,
industrialization began in Britain and cotton
production expanded manifold. This created an
enormous demand for cloth dyes. The existing
supplies of indigo from the West Indies and America
collapsed due to various reasons. The indigo
production in the world fell by half between 1783 and
1789. This meant that there was increasing demand
for Indian indigo.
The British indigo factory In india
India: A Major Source of Indigo
 The Company looked for ways to expand the area
under indigo cultivation in India. From the last
decades of the eighteenth century, indigo
cultivation in Bengal rapidly expanded. Only about
30% of indigo imported to Britain in 1788 was from
India. This figure went up to 95% by 1810.
 Commercial agents and officials of the Company
began investing in indigo production to increase
their profit. Many Company officials even left their
jobs to look after their indigo business. Many
people from Scotland and England came to India
and became planters; to grab the opportunity. The
Company and banks were giving loans for indigo
cultivation at that time.
A kalamkari print
twentieth century India.
A morris cotton print
late-nineteenth- century
England
SYSTEMS OF INDIGO
CULTIVATION
Nij Cultivation
 In this system, the planter produced
indigo on those lands which were
under his direct control. The planter
either bought the land or rented it from
other zamindars. He directly employed
labourers to produce indigo.
The problem with nij
cultivation
 Indigo could only be cultivated on fertile lands.
But these areas were densely populated and
hence, only small plots could be acquired. This
made it difficult to expand the area under nij
cultivation.
 They attempted to lease in the land around the
indigo factory. While doing so, they evicted the
peasants from the area. Peasants’ eviction
always created conflict and tension.
 A large plantation required a large number of
workers. Work at indigo plantation coincided with
the time when peasants were busy with rice
cultivation. Hence, mobilizing the labour for
indigo cultivation was a difficult task.
Ryoti System
 Under the ryoti system, indigo cultivation was
done by the ryots. The planters made the
ryots to sign a contract or an agreement
(satta). Sometimes, they pressurized the
village headmen to sign the contract on
behalf of the ryots. After signing the contract,
the ryots got cash advances from the
planters. But after taking the loan, the ryot
was committed to grow indigo on at least
25% of his land holding. Seeds and drills
were provided by the planter. The cultivators
prepared the soil, sowed the seed and looked
after the crop.
 But the planters bought indigo at low prices
and hence the ryots were always in debt trap.
A picture of Leadenhall Street,
London, c. 1837
Blue Rebellion
 Thousands of ryots in Bengal refused to grow indigo in
March 1859. The ryots refused to pay rents to the
planters. They attacked indigo factories. They used to
be armed with swords and spears, bows and arrows.
Women also fought with pots, panda and kitchen
implements. Those who worked for the planters were
socially boycotted. The gomasthas were beaten up
when they came to collect rent. The gomasthas were
the agents of indigo planters.
 In many villages, headmen mobilized the indigo
peasants against the lathiyals. The headmen were
angry because they had been forced to sign indigo
contract. Some zamindars were angry with the
increasing power of the planters and at being forced to
give them land on long leases. So, some zamindars
also supported the villagers in their revolt against the
indigo planters.
 After the Revolt of 1857, the British government
was worried about the possibility of another popular
rebellion. When the news of indigo revolt spread,
the Lieutenant Governor toured the region in the
winter of 1859. This was seen as a sign of
sympathy by the ryots. They began to believe that
the British government would support them in their
struggle.
 When the rebellion spread, intellectuals from
Calcutta rushed to the indigo districts. They began
writing about the misery of the ryots and the horrors
of the indigo system.
 The government called in the military to protect the
planters. The Indigo Commission was set up to
enquire into the system of indigo production. The
Commission held the planters guilty. It asked the
ryots to fulfill their existing obligations and then they
were free to cultivate whatever they wished.
Indigo factory in india where the low
cost of labour.
After the Revolt
 The indigo production collapsed in Bengal,
after the revolt. The planters now shifted their
operation to Bihar. Discovery of synthetic
dyes in the late nineteenth century severely
affected the business. But the planters
managed to expand production.
 When Mahatma Gandhi returned from South
Africa, the plight of indigo farmers in
Champaran was brought to his notice.
Mahatma Gandhi visted Champaran in 1917
and began the movement against the indigo
planters.
The Indian indigo
Ruling the Country Side

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Ruling the Country Side

  • 1. RULING THE COUNTRY SIDE DONE BY ARJUN.P VIII.C KENDRIYA VIDHALAYA SAP CAMP Chapter-3
  • 2. The first English ship salied towards India on 18th century
  • 3. Grant of Diwani and Financial Powers  The East India Company was made the Diwan of Bengal on 12 August 1765; by then Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II. Thus, the Company became of the chief financial administrator of the territory of Bengal.  The Company officials understood one important aspect of expanding their base in India. They understood the importance of those who had ruled the countryside in the past, and had enjoyed authority and prestige. The Company wanted to be careful not to annoy those people.
