The Anarchy-William Dalrymple

                                                                                                                                                          History

 

The Anarchy-The East India Company, Corporate Violience, And the Pillage of An Empire

William Dalrymple

 

William Dalrymple has written many books on recent Indian history. All are highly readable. They do not present history as a collection of dry-as-bone facts but read like a finely told story. These are meticulously researched and provide verifiable references. Thus, they present historical facts, but in a format that makes history accessible and joyful to a layperson.

 

Subtitle of Dalrymple’s latest book, rather long, makes the subject of the book amply clear. This is the story of East India Company. Company began in the last year of sixteenth century as a group of motley traders, some large, many inconsequential like haberdashers, leather sellers, clothworkers, etc. Each pledged an amount, not unlike stocks of companies today, thus making East India Company one of the earliest stock companies of modern world. It foundered for a century and a half, often courting failures and imminent bankruptcy, than success. By the year 1765, Company had transformed itself completely from the conventional trading corporation dealing in silk ad spices of East to a formidable colonial power. In that year Company obtained Diwani of Mughal Riyasat from the enfeebled, defeated, and titular monarch, Shah Alam, the Mughal Emperor. Gradually, Company gained control over a vast continent, whose riches had attracted plunderers, kings, emperors and empire-less princes in search of an empire, for past two millennia. Dalrymple tells this tale with the panache of a master story-teller and the rigour of a high academician.

 

Dalrymple obtained his material for the book from various sources. Mainly from Company’s own bulky records now found in British Library in London. Company’s Indian papers, an equally valuable source, are housed in the National Archives of India in New Delhi. As has been his research methodology in previous books, here too he relies extensively on histories written in regional languages. He has widely referred to Persian language histories written by Mughal historians, noblemen and scribes.

 

In a fairly long book spanning about four hundred pages, Dalrymple tells the saga of Company growth from a non-descript quarters in London, to a major corporate business house, controlling almost half of the world trade. He illustrates how and why the Company which came into existence for business, metamorphosed into a mammoth colonial power controlling the fate of millions of people of a huge continent. Another fact that Dalrymple emphasises and clearly enunciates in the book is that the Company was perhaps the first case of state-corporate nexus for the mutual aggrandizement of both, at the cost of the governed. The latter in this case were the people of India. Many of the powerful British parliamentarians had large stocks in Company and they bent every rule, overlooked gross improprieties of its Indian Officials, in the greed to secure Company’s profits and thus assure theirs. It was a plunder of a nation with no parallel in history. Nadir Shah’s carnage of Delhi in 1739, and Ahmed Shah Abdali’s several attacks on Delhi pale into insignificance compared to the systematic looting of the subcontinent by the company and its English officials: ruthlessly, relentlessly, and massively for more than a century. A measure of this gargantuan loot can be gauged from the plunder of merely one province, though the richest in the country, Bengal. Robert Clive who joined the company as a humble accountant and rose to occupy Governor’s seat in Calcutta, had a personal fortune worth two hundred and thirty-four thousand pounds, in value of those times, when he returned to England in late eighteenth century. After the Battle of Plassey, in 1757, a victory owned as much to cunning, treachery, bankers’ connivance, bribes, as to military prowess, he deposited two and a half million pounds in Company coffers, all looted from the province of Bengal.

Book tells the story of how company came to subdue and eventually usurp the power of Emperor Shah Alam by systematically defeating Nawabs of Awadh and Bengal, Tipu Sultan of Mysore Sultanate and the Great Maratha Confederacy. Story of Shah Alam is the backbone of this tale and insinuates in every narrative. Dalrymple brings our clearly the tragedy of Shah Alam: a refined, sincere aesthete; perhaps unskilful in court shenanigans and duplicities of diplomacy; who remained a puppet Emperor all his life; and who was used by Britishers and Marathas for their profit and treated abjectly when it suited them. Dalrymple puts his well-founded views forthrightly. Though, these are contrary to popular myths and biased histories. He lays bare the rapacious, profiteering and buccaneer creed of Robert Clive even as he talks bout his qualities of courage and perseverance in adversity and intrepid nature. He talks at length, unhesitatingly, about Warren Hasting’s true love for India and devotes much space to his impeachment proceedings in British Parliament. It was heartening to learn about the great qualities of Tipu Sultan, a much-maligned figure in today’s India. Tipu was highly accomplished in all statecraft, was patron of art and culture and protected Hindu and Muslim interest of his citizens without a bias. He revered many Hindu saints of his empire and gave lavish donations to their monasteries. Dalrymple also talks bout massive destruction of Hindu temples, rape and carnage that Tipu visited on vanquished territories. Tipu was the first Indian king to take on British rulers. He realised early the expansionist creed of Company and tried to forge and alliance with Marathas and Hyderabad’s Nizam to counter English. He fought against British till his death, never entering into any alliance with them. Dalrymple also writes in details about the valour and political acumen of many Maratha kings, Mahadji Schindia foremost amongst them.

 

Book reads like a thriller. In the process it also enriches mind. I recommend it strongly to every history buff and to every Indian who reads.

 



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