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Imperialism in India: The British Raj. The Mughal Empire. Established by Emperor Babul in the early 1500s Expanded its control over India over the next 2 centuries; But its heartland was in Northern India The Mughal rulers were Muslim (descendants of Tamerlane);
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The Mughal Empire • Established by Emperor Babul in the early 1500s • Expanded its control over India over the next 2 centuries; • But its heartland was in Northern India • The Mughal rulers were Muslim (descendants of Tamerlane); • But most Indians were Hindu
Decline of the Mughals • By the 1700s, the Mughal Empire was clearly in decline: • 1) Government was in severe debt • 2) Power struggles within the ruling family • 3) Dissatisfaction among religious minorities
Timeline: The British Assert Control • 1500s – 1600s: Europeans establish trading forts on the Indian coast • First the Portuguese • Later the British and French • 1756 – 1763: The Seven Years War (Britain vs. France) includes battles for control over Indian forts • 1757: Using Indian support for the French as an excuse, the British take control of the province of Bengal • At the Battle of Plassey, 3000 British soldiers defeated an Indian force of 30,000 • 1757 – 1857: Over the course of a century, the British East India Company gained control of nearly the entire Indian Subcontinent
The SepoyRebellion (1857-8) • Sepoys: Indian soldiers employed by the British East India Company • In 1857 a rumor spread among the Sepoys that the new British ammunition cartridges were coated with cow and pig fat • This rumor sparked a rebellion among the Sepoys near Delhi, which spread across the country • During the Rebellion atrocities were committed by both sides • Although the Sepoy rebels outnumbered British troops and their Indian loyalists, the rebels were unorganized and out-gunned • After the rebellion had been crushed the British government took control of the colony from the B.E.I.C.
The British Raj (1858 – 1947) • Some Benefits of British Rule • Established a public school system, which provided an education for Upper Class Indians • Greatly improved India’s infrastructure (roads, canals, railroads) • Established hospitals and introduced medical techniques that improved public health • Negative Effects of British Rule • British manufactured goods destroyed local industries, forcing millions into poverty • The British forced many farmers to grow cotton instead of food—when India’s population exploded, millions starved • British rule was culturally degrading
Indian Nationalism & Resistance • Most early Indian Nationalists were from the upper class and English-educated • For many of them, learning about the ideals of the Enlightenment caused them to question British rule in their home country • 1885—Nationalists form the Indian National Congress (INC) • The INC did not initially call for independence; instead it pushed for more Indian participation in the colony’s government • By the early 1900s, more and more Indian newspapers were calling for independence—and spreading the movement beyond the upper class • In 1915, Mohandas Gandhi returned to India from South Africa, and became active in the independence movement