1954 Annexation of Assam 1824-1854 by Lahiri S
1954 Annexation of Assam 1824-1854 by Lahiri S
1954 Annexation of Assam 1824-1854 by Lahiri S
ANNEXATION OF ASSAM
31)~. 1. B. BANERJEE,
M.A., P.R.S., PH.D.
HI.?AD O F T H E DEPT. OF HISTOHY, I ' S I \ ' E l t S I T Y 01.' V A L P I 1 1 ' A
'Thd writer h a s , though the matter is outside the scope of his subject,
discussed incide~~tallythe position of the Court in its relation wit11 the Government
of India (Pp 187-1\91) \\rhir.h, he hopes. j\.ould stimulate further discussioas on this
important topic.
the rebelliol~scovering aome 50 pages, which is altogether an origi~lal
co~~tribrl ti011 to the history of Assam. UIIti1 the pu b1ic.a tioli of some
of tlic chapters of llis thehis ill ~)ublic~liagazincs*very fe\v scholars
klie\v that there occul.rctl a series of rebellions ill Assall1 (Iurillg the
pcriod uridcr discuasioli i l l wliich the d\vellers of the plains as \\'ell i l b
the cl\~cllersof tlic Ilills-";ill cornbiuecl to clrivc the lowland atrilngrr.-
0111 of thch c o ~ ~ l ~ larid r ~ . lilaliy
" of these plots were coulltctraliced by
thcb : Z \ r i ~ ,411tl~oritics,alid the \vriter feels gratified to Iearu that man,\
of t11(> nc\v ~ ~ o i n brought ts to light hy him have bceii incorporated
ill sotlle ~-ccc~nt publications on assail^. II'hile describi~lgtlic. evc~ltc.
of the period (1824-1854) the \witel* Irils so ~i~arbhiilledt11c fact5
t l ~ ta they fir11 u1lt1c.r fi\.e** c.letll*lyniiirkecl di\risions-reveiilitig tlre
c.har;tct(~risti('sof oi1cI1 ~~c'riocl.111 l > r ~ * ~ > tl~ib i ~ ~ itlresis
~ i g - tlic write~,
II;IS r ~ i i ~ i l i l , rif~ , ~ i o tesclr~si\.cly.depcb~~dctl on the r~npul)li~lrcd recortls
~-".escrvetlin t l ~ carchives of the Cro\~onime~it of India, New Dcll~i.
EIc had no wcll marked tritcks to follonr savc w~rdesccpt vcw \)riel
;tntl incomplete accor~ntsof the perio(1 given Ily Gi~itand Ma~kel~lrie :
hc had practirallg to bring into existence - a new history of Assan1
o i ~ tof the dry facts gleaned from the varior~srerords of tile East
Intlia Company ;~ntli1s such it Iias 1 ~ x 1 1;I pioneer n~o~-k-c.otltai~lir~:!
all the dcfcctc; a pioiic~ci-'swork is si~hjectctlto.
For 11lc Itihtory of tlic periotl 1769-18'L4 as itrcorporatecl i l l the
pl.ologue- the writer cmannotclaim milch 0rigin;rlity. Tllc 5ubject
has been treated elaborately by many scholars. IIe has l~riefly
dvalt with the period wlhilch truly speaking does not fall within the
range of his researches except by way of introdrlcing the subject.
But even in dcaling wit11 the history of this perioil hc 11;~sfollowed
original sowces and supplementcd it with fresh data gathcrcd mainly
from the Assam Baranjis as cdited by Dr. S. I<. Bhayan. Ph.D., and
h i ~ salso tried to present the old theme in a new shape. The fruits
of incessant labolirs of six years are presented before the p ~ l l ~ l iand c
he does not know how far hc has succeeded.
I n ~ l c s c r i b i nnmany ~ of thc cvcmts the writer has nladc interpre-
tations and reached 8conclr~sions different from those niadc hy \-elera11
scholars in the linc 2nd as sllch many of his findings 111:ly appear
unpalatable. but like n tlve student of history hc has ncvrr dcviatecl
from the high idcal of historical truth 2nd in judging men nnd thinss
he has always placed truth above a11 things.
Febl-uary, 1954. R. 31. LAIIIRI.
* The Journal of the A s a m Resenrch Society. July S: October. 1944.
Tlre RIoclerll Reviav, April. 1945.
** Period of lYa.rs, Period of Interim Settlemeut, Period or Insurr~'clion,l'eriod
ol Appeasement end Period of Annexalion.
Before t l ~ i hh t i l ~ ~ l ) p~il)lic.alior~
lc bthforc the
of I I I ~ I Ii ~h ~p1~esc~l1tc.d
l)i~k)lic,it is 1 1 1 ~eli~tyto ii~kllo\\'lc.cJge 11c.lp \ \ l ~ i c l1~ rcci-~\,c>d ill tllc
c.oursc of thr' prth1>ilri1tion it llcl p u l ) l i ~ti011 i ~ of lllis tlsc.atibc. fronl
11111nero11s \\.tbll-\\ i\I~c.r,+,fritb~~(lh i111ct rc~IiiIio11h.
3 1 rraclillg of Rlartill'h "Eastem1 Iiltlin" c.rc.atcd deep il~tc~~c.,,l
i l l lhe Ilihlory of L I s b i ~ ~ ailcl ll inair~ly c.llc.o~~~.;igetl by nly re\rc.retJ
1'1.0ftlshors IAti. Dr. N. C. Ri~~lel*jctb, i111tl Dl.. 1 . B. Bil r~c~sjoc. of the
( ' i ~ l c *t t~i t~ L;i~i\.cr.sity 1 ~ncpi~irecl t o Ne\\r 1)c'lhi to l l i r t r t 111e i ~ ~ s ~ h i \ r ~ s
of t l l c ~C;o\.c>rnn~c~~t of India a t a time \ v l i c i l tlic. 1as1 (;lol,i~l \l'nl- \ \ i t \
stl-clcllillg its tcntacl(1a jricle in S o i ~ t h - l t i ~ s,lsia. t rl'l~o\c \\.cl.cb d i ~ y s
of c.o~ltrolhallel rc..strictions ;111cl \ve hat1 1 1 0 i ~ c ( * c ~ stqo ;I 1)ilrt of the
nrchi~.es--\\-c~ \vercl specially forl)iclclc~l to ( I lilise t lie tlocumen ts
~.tlli~ting to the Pi1 tkai Range throirgh \\,l~ic.li Illc Brll.lllcsC 1111rhtillto
.4bsiinl i l l 1816 ;mtl the dnpanehc \\.c>r.c.111c11I 11111ldcringa t the gates
of Brll-nla. AI,v pIi111 hacl to bc rc-(';ist i111d I l l i l ~ ~ klos tlle s l ~ g g ~ . s t i o ~ ~
of Sri .I. C. Baiierjcc. Lect111'c.r.C'it1(~11tti1 'IT~li\.crsit;r, n.bo was t1ic.n
\I orliing 011 the same lillc..;, I +elcctccl a la tc.r p t ~ i o t lof Ihcx -4ssalne~c
EIi5tor-y.
T o ~ ~ i ~ rthe d s proci11*e1l1~1lt of I he cscerl~ts from the rrle\vaiit
rccords of tlie East Tntlia C o ~ ~ l l > 1i i hat1 ~ l ~ t o i1ic111.it h l ~ g eexpendi-
t111.e ant1 mainly through i h c financial help of thc Go\,ernnlcnt of
M'cst Hcngal, t h c 111a t~.l.iills were collectccl. 1 11;ltl t o face a great
t l i f f i c ~ ~ l iigi~ill
ty ilt 111(1 tilncb of the p11hlic;ltiou of the book and 1
;ic.knowledgc~with tlc~cpgratitude the financial help I receivecl i l l this
connection from thc Government of \Vest Bengal. the autllorities of
thc ,\n;~nd:~clli~ntlri~ College and t h e R a h l ~ t family of Jalpaigliri.
RIII for tllcir. timcl;. hclp ilnd the interest inken 1)). m y ~-clntion
I :\. C . Roy. this treiltise of minc 1vo111dnot l i a ~ ~$(>en c ~ t h e light
o f tlic (lily. I iIm i11c;o grea tly indeh ted t o Sri IT. l 1 . T,ahiri M S . .
1;) I V of ihc Geoloeical S11rvcy of India. Sri R . 1,.Roso 3T.A.. fol.inel.
P1.incil)itl. Pal,na Ed~virrdColleqe. Prof. 1 1 . T,. RSIIkllci.iecb R4.A . of t h c
r-\sh~rto\h Collcce. C ; ~ l c l ~ t t Rrr. a . A. Rlukherjce B.A.. ilncl Prof. S. K.
Chi1ttc11-jec3l.A.. for reatling 111y work ant1 giving mc \~itll~able ilcl\rict*
O I I numerolls points.
LTST OF MAPS
1. ASSAM 1'ROI'ER-BlZA€IhlA1'1JTRR4 VALLEY-facing pi~jic .. 1
2. 31AP OF CACHAIt ANT) >I.\NTPUK--lacing page .. .. 143
3. h1.4P OF KORTH ASS.\AI SI1L'\\'IK\'(; THE DITL4RS-t'lr(~in~piige 01 6
1 1
I l ~ gt IIC Eri t i311 i n t c - ~ - \ ~i011
1 I ~ o L I I ~ I ( ~ si l l . i ~ s ; ~ i il i~ i ~ ( I i to t~~lt
i l l t i l t h i~ffiiil'sof t h c U ~ * ; l h n l i ~ ~ ) u Valley.
tra
( I 'iciv--1xL?4 )
f \
1I1e Il~.ilIl~lii~l)utl~i~ I'i~llcy A*.;i~lri ~ I ' O P C I " \\';I.; ~.ulc*t]1,y the
Al~o~i~s-nI J I ~ ~ I ~ U ~oI I I I I I I I six 111111(11~cd ycnrs.
Tlle Ahonis \\.crck il 1inl.tly I*:\( e fo~i(lof n l c : ~
~viiie-driiiki~lg.T1lq 111igrat(~lflsolli
Burmn :111cl ~ ~ o u l ~illto
-t.iililrg
~ n11cI i~tltlict
Shalt r.&yion, of Vpl)cr
1 1 1 ~ 1
:.(I to
.
c t l tlie i ~ o ~ ~ t l t - ( ~ i ~~~' tx(i' tr '~l li ~ iofi t ytlic' 13rnhrnu-
.
1)utlmilValley ill t h e thirtcc~tth c . , ~ t u l - t1.Z). \~ unclcbr tllclir 1c~adc.r
Sukiiph" 1228-1 4C8) nn(1 g~.;i(lri;llly ('st i ~ l ~ l i s l itI1~111~~4\'(~.c:
~d ;IS ~011-
qwrorr; of i l l 2 elltire Vnlley. Thcy slo\vly :~doptecl tllc Hindu
religion and cuc;tornc;* and also t h e I i l ~ r g ~ ~ uofg ethc c o ~ ~ r ~ u c r c tThcy l:
clc~c)lolw(l :I pc~tllinI' sj7st~ ' n l of ;~cli~iiiii,t 1.3t i o n b ~ l l t l hat1 a
1
-
The Assim of the A11oin.s nas Lounded oli the no1.1111y 111t. l3l1ub11 Ilill\.
on Llle n-cst by the Mru~ii.s rivm and the H;~I,ragllnt P; rgnnrrs. O I I the .soul11 1))-
1110 Niiga, KI1:lsi. &fil,i~:IIMI Gwo l~ills~ I I on
I ~ t11e enqa by t11c 3lis1ni. Si113111n :IIIA
Kl~amt i ranges.
* In their orinin:ll home in the S~IRII C ' O I I I I ~ P ) their religion was "Funlluna"
(T worsl~ip or "8fal1z-Yislt11u." 'fl~eir pri~wipa]gml N:IS ' ~ S n ~ w l e o ~11cme " in rag^.
it is said was given lo them by Itlrlrr.
"~e fe~~tllrt cle~nenl was rlea1.1~nlnnifcd ill the Ahom Govern~ac~~lal
syslenl. "The Government was vektetl in I l ~ e11:1ncl.; of the I,itlg stblcd ".qurgnclro"
and was strlctly speaking desptic. He 1vr.s assisted 1)y r i munc.il of state rom-
posed of tllr Boora Gollnin and Bar PaIra Gol~aintlllrl Bur Harun (Chiel w r e t a r y ) .
Under them were the Suddeya Khowa Goltain. 3lorangi h71nn-il and ot11~rc.
These officers held charge of areas OF strategic import;iaic.r. I n d c ~ p v ~ ~ dofc ~ IIICSC ~t
mere' a whole hosl of nobles styled Pllrrkans supposed to ekrrcisc colilrnl lo tltr
extent of GOO0 men, Raj Kllo~t-asof 3 W . Hazmika~01 1000. Z I I I ~tlleir i11Cerior
officers Saikias over 100 and Boras over 90. . . .The nobility had Kllels or l'r~rgaans
under -their control 1vi.tl1 the correspondiilg number of inferior rarlks. if so(-It it c a l l
be called, subject to the authority of the king. No surll tiling as R '.lrand tax"
as in our system was Illen 1anon.11. each hll(4 furnishing ils ow11 quota of produfih
-
in kind. The population was divided illto Gots. consisting of 9 p n ~ k s ear11 ~ n d
wag liable to be called up11 eithw as solc-liern. labor~retson the pl~Mir \\-orkc or
alby particular lands Mongind to the king in 1 4urn for whicll M ~ Paik I ~reivc~i
$2 pmralis of Innd."
-From the crcoun t or I,iel~t. RIIIllrrforrl
(Pol. I'rnc.cc.cli~lgu 1834. 9S1d Jlrly, No 70- 7 1 ) .
1)rosl)crous:; ailel c \ r ~ , . ~ ~ rt feti~gl~oL' ~ 11cit1-1): sir c ~ c ~ ~ l l u r i c ~' ls'. l ~ c ~l,~'o- ~
tllllcaCcl a c.o~lsiclc~-itl)lchislol*ic~i~llitc-r*illurch ;111tl (.;11,l.jc.c) 1 1 1 ~ . :irk of
c.ulbvillg \VOOCI LO it 11igl1-\\il t ~'~'-111itl'k ~f \ ' . \ ~ ' c ' I I c ' I 'I c ' ~ ' .
. ~ L ~ S S ~ I I I tI l, l L ~. ~ I I ( I I I I ~ - - - - ~ ~I I I~ I~~ ~ I I : I I I ( - ( I .
But ill t h e s l c ~ c y jl i~c ) l l o \ ~of
\ V ~ O S L I ~ L C ~ S SI ) c~b i 1I1 I I I)ilek
IJ~ tilt' A I I ~ I I ~ ~ I I I ili\.;lhioll,
I ~ ~ ~ I ~ ~ ~g I~Ii I~ ( I ~ l i l ] ] ~ ~
10.t lllcir \.igol-ous \\.iirlikcb ~ l t ~ i l l i l i c;111tl
s si111li illtc.) 111~.l,ositio~l ol' ii
of l. I Y I C C ~ . '1'11;. lasl lifl). >.cLil~':, of lllc'ir r111e l,ri\clic-i~ll,\ coi~icielillg
\villi c ~ t~t l~ r ~
l llc In.5.t ( ~ I I ~ I I ' L ~ ~ I 'of t l l c ' c ~ i g l ~tJi~ ~ c.c11i . t11e firs1 I
i11)(1
i l~ltt~c ~ ~ - ~ ~ :111(1
l~tlrlllc~ c ~ ~ l~t Ii Io\~' ~ I .\ \;v ~
l l i~
( - lI~ I" ~ t 1 1 ~ 1 1 c ~t (I l~( , l l : ~ ~ ) ] )\':111<~>'
)'
,,tt
l lrirt .\ssirlr~ l ~ ~ x . \ . i olo l ~ sI IIC.i~r\.i~sit..cr ti1 I l l ( . ;\IU:IIII~II'~C'S i c r I f !!O ( ? ) ~ 1 1 1 1
slrl)sccl~~r~rtIy thel.elo urrLiI lIrr :rrri\.;~I o S [he Iiurme.se \\.a?; i l l :; ~nosl IIc:ur~irlrirrg
htnlc? lhere is nnl ;I tlo11111 O F . . . . . . . . "
~ :)I O\'C : (.t : , U I I ~ ($1' 1,t. I ~ ! I I I I ~ ~ I ' O. I . ~ I ~
( I ? ~ o I I IIIc,
" G e n e r i ~ l l sl~rirl;i~~g.
~ I' i r l r r ol' ol1i115on ilrnl ,tire 1 t . \ \ ~ 1 . tr1.tler.s i l l ..!ssalr~ \\.rwS
lwller ofi L I L ~ I I I t l ~ eS ~ I I I I(lli~ss
~ i ~ r our ne111g;11lerritnr-ie; i11r11 t11i1t \~it,lrI ' V ~ ~ ~ C I I 10 ~ T
the liKlrlrresx 01 l11(. I i r ~ c t l I:ls, thr rerlility 01' ~ l r ewil ;~lrtl Llce c,onrl::r!,ti\.cl!. IliK,ir
11ric.e oI' g~.ilill~i l l I ' O ~ I I I C ~ (*~31!111r~.
I I r t b illel (.~~lli\.irl:)rs ( ~ \ . i t l r ~ relrjoTe(l
~l~ il I I ~ I I ( * ~ I
I i ~ r ~ , (sllilrt.
~ t . of [Ire ~~r,c,tlclc.e Illcil :cgriti~1tural Iirl~or~~~s."
(From St-oil's 11.ILcr. 1'. ('. mIS2S. . J I I ~ ) . 9.5: X o . 2 ) .
4 "IZ~.(jl>ithl~ no\vlrec!e else i l l (Ice ~vlcrz'e \vo1-111 (.i111 \vc;odc,n Ilouses Ije Iluill
1vi111 sllc-11 tlecwral iolr and figt~r.e ( ' ~ . I ' \ . ~ its I I ~ s 1 IIC ~ ~ e o l dofe tlris u.oun LI'?.. T ~ I P
sitles nS llre pnl'ac.e 1rii1,e I x ~ n~);rrlilic~~cetl r (:dar Iiitti(-es nl' ~ : ~ r i o rtlesig~ir
i ~ r ~ l t \vt ~s
c,ar\.erl i l l h relief ~ l l r l :~tltirnr.tl I : G ~ I I illsitlc. 1111tl ( : l ~ l s i ( i ivitlr
~ nrirror~ 01. polisl~etl
brass so that tvlcell S ~ I I I - ~ ) C ~ U I I l'Sa11 1111 I ~ ~ c ' I I ~ . t11(~eye i~ dilxzled I,y tire flaslrilrg
1)iick of light"--Fntl~i~i~(IBORS \'ol. I . P . I!)-L). Tlris t e s l i ~ ~ l o lc~oyn ~ i ~ lfrom
c
$he Muhn~nmarlnn hislol-inm wlco Ir:ls c.c)i~(len~~led the Assanlesr i n the stmngesl
terms l,ut. llils pri~isetl tlleir' \\.(lrIis is :dl tlle nrore \.i,81uwl)lc:rrrtI husl\vorlhy.
')
1)r. S. N . .%11'5 "Rerortls in O ~ i e ~ l ' I I,;rlrgrl;lgt~." i~l Yo]. 1 (Prpfil(.e)'
ti
Polil ic:ll I'roc.eedings 1,437 .Jnn. 7 No. 89.
111 O I I ~ C ~ ' \])lil(.i(l
\ . ~ ~ Ci I I l ( I (.ii1111 \\iltclm. Of 1 1 1 ~ ~~l~ahlllii~~u~rii
\-~III(,J~1~01itits, 1 IIC fi1.51 ~ * i l ~ p lI\i ~ a hti,iat I)), t]l(b ~ ~ ~ - l l l l ~ \,.tlo
l~ifi~
ucc1l1)ied 1 1 1 ~Illiitak n t ~ i u l li>.ing 011 tIlr c-t~strrllrxtrclllity
'l'l~c~Jlo5lnGriiis." tll; ~ i ~ l ' l i c spt l ' ~ h ~ ' I j , t cto
~- Iiill~llli.4111.
\I~c~I'c'
\\.or-
I f 1 I I I I o I ~ ~ t h tcllrth
~ ( of l ~ ~
I ~ ~ I I ( ~ I I ~ ~r11IIII (I ~. Jr(>f11>,*(1
I to t i ~ k ( b t o t l ~ c *\ \ o r > I ~ i of
p D l l r g j \vllicll 1, a.
111~. (.otlrt l'c4igio11of A\,&~IIII. ' I c \I.(*IX- i t l J ~ \ \ . c ~ ( I egtq-Cihe tllc*ir
"
l'hey are ; ~ l s okrlo\vll 1)). L l l c ~ gc.~~rricat1:rnr ol' I\Iall;~ks ( s l ~ . o l l ~- j -TIlca
Mua1l1ar.i~~ ;1(-(*or(]illg10 GiIjl (\'itlv TIistol-y of .-4s.~am 1'. 5 s ) "(~ol~sistt*cl I I I ~ I ~ Ii )If ~ ~
the rel~els.
13111 thc strffcri~lgof the p : ~ l > l ( hncl . j115t I ) V ~ I I I I . The. tyri~lllly
t111t1 t~.cilclic.r~ of Rajii Crau1~iii5 th \vc.l.c. I*( -ponsil)lc. for th:. i~ssassin;~-
t ion of the t hem R Hjil of T)i~l'r;l I I ~ ,;I C ~ C P : I I ~ C I I C ' of
~ Asham."' To
nvrngc his cicalli. his 5011 T < ~ ' i ' l l l l i ~ R ; % I ~ , I I~collo~tctl ~II~ :t fo1.c~.of
n~c~.cc~~i:irics fro111 the C o ~ n p ; ~ t i ~tlon~inion
.'. i l ~Bcngal :inti re-occupictl
Di11.rnng itftcr drivir~g itway the dc~tnchment of G a ~ ~ r i n i i t h Thih .
opener1 R floodgil t c of frcsli y l ream$ of dial3icndetl sepoys and
l3co.kn~rclu~e.s who portscd in from Rcngnl and made I'V~bhtAscam thc
ficltl of pluntlcr ant1 ;~~grc.;sion :lnd l)et\vecn thcsc tnro steam~-ollers
nf opp~ncshion-the hIo?lnr?ri;is in t h e east and t l ~ e Rti~lcantla~ca in
the nre~t-thc I~clopleof Assi~nibcgan t o I)e pr2ssetl r e ~ * hard. y In
11ttear hcll)lt ,>.s. Ril ja Gti11rin5th appcalctl t o 1,ortl C o ~ l ~ i i I I i s .
I hcb lli(.n CTO\~(\I.IIOI--GCI\C~.~~ t o e x p d these turl)ulc~li r t fians ~
fronl 111~.c-o~lfillcbsof As.;~I~II.T h e British C r o \ ~ c l ~ ~ l,Ili~(l ~ n ~ nf(.lt t n
mn~-i\I~ - c ~ ~ l m n s i l ~iil ll i ttyh c matter anc1 nccol.dingly in S c p t c l l l l ) ~
people.
T h e weak but tyrnnilical king did not kc?]> his I)~.oniisenntl
threw i ~ j ~ i lmeasures
y of reform intro(1uced 1)y Captain Vr(.lsh. >&iny
k l l vict ilnh. to his opprc.ssion. hf i s g o ~ e r n n itc ~ encr~cd ~ i~gitin snd
"ASI"CI~~I u a s given over t o co~ifusioll and niisclm,r.". Tlic h i ~ ~ o rof y
the past tlcci~des l)ega11 t o repent itwlf. T h e Kl~;llnti?. \\.ho hircl
clCsccndc~tlfronl t h e Bol.kh9mpti regioll lying in i l l , . Y ; I I I ( * ~ c)f th(.
I , v had established themselves in t h r eastcimnt l a r t s of
J r ~ ~ \ v n d ~ and
-4~~~1 1 1 n century ago with t h e permission of t h e then :illom R a j a ,
half
non. forcibly took Sadiyii, t h e frontier poyt. and c;111.~dout il SIIIRII
principality arodnd it, their chief llsllrping t h e title of thcb Sadiy5
K11:an.Z Gohain. t h e dcsignat ion of the Asssmcso Govc~lnol-of Si1diy5.
The Moglll3riris ])egfin l o cho\\l their head? again. Tn thc nliclct of r)(~. 19.
1791.
this nrelter of confusion and chaos. Raja Gau~~iliii th brca tliecl his li~ct.
T h c Prilne JIinister, Bllrhn Gohain nssr~med supreme po\vcr of
the state ofter pllttillg l o drat11 his rival Bar R a r ~ ~ non(l illitallc(l
olle I(inqrznl 011 the throne 1lndc.i- t h e nanic of K : ~ ~ l l a l ( ~ ~ h \ vRut nr.
the reiRll of this pllppet kill@ (1'i9,5-1810) war mnl-kccl I>\. \.icorlr :~llcl
rllwgy. TIle lrsistHllrr of t h ~ nloilni51.i5i \vils c1-11shrr1. oln(lcv-\vat
rrslorrcl ill~osp:l.ity again 1v.t m a n l to thi.: ~ ~ l l h n p 1:llld.
l , ~ tllillllc'
t o tllr ;Il)ility ;Illcl Rdlllillistrativr \ ~ i + d o mof t h r B I I ~G~~H l l i ~ i \vll()
ll
\ I V n c tllc (18 forto l*rllcl.of the r:alm. T ~ m p l c s nlld ~ ~ l l i l d i \f7(-r('
~lg~
n43ill (.lS(.(.tr(l. TIlr ' T , n l l k 4 k ~ ~ ~ d of
i l * i h c R41liRyililn' wn.; rri.+ific1(1
ill rlcailllt A,,;llllcsr. llnclpy the court palmnac: dlll'ill~ thi\
12 .\S..~IIII 1'. R I I I ~ ~ I)!.I I Il h~ .~ ~S .~ ~T<. RIIII\~;III.
1'. L2()t'.
T11r Eil.s~ern1Cro11tier of R1-itisl1 Ill(lii~-& P I ~ I ':I. C
, , IT.;\ . .
T3it11vrj(~.
P . R , S . P. 58-1st Edition.
' 1 ' 1 1 ~ l j ~ l l ' l 1 1 C h c I\Cbl'(- 1 1 1 ~ ~ 1 ~ 1 1cbl'
1 ~ [(~~I c *Lt11.11 of ( \ ~ - 1 1 l i l l -~5.ih111 ;, 11, i
tlli,~. UJICC ( I v . Y ~ I ~ ~ c I I c;I( I 511.~11gC . U I I I I I I ~ ( ~ I II II I I ~ I C ' ~111~' ciblll1lljl11,l
-\Iil 1llllg)'i iL\'C'llg~[ I I C (11'~1111 C I ~I$il(Ii~ll('jliilltll';l. ~ ' l l r i l l l t ~ i l ~
SillgIl flc'tl f o \ \ ' i I l ' ( I \ (;:~lllli~ti.( ' I I ~ I I I ~ ~ I * ; , ~ \ , 1 ~ 1 1 i l110\\, j ( ) i 1 l e ( i l ~ i ~ l l\ \~i [ ~i l .
lllc ~ J I I ~ ~ I Iit11(1 I C ~ \\.ah ~ proclaiilrctI l < i r r g I 1 I 1 ( b ~ 1 1 ~ ~ ( 1~ ,1 ~~ ~~ 1 '
~ ~ ~
le P. C . 1 8 2 9 , J a n . 11,No. 99. .a
10 P , C . 1822 Jan. 11, Nos. 92, 24-45.
a % -
10 The Annexation of Assam
Do~lrilliona,tlley must be disarmed and sent t o I safe Clista~lct:from
the frontier. But a t t l ~ csi1111e ti111e it was resolved thut should the
U i ~ r ~ i ~ c us tctempt to follow up CIIIIIICI~H 1Cii11ta illto the l!rithJ~
Donlinions, it nlust be iustiurtly rcpelIz&by force. Allcl instructiolis
werc accordillgly issued to t l ~ eOfficer Conln~ttl~dilrg ilt Dacca, to
serlcl sucbl~ r ~ ~ i l ~ f o r c c r ~as t s Scott 111igllt require t o llieet the
~ c nMr.
sitl~illioli. Steps were take11 ut the same time to acquuiut the llolllillal
I 11lc1.of Ahsun1 will1 the clclllalid for the restitution of the property
t (in C~ill~)t\rit)
p l ~ ~ t ~ c l c ur ct ~Ifibrilgl~ii
l by hi5 allies, the Burmese,
i l l lhe ycur 1821.20
" When A s a m was occupied by the British the sum of Rupees Q297/8/-
was disbursed, f r ~ mthe revenues of Lower -4ssam as compensation to the ryots of
HZbriiglliit for d e a g e sdstaiued by the incursions of the nurlnese prior to the gear
IF23 (letter to Court ~ d 9. bf 1831) .
1
21 P . C . 1824 Sept. 6, Nos. 18-21. I
'q.
C . 1822 Oct. 11, was. 53-54.
'VP.
C . 3848 Sept. 47, No. 67.
Prologue
9000 men left under t h e command of the Maha silwa." ~ n ad neHr
Governor was appointed for Assam. T h e org?es of wanton ravtlgeo
and cruelties which had marked t h e previous period came t o an
and a settled administration followed. But "Histol.y Ira, ;I nemesis
for every sin" and t h e Burmese were not long t o continrl,e their
perfidious acts of barbarity. Their insolent act5 and spirit of
aggrar~dizementso deepened and complicnted t h e icisllcs that the
British were compelled against their will t o u11shcathe the sword and
in less than a year h m t h e commencement of hostilities. the B u r n l c ~ ~
powers and pretensions in Aseam lay in drlst an(\ t h e 1 1 n h a p p ~vttllcy
was a t last delivered from t h e ordeal from whic 11 it h2d ~rlff(hrcrlfor
more than four years.
T h e rapidly expandcd Rurnlese Empire met thc Rriti.11 Indian
frontier in t h e south on the Cliittagong side nrhcn .4rak:in fell into
their hands in 1784-85. Their misl~ule and tj7rnnliy drove n 1:11.p&
number of Mags for shclter t o t h e Company's doininlons The
Burmese resented the emigration of their sr11)jccts 3114 over the
question of t h e ~raknn-refugees and other i n c i d c n t ~ ,t h e rclat ion
between thcse two neighbollring sta tcs bccam 2 ct rained oft
With t h e conquest of Assam b y the B u r m ~ s c .t h o matter assllmed
R very serious proportion. Incidents hccam:. ft.cqrrciil and cmlli~ion
with t h e Br~rmcsehecamc incvitahlc.
