KLJLB
KLJLB
KLJLB
by
INDRANI CHATTERJEE.
University o f London.
July 1996
ProQuest Number: 10752723
uest
ProQuest 10752723
ProQuest LLC.
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Slavery and the Household in Bengal, 1770-1880 .
This thesis outlines a political economy within which slaves lived and worked, within the
households of the hegemons in Bengal between the end of the eighteenth century and the end of
the nineteenth. Within household-polities that contained slaves, there were many distinctions
according to skill, age, area of origin, and principally of gender. Female slaves, of great
importance within the inner slaving economies of India, were however differently thought of, and
their work differently conceptualised in the indigenous and colonial regimes. This led to a conflict
of laws around issues of legitimacy, marriage, succession and inheritance in the period under
study. Where colonial administrators thought of marriage rituals as absent from slave social
relations, indigenous holders spoke of female slaves as daughters, and secondary wives. Where the
British colonial legal systems had no place for the peculium of the slave, indigenous systems relied
on the income-generating and maintenance-providing aspects of the peculium of their slaves. The
system of slave-holding that emerged in different sectors of the domestic economy as a result of
these multiple conflicts of laws, and presumptions, was thus much more like the colonial Atlantic
systems than had hitherto been the case. For, in spite of differences between two slave-holding
systems, the colonial state did not abolish slave-holding, as much as changed the organising
principles that lent internal consistency to the older system. So while slavery was allowed to
persist, the conditions of slaves and masters alike were diminished. At the same time, the colonial
regime exerted a more precise control over the labours of slave-women and girls, always critical
within the domestic labour economy, towards its own ends. The apotheosis of colonial legal
intervention in this task was the Contagious Diseases and Cantonment Acts of the latter half of
the nineteenth century.
Table o f Contents
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Introduction :
Searching fo r Slaves in Indian H isto rio g ra p h y...................................... 1
Conclusions .....................................................................................................................................250
Appendix I ....................................................................................................................................... 263
Appendix I I ....................................................................................................................................... 268
Appendix I I I .....................................................................................................................................274
B ib lio g ra p h y .....................................................................................................................................277
Preface
Like the slaves of my study, I too have become indebted by all that I have received from
my benefactors. Unlike theirs, however, my repayment is small, and a great joy to acknowledge.
First of all, my thanks to the Felix Trust for granting me a scholarship for 1993-96, and
to Miranda House, Delhi University, for leave to study. My thanks also to my supervisor Professor
David Arnold for his support, for subjecting the trivial and the radical ideas to the same searching
scrutiny, for promptitude and gentleness at all times.
I owe a special thanks to Liana Vardi, Bob Harms, Kathryn and Henzpieter Znoj, K.
Sivaramakrishnan, Brian Fegan and graduate students at the Programme of Agrarian Studies, Yale
University, for detailed comments and suggestions on two different sections of my work, and to
the Programme itself for a very memorable and fruitful four months in 1994-5. Thanks also to Dr.
Tirthankar Roy for suggesting important revisions and sources. The participants of the Oxford
South Asian History Seminar, the Commonwealth Institute History Seminar, and Debbie Epstein
and the graduate students of the Seminar on Feminist Theory at the London Institute of Education
have aided me considerably by critically discussing some of the ideas in this work.
The staff of the British Library, especially of the Reading Room, India Office Library and
Records, the nineteenth century branch of the West Bengal State Archives at Bhabani Datta Lane,
Calcutta, Bhabeshda at the National Library Calcutta, have all materially aided me in finding
records and in utilising my time in the most efficient of ways.
I thank my teachers in Delhi University, especially Sumit and Tanika Sarkar, for
inspirational teaching, and for their constant engagement with my work. Dharma Kumar alerted
me to the comparative literature on slavery, and allowed me to treat her personal library as my
own. My parents encouraged me to strip the gloss from the story of Pulin Kaku, the boy who
entered my grandfather’s household at the age of seven, shared in the rituals of the kingroup,
became a skilled cook, acquired authority over grandchildren and incoming daughters-in-law - but
never received any rights of occupancy in the ancestral homestead. To my father’s efforts to right
that wrong, I owe my understanding of the priority of civil and inheritance matters in an
appreciation of slave-law. My parents-in-law shared with me many stories of the institution of
bhanrar meye in Chittagong and Dacca. Supriya Guha shared her knowledge about childbirth in
Bengal in the nineteenth century, as well as her home during my research in Calcutta. Samar and
Jharna, the antithesis of malevolent kin, discussed the project, chivvied me along, and put up with
the demands of my research over the last ten years. To my nieces from whom I was exiled by my
work, many apologies.
Among the many friends in London, Cambridge and Oxford who made that exile a happy
one, I would specially like to thank the Lanning-Dinham household, Alistair Chisholm and Geoff
Ellingham for taking me under their wings, Gita Sahgal for her unwavering support, Tim Allender
and Kate Bennison for injections of good-humour. Thanks are also due to Phil Lokkas for teaching
me computerese, and for the final production of the thesis, Suhit Sen for labouring on an unwieldy
text, Najaf Haider for translating a Persian deed, Anil Sethi and Laura Bear for their thoughtful
reading of one chapter. I owe a special debt to Dorothy Stein whose encouragement restored me
at some of the more difficult phases of this work. For reading and disentangling various chapters
of this thesis, I am grateful to her and to David Kellogg. Katherine Prior’s patient and fine
toothcomb through two chapters sharpened my focus considerably.
Finally, 1 owe all the Marathi and Portuguese sources and records cited in the thesis to
Sumit Guha’s intellectual generosity. In charting my journey through a hidden continent within
the household, his wisdom was my compass; his faith the ballast that ensured the timely
completion of this project.
Abbreviations
Actg Acting.
AGG Agent to the Governor-General.
BC Board’s Collection.
BCrJC Bengal Criminal Judical Consultations.
BFP Bengal Financial Proceedings.
BJC Bengal Judicial Consultation and Proceedings.
BMP Bengal Medical Proceedings.
BOR Board of Revenue.
BPC Bengal Political Consultation and Proceedings.
BPP Bengal Past and Present.
BPubC Bengal Public Consultations.
BRP Bengal Revenue Proceedings.
BS&M Bengal Secret and Military Consultation.
Capt. Captain.
Cantt. Cantonment.
Ch. Chief.
Col. Colonel.
Collr. Collector.
Commr. Commissioner.
CPC Calendar o f Persian Correspondence.
Dept. Department.
EPW Economic and Political Weekly.
GOB Government of Bengal.
GOBy. Government of Bombay.
Govt. Government.
IESHR Indian Economic and Social History Review.
IHR Indian Historical Review.
IHQ Indian Historical Quarterly.
IJP India Judicial Proceedings.
ISP India Sanitary Proceedings.
IPP India Political Proceedings.
JAH Journal o f African History.
JASB Journal o f the Asiatic Society o f Bengal.
Judcl. Judicial.
Magt. M agistrate.
Misc. M iscellaneous.
MNLI Murshidabad Nizamut: Letters Issued.
MNLR Murshidabad Nizamut: Letters Received.
Offg. Officiating.
PP Parliamentary Papers.
Poll. Political.
Sec. Secretary.
Introduction
Searching fo r Slaves in Indian Historiography
The historiography of slavery in India has been haunted by the long shadow of plantation
economies of the Atlantic. Older trade-patterns,1 and alternative uses of slaves within a complex
society have left little trace in the historiography of eighteenth or nineteenth-century India. The
dominant conception of the slave in Indian studies of the late twentieth century has been that of
the human commodity, transported across vast distances, from whom labour is coercively exacted
without a wage.2 The implicit characterisation of the slave as ‘property’ has been widely shared,
across diverse ideological grounds, beginning with English commercial law, and the abolitionist
movement itself in Britain.3 As a definition, it was fundamental to liberal thought which
postulated that slave-labour, characterised as labour without wages, was less efficient than free
(waged) labour, impeded the expansion of the market, and technological innovation, inhibited the
growth of population and thus of industry and national wealth. It explained the rise of slave
societies of the past as possible only because the supply of free labour was inadequate to exploit
new land. The entire complex was characterised as primitive social organisation. This was, indeed,
directed at the plantation systems of the Atlantic, which were then shown to be both regression
and anachronism. In that some of these ideas undergirded contemporary writing, the definition of
the slave stayed rooted in the plantocratic system, as the adult male, belonging to his master and
deprived of the ownership of the means of production, working under extra-economic coercion.
Apart from the fact that material deprivation and physical violence came to be the
definitive criteria of slavery, and waged labour the criterion of autonomy and freedom, there were
problematic inferences for historians of the household and kinship. Marx and Engels, while
drawing up a sequential development of the sexual division of labour in human societies, argued
that
the existence of slavery side by side with monogamy, the existence of beautiful
young slaves who belong to the man with all they have, from the very beginning
stamped on monogamy its specific character...