  • 4.  Growth of Revenue: Initially, the Company was just interested in collecting revenue so that its trade and other expenses could be financed. But the Company was not interested in setting up any regular system of assessment and collection. The revenue was enough to double the purchase by Company within five years.  Growth of Problems for Common People: But the Bengal economy was facing a deep crisis. Artisans were being forced to sell their goods to the Company at low prices and hence most of them were deserting their villages. Peasants were not able to pay the dues. Production by artisans declined and farm production also declined. In 1770, a terrible famine hit Bengal. It killed 10 million people.
  • 5. Robert Clive accepting the Diwani of Bengal
  • 6. Robert clive  Robert Clive, 1st Baron Clive also known as Clive of India, Commander-in-Chief of British India, was a British officer and soldier of fortune who established the military and political supremacy of the East India Company in  Together with Warren Hastings he was one of the key early figures in the creation of British India. He also sat for two boroughs as a Tory Member of Parliament in Great Britain.  Modern historians have criticised him for atrocities and pillaging of treasures which occurred in Bengal and India due to high taxation he instituted and for
  • 7. Permanent Settlement  The Company had to take some steps to improve agriculture by improving investment in land. The Permanent Settlement was introduced in 1793. According to this, the rajas and taluqdars were recognized as zamindars and were given the responsibility of revenue collection from the peasants. The amount to be paid was fixed permanently and hence the name Permanent Settlement. The Company officials felt that it would ensure a regular flow of revenue. They also felt that this would motivate the zamindars to invest in improving the land. The zamindars would benefit from increased production because the revenue demand would not be increased.
  • 8. The Problem of Permanent Settlement  The revenue was fixed at such a high level that the zamindars found it difficult to pay. A zamindar who failed to pay the revenue lost his zamindari. Hence, zamindars were not investing in the improvement of land.  But the situation changed by the first decade of the nineteenth century. There was price rise and expansion in cultivation. The income of the zamindars increased but it did not result in any gain for the Company because of fixed
  • 9.  The zamindars preferred to earn as much profit as they could and seldom bothered about investing in land. They were just happy to lease out the land to tenants.  The system was extremely oppressive for the cultivator. He had to pay a high rent to the zamindar but there was no security of his right on the land. Cultivator often had to take loan from the moneylender, to pay rent. Failure of payment of the rental meant eviction for the cultivator from the land.
  • 10.
  • 11. Mahalwari Settlement ◦ By the early nineteenth century, the Company officials were planning to change the revenue system. A new system was devised Holt Mackenzie. Mackenzie was convinced about the importance of village in the north Indian society. He wanted to preserve this important social institution. He sent collectors to different villages to take a survey. Data regarding land size and type and customs and rights of different groups were collected. The revenue estimation was done for each village.  The village was known as mahal and hence this system was known as Mahalwari System. It was also decided to revise the revenue demand periodically. The village headman was given the responsibility of revenue collection.
  • 12. The Munro System  This system was also known as the ryotwari system. It was first tried on a small scale by Captain Alexander Read. He tried it in some of those areas which were taken over after the defeat of Tipu Sultan. This system was subsequently developed by Thomas Munro. This system was gradually implemented all over south India.  There were no traditional zamindars in the south. Hence, the settlement had to be directly made with the cultivators (ryot). The ryots had been tilling the land for generations. Their fields were carefully surveyed to make the revenue assessment.
  • 13. Thomas Munro, Governor of Madras (1819 -26)  Sir Thomas Munro, 1st Baronet KCB (27 May 1761 – 6 July 1827) was a Scottish soldier and colonial administrator. He was an East India Company Army officer and statesman.  He served with his regiment during the hard- fought war against Haidar Ali (1780–1783), serving under his older and distant relation Major Sir Hector Munro, 8th of Novar.
  • 14. Problems of Excessive Revenue Demand  The revenue officials wanted to increase the income from land. Hence, they fixed very high revenue demand.  Peasants were not able to pay the revenue. The ryots fled the countryside and villages became deserted in many regions.
  • 15. Crops for Europe  By the late eighteenth century, the Company was also trying to expand the cultivation of opium and indigo.  In the subsequent 150 years, the British also persuaded or forced the cultivators to produce other crops; like jute, tea, sugarcane, cotton, wheat and rice; to be supplied to Europe.
  • 16. Old Court House, Fort William, Calcutta, c1760-1774
  • 17. High Demand of Indigo  The tropical climate is good for indigo plantation. By the thirteenth century, Indian indigo was being used in Italy, France and Britain. But the price of indigo was very high and hence a small amount of Indian indigo could reach the European market.  Woad is another plant which is used for making violet and blue dyes. Wood is a plant of temperate zones and hence was easily available in Europe. Woad was grown in northern Italy, southern France and in parts of Germany and Britain. The woad producers in Europe were worried by the competition from indigo and hence pressurized their governments to ban the import of indigo.
