Presidency of Madras

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Madras Presidency, also known as Madras Province and known officially as Presidency of Fort St. George, was a province of British India. At its greatest extent, Madras Presidency included much of southern India, including the present-day Indian State of Tamil Nadu, the Malabar region of North Kerala, Lakshadweep Islands, the Coastal Andhra and Rayalaseema regions of Andhra Pradesh, , Brahmapur and Ganjam districts of Orissa and the Bellary, Dakshina Kannada, and Udupi districts of Karnataka. The capital was at Madras, now known as Chennai.

The Presidency had its origins in the Agency of Fort St George established by the British East India Company soon after the purchase of the village of Madraspatnam in 1639. However, there have been Company factories at Machilipatnam and Armagon ever since the early 1600s. Madras was upgraded to a Presidency in 1652 before reverting to its previous status as an Agency. In 1684, Madras was elevated to a Presidency once again and Elihu Yale appointed its first President. From 1785 onwards, as per the provisions of the Pitt’s India Act, the ruler of the Presidency of Fort St George was styled ‘’Governor’’ instead of ‘’President’’ and was made subordinate to the Governor-General at Calcutta. Madras made a significant contribution to the freedom movement in the early decades of the 20th century. Madras was the first province in British India where the system of dyarchy was first implemented. The Presidency was disswolved when India became independent on August 15, 1947. On January 26, 1950, when the Republic of India was inaugurated, Madras was admitted as one of the states of the Indian Union.

Madras was one of the three provinces originally established by the British East India Company as per the terms of the Pitt’s India Act. The head of state held the title of “Agent” from 1640 to 1652 and 1655 to 1684 and President from 1652 to 1655 and 1684 to 1785 and Governor from 1785 to 1947. The judicial, legislative and executive powers are wrested in the Governor who is assisted by a Council whose constitution has been modified by reforms enacted in 1861, 1909, 1919 and 1935. As per the Montague-Chelmsford reforms of 1919, a system of dyarchy was established and regular elections were conducted till the outbreak of the Second World War. The head of the government was known as Chief Minister. In 1908, the province comprised 22 districts each under a District Collector. Each district was further sub-divided into ‘'taluks’’ and ‘'firqas’’. The smallest unit of administration was the village.


Contents

Origins

Before the arrival of the British

The districts , which formed the Madras Presidency between 1685 and 1947 were ruled by different kings in different times. The discovery of dolmens has proved beyond doubt that this portion of the subcontinent had been inhabited as early as the Stone Ages. The first prominent historical dynasty to rule over this region was that of the Andhras or Satavahanas who held sway over the northern part of the Madras Presidency between the 3rd century B.C. and the 3rd century A.D. The Cheras, Cholas and Pandyas of the Sangam Age were the southern contemporaries of the Satavahanas. Following the decline of these kingdoms, the country was conquered by a little known race of people called the Kalabhrar. The country however recovered under the Pallavas and its civilization attained a golden age under the Cholas and the Pandyas. Following the conquest of Madurai by Malik Kafur, there was a brief period of lull when culture and civilization began to decay. But the Tamil and Telugu countries recovered under the Vijayanagar Empire. On the demise of the Vijayanagar Empire, the country was parcelled out amongst the numerous sultans, polygars and European trading companies.

Early British trading posts

On December 31, 1600, a group of English merchants established the British East India Company, the world’s first joint-stock company. Subsequently, during the reign of James I, Sir William Hawkins and Sir Thomas Roe were sent to negotiate with the Mughal Emperor Jahangir for the establishment of factories in India on behalf of the Company. The first factories of the British East India Company were established at Surat on India’s west coast and Machilipatnam on India’s east. Of the trading posts on India’s east coast, Masulipatnam is the oldest having been established in the year 1611. Soon afterwards, another factory was established at Armagon a few miles southward and both the factories were placed under the administration of an Agency based at Machilipatnam. However, soon after the establishement of these factories, the British authorities, unable to bear the hostility of local rulers, felt the need to move their new factory to an alternate location. Francis Day was sent southward for this purpose and after negotiating with the Raja of Chandragiri, succeeding in obtaining the land grant for setting up a factory in the village of Madraspatnam. A fort was contructed at the aforesaid place between 1642 and 1645 and christened Fort St George. An agency was created to govern this new settlement and factor Andrew Cogan of Masulipatnam was deputed as the first Agent. All the agencies along India’s east coast were subordinate to the presidency of Bantam in Java.

