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MECHANICS OF HISTORY - laws to understand the histtory |
The World History RewrittenHistory of IndiaThe same as China, India has extremely large share of the World population. For the whole history (except XVIIIth and XIXth centuries, when here was a demographic explosion in Europe) 1/4 of the World population lived in India subcontinent - i.e. on the territory of today’s India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka (Ceylon). Speaking about the history of India (the same as about history of China before) I will try to show you that it is not so different form European history, and historical processes and laws are basically the same.
Opposite to the history of China where generally there was one state (which sometimes had a periods of feudal fragmentation), history of India before the British conquest is a history of thousands smaller or larger feudal states fighting with each other (where some times one country conquered a large part of subcontinent). It is impossible to describe here the history of even the most important of them, so this page will be rather a presentation of some tools from my theory than a guide to the history of India (Jambudvipa). To the top Harappa & Mohenjo-Daro Civilization Indus Valley Civilization
(also called Harappa & Mohenjo Daro Civilization after the
contemporary names of two biggest cities discovered by archeologists)
was the oldest civilization of India subcontinent. The script used in
Indus Valley is still not deciphered, so all knowledge we have about
Harappa & Mohenjo Daro civilization comes from archeological
digging. The start of Indus Valley culture is dated on more or less
2800 BC (so it is almost as old as the Egyptian Civilization) and the
end came in XVIIIth century BC, when Indus Valley was conquered by Aryan
tribes.
Mesopotamian artifacts found in ruins of cities prove that Indus Valley civilization had intensive trade contacts (probably also by the sea) with Sumerian city-states, and Mesopotamia. Although in times of natural trade (when one good is exchanged for another without using any kind of money) is very hard to say which one of the trading countries is richer, we can assume that Indus Valley was less developed, and was a kind of ancient “emerging-market” exporting goods to Mesopotamia. Archeological discoveries prove that overall technology level of Indus Valley civilization was lower than technology level of Sumer city-states. For example bronze tools and weapons were rare and poorer quality than in Mesopotamia. One of important Harappa & Mohenjo Daro exportables was probably a cotton (India discovery). I have said that cities of Harappa & Mohenjo Daro
civilization were probably populistic
merchant republics or oligarchies (or at least two or three biggest
cities: Harappa, Mohenjo Daro, Lothal). But because we can’t read the
Indus Script, and there was almost no information about Indus Valley
civilization from other sources, it is only a hypothesis based on very
weak premises:
There are also several “low-weight” evidences, for example a
popularity of seals among Indus Valley people may suggest a very strong
trade exchange typical for populistic civilizations. But these
evidences are weak. Besides the trade with Mesopotamia, merchants of Indus Valley
traded with the tribes of Ganges Valley and probably with the west
coast of India peninsula. Expansion of Indus Valley Civilization, I
have marked with a brown arrow on my first map on Maps page was probably
a trade expansion and a diffusion of Indus Valley technology (like Sumerian expansion in Mesopotamia
or Phoenician colonization), not the
military expansion. The reason for fall of the Harappa & Mohenjo Daro
civilization were probably
combined crises in
Mesopotamia (the fall of the Sumer city-states and thus the shrinking
demand
for India export) and the local crisis in India, when the trade of
Indus
civilization spread over too large territory, and the diffusion powers
outweighed
the profits from expansion. Trade contacts with Mesopotamia was broken
after
the fall of Hammurabi’s Empire (called Old-Babylonian Empire). Decomposed civilization of Indus Valley was Invaded by
barbarian Indo-European tribes of Aryans,
who probably (around 2000 BC) first wandered from the north Black Sea
coast to the territory of today’s Iran (which was named from Aryans),
Northern Mesopotamia
(see ancient state of Mitanni formed by Indo-Europeans here) and
Afghanistan,
and then at the beginning of the second Millennium BC invaded Indus
Valley
thorough the Khyber Pass. Aryans
although
barbaric had an advantage of better bronze weapons and the technology
of
chariot. Aryan's conquest was rather a process than an immediate event
(similarly
as with Germanic invasion of Roman Empire). To the top Geography of India subcontinent The most important
observation about India subcontinent is its relative geographic isolation.
From the east and west sides India peninsula is surrounded by Indian
Ocean.
