Historiography of 1857 Revolt
THE Revolt of 1857
was born out of various features ranging from the British policy of conquest
and expansion to the colonial exploitation of India. Geographically speaking,
it affected north-western, north and central India. The ‘Sepoy Mutiny’– as it
was labelled initially by the colonial official writings, focused on the
‘Mutiny’ theme.
To colonial officials
and writers it was the handiwork of a set of discontented sipahis who were
unhappy with the introduction, in 1857, of the new Enfield rifle, with its
distinct ammunition, which required the bullet to be bitten before loading.
Rumours that the grease used on the bullets was either from the fat of cattle
or pigs had symbolic implications. Thus, whereas cows were considered ‘sacred’
by the Hindus, the Muslims considered pigs to be ‘polluting’.
This created strong
animosities and was located as an attack on Hindu and Muslim religious beliefs.
As can be expected, this understanding gave primacy to the religious factor and
reinforced a line of thinking which saw the Revolt as a ‘Muslim conspiracy’,
that gained acceptance among contemporary officials. Syed Ahmad Khan (1817 -
1898) wrote a tract (Asbab-e-Baghawat-e-Hind viz. ‘The Causes of the Indian
Revolt’) to counter this allegation, where he sought to examine the underlying
features that determined the nature of 1857. And taken together these seem to
be the basis for formulations like the ‘clash of civilisations’, echoes of
which are heard even today in the post-9/11 context.
Contemporary writings
in the mid-nineteenth century generated political hysteria and racism, which
legitimised the barbaric image of the ‘Indian’. Nevertheless, the 1857 Revolt
demonstrated the way English opinion itself was divided at home. Thus,
Chartists like Ernest Jones hailed the Revolt and unmasked the colonial
exploitation of India (The Revolt of Hindoostan; or, The New World, London,
1857). Of course the most serious dissenting voice was that of Karl Marx who
linked the colonial exploitation of India to the anger that was displayed by
the people during the Revolt. Marx and Engels hailed the unity displayed by the
different religious communities who opposed British colonialism (Marx and
Engels, The First War of Independence, 1857-1859, Moscow,1975).
Interestingly, the
Indian National Congress after its formation (1885) actually denounced the 1857
Revolt, given the social background of most of the leaders who were pro-British
in their thinking. However, by the end of the nineteenth century the Revolt
attracted and inspired the first generation of the Indian nationalists. Thus,
V.D.Savarkar, who was perhaps the first Indian to write about the Revolt in
1909, called it The Indian War of Independence of 1857. His pro-nationalist
stance made Savarkar reject the colonial assertion that linked the Revolt with
the greased cartridges. As he put it, if this had been the issue it would be
difficult to explain how it could attract Nana Sahib, the Emperor of Delhi, the
Queen of Jhansi and Khan Bahadur Khan to join it. Besides, he also focused on
the fact that the Revolt continued even after the English Governor General had
issued a proclamation to withdraw the offending greased bullets. Savarkar went
ahead and connected the Revolt to the ‘atrocities’ committed by the British. At
the same time, the importance he gave to religion illustrates the influence of
the imperialist writers on him.
From the 1920s,
efforts were made to analyse the Revolt from a Marxist position by pioneers
like M.N. Roy (M.N. Roy in collaboration with Abani Mukherji, India in
Transition, 1922) and Rajni Palme Dutt (India Today, 1940). Roy was rather
dismissive about 1857 and saw in its failure the shattering of the last vestiges
of feudal power. He was emphatic about the ‘revolution of 1857’ being a
struggle between the worn out feudal system and the newly introduced commercial
capitalism, that aimed to achieve political supremacy. In contrast, Palme Dutt
saw 1857 as a major peasant revolt, even though it had been led by the decaying
feudal forces, fighting to get back their privileges and turn back the tide of
foreign domination. Consequently, one witnesses the beginnings of a process
that interrogated and critiqued the internal feudal order, even while lauding
the popular basis of the Revolt.