Agency of Fort St George

Andrew Cogan was succeeded by Francis Day, Thomas Ivie and Thomas Greenhill. In 1652, when Greenhill’s term came to an end, Fort St George was raised to the rank of a Presidency and was given control of all factories on the east coast of India stretching upto Bengal. Aaron Baker was appointed as the first President of Fort St George. However, in 1655, the status of Fort St George was downgraded to an Agency and remained so till 1685. During this period, the British occupied the village of Triplicane near Madras. Streynsham Master was the most popular of the agents.

History

Madras Province in 1909
Madras Province in 1909

Expansion

In 1685, Madras was once again elevated to the status of a Presidency and Elihu Yale was appointed as the first President. During this period, the Presidency expanded manifold reaching its present dimensions in the early 1800s. At the same time, the early years of Madras Presidency were tormentous as the British had to bear the repeated attacks of the powerful Mughals, Marathas and the Nawabs of Golconda and Carnatic. In September 1746, Fort St George was taken by the French who ruled Madras as a part of French India till 1749 when Madras was made over to the British as per the Treaty of Aix-la-Chappelle. On September 1774, by the terms of the Pitt's India Act, which was passed by the British Parliament to the regulate the administration of territories owned by the British East India Company and to create an unified authority, the President of Madras was made subordinate to the Governor-General based at Calctta.

In Company Raj

From 1774 to 1858, Madras was a part of British India ruled by the British East India Company. The last quarter of the 18th century was a period of rapid expansion. The successful wars against Tipu, Velu Thambi, Polygars and Ceylon added vast chunks of land and contributed to the exponential growth of the Presidency. Newly-conquered Ceylon was a part of Madras Presidency from 1793 to 1798. The system of Subsidiary Alliances originated by Lord Wellesly also created a lot of princely states subordinate to the Governor of Fort St George. The hill tracts of Ganjam and Visakhapatnam were the last to be annexed.

This period also witnessed a number of rebellions. The Vellore Mutiny of 1806 precedes the First War of Indian Independence by half-a-century. The rebellion of Velu Thambi and Paliath Achan and the risings of the Polygars were other notable insurrections against British rule. The Madras Presidency, however, remained relatively undisturbed by the Sepoy Mutiny of 1857.

The kingdom of Mysore was annexed to Madras Presidency in 1833 on accounts of maladministration. THe kingdom was restored to the rightful heir in 1883. Thanjavur was annexed in 1858, following the death of Shivaji II without a surviving male heir.

Under the British Raj

Following the Indian Mutiny of 1857, Queen Victoria issued a Proclamation by which Company rule over India came to an end and the British Raj was established.

Geography

The northern boundary of Madras Presidency was extremely irregular. It was bounded on the extreme northeast by Orissa; then the highlands of the Central Provinces; next the dominions of the Nizam of Hyderabad; then Dharwar district of Bombay Presidency, and lastly the Kingdom of Mysore and the province of Coorg. The presidency also included the Laccadive Islands, off the Malabar coast, in the Indian Ocean. Its total area, including princely states, was 151,695 sq. mi., and its population in 1901 was 42,397,522.

Demography

Linguistic map of the Madras Presidency
Linguistic map of the Madras Presidency

The population in 1901 was divided into Hindus (37,026,471), Muslims (2,732,931), and Christians (1,934,480). Broadly speaking, the entire population of Madras Presidency belonged to the five linguistic offshoots of the great Dravidian language family, dominant throughout southern India. Of the five Dravidian languages in the presidency Telugu was spoken by over 14,000,000 persons; Tamil by over 15,000,000 persons; Kannada by over 5,500,000 persons; Malayalam by nearly 3,000,000 persons; and Tulu by about 500,000 persons. Oriya was the native tongue in the extreme north of Ganjam district, bordering on Orissa; and various languages and dialects of Dravidian origin were used by the hill tribes of the Eastern Ghats.