T h e Rnrmese Governor of Araknn illegally soizcd ic\?cri~lof ~ h c
Company's subjects engaged in hunting elcphnnts on t!le frotiticr of
Chittagong and Arakan (1841-22). When t h e Calclltta Corlnvil was
informed of these irregularities. they piortslg 1vishc.d thnl the facl
nced only he known t o Hiq B u r ~ c s e R1ajccty and i t \\~nrlldhc
remedied immediately .'" Other acts of nggression wcrc soon to
follow and no serious noticei was taken of thcm. But 1;ltcr 011. \vllcn
the Burmese forcibly occupied the .mall islaii(1 of Q h ? h p ~ on ~ r the
Chittagone side 2nd pave out that on the re-occ~lpationof thnd irl:~nd
h-y the British, the forces of t h e stntc of A1.a n.olll(l irl\vntl?> the
Briti& territories along the \vhole liiin of t h ? Enctc1.11 FI'OI~ Ii ~ r . ? ~
the period of rompla& came t o nn rnd. Thr Rrit i.11 Crovcrll~l~(~llf
thorlght it expedient as a prerautionarv mrn:r~~.et o dirrct th? llmvc-
mcnt of the troops t o Rangpur and Svlhct. nllt a t 111c cnnic tim -.
the local authorities Ifrere instructed to ahstain f l ~ mnrly ii?cn~111'=
10 S, P. IR4Fi. D e c ~ m h ~16.
r Nos. 24-27.
2". P . 1825. May 20, No. 94.
21 S. P . 1825. May 20. Nc. 33,
-, ,,
22 5. P . lRP5. April 15. No. 19,
.
S. P. 1825, May 40, No. 28.
,
a Explsiwtt uf the Bu~rneae 43
At this stage, a c o ~ ~ t r o v e rarose ~ ~ bt.t\\'etbll the two
Coi~lll~isriollcrs rclgardllrg the l r l u d u ~oyelunui to be clllployed against
tllc Siagpllo*~. Mr. Slrotl wras in favour estiiblisl~i~i~ a st~u~lg
ilclval~cepoht a t U u r l ~ a labout four days ~uarclrt l s o ~ r l 1ta11~puriilld
of p ~ s l r i ~111e
~ g~ 1 ~ ~ 1 . ~ t ifar
o11illlo
s tlre ellelliy coulltlby. Col. Hicllards,
Ju11io10C o ~ ~ ~ ~ r ~ i s sLuti o ~Oifit-cr
lcr Conl~~la~lding ill Assam, was ,lot in
favour of c5lablislri11~so advallced a post because in his opilliOll, ill
the cvelil on a large force c ~ ~ t e r i nthe g c o u ~ ~ t q .it, would not It:
possible to l~ursueoffensive nleasures, diff~cultksof transport proving
thc 111ost forlllidable obslacle. He feared that the entire forcer
staliollecl a t that far off place would Le cut down aud practically
forbade L t . Neufville fro111 e~lteril~g tlre Singp1io territories under
ally circu~nstanlc'es. The Calcutta Council, to whoril the nlattcr was
referred, held that the pacification of the S i ~ ~ g l ~tribes h o should be
accomplished as early as possible. L t . Col. Richard's forces were
heavily reinforced and a very prompt and clt~isive resistance was
organised against ally offensive to be launched by the B u r m e ~ e . ~ '
I n the nieantipe L t . Neufville had marched into the very heart
of the Singpho territory. T h e maii:li of Lt. Neufville had its desired
effect and' overtures of an amicable nature were made by the Singpho
Chiefs.'j B u t the appearance of a B u ~ ~ n e sforce e at this juncture
stopped further negotiations slid the Sulgphos I)eg:ln to waver.
Military operations were renewed and a series of gallant raids care-
fully planned was conducted into the very heart of the, Singpho
countries. I n the course of operations which lasted for more than six
months, Lt. Neufville effected the liberation of a large number of
Assamese ~ l a v e s . ' ~T h e work of "mopping up" continued and a t
last towards tile end of August 1825, the Chiefs or Gaum,.. of Bisa,
Kassan, Mullarkoo, Peesi, Set. Neeche and Naggo finding resistance 110
longer effective, surrendered all their arms, animonition and
Assamese slaves thus paving the way for a general settlement and
pacification of the d i ~ t r i c t . ~ '
The victory of the British arms on the I r r a w a d d ~secured in
the meantime, greatly influenced the final submission of the ~ i n ~ h o s
and the Burmese acknowledging defeat retreated. I n all, 6000 slaves
were liberated." Under instructions from Captaill Neuflrille, the
auxiliaries under the command of the Bar S e ~ ~ aand t i Sndi~B
Khawg Gohain also liberated a large number of Asssmece slaves for
'
20 S. P. 1885, Sept. 4, Nos. '24-94. 8
*
The population of Assam at the time oP Fhjed~war Siugh was nearly
44 lacs; on the eve of the Britisl~ ocrupatio~~it had dwi~idled dowll to G! lacs.
(Pemhton's report). P. 73.
" "ASSAM TUNGKHUNGIA BURANJI" editcd hy Dr. S. K. Bl~uyrul.
p. 965.
34 S. C. 7, July, 1896, N o . 94.
" From Jenkin's Report to Mill No. 275 of 1859
30 of "As~um"by A .
From "Observations oq the Ad~ninivlri~tio~l R. D d L d
Vide Mill's Report).
4
-UI~III
Kings ;111d ~egularlypaid c o ~ ~ t r i b u l i othough
~~s, at ~ilnillishtt~
rate, towurds thch perfornlnlree of the I'ujii at. the great tclllpllt d
l < a ~ ~ ~ i ~ kBut
h y ~t l.~ i swas ~ ~ o l h i ~whcn
r g tllro\rl:~ilgai~lst the wcigflt
of tlleir n~isdcedsi111d act,. of c r i ~ c ~ l l i e I~t. nlay 11ot be out of place
to n~elltiolllrvrc lhut tlic h a t lntlii~Compal~yalso steppeti into the
positiou of 111e Allon1 King ;IS thc Se1)iit 01 the Kii~~~aklryw ten~ple
when t l ~ e ytool< ovcr iuid it is illterest~ngto l ~ o t ethat : to cover the
exparses of the Puj5 \vl~ic.hwchre not fully mcl hy sl~lallgrallts tlley
~llaclefro111 time to tinw, thc represelltali\.cd of the East 111diu
Company cnipowerccl the priests to impose taxes upo~ithe pilgrims
offeril~gpujss a t l l ~ et e ~ n p l e . * ~ ~
The people of this unhappy Valley suffered not o111y froill the
agony of civil wars and from the inisrule of the Burmc~sle,they were
~ l s ogreatly Ilarassccl. specially the people living on thy border land
; ~ n dduars, by the occasional inroads of the ferocious hill tribes
occupying thc surrounding hills. With the decline of the powcr of
the Svargadeva, (hey began to make periodical clescents into the low
lands and carried off hullla11 Lwings to be offel.ed for sale as slaves
or to be sacrificed before their deilies. l'hc people Jiving! in the
duars thus lived in a stat: of constant danger and these marnudirlg
practices conlint{ed even up to the early period of the British settle-
ments. Over the duars verging on the northern skirts of the
Valley the hill tribes even shared sovereignty with the later Svarga-
devas-a vPry unusual right conceded to then1 by the later Xhom
sovereigns.
The economic condition was no better. Conlmerce and illdustry
well? in a depressed state nnd showed no signs of recovery owing; to
the scanty circulation of' money and want of means of cornrnunica-
t i ~ n . ~ " great part of the country was little better than a wilder-
ness and half of the population lived in a state of slavery owing to
the peculiar fiscal system obtaining in the country. But owing to
the existence in the country of institutions highly favourable to the
inTerests of the lower orders of the people who were in all respects
considered as the propri'etors of the soil under thi. indigenous
Government, the cruelties and grievou~soppression of the Burmese
* At the time of the occupation of Assam by the English the temple was
under the superintendence of a Bengalee BI-ahmin named Kalli Charan Bhattacharjee
in; wllose family it was usually veslddl under the Ahom Government-
(From Scott's letter dated the 19th September 1827, addressed to Secret
and Political department) .
" P . P. 1830, May 7, Nos. 51-53.
Exputsion of the Burmese
produccd much less effc4c.t upon the enera1 prosperity of the
inhabitants than could well have been anticipated."') Even a t the
worst period (1824-95) the revenue from the country1below E l ~ i i b B r
did not fall short of 2 lacs of rupr*es.'" This but shows that their
physical suffering was de2pt.r than thcir wononlic exploitation.
Such was the country that came under the possession of the
East India Company after the treaty of Yandaho and here, truly
speaking, for the f i r ~ ttime in thcir long annuls of victory and con-
quest in the vast sub-continent of India the B~*iti,<h serrncrl to stc.1)
in as saviours rather than i l a conquerors. Rut Ascam I V ~ SR liability
rather than an ~ ~ r s ~ t - t h cBritish Government had takcn over
country with a meagre income. a scanty pop~~lation and s trouble-
some frontier h y o n d which dwclt a predatory neighhour.
1890.
Now the problem arosn how this prccnriouq heritage w a ~to be
disposed of ?
Practically s p a k i n g ever since the occupation of the Brahma-
putra Valtey by the Burmese. t h e fate of A s ~ a mhad'been engaging
the serious attention of t h e Calcutta Council. With Assam and
M ~ n i p u ra s their spring-board,, t h e Burmese \flcrc found casting their
covetous eyes ,711 a r o ~ l n dand committing acts of aggression on the
British f r o n t i e ~which might have led t o war a t any moment had not
the other sidc been, restrained by the spirit of moderation. We have
seen thnt t h e Calcutta Council, though engaged in settlinq the
Shghpuri incidcnt by peaceful means, ncvcrtheless tholight of chcck-
mating t h e design.. of Burma in other mays. The people of Assam.
i t was reported to them, were in a state of smothered rebellion and
the council thought that a promise of the restoration of t h e native
Government n?oukl help them in eventually dislodging the R ~ ~ r m e s e
Oct. 1829.
from t h e commanding position they had occ~lpicdin Aseam and they
called upon M r . Fcott. Civil Commissioner of Rangpur, a s early as
1823, t o express his sentiments on t h e point a t issue.l
Accordingly M r . Scott informed t h e Cnlcutt,n Council t h a t the
interests of the British Government mould not a t all hc advanced by
any prematnre declaration in f a v o ~ ~ofr either of the candidates
contending for the throne. This measure, he feared, wotlld onlv have
t h e effect of writing off one of the factions. HI. f i ~ r t h c r submitted
that in the event of the Company's right of interference in resncct
of Assam b-.ing recognised as n reslilt of t h c negotiations pending.
the Companv choilld form a n allhnce with thc person havinq the
hest pretensions to the throne and s h ~ i r l ds i ~ ~ p !him
v with a s l ~ h ~ i -
diary1 force. M r . !+ott 2 1 ~ 0in~istcdon thc rigid nhqcl*vnncc of lhe
comme~vrialtreaty thnt was c o n c l ~ ~ d cwith
d t h c lnt e Rnin ~ o i ~ r i n s t h
in the year 1793 durinn thc time of raptair, Welsh and whir11 had
nevcr hccn ratificd b y tH? rcnntracting par tie^.^ 'Thepeople of Ascvm
dependccl mainly if not exrlr~sivclvon l h ~R ~ n g a l Salt, impo~ted
l/rch ~ ' d c l l t t i l Council \\'rote to the Dil*cctors ;I[ honlr. that the
rrvmqe of Upper A S ~ ~ ~varied I I I fronll one lac t o two la(.s of Ivl>cAc,
and that the Coni1jnny would gain f i l ~ a l l c i a l leve11 ~ l,roviding
libcr~llyfor the expcnscs of the civil adnlinistrotioll. As rCg;lrdS the-
p pa thy of hchrt~litaqrA s s ~ m c s c1rob1t.s to t h e forejgll rule, w wvi.w~y
C I IJY h l r . Stbutt, t h e C a l c u t t ; ~(:oun'cil poillted o u t that
P O ~ I L ~ C011t
(hey ~~o111cl tr)' t o overcorrir: it by the appointment of those dis-
gri111tledJ I O ~ I V S t o rcsponsi1)le posts ill t h e ju(iicitrl alld re\rellue
tlq~artnlents. ,\c' hhall see 1atc1- I l o \ \ ~ mistal<cll the!' \yelBclill thesc.
c,iilculations.
The C'i~lcuttit C o ~ ~ n c ifin;illy l oI~s(*~*vc(l t hilt :I\ I I U I I ( ~ of tl~t'
c,:~~ltlidntes hild oflerecl t o 111th Coml)ii~ly;my :~ssi~tfint-c. tllllillg 1 1 1 t h
last c.ampaig~~, the British (;o\-c~nmt~lit \v;~s 11ntlel- I I O ol,iig;~tiun 10
slll)l>ort their l~rc.tensionc;.'"s regartls the ~lllfa\,oural)leopiniot~
which othcr states niight cntc.~.t:~ill~'cgarcliil~ t l l t * i ~ *tra~ls~ctioil?i in
:is+:i~u;IS ;tl)lxehentlctl I)g MI*.Scott, they light]). b r ~ ~ s h easide d such
hc.1.up1c.s because they I h o ~ ~ gt lthc i :~r~.angcnlcii t n(loptccl hy thcm
j~lst and wise.l'
But tholrqll t l ~ r . C ~ o \ ~ c r ~ ~ o r - ( ; c ~ ~ ( ~ ~ * : t l -tlicl i r ~ -ilot
C o ~;it~ i ifirst
il
accept t h e pln11 of AII.. S;olt r e g a r d i ~ ~t gh e tlispos;tl of Uppel. A ~ E ; I ~ I .
h,~y ditl not finally closcb t hc- tloor t o it e\.c~ltu : ~ l wt tlcnlent n.
~)roposed by hini. So t l ~ c l ~ngi1i11 . c:illctl lrpon him to s u b ~ n i this
ol)inions on t h e point ." TI12 q l ~ c sion t \\,:Is not finally set tlerl for
o not her seven years.
To t hc Suprelnc Govc~rni~ieni. t h c restorc~tionquest ion did 11ot
nppe:ar t o hc a simplc. one nncl it bristled \ \ d l 1 IlulnerouF difficultlcs.
So they asked Mr. Scott t o reconsider thc question of tllc restor~t1011
in the light of t h e 'difficulties pointcd out I)y them. T h e Calcutta
Cou~lcilfeared that t h e nnti\re go\rcinnment, if r c ~ t o r c d ,would. in all
probability, entirely depend on the support of a foreign power owillg
to its extreme poverty a n d want and \vould be driven to plunder alld
oppress its subject t o fill its ~vcr-exhaucltrdcxchequcr. Their secontl
apprehel~sioi~\vas t h : ~ t there \r-ould he perpetual collision. and dis-
p l ~ t cbet\\recll the restored statc and the frollticr tribcs s ~ u ~ o u n d i n g
it. And this, they feared, would jeopardisc their interest in the
frontier, thc tranquillity of which waw a s esscntinl t o themselves R S
to thc subjects living on the border. Their third objectiol~ was
that there was n large number of claimants t o t h e throne nll with
colourahle claims and it n~o111dhe cstl.emcl~7tliffir~lltt o select a prince
* "IL I V ~ I Sasscrtt-tl
bJ ~ l :\ssal~~t.s.;e
~ c :,I. 1 t i t 1 1 g l ~;~, IrI ~ I , J i , ~ ~ ~:lL
l ~ it ~l ~i :I~ I I I ( > ( 1 1
M r . Wliite that tlic Rur1.a Sclin!)oti p:,ic\ :I tribule rjC N s . 10.000 ~ I C :111:1111111. !. U~II
the Bwra Se~lapati positi\.cly dc*l~ieclIllis 10 him ( r . i t . Alltl t11el.c \'.;I.'
110 record cf such a sum or part of il beil~g1~i1id. " (1'. C . 18'29. .!ugr~st 1-1.8. No. 105) .
l 0 P. P , 1832. Oclol~er5, N o . 114-A.
P . C . 1833, January 7 , N o . 99.
" foreign 1838, -4pril 18. N o s . 56-57.
2 P . P . 1835, February 11, N o . 91.
3 Foreign 1838. April 18, N o s . 66-97.
"-' Geography aild Populatio~l of ASY;III~ by Cill)!:\ill NeuIville-":4.;ii;ti~
Resenrches" Vol . XVI .
troops u11d nltti~~ttti~led i L buI'lklt.bc2 euvoy at Ili-, court.'-1 lijb &~~gdo,ll,
Iiilt'r 011. bccarne, without his kilowing, thc I1arl)our of t1lOw w l l ~ ,
were discontented with the British GovernlllVnt in Assan).
Agreeably to the suggt~\tio~r of 311.. Scott. tlw B;tr Scu:il~:ltitr ;I-
~~lilct-d t i ~ ~ ~ t of hiS C O L I I ~ ~ujv
iu Ihc s c i ~ l i - i ~ ~ c l ~ p e n c1~0hh('9hbll ~ ? ,it.
KuGuliyut (dcetl of i ~ g r c e ~ ~ l ecscar.~r ~ l t ) tccl o l ~RI;I~13, 1 b-31. IIC ulltler-
took t o filnlish u ~ la1nlc.d c o ~ ~ t i ~ l of g c :JOO~ l ~ yotc,s* of ~ ) . i ~; l~ in~t l t ~ ,
supply provisions to any Uriti~h c.sl)t.tlitioll pi155i11~t I 1 r i ~ 1 ~Ilis ~11
tcrritorio.. His C ~ ~ I I I ~I I ;illd I ~ I j~~(licaitil I ) O \ V ( ~ I * ~ \ v e r ~;I],o r ~ t i ~ ~:c y l
1 1 t h \\'ah 0111)' to 5=11drc.l)orts to t I ~ cAgc:lt i l l c.;isc. of 11lllr(je1..( I a c ~ j t ~ .
i111(lgrii\'C \\.0111ldh: IIC' \\.iih ~ : ~ l l ciliJoll
d 1 0 1)il) 11" ' . V \ ' ~ I ~ U ~ ' . ' " ' } { ( R H \
also hchld rc~spolu+il)l~~ for thc l)oll-t;~sof 15l-ltisll .llI)jt(.t> I 11lig1~;lti11~
illto hi.s tc.rrito~'ii~s; ; all(] t o c*ollt~c.tthose t i ~ s c t ~1 1, r ( - I';I+I IlltIi;, ( ' ~ I I I -
)!rllljv statio11c.d i I l I Offi~c.1~ ;it 1li.s ( > : ~ ] ~ i t f i l . ~ ~
A rsinlilnr albrtingc.mcal\\ i t 3 ~niitlc.\\ itlr t 1 1 k I<]ll1ll(iy01 111, ~ ; J ( ] J > ;I . L r r n ~ l g c ~ n e ~ ~ ~
region wllose tcn.itol.ic.5 c.stc.arlctl HIOIIL~t IIC I jiillk o f t Ilc. T11,'ll~itPani "lth
KIIAIII~I*
river. Thc IChR~ntisIlnct vncrgy ant1 n~ilit;ll-yskill +~~pc.l-lor It, t i ~ o ~ c
possegsctl 1)y ally other il;iti\'c.s of thv B ~ i r ~se n t t c r r i t ~ r i ( + . ~ '"TII,.
Khiimtis nre1.c.". in th:. ol~inionof M r . J c ~ ~ l k i"tlle ~ l s firlt race ill . \ : , ~ ~ L I I
r
ill spirit, in tc~lligcilcc:lnd nlori11 ,(11:11~nctc1~.I ' I i o i ~ ~ thc.~. l~ ~ ) ( ~ - ~ c ~ s ~ ~ ~ ~
9.
-.
S. P. 1896. JII~J:14. NO. 9.
42 P . C . 1833. January 7. No. R'?.
4". P. 1806, July 14. No. 9.
- 4". C . 1,921. Jllll~10. No. 60.
tlif&ult to introilucc. t hese goot1.s t ) ~ c l ~: IcI I ~ lhc miit t ell3 \\.;I\ (lc'l>iiletl
i l l l)oth Ilot1sc.s of Pnrliwnicw t . 311.. Scott t l * i c ~ t lto nlc.ct tlli,
(liffic~~ltj~ b ~ opv11ir1g
, LIP;I ilirwt tr:i(I(, I ~ O I I ~ ~ ~ clc11 C ' I I ~ I I ;llI(l
l ) ( b t \ \ ~~
11idi;1t111wugh A s s ~ I I ~*. "
& I ; ~ c k e ~ ~sz; Ii ~c . ;l l l ~ t"il ( 1 0 ~ s110t ~ I I > ~ ) ct h<i lItI ~tllcl I(I~>:I of ol)cllirlg
111) il ~ I ~ ; I ( I c *I.OII t~ itcalso\\ t l l ~Pfitki~iL ~ V C ~ IC';IIIIC' * [ O i 1 1 1 ~Ilillg
t 01. i l ~ ( l e t ~ t l
tll:lt ;Iny ac-ti\.cb at01)s \vcrcb c . v c ~take11 ~ t o tle\lc>lol) it". I " 13r1t thi,
\-ict\v of TIII.. J l i i ( ~ I < c ~ ~ lis~ i ( *C ~ ~ O ~ O Ot Uo Sit c(krt:li~~C ' X ~ C ' I,4ctivc> I~.
- l , y s \\x1lnCt ;1kt111i~~clc~c(l 1)). M r . S~oolt ;III(I <'11pt:ti113 ( ~ 1 1 t ' \ ~ i10I l , ~
tlc~\.c~lol) tliis tls;~clcl\\.it11 ;I view* to n . c ; ~ ~ ~ iiI\\;\y ng 111(% Si11gl)hos f r o n l
I licil. ~)l'c*tl;~toi-!. h:il)it.;. A.; priv:~tcl n ~ c r c l l a ~ l t\\lvrtb s 11ot :~\,;~il;~l)lc
to cilI8rY otl t l0:i(lc i l l t h i \ 1.cniotc1 i111tl ilillospit:~L)l(~ r i ~ i o l l .; ~(~11lj)ts
t
I i t I 1 o I I tr:ide t l l ~ ~ u g l tl Il(1 ( ; 0 \ ~ 1 ~ ~ 1 1 1 1 l i ~ l l t
;IgcbnK,v. 1'11(1 fil-st c.ollsigllnlcw1 \ ~ i i \ Ioc)tc(I 011 t11;. \yay :111tl ii fresh
i l l \ tb.;tlllcllt Of h i l l < i \ l l t l o ~ h l ~$!,ootl~ l' \\;is il!!,;IIIl tlc~pi~tchctl 1 0 S;ldi3'.~.~'
\ \ ' I ~ ~ \ I I Ct111ti1ill ,J(~nI;iiis il11(1 Pi~111l)~l~to11 t (>(I t l ~ c > ~rt .; \,i,bfi
('11i11atI11.ot1g11.IKS~IIII
~vc,~,c>;IIW visi~alized ;I I I ~ O I ~ I ~ I I C I I ;li(-~iilwr
IL of l11q GO\-PTII()~-
(:e~leri~l'x Col~~lcbil l o I I c.i)ltl-rc3 (,I' ;I l r ~ i i ~ l ~ lc~l)se!,\,ccl.
e ;IS ei11-IF :IS IS%:-
''ll'c II~:I>. esl)tvt lo 01)e?1 I I ( , \ V ro:~:ls I'or c,c;rninerccJ \ v i l h Y~III:III : I I I I ~ nt11er so11111
"
TreaLy of jwacc concludc~d ut Yaltdabo Englisl~ ve1bic.11.
Article 2. Ells Mnjestj- the 1;ilig of Avn reliouriccs 1111 rluilu~ 111)011. illlcl
will abatah~ from dl futwe interforence wit]? the principality of Assat11 !~n(l
its dependencies, and also with the contiguous petty states of Cacllur ant1 Jdinlici.
Wit11 regard to Manipur, it is stipulated t h ~ t should
, Gnmbhir Sing11 desbe to\ ~cturll
to that counlrjr, Ite sllall be rt*ogiiised by the king a RnJ':111tliercof.
5". P. 1833. November 14, No. 29.
Period of Interi9,z Settlement 43
cxerciacd offices nbuut the s of tllr Raja. They
~ . o u ~ ~ l c r p of; ~ lthb
~ t s chan~bc~rJnir~s of the 1ntvliev;lJ Europeau Prillrvs.
Cupttlin Fiaher i u u ~ a lthrcc . ~ u c dignitarier
l~ rvm Jurillg the hst (lay.
of Govillda Cllandru. But tllry \+lire shonl of ally 1 l>ower. Tlrc
: ~ ~ I m i ~ ~ i s t r noft i o ~justice
l was condu c tcd c.n,c.lty: c.
l ~ i ~ ~ i i s h ~\\.CAT
l ~ e u\\;~rtled
~~ts fbr slight offellre.. 'l'he principal ,wurrc.
of the slatc. i~icorilcwits the land rch\.enuc;cuswnls a.cArc)Ic~\vitd 011
exporls. I t is intcrLuiti~lgto k~lo\\rLtlitt tile pcol,lcb of ('FIcl~i~l' hilt] LC,
tuxes for mubic at marriages nntl OLIIC'I- ft'sti\'als illlcl Ct\.C'~l f0l.
ritling ill il ilodic (a covctretl litter) a11,1fo1, \vcarillj: gUIClo ~ ~ ~ ~ i I I 1 l C ' l l ~ ~ ~ ~
IL IS l:,ttll(~l that (I::~c.llal.i~~vokccl thy ajcl of tlrc ljl.ili.ll ~ , o \ \ t . li .l l
I ! \ l l l l l l ! l l i I I I I I ~ I41)(1(1( I 111) ( ( ( ~ - . c ~ c I I ( ~ (1
I I 1)1aills. ' British 11~111\\.as I-c*:IcI~I> $1 11 ,i11(1 (!I(*
tlc.1)~cclatior1sstop1)etl. 'Aga111 I I ~ ~ I C I ill I lEWk, O I I C Iiitly511 9i11~11.
tlihli~isscd~z~b~Cl/il* COIICJC~CC!:I body of I ~ Z ~ ~ X ' I ~ I I C;r~l[l I ~ I ?~ I~~ ~I I~( ~ c I .( 1c
Cachar, the Conlpany canle to Ilcr aiti. -41 tllat time ;tr: told
\\-(a
hclgnn to cJccc.c.ntl 011 hi111 oi]cl i~ftc'~. :~lto~l~c.r. l\ol~i 1); (Y-~~IIIIP
~ , r \ ~ i ~of i lrttc Raju \\.ah the first tu t i ~ k ei t 5lir.c out o f ill(' 1ii11~
l l fthc
(10111 of Cncllar. and installcci hinisc-If as an indepcndcl~t<.hic.ftiiilr 11)
t11:. l-tilly portion of the tract. ITc fell i L vic~i111to political s t ~ . i ~ t a g c ~ ~ ~
: ~ n t lntis ;~lzsrlssinatcd:by Govinda C1i;~ntlrnh u t tllc 1.c4)c~llin11 \\.;I\
( olltinlrctl by his son TulBr~iii. Rut worst 211d rno1-lb Q ~ I ' ~ ( J It J~~* o ~ ~ l b l ~ k
I 1 1 \ ~ i l i ~ I rc\col.(ls
l t l ~l ; o11 ~ 111i11 occ.i~>ioiiIllc ('on~l)tlt~~
1 r:;llli:e~l 10 qi\,cb 11i1i1 i l 8 C ' X C I ~ ~ I I ~iq~ .Li l~~ l i I i ~ l [l'iICL' of g1~011tl(I cs1v,\\hvr,
\\ l1ic.11 11c ~-cfrl~<ctl to ;~c.c'cll)t.
Govi~ieli~ ('1I1;111~1rit ~ ~ \ ' c ~l)c~cgc~(l
II 10 1 ~ i~llo\\.c'tl
1 to 11oltl Y i ~ ' i s l l ~ ) t l ~
i l l ZnniIl11kld1-iright and ilgtlirl 1,1*;1yt.tlllli~thi., R i ~ 1j , ~: ~ l t : ~ c * l ~ c lo . t l Ilrc
Company's dolnil~iorl for heLtcr 5ccuri t!~ i~ncl ~ ) r o l c c . l i o ~.It ~ . [hi*
pcriocl. Go\,irltli~Chilllclri~1,ccainc~\o tlcstit~ltc.thal 110 cor~ltl11ol c\w
I~rlryhis tlnily ~~ecc~l~,s;~l.ic~s of lifc. i111tl l)('gg*~(I to 1)r. ;111o\v:~(1to live i1I
Sirishpur \\.here i~rticlcs of con3u11ll)ti o ~ i \vcrcl 11111cllCIICYII)C'I-. But
1 1 i i l l i 1 1 i 1 \ I i l l I ])l'ot~:'tiol'. nor \\'iI> t ! l ~ Siri~ll]ltl~
l'n~'ycc?t~i restorcd to l ~ i m . ~ "
1893. z\3sum and ;\9tinipur Ililtl Ilc3e1l i l l theb ~l\eillltilll~ ovvlbrull11)- thc
1 r 1 1 1 c Chiturjit Sing11 clu:~r~ellccl \\~ith Gi~lllbirSiilgll iilltl flvtl
fro111 Ci11:liar i~ildtook 511cltt.r ill !?~.lhct i111cl prol)oscd t o 1ni11;e 01 el
t s Cachnl*t o i h c Colllpaliy a n d reql~cstcclthe l.Iagist!.i~tr
Iris i ~ ~ t c r e s in
of 9?.lhc>t to sCl1cl i1 1.cs1)onsiblc officer to ~nl<c., charge of hilc~shilre."'
-4t this j ~ ~ i i c t ~ ~ i011 - c .thc ~ t r e n g t hof n report (mhicll is open to
q112stion) froin i11c C o l l ~ l ~ iV;lkiI ~ l ~ stationctl
~'~ ilt Jilinti;T1)111-. Crovinrlil
Cliniidri~ wa Y rcmovecl t o Dacca, from S\.lhet. I t n T a l c i q~!>pcctctl
tlltli he hat1 applied for hclp t o the B~~rmesc.autllority ill ASSRDI.'"
R11t Govinela Chanclra was not l o ~ l gto rcmuin i l l ci~j)tivity.Circunl-
staaces so011 compcblled the Briti:h Cro\~cl.nment t o t a l t ~h i ~ nu11dc1
fliy;r pi*otocti@n.
~9 S. P. a. NO. 6.
