Paper IPaper I · History

Advent of Europeans and the British Conquest

From the Portuguese arrival of 1498 to the English East India Company's territorial empire: the Carnatic Wars, Plassey 1757 and Buxar 1764, the dual government, the Anglo-Mysore, Anglo-Maratha, Anglo-Sikh wars, the Subsidiary Alliance, the Doctrine of Lapse, the land-revenue settlements, and the Governors-General who built the Raj

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At a glance
PaperPaper ISubjectHistorySyllabusHistory of India: broad understanding of the social, economic and political aspects of Indian history from ancient to modern timesImportanceHigh
Modern IndiaEast India CompanyBritish ConquestPlasseyBuxarSubsidiary AllianceDoctrine Of LapseGovernors General

Why this matters for CAPF

This note opens the modern-history block, the single highest-yield slice of the CAPF history syllabus, because it sets up everything that follows: the Revolt of 1857, the rise of nationalism, and the long freedom struggle that anchors the Paper II essay (see theme freedom struggle). Paper I treats this period as a static-fact bank: the order in which European powers arrived, the two decisive battles (Plassey 1757, Buxar 1764) and exactly what each settled, the annexation instruments (Subsidiary Alliance, Doctrine of Lapse) and who devised them, and the Governor-General to whom each reform or land-revenue system attaches. The conquest is also the textbook case of a trading company becoming a sovereign military power, which makes it a natural security and nation-building reference point. Get the chronology clean and the matching items locked, and this becomes a scoring topic.

The narrative below is anchored to the NCERT modern-India coverage and to the standard reference treatment in Spectrum's "A Brief History of Modern India"; the static tables compress what those sources spread across chapters.

Core narrative

Arrival of the European trading companies

The European age in India began when the Portuguese navigator Vasco da Gama reached Calicut on the Malabar coast on 20 May 1498, opening the all-water sea route via the Cape of Good Hope and ending the Arab and Venetian monopoly over the spice trade. One after another, the great commercial powers followed.

Power Company and charter year First or main settlements Exit / fate
Portuguese Estado da India (state enterprise, from 1505) Cochin (1503), Goa (capital from 1510 under Albuquerque), Diu, Daman First to come, last to leave; Goa liberated 1961
Dutch United East India Company (VOC), 1602 Pulicat, Surat, Chinsura, Nagapattinam Defeated at Bedara (1759); focus shifted to Indonesia
English English East India Company, charter 1600 Surat (factory 1613), Madras (1639), Bombay (1668), Calcutta (1690) Became the territorial power
Danish Danish East India Company, 1616 Tranquebar (1620), Serampore (1755) Sold settlements to the British in 1845
French Compagnie des Indes Orientales, 1664 Pondicherry (1674), Chandernagore, Mahe, Karaikal Reduced to small enclaves after 1763

Mnemonic for arrival order: Portuguese, Dutch, English, Danish, French, "Pretty Dutch English Dance Forever". The Portuguese were first in (1498) and last out (1961).

The Anglo-French rivalry: the Carnatic Wars (1746 to 1763)

In the Deccan and the Carnatic, the English and French companies fought three wars for commercial and political supremacy.

  • First Carnatic War (1746 to 1748): an extension of the European War of Austrian Succession; the French under Dupleix captured Madras, which was restored to the English by the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle (1748).
  • Second Carnatic War (1749 to 1754): fought over rival claimants to the Carnatic and Hyderabad thrones; Robert Clive's defence of Arcot (1751) checked Dupleix, who was recalled to France.
  • Third Carnatic War (1756 to 1763): tied to the Seven Years' War in Europe; the decisive Battle of Wandiwash (1760), where Sir Eyre Coote defeated the French under Comte de Lally, ended French ambitions in India. The Treaty of Paris (1763) confirmed the English supremacy and reduced the French to a few unfortified trading posts.

Conquest of Bengal: Plassey and Buxar

Bengal, the richest province of the Mughal empire, became the springboard of British power.

