Title: The Age of Imperialism: India
1The Age of ImperialismIndia
2Goal of Today
- We will look at the British reasons for
colonizing India and how there were positive and
negative aspects of the British rule.
3European Interest in India
- Wanted spices from Asia, tea, jewels, and fabrics
of silk and cotton - Spices were used to preserve meats and flavor
foods - Interest grew from economic contact to direct
political control
4Role of the British East India Company
- Granted a charter from Queen Elizabeth I in 1600
monopoly on trade with India, China, and
Southeast Asia (East Indies) - Received permission from Mughals to trade in
India as early as 1613 - Had own private army
- Had power to sign treaties with Indian rulers
5British Clash with French
- As Mughal rule weakened in the 18th century,
Britain and France looked for allies among the
warring Indian powers to strengthen their trade
position - Britain and France were at war in Europe and in
North America - 1757 Battle of Plassey Robert Clive beat
Joseph Dupleixs French forces
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7Reasons for British Success in India
- Collapse of Mughal (Mogul) empire left things
divided and unorganized - Divide and conquer allied with small states
against larger ones - Dozens of languages
- British played rival princes against one another
- British superiority in military and naval power
- A series of able administrators governors
8The Brightest Jewel
- India was seen as
- The most valuable colony in the British empire
- A valuable resource for raw materials
- A market for British products (300 million people
to buy things) - British restricted the Indians from operating
their own businesses - Plantation crops were also very valuable tea,
indigo, coffee, cotton, jute opium
9British Opium Warehouse in Patna, India
Selling Patna Opium in China
10Did the people in India like the British
Presence?
- British rule was justified, in part, by the
claims that the Indians required to be civilized,
and that British rule would introduce in place of
Indian anarchy a reliable system of justice, the
rule of law, and the notion of 'fair play'. - Certain Indian social or religious practices that
the British found to be abhorrent were outlawed,
such as sati in 1829, and an ethic of
'improvement' was said to dictate British social
policies. - In the 1840s and 1850s, more territories were
absorbed into British India, either on the
grounds that the native rulers were corrupt,
inept, and notoriously indifferent about the
welfare of their subjects, or that since the
native ruler had failed to produce a biological
male heir to the throne, the territory was bound
to "lapse" into British India upon the death of
the ruler.
11A print from 1815 showing the Hindu religious
custom of Sati
12The Sepoy Mutiny Its Effects
Sepoy an Indian serving in the army of a
European power
13The Sepoy Mutiny Its Effects
- Causes - 1857
- New cartridges had been issued for guns greased
with animal fat (sacrilege!) offended both
Hindus and Muslims - Required sepoys to serve outside of India (went
against rules for upper-caste Hindus)
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15Sepoy Mutiny
- Great Indian Mutiny
- Began at army post at Meerut
- Sepoys killed every European man, woman, and
child they could - Spread to other army posts
16Sepoy Mutiny
- Took a year to suppress
- British brutally subdued revolt
- Indians called it the first war of independence
because it began the rise of Indian nationalism
to overthrow the British - British government decided to take over the
British East India Companys command of India
17Execution of SepoysThe Devils Wind
18Sepoy Mutiny
- India was divided into two main parts
- A British viceroy controlled three-fifths of
subcontinent - Native Indian rulers were allowed control over
one-third - In 1876, Queen Victoria was made Empress of India
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21Effects of British Rule in India
Britain tries to replace Indian culture with
western ways British schools offer
education Indians treated as inferiors New laws
justice for all classes
22Effects of British Rule in India
Top jobs go to British Indian resources taken by
Britain British-made goods replace local goods
23Effects of British Rule in India
- New roads and railroads linked parts of India
- Telegraph and postal systems united people
24Effects of British Rule in India
- Irrigation systems improve farming
- Farms grow cash crops rather than food crops so
Indians go hungry
25Effects of British Rule in India
26Impact of Colonialism
- Negative Aspects
- British held political and economic power
- British restricted Indian-owned industry
(textiles) - Emphasis on cash crops decreased ability for
peasants to be self-sufficient ? famine - British officials were very racist and tried to
influence the culture
27British Imperialism in India
- Lasted from 1600-1947
- Mohandas K. Gandhi would lead the bulk of the
independence movement in the first half of the
twentieth century