this post was submitted on 11 May 2024
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The 1857-8 Sepoy Rebellion/ First Indian War of Independence was a failed rebellion against the rule of the British East India Company (EIC) in India. Initially a mutiny of the Indian soldiers (sepoys) in the EIC army, the movement spread to become a wider rebellion involving a broad spectrum of the Indian population in certain regions.

The rebellion was ultimately quashed, but the victor was also its immediate victim as the British state dissolved the EIC and took over governance of its possessions in India. The grievances that caused the rebellion and the acts of violence perpetrated by both sides would colour Anglo-Indian relations for the next century and beyond.

Sepoys in the EIC Army

Although the East India Company was established as a trading company, from the mid-18th century, it employed its own army to protect its interests and to expand its territorial possessions. From 1765, only Britishers could hold officer rank in the EIC armed forces, but the rank-and-file majority was made up of Indian soldiers. These latter troops were first known as peons and then sepoys – a corruption of the Persian term sipahi. Sepoys far outnumbered European soldiers. The average ratio of Indian troops to British in EIC armies in the 19th century was around 7:1. Many Indians joined the EIC for better pay than was possible elsewhere and as a chance to improve their status in traditional Indian society.

The sepoys were well-trained and well-equipped, and they helped the EIC expand its control across India, especially following the four Anglo-Mysore Wars (1767-1799) and the two Anglo-Sikh Wars (1845-1849). At the time of the Sepoy Mutiny, the EIC employed around 45,000 British soldiers and over 230,000 sepoys.

The main causes of the Sepoy Mutiny may be summarised as:

  • Sepoys were unhappy with the pay inequality compared to British soldiers.
  • Sepoys were suspicious that rifle cartridges used animal fats they could not touch as part of their religious beliefs.
  • The sepoys' unwillingness to serve abroad.
  • Indian princes had lost their states or had to pay high protection fees to the EIC.
  • An overtaxed population
  • Concerns that traditional Indian cultural practices were under threat.
  • Concerns for traditional Indian manufacturing industries facing unfair competition from EIC imports.
  • British snobbery and institutional racism.

The sepoys had several grievances, which they felt, despite peaceful protest, were not being addressed by the EIC. There had been several small-scale uprisings since 1806, but these had been ruthlessly quashed. The sepoys were not happy that they received much lower pay compared to British EIC soldiers. Neither had sepoy wages been raised for over 50 years, meaning that in real terms their pay had lost half of its value since 1800. Indian soldiers were not happy either with the obligation to serve outside India, which would require Hindus to perform costly rites of purification, or the institutional racism that prevented them from ever becoming officers. The final straw was the introduction of greased cartridges for compulsory Enfield rifles. The animal fat grease of pig or cow offended Hindu and Muslim beliefs since the cartridges had to be prepared by mouth (as it happened the grease came from neither of these taboo animals).

There were other discontents besides the sepoys. 1857 saw the collapse of the Mughal Empire, which had been crumbling for quite some time, its institutions of rule in India now all but invisible. Many of the independent Indian princely states were far from happy with the EIC, in many places the Mughals' successor. Another serious bone of contention was the EIC's policy of taking over princely states whenever it could get away with it.

The Rebellion Spreads

The initial spark that set off the sepoys was the punishment of one of their own, Mangal Pandey (aka Pande), in March 1857. Pandey had wounded a European EIC officer near Calcutta, and for his crime, he was executed. This was a matter of justice perhaps, but the outrage sprang from the decision to also flog Pandey's entire sepoy company. Then, on 10 May 1857, the EIC sepoys at Meerut raised arms. They protested the 10-year prison sentences handed down to 85 fellow sepoys for refusing to use greased Enfield cartridges. The mutineers killed their British officers and then went on a rampage. As one mutineer lamented: "I was a good sepoy, and would have gone anywhere for the service, but I could not forsake my religion" (James, 239).

The EIC leadership was unprepared for the rising, which saw the sepoys promote the retired Mughal emperor Bahadur Shah II (1775-1862) as their leader. Then the rebellion spontaneously spread across India, involving not just sepoys but landlords, merchants, and peasant farmers of both the Hindu and Muslim faiths.

The sepoy cause was then taken up by a host of Indian princes disgruntled at their poor treatment by the EIC. Queen Rani Lakshmi Bai of Jhansi (1835-1858) and Nana Saheb, claimant to the Maratha title of Peshwa, were examples of rulers who raised arms against the EIC. Some princes remained loyal to the EIC such as the Maharajas of Gwalior and Jodhpur.