  • Battle of Plassey (23 June 1757): Robert Clive defeated Siraj-ud-Daulah, the young Nawab of Bengal, largely through the treachery of his commander-in-chief Mir Jafar, the banker Jagat Seth, and Omichand. It was a skirmish in military terms but a turning point: it made the Company the real power-broker in Bengal. Mir Jafar was installed as the puppet Nawab.
  • Mir Jafar was later replaced by his son-in-law Mir Qasim, an abler and more independent ruler who shifted his capital to Munger, modernised his army, and resisted the Company's misuse of trade privileges (the dastak). Conflict became inevitable.
  • Battle of Buxar (22 October 1764): the English under Major Hector Munro decisively defeated the combined armies of Mir Qasim (Bengal), Shuja-ud-Daulah (Nawab of Awadh), and the Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II. Buxar was the truly decisive battle: it established British military supremacy over the whole of north India and exposed the hollowness of Mughal authority.
  • Treaty of Allahabad (1765): Clive obtained from Shah Alam II the Diwani (the right to collect revenue and administer civil justice) of Bengal, Bihar, and Orissa, in return for an annual tribute. This grant was the legal foundation of Company rule in India.

This set up the Dual Government (1765 to 1772) in Bengal: the Company held the Diwani (revenue and civil power), while the Nawab retained the Nizamat (police and criminal justice), but with neither side fully accountable. The arrangement produced administrative paralysis and contributed to the catastrophic Bengal Famine of 1770. Warren Hastings abolished the dual system in 1772 and brought the administration directly under the Company.

Expansion across the subcontinent

Once secure in Bengal, the Company expanded through a sequence of wars and alliances.

  • Anglo-Mysore Wars (four, 1767 to 1799): against Haidar Ali and his son Tipu Sultan. The Second War ended in the Treaty of Mangalore (1784), the only treaty the English signed on near-equal terms; the Third ended in the Treaty of Seringapatam (1792); the Fourth (1799) ended with Tipu Sultan killed defending Srirangapatna, and Mysore restored to the Wodeyar dynasty under a subsidiary arrangement.
  • Anglo-Maratha Wars (three, 1775 to 1818): the First ended in the Treaty of Salbai (1782); the Second (1803 to 1805) under Wellesley broke Maratha power in the north; the Third (1817 to 1818) ended the confederacy, after which the Peshwaship was abolished (1818) and Peshwa Baji Rao II was pensioned off to Bithur.
  • Anglo-Sikh Wars (two, 1845 to 1849): fought against the Sikh kingdom after the death of Maharaja Ranjit Singh (1839). The Second War ended with the annexation of Punjab (1849) under Lord Dalhousie; the young Maharaja Duleep Singh was deposed and the Koh-i-Noor diamond surrendered.
  • The Gurkha (Anglo-Nepalese) War (1814 to 1816) ended in the Treaty of Sugauli; the Anglo-Burmese Wars (1824 onward) extended British power eastward.

The Subsidiary Alliance (perfected by Wellesley)

The Subsidiary Alliance was an instrument of indirect control perfected by Lord Wellesley (Governor-General 1798 to 1805), though its seeds lay in French practice under Dupleix. An Indian ruler who accepted it agreed to the following terms.

  • A British force would be stationed permanently in his territory.
  • He would pay for its upkeep, either in cash or, more often, by ceding part of his territory.
  • He would keep no other Europeans in his service and conduct no diplomacy or war without British consent.
  • He would accept a British Resident at his court.
  • In return the Company guaranteed his protection against external attack and internal rebellion.

The system disarmed Indian states, drained their revenue, and reduced them to dependence while keeping the Company free of direct administrative cost. Hyderabad (the Nizam) was the first major state to accept it, in 1798; Awadh, Mysore (restored), Tanjore, the Peshwa, Scindia, and the Bhonsle followed. By stripping rulers of armies and diplomacy, the alliance was a leading instrument of paramountcy.

The Doctrine of Lapse (Dalhousie)

Lord Dalhousie (Governor-General 1848 to 1856) pursued aggressive annexation through the Doctrine of Lapse. Under it, a dependent or princely state whose ruler died without a natural male heir would "lapse" to the British, the British refusing to recognise an adopted heir's right to succeed (adoption being permitted only with British sanction).

States annexed under the Doctrine of Lapse: Satara (1848, the first), Jaitpur and Sambalpur (1849), Baghat (1850), Udaipur (1852), Jhansi (1853), and Nagpur (1854). Dalhousie additionally annexed Awadh in 1856 on the ground of misgovernment (not the Lapse), deposing Nawab Wajid Ali Shah. These annexations dispossessed rulers, disbanded their armies, and threw retainers out of work, and they were among the most resented causes of the Revolt of 1857.

