History
History
History
1
All such historical questions refer us back to notions
of time. But time does not have to be always precisely
dated in terms of a particular year or a month.
Sometimes it is actually incorrect to fix precise dates
to processes that happen over a period of time. People
in India did not begin drinking tea one fine day; they
developed a taste for it over time. There can be no one
clear date for a process such as this. Similarly, we
cannot fix one single date on which British rule was
established, or the national movement started, or
changes took place within the economy and society. All
these things happened over a stretch of time. We can
only refer to a span of time, an approximate period over
which particular changes became visible.
Why, then, do we continue to associate history
with a string of dates? This association has a reason.
There was a time when history was an account of
battles and big events. It was about rulers and their
policies. Historians wrote about the year a king was
crowned, the year he married, the year he had a child,
the year he fought a particular war, the year he died,
and the year the next ruler succeeded to the throne.
For events such as these, specific dates can be
determined, and in histories such as these, debates
about dates continue to be important.
As you have seen in the history textbooks of the past
two years, historians now write about a host of other
issues, and other questions. They look at how people
earned their livelihood, what they produced and ate,
how cities developed and markets came up, how
kingdoms were formed and new ideas spread, and how
cultures and society changed.
Which dates?
Fig. 2 – Advertisements help create By what criteria do we choose a set of dates as
taste
important? The dates we select, the dates around which
Old advertisements help us
understand how markets for new
we compose our story of the past, are not important on
products were created and new their own. They become vital because we focus on a
tastes were popularised. This particular set of events as important. If our focus of
1922 advertisement for Lipton study changes, if we begin to look at new issues, a new
tea suggests that royalty all over
set of dates will appear significant.
the world is associated with this
tea. In the background you see Consider an example. In the histories written by
the outer wall of an Indian British historians in India, the rule of each Governor-
palace, while in the foreground, General was important. These histories began with the
seated on horseback is the third
son of Queen Victoria of Britain, rule of the first Governor- General, Warren Hastings,
Prince Arthur, who was given the and ended with the last Viceroy, Lord Mountbatten. In
title Duke of Connaught. separate chapters we read about the deeds of others –
How do we periodise?
In 1817, James Mill, a Scottish economist and political
philosopher, published a massive three-volume work,
A History of British India . In this he divided Indian
history into three periods – Hindu, Muslim and British.
This periodisation came to be widely accepted. Can
you think of any problem with this way of looking at
Indian history?
Why do we try and divide history into different
periods? We do so in an attempt to capture the
characteristics of a time, its central features as they
Activity
Interview your mother
appear to us. So the terms through which we periodise
or another member of
– that is, demarcate the difference between periods –
your family to find out
become important. They reflect our ideas about the past.
about their life. Now
They show how we see the significance of the change
divide their life into
from one period to the next.
different periods and
Mill thought that all Asian societies were at a lower list out the significant
level of civilisation than Europe. According to his telling events in each period.
of history, before the British came to India, Hindu and Explain the basis of
Muslim despots ruled the country. Religious intolerance, your periodisation.
caste taboos and superstitious practices dominated
What is colonial?
In this book you will read about the way the British came to
conquer the country and establish their rule, subjugating
local nawabs and rajas. You will see how they established
control over the economy and society, collected revenue to
meet all their expenses, bought the goods they wanted at
low prices, produced crops they needed for export, and
you will understand the changes that came about as a
consequence. You will also come to know about the changes
British rule brought about in values and tastes, customs
and practices. When the subjugation of one country by another
leads to these kinds of political, economic, social and cultural
changes, we refer to the process as colonisation.
You will, however, find that all classes and groups did not
experience these changes in the same way. That is why the
book is called Our Pasts in the plural.
Fig. 6 – Mapping and survey operations in progress in Bengal, a drawing by James Prinsep, 1832
Note how all the instruments that were used in surveys are placed in the foreground to
emphasise the scientific nature of the project.
Let’s discuss
2. What is the problem with the periodisation of Indian
history that James Mill offers?
3. Why did the British preserve official documents?
4. How will the information historians get from old
newspapers be different from that found in police
reports?
Let’s do
5. Can you think of examples of surveys in your world
today? Think about how toy companies get
information about what young people enjoy playing
with or how the government finds out about the
number of young people in school. What can a
historian derive from such surveys?