Colonialism and the Countryside
"The British didn't just conquer India. They SURVEYED it. They RECORDED it. They TAXED it. And in doing so, they TRANSFORMED the countryside."
1. Chapter Overview
British COLONIAL RULE fundamentally reshaped rural India through its REVENUE SETTLEMENTS. This chapter examines: the three major revenue systems (Permanent Settlement, Ryotwari, Mahalwari), how they changed rural social relations, what COLONIAL ARCHIVES tell us (and WHAT THEY DON'T), and the RESISTANCE of peasants — most famously, the SANTHAL REBELLION (1855–56).
2. The Three Revenue Systems
The Permanent Settlement (1793, Bengal, Bihar, Orissa)
- Introduced by Lord Cornwallis
- The EAST INDIA COMPANY fixed the land revenue PERMANENTLY. The amount would NEVER increase.
- Landlords (ZAMINDARS) were recognised as the OWNERS of the land. They collected rent from peasants and paid FIXED revenue to the Company.
- IF a zamindar failed to pay: his estate was AUCTIONED.
- CONSEQUENCES: (a) A new CLASS of zamindars emerged — many old zamindars could not pay and lost their estates. Speculators, merchants, and Company officials bought them. (b) Peasants became TENANTS — they lost their customary rights. They could be EVICTED. (c) 'Sunset Law': if revenue was not paid by sunset of the specified date, the zamindari was auctioned — a BRUTAL system that created massive distress.
The Ryotwari System (Madras, Bombay Presidencies)
- Developed by Thomas Munro and Captain Alexander Read
- Revenue was settled DIRECTLY WITH THE RYOT (cultivator/peasant) — NOT with a zamindar intermediary
- Revenue was based on the QUALITY of the soil and the CROP grown. Periodically REVISED (not permanent).
- 'The ryotwari system claimed to protect the peasant — but in practice, the revenue demands were so high that peasants were frequently in DEBT and DISTRESS.'
The Mahalwari System (North-Western Provinces, Punjab)
- The MAHAL (village or group of villages) was the revenue unit
- The village community (headmen, lambardars) was COLLECTIVELY responsible for paying revenue
- Revenue was periodically REVISED (not permanent)
3. The Colonial Archives — What They Tell Us (and What They Don't)
Sources
- Revenue records: district-level records of land, crops, revenue — ENORMOUSLY detailed
- Surveys: the British SURVEYED India obsessively. Maps. Census. Gazetteers.
- Reports: collector's reports, commission reports
Reading the Archives — Problems
- What is NOT recorded: The archives record what the STATE wanted to know — revenue, land, crime. They DO NOT record: the peasant's VOICE, the peasant's EXPERIENCE, WEATHER events (unless they affected revenue), CULTURAL life.
- Bias: The records were made BY the British, FOR the British. They are not 'neutral' — they reflect colonial ASSUMPTIONS and INTERESTS.
- Gaps and silences: The archives are VAST — but they have GAPS. Peasants rarely speak directly in them. Women are nearly invisible.
- 'Historians must read the archives "against the grain" — looking for what the colonial official did NOT intend to record.'
4. Peasant Resistance — The Santhal Rebellion (1855–56)
Who Were the Santhals?
- A TRIBAL community in the Rajmahal Hills (modern Jharkhand)
- The British encouraged them to SETTLE and CLEAR FORESTS for agriculture — promising land and security
- BUT: moneylenders (dikus — 'outsiders') and zamindars EXPLOITED them. Land was lost. Debt accumulated.
The Rebellion
- 1855: The Santhals ROSE against the moneylenders, zamindars, and the British state that protected them
- Led by Sidhu and Kanhu — two Santhal brothers
- The rebellion was massive — disrupting British administration for months
- CRUSHED by the British army (1856). Thousands of Santhals killed.
- Afterwards: the British created the SANTHAL PARGANAS — a separate administrative district with some protections for Santhals. 'The rebellion FAILED militarily. But it FORCED the British to recognise that even tribal peasants could threaten the colonial state.'
5. Exam Focus
- Permanent Settlement (1793) — features, zamindar ownership, sunset law, consequences
- Ryotwari — features, direct settlement with ryot, revenue revision
- Mahalwari — village as revenue unit, collective responsibility
- Reading colonial archives — what they contain, their limitations (gaps, bias, silences)
- Santhal rebellion — causes (dikus, debt), Sidhu and Kanhu, outcome
6. Conclusion
Colonial revenue policies transformed rural India:
- PERMANENT SETTLEMENT: Created a new landlord class. Peasants lost customary rights. 'Sunset Law' auctions.
- RYOTWARI: Dealt directly with peasants — but revenue demands were crushing.
- MAHALWARI: Made villages collectively responsible. The COMMUNITY had to pay.
- THE ARCHIVES: The British recorded EVERYTHING — but only what mattered to THEM. Peasants' voices are largely ABSENT.
- RESISTANCE: The Santhal rebellion. Crushed. But it showed: the countryside was NOT passive.
'The countryside was not just a source of revenue. It was a SITE OF STRUGGLE — between peasant and zamindar, between tribal and moneylender, between the colonised and the coloniser.'