From the North a Himalayan Mountains and Tibetan Plateau give India a
natural “Great
Wall”, much better than Chinese, because almost impassable. Even
Afghanistan and Burma borders are protected with mountains and deserts
and with mountains and jungles respectively. Almost only one land gate
into India is a Khyber Pass
between
Indus Valley and Afghanistan. Therefore is not strange that (before the
European colonization) India was successfully invaded only three times
in a 4500 years long history (of course external empires conquered
Indus Valley
several times, but the rest of the India stayed independent.) Here is a schematic map of
India
subcontinent Yellow dots marks the most important historical capitals of India Empires. Orange dots marks Portugal colonies in India (Ceylon island was for some time a Portuguese colony too). Light green names are names of lands, countries and regions, which I will mention later in this lecture. On the map I have marked
the most important trade routes in India. Please note that the Indus
Valley and
Ganges Valley are the natural backbone for a great state, so most of
the Indian
empires were founded here. But opposite than in China where in the
valleys of
rivers Huang He and Yangtzee were the home for approximate 2/3 of
Chinese
population, in the valleys of rivers Indus and Ganges in India lived
about 1/2 of
subcontinent population, and both rivers were not joined with a canal
like in
China – so there was no stable foundation for a great country in India,
and the
history of peninsula was for the most time a history of feudal
fragmentation.
Because of this relative
isolation, internal economic cycles were usually more important for
India
states than external economic cycles. To the top Short
Chronology of
India Schematic India
Chronology
The capital of Mauryans and Guptas was the city of Pataliputra in Magadha. The capital of Delhi Sulatanate and Mughal (Mogul) Empire was the city of Delhi.
To the top Interesting historical processes in the History of India After the fall of Indus Valley civilization, Aryan states
armed with higher technology step-by-step conquered the local tribes of
Ganges Valley and colonized neighbouring lands burning jungles and
starting the agriculture. We have very little data about this period
and our knowledge comes mainly from religious texts and eposes like Rig Veda, Mahabharata
or Ramayana.
Probably the whole process (at least since 1000 BC) resembled German
colonization and expansion in Central and Northern Europe in Xth-XIVth
centuries AD – serious wars with local states when economic conditions
were worse, and quite peaceful colonization carried out by people with
higher technology when economic conditions were better. One of the important consequences of conquest was a complicated feudal structure that evolved in India. There was essentially four social classes:
The second element of feudal structure was a system of Castes. Every social class divided into many castes which represents specializations or a professions (like: bard, scribe, chariot driver, etc.). There was a thousands of castes. In many ways castes resembled craft unions or guilds from medieval Europe. Below of cast system were Untouchable – people who had the most disliked professions. This system was very flexible. In periods of rather free-market oriented feudal economy allows easier social mobility: people could change cast easier than social class, and casts could advance (or go down) in social hierarchy of classes. On the other hand in periods of protectionism, system could limit social mobility: people had problems to change class or cast, and stable system of castes helped to protects monopolies in different crafts or professions.
To the top Religions of India Hinduism, the natural religion of India subcontinent is probably the most complicated religion of the World with the richest mythology (see short summary). When Aryans conquered northern India they were a minority among conquered nations, so had to incorporate many elements of local cults into original Aryan religion. Moreover, because of permanent political disunity, there was no reason for centralistic monotheistic religion that usually emerges when there is a need for an ideology supporting and explaining the central role of feudal monarch and centralized government.
At the end of expansion, Aryans finally conquered Bengal (region in the delta of river Ganges), opening this way trade route to East Coast of Deccan peninsula and Deccan plateau (also to Indochina and islands of Indonesia) for Aryan traders. Technology in Aryan North was these times much higher than in Non-Aryan (Dravidian) South. This created a very profitable trade exchange and increased the importance of trade route from Indus Valley thorough Ganges Valley, and Bengal to the South. The focal point of this trade route was controlled by Aryan kingdom of Magadha with the capital in the city of Pataliputra. We can say that a new trade route was as a kind of waterfall joining two water reservoirs, and Magadha state — like a power plant — could use energy of this waterfall to grow in power. Economic changes launched changes in ideologies. Traditional religion of Hinduism (adequate for times of colonization and expansion) appeared to be not enough for a society where cities and trade became more important. So at the turn of VIth and Vth century BC many mystic and philosophic doctrines emerged. Three most important of them were Buddhism, Jainism and Ajivikas doctrine. All started as a philosophies — explaining how a man should live — rather than religions. Buddhism finally evolved into institutionalized religion, two others not (because are atheistic), but very stable and ritualized doctrines also make them similar to religions rather than philosophies.