Land-revenue settlements: the fiscal backbone of the Raj

Company rule rested on extracting land revenue, and three distinct systems emerged.

System Author and year Region Who paid revenue Key feature
Permanent Settlement (Zamindari) Lord Cornwallis, 1793 Bengal, Bihar, Orissa Zamindar (landlord) Revenue fixed in perpetuity; zamindar made owner; peasant lost rights
Ryotwari Thomas Munro and Alexander Read, from 1820 Madras, Bombay Ryot (cultivator) directly No intermediary; periodic revision; heavy assessment
Mahalwari Holt Mackenzie and R. M. Bird, 1822 and 1833 North-Western Provinces, Punjab, central India Village body (mahal) jointly Village-level settlement; periodic revision

These settlements commercialised land, created a class of rentier landlords, impoverished the peasantry, and contributed to recurring famines. They were also a structural cause of agrarian unrest that the national movement would later channel.

Administrative consolidation and the Regulating Acts

Parliament progressively brought the Company under its control through a ladder of Acts:

  • Regulating Act 1773: created the office of Governor-General of Bengal (Warren Hastings the first) and a Supreme Court at Calcutta (1774); the first parliamentary step.
  • Pitt's India Act 1784: established dual control through a Board of Control (government) alongside the Court of Directors (Company); the Company became an instrument of British policy.
  • Charter Act 1813: ended the Company's trade monopoly except in tea and the China trade; allowed Christian missionaries.
  • Charter Act 1833: made the Governor-General of Bengal the Governor-General of India (Lord William Bentinck the first), ended the Company's commercial functions entirely, and centralised legislative power.
  • Charter Act 1853: separated the legislative and executive functions of the Governor-General's council and introduced open competition for the civil service.

Economic impact: the drain and deindustrialisation

The conquest restructured India's economy in Britain's favour. Revenue and profits flowed out as the "drain of wealth" (a charge later quantified by Dadabhai Naoroji). Indian handicrafts, especially Bengal's famed textiles, collapsed under competition from machine-made Lancashire goods and discriminatory tariffs, a process of deindustrialisation that turned India into a supplier of raw materials and a market for British manufactures. Recurring famines, heavy assessments, and the ruin of artisans defined the human cost.

Static facts to memorise

Event Year Significance
Vasco da Gama at Calicut 1498 All-water sea route to India opened
English EIC charter 1600 Granted by Queen Elizabeth I
Dutch VOC formed 1602 Later defeated at Bedara (1759)
French company formed 1664 Pondicherry from 1674
Battle of Wandiwash 1760 English beat French; Treaty of Paris 1763
Battle of Plassey 23 June 1757 Clive beats Siraj-ud-Daulah; Mir Jafar's treachery
Battle of Buxar 22 October 1764 Munro beats Mir Qasim, Awadh, Shah Alam II
Treaty of Allahabad / Diwani 1765 Company gains revenue of Bengal, Bihar, Orissa
Dual Government in Bengal 1765 to 1772 Ended by Warren Hastings
Bengal Famine 1770 Worsened by dual government
Regulating Act 1773 Office of Governor-General created
Pitt's India Act 1784 Board of Control; dual control
Treaty of Mangalore 1784 Ended Second Anglo-Mysore War
Permanent Settlement 1793 Cornwallis; Zamindari in Bengal
Subsidiary Alliance 1798 onward Wellesley; Hyderabad first
Death of Tipu Sultan 1799 Fall of Srirangapatna; Fourth Anglo-Mysore War
Peshwaship abolished 1818 End of Third Anglo-Maratha War
Charter Act 1833 Bentinck first Governor-General of India
Annexation of Punjab 1849 Dalhousie; after Second Anglo-Sikh War
Annexation of Satara (Lapse) 1848 First Lapse annexation
Annexation of Awadh 1856 Dalhousie; on grounds of misgovernment
Governor-General Tenure Associated with
Warren Hastings 1773 to 1785 First Governor-General of Bengal; ended dual government; Pitt's Act
Lord Cornwallis 1786 to 1793 Permanent Settlement (1793); reformed civil service and judiciary
Lord Wellesley 1798 to 1805 Subsidiary Alliance; Second Anglo-Maratha War
Lord William Bentinck 1828 to 1835 First Governor-General of India; abolition of sati (1829); English education
Lord Dalhousie 1848 to 1856 Doctrine of Lapse; railways (1853); telegraph; Punjab and Awadh
Lord Canning 1856 to 1862 Last Governor-General and first Viceroy; Revolt of 1857