The rule of the man in the family, the procreation of children who could only be
'J.E.Harris, The African Presence in Asia: Consequences o f the East African Slave Trade, (Evanstone,
1971); also W.G.Clarence-Smith (ed.), The Economics o f the Indian Ocean Slave Trade in the Nineteenth
Century (London, 1989); Elizabeth Savage, The Human Commodity: Perspectives on the Trans-Saharan
Slave Trade (London, 1992).
2D. Banaji, Slavery in British India (Bombay, 1933); Amal K. Chattopadhyaya Slavery in the Bengal
Presidency (London, 1977).
3Granville Sharp, The System o f Colonial Law compared with the Eternal Laws of God;and with the
Indispensable Principles of the English Constitution, (London, 1807), p.7.
2
his, destined to be the heirs of his wealth - these were aims of monogamy....4
The prior separation of monogamous wives from slave-concubines in the patriarchal family
influenced historians to represent the female slave specifically as ‘outside’ the lineage and
household, and slavery in general as the embodiment of anti-kinship, of non-belonging, of
permanent alienation, while the function of constituting the legitimate lineage was preserved to
wives.5
Historians of the classical societies to which the Engelsian characterisation had been
applicable have refined and challenged both kinds of separations implicit in such formulations.
Finley, rejecting the ‘traditional tripartite division of labour into slave-serf-free’ pointed to the
fallacies of associating all waged work with autonomy and all unwaged work with denial of rights
and claims in ancient societies.6 Garlan found that slaves constituted the majority of those who
did waged work in classical Greece. Thus free men were unwilling to enter into contractual labour
commitments because the latter ‘ran the risk of being gradually transformed into habitual
obligations of total commitment’.7 The further refinement of social history in classical antiquity
has pointed out the historical and legal limits of assuming the subordination of all women as
prototypes of the ‘first’ slaves.8
4F. Engels, ‘Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State’ in K.Marx Selected Works (Moscow,
1977), III, pp. 238-39.
5See an instance of this model in Robin Blackburn, ‘Defining Slavery - its Special Features and Social
Role’ in Leonie J. Archer (ed.), Slavery and Other Forms o f Unfree Labour (New York, 1988), pp. 262-
279. For a philosophical re-structuring of the priority of sexual subordination before the social contract, see
Carole Pateman, The Sexual Contract (London, 1988).
6M. I. Finley, Ancient Slavery and Modern Ideology (London, 1980), p.70.
7Yvon Garlan, Slavery in Ancient Greece trans. Janet Lloyd, (Ithaca, 1982), p. 93.
8SarahB. Pomeroy, Goddesses, Whores, Wives, & Slaves: Women in Classical Antiquity (London, 1975);
Beryl Rawson (ed.), The Family in Ancient Rome: New Perspectives (London, 1986); Susan Treggiari,
Roman Marriage (Oxford, 1993); Jane F.Gardner, Women in Roman Law and Society (London, 1986).
9Tanika Sarkar, ‘Bondage in the Colonial Context’ in Utsa Patnaik and Manjari Dingwaney (eds), Chains
o f Servitude (Bombay, 1975), pp. 97-126.
3
“'Extract of the Proceedings of the Committee at Kishennagur, 28 June, 1772, Orme Ms., Bengal
Various, 1700, p.97. All unpublished records, unless otherwise specified, are from the Oriental and India
Office Collections, London.
4
layers of moral defenses for the slaveholder in both America and in England.”
Furthermore, the issue of labour was divided between the household and the field in terms
like the following: ‘in what they are employed and how they are worked? What species of produce
are they employed in raising? Do they work in gangs, under a driver? for how many hours in the
day? ...Is the lash employed, and to both sexes?’12 The discreteness of slavery, premised on a
biracial division of labour, was suggested by identifying ‘their’ religion, ‘habits or morals’ or
marriage in just as distinct terms as they had in the plantation complex.
The collection of answers that have been the staple of all Indian studies of slavery, are
equally shot through with these contradictions. For instance, in evidence provided by various local
judges and magistrates around ‘treatment’ of slaves (the issue itself is posed in terms of the
plantation), it is common to find
the slaves are not so systematically worked up, nor so cruelly whipped and
punished as in the American slave-holding districts. The rising and resistance of
slaves against their owners have occurred in America and elsewhere; not so in
India.13
It is this omnipresence of the Atlantic plantation in the conceptual world of early British
colonialism that permeates Indian slave-studies, even when the historian self-consciously opposes
the colonial ‘voice’ of the records. It is now accepted that agrarian tenures and conditions in
eighteenth-century India were far more complex than in the plantation systems. Yet, the intimate
connection between the agrarian location of labour, procured through various extra-economic
techniques, remains intact in the most sophisticated work in Indian slavery studies so far.14 More
sharply critical of the representation of labour undertaken by colonial records, lucid in the
connection between Orientalism, the growth of law and slavery, Gy an Prakash’s treatment of the
‘long-term ties’ between the kamias (bonded agricultural labourers) and their maliks (masters) in
South Bihar threatens to reify the paternalism that men like Hastings had seen as distinctive of
nMargaret A.Burnham, ‘An Impossible Marriage: Slave Law and Family Law’, Law and Inequality, 5,
1987, pp. 187-225.
12Questions on Slavery in the East Indies, Circulated by Commissioners for the Affairs of India, 15
March 1834, Slavery in India: Correspondence, Parliamentary Papers (hereafter PP), 1834, 44, no. 128, q.6,
p.l.
13Extracts of Notes and Observations on Slavery, as existing in Bengal, Behar, and Benares, and the
Ceded and Conquered Provinces by Mr. G. Myers, in Report from Indian Law Commissioners relating to
Slavery in the East Indies, (PP) 1841, 28, no. 262, Appendix II, p. 281.
I4Gyan Prakash, Bonded Histories: Genealogies o f Labour Servitude in Colonial India (Cambridge,
1990); idem, ‘Terms of Servitude: The Colonial Discourse on Slavery and Bondage in India’, in Martin A.
Klein (ed.), Breaking the Chains; Slavery, Bondage, and Emancipation in Modern Africa and Asia (Madison,
1993), pp. 131-49.
5
Indian slavery.15 While Prakash is more open to the insights of other scholars of slave-societies,
this does not motivate him sufficiently to re-define slavery as it existed in the nineteenth century
itself. What we do get is the continuation of nineteenth-century European and liberal meanings -
of freedom, of kinship, household, and labour.
Such a perception becomes critical when discussing the centrality of biological and social
reproduction to the establishment of kamiauti (dependence). Typically, marriage is the occasion
for reciting the oral traditions about Bhuinya origin, giving the biological product of this union
a history (ancestors) and social identity (Bhuinya). Simultaneously, marriage itself is occasioned
by the maliks' insistence upon the ‘proper time’ and the giving of an advance as an act of
disinterested reciprocity. Prakash argues that this serves the labour needs of the landlords by
reproducing both labour and dependence, and it subordinates the Kamia woman both to her spouse
and the malik (reproducing the ‘patriarchal’ family). In turn, it bleaches the productive labour of
Kamia women out of the legal bonds executed between men (kamia and malik) and drives out
their reproductive labour from the oral traditions and Bhuinya genealogies. Given the absence of
the ‘father’ from the origin-stories and the subsequent retrieval of paternity in the realm of
ancestor-spirits, who are overwhelmingly male, Prakash is too quick to replicate the Kamia
‘family’ as a ‘patriarchal’ one. The malik's claims upon the labour and persons of the kamia
women, when read alongside the kinship terms of the Bhuinya songs (pp.51-52), suggest that
genealogy (the core of the ‘patriarchal family’) is constituted by the m alik's power, rather than by
the kamia male’s procreative sexuality. The issue that has perplexed students of the plantation
economies16 - namely, the formation of slave-families - has conversely, been too early resolved
by Prakash. Does the shared paternalism of the kamia male and malik in the matter of the
marriage-payments, in fact, represent a tiny victory in acquiring the privilege of having a ‘family’
at all? Does the male kamia have the same access to non-kamia females as the male malik does?
Does polygyny and hypergyny affect male and female kamias differently, as well as male malik
and kamia differently? Indeed, what could paternalism and slave-sociality have been constituted
of, if, as suggested by the origin-stories, kinship ties were tense, fragile, even malevolent?