Buddhism with one common moral canon was better suited for centrally governed states than politeistic Hinduism with numerous gods and deities, so it was promoted by the rulers of India empires: Maurya empire (by emperor Ashoka) Gupta empire and others. After the Muslim conquest Buddhism disappeared from India displaced by monotheistic religion of conquerors — Islam. Hiduism survived as a religion of Hindu subordinates and evolved into more hierarchical religion with the trinity of highest gods: Brahman, Vishnu and Shiva (similar evolution we can observe for example in Ancient Mesopotamia when many independent countries and cities were united into one state). One final element of all India religious doctrines I want to mention here is an idea of Reincarnation (also present in some other cultures). After the death, the “soul” of living being is reborn again in another living being. When a human is honest, obedient and lives according to its role in a social hierarchy, will be reborn as a person of higher caste or social class. On the other hand human who make crimes, is insubordinate (or outright acts against the social hierarchy), will be reborn in lower caste, social class or even as an animal. This way the idea of reincarnation had the same social, and political impact as the idea of heaven, purgatory and hell in Christian tradition — helped to preserve the feudal hierarchy.
The idea of reincarnation and cyclical nature of World, Universe and everything is probably the consequence of high stability of India economy (no deep crises, no periods of fast economic expansion), and the cyclical nature of India history. To the top Indian Machiavelli India subcontinent was the first time united by rulers of Mauryan dynasty. Founder of the dynasty Chandragupta started to build the empire short after the death of Alexander the Great and after dividing his empire by Alexander’s generals (diadochs). Maybe economic changes launched by the fall of Persian Empire and expansion of Greek technology were one of the causes of rapid growth of power kingdom of Magadha — shrinking demand for goods imported from India in Middle East weakened Western India sates, making this way Ganges-Deccan trade route relative more profitable — feudal empires need some source of stable income to have resources to grow. Chandragupta had an advisor, wise man known as a Kautilya (or Chanakya). We can say that Kautilya was a kind of Cardinal Richelieu for Chandragupta. And the same as Richelieu, he wrote a book explaining secret methods o making politics, called Arthashastra. Book promotes Machiavellian methods of making politics, so Kautilya (Chanakya) is sometimes called an “Indian Machiavelli”.
Mauryan Empire reached the peek of its power under the emperor Ashoka (273 BC - 232 BC), who united almost the whole India subcontinent. After his death Mauryan empire start to decompose, and India returned to the state of feudal fragmentation. Although for a few centuries India was not united, it were generally the times of great economic prosperity because of export to Hellenistic kingdoms of Middle East and then to Roman Empire (large deposits of Roman coins were discovered in Western India), and the times of cultural and scientific bloom. For example the decimal counting system was invented these times, which then launched the revolution in algebra when adopted by Muslim mathematicians, and the revolution in accounting (bookkeeping) when imported to Europe. Political disunity also stimulated knowledge about the
mechanisms of
politics (as an anecdote: the game of chess was invented these times as
strategical-political game for 4 players). India thinkers also
formulated the basic rule of alliance in war: a country on the
opposite
side of our enemy is our natural ally and next country in this chain is
our enemy natural ally. So when we have a layer-cake of states: A-B-C-D-E-F. States A,
C and E form one alliance and states B, D plus F
form another alliance.
To the top Sexual freedom and population growth These times population of North India reached its limits (maximum possible population at medieval technology level), so ideologies promoting sexual freedom gained great popularity. As you recall (from page about Ancient Greece): sexual freedom slows the population growth, and sexual-oppressive ideologies increase the rate of population growth. The reason for this is very simple: expansion (proliferation) of knowledge about contraception (how to not have children) is not possible without knowledge about sex. (Warning: there is only correlation here, not necessary the cause-effect relationship.) One of the effect of this sexual freedom was the Kamasutra,
probably the most famous treaty about sex and art of love in history.
