
      The East    India Company had long employed Indians as soldiers. There were supposed    to be not more than 4 Indian soldiers to every British one. However the    British had withdrawn troops to serve in conflicts elsewhere. By 1857    there were only 40,000 British troops in India and 311,000 Indians. The    mutiny began on 10 May 1857. The spark that lit the fire was the fact    that soldiers were issued with a new rifle - the Enfield. It was said    that the cartridge was greased with fat from a cow (sacred to Hindus) or    pigs (unclean to Muslims).
      The mutiny    began at Meerut or Mirat 60 miles from Delhi.The soldiers massacred the    British and the uprising spread rapidly. The rebels took Delhi and    proclaimed the restoration of the old Mughal Empire. The rebellion    spread across Central and Northern India but the south did not rise.    Soldiers in Madras and Bombay stayed loyal to the British. Eventually    the British were able to re-establish control.
      Rebels    besieged the British in Cawnpore and Lucknow. The British in Cawnpore    surrendered on 27 June 1857. They were then massacred. However the    British quickly sent reinforcements to India. Sir Henry Havelock led a    force to relieve Lucknow. He defeated the rebel leader Hana Sahib at    Cawnpore on 16 July 1857. Havelock reached Lucknow on 25 September 1857.    However he then found himself besieged by the rebels. A relief force was    sent under Sir Colin Campbell (1792-1863). He reached Lucknow on 16    November and the garrison escaped. Campbell decisively defeated a rebel    force outside Cawnpore on 6 December.
      Meanwhile    the British recaptured Delhi in September. The British recaptured    Lucknow in March 1858. Sir Hugh Rose took the rebel stronghold of Jahnsi    on 3 April. He decisively defeated a rebel leader, Tantia Topi, on 19    June 1858 at the battle of Gwalior. This blow broke the back of the    rebellion. The British then 'mopped up' the remaining rebels. By the end    of 1858 the rebellion was over. However the East India Company lost    control of India. On 1 September 1858 control was transferred to the    British
0 comments
Post a Comment