IR~.$, n ~ i 1
70 Letter from Court A u p u t 4, 1894.
71 Lett& from Court A u g ~ ~ s9,l 1RQ5.
72 Q . P , 18?B. Jnnr 99. N o . 18.
7
~ ~ ~ g r ill r s T ancl t hit t t llr Ril j i ~\ v ~ L I I ( ~rul)t~rir~icr
i h C:HCIIH I I O tliffinlhg
ill payi11g the t r i t ) ~ t e . ~ * j
Set t l r r ~t l ~ ~
Jaintiit \yits it sniall 1 ilitleprlldt~~r 1 ~ ~ r i i l c i p a l i llallBillg
t~
11 it11 011 the boriler of Sylliet lying bet\\feen t l ~ cK ~ I Ilillh N ~i ~ l l~h l~ Killl(-'
Jair~litr. ti0111 of Cachar. It M'WS pril~ciptllyi~ihnl)ite(l1 ) ~ t' h sicliie ~ pcoplt: wllo
hati oc'c'rll,iecl llle Iihiisi hills. $hiljl in 1 ~ i I)cblo\v
i li\.cd tllc
Ucagalct~---~l~c Iliu(111s:i t ~ ~ILluslims.
tl 11 c.o\~ctrc~d it11 :trtatl of 3453 Sq.
miles i111t1 the l)ol)r~li~ tion a t t h c tinic of the S r ~ r ~ u c s i~r\li~sio~l
t! was
(1-t inittt ctl i l l 1ici11.l~.-lO,OOU.'-' As regi~rilst hc r('ligic)n of t tic* people,
i t nroulcl sc.enl t h ~ t the Khnsis \vere Ile\.cr tlccyly irifl~~cnced by
Hrahniinisnl i111(1 tliitt i t \\'a,< only thc fitmilies of t h e Haja ancl his
lentling nobles tlli~t\vclrc brought. \\-ithi11 tlit. fol(l of llinclrlisni. 'l'hc
Rajas helongcul to thc Siikta Sect wild i t is allcgctl by Gait t l l i ~ tthey
--
kept nlivc thcb spstcnl of humall &acrificch,l.' \vl~icli I)ro~g!.h t then1
into coliflict with the El~glish.
The land tax was the princil)al sorurce of the s t a t e rcvenuc
There \\.as no fixecl rate and it was paid citllcr ill money o r in kind
or in ser\rices a t tlie pleusure of] tllc Haja. T h c Ii~lidrevenue yielded
t h e srrni of se\rtmt yfi1.c tliousttnd rupees nncl together with finer,
cikskoms anct ltuz(o8, the total r ~ \ ~ c l i n ~ tl et h e ti111e of the Burmese
i l l v a s i o ~a~m o ~ ~ n t cnearly
d t o onle lakh of rupees. T h e ~nilitarg
force consisted of ;t sl~iallstanding. army of 200 I-Iindustani scpcrya
nnd it is reported t h a t t h c King \VHSI able t o raise a n army of four
thousand strong in tinic of war.. It nus st be said t o ihe credit of
Jaintiii, t h a t she was t h e only kingdoni on the North E a s t c n ~frontier
that enjoyed 1111interrul)ted peace for illore than sixty years prior
to the outbreak of tlie Anglo-Burmese
Thc British cnnie into closer relation with Jaintia when the
Burmese had thrc:ltcned t o illvnde Cachar. T o prevent t h e entry
of t h e Burnlcsc forceis into J:iinti$ and t o establish a n advancecl post
there \vhich might prove a powerful check up011 the( Brlrmese in
Assam, thc Suprcnie Go\-ernmeut tlesircd Mr. Scott t o open
negotiations with the rrigniag monarch, Raja Riim Singh t\lithorlt
a n y further tlclap on similar t m n s as were ofTcred t o his neighhour
R a j a Govindn Char~dra.~TMr. Scott w a x instructetl t o c x ~ r t
n light rcvcnuc from that country in1 return for British pTotection.ie
-' -
.": C , 1835. .Jatlu'ary 7. No. 8 9 .
S. 1'. 1821. .Jiu~ua~-,v30. Nu. 18.
5". P . 18Qb. .T;u~rlnl:\ 17. No. 6 .
Period of Interinz LSet tlorzurl t 51
The H ~ j i lwus iit f i ~ ti~lr\!~illing
, to come to trrllrs \rith the Company
lest it bhoulcl co~n1)rouisr.the positiou of his kingdulU,
0 1 1 the sec.olid Jal~uary,IM4, Mr. Scott fidtlrc.s+LAtl a ~ ~ t,, t t
the Bu~-nlest~ Commander in Caehar ~)~.ohil,itin~ llinl fro111 elltc-ring
the clo~niuionof Jai~ltiiton thc ground thibt the Raja ]lad wllght
the p~vjtectioll of the British (;u\~c.nlmt~n t . Tlle Burmese advanced
on the plea that the kingdoni of Jailltia had I,t.c.o~ue11 vassal state
to Hi.s Hurmc~..c* &lajc~sty ))y tile conque\t of I to \,.hich it
formc~ly p;~id ilmil,ute and s e ~ wt follcc ' i 1 3 fur ;IS thy horder of
Jaintifi to ellforce thca pre~tlncc of thch H a j ; ~ R5n1 Sirlgll ;it the
Hurmc*st~C a ~ n p . l'hcl.eon. the 1oc:il Brit is11 C i l l i ~ n11dw
i ~ sent L\
detachment to reinforce the Ita ja's troops oil \\.lric.l~ t I](. Hunnesc
party w i t h d r e ~ . ~ "
I n the menntinle negotiations were completed nncl i l treaty \ra*
concluded with the Raja of Jaintiii. 'The t e r m were similar to
those of the treaty previously concluded with Govinda C h a n d r ~ .bU
As the lallds in Jaintiii were chiefly granted 011 military tenure. the
c ~ s hrevenue of the kingdom was but trifling. So no tribute was
demanded as originally suggestetl. Mr. Scott was asked to take
advantage of the situation and to settle :in oltl dispute regarding
the possession of a place called "Seven ~.c.:~c.lies"\vhicIi was clailned
by the British Government. As the lalid in dispute had b ~ e n
l e ~ s e dout, according to the custom of the conntry. to a number of
individuals on cltdk~tinsystem (Allotment of land in lie11 of wages)
wrho nrere not \villing to part with them on any money pi~ymcnt.
this point was given
As the subjects of Jaiiitiii were of a \~i11'1ik~ diq)o3itio11and were
expected to rendel- slibstantial aid as 11scf1i1allies a sclmratc article
\vils inserted in thc tlmeatg1)y 1~11icl1 Raja RGm $high engaged t o
assist thc Company in thc pro$ec~itionof the war agi~instthe king
of Avii and lo attack the cnemy to the cast of Gililhati. The Conl-
pany on their part promised to confer on thc Rnjs. on the c.onqued
of Assanl a part of that territory proportionat(&to the cbxtellt of hi.;
exert ion in the co~nnioncause.R2
On the occasion of Mr. Scott's passing thr011p11J;~intii~ wit11 n
body of troops in 1894. the Raja helped him with ~ u c ~and n provi.-ions.
Rut when the actt~al~ ; i r f a r ~ co~nmenced.it is :~llegctl.hc otTr.rccl
no effective assistance : 11c cvcn allowed tlic R111-1nc>~c tlc.tnch~l~r~lt
BLlt tllc' ~ 1 ' i ~ ; \\I10 ~ I l ('iilll(' ilS ~ i l \ ' ; ~ l l li'l,l l ( I ~ ' : l ] ) ~ l l l ' ( ' ~t l] l ~ ' ~ 1 1 l i 4 ~ ~ 1 1 i l ~ ~ O l ~
of t h c Ahsi~inc.sc 11ol)ility 1 ) ~t l c ~ l i i ~ i 0n11~ t l l ~e\.c. of the. -41lgl0-
Bnr~nc,scbco1lflic.t tliilt they hacl no i l l t e l ~ t i o ~o lf :r~liic\ingany pol.tion
of t h c h R ~ n h l i i i ~ l >1.nr ~VaTIc~y.
t p ~ - ~ f c r ~ -t oc v st;^^.
l ;I- C ' O L ~ ~ I I C I ' :~I II ~I S~ cli(1
. ~i co l ~ i l i1no.l
A 4 < s n ~ r i r~ ~y of \~.lroili-l-\vcl.kt l*cv111(-~(1to crr,;l t illibc r\. h.
t h e change of nlnstc*~- and 1)y thc al)olitioll of t11e piili bysteln. 1~c1.c
iiot s o c\n>ilg t o 1,c ~.cconc.il(.d. Tlic resr~lt \ \ . ; ~ stlic or~tl,rcilk. after
;I short illtcr\.ill of ljro ~ C N I ' S >ili('c the c1xl)~llsiouof ihc R I I ~ I ~ ~ ~ o .
of il sc.~-ic.sof i ~ , \ l l l ' ~ ~ c ~ ~ t: i~on, id.i.cl,c~llioiis ill I\-hic.11 colnl)illivl t o
~ n o ~ l c yI hey
, f o r ~ g l ~~l~. l i c l r ' l .t l ~ c . I ~ I O S LI ~ i ffling
r ~ i ~ . ~ ~ ~ l l l ~ l i i yet
;11lt1 l l c ~ ~ ,
t l l ~ ypllk 111) tl 11c'J'Oi~ fig'])[ i I l l ( 1 ] > Y O ( ~ I I ~ (~A~~ VI (~~ : ~\ I ~, ~
S o \~.J,lIllg
ljl'ili~~'
Thcs? i ~ t t c ~ ~ l :iliorlgll
t~, frltilc. i111(1 ~11il11,'~'icill i l l t1eigll. \IrCI'C
n o t ~ n a t l c i l l \rain. I'hc task of co1l.5oIitli1tioll ; ~ I I O rc~conciliiitiol~
\vent hairtl i l l h;lntl a l l t l \vhilc. t l ~ c . c~-lioc~s of 111c litst shots filsrtl a t
thc I<hr!si ~~cbel..: ~ ill 1 . 1 , ~ \\-c.,<t, a n;lti\-c
\\,cr:\ tlyillg i~n.:~:. i l l t l ~ :l~ills
~ : l ' i l ~ct was i.c\storc~I to thc t h ~ ~ o l lofc ~ his ~III(::.SI 01's i l l the. c i ~ s tant1
a t Ii~stt l ~ cv i s i o ~of~ 311-.Scott \\.;I. f l ~ l f i l l c ~ ltho11g11
, his nlnstcr n ~ i n ( l
\vns not thc.1.c. I o s f c Iinill c*ollsrliilm:llic)l~of his .;\\.isc. l ~ o l i c ~ . .
t l ~ c b
plot \VRS \vc.ll laid 110 tlatil)l: (;nd:?tlhal c*nrl.rsl)o~~tlctl \\'it11 the' Ilnl*
Bi~r~lii, the Bar P I ~ r l l i :11ld ; ~ ~ otlirl. e s - f ~ ~ n c . \ i o ~ l ;of~ ~tl1(1 - i c oI(1
, caor~l.li111cl
solicited their hcIlr n l ~ dro-opwa t iol~. Tbc. i~(l\-icc.11r p)t flunl tlir
cx-B~~rhG Gohiiin, c.i~lIctlPenli;~r.\v;ls ycl-y C R I I ~ ~ O I Iailcl * v;rlu~~l)le.-41
l hat t iwc the ex-Bll~-hfi Gollil ill \VH s ill c'o113t;illt lo11(*11\\lit 11 COIOIIC'I
Cooper an(] C n p t a i ~ iNeufviIIc. At the ~ i ~ l i ltilnr c he \vea . * C C W ~ ~ F
ncyotiatil~gwith prillrc \vitIlotl[ iaihinq the 1cn.l I .
rl(yihtrd tile i,ro\prcl 5 of tllc vrnt urc all0 :~dvist*dthib p r ~en(lcbr t
lo act ill hurrJ.. At the qamc tilllr hc \\-iskc(l it wrrrsq wit11 rill
11;s heart slid finnll~- p~.olni...cd t o joill \vhe~r sllccheq.; \\.a4 ~ l n ~ o s t
ccrtnin.
I'
S. C. IaO,March 19, Nos. '15. 16. I? & 54,
1R
8. C. 1830, Marc11 1%. Nos. Is, 16. 17 R. 54,
I
" . a 1830, Mnawh 12, NO. 19.
" a
S. 1830. n/Iarch 12. No. 118.
The First Rebellion
'1'11~ i~upri>c)llcd~)rillcc.c.fl'c~-t ecl his r-lscill)cAfro111 the jail end nvns Jau. lm.
e(1. But ;IS c ilg~ill \\'its ~ U I I I I ( i~~ l t l ~ i g t ~ with
I-c.-i~~'rest i ~ l g the guard
lJurcd o r r r him. Ilr \Vi1S ~ ( ' t l t( I ~ H ' I I to t11(~jail of R H I I ~ I ) I I(Henpal) I'
for safe (letellt io11
The sul)joct of I'~.ir~c.c.(;ii(I:i~IIli\~"s~ ~ l l l l i l l l l l i ~ i l that t i o ~ ~the plot
\\.;IS h ~ t ~ ' I ~ \\'it11
c ~ ( 1 tllc~( ~ O ~ ~ I I ~ \ ? H I ~ of C ' C *t l i c ~ Brlrmese gnvt.rnme11t uvas
tll,ly c o l l \ * ~ ~ ~t4)c t tI 1 1 ~~ O U I .of~ X\.5 I)y I f i ~ j o rB ~ ~ r ~ l cthe . y , Residellt
a t the c . o ~ ~ ofl ~ tAVR.\\.]lo \jvils iilsir.~~c~tetf t o GI-oiicl~the st1I)ject very
cl~~ltiollsly.N O fol'1ll;il lbc~nlo1lstl-all~c.: v e r ~llatlr: the Rllmal1 leSo.
3Ii11istclrs \!rchr(h0111y gi1~~11 t o I I I I ( I ( ' ~ S ~ ~ I I I (tI h i ~ ta11 il1lproper use ha(l
I)ec.11 ~llatlc. by tllv I ' c J ) ~ I s of thc~~ l i l l l lof~ IIih Br~r~~le.se Majesty a9
lcllcli~ighis c.orrlltt.l~anc.c~ t o their ]let ty i ~ ~ ~ r ~ t * l i111c1 . ~ c tthey
i o ~ ~\vtAt.t.
si~nply rcqueste(l t o forn~allycliso\vn t11o.scb iissc~rtiotl~to 1vhiv11 the
British Govc~rutllent \\.;IS said i o I ~ a \ . c ; ~ t t a c l ~ e tIl I ~c.rcdcncc~.-- A,.)
(Iiq)o';itiotl of 111t' j~:'Oj)le of tire ( ' O I I I ~ I I ' J . . ' ~ ' I I O I I ~ I I 311..Scott took
,clvrrc stcyh Io ~ I t Iclo\\.r~tile sc.c.o~r(l~'c.l)c.llio~~ I ) c . c . i i ~ ~ wi,r r Ilis opilrion.
~ I l cI : ~ ~ r i c ~ l r c a~~I I. O \ V I I 011 thcl or cm;r\iol~of (;i\(lfi(ll~ii~' K~lnliit*'? rt-l,cllio~~
11:itl i l o otI1t.r cffc1c.t ~ I I H I A111111 of ill~l~~cbtiintc~ly l)~.otluc*illgitlrothe~..hc
dicl 11ot f o l g c ~ l t 11c. It~ssonso f lilt- t l i h t 111.1 ) H I I ( ~ ci'is11~1 , these r'epeit t
tlist~~l-l)iillc.cs 1)ut confirlllcd his \*ic.~\.sof t h e 11ec.d for* t 1 1 ~rc.;tor il t 'I8)II
~ t ;I' icitivc- llloll;~I ~ ( ~ ~ I i, rvr A4%3111.
irihcrito~.01' ;I I I ~ O I - Cndvii~lc,>dtyllc of c.i\,ilisat ioll tIIi1l1 is gc~lcrilllg
f0ti11(1 i1111011gbtO ~ ~ I Chill Y tlsjbCbi1111il~)itilig~ I I Cs(brtI\ l<:1.sttbl,1~ rt1gi(~i1
of I n d i ; ~ . \F'lle~l pitted ugiliilst t l ~ cl<nglish, t he&>.csllil)ittbtl t l ~ csnnie
q11:tlilics uf rtut)l)oi*~ii~css, il~tlel)c.~~tlc~rc.c of clrari~clcr ; i l ~ t l 11i1l~t~tl ol'
a fol-cigll ( l o l n i ~t io11 ~ ; ~ \ ~ t ~ i c . ~l c~~ I I ~ I - ; I I I , vc l l i ~ ~elsiw
i ~ ~ It I I ~ ~ I ~ I ~ ~ I ~ I I ~ C ~
~ h ~ 0 1 1 ~ ~ 1t11cb
0 1 1\ tY O ~ ~ Ci111tI
I \\hi(*h i l l 111Cir C'iihC IlilCi h ' ( ' k 1 :~gilillgls~ilII)'
fobtcibtld 1)y ~ I I C I1at~1l~c of thcir go\rc.rnu~tblit\vhichl~ wllo\\ctl ~ \ ~ c r j .
; r ( l ~ ~ lpel-sorl
t to I I ; I \ . ~ llis say ill tllc ;~cl~~liilisll.aticbl~ of t l ~ cInncl.'
\\'hen 1)r. Lw~nb\.isitcd tllcir countl*y i l l tllc ytbar 1828 i l l q~icst
of a 5itc for the cst;tblish~l~c~lt of it ,sanntbriuin. I I ~ .\\.iis btl.11ck 11st h c
g e n e l 1~ ~il ir of ~'liecrh~lnessulltl ease i 1 1t i~lnong+t t h:m.
' I ' h o ~ ~ g IIi~itlu.*.
h t11c.y \\.:.I*(~ liltlc tl.otll)lctl \\.it11 IJint111 p1-r-juclicch.
rcspcc.Iil~g diet. 'l'l~t. s t l u i ~ g i t c of 111e pco1)lc :111(1 tllcir
gcbllcri~lI1(>itlth5l)okr po\vc~1-F\111\. ill f ; ~ O \ I I ~of tile clin1i1tc~\\ hicl~\\.as
a
S. P. 1833, January 7. No. 82.
S. P. 1829. May 8. No. 11.
S. P. 1R2D, June 26, No. 4.
The Khasi Insurrection,
a.ou~dtend to promote the prosperity of the country by giving the
Kksis easy access t o t h e markets b~1ow.Y
Mr. Tucker, Conlmissioner of Sylhet, was a t first ad\.ibrd t o
establish a sanatorium a t RlukR~iji in Jaintig as rcconinlended hy
~ 1 . .Lamb. B u t the site a t Mukhnji was given up in view of the
discovery of a better place on the Ichiisi hills. It was proposed t o
build a bungalo\v a t Nunklo\v (lying wit hi11 the state of Tirut
Singh) along with t h e construction of the road, for the treatment
of invalids.''
As a preliminary t o the construction of the road which was to
btart from Barduar facing Lower Assam, an application was made
to Chattar Si~lgli who then licltl the lo\vlands of Bwrduur in
ZamimZiry rights frorn t h e British Gover~lnicnt and hc readily
consentcd t o allow all the facilities that w e r ~required. But his
authority in the hill portion was constaritly opposed by T i ~ v Singh
t
and even labourers were threatened with murder. A t this time
Chattar Singh died and t h e construction was stopped, disputes
having arisen respecting t h e sr~ccessiont o the estates of the deceased.
There were several claimants t o his property and when they failed
to come t o a n y mutual agreement, M r . Scott w a s invited by them
jointly to proceed t o Nunltlow. thc capital of Tirut Singli's
territory. in Xovember 1826 t o help them in settling the differences.ll
Mr. Scott accordingly arrived a t Nunklour and a n assembly of
the principal persons of t h e tribe was held. All questions relating
to the disputed succession were thoroughly discussed for two days
with a degree of independence. coolness and propriety that evoked
the strongest admiration from M r . Scott who frankly admitted t h a t
the inhabitants of t h e most civilised countries could not have
displayed bctter parliamentary acumen. They settled the succession
question t o their satisfaction. I t n7ns unanimoiisly agreed that the
claim of Rajjin Singh, a child of five yenrs. the brother and direct
heir t o Chattar Singh, should b e set aside on the arounds of his
minority and t h a t Tirut Singh, t h e next heir. sholild be elected to
the R a j t o be succeeded a t his death h y Rajjin Singh.12
But with regard t o t h e request of Mr. Scott t h a t the Raja
should grant a passage for British troops through his territories.
they declined t o give a ready assent. lest their conlpliance with t h e
18equest should offend their neighho11l.s. R11t a t the same time, it
-
le
S. C. 1807. September 13. No. 16.
IDS. P. 1849. June 4G, NO.2.
" Kingdom of the Nak-l&li Rani adiclini~lg the Gnro hills.
"lowlanti stntllgersv fro111 his territory.'" His s e ~ ~ t i r ~ i ~were lits
shared also by liis sclrddrs i111d kinsine~l, \ V ~ Ohad hecm displeased
ilt the treaty \j*liich hc had without thrir sanctioii entered into with
311.. scot t
Suclh a schcnic \Vilb oiiercd t o Tirut Siugh and liis kil~h~nen bv
B i ~ rRlii~iik,thc cliicf of Molini. (one of thc I<h;ixi States) \vho actirlg
in c~oncertwith other hill chic~fs,invitc'd hi111 to make it general inroad
illto Assail1 i111cl t o effect thc expulsion of thc Brifisli from the hills
ancl f ~ - o mthe c o u ~ ~ l rbelo\v.
y Tlicir filial aini as t o restore the
native d y ~ ~ a s tilly Assitlll a n d thereby they hoped t o Ile rewarded
\vith the possc>ssioll of low l a ~ ~ d as : , far iis the Kallallg River in lieu
of thc scrviccs re~iclci'ed. And from these day-dreams they were
olilj. i t \ \ r i l k ~ ~ cby
d the flames of Momlu when they realised that
thcy had been fighting against an invincible enemy.?"
M r . Scott got scent of the inlpenclirlg dangcr on his i~rri\raIat
Nu~iklon.towards the end of March. 1820, on his way t o Cherrapunji
Elc ' npprehcnded no danger from T i r r ~ t Singh. His immediate
o l ~ j c ~oft chatisenlent was Barmdnik \\rho \\.as reported t o have sent
inccscngers to a11 t h e neighbo~ii'inghill Rnjns inviting them to send
their Inell t o cspel t h c British from thc low l a i ~ d s . M ~ ~r . Scott
immediately hurried do\vn t o Cherrapunji with a view t o carrying
out the instrr~ctions of the S l ~ p r e m e Government in respect of
Bnrmcnik whosc ilnti-Brit is11 activi t ics hild already reached their
cars. M r . Scott had intended t o oIrcrnwe BarmBnik with the help
of the Sylhct local corps. I t is said that t h e infiiction of condign
p ~ ~ n i s h m e non t Riirn15nik wol~ldhave put an immediat; end t o any
1lo:tile d:'sigti t h a t might have been entertained b y Tirut Singh or
a n y othci. hill chiefs. B u t t h e feeling was deep rooted and the hill
c*hicfs, contrary t o ill1 expectation, stole a march on Mr. Scott.
On t h e 5th of M a y , 1820, a party of KhRsis aided by the Ggros
llcl.l:et~'atcd what is known as t h e "Nunklo\\l massacre" in \irhich one
i~lilorcntEuropean (Lt. Bedingfield) and a number of Bengalees
living in the san;ltorium a t Nunltlow lost their lives under the most
l>i'l~t:~l circl~n~stances.None of t h e Assamese Amlihs living with
the party was killed. After t h e execution of Bedingfield. Tilut
Singh declal.ed that he n ~ o l ~ lnext d cut off the Aqent's hcad and
hang it I I in ~ the market of Nllnklo\v and thcn he n~ouldproceed
to take Ghuhnti. On the next day \vIicn the chiprfisi of the late
Singh, B a r n l i i ~ ~ iu~itl
k R l u k u ~ i dSing11 of hlosiug \ ~ l l o s cprctlccc.ssor
Alju Singll's ag'gressiol~, it iila)' bc nlciitio~~cclIicrt., had Ijc.t.ll tirc,
immediate cilusc of t l ~ cwar ivilh t t ~ clili5sis ill IT!)(). 'l'lre \vi~rc ~ l c l l h , j
in their expulsion fro111 tile plaius of S j ~ l h c t Lo Lhc l)ossc.ssioll of
mhich hlukui~clSingli \\us now casting ~ o \ ~ c t o u(%yes. s ' l ' l ~ ~ i lr~ ~ i l l , ,
which was n7orkc.d out sltilfully ancl \vhicl~ s11on.ccl org;llrisillg
ability of a high order on t h e p a r l oF the hill chiefs, n.ils t h a ~'I'irllt
Sing11 should posscss ma nil^^ ancl \vith tlie aid of Mi~lcl~ucl Sillg], of
Mosing s l i o ~ ~ lprcvcnt
d supplies ant1 rei~iforcenlci~tfroni i ~ l ' r i v i ~ i ~
from the Sglhct side. Barm5nil; ancl R.li~lrkulnlir \yere c i ~ l ~ ~ u s t e d
with thc important work of gui~rcli~ig t l ~ cpasses opening l o Assi~al.
By these mcnsurcs, tlie rc.b,bl leatlers Iiopecl t o cocrcc the
Cherrapunji people (who werc friendly t o t l ~ c English) into
submission and cvcntually. t o capture Mr. Scott and his pnrty.*
They expected every help fro111 the IChBsi chicfs on the Sylhct side,
c ~ ~ e r y o nofe \vhonl had claims t o t h e lowlalids from the l~ossession
of mhich their predecessors had been driven out by thc English ill
1790. T h e rehcl chiefs thought t h a t i t \rould be an easy nlnttcr
to dcal with t h e English, their own idea Ilaving I ~ c c nthat although
powerful on the plains, -the English, \vould be no match for then1
in the h i l l ~ . ~ 7
T h e military forces of thc hill chiefs were estimated a t 10,000
strong. T h e whole male poplllation was armecl \vith bows, t ~ ~ o -
handecl swords and shields. T h e Ichlisis were expert marli~inen.'~
Practically the entire adult population of the IClliisi hills mas in anns.
Their lack of fire arms and ammunition was Inore than coinpen-
sated b y t h e possession of a n abundant number of natural
defences." T h e country on the Nunklow side was extremely
difficult of access and covered with t h e densest jungles affordillg
situations every hunclrcd yards ~vheraa dozen ~ n c nin ambush \Irere
sufficient to stop a b a t t a l i o i ~ . ~ ~
Thcir first act ~ r a st o destroy t h c road co115tructcd by Mr.
ourselves in the country ; land not to any offenc6 given hy :In individll~l."
(S. P. 1820 April 26, No. 10-n letter from Captain JVhite) .
" Manik ~ h ~ $ l iRaja
, of Cllelrrapudji was friendly to the Drilish nll(1
ultimalely enabled Mr. Scott to rscapa to Sy111~I. (S. P. IS^^^
Mny 8, No. 9 ) .
" S. P. 1829, June 96, No. 2.
" S. Y. 1829, Mlay 1, No. 49.
" They also secured a number of Mnllns (Rurmesc) ar~necl wit11 musltclq.
?R
S. P. 1829. April 25, No. 10.
The Kh% Insurrection 81
h o t t . And l o render i t impassable, they obstructed it wit]l trees,
palisades a t places ~ l l ddestroyed the t3ridges.:iu
They did not tlcpericl up011 their own stmngth alone. Ram
~vailahlerecords it W O U ] ~ appear ~ t h a t Tirut Singll indeed made
y r e ~ ~ t ' a t i o r l tso drive out the English. Tirut SinghVs
views and plans were of t h e most extended llature and involved
I,olitical combinations and alliarices whicli a ruler of his character
could scnrccly have been expected t o form. Ha\ling selected the
most intelligent prisoners from amongst the ,captives taken at
Nunklow, he s e ~ then1 t off untler the escort of the to Raja
Chanclra K i n t a , t o t h e Bhots." ant1 t o the Singplios \vith suitable
presents exciting them t o tlrrow off tlie yoke of the Engli.sh.:' I n iI
special message Tirut Singli cxhortetl Chantlr;~ I<int w I<,ri.;c. arid
assist them noul t h a t t h e English had I>e:n driven from the hills.:{"
He sccretly scnt another batch of G r o s t o Gauhati and to othcr
plnccs t o ascertain carefully the inilitary strcngth of the English.
The intelligence gathered was minute in detail and gave colour to
ihe supposition t h a t t h e informers were assisted by some Rengalee
muh.lo~is (clerks) and t h a t some of the Assa~llescwere also in league
with Tirut Singh.33 T h e rebellion was not confincd t o the Khiisis alone.
I1 spread westward and t h e G&ros joinctl h;~ntls with the Khiisis
living on the southern side of Lower Assam and threatened irruption
into Assam. T h e district of Goalpara was also threatened and the
Magistrate of Goalpara applied t o Captain White for immediate
reil~forcements.~~
The situation prcsented :a dismal picture in(lced. although no
political movement took place in Assam and no outward symptom
of disaffection appeared on the s ~ ~ r f a c cThe . Assamese \rere of
course infected with t h e spirit of disaffection and the slightest
Ar;crses on t h e part of t h e English would have thrown t h e whole of
~ k s k r nwfth t h e rebellion. T o make matters aorse, the supposed
death of Mr. Scott (whose whereabollts were not known for many
days tdllo+ing t h e first signal of rebellion) created in the e$es of
the Assa'mese nobility and t h e eastern chiefs a temporary interregnum
dissolving all ties and engagements and tended t o give free hands
P. P.
1831, Fkbruary 18, No. 30.
en P. P. 1891. Fkbru~trpR5. NO. 98.
'" P. P. 1031. May 90, NO.34.
P. P. 1831. May SO. Nos. 96-36.
7fl Pemherton's Report P. P%8.
1a
90 T k Annexation of Aasam
7vP.
"
P. 1832. July 9. No. 89.
Mr. Scott died in August 1891 and was srlcceedcd hy RIi.. Robertson.
P. P.IR90. October 99. No. SO.
The Khisi Insz~rrection
intl-oduced in Assaln in 1826,'%11d in \j,l~ich cA\,'ll women could
take part, though it failed to achieve ita object, was neverthe]ess one
of the boldebt nieasures e\.el- carried out 1 ~ yany servant of the East
I~ltliaCompany. This ollly shows ho\v denlocratic and advanced he
\,rws in his political views.