The rebellion continued to spread with remarkable speed, helped by agents sent out for that very purpose and new people joining it after they witnessed the rebels' success and the weakness of the British. In many cases, too, the rebels had nothing to lose. Most of northern and central India was literally up in arms, particularly in the Ganges and Narmada valleys. As the EIC mobilised loyal troops, fierce fighting broke out at Banaras, Gwalior, Jhansi, Kampur, and Lucknow.

To fight the rebels, the EIC now employed the regular British Army regiments, which it typically hired out, along with loyal Sikh troops and new allies such as the Gurkhas from Nepal. Delhi was retaken on 18 September 1857 after a brutal six-day battle, then Kanpur and Lucknow in March 1858.

The rebellions were ultimately quashed by the spring of 1858 for two reasons: the far superior resources of the EIC and the lack of coordination amongst the rebels in terms of command and demands. These different groups might have all agreed that they wanted the British out of India, but they could not agree on who would replace them. In the end, 40,000 British troops shipped in from Europe decided the conflict in the EIC's favour.

Aftermath

Casualties were high on both sides, but far more so on the Indian side, as here summarised by Barrow:

2,600 British enlisted soldiers and 157 officers were killed. Another 8,000 died of heatstroke and disease, while 3,000 were severely injured. Indian deaths from the war and the resulting famines may have reached 800,000.

Atrocities and massacres were committed on both sides against military personnel and civilians in cities and rural areas. This bloodbath understandably led to much ill feeling and mutual suspicion over the next century.

In the aftermath, the EIC ruthlessly dealt with the rebellion's leaders. Bahadur Shah II was exiled to Burma, but his sons were executed. The British, for reasons unbeknown but to themselves, blamed Muslims for the rebellion far more than Hindus, and British soldiers were often guilty of harsh treatment or worse of captives of the former religion. There were so many lootings, kangaroo courts, and hangings that even the EIC directors had to issue a resolution to its employees to show more restraint. The historian W. Dalrymple describes the thousands of revenge hangings and murders as "probably the bloodiest episode in the entire history of British colonialism" (391).

The British state, already unimpressed with the EIC's governance in India, took the final step in what had been a gradual process of regulation and control to finally take full possession of EIC territories in India on 2 August 1858.

On 1 June 1874, Parliament formally dissolved the East India Company. The sepoys and the Indian civilians who had joined them had seen off one oppressor only for it to be replaced by another, or rather the same but with a different mask. In 1877, Queen Victoria was proclaimed Empress of India, and British rule continued to squeeze what resources it could from India until independence was gained in 1947, a movement that drew much inspiration from the mutiny almost a century before.

https://www.worldhistory.org/Sepoy_Mutiny/

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[–] Yor@hexbear.net 11 points 3 months ago (2 children)

it's nice when something works exactly like you thought it should. keeping track of indexes in an array shifting after removing items was making my brain a lil silly, so I wrote it out and tested it. I was right comfy-cool

now back to the rest of the project lol

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[–] WhatDoYouMeanPodcast@hexbear.net 11 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (1 children)

I have so many thoughts and opinions having traveled outside the anglosphere - about wealth disparity, our sex lives, and spirituality. I don't know where I'd express them to anybody who'd care. I get some friction talking about leftism, but I doubt my comrades care too much about the gritty details and gossip where I express what a little goblin I am. I also worry that my coworkers at Langley got wind of all the details of what I'm up to.

I think it's all just going to have to go into the sequel to my novel as a work of fiction

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[–] HarryLime@hexbear.net 11 points 3 months ago (1 children)
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[–] bigboopballs@hexbear.net 11 points 3 months ago

fuck landlords
fuck cars

[–] take_five_seconds@hexbear.net 11 points 3 months ago (3 children)

what are your favorite elden ring messages? mine are "try fingers, but hole", "fort, night" and ofc "liar ahead"

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[–] jimmyjohnsandwichfive@hexbear.net 11 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Forever funny that redditors have to pretend to be upset over the word cracker cracker

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[–] Redcuban1959@hexbear.net 11 points 3 months ago (4 children)

Well, today was an interesting day. I visited the graves of my mother and my paternal grandmother.