Prakash’s work also throws up methodological issues. Though it may not be his intention,
his work suggests that the kamias of the 1840s were the same group that he studied in the 1980s.
l5For a fuller discussion, see Peter Robb (ed.), Dalit Movements and the Meanings o f Labour in India
(Delhi, 1993), Introduction, esp. pp. 26-43.
l6See Herbert G. Gutman, The Black Family in Slavery and Freedom, 1750-1925 (New York, 1976);
Verena Stolcke,‘The Slavery Period and its Influence on Household Structure and the Family: Jamaica, Cuba
and Brazil’ in Elza Berquo and Peter Xenos (eds), Family Systems and Cultural Change (Oxford, 1992),
pp. 125-43; B.W. Higman, Slave Population and Economy in Jamaica, 1807-1834, (Cambridge, 1976);
Barbara Bush, Slave Women in Caribbean Society, 1650-1838 (Indiana, 1990).
6
The changes, if any, are in the realm of the market in grain and land, and in discursive practices
of colonial law. Has Prakash’s ethnology not imbibed the very premises he set out to deconstruct -
the Orientalist notion of stable, unchanging Indian societies? Why is there an erasure of the term
‘slavery’ from his own discussion, if not as a mirror of the colonialism that he critiques?
17Frederick Cooper,‘The Problem of Slavery in African Studies’, Journal of African History, (henceforth
JAH), 20, 1, 1979, pp. 103-25.
18Dharma Kumar, ‘Colonialism, Bondage and Caste in British India’ in Klein (ed.), Breaking the Chains,
pp, 112-30; also see idem, Land and Caste in South India (Cambridge, 1965).
lyResident, Cutch, H.Pottinger, to Sec. to GBy., 13 Oct. 1832, BPC, P/126/59, 24 Dec. 1832, no. 26.
7
For similar reasons, it may be necessary to remind ourselves that the attributes of caste -
its heritability and stability, for instance - systematised by early colonial ethnographers and
scholar-officials, were based upon ideas of race and labour that came from different locations. A
significant illustration of this derivation is the work of H.T. Colebrooke. Having arrived in India
in 1782, Colebrooke entertained ambitions of becoming a planter on the Atlantic model from early
in his career. Writing to his father in 1793, from Nattore, he was very critical of the obstructions
placed in the way of the Company officials acquiring lands in India;
If England will receive our sugar, and encourage the planters we could furnish
it cheaper than the West India Islands,... at least we could now undersell the West
India planters in their own islands, and, in a few years, could increase the culture
to any given quantity.20
This eventually led him into investing ‘a considerable sum in the purchase of land at the Cape
colony’ in 1815,21 where he appeared to have witnessed slave-sales without too many qualms,
wishing only that the children of ‘female slaves ought to be... subject only to an apprenticeship,
sufficient to remunerate amply the owners of the female slave, for bringing up her children, until
they shall become of an age to render profitable service.22
In the light of Colebrooke’s investment in the plantocratic ideal, his schematic arrangement
of caste-society in India tallied with the preoccupation with male labour and its stabilisation. In
what was supposed to be a preface to the Digest o f Hindu Law, Colebrooke’s admiration of the
purportedly neat division of Indian society into ‘slaves’ and ‘freemen’ by the ‘ancients’ was re
aligned along a grid of occupational ranking that he interpreted as caste. Thus, he argued, it was
only meet that the ‘ancient legislators’ had ordained the following:
Menial offices and mechanical labour were, in ancient times, executed by slaves,
and deemed unworthy of freemen. In other countries, besides India, the
descendants of enfranchised slaves have not been held on a par with the citizens
... it cannot appear strange that the class of sudra comprehended all servants and
mechanics, whether emancipated or franchised, or descendants of emancipated
persons. The freemen were denominated the twice-born ... included, as was
natural, the priest, the soldier, the merchant, and the husbandman... the Brahmana,
Cshatriya and Vaishya; the last comprehending merchants and husbandmen
indiscriminately... .23
The persistence of the Atlantic notion of slavery as a discrete institution and a fixed status
21Ibid., p. 316.
22Ibid., p. 334.
23,Heads of a Dissertation to be prefixed by way of Introduction to the Digest of Hindu Law, Civil and
Criminal’ in Colebrooke, Life, pp. 98-99.
(as Kopytoff puts it, ‘an all-or-none thing, marked by precise and unfailing indicators’24) could
have been possible only in the context of a society where slaves came from a distinct ethnic-racial
background. This was the context within which Colebrooke approvingly referred to the exclusion
of descendants of slaves from ‘citizenship’, regardless of manumission.25 Therefore, in
categorising ‘menial and mechanical’ labour as specific to loss of ‘citizenship’, Colebrooke appears
to have transferred the legal and social context of the Atlantic economies on to the Indian past.
Like him, most early Company officials struggling to comprehend Indian social organisation in
terms that were familiar to them, represented occupational groups, kin-groups and the like in terms
of the hierarchies of plantocratic society. Both attributes of ‘inheritable’ race and degrees of
disabilities were worked into the notion of ‘caste’ 26
Traces of this remaking of caste, critical for the fashioning of early anthropology,27 as
well as of Anglo-Indian law,28 reappear in perspectives that posit a fixity of ritual status, and its
24Igor Kopytoff, ‘The Cultural Context of African Abolition’ in Richard Roberts and Suzanne Miers
(eds), The End o f Slavery in Africa (Madison, 1988), pp. 485-503.
23We should not eliminate the possibility of the influence of Roman law on Colebrooke. However, the
state of English eighteenth-century knowledge of Roman law is beyond the scope of this thesis. Historians
of the present day insist that in Roman law, slaves manumitted according to one of the proper ways became
citizens. See a comparative study of the two legal systems in Alan Watson, Slave Law in the Americas,
(London, 1989).
27The influence of Colebrooke’s writing for R. Montgomery Martin’s edition of Buchanan’s surveys,
The History, Topography and Antiquities of Eastern India (London, 1835), for J. Wise, Notes on the Races,
Castes and Trades o f Eastern Bengal (London, 1883) and finally Jogendranath Bhattacharya, An Exposition
o f the Origins o f the Hindu Caste System and The Bearing o f the Sects Towards Each Other and Towards
Other Religious Systems (Calcutta, 1896, reprint Calcutta, 1973) is worth a separate investigation by itself.
28See H. T. Colebrooke, Remarks on the Husbandry and Commerce of Bengal, written in 1795, before
he undertook the translation and arrangement of the Digest. In this phase, the emphasis was on the
benevolence, and symmetry, of the system. By 1812, after the Act of Parliament of 1807, and the passing
of Regulation 10 of 1811, Colebrooke’s emphasis fell on the ‘lawfulness’ of the slave-master relationship.
Where earlier he had said little about the regulations of 1772, or even referred to the ‘laws’ of slavery, he
now proceeded to show three different grounds for the non-implementation of Parliamentary statute. The
first was that there were clear and fixed laws, ‘Hindoo and Mahomedan’, of slavery determining the nature
of proprietorship and treatment which, secondly, had been promised by Parliament to the people in India.
The third set referred to customs of the ‘people’ (meaning the owners): their ‘accustomed mode of treating
their slaves’, the importance of ‘religious festivals and celebrations’ which required exhibition of dances,
the absence of any system of poor relief which made disposal of children by parents an act necessary ‘for
separation from political-jural status. Following Dumont, as Lionel Caplan’s work on slavery in
Nepal and India shows, the problem of separating ‘slavery’ from Tower caste’ status in India
becomes well-nigh insurmountable.29 Employing Dumont’s dichotomy between power (political
hierarchy) and status (ritual hierarchy, marked primarily by purity-pollution notions), Caplan
argued that ‘domestic’ slavery in South Asia was premised upon this separation. The ritual purity
of slave-owners and the ritual status of slaves together determined the site of the slaves’
employment (the household or the field). However, by arbitrarily characterising slaves as
occupying the lowest rank in the legal-political hierarchy (i.e., of power), Caplan proved that the
dissociation of power and status enabled slaves to exist within ‘free’ society in Nepal. But, for
India, the focus on ‘agrestic’ labour led him to argue for a correspondence between low ritual
status and political powerlessness for slaves.
The key issue in his investigation appears to be the stability of ritual rank: despite
enslavement, the Brahmin priests and cooks in the houses of the Rajputs in Nepal remained
Brahmins. The contrast postulated by Caplan between Nepal and India is partly an artefact of his
largely secondary sources. The historical evidence for India also suggests that the ritually ‘higher’
jatis may equally well have comprised a substantial section of slaves. However, contrary to
Caplan’s assertion that ‘ritual rank was not fundamentally affected by whether the individual was
a slave or not’, the evidence indicates the very instability of jati-identity of a slave. For instance,
two girls were reported from Sylhet to ‘have been disposed off [sic] under feigned names to a
Brahmin in the Tipperah District as Brahmini Girls’30 while a woman identified as an ‘Ahirun’
was sold ‘for Rupees 60 as a Rajpootin girl’ in Goruckpore in 1871.31 Another narrative of the
Rajas of Nadia reported that ‘the rajas purchased sudra boys and appointed them as their personal
attendants; regardless of their jati they were proclaimed kayastha. Though these boys were initially
degraded among the kayastha sreni, some of them have now become equal with the rest’.32 While
such evidence throws the immutability of ‘j ati-identity’ into question, it also indicates that the
ritual status of the person bought, or born of a slave, was dependent on political and other
hierarchies. It also leads to the implication that within each ritual rank, there were slave-members,
the saving of their children’s lives by interesting in their preservation persons able to provide nourishment
for them’.