Security and nation-building angle

The Company's rise is the model case of a commercial body becoming a sovereign military power through battle (Plassey, Buxar), treaty (Allahabad), and the open-ended Subsidiary Alliance, which planted permanent garrisons inside princely states and stripped them of independent armies and diplomacy. This architecture of indirect control through Residents and treaties became the structure of British paramountcy over more than 560 princely states, the same paramountcy whose lapse in 1947 created the integration challenge that Sardar Patel and V. P. Menon resolved (see towards independence acts and partition). The disarming of Indian rulers, the recruitment of a sepoy army, and the divide-and-rule logic of these alliances are direct antecedents of the colonial internal-security order that the Revolt of 1857 first cracked.

How CAPF asks it

Common formats: chronological ordering of European arrivals; single-correct on Plassey versus Buxar (who fought, what each settled); matching a Governor-General to a policy; matching a land-revenue system to its author; statement-based items on the Subsidiary Alliance terms or the Doctrine of Lapse.

Authored practice:

Q1The Battle of Buxar (1764) was fought between the English and a combined force of which three powers?
  1. ABengal, Awadh, Mysore
  2. BBengal, Awadh, and the Mughal Emperor
  3. CAwadh, Mysore, and the Marathas
  4. DBengal, the Marathas, and the Mughal Emperor. Answer:
  5. B. Mir Qasim (Bengal), Shuja-ud-Daulah (Awadh), and Shah Alam II (Mughal Emperor) were defeated by Hector Munro.
Q2The Subsidiary Alliance system was perfected by which Governor-General, and which state accepted it first?
  1. ACornwallis; Mysore
  2. BWellesley; Hyderabad
  3. CDalhousie; Awadh
  4. DHastings; Bengal. Answer:
  5. B. Wellesley perfected the system; the Nizam of Hyderabad accepted it first, in 1798.
Q3Which of the following states was NOT annexed under the Doctrine of Lapse?
  1. ASatara
  2. BJhansi
  3. CNagpur
  4. DAwadh. Answer:
  5. D. Awadh was annexed in 1856 on the ground of misgovernment, not under the Lapse.
Q4Match the land-revenue system with its author. The Permanent Settlement of 1793 is associated with:
  1. AThomas Munro
  2. BHolt Mackenzie
  3. CLord Cornwallis
  4. DR. M. Bird. Answer:
  5. C. Cornwallis introduced the Permanent (Zamindari) Settlement in Bengal in 1793.
Q5Arrange in correct chronological order: (1) Treaty of Allahabad (2) Battle of Plassey (3) Battle of Buxar (4) Regulating Act.
  1. A2-3-1-4
  2. B2-1-3-4
  3. C3-2-1-4
  4. D2-3-4-1. Answer:
  5. A. Plassey (1757), Buxar (1764), Allahabad (1765), Regulating Act (1773).

Common confusion

  • Plassey (1757) versus Buxar (1764): Plassey made the Company a power-broker through treachery; Buxar established outright military supremacy over north India and led to the Diwani.
  • Subsidiary Alliance (Wellesley) versus Doctrine of Lapse (Dalhousie): one disarms states and stations a garrison, the other annexes heirless states. Do not swap the authors.
  • Mir Jafar versus Mir Qasim: Mir Jafar was the puppet of Plassey; Mir Qasim was the more independent Nawab who fought at Buxar.
  • Governor-General of Bengal (from 1773, Hastings) versus Governor-General of India (from 1833, Bentinck) versus Viceroy (from 1858, Canning).
  • Awadh annexed 1856 (misgovernment) is often wrongly listed under Lapse; keep it separate.

Memory hook

  • Arrival order: "Pretty Dutch English Dance Forever" (Portuguese, Dutch, English, Danish, French).
  • Battles: "57 broker, 64 boss" (Plassey 1757 made the Company a power-broker; Buxar 1764 made it the boss).
  • Land revenue: "Zamindar in Bengal, Ryot in the South, Mahal in the North" (Zamindari Cornwallis 1793, Ryotwari Munro, Mahalwari Bird).
  • Lapse states: "Satara, Jhansi, Nagpur" (and remember Awadh is the odd one out, taken for misgovernment).