Personally he was polite and sympathetic and courteous t o a
degree: 11e would offer a chair even t o the nleanest of the Assamese
visiting him in his office. I I e was a great friend of t h e Assamwe.
Tirut Singh gave him l1111ch trouhle b r ~ the \\?as magnanimous enough
to appreciate the valour nnd heroism of this hill chieftain. With
1.egm-d to political matters his views were always moderate and he
was not in fnvorrr of t h e annexation of Cachar. His handling of the
Kh5si insurrection came in for a good deal of criticism by the home
authorities and we think with regi~rdt o this, his conduct was not
~I\VAJ?S above cl.iticisin. He made t h e initial hll~nderof laying a road
tlil.o~lgli:I tra~ctover which hc had no control.
The system of administration he introduced in Assam did not
procluce the result he aimed a t . Rather his "Chowdree system"
produced dire conseqllences and his judicial system became an engine
of convption and tyranny. So far as t h e effects were concerned,
the measures were failures indeed 1111t it must be remembered that
these \frere mistakes of omission and not of commission. M r . Scott
laboured under acute shortage of hands and practically fell a
victim to excessive work. H e was n very painstaking and hard-
worked official. H e clied a t t h e age of fortyfire. Had his career
ilot been cut short a t the prime of life. he could have bestowed
lasting bcnefit on the people of Assam. H e labollred hard h u t
Inhoured in vain because the time and place were against him.
Mackenzie t r i ~ l y says. "Had t h e scene of his life's labour been in
North-west or Central India. where the great problem of E ~ n p i r e
\vns then being worked out. instead of anlidst t h e ohscure jungles
of Assani. he urould occupy a place in history b y the side of Rfalcolm.
Eliphinstone and Metcalfe."T6
Mr. Robertson. taking charge of the affairs of Assam. embarked
llpon a new policy t o put a stop t o this harassing state of warfare.
He tried t o myin over the hostile KhQsis b y mild and conciliatoy
measures. Hc indulged in the hope that if the Khssis were once
plllSs1laded t o believe that the British had no mind t o subjugate the
~ v l l o lof~ ~the K h i s i hills. they would submit ~beadilyand allow them
(the Bi~itish) l ~ I t i n i a t e lt~o ~ e t n i ntheir hold over n portion of the
" Even the Conrt of 1)irectors in their cIespiltclles often referred to them
as "Small and independent principalities."
' ' P I . Letter from C o ~ ~ rNo.t 14 of 1834.
*' Pol. Letter Tro~n Court No. 24 of 1836.
Pol. I ~ t t e rfrom Court No. 44 of IRS5.
* P. P. 1R33. Marc11 25. No. 108.
P. C. 1834. May 29. No. 78.
P. C . 1894. May 29. No. 78.
The Khesi Imu.rrection
And finally whe~lquiet H'HS r e ~ t o ~illd the Khgsi hills, Captain
Listel., for his superior knowledge of the character of the people
.l\,-ho for the first time ill the aii~lalsof their race were rendered
tlnibutary",gh?a~ a p p o i l ~ t ~Political
d Age~ltwith power to negotiate
,~;th the king of Jaintifi on political niatters. His headquarters were
fixed at Cherrapunji. His task was clearly defined. Over villages
tiirectjy unde~. the control of the British. he was empowered to
rxercise niagisterial functions. T h e chiefs were allowed to retain
c.~ltirejurisdiction within their own limits ; only they had to submit
to the geiiel.al supcrilltendence of the Political Agcbnt. Both in the
case of the restored chiefs and in the case of the independent chiefs
the Political Agent was specially forbidden t o interfere further than
he was entitled to do politically. As the powers vested were certainly
vague or tlelihcrately kept vague. the Political Agcbiit \vas specially
empowered t o correspond direct with the Governor-General on
~)oliticnln ~ aters.
t Thus \Ire find thn t though on paper every possible
care nras taken to retain the general indcpendence of the Ichfisi
chiefs and though originally a separate status was observed with
regard to the states of Cherrii, Khyrim, Nonpstain. Cyngkin and
Yongspung. gl.ndually the line of distinction ula.; ol)litei-atc~dand all
the Khiisi states sank into the position of dependent principalit ies.lo0
I
r tain the control of t h e ci1ste1.11 f~.ontic~'.So tlic. \vholc n ~ i \ t t c r\V;I>
n ail1 rcfcr~~ctl t o t h e Agent i l l l t l )I(> \\.;I< r c ~ q l ~ c > t to
the transfer of Cent l , n I Assnm t o ;I ~l;ltiv(*Crov(\t~l~~ii~ll
c ~ lstiltc \\JlctJ1~1*
t off c'l't'cl "suc11
;t sl~pei.iorp~*ospectof tr;lllqrlillity as \vor~ldor1t \vVigll thc ol,jcc-tion
])oi~ltedout by
RIcan\\.hiIc the much cspcctc.tl nlinrtt: of the. G O ~ ( > I . I I ~ ~ - G C I ~ ~ ~ I
011 the point at issue \v:ls published. 1,ortl W i l l i i r l l l n(-lltill(+
ohservctl thnt in the nl,scnce of ;I fin81 reply ~ I V I I I 111.. Scott. th('
hest authority on rastpl.ll flbolltie~.mat terc, it ~vorlltl not 1)e politic
to have a final detcrmin;ltion on this inllmrt:l~lt ql~cstion. IT(' how-
pvc.1. rxpecet:btl that nlost of his filitli~~ns n-or~ltlt:~lly wit11 tllow of
MI.. Scott. Rcgnr(]ille tllc lllost i.o~lt~-ovcr-ial poi^^ t. tht- nbtth1ltiollof
the Sa(jivfi fl-ontirr, he s1lpportrd tllc vi(wpoi11t of 111.. s~~~.nt 1 :lll(1
\\;IS of ophioll that tllollgll " t l l c a lrl~illlchllikllcrof tllc. Siicldc.yH. btatiull
\voulcl be prrrely one of t.xptbt~se"it \\ its ~ ~ c ~ v c r t l ~ eclesirablt.. less ~ i ~ ,
fmred that if the colltrolli~ly I I ~ I I I ~\v\.rw I i \ SaLdigi,
the. yro\ri~lct. \\loultl 1 ) ~overrull by the. s ~ ~ r r o t ~ u \ t\ jll til ~ tl'i1)(b4, ~~
I-Ie11c.c. he tlc~fillitcbly lilicl t l o ~ vthat ~ ~ Si~cliyii i11u3t I)c ~ ~ l i l i ~ l t i lih ~ i ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ l
;I Hritish pobt 111lcli8ri L l ~ r t t t l t >ii11d ~ ~ t csl~t~ric~llccvl officc.~.. jib rcgalnclh
t he. buggestio~~ of thtb ('or~llcil t lritt thc clcfc~~rc*c~ of I
l l c b e i i s t t ~ rf ~~~' ~ ~ ~ t i ~ . ~
shor~ltlI)t. hit~ltlctlovt- 10 H;~jii(;irnrl)l~irSi~lgll,11c. t t ~ r ~ l t '(lO\\lll d th(.
proposal ;IS f i l l ~ t w sic. l c.otlle~~tling thii t thi.; chief i111tI It is H ( I I I ~ ~ ( * ~ ~ ~ ~
\\.ot~ltl I ) c h lookcvl 011 I)y ii I1 1)it rt irs \\li t11 jt.i110113>1. His Esc.ellf~llc.y
thereforth tlicl 11ot t l c . c > l ~ l i t at i t I I politic. to itIIo\v (:ntlll)l~ir Sillgll 10
l~i~\.cb ;l footir~gill tire pro\-i~lcc~ of Asham.
C'olllitlg t o t h e cli~.c~c.tcl~~cbstionof tllC ercctiou of H native
I ~ I O I I ~ L ~ ( ' ~ It >IIC
' , G o \ . e r l l ~ ~ ' - G ~ hcltl
~ ~ ~ ltI1i1 s t 3Il011ldhe
' i ~tl tllc. c l ~ ~ cion
tl('c.itlcxtl 1)y tl~c.solc col~siilc~.iitio~~ \vhc.tlier its retclttioi~or rt.storiltion
\\,ol~l(lgi\.c tllc Hritish ilt~tl t h e ~)op~~l:ic-e of the. tritct thc greatest
gootl. '1'11c~ clrlchtioll \\.;IS "purely olle of 1)olicy.'' As 111e count 1.y
l i i t t l I~cc~u c.onqr~c~rctl fro111 the. I3111.mc~se \\,it hout thc slightest assis-
1iilrc.c from thc espelletl liajas or fro111 itnJ7 otl~tbrI ) : I I ' ~ ~ .t l ~ c r ccol~ltl
llot 1 ) ~illl!' 11101'~lclililll Sel'\.icc 1))' illl>T Ollch. I t doubtf111
\\,hetller thc restoration of a constit ~ tion t h ~ n d ; ~ n ~ e n t a ldefective.
ly
\voultl lend t o any a d v a t ~ c e n ~ c noft t l ~ ccortntry. Rut a t thc same
tirne, the good side of the Xhonl r111t>could not 1)e o\rel-lookecl and
the contin~ri~nccof n r l institution for a periotl nlnlost without
t ~ ini ~ p l ein history ( ~ n o r ct ha11 fi1.e 11t~ndredyears) 1vol11~1secnl to
illclicate thilt there \\.it$ son~ethingintrinsically goocl in the original
teonstit~~tion.T h a t t h e i ~ ~ s t i t u t i ohacl n heen (leeply rooted in the
feelings of t h c people (lid not illso fail t o strike t h e imaginatioli of
ihtb Gover~ror-General. H e came t o t h e final coi~clusion "that the
i ~ ; ~ t i \ .g~\~cl.nrnent
e may be esta1,lished aided 11y 111e support and
ntl\licc of a British offic.er9' nncl he hoped t h a t such an arrangement
would pl8ove to be a ~ e a c e f u lsettlcinent, while c o n d r ~ c i ~t o~ ggeneral
cntisfnction. RIr. Scott \\?as directed t o suhinit n further report
contilining n specific plan for t h e erection of a native ~~ioilarchy
ansn-ering both these pllrposes. Pendinq this, t h c .Jot.hfit Division
\va$ t o bc governed b y a British officer."
As anticipated b y the Governor-General. t h c viclvs of M r . Scott
coincided wit11 hi< own. Rl'r. ?\cott I-eportcd t h a t a restored native
PI-inct. \vol~lel not h e ill,lr t o control the border tiibes l~nlcssthese
\vc>lsccompletely tlihi~1.1n~c1 ant1 ill thi1t CRSC they ill their t u ~ n\vo\ll(l
1 ) ~i1pi11 csl,o.ccd to :irn-lcd I-aidelas froni the t rans-front ic.1. ~.cgiolls.
.Ae ~~cgartlq thc second pl.opos;tl of lc;~\~ing the ilcfcnce p~-ol)lcn~ to
tJle C ~ ~ I I ~ ~ , J IG~LUIIIS,
O Mr. Sc.01t oIhtb~'\'c(I iha t tllea~j,rott.ctor3 would
be t l ~ ~ . l ~ c .i tl l t o plt11ltl~l.c~r.b
i111d with the i-th.sibti(llce of tlleir bl.ctJlrcll
ljving ci~sl\\ilrcl would begiu ii concerted cuulyaigll of kl-ror and
pilJagth. 1le rcl~l;il.kc(ll'llrthcr that if the f~.ollticrtl-acts were l o
i t L o I I I , it nvould alho bc ilecu.c.sr;tl:,. tu
gi\te
Is,{
t l . Ail'. C r i ~ \ \ ' f ~ ~~ rI I(I lY ' \ \ , C I ~ i t ~ ~ ( lK
~ ~ ~ ~ t l e c i c l cI3111 r i l ~ I ~ ~ \ ~~ [~ ~ ~ -~ j , ~ ~
:111d declared ~ ~ n t ~ y ~ ~ i v o ill c i l~l l; yI \ . ~ IofI I .l'uri111cli~rsillgll.
W'IICII h l r . 1lol)crtson \\.:IS i i p l ~ o i ~ ~ tiIs t v lScott'h hucc.cshor Ilc
lot only c i ~ l l t ~111)otl l to sul)lnit his hcbntiulcb~~ts on t 11c clilinll, of tile
t\\.o l'i\'ill C'ii1lclitlilte;s 1 ) ~ \V;IS t who i~skcvlfor 11is 011 ille \\.ider
cll~rhtioliof the f c i ~ s i h i l i tof ~ ~.st>ttiog111' ;I 11;1ti\,cgovikrlllllc'~fl ill
\rie\\
'v.
P. 1832. July 30, NO.92.
15
The Annexation of Assarn
criminal law ill co~lsoriarice with the spirit of Britisll jurispruclence.
H e t h o ~ g l l tthat if t h e prclirui~iitries werc ;lcceptecl by lllr Raja,
the internal administration should be left entirely iu his flauds,
With regard to tlie pmposal uf Mr. liubertao~ithat tlie Usr Scllilyati
sllould be requirccl to pay a tribute irl lieu of the hupply of a toll-
tingent, that, he felt, was a matter to be decicled by the oficer
colnmaridi~iga t Jorhat.l6
The Vice-Preside11t in Cou~icilconcurred with the 111;lill fillding,
of the Governor-General but with regurcl to the retelitioll of Jorliit
as the headquarters of the Assanl Corps situ;lted as it would be
within a foreign state, they doubted whether such an amangcment
would be a t all wise. They regarded Bisliwanith as tlie most
desirable station for the principal post of tlie British forccs in
Assam. The main poiilts thus settled, Mr. Robertson was called
upon to interview Purandar Singh to ascertain his competency.
The Agent was specially forbidden from communicating the final
decision of the government to Purandar Singh a t that stage.17
Aocordingly, Mr. Robertson had two interviews with Purandar
Feb.Iss3 Singh a t Gauhati. H e was highly impressed with his outward
appearance and manners. H e reported that Purandar Sing11 (who
was a t that time a youngman of t\venty five) was a person of amiable
manners. His countenance was pleasing and address good. His
natural abilities were respect;~ble and his disposition mild and
pacific. The Agent, however, did not find him very active and
energetic. But these disqualifications he ruled out as, in his opinion,
they were not required of a dependent king. Major White, Lt.
Mathew and Lt. Rutherford. the local officers, were all decidedly of
opinion that "Purundar Singh was the person best fitted to be at
the head of the state to be created".18 On receipt of this favourable
report, the Calcutta authorities authorisxl Robertson to take
Purandar Singh into confidence and enter into negotiations with him
to settle the terms of his installation.lg
Ma..1833 T o return to Chandra Ksnta. When the intimation that the
British Government had finally decided to place Purandar Singh on
the masnad of Central Assam reachcd the ears of Chandra Kinta, it
came as a great shock to him. He had lived so long on hopes alleged
to have been held out to him by the late Mr. Scott and when he
sl~ddenlgfound himself thrown over. he was deeply disappointed.
In P. P. 1832. November 5 . N o . 4 .
'' P. P. 1832. No\-eml~er5 . N o . 5 .
Ib P. P. 183.7. Fehrl~ary 4. No. 123.
lU P. P. 1833. February 4. N o . 1'24.
lie a mcnioriul couched in pathetic language. He appealed
lo the British Government t o reconsider his case and t o issue an
directing the R a j t o be restored t o him. H e threatened t h a t
he alld his family "woulri p u t a n end t o their existence" if his appeal
\yclse rejected. Needless t o say that i t was an idle threat.2"
The Governol.-Gener~I-i11-C:oi~~1cil informed hini t h a t they "could
not believe that their accredited agent the latc M r . Scott had
committetl anything t o Chn11d1.a K i n t a on their behalf." After
pinting out the cil-cumstances which led them to intervene in the
fiffafbsof Assam they plilinly told the ex-king that the princes of the
of the country (evidently referring t o Chandra Kiinta and Prlrandar
Singh) \\rho wclSe suspcctcd t o be communicating with the Burmese
cven in thcir detention ~vhile p~.ofes,ing friendship t o the English.
had no claims t o the throne of A s s ; ~ m . With a \~iew,however, t o
contributing t o his comforts and t o saving him from the humiliation
that might attend his continued reside11~c.ein t h e kingdom of Purandar
Singh they requestetl him t o select an appropriate spot for his future
t.esiden<ccwithin the Company's territories.*'
Had Chandra Kiinta a n y right t o the throne ? When the E a s t
India Company wrested t h e c o ~ i n t r yfrom the hands of t h e Burmese
\\rho had thoroughly s~lhduedit. none of the princes rendered them
any help. Rathci. they were found treating with the enemy. and
Chandra R ~ n t ais said t o have taken a leading part in the insurrec-
tions that were set in motion t o drive the English o u t of t h e countqr.
Henc? the princes had neither legal nor moral right t o claim t h e
throne. Secondly. M r . Scott. when recommending him. did not give
any ~rndertaking. nor did he hold out any promise. When the
British Government made a general declaration on the eve of t h e
Anglo-Burmese conflict t h a t it 11lo111d not annex any part of Assam.
there was no commitment in f a v o ~ of ~ r any p a r t i c ~ ~ l aprince.
r When
at last they restored a part of the kingdom t o a11 Assamese prince
after long scren years. they chose the one whom they considered
to be the fittest. Chandra Ksntn \vns no doubt amare of these facts:
I'
if not. his case \r7as indeed. H e 1 1 ~ ~a swilling victim of his
t own ill~~sion.
b1 In th. mmntime. Dreliminarr alrnnqernents \Yere made and a
4r1, treatr n7as concllldcd on the and 34arch. 1899 a t Gallhati hetween
thr Enst Tndis Compnnv 2nd P n m n d a r Finah. Rv this treatv the
C o n ~ n n n rpnvp O V ~ Pt o Rain Prlrandar Sin& Upner -4ssarn e?itend-
inp from Rllrllit t o thc Dh?nciri river and the Rain aerced to prrr
* Out of this sum it was proposed to set apart Rs. 6.0001- for the s l l p ~ r t
of Raja Chunder Kanta and mother thousand rupecis for the support of the Mnni-
porean wife of Raja Pmunder Singh. It was reported that the neglect and bad
treatment the Muniporean princes had received from her hlisband had given great
offence to her kinsman Gumbhir Singh. (P. P. 1833. May 30. Nor. 8 6 - I l l ) . .
22 P.P, 1883, May, SO, No. 91.
Restoration 117
" Even the Govanor-Genera] admitted afterwards that "There CHI^ be lilile
doubt that both P o o r ~ l d e rSill& and the B U ~ H
Sernaputtee will agree to any term
which may be yoposed and they will likely endeavour to indemnify tliemselves for
their concession by the usual course of exactions."-P. P. 1R3S. May. 90. N o . 88
?
.
" P. 1833, May 30, No. 91.
ar
P. P. 1833, May 30, No. 143.
'' Foreign 1838, April 18, No. 56.
20 P. P. 1833, Ma3' 30. NO. 119.
27 Letter to Court No. 2! of 1894.
iufluerice with the populace i111d chiefs than his rival Puraudar Singh*
who had been installed as king. The Sucliyii Khawa Gohain, the
chief of the Khiimtis, who wns a great adherent of Chalidra G n t H
ditl not welconle the rcstoratioli of Puraridar Singh.28
When Ch;indni Kiiiitn foulld his riv;~lPulrndar Singh iirtuil]ly
illstalled as the Raja of Ceiltral Assam, he was overwhelmed with
grief. IIc niadc i~notherattempt to have his claim recognised by
the Sr~prenlc. Government illld subrnitttd a fresh ~~~('nlorial to the
Governor-Ge~icral. I t \ u s iis usual full of invectives against Purandar
Singh. After i~tlduci~ig the 11sua1 proofs in support of his rightful
claini, finally he held out tlic "lure of goltl" to the Company and
offerccl it higher bid for the kii~gdom. He oflcred to pay Rs. 70,000
as tribute to the British Government." But a11 his supplications
were In \ram.
111 the nlcnntime, Captain Pemberton's report threw a flood of
light on the conditions of Manipur, Cachar and Assam. I t pro-
ducctl a change in the hitherto indifferent attitude of the British
Government towards their newly acquired territory and was largely
responsible for the vigorous application of "the new policy"" as
enunciated by the Court of Directors in 1834 (vide, p. 122, Foot
note) the! effect of which we shall describe in the following chapters.
Mainly on the strength of this report, the Governor-General
submitted a fresh minute (27th March, 1833) on the advisability
of the restoration of Central Assam to Purandar Singh. I n it he
expressed doubts concerning the correctness of his own findings1
(which had already been given effect t o ) . H e called the measure
as "one of somewhat hazardous policy." H e held that "by giving
up the specified portion, we surrender the third of the population
without being able to diminish in any great degree our establishment
and consequent expenditure and we shall be compelled to preserve
our advanced position to protect a helpless and probably ephemeral
power." For this reason he expressed his willingness to reconsider
the affairs of Upper A~sam.~"~~t it was "a fait accompli": an
agreement had been entered into with Pllrandnr Singh and he had
(1 1
already been placed on the throne.
[,; 1
I
:"
'"P.P. P. 1833. May 30. No. 109.
P. 1833. ,4ugust 29. N o s . 70-71.
33 Gait History of Assam P. 897. 211cl Ed.
120 The Annexation of Assam
event of rnaladnli~iistratio~~, the Court of Dircvlors observed th;,l
this would lead them t o interfere 011 iiunicrous occasio~ls nntl
a p p r e h c ~ d e dt h a t thcy would a t le~igth be volupt.1lc.d to 111iclotheir
work alld p u t a n c~ntl to the Go\rerlinicnt which tIlcy haci cillletl
into bcil~g. They feaiocd t h a t drlring this i~~tchrvc~nirr~ ~>c.l~iocl
tllc
people of Upl>cr A S S ~ I IWOLIIC~I~ I>e rnt~tlcthcl victini of irli tttiliccessary
experiment. Untler t h e circurnstanccs, tlic. (levision of the S ~ I ~ I * ~ ~ ~
Government t h a t thc matter wo~iltlbib clcfcbrred "until M r . Hobcrtsoll
shall have had time to make hinlsclf Inore tIiol.o~rghly acquiii~ite~]
with the statc and cincunistances of thc countly" guvc t h c ~ rnot ~ a
little relief.34
B u t when t h e news of the final cstal)lishrnent of the native
Government reached the Court of Directors along with post-rzsto-
ration minute of t h e Governor-General in which he expressed
doubts regarding the estnblishment of such n nlonarchy (\vhich he
had formerly advocated) until 11e hacl had tiiilc t o examine thc
question de nozjo, they strongly ccnsurcd t h e conduct of the Supreme
G o v e r n m ~ n tdescribing their a c t a s "an ill-advised measure."
T h e Dirmtors were angry because in t h c first place the Bengal
Governlnent had made over t h e administration of a n extensive
district with a population of 2 lacs and resources adequate enough
t o support many timcs t h a t number, without a previous reference
t o them when the inutter u7as of no such nrgency. They were all
t h e more angry becaus? t h e authors of the transaction themselves
entertained strong doubts as t o t h e espcdiency of the measure
they had initiated. T h e Court of Directors thought of issuing an
order for annulling this measure, b u t on second thoughts they
shrank from doing so since this ~voultlhave weakened t h e authority
of the Bcngal Government. B u t a t t h e same time t o prevent the
r?curren,ce of such a mistake they issued a n express injunction that
"henceforth no portion of t h e public revenue and still less the
government of any portion of our territory b e permanently alienated
without a previo~isreference t o us Por our authority and sanction."
B u t though t h e Hoinc authorities condemned the action of the
men on t h e spot, they were liberal enough t o let t h e matter stand
and t o give their blessings t o the political child of t h e Bengal Gbv-
crnment, expressing the hope t h a t "it may he attended with better
conseqiiences." T h e y were pleased t o learn t h a t the engagement
had been executed in t h e form of an agrwment and not in the form
of n treaty ns originally determined ~ i p o n . ~ ~
* (Vide P. f? fool n o k ) .
16
122 The Annexation of Assam
~ ~ thel dwhole of India felt the impact of it.' Nearly all the prin-
cipalities of the Brahmaputra valley a11d the hilly 13cgions of Cachtlr
and Jaintia were annexed to the Company's dominions in Assanl
one by one in the course of two decades. And to this tale we
turn in the next chapter. Already the small tract of Cachar had
been annexed to British tei~itory.
* Lord \\rillia~n Bentincek was lied lo l l ~ epolicy o l 'Let alone' Ily illr
nu~liol-itiesin Fhglantl when he came to India (IHBR) . But he departed from it
tlrssticnlly ill home csnues, nr~tl his masters (the Court of 1)irectors) rormulated
the polig. of annexatio~~in 1894. This expansion'isl plic8y was more cleurly
e~n~hasiserlby them in 1841 i~nd was itpplird v i ~ r o u s l g in thr time o l Lortl
I)al housie.
CHAPTER V
SECTION I
'
S. P. 1836, June 43, No. 18.
* 'STb Raja. however. was no sooller restored to the throl~r than llc
Wmmenced a series of unsparing exactions on his own He almost killed
the trade between Manipur and Sy]het by imposing the heaviest transit dues 011
811 articles of rne~chm'diue. He bellaved nlost tyrannically towards the n f ~ n i p u r i ~
who had settled in his territory. His tribute also fell into arrears. It ~ ~ u 11~\.e
l d
been i m w i b l e to this state of thillgs to go 011 indefinitely" Gait-"Histor?.
of Assam" Page 304, 2nd Edition.
134 The Annexation of as sun^
As before. troub1t.s interrial as \!.ell iks ('xlv1.11~1
W ~ I ' C ill bbrc
Pimucia1 for the unhappy Raja. Fiuu~lcial tl.oi11)Ieb fir~bt btt~l*cdhi111 ill th,
difficulty face. Though t hc. Coll~n~ihsiollrr of Sylhet reported t h a t cultivntioll
rvas lliakilig rapid progrcbs:, it~lrlt hilt thi. H i ~ j a\voulil c.xperienCe no
(lifficlrlty ill payill(: the tl-il~utcreguhl*l>-.p1.0g1.c~~ \\'its 110t so rapi(1
as expibctt.cl."he tlsil)utc. fell into arrclarb as the (:alcutta
I - i t i ~nppl.c~hc11dct1,
s h ~ thih
t \\.iks 110t t I 1 ~ . f a i ~ l tot' (:ovi~lda CIlllndra.
Cachilr hat1 1)cc.n one of the theatres of opcriltion duriny tht.
\\.iir a l ~ t lthe pl-olongl'tl stay of the Btlrnlcbse soltiirrs irl that quarter
hikc1 reduced the country side l o s ~ c hii state of \vretchedlress and
poverty that eve11 Mr. Tucker. Comniissiorler of Sylhet, hitd to
confess that "it would q u i r e years of peilcr ancl gooti management
to place it. in H, condition c;q)nble of liquidating the tribute payable
bj. the Rajil.;' During the reign of Raja Krishna C h n ~ d r a .Cachal'
had yielded a revenue of one lac of rupees. After his death thc
a n ~ o t l l ~fell
t off and tht. colidition of the country began to deterior;ltc
owing to prolongccl incursions nlade by the rehe1 Tr115l:im and thc
Manipuriali l)~.inces. Thc Birrmese invasion ~conipleted the ruin of
the countr~.. A11 the lards east of Rikrampur and Panchg5m were
thro\\ln out of cl~ltivationand a large number of cultivators were
eithcl. ltilled or carried into captivity. After the ~ o ~ ~ c l u s iofo ntllc
I?caCcB, n fgjV parqawis nrerc reoccupied. but still most of the villages
\Irere nearly empty and no revenues were forthcoming from them?
So Raja. Govinda Chi~ndritapplictl to thc British Government for
~.einissionof tributc for the ycnrs 1895-1S26 and 1886-1827.5
Mr. Scott atpporteil the petition of Govinda Chandra nlicl
~ . ~ ~ ~ ~ o t i ~ m tthat
. n d e cas
l the Paramount Power had failed to afford
itdcqtlrte protection to the people of Cachiv, the necessary remission
~.houldbc c r n n t c d . V h e clefatlltina Rnjn was granted his request:
b u t in return for the co~~cessionwhich the Supreme Government
trrnlcd a "boon", he loas rcqilired to constrrlct n good road accross his
coulltry faciliting easy communications between Svlhet and Manipur.
At the same time, the Silpreine Government again called upon the
Con~missionerof Sylhet to ascertain from the Raja if he was willing
to hand over his kinedoin to the East Tndin Company as "hc was
;,dj,anceClin yc:lrs, hodilv infirn~i ~ n dhad 110 heir. t o srlnrrrd hi1119'.'
..
2 S. P. 1828, September 15. NO. 57.
b 2 S, C. 1897, November W ,No. 43.
1
4 S. C. I8m. August 14, NO. 6
5 S. C. 1827, November 3. NO. 44.
6 S. C. 1827, November 9.3. No. 43.
7 S. (1, 1897'. November 23. No. 44.
Plains of Cva,char
Hardly hat1 ( i ~ \ ' i l ~ ( l Charldrit
i~ ~ himself frorn the
ex t I . K .ted
$alleial tanglr, whell ht. was faced with external troubles of a v r r ~ ' %.I
,,yious 11ature. 111 the 110rth he was again inenaced the dm-
rebellious T u h r ; i ~ ~ his
r . old C'llC'lklJ' ; ill the south-west the Kukis Hiere
their occ~siorialmarauding practices with impunity, and,
\"orst of ell, i l l the south-east the aspiring and unsrcrupulous Prince
~alnbhirSingh of Milniprlr h c ~ g ~tno encroach upon his ancestral
I,ossessions.