29Lionel Caplan, ‘Power and Status in South Asian Slavery’ in James L.Watson (ed.), Asian and African
Systems o f Slavery (Oxford, 1980), pp. 169-94.
3()Extract from Commr.’s Report, Judcl. Letter to Court of Directors, 27 June 1837, E/4/158.
3lCrime Report, Patna Division, 1871, Appendix A, BJC, P/433/15, Oct. 1871, no. 22.
32Karttikeya Chandra Ray, Kshitish Vamsavali Charita, (Calcutta, 1932), pp. 29-30.
10
or slave-born members.
A similar point is made by an inscription of the eighteenth century, found in Central
India.33 In this inscription, authorised by one claimant to the chiefship of Orchha against the
reignant chief, a descendant of Udet Singh, the latter is described as having assimilated the
children of his slave-women {laundin ke jaaida) into his kin-group, and raised them to the
chiefship. (In short, the inscription tries to ascribe slave-status to the present chief). Then it
proclaims that these people should not be assimilated into the Bundela jati from whose hands
water may be drunk, nor should they be admitted into the ranks of those with whom one eats in
assembly. Those who do admit these slave-born (varanasankar, naichi panti) to the ranks of their
own jati, by eating with them and by marrying them, are in turn, severely cursed (they and their
ancestors are gandu) with all manner of degradation. As in the case of the Nadia rajas, this
inscription, in trying to demean current practice, emphasises the nature of a slave’s jati-identity
as derived from interlocking political and social powers of their holders. From the most stringent
administration by ritual of the eighteenth century - that of the Peshwas - there is an order to the
whole got of the shimpis (workers in cloth) to admit the second husband of a widow, Malhar, the
slave (ghulam) of Raghoji Kodhilkar of Saswad, into the jati. The grounds offered for this order
are also instructive, since it says that it has been the practice in the jati to admit slaves into its
rank (tunche yatimadhye sudamat ghulam jatit ghetat, yaise chaalat aale aahe).34 The issue, it
would appear was not the performance of labour corresponding with jati-status, but the belonging
within a corporate group, of the slave and the slave-born. It would also suggest, contrary to the
assumptions of closure made by the ethno-historians, that while the category ghulam or laundi was
stable, ritual status or identity was fluid, at least in the late eighteenth century.35
Furthermore, the association of slave-labour with lower ‘caste’ status allows social and
legal historians to read texts of Hindu law as though the latter were not conditioned by history,
but above and outside it. This has been of some significance in assessing the role of the Brahmin
pundits in the eighteenth century and the subsequent social and administrative endeavours coded
33Hiralal, ‘Sagar Ka Bundeli Shilalekh’, Nagaripracharini Patrika, 8, samvat 1984/1926 C.E., pp. 395-
400.
34From the daily diary of the Peshwa, second half of the eighteenth century, cited in Itihasa-sangraha,
7, 1-3, 1915, p. 274.
35These reservations also apply to other excellent work like Sharmila Rege,‘The Hegemonic
Appropriation of Sexuality: The Case of the Lavani Performers of Maharashtra’, Contributions to Indian
Sociology (n.s.) 29, 1&2, 1995, pp. 23-38, and T.P.Vijaya, ‘Aspects of Slavery in Coorg in the Nineteenth
Century’, Indica, 29, 1992, pp. 107-22. Both scholars appear to have worked with the notion of the fixed
nature of caste-ranking and its correspondence with enslavement by the state. For a view of negotiated
‘belonging’ within a caste, as an alternative to enslavement, see Sumit Guha, ‘An Indian Penal Regime:
Maharashtra in the Eighteenth Century’, Past & Present, 147, 1995, pp. 101-126.
11
as ‘Brahminisation’ or ‘Sanskritisation’. Few scholars notice that the verses condensed and
translated by the pundits for Sir William Jones and H.T. Colebrooke, and their own glosses, do
not tally with the way the English scholar-officials tried to align menial labour with slavery. For
instance, in the oft-cited Digest o f Hindu Law, the verse from Vrihaspati and Narada showed that
the distinction between slave and non-slave was not between one receiving nothing for his labour
and one receiving wages, but between one who promises obedience and one who does not. The
whole group of persons who are ‘bound to obedience’ are in turn distinguished by skill. Thus
Vrihaspati’s verse on ‘science, human knowledge, love or pay’ was interpreted by Jagannath
Tarkapanchanan to include within science ‘knowledge of the Vedas and the like...skill in arts and
the like’.36 The inference clearly is that those who knew the Veda (i.e. Brahmins) could owe
obedience just as much as those who received wealth. In short, there was no necessary
correspondence between menial labour, ritual impurity, and subordination.
Nevertheless, so authoritative had Colebrooke’s writings become37 that the answers of
various officials in 1834-41 also portrayed slave-status in terms of caste, as though these were
interchangeable terms. It is unfortunate that scholars have relied so heavily on the Parliamentary
Papers for their information on slavery without taking this historical ellision into account. This
is true of Arunima’s discussion of the impact of the abolition of slavery on the Malabar taravad.
She states that ‘a significant part of manual labour and cultivation work was carried on by the
slave population, a majority of whom were constituted by the Cheruma and the Pulaya castes’.38
According to her, in place of the Cheruma’s inclusion in the ‘community of pollution’ affecting
their higher-caste masters, the mid-nineteenth century saw the erosion of internal differentiation
within the Cheruma, who were then considered to be the slave caste. This militates against treating
slavery as coeval with ritual pollution, (and the latter as a segregating principle between castes).
However, the difficulty with Arunima arises from her finding that women of the higher castes, the
Nambudiri and Nayar, could also be sold into slavery or be kidnapped by lower caste-men, with
whom they were then forced to live as Pulayas and Cherumas. Would this institutionalised kidnap
or sale of Nayar women have modified the contours of matrilineality of the Nayar taravad even
before the impact of colonial legislation? Perhaps due to the way slavery itself is conceptualised
36H. T. Colebrooke, A Digest of Hindu Law on Contracts and Succession; with a commentary by
Jagannath Tercapanchana: translated from the original Sanscrit by H.T, Colebrooke (Calcutta, 1797, this
ed. 1802), II, p. 174.
37At least one major official text reproduced verbatim Colebrooke’s writings of 1811-12 in its discussion
of slavery in India. See J. H. Harington, Analysis o f the Laws and Regulations o f the East India Company
in Bengal (Calcutta, 1817), III, pp. 743-51 and 762-3.
38G. Arunima, ‘Colonialism and the Transformation of Matriliny in Malabar, 1850-1940’, Ph.D.
Dissertation, Cambridge University, 1992.
12
as a form of labour at the periphery of the taravad, it is necessary to draw out some of the
implications of Arunima’s argument in order to clarify the contradictions.
Where descent and filiation is structured through sisters and daughters, the Nayar women’s
re-allocation to the Pulaya and Cheruma jatis would presumably produce ritually mixed-status
children, who would inherit from their Nayar maternal uncles. Unless, with such kidnap, the rights
of the woman in her natal taravad were also extinguished. If not, the ritual purity of the Nayar
taravad would be, by this logic, precarious, and in need of reconstitution in each generation, given
the existence of the ritually mixed-status inheritors. This kind of strategy has been argued to exist
among males in matrilineal societies trying to retain wealth in their own control, and logically
should have characterised the Nayar males’ claims upon the Pulaya/Cheruma women. However,
this is not the case Arunima argues. In fact, nothing is said about the female Cheruma/Pulaya
slaves at all. For Arunima, the critical task is to reinterpret the strategy of household-formation
that was characterised as concubinage in the twentieth century by a reformist movement towards
a feminist critique of colonial law and patriliny.
Laudable as the project is, there are pitfalls in using concepts (like unilineality) fashioned
by anthropologists in the course of field-work done in societies subject to both internal and
external slave-trade, especially in Africa, without taking this critical history into consideration.39
Historians of the slave-societies of the Atlantic have noted, for instance, that the need to reproduce
slave-labour on the plantations sometimes resulted in matrifocality: as Gutman puts it, reproducing
slavery required ‘only the simple biological dyad "mother and child". The social dyads "husband
and wife" and "father and child" were not essential... Slave women mostly counted in the
calculations of their owners as mothers, and slave men counted mostly as laborers’.40 On the
other hand, matrilineality in African societies may have been the consequence of the skewed sex-
ratio of the slave-trade from Africa,41 which, in turn, was related to the retention of greater
numbers of slave women within Africa. In other words, we need a pre-history of lineality, which
knits the history of slave-trading and slave-use within the region, before we can understand the
significance of the transformation that occurred under colonial auspices. We simultaneously need
to re-examine our assumptions about terms like family, household, descent-and-status inheritance,
kinship and, above all, to recognise the different forms and nomenclatures through which slavery
39It is significant that Cohn, who warned South Asian historians against borrowing the anthropological
models derived in African contexts, made no mention of slaving at all in his ‘African Models and Indian
Histories’, in Bernard S. Cohn, An Anthropologist Among the Historians and Other Essays (Delhi, 1990).