Night before

  • 1498 da Gama; 1600 English charter; 1757 Plassey; 1764 Buxar; 1765 Diwani / Treaty of Allahabad.
  • Dual government 1765 to 1772, ended by Warren Hastings.
  • Subsidiary Alliance: Wellesley, Hyderabad first (1798). Doctrine of Lapse: Dalhousie, Satara first (1848), Jhansi (1853), Nagpur (1854); Awadh 1856 for misgovernment.
  • Tipu died 1799 (Srirangapatna); Peshwaship abolished 1818; Punjab annexed 1849.
  • Permanent Settlement 1793 (Cornwallis); Ryotwari (Munro); Mahalwari (Bird).
  • Regulating Act 1773 (Hastings, first GG of Bengal); Charter Act 1833 (Bentinck, first GG of India).

One-line recall

  • Vasco da Gama reached Calicut in 1498; the Portuguese came first and left last (Goa, 1961).
  • The English EIC got its charter from Elizabeth I in 1600; main settlements Surat, Madras, Bombay, Calcutta.
  • Arrival order: Portuguese, Dutch, English, Danish, French.
  • The Carnatic Wars ended with the English win at Wandiwash (1760), sealed by the Treaty of Paris (1763).
  • Battle of Plassey (23 June 1757): Clive defeated Siraj-ud-Daulah through Mir Jafar's treachery.
  • Battle of Buxar (22 October 1764): Munro defeated Mir Qasim, Shuja-ud-Daulah of Awadh, and Shah Alam II.
  • Treaty of Allahabad (1765) gave the Company the Diwani of Bengal, Bihar, and Orissa.
  • The Dual Government (1765 to 1772) was ended by Warren Hastings.
  • The Subsidiary Alliance was perfected by Wellesley; Hyderabad accepted it first (1798).
  • Tipu Sultan was killed at Srirangapatna (1799); the Peshwaship was abolished in 1818.
  • Punjab was annexed in 1849 (Dalhousie) after the Second Anglo-Sikh War.
  • The Doctrine of Lapse (Dalhousie) annexed Satara, Jhansi, and Nagpur.
  • Awadh was annexed in 1856 on the ground of misgovernment, not under the Lapse.
  • Permanent Settlement (Cornwallis, 1793) made the zamindar owner; revenue fixed in perpetuity.
  • Ryotwari (Munro) taxed the cultivator directly; Mahalwari (Bird) settled with the village.
  • Regulating Act 1773 created the Governor-General of Bengal; Pitt's Act 1784 set up the Board of Control.
  • Charter Act 1833 made Bentinck the first Governor-General of India.
  • The drain of wealth and deindustrialisation impoverished artisans and peasants.
  • The Lapse annexations and the loss of Awadh were leading causes of the 1857 Revolt.
  • British paramountcy over the princely states grew out of these alliances and lapsed only in 1947.

Glossary

  • Diwani: the right to collect revenue and administer civil justice in a province; granted to the Company in 1765.
  • Nizamat: the police and criminal-justice authority retained by the Nawab during the dual government.
  • Dual Government: the 1765 to 1772 split of power between Company (revenue) and Nawab (administration) in Bengal.
  • Subsidiary Alliance: Wellesley's system of stationing a paid British force in an allied state and controlling its diplomacy.
  • Doctrine of Lapse: Dalhousie's policy of annexing heirless dependent states by refusing to recognise adopted heirs.
  • Dastak: a duty-free trade pass abused by Company servants in Bengal, a flashpoint with Mir Qasim.
  • Permanent Settlement: the 1793 Zamindari arrangement fixing revenue in perpetuity in Bengal.
  • Ryotwari: a settlement made directly with the individual cultivator (ryot) in Madras and Bombay.
  • Mahalwari: a settlement made with the village community (mahal) in the north-west and central provinces.
  • Drain of wealth: the unilateral transfer of India's resources to Britain without economic return.
  • Deindustrialisation: the decline of Indian handicrafts under British competition and tariff policy.
  • Paramountcy: the supreme authority the British claimed over the princely states, lapsing in 1947.
  • Resident: a British political agent posted at a princely court to enforce alliance terms.
  • Charter Act: a series of parliamentary Acts (1813, 1833, 1853) renewing and curtailing the Company's powers.
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