This time the hhl-ewd Tuliifini, bib old eneniy, adopted a new
rapo on-a moral ollc-to weaken the authority of Govinda Chnndrii
and armed with a legal injunction issued against him by the forty Troubla
ScmpongsXof the Cuchuri tribe, questiorled the authority of Govinda .ru,irin, from
Chandra as the lawful Raja of Cachar. Tiiliiriini w i i h not ipno1)lr
clnrmy to bra easily brushed aside as sonit. histol-ians suggest. The
entire Cachari tribe d\velling in the hills backed up the pretensions
and claini of this rebel chief. It is stated that in consequence of
the \~iolationbay Raja Govinda Chandra of long established custonl
:rlici usages by which t h e ministers of S t a t e as well as Raja of Cwhar
should bc chosen from amongst the forty Sempongs, the Cacharib
separated t hemsclves from his :tut hority and t ra~isferred their
allegiance to Tuliil-iim. T h e forty Senlpongs. perhaps under the
influence of T u h r 5 m . submitted a memorial to the East T n d i i i
Company alleging t h a t a s Govinda Chandra had violated the ~ ~ ~ c i c n t
S o \ .. 1H3b
Ilsilgc of the country and had ruled tyrannically he had forfeited their
confidence? Though later on it uras proved that the Sempongs hat1
no right to elect t h e kiug."'for the time 1)eing this declaration
;iccentuatcd t h e difficulties of Crovillda Chandra t o the great
advantage of Tuliill'iim who now hecamc his rival and made prepam-
tions to seize his kingdom,
Towards t h e end oF 1828 TulBriin~ made a swift descent to
Dharampur and, after committing numerous outrages and nlurders.
yetired t o his r n o u n t a i ~rctren
~ t ~~nmolested." At this period 01~illg
Forty Sempongs are 1101 so many noble fanlilies but include the a l d e
body of the Caclw People who ere divided illto forty tribes (Fislier's ncmunt-
p.c. 1894, May 141, No. 100).
". C. 1829, May 30, No. 9.
lo Fisher reported Clint "the Sen~pongsIlud no lidit to elect the killer. ''I'YI~
only inslance adduced was supposed to 11nj.e taken place about 1.50 y n r s ago nllell
Raja Kirti Chunder wm elected to tlie vncniit throne 11.v ille forty %rnpor~v
(Kachari people at large) ".
Tularanl also e~lkredthe territory of Jaintia with n ~lu~nbcr of ONO OW^^^
con~rnitted violmce there. The Raja of Jrlintin reqnrslrd Mr. Scott l o expel
him from liis territory.
196 The Anuexatwn of Assam
to old age he relinquished the command of his army in favour
his cousins Govinda Riim and Durgir Charan who in Mal&, 18%
again swooprtl down upon Dharnmpur iilid prevclitchd the officers of
Govinda. Chandra f r o n ~collwtilg rents fro111 the people. Govillda
&m and his party were repulsed by the Inen of Govinda Chandra
M.mhy but again Govillda RIIU cnrne on niost unexpectedly, fell 011 thy
people of Govindit Chandrt~ and carried off ltially its prisoners,
Thus people living in the cr~itralpart of Cachar were cons(antly
harassed by this intel.nccine warfare. The collectior~of thch revenue
\\.as stopped arid u large number of illhabitants fled in corlfusioll and
arrived on the northern bank of the river Kapilii. Govinda Char&
iu dcspair asked for aid from his Suzerain.'"
Things would have been calamitorls for Govilidtl Chandra had
Govindariim rcontinued to attack him. But just a t this stage the
latter turned his arms against his brother TuNiiriin~ who fled p s t
haste to JaintiA. A few months later, with the aid of a Manipurian
detchment sent by Raja Gnmbhir Singh, Tuliiriim recovered his lost
posscssious aud sent Govindaidm fleeing towards Dharampur for
protection where he w a s a r m received by Raja Govinda
Chandra.13
Things were a t such a pass when Mr. Scott, to avoid further
bloodshed and dispute, appeared on tfie scene in the role of a
mediator and adjusted the differences between Govinda Chandra
and Tuliii-tim. Mr. Scott proposed to Govinda Chandra that he
should appoint Tu1drii.m as his Seniipati and give him formal charge
of the hill districts he already held. He warned Govinda Chandra
that in case of non-compliance he would forfeit all claims to the
future interkrence of the protecting power on his behalf against
TuLfirn. T o Tuliii6m he also made similar proposals and told him
that he would be formally confirmed in his possession by the ~ a j a
of Cachar. but that he should make no further encroachment and
5hould behave peaceably. Mr. Scott warned him that any infrioge-
n ~ e n tof these conditions mould be punished by his exp1llsion from
the hill portions he held. Raja Govinda Chandra at first turned
down the proposal of Mr. Scott. He was not in a mood to recognise
his late table servant as the chieftain of the hilly tracts of Cachar
1~7hichonce belonged to him. But subsequently he became more
and accepted in t h c main the proposalsoof Mr. Scott."
3 . ~ No. 9.
S, P. 1430. F e b r u ~ ~66.
5 S. C . lRO0, ,Jul,v 31. No. 9 0 .
9 P. P. 1833. .July 43. No. 66.
The Period of Annexation 131
g ~ ( 011
I the Harik ill Caellar. l ) r c \ f r ~ ~ ttrhdr lllerrllallts of Cilellar
Sylhrt from bl.inging ~ O W I I their goods for sale into
,, had heen the ctlstuni ;lad compelled them to ~ i s ~ ~ 0 5 1 ~
,f their melvhandisr t o Maiiipurinn ~nerchantsa t Chllndrapur a t
rates. He i~lsoestablished his owii thanas in the territorieh
of Govintlii Chanclrit and h i th~,n&hiru 1c.vic.d tolls from tile
r i , s \\'htlt \Vah \170rStA,hc ))egi~llto c.o~lllllitacts of violence
~ ~ ~ l l a itll(l,
(lpotr tllo C'achttris of the plains.
It is rcportetl tlltlt some of these oppressi\rc 111~q5"rv~ Gtim],hir
Sillgh atlol)tt'd by \yay of retwliation I)c.c.ause the extortions practisd
ilgai~~stthe b1~nil)uriiiri lnci-chants I)?, thc. 1thsscc.s of the y],c;ta ill
i ~ ~ ~ OII 1ht1 part of the
Cachar \vc.re. rlothing l ~ u t" ~ r n b l ~ l s hp1rrl~tlc.r.s
officersof Go\-intia Chunt1t.1~". B r ~ tGambhir Singh's c.ond11ct I>cc.;llllr*
*o injulmiousto Illeinterests of tllc. 1.c1ignin~i ~ l o n i ~ ~of . c lCi~c*hiir
~ that
(lr.er~the 1)il t i ~ 1 of 1 ~MI-. Scot1 \\'its ~yhairst(y1. After all p l l q ~ i r > , ,
Ia5ting for months. he. \ r i t l ~t h e al~l)ro\li~l of the Go\rernor-General.
sent a htrong letter1 of lSenlonstrilnce to G a m b l ~ i rSingh ~ v n r n him i~~~
i~gain~t t hehe acts o f \.iolenc.c ant1 hrignndnge a n d threa tening hinl
with esplrlsioil from Ciicahar if thejr c o n t i n ~ ~ e c l . ~ ~
We hi^\'(' SCVII h o \ ~G o \ ~ ~ I I C ( ~I IH: I I I C I ~
\ Y~
A Y as\ilil~'(I ~ I W I I I ;ill
quartcl.~I)y his enemies. TTe \V:I Y gil'cw no blseathing-,pace. Besicles
thew cstcrilal trolrblcs t h e w were other tlifficar~lticsof il \vc~my cliffel.ent
nat11l.c in -tore for him \vhic.h also jeopnrtlised his po:.ition.
Accortlir~~to T r ~ c k e r the^-cx were sc.~.iot~sab~tscs pre\lalent in hi3
territory. ~vhiclicalled for t h c ~inter\.ention of the P w r a ~ n o ~ ~Power. nt
Thcrc \Irel-e also iilee~cant(lelnailds for the transfer of his kingdoni
to the ctrslody of the East India C o l l q ) a ~ ~ yTheec . "\ye~atiou.;
intrusions" c a ~ ~ s chiin d great 111iea~inc~ss of niind. He was l r n h a p l ) ~
in other rc.,kpects also. 1Je had no iss~re and thcrc were many
rlairnalzts alicl acpirants t o his thronc i ~ n dhe lived in constan1 fe:llS
of being murderetl h y his enemies.
The y s t e r n of ntlrniniqtration in Cachal. (luring t h r tilnr of
Gotlinda Chanclra nppe,q~.edt o h e tyrannical t o 1\11.. Tucker (Corn- Jl)tel~bi\I
missioner of Svlhrt). ITC reported that though the soil of the diffietdli~~
~ l-ieh. the 1)eoplr werr l,~nvclrbinlly poor hwnllsr "th('
c o l ~ n t lwas
man who p ~ l tthe see(] i l l the hnd no sec~lritgthat he ~rollld
reap the profitq of his lilhOllr". Tt \F.;IC ills0 :~llcgrdI)? Tllcltrr 1h.t
Raja co\,ill(l;~Cl,an(l~.:lhall prohihitr(1 the rupo~-tntionof i.i['c. Thf'
l ~ ~ o e h ; , noft ~ . ~ ~ ] l ; l ~~ t ~ ~ i ~l ol t ~l a~ li~~.g(l
~ ~ ill~;lntity
l ] ~ of $ ~ ~ l I ~ l
* Paddy was selling in Cachar for 16. I7 and 18 ~nauntls For the w e e ill
18?S whilst in our o m district (Sylhet) the same description of grain sol(l at the
rate of 3 m n u d s for the rupee whole& and 0:. hi rhe Baznrs"-Fro~l~ If'..
Tucker's account (S. C. 1829, May 30, No. 2).
2.5 S. C. 1829, Ma.y 30, No. 2 .
26 9. C. 1829, May 30. NO. 6.
The Period of Annexation 7
133
yjulldrring the111 tha11 illmn the ( . O I I I I I I ~ It~
I ~ ~ itt la w e \\.JIU are pw-
all better off than the lnrn of the Sylhet district as tllcj.
cultivate huperior .soil ilt H lower rate."" A h for the cllargcs (,f
,jefalcatiollle\ltdlt.tl against Govinda c'halldru by (;iiit find that.
,xcept for the Bt~ligaliythars 1439 8: 1933 ( 1826 & 1827 A.D.) t h ~
rt.\.enues of subscq~lt~lltyears \vercA prlnctrr;~lly paid H I I ~ this wit$
?\.en admitted by Mr.
So w t b find that the PtmotectingPower Ilad no 1 ~ a 1and seriou,
FPie\.ancrsagairist the Cacallnr R a j alltl that the tyranny practised
thc Haja us not .so it1)ominable as Gait asserted. Eve11 the
Go\re~.nor-Gcnel~al had t o admit. "Tilt* secontl article of the treaty
does ~ ~ give o t u s the right to insist on the abolitiol~ of the rice
monopoly in Cachar aLi 1)eing decidedly injlrriol~sto thc illterest of
his own subjects and sul~versiveto the impro\rcment of the country"
a i d , he went on. "111 the internal affairs of the cor~nttywe lla\~eI I O
right to interfere 50 loilg a s 11is measure tloes not injllre our
~ubjects."'VThe fact is-thc Raja was rno1.e weak t h ~ nwicked nncl
lliq administration was inefficient.
1
S. C. 1s8n. August 14. NO.3.
:{' P. P. 1830, May 14, No. 38.
:". Y. 1830. May 14. No. 38.
"
3. P. 1830. May 14. No. 4.5.
Pc' P. C. 1839. April !I. No. 44.
arndra's tleiitl~ gtl\.(> Gamhhir Singh full lice~~se to carry on his
deigns rgviost C a d a r and he gradually swallowed the whole of the
astern portion between the Barilk and the Jiri rivers and even his
tjuaerainlater on failed to rnak(1 him disgorge what he had obtained
means.
Enquiries revealed tiltit lowa1.d~ the early part of 1890 Raja
(;oviilda Chtlndra, perhaps encouraged t)y the revised tittitilde of
~ ~ r a m o uPower
l~t tonlards the atloption y ilestion as disclosed in t l ~ c
interview Mr. Scott had with him in July of the previous year took
!,reparatory stcl~sto udopt a child. Gnmbhir Singh who had an eye
on Cachar tlnd who had been encroaching all these years on the
lerritories of Govinda Chttlldri~feared thut the proposed step woulcl
foil the ambitioll of liis life ant1 entered into league with Bidyinilnd,
tllc British Vi~kilat ~ h c court of Cro\~indaChandm, H i m Govindn.
Bidyinand's Muktea~',one B ~ l t ~ r i iI-Iivildiir
n~ an officer of Govindfl
Chandra, arld liis (Gi~nlbhirSingh's) own BhiindBri, Gourshyiim, to
put an cnd to the life of Govintla Chandru. As it result of the
investigt~tion,Riimgo\rinda. Baliiriini and others were apprehended
find sent for reg111nr trial, and \Irere sentenced to death."
The Sul)remc Government re\?ie\ved their cases and the se~~lencc. April. 1RS3
of death' passed on them was conlniuted to iniprisonment and t r ~ n s -
pol*tation for lifc. They \\rere sent down to the Tenasserim coast
to serve their terms of iniprisonment. Gourshyiim was not even
apprehended, though there \\?ere direct proofs against him. because
"that \vould 11a1.e been tantamount to the pi~blicaccus~ltionof his
onrn master Gunibhir Singhv.42 I t wits strange indeed that 110
verbal remonstrance was administered to Ganlbhir Singh, the villain
of the piece." Had the Supreme Government adopted stern
nmsures against their pampered ally ;IS early as February 1930.
when the Cachar-Mnnipnr dispute \vas heading to a crisis. Gambhir
Singh ~ o u l dnot have dared to take this extreme and fatal step.
Gait is totally silent on this p i n t . I n his treatment of the second
phase of the reign of Goj~indaChandra nowhere does Ganlbhir Singh
come into the pictllre. thollgh nct~lally it \!?as he who dominated
the whole shon?.
In the mcnn~vl~ilc.nftcl. the trssnssinntion of Raja ~ o ~ i n d ~
'' P. C. lssa.
" April 9. No. 44,
2. C. 1834, April 9, No. 56.
" Mr. Scott tried to arrest Goiuhh;r SinXh n l ~ elhe~ ~lalter cbnnlc to S.\'bet
Lo attend the festival of Ratha Jatra. hut 11e tvns directed 11o1 lo take such
by the Supreme Government.
(P. P. 1890. June 96. Nos. 45-36).
18
Cllaodr;~,tlle British t i o v o n ~ n c ~p~~l t~ l ~ l i s il~ ~l ~c cr l~ ~ l i ~ l i ~ i l livti t~ ii ~ul g~ ~
llic ~ ~ ~ i l l l to~ l l t ~C ~ e h i ~Raj 1 ~ c;tses within hix
l ' to p I ' ~ ' ~ e l itheir
\ ~ e e k s . ~'l'liib
: ~ rcsi~lt~cl i l l ;I .spate of ( a l i ~ i ~to~ ~tllo
s \.AC'NII~ tlll~Ollt'.
Tllc t11ro11c\v;ts chimed 1 . ) ~ Go\silitl;t C:ht~nd~*u'~ \vitlo\vetl Hil!ih, I),.
his rcal)elliotrh h~ihject l'ulitrfin~, fort). Sth~lkpo~lg.s of tl~~h CRCtl;lr
tribe allel ~ \ * c ' I I hj' his 111orti11enemy (innhhir Singh, r i l l of wlroll,
regurdctl t hc~nscl\~c..sits t llc legit imi~te .successors to t 11c decbeased
j Ganlbhir Sillgh Iiad ;in iiltcr~iati\lt*P ~ O ~ I O S11e ~ I illso
I ; apl>lied
to take tlic caot~ntry011 lease for a n111ilbt.r of ychilrb. I-Ie ~voul~l
;illo\\. tlo opport ullity to slip. 'rhe Supreme ( ; o ~ ~ c r ~ i ninstructed ~e~~t
t he local officers to inake a sifting coquiry illto each of thesc claim,
i~ntl to t e ~ ~ t l etheirr hentiments 011 how Lest C n c h ; ~ ~could . hr
tlisposetl of.
Gamhhi~.Sir~ghaftcbr l~erlioani~lg "ho\v he 11i1tl hthen ],assing hi*
tlit,\.s o\rcr\vlieln~ed with grief since the cot~ntryof Hitjinibhn went
o r ~ tof his posscssior~"prayed thnl the cot~ntryhc givcn over to him
Claim of
011 lease for a tcl-nl of t\venty years at least, if it be ]lot retaillcd by
GPm,.,hir
Siligh thc British. He oft'cred to pay tl~clst1111of Rs. 15,000 as re\lcnl~c~~
i111d pronlised to providv his niece, the \\,idow of the In tr Raja
Krishna Chandra with ample nicans of sr~bsiste~~ce.* His claim was
strongly advocated hy Captain Grant. thr11 resirling at RIanil)ur,
\vho welcorrled the chance of l~l~itiligthe Manipurians and thc
Cacharis, tlic two barbarous tribes. under it Government sufficiently
powerful to keel) then1 in order. H e pointed out that the farniing
of C H C ~ N toP Gi~mhhir Singh \vould enable hini, a niiln "almost
destitute of revenue." to built1 I I a~ stable and efficient Go\~ernmcnt
at Manipur which ~voulcl he conduci~~e t o the safety of the N.E.
rcgion. Hc thought it ~vouldneutralise the possibilities of oppression
on the part of Gnmbhfi Singh if Cachar were given to him on lease
for H nl~rnl>erof years with the prospect of conditional renewal.
And he finally proposed that if it were not possible to lease out the
whole of Cachar to Gambhir Singh. at least the eastern portion
between the Jiri river and the western bank of the Barik (mhich
the latter had possessed hg ~lslirpation) slioul(1 he forii~allf gi~rell
over to
P.C.
1839, May 14, No. 100. nr p. C. 1832, JItly 14. KO.IN).
52
P. C . 1839. Mtly 14. No. 90. n5 p. C. 1 ~ 9 4 Jlay
. IS. yo. 1 0 .
'0 C. .1839, May Irk No.98.
Guvhdr Chaadrn tt~llrl G v v i ~ i d ~ r ihi~lis(~II
i ~ ~ i hat1 advnllcthd llo such
clain~,~~
AS ret.p"ls the chi111 OF tilt. S C I I I ~ OtoI Ielect
~~ ~~j~ froll,
i\ I I ~ \ V
56 P. C. 1839. May 14. No. 100. 5". C. 1839. July 9. NO. 13.
ST P. C. 1839, May 14. No. 100. 60 P. C .1892. July 9, NO. 16.
5s P.C. 1832, May 14. No. 118. " Z~),id.
?'he Plains of Cuchar
I
,( b c t t ~ ealiglile~lrd syrtclll ol iidnlillistrstiuli sua i~~trwluced
,, tioubt, rcsulti~~g: ill thc ~llarkcd prosperit) of the land.
'I3
p. p. 1839. .July 23. No. 64.
" p. P. 183% duly 93. hTo.66.
6v.
P. 183%. .July 03, N o . 71.
Letters from Courl No. 14 of 1834.
" The position m d p~\\~c.rsof the nonrcl of Directors in reliltioll to
(a) Calcutta authorities and (I)) the Board of cnn~rol hnve 1)een discusred in
Setion 1TT of this Cliapter.
SECTION I 1
l3
P. C. 1893, December 19, No. 70.
* In the second paragraph of his Report ~nentionedabove) Mr. Rohrtsoll
admits that the deposition (No. 1) of the mad (who made his escape) sctms
to be entitled to the fullest credit which is again (as mentio~ied in the 8th
Puogreph of the report) co~lfirmedby the depositions Nos. 9, 3, 4, 5. 6 aid
a8 made by the pleople of Nurtung. These depositions iogzther with ~ 1 1 0d e p i -
tiong NOS. 8 and 9, made by the servnnts of the Rajah of Gobhi, estsbldl.
awoding to Mr. Roktson, that Sobllii Sbigh, Raja of GoLhP, mws active!?
~ 0 n d ~in d seizing th.&. missmg individuals and accordingly he wrote to the
Rajah of Jaintii demhding the s e n d e r of the atid Gob115 Raja. SobU Sing11
wns not s~mn&red W MY.h h r t s o n suggwtdd that M by non-complyintr
a disinterested ~ ' e a d a.s
t~ 110tlli11~ I II~'~~ ,,,
) I I ~ i l l 1 I I I I C O I I ~ ~ ~ Istatrrnerrt
far 8 s the latter's guilt is ,conceriied.
Happily. however, this t imc the St~pr~lllcb Go\'er11111(~11 t took
k., 19, more reasonnble view of the &air iincl instructccl thrir .\gal( sinll>ly
lBs9
to repeat the dcmnncl for the sorrcilder of thc perphtri~torsof til(.
foul offelices aiicl to warn Rajendra Singh tllut 11011-coinplia~~~
this request \voultl 1)t. \?isilecl by the st~\~erc displri~s~rrc~ of the Rritisll
Gbvernn~ei~t .I4
I11 J a n ~ ~ a rlH34.
y Sing11 for\\.i~l.detl;L petit io11 lo the
H.itjei~drc~
Govt.rl~or-Gcl~t~ri~t clrttwing his c~ttentiolito thc ulitlue demand inad,,
by the Agent. :iftcr relating how Mr. ltobertsoii hat1 i~lnoyedhill,
in various ways al~clliow 11c hacl degrudecl hill1 in the estinlation of
11;s subjects by iicldressil~glii111 iis the mtlilagei. of the Jnintili Statc.
he pointed out that the deinand of the tribute was in direct opposi-
ti011 to the ci~g:.ugcnieutsexecuted with his predecessor. And he
finally pleatlccl that ;is his cot~ntrywas sniall ancl its i ~ o s tof hih
qrtbjects reilclered pel-soiial service in lieu of cash pityment of revenue.
he was not ill a position to pay uay tribute to the Company. The
Suprenie Governn~ent in reply informecl hiin thnt thc ngrermeilt
cxecuted with the Iatc R ~ t j aRill1 Singh WilS M personal onc and 8s
Fcb, 6, such there was no obligatioil on their part to afford him any protec-
lsJ4
tion without any rrtltrn. And a t the saine time they called up011
their Agent to state oil what data the sum of Rs. 10,000,'- had bee11
fixed 1)s hi111 iis the itrnount of trihl~teto l ~ etlerna~lded fro111 thv
State of Jai~iti?i.'.'
At this tinie MI.. Robertson \vits ordered to Le relieved by
Mr. Jenlriris ancl before he hncl cluittecl his office, hc nddrcssed n
letter to the Calcuttii authorities in ~vhichhe made a revie\i7 of t h ~
:idministration of the province i~icludedin his agency and begged
the Govei~~nlent "to admit thnt the agencJ7 had greatly improved
11ndc~llis gencral sl11,erintentlence." Even whilc I)lo\ving his o ~ 1 1
with the denlaud, the Rajah of JttintG had taken th eguilt of tl~e crime up011
h i d f , he should be deprivd of his Kingdom. Upti] now hc had I I O L implicatkd
RajenlrLa Sngh in the crime. Then he asserts hl the Iltll para oF the above
report that "the pre&t ruler of Jaintiii. is ge.elllerally reported to h a ~ ebeen.
even during the life time of his predecessor. a promoller of the horrible rites of
human sacrifice" nild then sudde~lil\-comes to the conclusion that "his (Rajendra
Sin&#) pccrticiputio,~ +n thti yreumtt cuua, I conceive is ~rrotlcd by tlie bed
etidenca." Where is the evidelke ? Then *gain in the neat parap;l.al>h Ile m;\<
"At all events there cannot be doubt of the guilt of Gohld Roinh" Tl111~
Hajendm Sh~dl's participation it] the present c.cr,sc is nowllern p~.th.~(l
'4 P. C. 1893, Daember 18. No. 74.
15 P. C . 1094. Febl*u;iry 6. Nos 141-144.
IIC could imt reslritili hi~risrlffro111girpiug a bit of advice to
,ruulict,
/he Supreme Governrn(int ~~egardingthC course of action to bc
towards the Ruju of J ~ i n t i f i\\.ho ill his opinion, was sure to pet,.
,llmncler to the de~riairtlsof the B1.i t is11 Go~cnlmentprovided "tJie lRYl
~ v c ~ r ~ i mpersisted
ei~t i l l \vithholding tlie title of Raja." At this
time ct letter rtddressetl t o Rajei~(lraSing11 came to liis office from
the Governor-General. I i c clven declined to deliver this letter tu
l{aje~idnrSingh becausc. tLca 1attc.r had bee11 addressed as Raja alrtl
rrturnetl the same wit11 u request tllat "it J I ~ H Y be directed to tbe
Zami~lder and not to this R a j ~of Jaintia.") This l ~ s tnct of Mr.
Robertson is hardly justifiable.
In response to the letter of tlica 6th k'etjruary, 1834, MI..
Roberlso~r informed the Suyrelnc. (;overnmcn t that tlw Raja of
baintiii was in u. ~msition to l ~ a j ,;I fat]. hc-a\,ier amoi~ntof tribute
~ I I R J that
~ had been fixed I)? 1iin1 hecause ;~cc.orclingto ii~for~ilntiol~
received from Lt. Inglib lrlicl Ciiptain Fisher. cash revenues of
Jaintiii amounted to Hs. 30,000 ;~nnuallyin acltlitiou to what wa3
paid in kind i ~ n dthat ";I treasure ~nlouiltingto nearly 40 lacs of
rupees had accumuln t eci in tho ~noyal \.;~ult ." Though the Supreme
Go~lenlmentagreed with their Agent ill in~posingtribute upon the*
new Raja, they regardcd thc arno~rl~ t of tribute suggest cd by hi]..
Robertson very high in spite of thc al)o\ye information. They ins-
tructed the new Agent Mr. Jenkins to give his advicc on the subject
since Scott had been averse to the demand of any tribute and one-
third of he money re\renlle of tlie state seemed to he too high all
amount. Thc letter ret~~riietlundelivered IJJ, their former over- M a r . 1831
zealous Agent, they forwarded once more for clclivery to the Rujrl
\\rith~tlt alteration, coinnlenting that "the Chicf of Jnints is elititled
to the dignity of ;I Raj;~nccol*dinp to ihe fo~.niertlscaty and forn1~1'
11sagc."li
The neur Agent took aver in March, 1834 and in~n~ediatel,\.
Rajendra Singh deputed tn.0 of his vakils to Cllerrapunji to place
his grievi~ncesbefore him. The vakils represented that the young
Raja was quite willing to i~pprehendthe persons implicated in thr
sacrifice of the British subjects. but he was unable to do SO O W ~ ~ I K
to the fact that the chief of Nurtu~lg was resisting his authority
and that the refusal on the part of the British Gorernnlent
recognized him as the Raja of Jainti5 had further encouraged his
subjects to d+ his authority with greater impunity. We haye
already I ' P ~ C ~toT ~the djspllt~t h ~ 11~1s
t going on het~veenRajenrlci
";
P. C. 1834, March 9.5. No. 38.
P. c. 1854. M~rch 95. Nos. 4 0 4 1 .
Singh and his disaffected ~lobles. 'l'lle situatiolr had by this timt,
greatly deterior~ted. A series of aggressions i~ttendedwith muder.-
ens atrocities follo~red. Chaotic conditions yre\railrtl not only in
Jnintift , but the contagion spread eastward ~ l s oalld the rrighboerinC.
Khfisi states became restive. So the vnkils of Ruje~ldlr Singtl
requested the new Agcrit to effect a reconcilia tion I)ctwcc~uthe Raja
anti the dis~ffcctcd Dolois of Nurtung. 3lrT Jenkins t~dopt~tl bl
csorrect and sy~~pwthetic attitude. IIc realized that unless internal
commotion were effectively checked and the authority of thc Raja
restored in fr~tl.it would he futile to expect hirn to s~lrrendertIlr
MU.p"S
1884
culprits. So. to arrest the spread of lnwlessness and to terrninatr
the hostililties between the warring dolois., he deputed Lt. Inglis, i l l
whom both the parties had faith, to act its n mediator and pmce-
maker.'"
Mr. Jenkins took n very sensible and balaliced view of the
tlispute. According to him. the clairn of Rajendrii Singh to the titlcn
of Raja ottght to have been ncknowledged by the British Govern-
ment as a matter of course because he had been recognized as such
hy the chiefs of the country. Nloreover. hc did not regard the treaty
H S n personal one liable to be annulled by the denth of the sovereign
with \vhonl it had becil originally contractccl. Its terms, he thought,
were really unfavourable to the Paramount Power, but the expla-
~lntionwas that "it \vas n ~ a d ea t a ti~iicof great emergency." As
none of thc terms of the treaty* had beell alleged to hc violated,
Mr. Jenkins considered that the proper course would have been to
p e r s ~ ~ n dthe
e Raja to a voluntary c o m ~ n ~ ~ t a t ifor
o r l n nloney tributr
of the seriaice he was hound to yield 11y the terntq of thc fortn~r
Lrenty.
Thus Mr. Jenkins clisayprovecl thc method of hii predecessor
with regard to the renewal of the treaty. He also disapprovetl of hi3
]~redecessor's suggestion that the yoong king sllol~ld be removed
from his gad; for his nonicompliance with thc demand for th('
surrender of the criminals because it appeared to llinl that the f ~ t s
that the Raja was a minor, that the condition of tlle kingdoin ~ t ~ a h
chaotic and that the offence nras conlmitted during the time of
Raja R i m Singh hacl not been sufficiently kept in mind by
Robertson. FIc rccon~mended the s ~ ~ r r e n d e of r the culprits b!'
Rn jc~l(l~*i~ Singh i s :I condition preccde~lt to his recognit ion 36
1
." C . 189.1.. April 10. h r o s . 135-138.
" Yide ;4ppcndix ".2"
by the Conipany and finally advised the Supreme Government
to suspend the conclusion of the new treaty with the Raja until :JM. 2;
1 Kd4
he to pay tt yearly tribute.'"
cording to Mr. Jenkins's instxvctions, 1,t. Inglis repaired to
~ ~ i ~ t k on
p u rthe 9th of April and met the contending parties in
, durbar. The isuler of Jaintiii and his lnantris were present along
with the Dolois of Johy and Nurtung. T l ~ eRaja restored their
privileges and the refractory dolois of Nurtung made the customary
to Rajendra Singh. Lt. Inglis also effected a reconcilia-
tion between the people of Johy and the p e o p l ~of Nurtung both
of which parties he found a t fault liable for punishment by the Raja
of Jaintii. Their misdeeds were. however, condoned by the young
king at his intervention with a view to restoring q ~ ~ iin
e tthe country.
This act of forgiveness on the part of the king gave immensc
satisfaction. Peace was restored and there was rejoicing every- ;,i.,y 9 ,
where. The mission was a great s ~ x e s s . ~ ~ 15:; 1
ln
p. C. 1834, April 10. No. 135.