4lSee Martin A. Klein, ‘Women in Slavery in the Western Sudan’ and Jean Pierre O. de Sardan, ‘The
Songhay-Zarma Female Slaves: relations of Production and Ideological Status’ in Clare C. Robertson and
M.A.Klein (eds), Women and Slavery in Africa (Madison, 1983), pp.67-92 and 130-43.
13
Reassessing Labour
The problems of scholarship appear to have arisen from the nature of the records consulted, the
inability to interrogate the characteristics of formations like caste, family, and, above all, by a pre
occupation with the location of a particular kind of productive labour. What kind of productive
labour systems were slave-women and eunuchs part of? The issue, so far, has been framed as one
of the general reproductive labours of women. Historians of African systems have argued that in
patrilineal societies, men could acquire a slave concubine and build up their lineages with the free
offspring of these unions. Yet others have urged that in matrilineal societies, the advantages were
even greater, since men could achieve direct control over their offspring with slave concubines,
instead of relying on the uncertain loyalty of their sisters’ children. However, if one takes into
account the rich yield of Chinese history,42 it appears that both men and women can, and did,
contribute to the production of subordinate lineages in different ways. While there is some
evidence in the Indian records that higher prices of female slaves were explained by some
indigenous informants in relation to the reproductive ability of the female, this does not exhaust
the discussion of either price-differentials, or of female slaves in the polity.43
Derived from the reproductive ability of female slaves were explanations stressing the ease
of women’s assimilation and benefits to men of acquiring slave wives or concubines. While
assimilation with the host society or lineage or household may have been an important demand
put upon slaves, it is not being female as being infant that is the key to assimilative strategies
everywhere. As one colonial official explained the age-profile of the internal market in transfers
of young people in mid-nineteenth century India, ‘the demand for children is greater than the
demand for grown up people, for they recollect not after some time their parents and place of
nativity and are more obedient than the grown up who are generally on the look-out for one early
42Maria Jaschok, Concubines and Bondservants: the Social History of a Chinese Custom (London, 1988),
M. Jaschok and S. Miers (eds), Women and Chinese Patriarchy: Submission, Servitude and Escape (Hong
Kong, 1994).
43Evidence of Tek Loll, Mooktear in Sadr Diwani Adalut, 28 Dec. 1838, in PP, 1841, Appendix I, p.
225. This witness said that the price of a young male was about a third less than the price of a young
female, which varied between 50 and 125 Rupees. The fact that "the girl may have children which will
belong to her owner" only explains a gender differential, it does not explain differentials within the same
gender. In other words which female slave sells for 50 Rupees and which for 125 Rupees is not explicable
in reproductive terms alone. Nor can explanations resting on reproductive ability explain the fact that the
highest prices in the slave-market were reserved for eunuchs/castrated slaves. See evidence of Aga Kurbelai
Mahomed, ibid., p. 240.
14
44Resident, Gwalior to Sec.to the Gov.- Gen. at Shimla, 30 July 1832, BC F/4/1467/57728.
45Letter of Father John Cabral in Travels o f Fray Sebastien Manrique, trans C.E. Luard, (Oxford, 1927),
II, Appendix, p. 405. Emphasis original.
4Tbid„ p. 218.
47Ishwardas Nagar, Futuhat-i-Alamgiri, trans. and ed. Tasneem Ahmad, (Delhi, 1978), pp. 8-9.
15
writing and reading, is clear from the accounts. Shahjahan wrote to Aurungzeb from his prison
asking for an eunuch to be posted at his disposal ‘for writing his letters’.48 Another eunuch,
Bakhtawar Khan, associated with the authorship of Mirat-i-Alam, according to the preface of the
work, was ‘fond of historical studies’.49 Thus it is not at all surprising to find that the eunuch
named Yaqut, titled Mahram Khan, held the post of tutor to a son of Aurungzeb, Kam Baksh.50
The kind of work a slave did was ultimately related to the nature of her/his master’s
wealth and social rank. The master’s wealth determined the number of slaves he or she held, and
the greater degree of specialisation among the slaves. Where a master was a tailor whether his
slave was also a skilled worker, or not, depended upon the numbers of slaves held. The final work
of the slave was in the symbolic sphere, where s/he lived as the advertisement of the master’s
wealth-creating abilities, as well as maintained the master’s competitive social profile vis-a-vis
others. This was particularised on ceremonial or ritual occasions. Manrique’s description of Asaf
Khan’s slaves, deputed to wait upon the Emperor, touched upon this symbolic, and embodied,
work simultaneously performed by slaves. The washing of the Emperor’s hands was done by four
girls, whose implements, ceremony, and ‘gracefulness, gallant bearing and beauty’ were far more
valuable than the twelve others - ‘less striking than the first bevy’ - who presented the hand
washing vessel to the princes ‘with rather less ceremony than the first company had used towards
the Emperor’. During the meal itself, four of the ‘principal eunuchs’ served the emperor alone,
passing on the dishes brought by other eunuchs to ‘two most lovely damsels who knelt on each
side of the Emperor’.51 Clearly, the social status of the person the slaves were deputed by their
masters to wait upon corresponded to a code of deference among masters. An equal and a superior
was waited upon by a master’s valued slave following a more elaborate ceremonial, an inferior
by the less skilled or valued slave.
Some of the codes of this timocratic system were witnessed by later English administrators
who did not always understand the honour that was bestowed thus. This is most visible in the
descriptions of the dancing girls who were a regular feature of the courts of the eighteenth and
nineteenth century, and of the public celebrations of the notables of Calcutta in the nineteenth
century. What made the performance, or their attendance upon a guest, a symbol of honour? It lay
in the display of skills acquired by slaves as a direct investment by masters and mistresses both
4sS. Moinul Haq, Khafi Khan’s History ofAlamgir (Karachi, 1975), p. 106.
49H. M. Elliott, The History o f India as Told by Its Own Historians (ed. J.Dowson, London, 1877), VII,
p. 150.
in maintaining and in training them. Some of this training was rigorous, going by a document of
the eighteenth century, in which an official in charge of the natakshala of the Peshwas complained
against the man who was to train the slave-girls in dance. Instead of training them for ‘five to
seven ghatikas’ in the morning and for the same period in the evening as was required of him, this
trainer only did ‘ton-ton for one ghatika' ,52 This letter of complaint however absolved the tutor
for music and literary composition of such abrogation of duty: accordingly, the girls received their
required hours of training in these departments. The existence of skilled slave-poets and slave-
composers is again highlighted by a document of the Krishengarh state. Discussing certain stanzas
attributed to ‘Rasik Bihari’ in the work of the Bhasha poet, Nagari Das, this document states
clearly ‘The Kavitas and padas bearing the poetic name Rasik Bihari... are the compositions of his
khavasa pasvan yani upastri’ .53
Differentials of skill characterised the continuum among male slaves too, allowing for the
climbing of infant slaves from the rungs of the unskilled to those of the highly skilled, from chela
(slave) soldiers and scribes to commanders and treasurers in their own right. The reproduction of
skills was independent of biological reproduction since eunuchs too trained their chelas, and
dancing-girls in turn bought and trained their own slaves - all under the aegis of the central
household i.e. the palace. The command over skills was, in turn, determined by the ability of each
individual household to garner the resources necessary to impart such training. In other words, the
question of the emergence of skilled slave specialists was intimately dependent upon the resources
of the particular household that the slave was enmeshed in. For instance, the labour of the literate
slave of the palace was different from the labour of the slave in Sivnath Sastri’s household, who
was described as ‘efficient in a variety of tasks’, from cutting wood in the jungle, to fishing in the
village waterways, milking the cows, threshing grain and caring for the young children of the
household.54
The clear inequalities between masters determined the kind of skilled or unskilled labour
performed by slaves. For such reasons alone should the numbers mentioned in the Parliamentary
Papers of 1841 be treated seriously. These are the first colonial counts of slaves. Despite
52Letter of Atmaram Rajaram in Selections from the Peshwa Daftar (ed. G.S. Sardesai, Bombay, 1931)
henceforth SPD, IV, 147. The editorial dating of this letter is 1761. Each ghatika is made up of 24 minutes,
so that a span of 5-7 ghatika is approximately two-three hours.
