European Imperialism
Up until 1858, the British East India Company had a monopoly on trade with Asia and also governed most of the Indian subcontinent, although it was replaced by direct British rule after the Rebellion of 1757-58. Initially, the Company was not interested in 'modernizing' or reforming India, but only in expanding its power and profits. It would either buy off of eliminate all of its competitors and interlopers, as it did by hanging Captain Kidd in 1701 on charges of piracy. It sold opium to China to help finance its activities, and Chinese attempts in restrict this trade in the Opium Wars of 1839-42 and 1856-60 resulted in the British takeover of Hong Kong. In the Boston Tea Party of 1774, the East India Company's monopoly on trade with Asia sparked the American Revolution, led in part by merchants who preferred free trade policies along the lines of those recommended by Adam Smith and other liberal reformers. Opposition to the Company's rule did not yet take the form of modern nationalist or radical movements, but traditional rulers and local feudal elites who resented its encroachments. Mahatma Gandhi created the mass populist movement that finally drove the British out of India, and his strategy of nonviolent resistance was essential in winning home rule in 1935 and independence in 1947.
Britain first invaded India in the 16th and 17th Centuries during its wars with Holland, Portugal and France for control over the trade of Asia. All of these nations were mercantilist powers at the time and had East India Companies that had been granted trade monopolies. At the Battle of Plassey in 1757, during the Sven Years War, the British forces under Robert Clive defeated the French and assumed control over most of the Indian subcontinent, and for the next hundred years the British East India Company governed this area. Initially, it interfered little with local customs, religions and cultures, and made strategic alliances with Indian kings and princes. Its interests were purely economic, since it was a joint-stock company controlled by its shareholders, and its leaders were basically pirates, plunderers and adventurers who were primarily interested in the 'primitive accumulation of capital', as Karl Marx once famously described it (Harlow and Carter, 2003, p. 2).
Eventually, the liberal-Whig reformers in Britain also gained control over the East India Company, and decided to use it as a vehicle to remodel India along 'modern', European lines. Moralistic missionaries, bureaucrats and administrators, supplied with the latest ethnographic and anthropological studies, replaced the gamblers, adventurers and pirates who originally controlled the Company. According to 19th Century ideas or order and progress, India was considered 'uncivilized', even though it was home to some of the most ancient civilizations known on earth. Some European scholars had always appreciated this, of course, by for the 19th Century reformers India was "governed by superstition, ruled by hysteria and idolatry, and wholly without functioning economies and markets" (Harlow and Carter, p. 3). Thomas Babington Macaulay thought that any attempt to accommodate or understand traditional Indian society was absurd since "only systematically introduced English values, traditions and institutions would enable successful and effective forms of colonial government" (Harlow and Carter, p. 5). Liberal-Whig directors of the Company like William Bentinck genuinely thought they were bringing order, civilization and rationality to India, such as by outlawing thuggee, the death cult associated with the goddess Kali, widow-burning (sati) and polygamy. They were genuinely astonished when the opposition to these efforts and cultural and religious reforms sparked a massive uprising among both the Hindu and Muslim populations.
By their own lights, these attempts to modernize and Europeanize India were well-intentioned, although they aroused local resentments for interference in local religious, cultural and political practices, and finally sparked the Indian Rebellion of 1857-58. This was not yet a modern nationalist or radical movement of the type that the British would face starting in the late-19th and early-20th Centuries, particularly when Mahatma Gandhi turned it into a mass populist movement against British rule. Instead, it was led by traditional rulers like the King of Delhi, the Rani of Jhansi, and Tipu Sultan, who resented attempts by the Company to displace them and reduce their own political and economic power. Although the rebellion was defeated, it also spelled the end of the East India Company, which was replaced by direct rule by the Crown with Queen Victoria given the title Empress of India -- the British Raj. Gandhi's resistance movement, then, was aimed at this...
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