Kamasutra (book devoted to the god of love, Kama) was very popular
among merchants, nobles, and city-dwellers of India these times. It is
useful to mention here that there is a similar treaty about sex in
Chinese culture, but opposite than Kamasutra in India it was written
only for the Chinese Emperor and his court — as most of the Chinese
knowledge it was not popularized among people outside the court. Of
course, sexual freedom in India these times was not so great as today
(when discoveries in medicine created demand for ideologies that slow
population growth), and generally was limited to city-dwellers (the
same as sexual freedom in Renaissance). Another important factor that slows the population growth is education of people, especially education of woman. And third brake slowing the population growth is some economic pressure promoting smaller families (but not too strong, see point 2. below). Now is a good moment to say a word of two about demographic mechanisms and reasons for demographic explosions.
To the top Economic and political cycles in feudal states When export to the West shrank because of collapse of the Roman Empire (IVth-Vth centuries AD) North India was united again by Gupta dynasty. Because of economic prosperity and cultural bloom this period is called the Golden Age of India. But technology and income gap between Aryan North and Dravidian South shrank, so the relative profitability of Ganges-Deccan trade route decreased, and Gupta Empire collapsed, dispatched by Hun invasions (other branch of Hun tribes that invaded Europe). Another period of feudal fragmentation in a rise-and-fall cycle of feudal state started. Well, rise and fall cycle of feudal state is little more complicated than I stated before - this theory has levels. But before I say more, a few definitions: 1. How to say, when feudal state has free-market oriented economy, and when government-regulated economy?
Actually, most of the time economy of feudal state is some mix
of both models. Taxes are collected concurrently in money and in goods,
monarch has only a fraction of whole land, many land manors are allodiums
(land the property of feudal is inherited by sons). Monarchs could
behave as a boss of a mob (mafia) and steal the land of his political
opponents, or as a leader of a nation who generally respects traditions
and laws of the country. 2. When writing about crisis of feudal state, we have to remember that there are a few types of crises:
Some of this crises will be independent of each other, other crises will start with some latency one after another (ex. polarization crisis as an effect of the diffusion crisis). Moreover, until XVIIIth century we have very little data to analyze economic processes. So please forgive me when I sometimes speak about crisis not saying what kind of crisis (of mentioned above) I have on mind.
When profitability of large-scale economic activities (first long range trade, then wars and external expansion) exceeds profitability of small-scale enterprises, feudal country unites. And opposite, when small-scale economic activities (local protectionism) becomes more profitable than large enterprises (external wars appears to be too costly, profitability of long-range trade decrease), the country disunites. But as you can easily see from the picture above, economic processes responsible for these political changes usually started many years before (and changes in ideologies shortly thereafter) - when marginal profitability of large scale enterprises exceeded the marginal profitability of small-scale enterprises (reunity) and vice versa (decomposition).
Of course we should analyze the average profitability and marginal profitability for ruling and privileged classes of feudal country - i.e. for nobles, priests, state officials. Great mass of ruled plebeians with no political rights have almost no influence on the politics of feudal state. What are the reasons for cycles (waves above)? Generally, it is a very simple mechanism:
Of course this schema is very simple, and actually could be modified by some external factors (like external economic cycles, expansion of external states, etc.). Also shift/latency between cycles of private sector (blue waves) and cycles of government sector (black waves) may vary. But generally we can say that there are only two basic reasons for economic cycles here:
To the top Some other notes on medieval India In many ways feudal medieval India (I mean from Mauryans till Muslim Invasion) resembled medieval Europe. We can find here guilds, craft unions, even merchant associations (like ex. Hanseatic League in medieval Germany), cities with extended autonomy (like German or Italian cities), etc. After the decline of Gupta Empire feudal states of Southern India grew in power. There was several local empires these times on Dravidian South. Probably the most important one was the Chola Empire (IXth - XIIIth century), which span over whole Eastern Coast of Deccan peninsula and controlled the trade along the coast and with interior of Deccan. It was the normal process: when the power of core countries (high developed) declines, former “emerging-markets” (middle-income countries) come into the scene. At the beginning of XIIIth century Northern India was invaded by Muslims (Turko-Afgan rulers). Who founded the Delhi Sultanate with the capital in city of Delhi where the most important trade routes of North crossed (to Indus Valley, to Ganges Valley and trade route to China, Middle East and Europe thorough Khyber Pass). Controlling the most important city of India (Delhi) Muslim sultans could start to conquer the weaker neigbouring states, step-by-step reuniting most of India.