Districts of Madras Presidency
District District Headquarters Area (in square miles) Population
1871 1881 1891 1901 1911 1921 1931 1941
Anantapur Anantapur 5,557 741,255 599,899 727,725 788,254
Bellary Bellary 5,714 911,755 726,275 880,950 947,214
Chingleput Saidapet 5,079 938,184 981,381 1,202,928 1,312,122
Coimbatore Coimbatore 7,860 1,763,274 1,657,690 2,004,839 2,201,752
Cuddapah Cuddapah 8,723 1,351,194 1,121,038 1,272,072 1,291,267
Ganjam Berhampur 8,372 1,520,088 1,749,604 1,896,803 2,010,256
Godavari Cocanada 7,972 1,592,939 1,791,512 2,078,782 2,301,759
Kistna Masulipatnam 8,498 1,452,374 1,548,480 1,855,582 2,154,803
Kurnool Kurnool 7,878 914,432 678,551 817,811 872,055
Madras Madras 27 367,552 405,848 452,518 509,346
Madura Madura 8,701 2,266,615 2,168,680 2,608,404 2,831,280
Malabar Calicut 5,795 2,261,250 2,365,035 2,652,565 2,800,555
Nellore Nellore 8,761 1,376,811 1,220,236 1,463,736 1,496,987
Nilgiris Ootacamund 958 49,501 91,034 99,797 111,437
North Arcot Chittoor 7,386 2,015,278 1,817,814 2,114,487 2,207,712
Salem Salem 7,530 1,966,995 1,599,595 1,962,591 2,204,974 1,766,680
South Arcot Cuddalore 5,217 1,755,817 1,814,738 2,162,851 2,349,894
South Kanara Mangalore 4,021 918,362 959,514 1,056,081 1,134,713
Tanjore Tanjore 3,710 1,973,731 2,130,383 2,228,114 2,245,029
Tinnevely Tinnevely 5,389 1,693,959 1,699,747 1,916,095 2,059,607
Trichinopoly Trichinopoly 2,632 1,200,408 1,215,033 1,372,717 1,444,770
Vizagapatam Waltair 17,222 2,159,199 2,485,141 2,802,992 2,933,650
Total 31,220,973 30,827,218 35,630,440 38,209,436 41,870,160 42,794,155 46,740,107
Source: The Imperial Gazetteer of India

Administration

Madras Presidency in 1909, northern portion.
Madras Presidency in 1909, northern portion.
Madras Presidency in 1909, southern portion.
Madras Presidency in 1909, southern portion.

The Madras presidency was administered by a governor and a council, consisting of two members of the civil service, which number may be increased to four. There was also a board of revenue of three members. For legislative purposes the council of the governor was augmented by additional members, numbering 45 in all, of whom not more than 17 may be nominated officials, while 19 were elected by various representative constituencies. Members of the legislative council enjoyed the right of interpolation, of proposing resolutions on matters of public interest, and of discussing the annual financial statement.

In 1911 the province was divided into 24 districts: Ganjam, Vizagapatam (Visakhapatnam), Godavari, Krishna, Kurnool, Nellore, Cuddapah, Anantapur, Bellary, North Arcot, South Arcot, Chingleput, Madras, Salem, South Canara, Malabar, Coimbatore, Tiruchirappalli, Tanjore, Madurai, Tirunelveli, The Nilgiris, and Guntur. Each district was under the charge of a collector, with sub-collectors and assistants. The districts were not grouped into divisions or commissionerships, as in other provinces.

The principle of local devolution was carried somewhat further in Madras than in other Raj provinces. At the bottom are union panchayats or village committees, whose chief duty is to attend to sanitation. Above them came taluk or subdivisional boards. At the head of all were district boards, a portion of whose members are elected by the taluk boards.

Five princely states fell under the political authority of Madras Presidency: Banganapalle, Cochin, Pudukkottai, Sandur, and Travancore.

Army

A British officer in the Madras Light Cavalry
A British officer in the Madras Light Cavalry

The city of Madras had its own garrison ever since 1665, when the British East India Company was first permitted to set up its own garrisons to guard its settlements. Notable amongst the army's early operations were the defence of the city from Mughal and Maratha invaders and the forces of the Nawab of Carnatic. In 1713, the Madras forces under Lieutenant John de Morgan distinguished themselves in the siege of Fort St David and in quelling the mutiny of Richard Raworth.[1]

When Dupleix, the Governor of French India began to raise native battalions in 1748, the British of Madras followed suit and established the Madras Regiment.[2] Though native regiments were subsequently established by the British in other parts of India, the distances that separated the three presidencies resulted in each force growing up on divergent principles and with different organizations. The first reorganization of the army was carried out in 1795. The Madras Army was reconstituted into the following units:

  • European Infantry:Two battalions of 10 companies.
  • Artillery: Two European battalions of 5 companies each, with 15 companies of lascars.
  • Native Cavalry. Four regiments.
  • Native Infantry. Eleven regiments of 2 battalions.[3]
A Jamadar of the 20th Deccan Horse
A Jamadar of the 20th Deccan Horse

In 1824, there was a second reorganization of troops. The double battalions were abolished and the existing battalions renumbered. The Madras Army, at the time consisted of two brigades of horse artillery, one European and one native; 3 battalions of foot artillery of 4 companies each, with 4 companies of lascars attached; 3 regiments of light cavalry; 2 corps of pioneers; 2 battalions of European infantry; 52 battalions of native infantry and 3 local battalions.[4][5]

