Key Points at a Glance

  1. 1

    Subsidiary Alliance (1798, Lord Wellesley)

    • Required Indian rulers to maintain a British force at their own expense
    • Required acceptance of a British Resident at their court
    • In return, Britain guaranteed protection from external and internal threats
    • States absorbed: Hyderabad (1798), Mysore (1799), Awadh (1801), Maratha chiefs (1802)
    • Ended the independence of Indian rulers without formal annexation
  2. 2

    Doctrine of Lapse (Lord Dalhousie, 1848–1856)

    • Denied Indian rulers the right to adopt heirs — adopted sons could not legally inherit feudatory states
    • States lapsed: Satara (1848), Jaitpur and Sambalpur (1849), Baghat (1850), Udaipur (1852), Jhansi (1853), Nagpur (1854)
    • Annexation of Awadh (1856) added on separate grounds of "misgovernance"
    • Dispossessed rulers became core leadership of the 1857 revolt
  3. 3

    Permanent Settlement of Bengal (1793, Lord Cornwallis)

    • Fixed land revenue in perpetuity with zamindars who gained hereditary ownership rights
    • Peasants (ryots) were reduced to mere tenants with no ownership
    • Transferred agricultural surplus to a new zamindar class loyal to the British
    • Created chronic rural indebtedness and deepened agrarian poverty
  4. 4

    Ryotwari and Mahalwari Settlements

    • Ryotwari (Thomas Munro, Madras 1820; Elphinstone, Bombay): revenue settled directly with individual cultivators (ryots) who held occupancy rights
    • Mahalwari (William Bentinck, northern India): revenue settled with villages (mahals) collectively with joint liability
    • Three systems together covered all of British India
  5. 5

    Railways in India

    • First railway line (Bombay to Thane, 21 miles) inaugurated on 16 April 1853 under Lord Dalhousie
    • By 1900, India had 25,000 miles of railway
    • Served British imperial purposes: raw material to ports, troop movement, market integration
    • Critics: railways deepened economic drain; defenders: created unified national market
  6. 6

    Drain of Wealth Theory

    • Articulated by Dadabhai Naoroji in Poverty and Un-British Rule in India (1901)
    • Supplemented by R.C. Dutt in The Economic History of India (1902)
    • Naoroji estimated Britain drained at least £30 million annually through "Home Charges"
    • Home Charges included: civil/military pensions, railway debt interest, India Office costs, remitted profits
  7. 7

    Indian Civil Service (ICS)

    • Established by the Charter Act of 1833; competitive examinations introduced by the Government of India Act 1853
    • Examinations were held only in London until 1922 (simultaneous exams in India and England allowed after that)
    • Lord Macaulay's 1835 "Minute on Education" pushed English as the medium of instruction
    • Shaped a colonial bureaucracy that became the IAS after independence
  8. 8

    Lord Macaulay's Minute on Education (1835)

    • Argued that "a single shelf of a good European library was worth the whole native literature of India and Arabia"
    • Recommended English-medium education to create "a class Indian in blood and colour, but English in tastes, in opinions, in morals, and in intellect"
    • Transformed India's educated elite but also produced the intellectual leaders of the independence movement
    • Naoroji, Gokhale, Tilak, and Banerjee all used Western ideas of liberty to demand self-rule
  9. 9

    Queen Victoria's Proclamation of 1858

    • Transferred power from the East India Company to the British Crown after the 1857 revolt
    • Promised non-interference in religious matters and equal employment opportunities for Indians
    • Promised respect for existing treaties with Indian princes
    • Created the framework for direct Crown rule (British Raj) until 1947
  10. 10

    Lord Ripon's Local Self-Government Act (1882)

    • Created elected local bodies (municipalities and district boards) with elected Indian majorities
    • First significant devolution of power to Indians
    • Also associated with the Ilbert Bill controversy (1883) — attempt to allow Indian judges to try European defendants
    • European community opposed the Ilbert Bill, forcing its withdrawal
  11. 11

    Indian Councils Acts — 1892 and 1909

    • Indian Councils Act 1892: allowed Indians to be nominated to legislative councils
    • Indian Councils Act 1909 (Morley-Minto Reforms): introduced limited elections
    • Controversially introduced separate electorates for Muslims — deepened communal identity
    • This separate electorate policy eventually contributed to Partition
  12. 12

    Partition of Bengal (1905, Lord Curzon)

    • Bengal divided into East Bengal (Muslim-majority) and West Bengal (Hindu-majority)
    • Ostensibly for administrative efficiency; nationalists saw it as deliberate "divide and rule"
    • Triggered the Swadeshi Movement — boycott of British goods, promotion of Indian products
    • Reversed at the Delhi Durbar (1911) under King George V; capital also shifted from Calcutta to Delhi

Predicted RAS Questions

Based on PYQ trends and 2026 syllabus analysis

1 5M What was the Doctrine of Lapse? Name four states annexed under it. 5 marks · 50 words

Model Answer

The Doctrine of Lapse (Lord Dalhousie, 1848–1856) denied Indian rulers the right to adopt heirs — states without natural male heirs automatically "lapsed" to British sovereignty. States annexed: Satara (1848), Jhansi (1853), Nagpur (1854), and Sambalpur (1849). The annexation of Awadh (1856, on "misgovernance" grounds) added to the resentment that fuelled the 1857 revolt.

~50 words • 5 marks