Muslim conquerors were relatively small elite in India - some historians estimate that they were only about 10% of India population. Well, elites that rule feudal countries (i.e. have political rights) are relatively small - usually about 5% (maximum 10%) of whole population. So, relatively small number of invaders can easily dominate a large country. They must only defeat old elites (native nobles) and take their place. Subordinate people with no political rights, even if they do not like new rulers, usually have not enough economic strength and resources (weaponry, leaders, organization) to fight against invaders. Especially when invaders do not exploit them so intensive as old elites (as it is usually the case). As a rule of thumb: When invaders are about 5% of the population of conquered country, they will be assimilated by the local culture (like for example Normans in Anglo-Saxon England or Mongols in China). When invaders are about 10% of whole population, both cultures could exist independently for long time (like Muslims and Hindu in India). When percentage of invaders is higher (maybe 20% of population) like in case of Aryan invasion, the culture of invaders will dominate the conquered country. India is a good example here, because percentage of Muslims was different in different regions: highest in Indus Valley and intensively colonized Bengal, average in Ganges Valley and Northern Deccan, and lowest in Southern Deccan and in Rajputana region (east from Thar Desert - which was for long the center of resistance against Muslim rulers). Since IXth century the maritime trade in the Arabian Sea (and India Ocean generally) was dominated by Muslim sailors from middle East, who have trade outposts even in Southern China.To the top Peninsula schema in India When the income and technology level of Southern India increased to be comparable with Aryan North, the competition between southern states became stronger, and accelerated modernization started (the same as in Europe or Ancient Greece, see peninsula schema). Southern India was periodically conquered by northern Muslim empires (Delhi Sultanate and Mogul Empire), even some southern states have Muslim rulers (Ahmadnagar, Bijapur, Golconda, Berar, etc.). But generally south of India for the most of time was a collection of independent states fighting with each other. Good example here are long wars between Hindu Vijayanagara empire (located more or less in central and southern regions of Deccan plateau) and Muslim Bahmani Sultanate (east regions of Deccan) at the turn of XIV and XV centuries. Strong competition caused Deccan states to develop new technologies and to adopt technologies from Europeans — who were present in India since Vasco da Gama journey (1498). For Example India armies were using canons comparable with these used in Europe in XVth century. Generally technology gap between India and Europe was smaller than technology gap between Europe and China. Especially intensive modernization (capital-organized production of craftsmen, rulers supporting local traders, etc.) we can observe in XVIIIth century in Travancore, a small Kingdom in Kerala. Sooner or later Travancore could probably evolved into a populistic state - a kind of “India Netherlands”, but European colonization stopped this process. Travancore was incorporated into the British Empire.
To the top Europeans First Europeans in India (since Vasco da Gama journey) were Portuguese sailors. Europe has these times much higher technology level than India and also much higher income per capita. Therefore demand for Indian goods (mainly spices, but also indigo, cotton, gems, etc.) in Europe was very high, but the demand for European goods in India was very low (see substantiation at my page devoted to the polarization effect), so European traders had to pay for India goods with precious metals and Europe has negative trade balance with India (it may be boring, but again: rich countries have comparative advantage at money). But Europeans have an important military advantage - ships with canons on board. Portuguese defeated Arabians and monopolized the maritime trade in Indian Ocean. Additional money they got as intermediaries in maritime trade in India Ocean were used to finance import to Europe (extremely profitable because of very high prices of Indian goods in Europe). It is the classic strategy of rich countries in international trade exchange: to monopolize trade and financial services (as you recall Arabians did the same a few centuries earlier). Another tactics to avoid the negative trade balance was to bribe local India feudals with gifts to get privileged (monopolistic) trade position in their domains. According to the theory of monopoly: a market player with monopolistic position could dictate prices and therefore buy and sell goods at better prices (comparing with the prices of these goods in competitive, free market). After some time other European nations arrived to India: Dutch, British, French. European powers started to fight with each other for monopolistic position in India trade. These wars were waged for more or less 200 years (from