The access to sources
after the independence of India saw interesting developments related to the
studies on the 1857 Revolt. What developed was a rather sophisticated
Nationalist historiography that harped on the complexities of the Revolt. It
included Nationalist historians like R.C. Majumdar, S.B. Chaudhuri, S.N. Sen,
and K.K. Datta, (viz. R.C. Majumdar, The Sepoy Mutiny and the Revolt of 1857,
1957; S.B.Chaudhuri, Civil Revolt in the Indian Mutinies, 1857-59, 1957 and
Theories of the Indian Mutiny, 1965; S.N. Sen, Eighteen Fifty-Seven, 1957; and,
K.K. Datta, Reflections on the Mutiny, 1967). These historians were not
uniformly comfortable with the idea that the 1857 Revolt was the ‘First War of
Indian Independence’. Moreover, they referred to ideas like nationalism that
were supposedly witnessed during 1857 or saw the very inception of the national
movement contained in the Revolt. Nevertheless, they went very clearly beyond
the simple categorisations that had seen two dominant and opposing narratives –
lauding the British, the victors who had ‘won’ the war and the claims of the
‘rebellious Indians’, who had been ‘defeated’.
This meant a shift in
focus, with efforts being made to locate the internal contradictions (viz. the
Indian ‘rich’, which included the moneylenders and buniyas) and the popular
basis of 1857 and not concentrate merely on the influential classes which had been
the focus of contemporary British officials. It is here that Nationalist
historiography worked on and developed the legacy of the Marxists, even as some
Nationalist historians inscribed their disapproval of seeing it as the ‘First
War of Independence’. In this sense at least, the Nationalist historians
accorded a space – howsoever limited – to the popular basis of the
Revolt.
Since peasants did
not/do not write their histories, they did not document their interaction with
the 1857 Revolt. But, is it possible to ignore the folklore and traditions of
resistance associated with the 1857 Revolt? Moreover, can one afford to ignore
the connections between 1857 and the peasant revolts of the preceding phase, or
those outside the northern region of India? One can for example refer here to
the Revolts of the Bhills in 1852 (in Khandesh, Dhar and Malwa), the Santals in
1855-6 (in Rajmahal, Bhagalpur, Birbhum), the Mapillas over the 1836-1854
period in Malabar, the Kandhas in Ghumsar and Baudh (1855-60), the Savaras of
Parliakhemedi (1856-57), or, for that matter, the Indigo Revolt in Bengal (that
began in 1859 and was directed against white planters) – inspite of being told
repeatedly about the role of the Permanent Settlement and the bhadraloks, that
supposedly left Bengal as a ‘zone of peace’ in this phase.
Unless one locates
historical processes in a narrow, factual manner, it would be indeed almost
impossible to assume that peasants cannot think or incorporate components from
the past while struggling against colonial rule as well as their immediate
oppressors. In this sense at least, it is difficult to study the Revolt unless
one takes into account the social history of peasant protest prior to 1857 and
in the phase after it. This would show the peasants in a bitter
anti-imperialist political struggle, where the internal exploiter in the form
of the sahukar or buniya was not spared. It would also undermine a point that
has almost got frozen as common sense – viz. that the impact of the 1857 Revolt
was not felt outside the Indo-Gangetic plain.
With the passage of
time the development of other historical approaches generated a lot of debates
on the nature of 1857 among historians. The first exhaustive work on the Revolt
was published in 1957 to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the event. Edited
by P.C.Joshi (1857: A Symposium, 1957), it focused on both the diversities and
the specificities of the 1857 Revolt . This included assessing 1857 against the
colonial backdrop, examining aspects of participation and focusing in a major
way on the internal contradictions. This volume also sought to highlight
dimensions of popular culture by incorporating folk poems that have survived.
One has in mind here the contributions especially of P.C.Joshi and Talmiz
Khaldun.
