never_rains t1_itzo543 wrote
Reply to comment by nthw1 in Fall of the East India Company by Vailhem
Indian manpower captured India for Britain. The number of British soldiers who served in India was always small compared to the native contingent.
Odinshrafn t1_iu2mj7n wrote
Yeah the ratio under Company rule was crazy. It ranged between 3:1 to 7:1 (Indians:Europeans) throughout the Company period.
andtheywontstopcomin t1_iuejaqv wrote
It’s also worth mentioning that the British didn’t really “capture” india through conquest or war. Nor did they directly rule the entire subcontinent.
never_rains t1_iuem91e wrote
All of the India wasn’t ruled by Britain but they controlled two thirds by area and more by population.
andtheywontstopcomin t1_iuepc65 wrote
Correct me if I’m wrong but aren’t the yellow areas in this map not even 2/3 of the subcontinent?
To my understanding the British Raj was much poorer and less productive per capita than the relatively autonomous princely states
never_rains t1_iuers3z wrote
Wikipedia says that princely states occupied 40% of the area and 23% of the population. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Princely_state
British India was on average better than an average princely state. But there were few states like Travancore which performed better than British India. Tirthankar Roy has a really good book on it.
andtheywontstopcomin t1_iuevyh4 wrote
Can you elaborate?
I’m pretty sure the princely states outside of the nizams had higher GDP per capita than the Raj. Mysore (or maybe it was travancore) for example had electricity while the rest of the Raj was basically in poverty
Not to mention that nearly all industry in india collapsed when the British took over and there was a huge efflux of people from cities into rural areas. So rural poverty became a huge problem
Vir-victus t1_iuid2hx wrote
General rule of thumb: Around 85-90% of the Indian Army were Hindus.
At 1858, EIC Army was at about 360.000-400.000 strength, of which about 40.000 were Europeans.
SeleucusNikator1 t1_iu7llr6 wrote
Certainly didn't help (the British) that diseases like Malaria, Yellow fever, etc. thrived in tropical climates such as in Southern India. European men used to drop dead like flies from these diseases.
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