From 1748 to 1895, the Madras Army like the Bengal and Bombay armies, had its own Commander-in-Chief who was subordinate to the President, and later, the Governor of Madras. The Commander-in-chief of the Madras Army was, by default, a member of the Governor's Executive Concil. The Madras Army participated in the conquest of Manila in 1762,[6] the 1795 expedition against Ceylon, the expedition against the Dutch and the conquest of the Spice Islands in the same year and in expeditions against Maurutius in 1810, Java in 1811,[7] the wars against Tipu Sultan and the Carnatic Wars of the 18th century, the British attack on Cuttack dring the Second Maratha War,[8] the siege of Lucknow during the Indian mutiny and the invasion of Upper Burma during the Third Anglo-Burmese War.[9]

The 1857 mutiny, which caused drastic changes in the Bengal and Bombay armies did not affect the Madras Army, the least. In 1895, the Presidential Armies were finally abolished and the Madras regiments brought under the direct control of the Commander-in-chief of British India.[10]

The Madras Army derived heavily from the Moplahs of Malabar and soldiers from the Coorg.[9]

Chief Ministers of Madras Presidency

#[11] Name Took office Left office Term[12] Political party
1 A. Subbarayalu 17 December 1920 11 July 1921 1 Justice Party[13]
2 Panagal Raja 11 July 1921 3 December 1926 1 Justice Party[13]
3 P. Subbarayan 4 December 1926 27 October 1930 1 Unaffiliated[13]
4 P. Munuswamy Naidu 27 October 1930 4 November 1932 1 Justice Party[13]
5 Ramakrishna Ranga Rao 5 November 1932 4 April 1936 1 Justice Party[13]
6 P. T. Rajan 4 April 1936 24 August 1936 1 Justice Party[13]
7 Ramakrishna Ranga Rao 24 August 1936 1 April 1937 2 Justice Party[13]
8 Kurma Venkata Reddy Naidu 1 April 1937 14 July 1937 1 Justice Party[14]
9 C. Rajagopalachari 14 July 1937 29 October 1939 1 Indian National Congress
10 Tanguturi Prakasam 30 April 1946 23 March 1947 1 Indian National Congress
11 O. P. Ramaswamy Reddiyar 23 March 1947 6 April 1949 1 Indian National Congress
12 P. S. Kumaraswamy Raja 6 April 1949 26 January 1950 1 Indian National Congress

After India's independence

After India's independence in 1947, Madras Presidency was reconstituted as Madras State. In 1953 the Rayalaseema and Coastal Andhra regions became the new state of Andhra, and Bellary district became part of Mysore state. In 1956 South Kanara district was transferred to Mysore, the Malabar coast districts became part of the new state of Kerala, and Madras state, renamed Tamil Nadu in 1968, took its present shape. The northern district of Madras presidency, Ganjam, was transferred to Orissa

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Madras in the Olden Time, Vol II, Pg 198
  2. ^ Armies of India, Pg 4
  3. ^ Armies of India, Pg 7
  4. ^ Armies of India, Pg 20
  5. ^ Armies of India, Pg 21
  6. ^ Armies of India, Pg 14
  7. ^ Armies of India, Pg 15
  8. ^ Armies of India, Pg 57
  9. ^ a b Armies of India, Pg 123
  10. ^ Armies of India, Pg 126
  11. ^ The colours indicate the political party affiliation of each Chief Minister.
  12. ^ The ordinal number of the term being served by the person specified in the row in the corresponding period
  13. ^ a b c d e f g World Statesmen.org — Provinces of British India
  14. ^ Justice party was in power except for a brief period. (apparently that of P. Subbarayan) The Congress fought the elections for the first time in the Madras Presidency in 1937. Therefore, this tenure should have been that of the Justice Party.

References

Further reading

Cover of the Provincial Geographies of India, Madras issue
Cover of the Provincial Geographies of India, Madras issue
Government publications
  • Thurston, Edgar (1913). The Madras Presidency with Mysore, Coorg and Associated States. Cambridge University. 
  • Thurston, Edgar; K. Rangachari (1909). Castes and Tribes of Southern India Vol. I to VII. Government of Madras. 
  • Madras District Gazetteers
  • Slater, Gilbert (1918). Economic Studies Vol I:Some South Indian villages. 
  • Raghavaiyangar, Srinivasa (1893). Memorandum of progress of the Madras Presidency during the last forty years of British Administration. Government of Madras. 
Other publications
  • Penny, F. E.; Lady Lawley (1914). Southern India. A. C. Black. 
  • Aiyangar, Sakkottai Krishnaswami (1921). South India and her Muhammadan Invaders. Oxford University. 
  • Vadivelu, A. (1903). The Aristocracy of South India. Vest & Co.. 
  • (1922) Some Madras Leaders. Babu Bhishambher Nath Bhargava. 

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