the middle of XVIth century till the middle of XVIIIth century). At the beginning other European nations tried to break Portuguese monopoly, at the end two strongest nations: French and British fought to get domination. Finally Great Britain as a democratic (and thus much more effective) country won this struggle.In meanwhile - i.e. in XVIth and XVIIth century - North of India (and periodically the South) was united by emperors of the Mughal (or Mogul) Empire. To the topExpansion of Maratha After the collapse of Mughal Empire at the end of XVIIth century, the new power called Maratha Confederacy took control over the central India. Marathas represented the national Hindu uprising against the Mughal rule. Rise of the Marathas was the consequence of the shift of trade routes - in XVIIth century maritime trade with Europe become much important for India than older trade routes (thorough Indus and Ganges valleys and Khyber Pass). The Marathas grew in power at the background of Portuguese colonies in India - thanks to trade contacts with Europeans they were better equipped (in gunpowder weapons), and had better organization than Mogul armies or other feudal powers in India. Maratha expansion was the example of very simple (but important) economic mechanism: The end of XVIIth and the beginning of XVIIIth centuries was the age of economic protectionism for most of the European countries (especially for these powers which were in decline as Portugal). When the core countries introduce the protectionist economic policy - price manipulation taking advantage monopolistic position, higher tools, lower demand for import, etc. - the trade with core countries (vertical trade) become less profitable for middle-income “emerging markets”. In consequence a trade with other middle-income countries (horizontal trade) become relative more profitable than the vertical trade (exchanging labour-intensive goods for capital-intensive goods). This change of trade schema usually launches a consolidation of middle-income countries neighbouring with the core (i.e. Portuguese colonies in India) - simply because groups of political interests (GPIs) that are interested in federation grow in power and dominate the local politics. Classical example of such consolidation was the Habsburg Empire in Central Europe in the neigbourhood of Venetia (and Italy in general), but we can easy point out many other examples: gathering of Russia lands by principality of Muscovy in the beighbourhood of the Republic of Great Nowogorod, expansion of Chola Empire in medieval India, Arabic conquests in the neighbourhod of collapsing Byzantine Empire, etc., etc.Middle-income countries could federate peacefully or be
conquered by the strongest of them - and then conqueror may bank on
support of local GPIs interested in horizontal trade. United
middle-income countries has also the better negotiation position when
negotiating with diplomats or traders from core countries (traders from
core countries could no longer use conflicts and competition between
middle-income countries to win trade privileges). Such united political
organism may continue expansion on territories of low and high-income
countries if the wars appear more profitable for its elites than trade.
This mechanism is quite universal, so also explains barbarian
expansions or formation of G20 alliance in WTO negotiations for example
(early XXIth century).
To the top British Rule There are two important dates that enclose like brackets the period when British conquered and dominated most of India:
Why the British conquered India? There was basically two reasons:
Map of British India ![]() As you can see, regions with direct British administration (red, pink and orange) were mixed with half-dependent autonomic provinces (yellow) and allied domains of local rulers (brown). This mosaic
organization of British colonies in India is responsible for
federal structure of modern India, and therefore for the very short
duration of populistic
system
(1947-1997, only 50 years!). Moreover
populistic system in India had the form of quasi-democracy - in federal
country politicians have to negotiate and accept local autonomies,
which always promote the democratic or democratic-like forms of polity
(political system). In many ways India of the second half of XXth
century resembled the USA of the first half of XIXth century: in both
countries states with higher political systems (like Kerala or Rhode
Island) and less developed populistic states coexist together. British administration - clash of civilizations India was very large country with population about 20 times (rough estimate) greater than population of England. Even with superior technological and military advantage the British were able to hold India only because of two basic reasons:
Of course British tolerance had its limits, and sometimes serious conflicts arose. Good example here could be conflict around the custom of sati. In some regions of India, according to this custom, widows should burn themselves on their husbands funeral pyre. In 1829 William Bentinck, Governor-General of East India Company delegalized sati.