53Pandit Mohanlal Vishnulal Pandia, ‘The Antiquity of Poet Nagari Das and his concubine Rasik Bihari
alias Bani Thani’ in Journal of Asiatic Society o f Bengal, (henceforth JASB), 66, 1, 1897, pp. 63-75. The
translation of these three crucial terms by the author is flattened out in one English word, concubine,
whereas each term bears quite specific and separate meanings: khavasa is slave, pasvan is concubine, upastri
is secondary or lesser wife. I want to keep all three meanings alive in the discussion of labour to highlight
the absence of neat barriers between ‘slave’ wife and ‘dancing girl’.
55Evidence of Kashi Nath Khan, Agent of the Ranees of Natore, Report of the Indian Law
Commissioners on Slavery in India, PPt 1841, 28, Appendix I, p. 232.
56Deposition of Tek Loll, Mooktear of the Sadr Diwani Adalut, 25 January 1839, ibid., p. 234.
57Evidence of Vishnu Dutt Dalli, chief priest of the Kamakhya temple in Assam, 5 February 1839, ibid.,
p. 239.
58Evidence of Dhurb Singh Das, Oriah Missul Khawn in the Presidency Sadr Diwani Adalut, 15 January
1839, ibid., p. 231. This witness gave the lesser figure for his own holdings and the larger figure for the
holdings of such ‘great zemindars’ as JunmaJay Chowdhri and Bhagwat Chowdhri in the morthern division
of Cuttack.
59Evidence of Vydia Nath Misser, Pundit of the Sadr Diwani Adalut, 2 January 1839, ibid., p. 226.
60Evidence of Gopal Lall Kaiet, agent of the Raja of Burdwan, 12 Feb. 1839, ibid., p. 243.
6IEvidence of Sarvanand Rai, Mooktear of Bagoroti Durya, Zemindar of Zaffar Shahi and Mymensingh,
15 Feb. 1839, ibid., p. 246.
62Bharat Itihas Sanshodhak Mandal (ed. D.K. Rajwade, Pune, 1923), pp. 191-92.
^Selections from the Satara Rajas and Peshwas Diaries (ed. G.C.Vad and K.B.Marathe, Pune, 1910),
henceforth SSRPD, VIII, 1116, p. 259.
Manjurma, recounts the way in which a medicine-man acquired an ‘orphaned’ female infant,
reared her as his ‘daughter’ and married her, only to have her escape.66
Dissimilarities among holders then was co-related to the condition of, and stratification
among, slaves within the same household. The semi-autobiographical narrative by Mir Musharraf
Hussain, Udasin Pathiker Moner Katha, described this stratification among female slave-servants
(kharida) in one substantial household of Bengal in the nineteenth century. Speaking of an age-
cohort of elderly female slaves, he wrote of one among them enjoying privileged stature by virtue
of the fact that her daughter was one of four select personal attendants of the female holder.
However, the younger cohort of female slaves was distinguished from the elders by the practice
of seclusion. Thus the four personal attendants (khas bandi) Durgati, Hoorun, Noorun and Champa
never left the house, whereas Durgati’s mother, the privileged elder female slave Sabja, enjoyed
unrestricted mobility.67
66D. C. Sen, Eastern Bengal Ballads (Calcutta, 1928), III, pp. 1-20.
67Cited in Kazi Abdul Mannan (ed.), Mosharraf Rachana Sambhar (Dacca, 1976), I, p. 578 and pp. 582-
83. The narrative itself was first published in 1891.
68David Ayalon, Islam and the Abode o f War: Military Slaves and Islamic Adversaries (London, 1994).
19
or in Rome, we do not call those either Confucian or pagan slavery (nor do we characterise them
as Islamic).
The urge to categorise these as Islamic conflates prescriptive texts with practice and
subverts our understanding of the processes by which a legal code is formulated to comprehend
the problems arising out of a specific social formation. This had certain parallels with the way
Sanskrit texts were mined by the scholar-official for ‘Hindu’ slavery in eighteenth - and
nineteenth- century India. There have been mainly two kinds of responses to the philological
dilemma. One has concentrated on the historical development of doctrine, like the study of wala
or paramonar manumission by Patricia Crone, which illustrates the absorption of provincial
practice in the classical and medieval Near East into ‘Islamic’ law.69 The second has been to
compare social practice with prescriptive texts, called ‘legal realism’ by Mark Tushnet.70 The
earliest expression of this framework is again associated with abolitionists, like William Adam’s
indictment of the British government in India for exceeding the limits prescribed by ‘Islamic’ law
for the liability to enslavement.71 Like Adam, many historians who work with a model of
‘Muslim’ slavery share a particular need to make social practice correspond with religio-juridical
decrees and texts. Implicated in this is an attempt to distinguish it from the Atlantic form of
slavery by insisting on the pious injunctions of manumission in the Quran,72 as well as a belief
that texts cannot be re-interpreted and changed.73 This does not allow students of slave-societies
in historical time to even look for, let alone explain, the divergences between text and practice in
a particular regime, nor relate the post-emancipation histories with the textualisation of religions
in all the regions affected by slavery.74
69Patricia Crone, Roman, Provincial and Islamic Law: The Origins o f the Islamic Patronate (Cambridge,
1987).
70Mark V.Tushnet, The American Law o f Slavery 1810-1860, Considerations of Humanity and Interest
(Princeton, 1981).
7'William Adam, The Law and Practice of Slavery in British India (London, 1841).
72Among others, see Alan Fisher,‘Studies in Ottoman Slavery and Slave Trade, II: Manumission’,
Journal o f Turkish Studies, 4, 1980, pp. 49-56; A. and G.B. Fisher, Slavery and Muslim Society in Africa:
The Institution in Saharan and Sudanic Africa and the Trans-Saharan Trade (London, 1970); R. W. Beachey,
The Slave Trade o f Eastern Africa (London, 1976) and M. Gordon, Slavery in the Arab World (New York,
1989).
73For the centrality of interpretation to the constitution of a corpus of Islamic texts including the Quran,
see Leila Ahmed, Women and Gender in Islam: Historical Roots o f a Modern Debate (New Haven, 1992),
pp.79-121; Fatima Mernissi, The Veil and the Male Elite: A feminist Interpretation o f Women’s Rights in
Islam (New York, 1991); idem, Islam and Democracy: Fear of the Modern World (New York, 1992), pp.
75-148; idem, The Forgotten Queens o f Islam (Cambridge, 1993).
74John Ralph Willis (ed.), Slaves and Slavery in Muslim Africa, I-II, (London, 1985).
20
For Indian history, the emphasis on ‘Muslim’ slavery has acted hitherto as a heuristic
device and as a chronological demarcation, limiting slavery studies to the period of the Delhi
Sultanate (llth-14th centuries), when a series of slave-rulers appeared in North India.75
Surprisingly, even when the primacy of the plantation model of slave-use was challenged, the basic
postulates of class formation - like ownership of the means of production and genealogical
pedigree - were seldom upset. This prohibited the conceptualisation of the political economy of
the period with consequences for the ‘long’ eighteenth century, and it has retarded the study of
the changing and embedded markets in human beings.76 When we have no studies of the
volumes, prices and taxes of the markets in humans in the period between the sixteenth and
eighteenth centuries,77 the impact of the European commercial transactions in such markets
between the sixteenth and eighteenth century, as distinct from other goods and credit mechanisms,
cannot be but under-assessed.
For such reasons, Sunil Kumar’s recent study of slavery in the Delhi Sultanate is a
welcome addition to knowledge.78 By concentrating on the ways in which specific male slaves
were given local administrative initiative, through the iqta (transferable revenue assignment)
system, Kumar has proved that the term ‘free’ within this structure implied the possession of
options, for those men who were rooted within the autochthonous kin-and-lineage groups of the
region. Since slaves of the sultan were ennobled, Kumar argued that the co-ordinates of nobility
needed to be rethought for the Mughals as well:
There is no doubt that during the Mughal period the mansabdars were ‘ennobled’
by the padshah, but we tend to assume that the political status derived through
service with the state automatically provided the officer with a position in local
society. On the other hand, if the term noble implies an inherited social and
political status protected at least by customary law, then the ‘noble’ in Mughal
75Dharam Pal,‘The Influence of the Slaves in the Muslim Administration of India’, Islamic Culture, 18,
1944, pp.409-417, (reprinted 1971); Gavin Hambly, ‘Who were the Chihilgani, the Forty slaves of Sultan
Shams Al-din Iltutmish of Delhi?’, Iran, 10, 1972, pp.57-62; Salim Kidwai, ‘Sultans, Eunuchs and
Domestics: New Forms of Bondage in Medieval India’ in Dingwaney and Patnaik (eds), Chains o f Servitude,
pp. 76-96.