'O
P. C . 1894, Xilay 1.5. No. 70.
P. C. 1894, & f ~ y15, Nos. 77-78.
80
154 The Anmxation. of Atwarn
offences committed by the inhabitants of that place." They further
called upon him to infonn the Raja that should the latter
inability to punish his vassal, thc British Governr~lcrltwould consider
Gobhir as severed from his dominion and would ttrkc sllitablr steps
for the reduction of that refractory
Accordingly, on the 28th May, 1034, the ltujw of Jail~tiiwab
informed by the Agent that now that peace had been restored in
his clominion, he should immediately take steps for tlle apyrehellsion
of the offendel-s. He was a t the same time callcd upon to pay
the tribute and renew the treaty with the Company. As regards
the first point, the Raja of Jaintiii gave his I , ~ . h t assurances but
with regard t o thc demand of the tribute, he withheld his assent 8s
hefore and trusting to the liberality of the British Government begged
it "not to insist upon n demand t o which he was llnable to offet.
~ ~ e ~ i s t a notherwise
ce than by remonstrance and repre~entation."2~
The matters were a t s ~ c ha state when a fresh cause of dispute
;irose. And to trace back the history of this incident, we'shall
have to go back to the time of Scott. On the southern bank of
the Kiipil5 river, which fornled the boundary between JaintiL add
Assam, Raja RSnl Sing11 establishecl R c h a ~ i k iat Chapparn~uktifor
levying. tolls on all goods passing through that ghdf. The British
had also a chauki on the northern bank of the river. Goods
coming from the British territory were thus doubly taxed. The
gross revenue of the British cllstoms house stood a t Rs. 1,400
while the amount of the duties collected at the Jainti5 Raja's
cl~auki exceeded Rs. 8.000 per annum. I t was alleged that the
rollectors a t the Raja's chauki pralctised extortion which some-
times led to violence. Mr. Scott also questioned the proprietary
right of the Raja in levying such a duty and requested Ram ~ingh
to remove the chazlki. "Were both the sides of the river ours,"
lie stated "you might there establish such a ghaut." Raja R B ~
Singh in reply pleaded his inability to comply with the rehuest of
Mr. Scott and begged him to waive the question. T h e correspond-
ence dragged on for sometime between the successors of Mr. Scott
and the late Raja RAm Sinph and Rajendrn Singh hut nothing was
settled.
,As the matter continned till the time of M r . Jenkins, he, with
n view to bringing "this long and fruitless correspondence" to
close. referred the matter to the Supreme kuthoiities. H e suggested
thnt if tlir Crove~nmentshorlld deride ngflinst the rights of the Raja.
V .
C . 1894. May 16, No. 'YR.
2% P. C . IR3FT. A i ~ g ~ i qIt. No. 110.
it dould address him directly in the matter. In case he Govern-
ment upheld the right of the Raja to levy the tax, he recollllnended
that steps should be taken to fix R limitation to his denlands because
be feared that "it was in the power of the Rajah to interdict the
traffic by the Kallang river altogether." He even advised the
SuprL.rne Government to purchase the rights of the Raja should
they be admitted.24 From these it will appear that the sole concern
of Mr. Jenkills and his predecessors was more to protcxt the inkrests J-, lW4
of trade than to establish a right of ownership of which they them-
selves were not very sure. Yet both Gait and Mackenzie allege*
that the Raja of Jaintiii refused to remove the chauki he h d
established without authority.
The Supreme Government did not pass any final opinion on this
long standing matter because they held "if the chowkey in question
has been established since our occupation of Assam and we have no
chowkey of our own on that side of the river which belongs to us.
the Rajah may fairly be req~iestedto place the thing in their former
footing h.v ;~bolishing thc chomkey" and called upon the agent to
furnish them with further information on the j ~ o i n t . ~ We~ do not
know if any fresh demands nrere made upoil the Raja to remove the
chnuki.
At the time when this question was engaging the serious
attention of Mr. Jenkins, the young Raja reminded the British
Government of their promiseC* as embodied in the treaty of March
1844 and demanded some territories in Assam. He recalled the
service rendered by his late grand llnrle duiing the Burmese war and
pointed out that "in case of refusal the British Guvcnlment had a pu-
fect right to renounce the treaty and withdraw its protection." After
recalling how his predecessor had gail~edthc esteem and rtpprobation
of the British authorities a t the time of the Burmese war in return
for the valuable services rendered by him, he respectfully subnlitted
that "his reluctance to part with the privileges of his forefathers was
not unnatural and ought not to be considered as a mark either of
contumacy or of disaffection." H e begged to offer a reasonable
tribute and prayed for the restitutior~of his ~nccstraldominion. Rut
his prayer was rejected.31
When the JaintG affairs reached the ears of the Board of
Directors, every act of the local officers with regard to J a i n t i ~came
under their severe condemnation. When the proposal of tribute was
first referred to them, they felt ;I strong repugnance to the demand
of the tribute and found "no propriety in imposing a condition on
a successor which it was not deemed expedient t o impose on the
original party."" As regards the coercive steps which the Calcutta
authorities had (contemplated to take against the Raja on his refusal
to renew the treaty on new conditions they found nothing wrong
in the conduct of the Raja and observed, "If the treaty has expired,
the Rajah is in the same situation as if none had ever heen concluded
and our right extends no further than t o discontinuing to afford him
the benefit of our protection unless he will consent to give a pecuniary
equivalent." And fearing that any tribute which the Raja might
bind himself to pay would be probably extorted from the ryots who
were lightly taxed, they informed the Calcutta authorities that
"they were not anxious that any such engagement should be
concluded."33 These were just views of the authorities a t home.
I n the meantime Jaintiii had been annexed. When the news of
the final annexation of Jaintis reached home. the Directors were not
ronvinced of the necessitv of such an extreme step. They could not
look a t the matter as fully justifiable. They wrote, :'it is not made
out to our satisfaction that the Raiah either refused or decidedly
evaded compliance with your requisition for the surrender of the
cnulprits as to warrant his being subiected to so severe penalty on
that account alone." The Home authorities were previously given
to understand that if the guilty parties were not delivered up withill
two months. the district of Gohh3 nro~lld bc nttnched. So they
' '
P. C. 11896, Deaernber 19. Nos. 89-49.
3i P. C. 1837. May 92. Nos. 143-174,
S E C T I O N I11
* "The Raja i~wid to he n man of 110 tnlent. hut his claims are gencrdl~
~cknowledgecl hy the Assalnese"- (From Tl'hite's Ftatement-S. P. 1849. fi1a.v 1,
Nn. 4 4 ) . (Post S c - ~ i p t ) .
P. P. 1838. hIny 16, No. 5.5.
p. C . 1894. brine 19. No. 99. .
"hid.
Purandar Sing h ' ~l)om.inion
less anxiety. The llille years (1884-1835) of unsettled rule had left
their indelible marks upon the country. As the Company coutem-
,,jalt.d to halid over this tract to n prince of the old royal dynasty,
110 serious u t t ~ m y t swere made by the British officers to heal the
wounds caused by the misrule and co~ifusion of the preceding
~~~If-century. The interim administration set up by the British
rather worsened the situation in many respects. The system
adopted during these nine years was neither wholly British nor Ahom.
It was an admixture of both and during this interim period the
people neither got the blessings of the enlightened British administra-
tion nor the concessions of the indigenous system. Society was in a
disorganised state.
Under the Ahom System of administration, as we have seen, the
comniunities wete divided into separate bodies numbering from
1000 to 5000 able bodied men deno~ninatedas Khels under a Phukan
or Bnrua as Kheldkr. The Khels were further sub-divided into gots
of three or four p d ~ I i a or freemcn and 0 1 1 ~liiili of each got was
bound to render personal service throughout the year to the Raja
or to any officer of the state in lieu of the rice lands obtained from
the state. The Niks also received a piece of land for garden and
homestcad for which tl1ey paid poll taxes. If any piik cultivated
any rice land in excess of the poorahs obtained free of rent from
the state, he paid the state one rupee annually for each poorah so
tilled. Originally the Khels were located in a given tract of the
territory with definite boundaries and Kheldiirs residing a t their
Khels took personal interests in the welfare of their subjects. But
later, the pGiks living in the Khels became scattered over the whole
of Assam, necessitating the appointment of a host of subordinate
officersto effect the collection. As a result of it, corruption became
rife and a series of irregular exactions was extorted from the @h
by these greedy ~ m l d s . The Khelders no longer lived in the Khel-
they passed their time as idle loungers about the court of the king.
thus neglecting one of the sacred duties they were entrusted with
and severing the salutary tie which connected the ripper pnrt of
the community with the lower one.
Under the British Government, some attempts were made to
rectify those abuses and a partial settlement upon the land was
made, but as the orcupation was an interim one, no exhaustive
reforms were carried out. So the defects and abuses were allowed
to remain as they were. Everywhere partial reforms were made.
Judiciary was no less defective. Purandar Singh's task was made
the more difficult and complicated, as we shall see presently, by
the compexity of the British System of administration engrafted
1652 l'hs Annexation of Asaam
upon a people wholly alien. So his reigll hcgi~nill tllc lilidvt of
chaos and confusion and it must be wid to his credit in all fairnea,
that though he met with much irritation and disaffection, he wab
bent upon providing good government for his subjects from thlI
very start and issued a series of reguletio~ls for the beter
administration of the tract under his care.'
Most of' the reformatory measures were discussetl i l l ope11
Durbar. Yurandar Singh held consultatiolls with Mr. White, the
Political Agent stationed a t Bishwanatll, and suggestioiis t h t ~
were submitted by the Phukans and Baluas were duly considered.
As the revenue system of the province cttllcd for speedy reform, it
was tackled first of all. The original land systern based on personal
service was found to be more congenial to the habits and cristoms
of the children of the soil, so the partial settlement upon the land
introduced during the Company's regime was given up ant1 the
indigenous system was reverted to. At the suggestion of Mr. White,
the King, however, agreed to effect son~cinlprove~ncntsin thc old
revenue system on the basis of the European mode of administration."
The territory was likewise divided into a number of Khels with
regular and well defined boundaries. A list of pfiiks was drawn up
RBIrenua
and a regular allowance of 2 poorahs of land was made over to each
mforms. and a settlement was made with the EheB&r for a period of four
years in the first instance. Mr. White was a t first in favour of
settlement for a period of ten years, but he eventually gave way
to the Raja's wish because four years' settlement afforded oppoitu-
nities for frequent revisions. I n addition to the service rendered by
a, number of ,@iks, the Khelh-rs were allowed a small money
commission. The Kheldef~s were stiictly enjoined to reside as
before within their respective Kheb. T o encourage cultivation, the
Raja allowed the ryots to break off jungle lands and to hold the same
rent-free for two years. To prevent oppression on the part of the
Khekld~s,it was ordained that no remission was to be granted to
Lhe Kheld4ir.v in the case of refugee ptiiks. This salutary check had
the effect of compelling the Khddirs lo preserve their ryots. Tbe
Kheldtirs were called upon to issue receipts against collections. It
WAS further enacted that after a period of three years, no one who
did not know how t o read or write would be placed in charge of
1-evenues. and to encourage learning one school was established in
each Khel. As many of the Khom nobility did not know the ludi-
ments of reading or writing-the members of other cl~sses.who were
7 aid.
-.
8 Tbid.
Purandar Singh'e Dominion
dwing tlle first year of his rule, and specially owing to the
dogged pfl"iptence of the followers of Chandra m n t a who had
tile collectior~ of revenues by launching the "No Rent
campaignwagainst him, the first year brought a poor return to the
rnyal excliequer. But these were after all temporary set-bncks a d
,night have been easily ignored, because it was expected that the
,gacious and benevolent admillistration established by Purandar
Singll would eventually remove the difficulties created by the
,lisgruntled nobles. But there remained one inherent defect which
threatened to prove an insurmountable obstacle t o the future
realisation of the revelllie and which was clearly foreseen by
)Ir. White even a t that stage. T h a t was the peculiar relation in
\rlhich Purandar Singh's dominion stood to that of his neighbour,
tile Bar SenHpati in whose territory there was no direct money
tilxation.
There were little differences in inaiiners and religion between
the people of these two dominions. So there was a constant
temptation held out to the subjects of Purandar Singh to emigrate
into the territory of the Bar Seniipati. The Company's possession
(Western Assam) to the western side of his dominioils offered a no
less tempting show t o his ryots where although the assessment was
]lot light, the redress against over-exation was readily obtainable. So
Purandar Singh was placed in very peculiar and difficult circum-
stances. The very existence of his territory was at stake. Mr. White
fillly realised the gravity of the situation and as a ren1ed.y against
this, he s~~ggested that all subjects of Purandar Singh who would
take refuge in the Bar Sengpati's dominions should be subjected to
the same or a slightly lower rate of taxation than what had prevailed
in P111~andarSingh's dominions. He fi~rther~.ecornmendeclthat a
native officer, on behalf of the British Government, should be
stationed a t the Capital of the Bar SenRpati to collect taxes from
thme rqiks. The Rar SenBpati. Mr. White conceived, \~ouldhave
110 ~eason to complain about this arrangement because under the
10 Ibid .
P.C. 1834, June 19, No. 110.
."I C. 1834, AugusZl 91, Nos. 06-87.
P. C. 1894 Augustl El, No. 88.
l4 P. C. 1894. August 91. Noe. 88-80.
During thia period Purcrndw Si~lgkalso was exyerie11ci.u~g r a t
! ,jfic"lty in securing an adequate supply of c o i u for the payment of
hie tribute. In it country where state officials were paid not in cash
but in kind in terms of piiiks and where most of the ryots paid their
rent in kind, there was always a scarcity of coins. The difficulty
acc.erltuatecl during the reigri of Purandar Singh, who was to pay
, tribute to the Paraniount Power strictly in cash under the treaty
condition, Commerce was not yet fully developed so as to attract
coins from the trading countries. To add to his difficulties, many
d the coins that were in circulation were spurious ones. The coins
were debased to such an extent that the native troops employed
in that quarter refused to accept them even a t a discount. I t may
be mentioned in this cotlnection that two kinds of coiris "Rajmuharee
rupees" and "Narayani rupees"] were in circulation ill Assan1 a t that
time." As there was no mint either in Western Assam or in Central
Assam for the coinage of these rupees and as there was a growing
demand for coins, coinage by private agencies, which prevailed in
Assam and the adjacent territories to w r y considerable extent, led
to gross abuses. The practice became so scandalous that as early
as 1833, the Supreme Government thought it necessary to prohibit
it and Mr. White recommended the establishment of a mint in the No\.1 ~ s .
clominion of Purandar Singh. But the Supreme Government did
not accept the proposal of Mr. White and ordered that the new
"hrruckabad rupees" should be put into circulation in that
quarter.15 This measure did not however ease the situation for
Purandar Singh. So he solicited the permission of the Supreme
Government to coin rupees to meet the growing demand.
Purandar Singh also clearly understood that the possession of
one-half of Assam would not give him any financial stability.
so Aug. 1894.
he again begged the Supreme Government to bestow on him the
Western half of Assam. Western Assam under the Company's OCCU-
pation yielded a revenue of 3 lacs of rupees and the entire amount
spent in meeting the allowances of European and Native officers
and of the troops cantoned there. The British Government had to
dmur money from the Central excheqaer to corer other s u n d v
1898. country" and to find out whether the desertion was t o he attributed
to the Raja's own mismanagement or whether there were juet
grounds for allowing him a remission of his present t r i b ~ t e . ~ 'Th
I* Pa C. 1H36. 14.
hTo1~111lwr No. 99.
1 "lid.
"('
P. C. 1834, March 9-5. No. $8.
P. C. lW6. November 14, No. 8%.
1.
-.
Pw& Sinph'a Dontkion 171
* Suitors UI EngJand in the 16th and 17th Ckturies often used to give
presents to judges.
"* Re :-Revenue and Judicial Administration of Assam (11836-1893) under
the British, w Epilogue. It was a period of maludministr~tion.
28 Ibid.
P'Q "idd for an mernptio~l during the firbt t w o y a r s . bere
he did not 'Tail to bring to the ~loticeof the Haja who p r o m i d
to rectify them.
With a view to acquiring a correct uotiou of the state mdeq
the Raja's administration, he toured the territory around and pamed
through forty to fifty miles of the Raja's dominion. He wab; struck
with the excellent state of cultivation. He f o u d that in the
ndghbourho~dof the capital the cultivation had decidedly increased
since the province had been transferred to the Raja. In the outlying
districts df Jangi and Rangpur, he found the cultivation fully equal to
that of the fertile districts of Nowgong or Tezpur in British Assam.
The cultivation in the distant Bisii and Lakhimpur gave him q u a 1
satidaction. I t must be remembered that these impro\.ernents the
Haja effected under most difficult conditiolls because these parts of
his territory were more affected by civil coininotion and natural
calamities and the king had not sufficient force a t his conlmand to
give his ryots due protection. The ryots in the Company's dominion
were better protected. But the ryots of Yurandar Singh, though
deprived of the stimulus to cultivation, did their husbandry equally
afell and this reflected much credit upon the king who received
unstinted praise from M i . White. I n the districts of Jangi and
Rangpur Mr. White found the village settlement based on land (as
against the piiik system) as recommended by him. But the capita-
tion tax (which the Raja was decidedly in favour of retaining) was
still maintained. The king rightly contended that if the " R i k
System" was abolished, it would be impossible for hill1 to nlaintain
his rank and establishments since a pkik cost him Rs. 9/- per mnum
as against the sum olf Rs. ae/- being the ordinary wages of a senrant
for a year. But the Raja, according to White, was not altogether
averse to its abolition provided a suitable remissioll was made fro111
his tribute.24
Coming to the question of emigration which had caused all this
commotion, Mr. White found that this was due to the reasons
already pointed out by him and he saw no reason to differ from his
original comlusion.
Lastly he looked into the financial condition of the State. With
a view to arriving a t a correct understanding, he inade a full survey
of the finances from the very beginning. I t was a sound and true
analysis of the situation. H e found that under the British Govern-
ment the maxilllum amount that was realised stood ~t about one
lakh of rupees and not 1 lakh and 1% thousand, as s t a t 4 the
Agent, a d that too was OU~)' for Wtt year. h' e average rt.alisatiW
wss about 90,000 rupees per annunl. Under the h j i i ' s
the highest aniount realised was Ha. 75,000. Out of this amount,
the Raja had to remit the s u ~ l of
l Ra. 50,000/- by way of tribute to
the Paramount Power, leaving n snltlll balance df Hs. 25,000/- fort
the support of his family t ~ n dfor the mai1ltt:nance of Establishnlents
of his realm. This suln appeared to Mr. White "to be quitt
inredquate." He found the tribute fixed itt it lrlirch higher anlount
as compared with the gross revenue than that of any other Raja
dependent up011 the Company. He quoted from Sutherland's book*
to show that the Native Chiefs ill Rnjputann paid six anr~asin the
rupee or about 3670 of their gross jurt~mlrihby w y of tribute, wheretto
Purandar Singh had to pny 6670 of his giwss revenue as tribute-
the highest ever paid by any v~tsstll state in India. Mr. White
found that even his neighbour. the Raja 04 Couch Behar had
been paying only Rs. 19,000 a s tribute with a irluch larger
revenue.
As according to Mr. White the real motive behind the
"restoration" was to provide employment for the disgruntl~d
nobles of the Ahom State, who would othelwise have been a burden
upon the resources of the British Government, he could not realize
why so much amount had been fixed by way of tribute. He himself
was in favour of demanding Rs. 40,000 as a tribute as against the
gross collection of one lakh. He, in the course of investigation,
Yound out that the tribute For nearly three years had been h aid and
the king was in arrears to the extent of six months' tribute only.
Under these circumstances he was satisfied that the Raja had exerted
himself to fulfil his pecuniary obligation to the utmost. Any other
impartial observer would have come to the same conclusion. Mr.
White regretted that Purandar Singh's Government had not bee11
given a fair trial anti he was of opinion "that it had worked well as
could have been expected".
From all accounts it seems clear that the financial condition of
Central Assam was very gloomy indeed and the Raja was not
responsible for it. It seemed to Mr. White that if Purandar Singh
was to continue as a king, something should be done to give him a
respite and he made some recommendations to make a way out of
the impasse. He recommended for the redu[ction of the tribute and
fixed it a t Rs. 35,000/- to be made payable from the 1 s t of May.
2Vbid. 28 Ibii.
176 The Annexation of Assam
Narindra" was nothing but a manager of an estate. That was the
irony of fate reserved for the last independent Swargade" o(f the
Ahom dynasty.
But Mr. Jellkills was not a11 harshness. He was magnanimous
enough to propose a peusiou to the extent of all the surp)us stated
to have been received by him viz. the sun1 of Hs. 25,000/- per annuln
though Purandar Singh, according to him, was the richest lnan in
the whole of Assam. This arrangerrlent seemed to him to he of
the highest advantage to the British Government as well as
to the people of Assam. I n reply the Supreme Government
directed him to take an early opportunity of proceeding to
Upper Assam with a view to satisfying hinlself personally
on the state of a f f ~ i r sobtaining there. The Calcutta authorities
held that if the Agent was satisfied that the tribute pressed
too heavily on the Raja, they would have no objection to
the reduction of the tribute for a period elf t\vo or three years by
way of experiment in the first instance. IF on the other hand, the
Agent found that there were inherent defects in the Raja's
administration not liable to be removed by any reduction in the
amount of the tribute, they proposed to grant him either a reduction
on his surrendering to the British Government a portion of his
territory equivalent to the reduction or a pension equal to that of
his net revenues or1 his relinquishing the reins of admir~istration.~~
Aclcording to the instructions of the Supreme Government Mr.
March,
Jenkins paid a visit to Upper Assam in the early prt of 1838. To
I898. acquire a first hand knowledge of the conditions prevailing in the
Raja's dominion, Mr. Jenkins travelled by land from ~ i s h w a ~ t h
to the Subansiri river along the northern bank of the Brahmaputra
and then crossed to the south bank df the river through Majoli
island. I n this way he arrived a t Jaipur via Rangpur, Gbergaon
and Burhat. From Jaipur he sailed down the Buridihing river and
a t last reached Jorhiit, capital of 'IJpper Assnm. On his way to
Jorhiit he received a number of petitions from the ryots of the king.
He found the countlyside a s fertile as that of Lower Assam and
saw traces of the h r m e r prosperity of the villages once densely
populated but now almost deserted. He noticed a great falling-off
in the population of the country whilch did not contain more than
2,50,000 people a t the time of his visit." H e found the brass workers!
fishermen. goldwashers. weavers and potters emigrating into the
20 Ibid.
" P.P. 1898. May 16. No,53.
Yurandur Sing h'y Dominion 179
Total .. ..
31 Ibid.
Mr. Jellkills alluwcd t h a t the 1 , by Lhe yrol)oscd ;~rrallgeluc1,lI
woulcl bc left a C O I I ~ ~ ~divisioll L C ~ irc'rJ. C'011\;e1iic1itly situated roull,j
11ih ci1piLii1, 111c 11eL rclvelliiil ul' \vhich \ \ r o ~ ~he l d tip\viir& of
~ ~ 1 " ~
~~) 1 1 W
rupees ((nceunlin~LO l ~ i rc i l l c t ~ l i ~ I i oi111d ~ O U I ~llil\re llUlllillgt,,
cul~lplni~l of. T h e Lrilet tu be r o u i n c d by tllc ( ; u \ c n ~ ~ a r l lt t I ~ ~ ~ ~ l
jrilrter i r ~areit was sl~ll'"d~'1 ) o l ) ~ l l i l t alld
~ ~ l ~olltilill~cl 40,000 pooru/ly
dl' rice liiiid ils agaiilsL 70,000 pooralls of lhc cli\ ision to I)c left oilcr
t o tlich l i i i j i ~allct i l s rcveliuc income was o ~ i l y34,000 us illelltiolletl
a hove.;"
A1 lirst sight tl~ca ~ I ~ ~ ~ L I I ~ CI )' I I' OI ~I) CO ~~C~' Cl)y
~~ 111'.J e n l i i ~ ~111i
s 13'
iIl>llcill. a bat1 b a r g i ~ i ~011l the p i ~ ofl t I l ~1Jritihh C;uvc~r.~lnic.~lt. BLll
it \\.>is 110t rc~ally SO. The 11 t i , l110~1gllbl)iirbcly
pol~ulatccl, contaiiiecl tlic richest 1)nrts of Assnnl antl sho\vcd signs
of vast pobsibiliti~s. It c o i ~ained t salt Itrits (lnarket h) n~ld .salt
~vclls. Under better arra~rgemeiltsit was liable to ~ ' i ~ ~ inlpro~c- i ( l
i ~ i c ~ a11c1
i t RIr. Jellkills l~cggecl the Suprenle Go\rerriment not to
o l ~ j e c tt o n little evljcn~ciit first t o possess a propcrty so ~)ron~ising.
T11c Ijettclr nclmini~trntioi~. RIr. Jciil<iiir Iioped, would invite a large
emigration of people t o this tract. He visui~lised that not only
~ ~ ~ o thercu l d be x flonl of einigrants froni t h c Raja's dominion, but
there would also be a n ~cccssionfroin t h e Bar Senipati's country
which ~ t ~ o u lind turn lead t o an incrcasc df t h c reveiiue within a few
ycars. M r . Jenkins foreshado\ved thilt tlic political advantages that
~voiild accrue from this arrangement \voiild be no less important.
By t h e cstablishmcnt of a strong Go\rernrncnt in this part of the
country. t l ~ cD?flt?s, t h e RIiris nn(l the Ahors in t h e north and t h ~
Napas in the solit11 \vhosc atrocities and cxc~~rsioiis had prnctici~ll~
turned the districts bet~vccnt h e D i s ~ n gand t h c Dihing (which hi~d
once been i h c granary of Assam), into a ~ ~ ~ i l d c r n ewould ss, be kept
111itlvr check and n scnse of triinquillit~ \~lould prevail on the
frontier. This, M r . Jcnl<ins asserted, would never he achievc(1
~ ~ l i d ct hr e Raja's management. H e also ~forcsan' t h a t ~vitlipeace
~ \ ~ o t i lcome
d security and prosperity and improved tradc.
141.. Jcnliins fillally proposed that as under his 1il)cral iirrangc-
mcn t tlic R:~jii wol~ldgain so nillch. thc G o \ ~ c ~ - ~ ~ i sholil(1 ncnt i n d
01, Ilic ii1,olishing all transit d ~ i t i c silnd shoulcl further call up011 hill]
Io slihctitnte n lantl tax for a poll tax. H c silqqcstcd fill.th?r tllfit
the R:Iiii 511011ld remoc1c.l his cou1.t s on i l ~ cRl-itis11 systc\in antl $holll(l
I:c n\kcrl t o show tlic l~ool<.;nntl ~*o-o~.ds of his courts oncr :I Y C ~ ' '
l o thc Po1itic:ll Aqcnt stationed a t Cadiys who shoiild malie a n
anuual visit t o t h e 1iaJa'a capital. hid l o cllaI~le Raja
i n l l l l ~ i a ~ etloy set about tht: r e f o r u s proposed Ly hirn, Mr. J c ~ ~ k i l l s
reconlllle~~ded t l ~ einlmediate suslje~isiou of arrears of tl.i~,utc. illld
ympoacd tllitt it ~ h o u k lhe liquidated ia five yrpra by iualal-
alalts. Mr. Jeakins l ~ o p e dalld trusted tl~iit"ul~derillc arrallgelllellt
l,rol~oacdby llim-the ltajall'r (;ovc.rl~ma~t'Irced il-olll ;ill delllaad3
of tribute 111ighl 1-)e co~iductedI I I O ~ CIlappilj. tor his subjects alld l11o1-c
for Ilis ow11 reputatioll a n d p e r ~ l l u n e ~ beudit it t1ia11 it liad llitllerto
been"?"
Without taking a t first thc l~ropositio~l whether the proposctl
an.ange11icnt would be of any advantage to Puriindar Siugl~or lot,
Jet us first of all see ~vhethcrhis adn~inistration\+.;Isof 3uc.11 ;I girllillg
llilturc as to have citlled for the kind of reform .suggcbtcti 1,). t11c
Agent, which aimed at thc niutilalion of his territory. I t i h ~liificult
to take n l a i ~ yof thc fi~idingsof 311.. Jcnkins a t their f'acc valuc. IIc
says, "the misrule has beell great and gitlli~~g 10 tllc pe011I~H I I ~h i ~ s
originatetl partly in the Rajah's unpopuli~rity and l>i~rtlyi l l hi-
iacapacity or his rapacity". And in the s ~ n i eI~rcath11c hiiys. "Xu
specific acts of opl~ressiolicon~niittcd 1,). thc Ki~jallI ~ u \ . c . 1)c.c.n laid
bcforc nie". Thcrc were many \vc;~k sl1o15 jlr 1'tu.u II(I;II. Siligll's
administration 110 doubt .34 b1any of t hc'w \\-cl.c. of t r i f l y i l ~I ~I ; I ~ I I I - ( ~
many were exaggerated, and nialiy i \ g i ~ i ~\yere l llot of 11is u\\ 11
crentioa. They were forced on llilii cithcr as the legacy of t l ~ c
tlrcadful past or a s the col~tilluatio~l o'f a system which he col~ldllot
abolish altogether for want of means. H e ~ v a sgiven a \.i~st ; ~ n d
straggling tract t o rille b11t he was not given resounc'e.; cbnougli to
lllanage it properly. From all accounts it \\.;IS clcitr th:lt t l ~ cn~osl
important cause of t h e desertion which hnd glncatly. if not ~ n : ~ i ~ l l ~ , .
retarded his illcome M-;IS the al>sencc or lightness of taxi~tioni l l thc.
n c i g h b ~ u r i ncountries.
~ ancl for this t l ~ cking \\.;IS ]lot t o I I I ~ I I I I ~i ~ t
1 . This was clearly perceived by RTr. White ill~dhe took n lcnicllt
vicnl of the situation and consequent IF recomll~cndcd;I renlission of
the tribute. though that was not the pilllncen for all his trou1)lcs. il.
n.r shall see presently.
M r . Jellkins also flllly renlised the e m l ~ i ~ r r i l ~ s i sit a p l ~ nion
t of
Pulvandilr Siagll lVhea he. ~rrhilrinvrstigatinp the ciltlsrc of desrrtioll.
ohscrved. "The lightnrss df taxation in the n l l ~ t t o r tcol~ntry.in tllr
coilseq~~ence of the Run.a Senapatty's having 110 tril)l~teto pay. ha"
certainly hecn the nlcalls of thc Raja's loqing nlnrly of 11;s 1.yot5.
In our timc the emigration vTas chcckcd hy the l31lrm S c n i ~ p u t t ~
" 'bid.