It was a very cruel custom, but as you remember, there was periods in the history of India (early medieval times for example when Buddhism dominated) when Indians were much more civilized and more humanistic and freedom-oriented than Europeans - there is nothing like “stable nature of civilizations” or cultures. Cultures and civilizations are changing continuously. Moreover, originally sati was rather an option for women who really did not want to live after the death of his beloved husband and was very rare. Then in British times custom of sati warped, and women were forced to burn themselves, often by relatives who simply want to get their husband’s property. When the crisis affects a community, competition between members of this community increases. These times the weakest of them (women, poor people) are usually eliminated from economic game by stronger players. Again, it is universal process, which can be observed many times in history, even today. Very often law, custom or solution that works quite fine in times of economic prosperity, warps and become abused in the times of crisis. So good solution is the one which has built-in protections against abuses.The reason for crisis was trade with England and rules of
economic game introduced by the British - much more liberal and
free-market oriented than before. Therefore many traditional
enterprises (ex. some traditional crafts, some small feudal real
estates) started to decline and some groups of people start to
pauperize. Other groups while still rich (ex. priests) lost some of
their economic power. So ironically, British Governor-General fought
with the side-effect of economic process that was started by the
British themselves (but his solution was correct: economic process was
unstoppable, only thing British administration could do, was to
introduce the law protecting weaker ones from some negative effects of
the process and from being abused by stronger ones). How works the economic mechanisms that is responsible for clash of civilizations, as described by Samuel P. Huntington? Generally, when a country modernize, some branches of its economy expands but other traditional branches decline. Therefore some group of people get rich, while other pauperize (or become relatively poorer and less important than before). The most important are two streams:
When the upward stream is stronger than downward stream, people will support the modernization — advocates of modernizations overrule defenders of tradition, and dominate elites that are responsible for creating and promoting ideologies. And opposite, when downward stream is stronger than upward
stream, people will be against the modernization — defenders of
tradition (like fanatic priests) will get more followers, and the
ideologies postponing the modernization will be stronger. And thus we
can observe the “clash
of civilizations”.
Best way to prevent such conflicts is to support upward
stream. For example by promoting economic and social advance of poor
people strengthen this way pro-modernization elites. We should remember
that
the strongest base for opposition against modernization are not the
poor people but members of traditional elites (ex. middle-income
feudals, priests) who are losing their status. The true reason for
conflict is not the poverty, although “the fight with poverty” could
make any of the sides of the conflict stronger, because increases the
number of its political clients. Opposite than in democratic system, in feudal system
(and most
times in populistic
system)
poor people do not represent
their interests but are political clients of other GPIs. Conquest of India by East India Company also has some negative aspects:
As
you can see these mistakes were not so different from mistakes of USA
administration in Iraq today (i.e. after 2002). Of course similar
business and public relations mistakes as mistakes of East India
Company, nowadays are a case studies in any basic course of business
administration (you just have to translate unqualified soldiers to
“blue-collars” workers).
These mistakes cost lives of many British civilians in India. Shock of mutiny was the main reason for introducing British Empire administration in place of East India Company administration. In other words company administration (profit-oriented) was exchanged for government administration (oriented on political solutions). That probably slowed down India modernization, but made the modernization process more acceptable for Indians (or to be precise for Indian elites), and thus much safer for the British, who no longer had to fear of a rebellion. And the final note: in
spite of mistakes mentioned above, you had to remember that some
conflicts are unavoidable because of economic factors that direct the
history. Probably it was in the case of Sepoy Mutiny too.
Negatives and positives of British rule British Rule had some negative effects on India:
But also many positives:
Generally, net effect of British rule for India was positive. Of course India was exploited by England and united India with national, wise government might develop faster and get better prices in international trade. But key words here are “wise” and “united”. Administration and ruling elites of feudal state are interested in exploitation of common people, so feudal government cannot be “wise”, and will never represent interests of the whole nation but only interest of a narrow feudal elite. So, without British rule common people would be exploited too but by the local feudals. Foreign occupation by democratic country is always more beneficial for feudal country than the rule of local (national) feudals. Comparison of foreign democratic occupation and local populistic government gives more ambiguous results. Using Mechanics of History we can made a reasonable guesses, how the history of India without British rule might look like:
And last but not least: colonial administration introduced by democratic country is always controlled in some degree (but sometimes may be brute when this control is weak), and had to obey some legal rules that are constraints limiting abuses of colonial government, and therefore the oppositional activity is easier and safer. Simply speaking: If Gandhi lived in (for example) Soviet Union, he would had no chance to organize peaceful protests against government — he would be shoot or send to the deadly work camp. And all his followers too. Please remember about that, if you spent whole your life in a democratic country (or at least country with quasi-democratic variant of populistic system). To the top Some links to the history of other states
Warsaw 31 January 2005 Last revision: October-November 2006 Slawomir Dzieniszewski To the top |
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