Anglo-Maratha War

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Anglo-Maratha War

The 17-year old Madhav Rao became the Peshwa in 1761. He was a talented Soldier and
statesman. Within the short period of 11 years, he restored the lost fortunes of the Maratha
Empire. He defeated the Nizam, compelled Haidar Ali of Mysore to pay tribute, and reasserted
control over North India by defeating the Rohelas and subjugating the Rajput states and Jat
chiefs. In 1771, the Marathas brought back to Delhi Emperor Shah Alam, who now became their
pensioner. The 17-year old Madhav Rao became the Peshwa in 1761. He was a talented Soldier
and statesman. Within the short period of 11 years, he restored the lost fortunes of the Maratha
Empire. He defeated the Nizam, compelled Haidar Ali of Mysore to pay tribute, and reasserted
control over North India by defeating the Rohelas artd subjugating the Rajput states and Jat
chiefs. In 1771, the Marathas brought back to Delhi Emperor Shah Alam, who now became their
pensioner.

Once again, however, a blow fell on the Marathas for Madhav Rao died of consumption
in 1772. The Maratha Empire was now in a state of confusion. At Poona there was a struggle for
power between Raghunath Rao, the younger brother of Balaji Baji Rao, and Narayan Rao, the
younger brother of Madhav' Rao. Narayan Rao was killed in 1773. He was succeeded by his
posthumous son, Sawai Madhav Rao. Out of frustration, Ragbunath Rao went over to the British
and tried to capture power with their help. This resulted in the First Anglo-Maratha War. The
sudden growth of the Company's cotton trade with China through Bombay from Gujarat made
them concerned about the security of Deccan, then under the control of the Maratha confederacy.

A succession dispute provided the first opportunity for intervention, as Raghunath Rao, who had
his nephew Peshwa Narayan Rao killed in a conspiracy, now faced combined opposition of the
Mararha sardars and began to look at the British in Bombay as a possible new ally. In March
1775 Raghunath Rao's forces were defeated in Gujarat, and a combined British army from
Madras and Bombay arrived in his rescue. An inconclusive treaty of Purandar in 1776 offered a
number of concessions to the Company in return for its withdrawal of support for Raghunath
Rao. But the treaty was not ratified by the authorities at Bengal and war was resumed again in
1777. By now the Maratha forces had regrouped under Nana Fadnis, Sindhia and Holkar and
inflicted a crushing defeat on the British at Wadgaon (1779). The latter however got the revenue
of southern Gujarat, as a strong contingent arriving from Bengal forced the Gaikwad to surrender
it. This was the period that wimessed the rise of Nana Fadnis to the political centre stage of the
Maratha polity. By 1781 he and the Bhonsle family had formed a grand alliance with the nizam
and Haidar Ali against the British. But the inconclusive First Anglo-Maratha War came to an end
in 1782 through the Treaty of Salbai, which committed the Marathas once again to friendship
with the Company and also to a confrontation with Mysore.

Nana Fadnis had made the peshwa virtually powerless. In 1795 the frustrated peshwa
committed suicide and the succession dispute that followed put the entire Maratha polity into
utter confusion. The new peshwa Baji Rao II wanted to get rid of Fadnis and sought allies in
different quarters. With the Latter's death in 1800 the confusion deepened even further. The
Peshwa‟s power was now on the wane. At Poona there was constant intrigue between the
supporters of Sawai Madhav Rao, headed by Nana Phadnis, and the partisans of Raghunath. Rao.
In the meanwhile the big Maratha sardars had been carving out semi independent states in the
North, which could seldom cooperate. Gaekwad at Baroda, Bhonsle at Nagpur, Holkar at Indore,
and Sindhia at Gwalior were the most important. They had established regular administrations on
the pattern of Mughal administration and possessed their separate armies. Their allegiance to the
Peshwas became more and more nominal. Instead they joined opposing factions at Poona and
intrigued with the enemies of the Maratha Empire.

Sawai Madhav Rao died in 1795: and was succeeded by the utterly worthless Baji Rao II, son of
Raghunath Rao. The British had by now decided to put an end to the Maratha challenge to their
supremacy in India. While Daulat Rao Sindhia supported the peshwa, the Holkar's army started
plundering his territories in Malwa. A desperate peshwa once again looked at the Company for
help. In the meanwhile, with the arrival of Wellesley, there had also been a remarkable change in
British attitudes towards the Indian states: Hyderabad, as we have already seen, had accepted a
'Subsidiary Alliance' and Mysore was crushed in 1799. So, this brought the Company face to
face with the Marathas, the only remaining significant indigenous power in the subcontinent.
After Holkar's army defeated the peshwa's forces and plundered Poona in October 1802, the
peshwa fled to the British in Basscin and in 1803 was obliged to sign a 'Subsidiary Alliance'.
Surat was handed over to the Company, while the peshwa agreed to pay for a British army and
consult a British Resident stationed in his court, Hereafter, Baji Rao was escorted to Poona and
installed in office; but this did not mean an immediate end to independent Maratha power.

This in fact marked the beginning of the Second Anglo-Maratha War (1803-5), as Holkar soon
put up a rival candidate for peshwaship and looked for allies. Lord Wellesley and Lord Lake on
the other hand fielded a large army and for the next two years battle continued at different fronts
across the Maratha territories. In the end, treaties of subordination were imposed on a number of
tributaries of the Marathas, like the Rajput states, the jars, the Rohillas and the Bundellas in
northern Malwa. Orissa was taken control of, while the treaty with the Sindhia secured the
British all his territories north of Jamuna including Delhi and Agra, all his possessions in Gujarat
and claims over the other Maratha houses. The treaty also forbade other Europeans from
accepting service in any Maratha army and made the British arbiters in any dispute between the
Maratha houses. But even this did not mean the final demise of the Maratha power!

The wars, on the other hand, meant huge expenses for the Company, and the Court of Directors,
already dissatisfied with the forward policy of Lord Wellesley, recalled him in 1805. Lord
Cornwallis was reappointed as the governor general in India with specific instructions to follow a
policy of non-intervention. This allowed the Maratha sardars, like Holkar and Sindhia, to regain
some of their power, while their irregular soldiers, known as the Pindaris, plundered the
countryside in Malwa and Rajasthan. The situation continued for some time till the arrival of
Lord Hastings as the governor general in 1813. He initiated the new policy of "paramountcy",
which privileged the interests of the Company as a paramount power over those of other powers
in India and to protect such interests the Company could legitimately annex or threaten to annex
the territories of any Indian state. Pcshwa Baji Rao II around this time made a desperate last
attempt to regain his independence from the English by rallying the Maratha chiefs. This led to
the Third AngloMaratha War (1817-19) in which Holkar's army and the Pindaris were
thoroughly crushed; the British took complete control over the peshwa's dominions and
peshwaship itself was abolished. Significant parts of the territories of Bhonsle and Holkar were
also ceded to the Company, while they entered into alliance of subordination.P? The English
East India Company had now complete mastery over all the territories south of the Vindhyas.
The British divided the mutually-warring Maratha sardars through clever diplomacy and then
overpowered them in separate battles during the second Maratha War, 1805-1805, and the Third
Maratha War, 1816- 1819, While other Maratha states were permitted to remain as subsidiary
states, the house of the Peshwas was extinguished. Thus, the Maratha dream of controlling the
Mughal Empire and establishing their own Empire over large parts of the country could not be
realised.

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