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Why did the events of 1857 happen?

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Why did the events of 1857 happen? As part of this assessment enquiry you should: Pursue historically valid enquiries including some you have framed yourself, and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Why did the events of 1857 happen?


1
Why did the events of 1857 happen?
  • As part of this assessment enquiry you should
  • Pursue historically valid enquiries including
    some you have framed yourself, and create
    relevant, structured and evidentially supported
    accounts in response.
  • Understand how different types of historical
    sources are used rigorously to make historical
    claims and discern how and why contrasting
    arguments and interpretations of the past have
    been constructed.

2
The Sepoy Rebellion, 1857
Small landowners and peasants couldnt afford to pay the high taxes that the British were imposing on them. Christian missionaries made Indians suspicious that the British were going to force Christianity on them
The British challenged the Indian customs and beliefs, eg. Sati Indian princes and nobles lost power when the British took over their territories. They resented the British rulers
Britain wanted to impose a Western (British) style of education to India, with a focus on the English language The sepoys heard a rumour that the Lee Enfield Rifle was greased with animal fat, which abhorrent to many Indian religions
Can you sort these causes of rebellion under the
headings, POLITICAL, ECONOMIC, SOCIAL, CULTURAL
and RELGIOUS?
3
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4
Jhansi Ki Rani (The Queen of Jhansi)
  • Rani was the widow of the King of Jhansi
  • The Queens husband passed away and she was left
    penniless due to a British law called the
    Doctrine of Lapse
  • The Rani lost everything including her clothes
    and jewels.
  • She appealed to the British for help, but they
    refused
  • She became bitter towards the British and joined
    forces with rebels against the British empire
  • She remained a figure-head of resistance for many
    years
  • Indian school children have to learn this poem by
    heart and often recite it in class!
  • Doctrine of Lapse, introduced by Lord Dalhousie,
    said that any territories with no legitimate heir
    (i.e. son), the land would be passed on to the
    East India Company alternatively if the EIC
    deemed the heir to be inappropriate (ie. Anti
    British), the Doctrine of Lapse would apply too

5
Jhansi Ki Rani (The Queen of Jhansi)
  • Over 3 pages draw 18 boxes 6 to a page
  • Eg
  • Read the poem of Jhansi Ki Rani. Summarise each
    verse in to a box
  • (You can do this in writing or in pictures, or a
    combination of both)
  • What does it tell you about
  • the status of women in India under British Rule?
  • Indian attitudes to British rule




6
Mangal Pandey
  • A sepoy working under the British East India
    Company, Mangal Pandey's name got etched into the
    pages of the Indian history after he attacked his
    senior British officers in an incident, which is
    today remembered as the sepoy Mutiny of 1857 or
    the India's First War of Independence. The reason
    behind this was the rumour that the cartridges
    used by Indian sepoys were greased with the fat
    of cow and pig.

7
Mangal Pandey film
  • This is an Indian film, produced in 2005.
  • Some of the funding for the film was from British
    sources
  • As you watch clips what does the film tell you
    about
  • Indian attitudes to the British?
  • British attitudes to the Indians?
  • Attitudes to British and Indian women?
  • Political, economic, social, cultural and
    religious differences between the Indians and the
    British?

8
Massacre of the British officers and their wives
at Jhansi, 1858
9
British officers and their wives trying to escape
from Cawnpore, 1858
10
A historians view
  • While it is true that large numbers of European
    men, women and children were murdered with great
    brutality by the mutineers, it is equally evident
    that some of the stories of torture, rape and
    bestiality were either grossly exaggerated or
    totally untrue. Indeed, regarding the treatment
    of white women by their Pandi captors, it has not
    been possible to discover a single proven case of
    rape.
  • However, the British relief forces felt that
    every Indian male capable of carrying arms was
    guilty of such crimes. Hundreds were killed in
    the fays following the capture of Delhi, either
    by shooting or slow strangulation.
  • R. Perkins, The Kashmir Gate, 1983

11
Assessment task
  • 1. Why did the events of 1857 happen? Was it
    Religious, Political/ Power, Social or Economic
    reasons or a mix? Refer to the sources
  • 2. How should the events of 1857 be remembered?
    Mutiny, revolt or revolution?
  • 3. How significant were the events of 1857?
  • 4. Why did people from the UK disagree with the
    Mangal Pandey films getting UK funding?

12
Now draw out this diagram, complete it then sum
it up in a concluding paragraph.
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