SUBSIDIARY ALLIANCE
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Subsidiary alliance is an alliance between a dominant nation and a nation that it dominates.
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The doctrine of subsidiary alliance was introduced by Marquess Wellesley,
British Governor-General in India from
1798 to 1805.
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Early in his governorship Wellesley adopted a
policy of non-intervention in the princely states, but he later adopted the
policy of forming subsidiary alliances. This policy was to play a major role in
British expansion in India.
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By the late 19th century, the power of the
Maratha Empire had weakened in the Indian subcontinent, and India was left with
a great number of states, most small and weak. Many rulers accepted the offer
of protection by Lord Wellesley, as it gave
them security against attack by their neighbours.
PRINCIPLES OF A SUBSIDIARY ALLIANCE:
1. An
Indian ruler entering into a subsidiary alliance with the British had to accept British forces within his territory
and also agreed to pay for their maintenance.
2. The
ruler would accept a British Resident in
his state.
3. An
Indian ruler who entered into a subsidiary alliance would not enter into any further alliance with any other power, nor would he
declare war against any power without the permission of the British.
4. The
ruler would not employ any Europeans
other than the British, and if he were already doing so, he would dismiss
them.
5. In
case of a conflict with any other state,
he would agree the resolution decided
upon by the British.
6. The
ruler would acknowledge the East India
Company as the paramount power in India.
7. In
return for the ruler accepting its conditions, the Company undertook to protect the state from external dangers and
internal disorders.
8. If
the Indian rulers failed to make the
payments required by the alliance, then
part of their territory was to be taken away as a penalty.
Under
this doctrine, Indian rulers under British protection surrendered the control
of their foreign affairs to the British. Most
disbanded their native armies, instead maintaining British troops within their
states to protect them from attack. As British power grew, in most parts of
India this became increasingly unlikely.
TIMELINE OF BRITISH-INDIAN SUBSIDIARY
ALLIANCES:
1798 - Hyderabad
1799 - Mysore
1799 - Tanjore
1801 - Awadh
1802 - Peshwa
1803 - Scindia
1803 - Gaekwad
The
Nizam of Hyderabad was the first to enter into such an alliance. Tipu Sultan of
Mysore refused to do so, but after the British victory in the Fourth
Anglo-Mysore War, Mysore was forced to become a subsidiary state. The Nawab of
Awadh also accepted the Subsidiary Alliance, in 1801. After the Third
Anglo-Maratha War, the Maratha ruler Baji Rao II also accepted a subsidiary
alliance.
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