  • 18.  But indigo was preferred by the cloth dyers. While indigo produced a rich blue colour, woad produced pale and dull blue. By the seventeenth century, European cloth producers pressurized their governments to relax the ban on indigo import.  Indigo cultivation was started by the French in St Dominique in the Caribbean islands. Similarly, the Portuguese began indigo cultivation in Brazil, the British in Jamaica and the Spanish in Venezuela. Indigo plantations were also started in many parts of North America.  By the end of the eighteenth century, industrialization began in Britain and cotton production expanded manifold. This created an enormous demand for cloth dyes. The existing supplies of indigo from the West Indies and America collapsed due to various reasons. The indigo production in the world fell by half between 1783 and 1789. This meant that there was increasing demand for Indian indigo.
  • 19. The British indigo factory In india
  • 20. India: A Major Source of Indigo  The Company looked for ways to expand the area under indigo cultivation in India. From the last decades of the eighteenth century, indigo cultivation in Bengal rapidly expanded. Only about 30% of indigo imported to Britain in 1788 was from India. This figure went up to 95% by 1810.  Commercial agents and officials of the Company began investing in indigo production to increase their profit. Many Company officials even left their jobs to look after their indigo business. Many people from Scotland and England came to India and became planters; to grab the opportunity. The Company and banks were giving loans for indigo cultivation at that time.
  • 21. A kalamkari print twentieth century India. A morris cotton print late-nineteenth- century England
  • 22. SYSTEMS OF INDIGO CULTIVATION Nij Cultivation  In this system, the planter produced indigo on those lands which were under his direct control. The planter either bought the land or rented it from other zamindars. He directly employed labourers to produce indigo.
  • 23. The problem with nij cultivation  Indigo could only be cultivated on fertile lands. But these areas were densely populated and hence, only small plots could be acquired. This made it difficult to expand the area under nij cultivation.  They attempted to lease in the land around the indigo factory. While doing so, they evicted the peasants from the area. Peasants’ eviction always created conflict and tension.  A large plantation required a large number of workers. Work at indigo plantation coincided with the time when peasants were busy with rice cultivation. Hence, mobilizing the labour for indigo cultivation was a difficult task.
  • 24. Ryoti System  Under the ryoti system, indigo cultivation was done by the ryots. The planters made the ryots to sign a contract or an agreement (satta). Sometimes, they pressurized the village headmen to sign the contract on behalf of the ryots. After signing the contract, the ryots got cash advances from the planters. But after taking the loan, the ryot was committed to grow indigo on at least 25% of his land holding. Seeds and drills were provided by the planter. The cultivators prepared the soil, sowed the seed and looked after the crop.  But the planters bought indigo at low prices and hence the ryots were always in debt trap.
  • 25. A picture of Leadenhall Street, London, c. 1837
  • 26. Blue Rebellion  Thousands of ryots in Bengal refused to grow indigo in March 1859. The ryots refused to pay rents to the planters. They attacked indigo factories. They used to be armed with swords and spears, bows and arrows. Women also fought with pots, panda and kitchen implements. Those who worked for the planters were socially boycotted. The gomasthas were beaten up when they came to collect rent. The gomasthas were the agents of indigo planters.  In many villages, headmen mobilized the indigo peasants against the lathiyals. The headmen were angry because they had been forced to sign indigo contract. Some zamindars were angry with the increasing power of the planters and at being forced to give them land on long leases. So, some zamindars also supported the villagers in their revolt against the indigo planters.
  • 27.  After the Revolt of 1857, the British government was worried about the possibility of another popular rebellion. When the news of indigo revolt spread, the Lieutenant Governor toured the region in the winter of 1859. This was seen as a sign of sympathy by the ryots. They began to believe that the British government would support them in their struggle.  When the rebellion spread, intellectuals from Calcutta rushed to the indigo districts. They began writing about the misery of the ryots and the horrors of the indigo system.  The government called in the military to protect the planters. The Indigo Commission was set up to enquire into the system of indigo production. The Commission held the planters guilty. It asked the ryots to fulfill their existing obligations and then they were free to cultivate whatever they wished.
  • 28. Indigo factory in india where the low cost of labour.
  • 29. After the Revolt  The indigo production collapsed in Bengal, after the revolt. The planters now shifted their operation to Bihar. Discovery of synthetic dyes in the late nineteenth century severely affected the business. But the planters managed to expand production.  When Mahatma Gandhi returned from South Africa, the plight of indigo farmers in Champaran was brought to his notice. Mahatma Gandhi visted Champaran in 1917 and began the movement against the indigo planters.