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General Studies 1 >> Modern Indian History

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TREATY OF ALINAGAR

TREATY OF ALINAGAR

 
 
1.Background
The Treaty of Alinagar, signed on February 9, 1757, was a reluctant agreement signed by Bengal’s Nawab Siraj ud Daula with the English East India Company
Image Source: Britanica
 
2. A trading company comes to India
  1. The English East India Company (henceforth referred to as ‘the Company’) was formed in 1600 by a royal charter
  2. The charter gave the Company monopoly of all trade from England in the East and the right to carry gold bullion to finance its activities, with the aim of combating growing Dutch influence in the East
  3. The Company formally began trading with India in 1613, supported by a royal farman from Mughal emperor Jehangir which allowed the Company to open its factories and warehouses
  4. Till the middle of the 18th century, the Company worked with local rulers, often subservient to them, and established a thriving business
  5. While over time it had acquired control of various trading posts on both sides of the coast, the Company was yet to engage in a concerted effort to expand its territories
3.Bengal as a trading town
  • The three primary trading towns where thriving British communities emerged by the 18th century were Bombay, Madras and Calcutta
  •  Of these, Calcutta was the most important, as by the 18th century, goods from Bengal comprised nearly 60 per cent of all English imports from Asia
  • It was Mughal emperor Aurangzeb who gave the Company the right to trade in Bengal for an annual payment of Rs 3000
  •  After his death in 1707, the Mughal Empire started to crumble. Those who were previously subordinate to the Mughal crown started vying for autonomy.
  • While the Mughal emperor remained the symbolic head across much of the erstwhile Mughal heartland, his actual power was fast diminishing
  • This was a problem for the British, who relied on the legitimacy of the Mughal crown to carry out trade, unhindered
  • When another farmaan from the Mughal emperor Farrukhsiyar in 1917 established favourable terms for the Company to continue its trade in Bengal, this was met with local opposition
  • Nawab Murshid Quli Khan, the new autonomous ruler of Bengal, refused to extend the 1917 farmaan’s duty-free provision to cover also the private trade of the Company officials
  •  He also denied permission to the Company to buy the thirty-eight villages and refused to offer minting privileges to the British
4.Siraj ud daula
  • In 1755, vary of French competition, the English began renovating the fortifications in Calcutta without the Nawab’s permission
  • The situation was already tense when matters took a turn for the worse in 1756. An Indian trader named Krishna Ballabh took refuge inside the renovated Fort William in Calcutta
  • He had been charged with cheating by the new Nawab, Siraj ud Daula. This was a major provocation and the young Nawab threatened military action as well as a crackdown on the Company’s business
  • When the Company failed to listen to warnings, Siraj showed his strength by taking over the Company factory at Cossimbazar
  • A few weeks later, the Nawab’s forces would attack Fort William, capturing Calcutta on June 20. They would ransack the city and the Nawab would shortly rename it Alinagar
  • However, the Nawab’s position was far weaker than his easy takeover of Calcutta made it seem. Not only did he face a large Company force on its way to Bengal from Madras under Robert Clive, there was also the looming threat of the Afghans under Ahmad Shah Abdali who had already caused havoc in the Northern territories of the weak Mughal Empire
  • A surprise attack by the Company forces defeated the Nawab’s forces outside Calcutta in early 1757
5.Treaty of Alinagar
  • Under the threat of an impending Afghan assault and under advice from his ministers, the Nawab reluctantly decided to sign a treaty with the Company on February 9, 1757: the Treaty of Alinagar
  • This treaty restored all the privileges that Farrukhsiyar’s 1717 farmaan had granted to the East India Company, allowing it to carry out duty-free trade, build further fortifications and operate a mint
  • The story of the Treaty of Alinagar is a story of the eventual rise of the East India Company as a political force to be reckoned with
  • Though the treaty ostensibly maintained the sovereignty of the Nawab of Bengal, its terms were extremely favourable to the Company
  • Finally, on June 23, 1757, Robert Clive’s army met the Nawab’s once again, in the famous Battle of Plassey
  •  Though outnumbered, the Company won a decisive victory, thanks to defections from senior commanders of the Nawab’s army, including the infamous Mir Jafar
  • Historians point to the Company’s victory in Plassey as the moment when the East India Company became a proper colonial enterprise, interested not just in trade, but territorial control that would serve its economic interests
  • For most Indians, the history of British colonial rule in India begins in Plassey. However, the roots of it were sown long back. While the Treaty of Alinagar itself might be relegated to a minor footnote in history, understanding what led up to it provides much greater perspective of the machinations of early colonial expansion in India
 
 
 
 
For Prelims: Battle of plassey, Treaty of alinagar
For Mains:
1. How the treaty of alinagar set the stage for the English East India Company political rise

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