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[–] oscardejarjayes@hexbear.net 11 points 3 months ago

grr, megathread locked while I was writing a response to GalaxyBrain.

"I try to avoid snorting things, chronic cocaine use has not been kind (even with sprays and such).

As a part of that, I get to understand why people snort. Tastes terrible, more expensive, etc."

[–] poppy_apocalypse@hexbear.net 11 points 3 months ago

St Pauli is in Bundesliga next season.

[–] SSJ2Marx@hexbear.net 10 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

big-cool

Aww yeah another day another $300 made card counting.I have lost two thousand dollars

[–] AntiOutsideAktion@hexbear.net 10 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (3 children)

You'd think that living in the same house as your landlord would translate to better maintenance. Well tell that to the earwig infestation that surrounds this place. The front door and area around it is covered with them like polka-dots every night when I get home. I have to close my window at night and deny my kitties the smell of the outside because they roam my walls freely. This morning I found one hiding in the clean water compartment of my water filter and I couldn't wash it with soap because the kitchen sink leaks and has been turned off for two days now.

I never thought I'd have strong feelings about earwigs until now. They were just the cool looking bug with a pincer butt you'd see occasionally. Now I hate them like cockroaches. They're the cats of the bug family. Just mocking you, hanging from your ceiling with their butts hanging down like a cheeky cat with its tail up. I'm going through a roll of paper towel a week grabbing them. Tearing full sheets into quarters.

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[–] Frank@hexbear.net 10 points 3 months ago (1 children)

The cinnamon roles at two stores from the same grocery chain a few miles apart use totally different recipes to make different kinds of rolls with different kinds of frosting which are then sold in the same mass produced cardboard box.

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Putting an egg on my croque monsieur to mess with the terfs

[–] wombat@hexbear.net 10 points 3 months ago

it is may 13 and stalin saved the world from fascism

[–] moonlake@hexbear.net 10 points 3 months ago (4 children)

I watched Civil War recently. It doesn't answer any questions, like "how did we get here" and "what can we do to prevent this". Which is okay because movies don't have to answer questions but they at least have to ask some questions and this movie doesn't even do that, which is wild.

This movie has nothing to say except "reporters are important." Which is such a basic ass message that doesn't even have to be said since everybody can agree with that.

Reporters are important because of the valuable insight from the front lines that they give us. But what's even more important is the action that we do as a result of this insight. If reporters are documenting someone's misery but nothing gets done to stop it, then they are just making misery porn for our entertainment. That's a far more important point and this movie doesn't have anything to say about that.

Overall I'd rate this 6.5 out of 10 popcorn bags, shout out to Portland Maoists

[–] TerminalEncounter@hexbear.net 10 points 3 months ago (5 children)

I watched it and thought it was such a dumb idea from the conception of the movie to make it about the 2nd American Civil War - a very political thing - but avoid politics entirely. The guy who made it is a proud centrist (centre leftist according to him) so you can see why it's Like That. Can't believe he made Ex Machina and Annihilation.

It was cool blowing up shit in DC though

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[–] ComradeEchidna@hexbear.net 10 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (2 children)

The Fallout show handles fusion cores better than FO4. Like a single one should be an extremely precious commodity that can run a suit of power armor, a small vault or expanding on what we haven’t seen a car or vertibird. Like in game you should be popping the one core you’ve found out to use it for other things, making choices on what’s the best use right now until late game where you have a few spare.

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I love getting IOF propaganda suggested to me by YouTube while I'm searching for music

[–] Acute_Engles@hexbear.net 10 points 3 months ago (7 children)

Pretty sure i aced my red seal exam the other week but my results aren't going to be in for a month so I'll just spend the time in between assuming I fucked everything up

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[–] Kolibri@hexbear.net 10 points 3 months ago (6 children)

why must headaches exist, at least like its not a migraine this time. at least like advil/ibuproen works better for headaches

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[–] AbbysMuscles@hexbear.net 10 points 3 months ago (2 children)

First! I was here before it got stickied 😎

I want a typewriter

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[–] Babs@hexbear.net 10 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Vending machine charged me $10 for a drink it said was $3. Like who do you even complain to about that shit?

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[–] HarryLime@hexbear.net 10 points 3 months ago
[–] GalaxyBrain@hexbear.net 10 points 3 months ago

I don't wanna have a dog full time, but on occasion it'd be nice to have a big fluffo to snuggle. Darby is a fantastic cat and cuddles real good, but sometimes you want that heft and lack of fussiness about whether you need to move your arm or whatever.