76For instance, see Irfan Habib, ‘Slavery in the Delhi Sultanate, Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries -
Evidence from Sufic Literature’, Indian Historical Review, 15, 1-2, 1988-89, pp. 248-256.
77The present evidence of the Mughal state’s attempts to control the transfers is derived from the
European commercial records, and from European travellers. Thus the Dutch records state that by the treaty
of 1636, the Dutch Company had to pay a tax on the import and export of Indian slaves - 12% on ‘Moors’
and 7% on other kinds. See F. Lequin Het Personeel Van De Verenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie in Azie
in De Achttiende Eeuw Meer in Het Bijzonder in De Vestiging Bengalen (Leiden, 1982), I, p. 178.1 thank
William G J. Kuiters for the translation of this work, and of some French transfer-deeds.
78Sunil Kumar, ‘When Slaves were Nobles: the Shamsi Bandagan in the Early Delhi Sultanate’, Studies
in History, 10, 1, n.s. 1994, pp. 23-52.
21
India was not the mansabdar whose property could be ‘escheated’, but the
zamindar chieftain whose rights were protected, amongst other things, by the
watan jagir. ...In other words, the understanding of Mughal mansabdars as nobles
only provides us with an entry into an imperially prescribed system of ranks; it
does not enlighten us in any way about the manner in which north Indian society
understood and respected hierarchical distinctions in the Middle Ages.
Kumar’s argument has serious implications for regional ruling groups in the fifteenth
century and later, as well as for paradigms deployed in any study of ‘elites’ in Indian history.
Especially given historiographical discussions which presume that slavery prohibited the emergence
of a proletariat, Kumar’s work suggests that slavery may equally well have inhibited the
emergence of a nobility on the pattern of a European aristocracy. More important, the relationship
between revenue-assignments to specifically trained slaves and freedmen, and the tussles of other
notable groups to transform escheatable revenue-assignment into ‘ancestral jagir’ in the seventeenth
and eighteenth centuries (the crisis of the jagirdari and mansabdari system) can be re-thought.
Since slave-status was not equated with ‘landlessness’ per se, it must have been the inability to
convert assignments of revenue-paying lands into ‘ancestral’ lands which would distinguish the
slave from the non-slave noble. It would also imply that such conversion was only possible where
the assignment holder, in turn, had a network of kin and corporate groups centred around him. In
sum, the creation of these networks, through a range of reproductive strategies, in turn, was
incumbent upon each such hegemon of the eighteenth century.
Given Kumar’s insights, other studies that suggest continuities between northern India and
other regions, but fail to go beyond the terms of European social organisation appear faintly
disappointing. For instance, in one of the recent studies of Bengal, Eaton gives a brief glimpse into
military slavery but makes no deductions from it for a general social history of the region.79
Eaton does not explicate the relationship between slavery, kinship, kingship, and community.
Instead, he takes some pains to refute the possibility of any connection of Islamisation with slavery
by equating Islam with the idea of equality, a claim which had been refuted by Kidwai.
Nevertheless, Eaton’s evidence clarifies the existence of similar patterns in North and East India,
a similarity that historians of later periods in the history of Bengal have paid scant attention to.
Exciting though the possibilities were, the issue of slavery was largely obscured in the
textbook histories of the Mughals.80 Certainly, the Mughal ‘nobility’ would appear to have been
a distinctly qualified order, if historians had been willing to interrogate their own assumptions of
class-formation, or household constitution. Exceptions are few. One is J.F. Richards, who described
79Richard M. Eaton, The Rise of Islam and the Bengal Frontier, 1204-1760 (Berkeley, 1993).
80I. H. Qureshi, The Administration o f the Mughul Empire (New Delhi, 1979); U. N. Day, The Mughal
Government 1556-1707 (New Delhi, 1969); M. Athar Ali, Mughal Nobility under Aurungzeb (Aligarh,
1966), among others.
22
the Mughal household as a ‘world of domestic slavery’,81 noting the use of slave-eunuchs
obtained from the slave-markets of Bengal and the institution of khanazadgi (indicating the
presence of second-generation slaves, born in the household) which provided the paradigm of
political conduct - that of selfless, loyal hereditary service, and a comportment compatible with
subordination to the master/emperor. Considering that the Mughal household persisted into the
nineteenth century, and provided the model for many of those social groups which were intricately
enmeshed in the empire, there are significant implications for the study of regional polities in the
eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.82 Referring to some of the latter as ‘extended sets of jajmani
relations’, Bayly acknowledged that a ‘slave caste’ phenomenon was more widespread than is
generally known.83 Just how widespread it was can be glimpsed in the moral defences offered
during the mid-nineteenth century, when particular ruling houses refused to ban the sale of
children on grounds such as the following:
in the Zenanas of the Durbar and other Sirdars it is not customary to employ men
Servants, and married women... cannot always be in attendance which is of itself
a source of inconvenience - on the other hand there are Gosaees &ca who never
have offspring and according to ancient custom they purchase a Boy on whom
they bestow all their property...84
8IJ. F. Richards, The Mughal Empire (Cambridge, 1992), p. 62; idem, T h e Formulation of Imperial
Authority under Akbar and Jahangir’ and ‘Norms of Comportment among Imperial Mughal Officers’ in J.F.
Richards, Power, Administration and Finance in Mughal India (Hampshire, 1993), pp. 252-289.
82For the purchase of seventy-five female slaves from Delhi by Balmukunddass, agent of Haider Ah,
see Maheshwardarbarchi Batmipatren, no. 69, 28 July 1782, in Itihas Sangraha, 1, 12, 1909, p. 156. For
the purchase of slaves from Patna by the Awadh court, see letter from Capt. Gabriel Harper to James
Alexander, 25 March, 1770, in BS&M, P/A/10., 15 April,1770, unnumbered.
83C. A. Bayly, Rulers, Townsmen and Bazaars: North Indian Society in the Age o f British Expansion
1770 - 1870 (Cambridge, 1983), p. 50, fn. 36.
84Translated Khurreeta from H.H. (Gaekwar), to Lord V. Falkland, Governor of Bombay, 19 May 1850,
BC F/4/2401/129609.
23
of political culture and social history, appeared to be on few historiographical agendas.85 Thus
what appears to have been a common denominator in the constitutions of the eighteenth and
nineteenth century ruling households in Mysore, Awadh, the Maratha, Sikh and Rajput states, all
of whom used slaves under different ideological paradigms, has been relatively obscured.
However, writing harem slavery into the given historiography requires not the erection of
alternative mythologies, but a refined theoretical perspective, within which an exploration of
power, articulated through hierarchies of age, wealth, social status and sexuality, occurred. It is
no more fruitful to discuss Mughal political culture in terms of liberal or other philosophical
paradigms than it is to ignore the reproductive bases of that polity altogether.
Two disparate studies of the Mughal harem, Findly’s Nur Jahan and Lai’s The Mughal
Harem86 illustrate the force of this. While the former details the organisation of life in the harem
/ zanana complete with laws of seclusion, structures of seniority and rank, and the diversity of
functions, the author’s inability to relate this to reproductive politics, kingship, and social
organisation in specifically non-European terms is a serious flaw. Partly responsible for this is the
recurrent miscognition of the meanings of private and public, kinship and subordination. For
instance, Findly follows the time-honoured tradition of characterising the claims Akbar made upon
his adversaries’ women as ‘marriages...to enhance his political alliances and to stabilize his
empire’, without taking into account the range of diverse institutions of marriage itself among the
groups thus ‘allied’ with. Furthermore, the nature of such transactions seems to have no bearing
on the nature of political allegiance itself. Conversely, the implication that all such ‘marriages’
were relations between unequals is taken as self-evident, without exploration of the other and more
equal marriages that existed simultaneously, within the ruling household. Given the author’s
uncritical interpretations, anachronisms like ‘Jahangir moved beyond the purely political context
of marriage and introduced into it an element of love’ (p. 100) mar her interpretation of the
household itself. The conclusion seems inescapable that all the values, dichotomies and meanings
of a liberal Western historiography have been read into the Mughal past.
Lai’s work notes the secondary status of women received as pawns in the Mughal harem,
the close connection between slavery and concubinage, the concentration of skill among slaves and
slave-born, and critically, the fact that the most important person living in the harem was the king.
Lai also argued for the continuities between Sultanate polities and Mughal structures in his
85This is true of Stephen P. Blake, Shahjanabad: The Sovereign City in Mughal India, 1639-1739
(Cambridge, 1991) and idem, ‘The Patrimonial - Bureaucratic Empire of the Mughals’, Journal of Asian
Studies, 39, 1979, pp. 77-94.
86Elison Banks Findly, Nur Jahan: Empress o f Mughal India, (Oxford, 1993) and K.S.Lal, The Mughal
Harem (New Delhi, 1988).