In many ways this
work inspired a serious spell of writings on the Revolt. Here mention must be
made of Eric Stokes who examined issues ranging from the way the nature of 1857
was conditioned by the background, the demographic and ecological features to
the social composition and the role of the peasants, especially the ‘rich’
peasants’ (viz. Peasant and the Raj: Studies in Peasant Society and Agrarian
Revolt in Colonial India, 1978; and his The Peasant Armed: The India Revolt of
1857, 1986). Interestingly, his research guided Stokes to reassess his
position. Thus, whereas in his first work he had focused on the ‘rich’ peasant
leadership and mobilisation, in Peasant Armed Stokes enlarged the social basis
of peasant participation in the Revolt.
However, it was left
to historians like Rudrangshu Mukherjee (Awadh in Revolt, 1857-58: A Study of
Popular Resistance,1984) and Tapti Roy (The Politics of a Popular Uprising:
Bundelkhand in 1857, 1994) to enrich our understanding of the Revolt by their
focus on the popular level of the Revolt. Their effort was based on specific
area studies – viz. Awadh and Bundelkhand – that brought to light fascinating
complexities of popular militancy that had remained ignored.
Alongside, historians
likes Iqtidar Alam Khan have studied questions related to organisation (‘The
Gwalior Contingent in 1857-58: A Study of the Organisation and Ideology of the
Sepoy Rebels,’ Social Scientist, January-April 1998, pgs. 53-75; hereafter
S.Sct.), Gautam Bhadra and Saiyid Zaheer Husain Jafri have focused on the
middle level leadership (‘Four Rebels of Eighteen Fifty Seven’, in Ranajit
Guha, ed. Subaltern Studies IV, 1985, pgs. 229-75; and ‘Profile of a Saintly
Rebel - Maulavi Ahmadullah Shah’ in S.Sct., respectively). Scholars like
Khaldun (in P.C.Joshi, pgs. 1-70) and E.I.Brodkin (‘The Struggle for
Succession: Rebels and Loyalists in the Indian Mutiny of 1857’, in Modern Asian
Studies, 1972, pages 277-90) have focused on activities in the areas where
British authority had been subverted, and if 1857 was indeed a restorative
Revolt.
More recently – since
the 1990s – historians have focused on the popular dimensions of 1857. Here one
can refer to scholars like K.S.Singh who have highlighted the participation of
adivasis (“The ‘Tribals’ and the 1857 Uprising”, S.Sct. pgs. 76-85); Badri
Narayan who has focused on low and outcastes and popular culture (‘Dalits and
Memories of 1857’, ICHR Conference Proceedings, December 2006, unpublished; and
‘Popular Culture and 1857: Memory Against Forgetting’, S.Sct. pgs. 86-94); and
Rajat Ray who has studied the mentalities of 1857 (The Felt Community:
Commonality and Mentality before the Emergence of Indian Nationalism, 2003,
pgs. 353-534). Moreover, working within the paradigms of cultural studies
scholars like Jenny Sharpe (Allegories of Empire: The Figure of Woman in the
Colonial Text, 1993) and Nancy Paxton (Writing Under the Raj: Gender, Race and
Rape in the British Colonial Imagination, 1830-1947, 1999) have delineated the
way the theme of the ‘rape’ of white women that was virtually created to fuel
racism, which emerged as a major fall-out of the Revolt.
What needs to be
emphasised is that the 1857 Revolt represents possibly one of the most powerful
and dramatic anti-colonial movements which united the peasants and the landed
sections against the ruthless imperialist onslaught over the first half of the
nineteenth century. At the same time, it also questioned the internal
exploiters like the moneylenders and buniyas. What has been delineated
illustrates the evolution of the historiography on the 1857 Revolt. As seen,
historians have shifted their focus from the mutinous ‘sepoys’, and seeing in
it the origins of Indian nationalism to studying the diversities of the Revolt
both in terms of popular participation and regions affected by it as also
highlighting the internal contradictions. Presently some historians are engaged
in resarching gender-related issues, which would undoubtedly enrich our
understanding of the Revolt of 1857.
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