MOTHER MIRACLE INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL
Notes of Ch 2 From Trade to Territory Class 8th History
End of Mughal Empire
• Aurangzeb was the last of the powerful Mughal rulers.
East India Company begins trade in Bengal
• The first English factory was set up on the banks of the river Hugli in 1651.
• As trade expanded, the Company persuaded merchants and traders to come and settle near the factory.
• By 1696 it began building a fort around the settlement.
• Two years later, the Company gained zamindari rights over three villages.
→ One of the villages was Kalikata
(later came to be known as Kolkata).
How trade led to battles
• After the death of Aurangzeb, the Bengal nawabs asserted their power and autonomy.
The Battle of Plassey
• In 1756, Sirajuddaulah became the nawab of Bengal after the death of Alivardi Khan.
• The Company was keen on a puppet ruler so it help one of Sirajuddaulah’s rivals become the nawab without success.
• Angry Sirajuddaulah asked the Company to stop interfering in the political affairs of his dominion, stop fortification, and pay the revenues.
• After negotiations failed, the Nawab marched with 30,000 soldiers to the English factory at Kassimbazar, captured the Company officials, locked the warehouse, disarmed all Englishmen, and blockaded English ships.
→ He then marched to Calcutta to establish his control over the
Company’s fort.
Company officials become “nabobs”
• Those who managed to return Britain with wealth led flashy lives and flaunted their riches. They were called “nabobs” – an anglicised version of the Indian word nawab.
Company Rule Expands
• After the Battle of Buxar (1764), the Company appointed
Residents in Indian states.
→ According to the terms of this alliance, Indian rulers were
not allowed to have their independent armed forces.
→ They were to be protected by the Company though they had to
pay huge amounts for this
protection.
→ If Indian rulers failed to make these payments, a part of
their territory was to be taken away by the Company.
Tipu Sultan – The “Tiger of Mysore”
• Mysore had grown in strength under the leadership of powerful rulers like Haidar Ali (ruled from 1761 to 1782) and his famous son Tipu Sultan (ruled from 1782 to 1799).
→ In the last – the Battle of Seringapatam –
did the Company ultimately win a victory.
→ These chiefs were held together in a
confederacy under a Peshwa (Principal Minister).
• Anglo-Marathas war were fought between these and the company.
→ The first war that ended in 1782 with the
Treaty of Salbai, there was no clear victor.
→ The Second Anglo- Maratha War (1803-05) resulting in the British gaining Orissa and the territories north of the Yamuna river including Agra and Delhi.
→ The Third Anglo-Maratha War of 1817-19
crushed Maratha power, the Peshwa was removed and Company now had complete
control over the territories south of the Vindhyas.
The claim to paramountcy
• Under Lord Hastings (Governor- General from 1813 to 1823) a new policy of “paramountcy” was initiated which claimed its power was greater than that of Indian states.
→ In order to protect its interests it was
justified in annexing or threatening to annex any Indian kingdom.
• In the late 1830s the East India Company became worried about Russia as Russia might expand across Asia and enter India from the north-west.
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