33 Ibitl.
beillg obliged t o pay over to our G o v e r ~ ~ ~ i ltlic c ~ i tpersolla] tax of
the deserted H e evtbn W C I I ~ to the lc11gLl1 of criliciaiug
the ~)alicyof the Govcrnruellt on this poi11t ;111d ra t l ~ c rallgrily
exoluinied, "'l'his the (Britisl~) G o v e r n l ~ ~t cwould
~i not allo\\r to bc
continued ill favour of the Hujah, nor \vould tlic G o v e r ~ l ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ t
authorise u proportionitte tribute to be imposed u p o ~ ithe RIllttock
cliicf".::" 'l'licse were l ~ i sow11 filldings cluitc ill keeping \\litll the
~ \\/as c~zlleciupon t o i~i\lestigate. Uut the r e ~ l i c d i Ilc
s i t u a t i o ~11c ~~,
suggested \jrcrc ultogctlic.r of a clifferent character. 1 hese \\,ere
I '
35 Ibid.
38 Ibid.
37 Ibid.
Purandar Siny h's I)o9ninio?t 183
,isham was submitted t o the Supreme Govenlment for consideration.
This MTas H 1 first C X ~ I M ~ I by I ~ ~the Vice-Preside11t - i ~ i - ~ ~ The
~ ~ ~May,
~ i lelc
l .
vicc-President-in-Cou~icil collsiderecl all the circunlstallces alJudcd
to ill the report niid came t o the col~clr~sioli that the Govelament
,vould not bc warranted in leaving the territory of Upper Asulu
;iny longer iu the hands of the Raja. I n their opinion the e x p r i -
nlent had proved it fnilurc, I~ecause the trial of five years had
n coritiiiuance of the u70rst evils of the old system. As
the system of Yorced labour and the ~ d i ksystem had kjee11 source*
of op~xession; I I I ~a s t h e revenue re;iliwd by thc Hiij:l had tl\vindlcd
under his management resulting in thc accun~i~lfition of arrears, they
ban no 111-ospect of any improvement of the tibiict u11dc.1. the liaja's
administration. T h c y did not accept the recommenc-Inti011 of the
Agcnl because they were of opinion thai the s;lmc nrgr~ment whicl~
woultl jr~sti't'y t h e resumption of a part of thc telritory ~vouldalso
render necessary the taking of the whole. They observecl. "The
Rajah is by character unfit t o rule a ~ i din his hands there is n o hope
of providing for tlie country even a tolerable adn~i~iistration".:~"
The Vice-President-in-Council even 1)rushctl aside the instruc-
tions of the Court of Directors who authoriscd tlieni to rcnounccA
any portion of the stipulated tribute which they (Corrr-t of Directors)
had considered inipossible for Purandar Singh to pay ~vithont
oppressing t h e people under hin~,~%alldrecommended the res111nptio11
of the whole territory and the assignment of a moderate pension for
his m a i n t e n a n c e . " V h e decision was apparently most ~ ~ n e s p e c t e d
nncl it even went f a r beyond t h e measwe of reform s ~ ~ g g e s t eby d
Jenkins. B u t Jenkins himself \vas responsi1,le for this calamitous
award as will h e seen presently.
In a demi-official letter (dated the 4th April 1838). which was
forwarded t o t h e Supreme Governnlent along with his main report.
Mr. Jenkins described R a j a Purandar Singh "as a rapacious miser.
one of the worst characters we could have put ovcr t h e unfortunate
country". This letter sealed the f a t e of the king. I n it hc admitted
the existence of a c o n s p i l ~organisccl ~~~ by the Raja's counsellors
who tried t o get rid df hiln by creating a breach between t h e king
and the British Governnlent over a failure of the tribute ljecause
"these men who fattened under us saw nothing but starvation under
him". M r . Jenkins f o ~ l n d in Raja's principal counsellors his
Rrcntest cnernirs. Rllt i n ~ t c a dof extricating the Raja f r o n ~the
44 Ibid.
4P". C: l(R3R. AuEtlst 49: NOS.8-10.
24
would be placetl i l l ii coudit ion of "i~vo\vetl H I I ~111ii\,erhaI\veiikllebs*.,
lir: npprehen(le(l t II:I t his R a ~ i l io p i ~ l i o011 ~ ~t 1 1 o t at i*slle nlisllk
give umi)lage t o the ( ' O I I ~ ~of Directors iill(I, lliel.efore, elu.nestly
t l llonle ;ill t horil ies to r t ~ n i e ~ ~ i \t)hit
r e q ~ ~ e s t e the c ~t r t l l c . s c h hR(l I)eell
w~*it ten in all hincerity.
(:onling t o t h e clucbstio~i~f the ~.e,s~lnll)t ion of the tenmitory of
Yrlrandar S i ~ ~ g l Hisl , Lo~*clslripl~eltltllat i l l \pic\\7of tl1c1 restriction
plitceil r ~ p ot h~e ~( ; O ~ ~ ~ I * I I It I ~of~ I Intliit
I t ) y the. Honic ; I N thorities, it
was I ~ etcr t thii t the \vllolt* miit tvr Iw bl~q)t.~icletlIwcar~se '*cq.(~lby
~~ro\.isionillarrangen~ent of a tthrritory lnr~st b e 1)atl". TTndel-;\
system lial)le to I)e reviseti \\ritl~in i~ few r~~olitlis,His 1,or~ship
feared t h a t t h e people woirld lose confide~lcein tllc British. But, a t
t h e snnic time. a s he felt that [tic erlqr~iryot' Captail1 Jenkins must
have illrthiitly Ictl ~)eopleto vx1)ec.t (>;11.Iy illle~~fercncc.,he Icft the
nlilt ter to t h e clccaision of t l ~ c\:itbe-PI-esiderit-in-Cou~icil.~"
13cgiircling the merits alitl cle1l1tb1.it s of [lie "Prohil)itol~.Order"
issllecl by the Co11t-t of I)i~.ec.tors. w c arc conslri~inotl to say that
Ilis 1,ordsIiip ~.i~tl.icr ~nisl~ntl(.r\too(l thc spirit of tlic order of the
Home n l r tliorilies. His fc~nrs\vctrc 1111fou11clecl.I t \irns not n gencl-al
(\~nhilrgotlt~cla~-ing every act of tlic Illdin Government tenlporary
pending I he finiil orcler ~)nc;scdI,;\. tl~cml: it sinlply restricted the
power of tllc Tntliii Govc~~~nnient in olic ficlcl of action, namely, the
~IIII~X ~ I of the t crri torics of i1 in t ive prince \vitl~outreference to
Iion
hem. TII o11r opinion tlie Cro\.ernnlcnt of Tndia hy their arbitrary
i ~ s eof thc discrcat iona1.y po\vcbrs ~ c s t c c l in them, ns lamentably
rxeniplified in the case o'f .Tilint i i . quite j11i;tificd the promulgation
of t hc a h o r c "P~~oliil,itol-yOrelcl-". hon.evc\r 1111pnli1 tnhlc it ~nigllt
have Iwen to them.
July.
The Vice-President held a meeting of ilie Chl~ncil on the 8th
1898. A1rg11.t 18.38 t o d c t c ~ . n ~ i nfinally
c t h c qr~estionnt iscrle in the light
AuEUst of tlie p~-oIiihitorp order passed hy tlie HOIIIC all thorities. Accord-
1838. ingly they rcricn-ccl the cnsc of Purandiir Singh d~ noiw and \Irere
convinccil that tlic Inensllre of resl~niption having been determined
on. any cleliiy to m r r y i t into effect ~volllil he attmclecl with the
<(
\TWJT\volmstco~iseq~icnces".With regard t o the order of the C0ul.t
of Di~*rctors,they hclrl that this was not npplicnhle t o t h c case and
firinlly resol\~cdt o arltho~*iseCaptail1 .Jenkins "to adopt the necessRrY
steps 'for rcsrinling the ad~iiinist~.ntion of the territory made over t*
Pl~rnnclal* Singh in Rrnrch 18.33 nncl for pli~cingit under the manage-
men1 of the Rrit is11 oficcrs". T h c Governor-Gcencral concurred in
the rcsollllion of tlic Vicc-Presiclent-in-Co~~ncil nnd P ~ ~ r n n d aSindl
r
.
'I6 lhi,I,
l'urandur Sin yh'a Jlo.tttin ion
" h) n)c~~li~~c.k's
m i ~ ~ u l eSeptell~lxr
. 14. 1831.
(b) 1,orct Elkllborougl~'~letter to Sec.rel Collllnit tce. J H I I U A18.
~ \ ' 1841.
('. H. Pl~ilips-The East Illtlia C ~ I I I , ) ~Cl~npler II~. YII.
Holeris-Hislory of British India. P. 386.
58 "Tlie strellgtl~, ir~flue~~ce ~ l ctilt.
r11t1 i ~ ~ d e ~ w l ~ r l eof e ('olrrt o l 1)irec.lor.q Rs
ageillst the Bonrd or ColrtroI \.nrid i l l prol)orIio~~ lo tho sil.el1gl11or he India
inlerest in Parlianlent. 111 1834 111ere\yefib 45 111di;r 111enll)crsa3 ngnill~t
iu 1806"-Philips' "Eaat 111rlii1.C O I I I ~ ) R 1784-1831..
II~." I'nge 9%'.
-y!J Roberls-History of Brilisl~ 111tlia; P. 986.
" ' L e t t e r lo Secrel Con~nliltee; Jany. 18. 1844.
" 1I)alhousie's Privale letter to Sir George Couper ; I>etu.~l~l)cr R. 18.51.
G".etter fro111Courl to Boiirtl. Aug11.t 47. 1829.
" Keill~-Co~~stitutio~l~I History of India. Page 140.
Purundur Sin yh's i ) o ~ iirt
i ion
P. C . 1832, A u g u ~ ,40,
~ No. 94.
". C . 1832, August 20, No. 95.
106 The An;nsxation of Asdam
tary of the British Government and also reconlmended assignment
of a small force to him for the protection of himself and his country
against aggressiol~s by independent powers such as the W @ ~ , ~ I
This proposal of Captain Fisher was strongly supported by the
Augel, Agent.7 B u t the Supreme Gover~lment turned it dowll as it
'1839 appeared unnecessary to then1 to enter into any fresh engagement
with Tuliirim. The earlier proposal of Captain Fisher regarding the
supply of arms and money t o Tullriim or posting of a small force
in any part of Tul~riiin'scountry was also negatived by the Supreme
Government. The Supreme Authorities stated, "No reason exists
for burdening ourselves with any expense whatsoever for the purpose
of maintaining the authority of TodiirBm", and aptly remarked,
"what he cannot keep in order by his own means he ought to
relinquish".e
We find from the records that though Tukriim had no direct
Sept 17, help from the British Government as desired by his well-wisher
1833 Captain Fisher, the local &cers adoptcd all possible means they
were capable of taking under the old treaty provision, to save his
territory from further molestations and he was firmly seated in his
government. But T u k r a m deserved no such help. Just at this
stage when things were brightening up for him, he commit-
ted acts of treachery and brutality which not only cost h i h the
good will of the Paramount Power but also deprived him of a good
part of his kingdom.
Tulgriim made a swift descent towards the end of September
1833 upon the district of Dharampur, which was under the
management of a native officer appointed by the British Govern-
ment, and aft.er burning four or five villages, carried away several
individuals, two of whom, namely Songrim and Mathur, were
murdered in the jungles. These diabolical murders were committed
by agents of Tulgrkm and under his own immediate personal direc-
Sept 90,
tion and order. The murdered met1 who were British subjects, were
1832
reported to have given Tul&fiin great offence.
When this ghastly news was conveyed to the Agent he issued
immediate orders for the apprehension of Tulgrgm, whom he
declared to be the leader of a gang of lawless marauders liable to
the severest punishment. On the 3rd October, Tullir8m
arrested by Captain Fisher and sent down to the Magistrate of
' Sylhet to stand his trial.0 As Tulbrgm was an independent bill
hillmen decidedly averse t o t h e rule of Tuldrim and tllcy all ex- lass
pressed their desire t o come l1nder British ad~iiinistl.ntioll.'~
Accordingly Central Cachnr was annexed 1 ) ~tile I3riti.h Go\'erll-
ment and a llew treaty ass concluded with TlllirAm ~-1li~h
'l'he Bar Sentlpati, the chief of the Illitaks, entered into a11
eligagement wit11 Mr. Scott in hiay 11326 as lnentiolled earlier,
wherel~y he acknowledged the supremacy of the British Govern-
ment nnrl agreed to furnish the Pnrnlnouot Power with a colltingerlt
of YO0 piiiks in time of war as well as ill tirne of peace. No tribute
\\cs lionever clemiinded frorn him. To check the flow of c.migr~nt,
illto the kingdom of the Bar Seniipnti fl-on~Upper Assan], a n officer
was ~naintained a t his capital who \vas cml~owered to collect poll
taxes from the absconding psiiks on behalf of the British Govenl-
~uent. Ei*erything passed off smoothly and nothing marred the
friendly reliltion that existed between the Vnssal and the Parunlount
Power. At the time of the Singpllo Insurrection, however, the
fidelity of the Bar Sendpati was doubted by the local officers, but
his repeated offer of help to tlle British Governnlent proved beyond
doubt t h a t the old chieftain was decidedly faithful to his engngc-
rnents and finally convirlced Mr. White of the sincerity of hi*
p11rpose.'
The old arrangement continued until the yenr 18:J:i \vheu
Upper Assan1 was transferred to ~ u r n n d a rSingh. The post of tllr
British official stationed a t Rongagors was aibolilslled Inter. \Ye
have secn before that the request of Purandar Singh to retain t h ~ t
officer to collect poll taxes on his behalf was not acceded to hg t l ~ e
British Government,%either did they accept the propos~lof Mr.
White to demand a proportionate assessment from the Bar YcnB-
pnti to stop the emigrntion of pfiiks from the Raja's territory.
But in the year 1836 an innovation was introduced and the Bnr
8enipati was :isked to make a payment of Rs. 1800/- per annun1
in lieu of the service of pgiks3 \vho consequently ceased to perfor~u
duties for the Paramount Power.
From the time of Mr. Robertson, however, attempts were
being llnde to levy a general tribute from the Bar S o ~ i p n t i . But
the Suplaerne Government was averse to levying any tribatc from
his kingdool. 35 they prized the f r i e n d s l ~ of
i ~ these wild chiefs and 1854.
lo. Ibid.
the part of tile Maju Gohain t o supply c ~ o l i t as . ~ dcnlalldrd by hfr.
~ I H I I I Ithe
H , officiating Political Agent.
111 truth t h e alliallce of Mug 1846 v a s nearillgthin and there
\\as gl.owing coldllcss on the part of tllr & G t a k chiefs. & captain
\ r ~ t ~proposed
h t h a t in fairness to all l!artic.s, n fse,h census should
talit.11 i111d on the basis of the 1 1 e i l by
Scott, the Mliju %hain should bind himself to st~ljl,lv t \ ! ~ ~ - t h i ~ d ~
of the piilia, who \vould either ulpldy labour ill tile Paramowt
Power 01. commute their pe~*sonalservice into :j nlonejr payment.
other respects he found himself in f u l l agreement \rith what
M'hitc had recommended. Captain Vetch c o n ~ m u n i c a t d these
proposals t o 2l6ijti Gohain who had been invited to nleet him. ' I-Ie
accepted the main proposal of Captain Vetch, 1,ut with regard to
[he ruggestion t h a t thc survey party should be acconlpanied by a
few co~~lpanies of sepoys t o overawe all attempts at opposition a t
the time of t h e census, the h G j u Gohain begged that the survey
work shculd be carried through quietly, urithont the presence of a
strong military force.ll
Mr. Jenkins found the sl~ggestionsof Captain Vetch quite judi-
ciolls and equitable though he feared t h a t under the proposed
armne;ement "the resourcss of a large portion of the country would
be lost to 'us and Maju Gohain would Fe the first to rise against
us if he can establish a firm allthority".12 T h e Supreme Govern-
ment approved of the suggestions p n t forward by Captain Vetch
and instructed t h e Agent to enter into an a r r a n ~ e m e n t with
the nfli&juGohain on the lines laid down by the Political Aqcnt.
It seemed t h a t t h e vexed R!To5m%.i,? tangle was on the wav to
settlement b u t t h e Supreme Governmolt a t this stage added
two seemingly innocent corollaries which prevented the solution of
the Md?im?irit% problem.
The upper part of the Bar Senspati's doininion known es
"MoranW jvaS eYclll~iveIyinhabited by t h e MokGriHs ~ h o it,
reported $0 the C a l a r t t ~Counc;l. were averse to t h e rule of the
Bar Senspeti's family because their religious tepetr and nrnctices
differed from those practised by the members of the ruling famil''.
The inhphitslnts of lower M5tak urcre mainly composed of the
refilgee Assameke piiks. So the Supreme florcmnlent insisted on
the separation of t h e former tract froin the rest of the MGtak
country t o be b y the Mc?itl Gohain. and f ~ t h e made
r
a fresh demand t h a t all jungle tracts of tile Countllr along with waste
l1. h i d .
12, Rid,
The Annexation of Assam
lands should be placed i t t the disposal of the East Indiu Comyally,l~
Captain Jellkins iristructcd Captain Vetoh t o proqeed to
Rungagor6 and effect a settlenici~t of the district with the Mgju
Gohain on the basis of the terms fixed by the Calcutta autllorities
and, in case of a breakdown of tlie negotiations, Captain Vetch
also authorised to take possession of the country. Captain Vetch
feared that the Mitju Gohain and his other brothers would not
accept any arrnngernent that would not include Upper Rloriin. so
he requested Captain Jenkins to irlnke arrangement for the posting
of soldiers along the frontier posts of the Mbtak district with a view
to securing a peaceable occupation of the country in case of
Nov, 1830
refusal.14
Precautionary measures were taken and on the 12th November
1830, Captain Vetch escorted by YO0 men of the Assam Light In.
fantry and 150 recruits of Upper Assnm Sihbandi left for the capital
of Mdtak through upper Rl014An. H e found the country side well
cultivated. The cl~ltivationof cotton, sugarcane and Mugi he found
in abundance. The men who grew these crops interested him no
less. Their physical features impressed him and Captain Vetch
found in them the making of admirable soldiers and thought of
forming a company out of them for warfare on the frontier. The
sides of the Dib1-u river he passed through, appeared to him well
adapted for the cultivation of tea. I n due time he reached the head
quarters of Upper RIorfi11 where he was waited upon by the Gohain
and other respectable men and heads of the vil!ages. I t is reported
that all expressed their desire rlot to be placed under the control
of the Bar Senlipati's family. Their grievances appeared to Captain
Vetch of little importance. They did not complain of any mal-
treatment a t the hands of the Bar SenGpati or his sons. Their
main grievance wras that as they were the followers of Vishnu they
desired not t o he ruled by men holding different religious tenets. It
is evident t h a t the sectarian spil-it m~nifestedbv their forefathers
in the early seventies of the 18th century had not died down.
Captain Vetch, however, did not acounint them with the views of
the Slipreme Gbvernment but told them to send a denutation t o
RancapodB where they would he informed what trrms wollld be
offered t o the M'iiu Gohain and then left for his destination?"
He arrived a t Ran~agorl,?.and before an assemhlacre composed
of the heads of village.; and Khels, announced the new
" Even the Cov?rmr-Genemi Lord 1)ulllousie adnlitted in the course of lris
minute dated the 6th Marcll, 1853 t l ~ tthese urrw n d pro\-Isio~lal arrang~rnellh
" "Leer from Court No. 44 of 1835.
? J Letter from Court No. 17 of 1837.
I t has bee11 nlc.i~tiolied earlier t l l ~ t bcott C'IILC'I'C'~ ~ I I ~ O
arra~lgenlrntwith the bad~ykilihawa G o l ~ u i ~111i 1 8 X G s11111iarto Illat
made \ V I L ~the Bar Se~L;lpatl. 'I'lie ilitercourse w ~ t hthe kllarrltis \vus
carried on by the b r ~ t ~ sGpvernnieiit
h tlllwugl~ a lliltlve officPP
stat~onecla t the headquarters of the Khhmti Chief. 'I he I C l ~ a ~ ~ t i ~
proved valuable allies to the S~'itisliin the year 1630 \vlien the
Singphos aided by their brethren beyond 11iade n deternii~~ed attack
on the eastern part of Assam. Everything went on smoothly ur~til
the death of the Sadiyii IChawa Gohain which took place early in 1895.
His eldest son who succeeded him as Sadiyt;t 1Cllawa Gohain wns a
man of great intellectual powers. Though it Buddhist, he was well
acquainted with Bengali and the doctrines of the Hindu religion.
But he was reported to be a notorious intriguer1 and he entered into
a dispute with the Xillf~takchief over a piece of land over which both
of them asserted claims. Captain White, Political Agent stationed
a t Sadiyk, called upon the quarrelling chieftains to refer the matter
to him.
But the Sadiyfi Khawh Gohain defied the instructions of the
political Officer and took forcible possession of the land under dis-
pute. The matter was referred to the Agent (Mr. Jenkins) who
agreeing with the line of action as recommended by Mr. White, at
f i s t suspended the recalcitrant chief and finally removed him from
office and brought the whole tract under direct British occupation.2
Though, as regards the internal arrangement, the K h m t i s were left
as before under their own chiefs, the Assnmese who formed two-
thirds of the population'of this region i ~ n dhad been reduced to a
state of slavery by the Khiiimtis were declared free. And for revenue
and judicial purposes they were placed under the direct control of a
British officer. The Assamese were taxed a t the rate of Re. 1/- per
head in lieu of their personal service. This measure was approved
of by the Court of Directors who simply remarked that the local
officials in assessing the Khiimtis ought to have ~roceededwith more
caution and con~ideration.~
These innovations produced a marked change in the attitude of
*The firse Mission was sent under Mr. Rogle and Captain Turner JuGw
the second half of the 18th Century (1783).
The Duars
110 orga1list.d Govrr~~nl'lltill the country capable of euforcillg ita
will.
C ' H I J ~ ~'L ~ ~ I ~ hisl i ~ r ~ ~ i vaat l Yullfikld found tile
011
Cotrc~rllmentill a lllost ul~scttlccl3tatt.. 'J'lic. tvere not
o r l l , ~clisinclilled t o agree to ;I v. ol' tlw 111orc illll)ortant propositions
made to thcnl by the ~ - c * p ~ - c s c i ~ of t a t thei i * ~Colllpany b u t they felt
their tenure of powel- so insccurc~that tlley e\.ell die] 11ot \venture to
accede t o ally of the rniaol- i ~ i ~ i ~ l l g ~\\'Ilal i ~ ~ e\\.as ~ ~\verse.
t ~ . he had
to co11tluct the 11egotiatior15 I I I I ( ~ C ' I '~ ' ~ l ' l ' l l l l l ~ ~ i $ l of
l ( ' ~1' b, e ~ ~ l i idifficultj7
lr
and tlelicacy. Ye had to collciliate tlie good will uf the d e p s e d
Deb ltaja without a t the saine t i n ~ cgiving u n l i ~ r i i gto ~ the reigning
chief. J-Je had also t o nlciAt thtb "\.al-iou.s i11tl.i~uc.;.st~.;rttlgc.msa ~ l d
dcvices t h a t were put ill the \Yay of the hctLle~uc.~ltof the o ~ t -
standing questions." Consclquently, Captain Peml~erton failed to
secure any settlement of the question con~iectcd with the duars.
Nevertheless. as he conducmtcd negotiations "in an eminently
j~~tlicious manner and displayed a more than ordinary degree of
ability, discernment and discretion" under circunlstances of peculiar
difficulty, his work was apprcciated by the Court of Directors who
thought that although in such a state of affairs "entire success was
nl)viously l~naili~ini~l)lc. ;t foulldatio~lhad been laid for their partial.
9 Mwkenzie P. P. 19-40.
'"Mackel~zie P. P. 19-20.
The Duars in lower Assam, eight in number. were all held by tributary Rajns
who paid an aggregate revenue of Rs. 1*.000/- to the British Government. (P. C. 1833.
January 7, No. 84.)
Observation on the Annexation Policy
T h u s we find that in t h e course of t hrec tlc>cailes (1824- 1654) the
different parts of t h e Brahmaputra and S L I ~ I Viillcy I I ~ ~ wcrc. i ~ l l n e s ~ d
t o t h e British clominioris. I n t m c i l ~ gt l ~ chistory of thew ilnlles;i-
tions, i t may be noticed t h a t on some occnssions, the ilictl~o~lof
annexation as pursued by t h e East India C o i n l j a ~ ~Iiaqy 11ot I,rc,ll
justified by us. Even t h c I-lorne authorities coiilcl not ~ c ceye to
eye with their Agents in Inclin on the ;~iincx;ttion of i l I ~ t a k alltl
of RIit;ll<
Jaintik ; on strictly nlornl grounds i l i c l c w l thc i11111~~atioll
cannot be justified. But if we discuss thca iin~iesntion policy as a
whole from t h e general point of view of 1)olitical \\risclo~u.we find
that there was no other altcrnati\?e left opcn to the
E a s t India Company.
When t h e Bld?nl5rifis struck a t t h e authority of the S\vnrgndev
Lakshmi Sing11 towards the nlitltlle of tllc cigl~teenthcentury, Ahom
civilization had become a spcnt forcc; its potcncy for good was
gone. T h e country's i~dministration had beconlc llopelcssly inefi-
cicnt. T h e successive rebellions orgil~lised by the disaffected
Mokm5rih scct and factions engendered by a sniall* and selfish
ruling class hastened t h e process of disruption and t h e final coup de
grace was given b y t h e Burmese whose victory brought into Assam
n reign of terror. When t h e British appeared filially on the soil of
flssain in 1894 and reconquered it. they f o ~ ~ n tthe l 111ass of the
people reduced t o the deepest poverty and ignorance and the
vanquished enemy a t the gates of Assam still in bellicose attitude.
H a d t h e British forces retired from t h a t unhappy valley a t that
stage as did Welsli half a c e n t u i ~ ngo not only i h c eastern
frontier of the Brilish Empire would have been imperilled, Assam
would not have recovered from t h e blight of mcdizval theocratic rule.
A hopelessly decadent society and disorganiscd state badly felt
t h e necessity of a reform and a n efficient government. T h a t was
supplied by t h e Agents of t h e E a s t India Company. Reactionary
forces were suppresed; law and order was quickly restored and gra-
duallj. one uniform law and one uniform system of administration was
introduced throughout .4ssam and t h e province ~ v a sbrought n7ithill
t h e pale of enlightened British administration. British collquest
opened for Assam a new era of peace and prosperity. Tliese \yere
t h e fruits, t h e tn11y glorious fruits of British peace. B u t
wns slow t o come ; t h e immediate effect of conquest on Assam proper
was rather depressing as will be evident from t h e following pages.
\Vc h;lrc Ice11 thtit soou after the treaty of Yalldabo (1m)
boll1 portio~isof the B r ~ h m a p u t rvalley
~ i.e. Assan, proper were
formally al~nexecl by the East India Company. The adverlt of
British rule in Assail1 was hailed with jog by the illhebitants, and
peace nt last dawned on A s s ~ mafter half a century of internecine
struggles and devastating \varfarc. But prosperity did not retun1
to this land as was expected. For mnny years following the introduc-
tion of British rule the country remained in a very deplorable state
-rather in many respects, its condition deteriorated. I t was a
period of maladministration. Abject misery and confusion reigned
eveqwherc and many of the inhabitants left the country driven out
by h ~ ~ n g eand
r extortion.
Captain Jenkins writing as late as 1833 pointed out, "since the
full occupation of Assam (1823) by us upurards of eight years have
elapsed in uninterrupted peace and there sce111s to be but too good
renso~tto suppose that t11c nun~l>erof thc people has a t last not
increased, nor their condition been improved ;"I when Mr. Robert-
,*en assumed the chargc of Assam in 1834, he found "the country
retrogating, its inhabitants emigrating. its villages decaying and its
revehue annually declining". And this statc of things struck him
as very peculiar because tha provincc of Arakan, which was
acquired b;y the East India Company a t the same tirnc as Assani,
was reported to him to be advancing annually with its population
increasing and its resources improving. Thcsc differences appeared
to him to be all the more extraordinary bccause the pro\rince of
Assam possessed natural advantagcs far superior in many respects to
those of Arakan and "would have" according to him "kept pace or
outstripped that province in the career of inlprovement under equal
manngemcntv.z ~ u reverset was the case. When this sad p i c t u ~
of Assam was brought to the notice of the Court of Directors the?.
felt that "we have hitherto governed Assam extrenlely ill'' and called
upon the Calcutta to tnke imnlcdiate steps to termillate
this deplorable state of a f f ~ i r s . ~
So it is admitted on all hands that the first ~ffcct of British
--
(P.P. 1832, July 23, Nos. 70-71).
"Cater on they were elected for a term OF three ymrr
This systeru couplcd with the metllod of direct elc.ctioll beellled
to be an excellcat oiic 011 paper. But ncither thc republiculb
character of tlie nor the ~lioderatcasst'sslnent fiBcC'd by
tlie British Govcri~~rlc~lt was of any iivail. This 11cw systcnlj did llot
work well ill practice. No nclequatc nlciwurcs in priictice appcltred
to have been acloytcd to sccurc tile ryots from extortion. It is true
that in theory the clcction of the CI~oudhuric)swas vcstc.d ill t]lc llliIltls
of the ryots who clccted hi111 by ballot, but in practice, this systenl
broke dowri and brought untold misery upon the ryots. Scott did
not take into consideratio~i thc nature of the liunian agencies that
were to be employed to work out his otherwise exccllc~ltsyste~rlnor
did he foresee the nunlcrous loop-holcs for extortion and nlalpractice
which his syste111offerecl to an unscrupt~lor~s man. Again the systen~
itself proved to bc it vicious one hedged in by nu~l~crous conditioris.
Now let us sec how the systeni workccl out in practice.
Before a Chozc.clhzlry could obtain a pargan& he liatl to pay
large sums to the officers of the Gauhati court as bribes. If installed,
he was required to furnish security for the collections to be made by
him on \vhich he had to pay a commission of loyo,a sum equal to
his legitimate renluneration. And lastly he had to advance to the
treasury half a ycar's revenue before he had collected anything and
it is reported that this sun1 hc had to procure by borrowing a t a
ruinous rate of illterest sonieti~neseven running to 1207'. Further
it appeared that in some instances when unoccupied lands were
thronln into the ~ R I I of ~ S the Cl~oudhuriesa t an arbitrary valuation
and there was no one to settle in that land a t that rzte, they made
good the loss by realising the rent of unoccupied land from other
ryots. So it is quite cvident that the system itself was erroneous
and "its tendency lllust have been to convert even a well disposed
man into an extortioner." Sometimes the Choz~dhu~-ies bribed the
ryots by promises arid even by money to secure re-election.l"vel~
\!.here the field of extortion mas sonlewhat barren, there was 110
dcarth of applicants for Chouclhllriship. The inere name of Chow-
dhury was \ralr~ablein the eyes of the Assanlese. A choudhury when
installed began to extort on all sides. Foreseeing the possibility of
his not being re-elected, hc squeezed to the utmost extent practi-
cable.