This also made me recall my old roommates dog, who I still see often and we're pals, dog and person. It was probably animal to animal views given by my cat but this dog always seemed to think she wasn't allowed in my room which was never at all the case so when her dad was out for a while and she got lonely she'd sit in the doorway and whine until finally after a bunch of coaxing she'd trepidatiously step in and eventually come sit with me and then the whole time would acr like she'd get in trouble if she got caught. My cat didn't even mind her being there if she wasn't looking for cuddles. Dogs are incredibly silly animals.

[–] DyingOfDeBordom@hexbear.net 10 points 3 months ago

Im cooking for like 80 people tonight instead of 200 so i'm making fancy Spanish rice (i cooked my own salsa instead of just globbing salsa from a jar onto the rice) and Im gonna try to make a sauce out of this mojo marinade (the original recipe just says to whisk in pan drippings and add fresh cut mint) and hopefully it's all gonna be dank af

[–] KittyBobo@hexbear.net 10 points 3 months ago

I'm thinking about just not going in to work. I have enough saved up to coast by for a bit, I'm just tired of having to work through everything I'm going through, for management to be so laughably incompetent, letting things pile up and get so bad that if the fire martial came he'd shut the place down, not that he ever seems to do his job eother, and still I'm the one getting harped on for not doing enough. Fuck it, good luck finding anyone that will do everything I did. I'm going to do a fools etrand and apply for disability again, but I'm not expecting anything. Seems like whenever I stop and think about how my life has gone it makes me laugh, like whoever wrote my script had a sick sense of humor and a love for twisted irony but it's hard not to just laugh at the absurdity of it.

[–] Kolibri@hexbear.net 9 points 3 months ago (1 children)

screm3 my headache turning into a migraine. I just need to not move and lay down. seriously like. why are migraines even a fucking thing. why. I was hoping for it to be a simple headache

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[–] hexaflexagonbear@hexbear.net 9 points 3 months ago

zip.zip/zip.zip

[–] MaeBorowski@hexbear.net 9 points 3 months ago (2 children)

Can anyone tell me why we can't access lemmy.ml's privacy comm from hexbear?

I can get there from from lemmy.ml itself of course: https://lemmy.ml/c/privacy

I can get there from lemmygrad: https://lemmygrad.ml/c/privacy@lemmy.ml

But if I try to go there from hexbear, I get the couldnt_find_community error: https://hexbear.net/c/privacy@lemmy.ml

I'm assuming that's true for other hexbears, right?

There are also users who I can never see from hexbear even though we're federated with the instances they're on and they don't show up as banned in the modlog.

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[–] DyingOfDeBordom@hexbear.net 9 points 3 months ago (4 children)

Had a funny idea for a post in the shower but forgot and all i remember was it was gonna be so funny

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[–] Rojo27@hexbear.net 9 points 3 months ago

I always have to fight the feeling of attachment I get from having a crush. But it feels impossible, especially when it someone I actually vibe with. I've had crushes where I really can't figure out a way to really connect with or grow more distant (physically or emotionally) with over a long period of time. But, fuck, I feel so stuck now. Its worse because I just never really have the energy to try and act on it for a sustained period of time. And its not like there isn't a whole world to interact with socially to take away even more energy so... yeah. I kind of just lose my way easily. IDK.

[–] ashinadash@hexbear.net 9 points 3 months ago

So fascinating watching Tactics Ogre play itself.

The game has a training mode so you can gain XP(grind) and stuff, and you can either control one or both teams yourself, have a second player control the other team, or weirdly set both to be controlled by the computer. I thought it sounded really dumb setting the game to grind itself, but not only do I not mind... I'm actually kinda fascinated watching the game go. Like, when you control it yourself it's cool to be able to test out strats, abilities and gear in a safe environment, but it's equally cool watching your little guys (Lizardmen my beloved!) go at it, fighting and maneouvering and seeing what the computer does with the teams you've built. It's essentially like a really ridiculously complex chess game, or a fencing match.

You just sit back and vibe, it's also good for downtime between those relentlessly difficult battles ❀ (ZAPAN AT RIME FUCK YOOOOOOOU I WILL GUT YOUR ASS AND WEAR YOUR HIDE)

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