The mode of assessment was another source of evil. It was SO
r:~dirnlly \~irior~r tli:r t it gave thc choudhuries amplc loopholes for
~ ~ t o ~ . t i o TTntler
ll. the r1c.w I.c\lenuc system. a choudhur?/ could demmd
fmnl the ~-yotsthe follo\ving taxes such as a house tax, n poll tax of
e
15 Ibid. ..
Ibid.
37 Letter from Court NO.14 OE 1894.. ..
P. P. 1899, July 29, NO.'70-71.
232 The Annexation of Assnn~
acl1ninistralio11 1s to attributed. Thc 11ew judici;~l systc~ll \vhicll
\\.its gelieri~llj~
r ~ by
n the "native m a c h i ~ ~ c ~was
y " 110 less r c ~ ~ l , ~ ~ ~ ~ i [ , l ~
for this unhappy state of tl~ings. 111 Upper Assa~il,as wc hiLvcbvc,l
cnrliclh, the judicial business was ylaccci u ~ ~ d telr~ es u l ~ ~ r i l l t c l ~ d ~ ~
the Bnr Phukan. For the dccisio~iof civil suits, stunding c o n l ~ l ~ i t t ~ ~ ~
wcrc constit~~ted colisisti~lgof ptlntlit s ancl vario~tsofficers of stiltc.
'l'he crinlitial court was con~posetlof three judges, t\vo ~ ' ~ ~ ~alld ldit~
six :~sscssors. I n Lowcr Assan1 the sarnc procedure was followe[l ;
only n nntivc ,sl~e~istillid~i~ was appointed as head of the judicial
c.stab11shnlcnt instc:tcl of the Bar Phukan.'!' Thus the entire jt1,liciul
milcl~inery\\.as left to be nlanagctl by the Native agency.
111 crimini~lmittters, where the native judges sat and deliberated
under the cye of L: European officer, verdict appeared to be very
satisfactory, but with regard to civil cases, where thc only control
they were subjcct to was that of :I remote revision by a superior
officer in the person of the Governor-General's Agcnt overwhelmed
with othcr duties, the same could not be said. Mr. Kobcrtson says,
"Even the suddcr panchayets are generally reported to be venal in
the extreme while the Muffasil Panchayets are mere cngines of
abuse and extortion". The most striking feature in the criminal
husincss of the period was the great prevalence of crime in Lower
Assam. A surprisingly great number of people werc implicated and
convicted of criminal offences such as gang robberies. This was
duc not only to the mildness of the penal system* as introduced by
the new government but also to demoralisation and poverty
arising from n had revenuc settlenicnt. I t is reported that Scott
allo\ved the police officers to takc bribes that were offcred to them
provicled thcy werc instantly reported. From the difficulty of
obtaining qualified persons it was necessary, during the early days
of British administration to employ drn14fiis convicted of bribery and
the result was that "with some exceptions only the refusc of the
other Zillah came there" and these villains maltreated the people
n t their pleasure.20
According to hlr. Robertsoh, it was to the scanty European
Agency cmployecl in Assam that the misery of the pcople and the
defalcation of the revenue were directly traceable and this statement
i q true to n great extent. Wc have seen how Scott himself advocat~rl
'
I!' S. C. 1826, July 7, No. 31.
* The old cruel and barbarous rnelhod of punishment was do& avay with.
2'' P. P.1839, July 43, Nos. 7'0-71,
The effect8 of the Annexutim 28s
"He iilluwttd the desire ot apanng erpenaes to bfcolne paramount
U bfi l~llllda b to detfl llllll trollr ~ l - r , ~ i nfor
g tllc aar~bhllce
he ll~r~lacrr eurrardercd tu b e abwlutny nrceSbPry'. l+aeticauy
llle tor Illally yearb tollowlllg Lkle introduction of Urlllsh rule, .&the
@vt.l.llur-Gellt'l.A Agent hiid bern vifiua1ly the judge, nurgstmte
md c ~ l l a c l ~0 1r h i r e r Aasalu with a rillglC aaaistl(llt help hilo"
w h l k during the bulllc pc-nod the yrovillctt of Arakll which does not
Nlual ill extellt the pmvince of Lob\rer Assalll, was nlaulled by sir
Euroyeall officers.
'l'he territory of Assam l~early400 mile3 in leUgth and 50 miles
IU breadth 011 an average, having an estimated yopuhtioll of 8 ~ , 0 0 0
and an a~lnualleveliue ot 3,50,000 rupees, was aclminlblerd ill dl
its branches under the direction of a single functionary overburden&
with other business. The result was a foregone conclusion. ''The
greater part of the revenue and judicial adruinistrlttioll was entrusted
to native functionaries without any adequate provision for repressing
the abuse of their ~>owers"and maladm~nistrationfollowed iu every
branch of the administration. And in the opinion of Mr. Robertson
"The experiment of substituting native for European agency in the
administration of Assam ended in a decided failure", because "Mr.
Scott sought to extract an honest result out of the con-
flicting agency of dishonest in~trurnent".~~
As a result of this maladministration, the situation towards the
end of 1832 became really alarming. Captain Bogle reported that
"many of the poor class were found subsisting upon the seeds of
bamboos". Their number was again greatly thinned by deaths and
desertions. Mr. Robel-tson, who was then acting as Agent to the
Governor-General, also reported that the revenue of Assam seemed
to be daily falling into a more deplorable state and that the out-
standing Lalance had amounted to upwards of 5 lacs of rupees and
he apprehended that unless some steps were taken immediately to
arrest the falling of the revenue, the balance would become irre-
coverable and the future collection would dwindle away to lo thing.^^
The whole system appeared to him to be radically vicious. Such
was the deplorable picture of the state of Assam during the early
years of British rule (1835-1833).
The local did not remain content with sending these
disquieting reports alone. The whole system W ~ e f i r dto tllrnl to be
radically vicious and deserving of radical reform. They therefore
sbgested immediate reforms. Lt . Rutherford advocated the
21 Ibid.
22 Letter from Court NO.14 of 1894.
234 The Annexution of Assam
blishrnent of a Ryotwuri Syl).'~Lem ill place of the hated Choudhury
system, and to afford adequate protection to ryots, he plmned the
division of the larid illto lltilu/is co~isistiligof 4 nuiuxus each with a
~iatlvewriter (Khayatee) to keep the accounts. fle also provided
a mondal for each Ti$zik to be assisted by a ' * G ~ - uBUTT&''
m (viliage
headman) from each village all of whom, under his scheme, was to
receive remuneratioii either in cash or in kind. There would be a
Niiib T u s l ~ i l d &
in~ each pargan8 to whom these subordinate officers
wvere to submit accounts and the former again would be under the
charge of a senior I'cqshildir (orre for 4 lmrgan4s). The author of
the scheme hoped that this system by its developmerlt and practical
application would create an interest in the soil and would moreover
secure for the ryots a readier means of redressing complaints by
tracing it through different hands, because under his scheme it would
be impossible to stop the mouth of so many investigators." Lt.
Rutherford and Captain Bogle also urged for the immediate aboli-
tion of "Burgonne" and other irregular impositions.
Robertson to whom these reports were submitted in the first
i ~ s t a n c eimmediately acted upon several of the suggestions. To him
the most indispensable thing that Assam needed a t that period was
an efficient machinery to carry out the administration and all other
considerations appeared to him of secondary importance. And
acting on this principle he proposed that a sub-commissioner with a
salary of Rs. 2,OOO/- per mensern with one or two assistants attached
to his office should be appointed immediately a t the centre to give
relief to the overworked Agent and Commissioner, and for the
districts he recommencled the appointment of three assistants, each
in charge of three separate divisions of Assam, with powers of
magistrate and collector. The cost of European establishment he
calculated a t Rs. 50,000/- per annum and begged the Supreme
Government to remember that they should not look askance at the
costly measure which, he assured them, would really make the
revenue of Assam a real and not a nominal source of supply, as it
had been hitherto.24
The Supreme Government to which all these proposals were
submitted immediately authorised the Agent to write off the sum of
I"* a s . 72,000/- out of the defaulting revenues. As the numerous items
of extra assessment were reported to be "a fruitful source of con-
fusion, litigation and oppression" they ordered their abolition or
consolidation as far as polssible on the expiry of the existing leases.
' The inhabitants of [he prir~cipalities conquered after this yriotl (18%
of go!o;ng through the sufferings which
1833) had not the n~isfortu~ie their leks
fortunate brethren of the Brnhmnputra Valley had experielic.cd during the early
stages of British rule. The Brnllmaputra Valley h d bcw~subjected t o experimellttll
schemes wiU1 the attendant evils, wl~erens the tracts acquired subsequently were
administered up011 thwe priliciples whicl~experience had proved to t~ llie nlost
kneficient. ' .',
APPENDICES
APPENDIX "A"
l'reety concluded between L)uvid Scatt, Agent to ttie Governor Geaerd
on the part ul' the lion'ble East h d i a Conlpauy aud Haju 1 h Sing,
h l e r of Jynteeyoor or Jynteah.
Article lbt : h j a h Haw Siug wkr~owledga allegiance to tht: Hon'ble
Company d p l a w his c o u t r y of Jynteali under their protection ; mutual friend-
ship and arnity sllall Jwnys be mclil~tined betwee11 Ll~e Hon'ble Company and
the Rajah.
A~tiole2 n d : The internal Gover~imentof the Coul~trystid be conducted by
the ltajah and the jurisdictiorl of the Britisll C o l d s of Justicc sllall not exlrlul tl~elr.
The Rajah will always utte~ldto the welfare of his subjects uul ohserve tlu u11cieut
~vstorr~suf Goverrtrnerr~hbut, should any u~~l'orewel~ abuse a r k ill the tidniinialrution
of affairs he agrees to rwlify the sanle ngreably to the udvicc of tile Go\~eruor-
General in Council.
A~i?de 3 r d : The Hon'ble Company engages to protect the territory of
Jynteah from external enenlies and to arbitrate auy differences that nlay arise between
the h j a h and other states. The Rajah ngrees to abide by sucli arbitration nnd to
hold no political correspondence or communication with foreign powers except with
the consent of the British Government.
Article 4 t h : In the event of the Iion'ble Company h h ~ gengaged in war to
the Eastward of the Burrumapooter t l ~ eJbjah engngvs to assist wit11 all forces and
to afford every other facility in his power in furtherance of such militnry operativw.
Article 5 t h : The Rajah agrees in concert with the British local authoritiee
to adopt all measures that may be necessary for the maintenanc* in the district of
Sylhet of the arrtmgement in force in the Judicial, Opium and Salt department.
Executed this 10tli &larch 1824.
Correspondi~igwith the 4ALh of Phagon 1230 at Rajahgunge.
Sdl- D. Scott.
Agmt t o t h Govamor Qennal.
Sewrats article of tha Treaty concluded between the Hon'ble Company and.
h j a h Ham Sing of Jynteah.
Rajah Ram Sing engages that to assist in the war cornn~e~~ced
in Assam between
the Hon'ble the Company's troops and tliose of the Kiug of Ava, he will march a
force and attack the enemy of the East of Gowahntty axid the IIon'ble Cornpaw
agrees upon the conquest af Assam to confer upon the Rajah a part of that territory
proportionate to the extent of hie exertions in the conlmon cause.
APPENDIX "B"
The Memorial of' Rajundar Sing, Rajah of Joyntiapore respect.fully ttheweth.
That your Memorialist is the descendant and successor of a race of independant
Chiefs, who for a long course of ages have ruled over a territory, situate on Lhe north
W e r n frontim of Bengal and known by the name of Joyntiapore.
m a t the f i s t connexion between the Rajdh of Joyntiapo~and the British
Government wao in1the Saka year 1695 or English year 1779/4 when Captain Oligm
APPENDIX "A"
Treaty co~lcludtdbetween Ljavid Scutt, Agent to the Governor Gtneral
on the part uf the lion'ble E u t ludia C o r n p ~ yaud 1 b j a Rarn Sing,
Buler 01 Jyrlteeyoor or Jyuteah.
Article lkt : Rajah 1b1q Sing' u k n o w l e d p allegiance to the Hon'ble
Compa~iyd p l a ~ sllis couutry of Jynteah under their protection ; mutual friend-
ship and a ~ n i t yslrall always be maiiltuiiwd k l w c u . ~the
~ Holi'ble Coulpimy and
the Itajah.
Article 2nd : The intarnal Government of the Cou~rtrysllall be co~lductedby
the l h j a h and the juridiction of the Brltivll Courts of Jualicc 6Irt1ll not eslelrd tliere.
The Hajah will always rrttend to the welfare of his subjects aud okrva th ancient
custonls uf Gover~~lnsnt but should any uul'urewen abuse arise ill the administration
of affairs he agrees to rectify the same ngeeisbly to the ndvice of tlre Goveruor-
General in Council.
A.rticle 3 r d : The Hon'ble Company engages to protect the terri~oryof
J y n h h from external enemies and to arbitratre any differences that may arise between
tlie RRjah and other states. The Rajah agees to abide by such arbitration and to
hold no political correspondence or communication with foreign powers except with
the consent of the British Government.
Article 4 t h : In the event of the Hon'ble Company being engaged in war to
the Easlward ol the Burrumalmter the Rajah engages to assist with all forces and
to afford every other facility in his power in furtherance of such military operatives.
Artide 5 t h : Tlle Rajah agrees in concert with the British local authorities
to adopt all measures that miry be necessary for tlie mainknance in the district of
Sylhet of the arrangement in force in the Judicial, Opium and Salt depantmente.
Executed this loth March 1894.
Corresponding with the 98th ol Phagon 1230 at Rajahgunge.
Sd/- D. Scott.
Agmt to the O O V ~ W aencml.
Separate article 01 the Treaty concluded between the Hon'ble Company and.
Rajah Ham Sing of Jynteah.
Rajah Ram Sing engages that to assist in the war commenced in Assam btween
the Hon'ble the Company's troops and those of the King of Ava, he \+-ill m m h a
force and attack the enemy of the East of Gowallatty and the Hon'ble C o m m
agrees upon the conquest af Assam to confer upon the Rajah a part of that territory
proportionate to the extent of his exertions in the common cause.
APPENDIX "B"
The Memorial of Rajundar Sing, Rajah of Joyntiapore respectfully heweth.
That your Memorialist is the descendant and successor of a race of independant
Chiefs, who for a long course of ages have ruled over a territory, situate on the nortll
Eastern fro~lltiarof Bengal and known by the name of Joyntiapore.
'That the first connexion between the Rajdh of Joyntiapom and the British
Government waa in1 the Sake year 1695 or English year 1773/4 when Captain Oligar
31
$249 The Annexation of Assam
entered it in command of a Military force a ~ ~ took
d hostile possession on the part
of the British Governme~~t.This occupatioll was llowever of no long durotioll. In
the same year, the Britivh force was witl~druwn uud the Iiajtih reinstated or1 the
same footu~g as betbre. Since that t i u e hitherto the Raj of Joyotlulwre has
ack~dowled~ed the suprenltwy of tlle British Authority and hos conti~ludullcier its
shelter and protectio~lin the undistwhd possession of its ancient rlu.e of rulers,
out claim or payment of tribute oE any k u ~ d .
That on the 10th Rilorch of the Christian year 1824 the British GoverrlmeIlt
being then eugaged in warfulre with the killgdom of Ava, the Right Hon'ble the Lord
Amherst then Govenior-General of India was pleased to el~terinto a formal tl-eaty
with Rnjah Ham Sing then the ruling Prince of Joyatiapore. 'l'lle ternls arld articles
of that treaty were not only (fully complied wit11 by the Titijuh but he w ~ so
s fortulllrte
as by is fuitllful attachnlent and zealoy exertiofi in tlie siiyply of nlell o11d prOVi-
sions to the militry forces in Assam to obtain the esteem nnd approbation of the
British Authorities.
That Rajah Ram Sing died on the 11th Ashwin of the Bengal year 1439 (86tll
September A.D. 1832) leaving no male issue. arid your Menlorinlist, as the nearest
male collatieral heir in due course according t o the laws and -& of the Roj
became his Successor in the pri~~cipalityand assu~ned the dignities crf itu
chief in which he was recognized by the British Governme~it notwithstanding the
open and secret intrigues and macllinations of tlie Rajah of Poonjee and other
neighbou~ingChieftains who hoped to supldant him in his rights, and even mtwed
into a league to depose him and to possess themselves of the territory and used every
axartion to obtain the sanction of the British Government to such aggression. In this
liowvever they found themselves baulked by its wisdom and justice and by that
sacred regard to treaties and respect for the rights of others, which has gained it the
confidence of the neighbouring powers.
That being thus foiled in their unjust designs the enemies of your memorialist
tried to injure a d calumniate him with the Britidi Government by every means in
their power and for that p w p o x availed themselves of an unfortunate occurrence
which had taken place in the life time of your memorialist's ~redecessorHaln Sing
and which was as follows : - o n the &lst Assar of the Bengali year 1239 (7th July
1833) it was reported tb Mr. Robertson then Political Agent in Assam that two
subjects of the Con~pany'sterritory were on their road to Assam, kidmpped by some
miscreants set on by one Chutter Sing and carried off t o the hills in the neighbour-
l~oodof Gobha in the Raj of Joyntiapore, and there together with two others supposed
to have beeol seized in a similar manner, decked out for sacrifice a t the Shrine of
Kali ; that one of them had escaped who told that tale but lhe other three were
presumed t o have been immolated.
This statement, made by a mRn who represented himself as the fugitive being
corrohorRted by enquiry and information ,from other sources was accredited by the
Agent, and laid before the Governor General and was shortly before the death of
Rajah Ram Sing the subject of a remonstkance addressed to Rajah Ram Sing togyther
with a demand ltor the surrender of the perpetrators, which he was in the very act
of complying with, by the delivery of Chutter Sing and others, when his own1 sudden
death set the accused a t liberty.
The demand of their surrender mas renewed and your memodialist e x a d
himself t o comply with the demand. But difficulties and confusion incident to his
recent succession and a variety of other impediments made it impossible to trace or
retake Chutter Sing himself or indeed any of the other offenders till a considerable
time had elapsed. Your memorialist however a~fterrepeated attempts did at length
Appendix
ruoceed in layink hold of f o u of them whom he delivmed up to the British
Authorities, as will tlp~warby the original milteu a ~ k n o w l + ~ ~ t of Ceptrriu Jenkins,
the British OHicer then iu charge, dated tile 41st Septemkr 1-4 nor in your
memoriaiist's hands, tlnd of which a copy with trwdation i6 w~neredm w k d (B, .
Meantirne British Go\,enlme~~t lo vary terms cd the treaty and drlualld t r i h k
wlsl~il~g
in cave of \Vm on th eouLI1
in Ilcu of tile obligntioll to fur~~ihh Milittlry c.o~itillg~lt
mstel.n frol~tier, uvailed itlself of the ol)portunity offewd by tile d e ~ u iof~ Rajah
Htlni Sing to require ul levision of the treaty : and T. C. Ruhrtson h r . t h w
Political Agent for Asslllll, in purbuance of illbtruc-tiom lrom Ll~eGovernor-Genera!-
111-Council, on the a l s t May 1833 made a formal denland in w r i t r i upon your
me~norialist to enter in a new e n g a m e n t , ul which the pa.yment of o fixed lumual
tribute of Sicca Rr~pees 10,000 should l x substituted in place of Artide 4 of the
former treaty ; it wtw natiural that your inenlorialist should feel surprimd at thi
demand. It was the first time that any thing like tribute had k u required bey the
British Government, and the compliance ~vithsuc~lia demand was certain to alter
the position and estimation d the Rajah in the eyes OF the neighhuring chiefs.
Surely theirefore it was not unreasonable that your ~n~morialibt should at the moment
solicit a space of no more thml fifteen days time for delibrration. or tllat, in hie
reply of the 43rd Joystya of the Rengal year 1240, Ile rjllould llave respectfully urged
his objections to the variation demanded. The Political Agent, however, without
waiting for further communication uras proceeding to take immediate steps for
enforcing his denland and was only induced to pause by a l q u e s t ou the part of
your Memorialist's Agent of seven days further delay. Your ~nemorialist imme-
diately dispatched Gopaulmony Duloojee and two otliers to Llie Resident, with a
letter'again urging his objections, and representing the fidelity with which the formar
treaty had been observed on the part OF the Raj rtnd the senioes of h j a h Ram Sing
his predecebsor but the Resident1 paid little attention to the commurdcstion and
made no other reply, than by requiring your memoridist's agents to give in a defu~ite
answer respecling the tribute demanded within twenty five dnys. No further com-
mu~~icittioil having hen made froni your memorialist the matter stood over until the
16th of Joystya 1241 (28th Bfay 1834) wllen your Memorialist rexived a letter fmm
Captain Jenkins, the Political Agent renewing the demand of tribute and repeetinu
tile requisitioil for delivery of the offenders in the affair a t Gobha. The latter wae
complied with as above stated t o the litmost of your ~nemoria~list'sability ; but your
memorialist withheld the signification of his assent to the payment of tribute trust-
ing t o the liberality of the British Government not to insist ulmn R demand, to which
your Memorialist was unable to offer resistance otherwise than by remonstrance and
representation.
That this hesitation of your memorialist appears to have broudit domil upon
him the heavy displeasure of his Lordship the Governor-General-in-Council for in the
month of March 1835 he was both grieved and surprized by receiving a letter from
His Lordship in Council intimating that the whole OF your meme
rialist's a n w s t o ~ ~ ~posseions
aI in the plain? has bee11 confiscatd by t11e Brilish
Government, and t h ~ orders t had been issued for taking ~ o a r c ~ i oofnthem on its bchdf.
The only ground assigned for this summary a d was the nondelivery of the
offenders in the atrocity of Gobha and the occurrance d a similnr cause of offence
in the English year 1821 together with an insinuation OF your m e m o r i d d s
participation e i t b in the outrage i t d f or in the proktion of the p n p d n t ~ .
Them mdem were i-ediatcly carried into e l k t and your rnemorialiat h a t h d y
!244 The Annexation of Assam
been stript af the whole of the possession^ in the plains which hud been tho pahimmy
of hie ancestors for many generations.
He begs leave respectfully to repre~lentthat the avowed wason for this sevm
and summary treatrilertt of the heh oP ari old and f~litllful vnssd w l ~ l not only
insufficient in itself but was wholly untrue in fact, your menlorialist having, rn above
sbted, a l d y complied, as far as it was possibla for hirn to do .w,with the requisi-
tion to deliver up the offender in ale affair of Gobha arid h a v i e obtained the
wl-itten acknowledgment of their surrender. Your Memorialist cannot believe that
this f m t could have been known t o his Lordship in Council when the orders corn-
plained of were given. If it had it must hawe been noticed in t l l~d k of his
Lordship. Moreover he begs to submit that it would be strange indeed tco hold him
mponsible for an outragel committed three years before ancl in the time of hie
predecessor.'; still lem for one than had occured fifteen years ago upon which no
measures had then been taken or insisted upon. As successor t o the Itaj, your
memorialist was doubtless bound to f01low u p the offenders whom Rajah Ram Sing
had seized but was prevented by his death from surrenderirig ; and so he did. Nor
ia it t o be wondered a t that delay should harve occurred in a mattm of SO much
embarrassment and amongst tribes so wild and impatient of all rule. Your Mmo-
rialist on receiving the acknowledgement from the British Officer, without comment
or further demand naturally concluded that his compliance with the requisition had
beern a m p t e d . Had any thing more been, called for, it would ~ n r e l yhave been
intimated t o him in the interval bet- September 1894 and March 1836 and had
any such intimation been made, it would appear on the records of the procedi*
of the British Authorities. But none such has ever been made or pretended.
Your memof~ialistw a . 1 ~ knows
1~ how t o advert t o the charge against himself of
participation in the atrocity of Gobhs or a t least uf harbouring the perpetrators; for
the charge is radher insinuated than brought forward in the letter from His Lordship
in Council and it was new t o the ears of your Mranorialist, who can impute i t to
nothhig else but the .secret malevddnce af his enemies ,md calumniators. Had there
been' any foundation for such a c h a ~ g eit would have beem an dectual bar tk, the
recognition by the Bitish Government of your memorialist a s successor to Rajah
Ram Sing. The best reputation is the bare fact of your memorialist having in the
interim braced out and delivered u p four of the offenders. before the charge was
even insinl~ated-His Lordship's knowledge af that fact alone would have effedually
silenced the calumniator by whom the scggestion must have been made.
It will however naturally occur t o your Lordship thnt the outaage a t Gobha
was merely the ostensible ground of charge, and that the real offence of ymr
memorialist, which has been thus heavily visited was the silence of your memo-
rialist m t o the demand of tiribute. Indeed the total omission of this topic in the
communication of the ground af offence can be no otherwise accounted for than by
the consciousness that i t was untenable. I n time of war or other emergency, the
demand of a subsidy or money paym&t by the paramount state from its vassal is
usual and just. B u t the demand of a permanent tribute in time of profound peace
in lieu of an existing obl'igation to furnish t e r n w a r y aid in men b d
supplies upon the contingency of war on the neighbouring frontim which might not
occur for a century, seems mither usual nor q u i b b l e , and could appear to the
valssal in no better li&t than an alarming innovation. But even the direct refusal
of such a d e m a d could scarcely be a just g o u n d of forfeiture. Your memoridst
however never did refuse compliance. H e was .sensible of his position and of the
impossibility of refusal. Had that course been taken towards memorialist. howev*
Appendix
r e l u c b t to part with the shadow of in-dem h k exemption d m tribute
aypared to leave to Iiim, or grieved at the n e t y of diYchar&ig those mtakm d
his family which the exaction of a tribute equivalent to nearly half of the q n t of the
territory taken from 11Ln niust render him unable l o n p to entertain, he must
nu& have yielded to thd demand. Bf the interests of the British Government
require that the tribute in question should be insisted upon .as the eonditiom 'fl
renewed treaty with the Rajah Joyntiapore, your memoricilist waa md is ready to
oubmribe to those terms. But he respectfully submits that his reluctance to part
with the privilegee of his forefathers was not unnatural and ought liot to be am-
atrued as a mark either of contumacy or of dieaffection.
In conclusion your petitioner confidently h o p , that, on full conaiderotion of the
ease, it will be found by your Lordship that the forfeiture, and degradation he has
been subjected to have beem inflicted upon him undex misllpprehens:~~~ of the far+
and without regard to the actual circllnlstanrea of the Raj of Joyntiaporq and of
your Memorialist himself. And he etrrnestly solicits that lie may be restored to the
possesion of Cbe small territory of which he has been deprived and that the treaty
of the British Government with the Raj of Jyontiapore may be renewpd on such
terms either of tribute or otherwise. as your wisdom and justice hall dictate.
B. PIJBLISHED SOURCES
1. Original Adicles on Aasnm kj C~ntenupornsy Il'riters :
The following origirial ~rticleson Assam written by Contemporary European
writers - mostly officers serving in Assam, throw a floocl cf light on many obscure
points in the histo;.~ OF Assam. Many of these articles are generally taken from
reports submitted by the miters while on duty. But there sre many new points in
the articles which for obvious reasons could not be included in the dry officld
reports.
1. Asam Since the Expulu:on of the Burmese--Calcilt#ta. Review Vol. XIX
Page 413.
a. Memoir of a Survey of Assam and the neighbouring countries executed
in 1825-1828.
-Asiatic Researches Vol. XVII Page 314.
3. Journal of a Travel in Assam -Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal
(J.A.S.B.)
Vol. VI, Page 325.
4. Geography and Population in Assam
J . A . S . B . Vol. XXXVlII, Part I .
5. Geography of Ascam by C ~ p t a i nNeufville
Asiatic Researches Vol. XVI, Page 331.
Bibliography
6. Sketch of A~lgam, 18!49.
Calcutta &view Vol. VIII, Page 195
Account of a Visit by Dalton, 1853,
J.A.S.B. Vol. XII, Page 9W.
1. Correspondence with the Agent to the North Eset Frontier, Vols. I-IV
(NOS. 241-244) .
2. Wheeler's Rlen~orandum- Foreign M i a . Depal-tment.
3. Selections from the Records of the Bengal hretari~t No. XXIII.
4. Constitutional DocumentP. from 1757-1858.
Though many d the letters and records falling u ~ ~ d ethe
r above category forni
the subject-matler of unpublished records tidready mentiulled, yet these are of some
use to a student of the history OF Assan] of the period u11dt.r disrussio~l.
Miscelleneous
11. Assam District Gazetteers.
2. Map as found in the unpublished official Records and in the book of
Aitchison.
3. Stray articles on A w m eppearing in some Vernacular Periodicals of Bengal.
Auc-kland-I,ord, 157, 101, 222
B
Bndanchundra, 6, 7, 68
P
Fisher-Captain, 46, 72-73, 137, 141-
144, 151, 194-197 Hajendra Singh, 147, 149-151, 153-154,
156-157
G Robertson, 38. 74, 91-02, 94-95, 98.
Gadadhar, 60-64, 67-68, 71 1111-114. 119-120. 143-144, 147-148.
Gambliir Singh-Raja, 14, 24, 45-46, 170, 175, 105. 107, 199, 436, 392-
52-53, 55-56, 109-111, 125-126, 128- 233
131, 136-140, 142-164, 187
S
Gaurinatll-Raja, 3-4, 28, 37, 39, 56,
63 Scolt, 8. 10, 15. IS-21, 23. 25, 9R-90.
33-34. :li-38. 40-13. 48, 50-54.56-59.
Goracha~~dra R l i l r i ~ , 150 64, 66, 70-71, 74-79, H I , 84-83.H i -
line
e7 need only be needed only to be
34 chief chiefs
2 (foot 110tc) Burma Gohain Burha Gohain
a0 Purandra Purandar
18 Vally Valley
32 Burma Gohain Burha Gohain
3 Vide Page 63 F7ide page 35
16 Purandar Singh' Purandar S i q h
27 prevent to prevent
4 Jenkin's Jenkins'
3% Capable manager Capable, nlanager
7 to the on the
10 in tergral integral
5 occassion occasion
32 suppresed suppre.wd