24
discussion of the size and organisation of the harem of Akbar and his successors. In the Sultanate
period, he urges, it was believed that the numerical strength and consumption patterns of the
harem determined the importance and stature of a ruler. Such ideas made it almost imperative for
the king to have the largest harem as compared with that of his nobles or the neighbouring
independent rulers. Lai argues that Akbar’s military conquests reinforced the political significance
of the harem, with the Rajput princesses sent there either as tribute or as pawns and pledges of
faith, other women as booty captured in war, and the growing numbers of castrated boys ‘gifted’
as revenue payments, (especially from Sylhet in eastern Bengal) by the end of the seventeenth
century. The shortcomings, however, are obvious. If collecting women is a political act, what does
this say of the values of wealth-creation, followership, and the formation of class and state? His
pre-occupation with a homogenous and hermetically sealed category, ‘M uslim’, makes him
oblivious of the harems of other contemporaneous groups like the Rajputs themselves. In the
context of the sub-continent, such a focus smacks of a communalised historiography, by the
reckoning of which, harem-slavery was peculiarly Islamic and ‘foreign’ to the indigenous ruling
houses prior to the advent of the Ghuznavids.87
The best antidote is offered by Varsha Joshi’s study of Rajput ruling houses, which proves
the existence of slave-based harem systems within the ideological and ritual confines of ‘Hindu’
polities.88 By focusing on polygyny,- simultaneous acquisition of multiple women - Joshi directs
attention to the importance of reproductive politics in Western India between the thirteenth and
nineteenth century. Prodigious in its revisionist scope, Joshi’s study also has its limits. Though she
finds that sons born of slave-mothers did not inherit the throne, but were provided for more
generally, she says nothing of the ‘lineage-based’ state that needs slave-mothers in the first place.
Nor does she scrutinise the implications of slavery for the tensions and conflicts within the nexus
of kinship and kingship, and the complex role of the British colonial regime in the persistence or
modification of these structures. Definitional problems remain unexamined precisely because of
the ‘closed’ nature of lineage and caste that she begins with. Thus the discreteness of the
categories of slave and wife, or slave and daughter/ sister. It is a problem shared by Lai and Findly
in that they translate the terms of kinship and affinity, the core of the ideologies of legitimation
by slave-holders, in very literal ways.
87A notable instance of this is Lai’s comment at the end of Chapter I, which goes ‘Small wonder that
the Islamic system of slavery was revolting to the Hindu psyche because it was alien to Hindu Dharma and
ideologically abhorrent to it.’ See his Muslim Slave System in Medeival India (New Delhi, 1994), p. 8. There
is a political intent in tagging this sentence on to a paragraph which explicitly records the transfer of slave
girls ‘to the English gentlemen’ at Multan in 1820’s, and concentrating only on the seller’s religion.
88Varsha Joshi, Polygamy and Purdah: Women and Society among Rajputs (Jaipur, 1995); also Marzia
Balzani and V. Joshi,‘The Death of a Concubine’s Daughter’, South Asia Research, 14, 2, 1994, pp. 136-62.
25
The issues left out from the above work constitute the strengths of studies of other harem-
systems, the most recent of which is Leslie Peirce’s work on the Ottomans between the fourteenth
and the seventeenth centuries.89 Arguing that the harem lay at the heart of the empire, and of all
political processes, Peirce illustrates the critical contribution of slave-women to the consolidation
of dynastic rule and patrilineal reproduction, and the consequent changes in status and wealth of
single-son concubines over a period. These changes, in turn, were resented by groups of Ottoman
subjects, like the ulema, whose investment in the power and privilege of rulers made their
representation of these women’s roles appear illegitimate usurpations. Though Peirce does not
extend the study to the nineteenth century, when it is juxtaposed against other studies of the
Imperial harem of the nineteenth century, the direction of political change in the Ottoman harem
appear to have resulted from a combination of the internal contradictions of the structure and
European imperialist and ideological pressures to end the slave-trade.
A similar emphasis on the centrality of the royal household to the political, administrative,
military and religious life of the kingdom is evident in the work of historians of slavery in Africa.
Edna Bay’s study of the palace organisation of precolonial Dahomey shows how this worked to
maintain and extend the political power and control of the monarchy by absorbing and distributing
the bulk of female slaves brought to Dahomey.90 The palace inhabitants, she argues, included war
captives, slaves purchased abroad, women and girls recruited from all the lineages in the
Dahomean state and the daughters of the king and female descendants of his lineage. Critically
for us, Bay notes that despite enormous variations in the social standing of the women who
entered the king’s service, they were all ‘legally’ wives (ahosi) to the king, distinguished from
nonroyal wives by the fact that all of the former lacked the fundamental protection of common
marriage, the right to divorce. Thus her work illustrates (a) how the language and institutional
structures of the common polygynous household were employed to describe the experience and
functions of life-long service to the ruler and (b) the distinction between legal status (slave) and
rank in terms of titles and access to positions of power, wealth and authority.
Peirce and Bay both significantly rewrite the meanings of what, in feminist theory, has
been called the ‘false universal’ - the dichotomy of private/ public. Instead of erecting a bipartite
division of power coinciding with visibility and space, Bay and Peirce individually illustrate that
power in the polities they study is imagined and arranged in terms of concentricity. Arguing that
power relationships in Islamic societies are represented by spatial division more horizontal than
89Leslie P. Peirce, The Imperial Harem: Women and Sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire (Oxford, 1993).
y(,Edna G. Bay, ‘Servitude and Success in the Palace of Dahomey’ in C. Robertson and M. A. Klein
(eds), Women and Slavery in Africa, pp. 340-367; idem ‘Belief, Legitimacy and the Kpojito: An Institutional
History of the Queen Mother in Precolonial Dahomey’, JAH, 36, 1995, pp. 1-27.
26
vertical (so that one moves in towards greater authority from the outermost circles of the most
minimal influence, privilege and wealth), these scholars explain the importance of the inner as the
centre of this series of concentric circles, identified with the ruler, and the space he inhabits. Peirce
underlines the inter-relatedness of sovereignty and seclusion in discussing the spatial and
metaphorical inviolability of the harem. Etymologically derived from the Arabic root h-r-m, the
term harem combines two sets of meanings, one, to be forbidden or unlawful, and the second, to
declare sacred and inviolable. Thus a harem is, by this definition, a sanctuary or a sacred precinct,
redolent of religious purity and honour, and evocative of the requisite obeisance. By implication,
it is a space to which general access is forbidden or controlled and in which the presence of
certain individuals or certain modes of behaviour are forbidden. This sense of the harem as
sanctuary is as applicable to the holy cities of Mecca and Medina as it is to the quarters of a
palace where the sultan - God’s shadow on Earth - resided.91 The degree of seclusion served as
an index of status because authority was a phenomenon of interiority, the boundaries of which
were heavily guarded. Thus proximity to the ruler, and access to interiors, determined rank and
power. It is within this political hierarchy, an inversion of dominant Western notions of the
politically significant as ‘outer’ or public, (and male) and the politically marginal as ‘inner’ or
private and domestic, that the meanings of seniority, gender and power have to be sought.92
Rewriting the spatial representation of power is fundamental to an appreciation of regimes
where the person of the ruler creates a sacred space around the presence. In such regimes, only
those who were not considered to be fully adult males could be routinely permitted in the inner
worlds of the palace: eunuchs, dwarfs and mutes, and slave-women and children of both sexes.
Furthermore, the more intimate one’s service to the ruler in the inner world, the greater one’s
standing in the outer world. Thus eunuchs and female slaves could hold the highest offices, with
corresponding salaries and incomes.
91Shaun Marmon, Eunuchs and Sacred Boundaries in Islamic Society (Oxford, 1995), pp. 6-15.
92This is not the equivalent of Dipesh Chakrabarty’s understanding of the ‘domestic’ as site of sacred
in ‘The Difference-Deferral of a Colonial Modernity: Public Debates on Domesticity in British India’ in D.
Arnold and D. Hardiman (eds), Subaltern Studies, VIII (Delhi, 1994), pp. 50-88. Where Chakrabarty’s
grihalakshmi is the sovereign in the picture he draws of mid-nineteenth century Bengali Hindu household,
the alternative here offered is that it is the sovereign male, with attributes of divine kingship, whose presence
in the interior makes this a sacred space. Other people’s power derives from that godly male seclusion,
whether it is of the ritual specialist, or the castrated slave, or the female concubine/ wife, all of whom may
be agents on the sovereign’s behalf.
27
kinship (like status inheritance, lineal descent) and affinity have inhibited the study of slavery. Few
scholars of India, for instance, have noticed that ‘marriage’ or ‘daughterhood’ itself operates within
a corpus of linguistic strategies, whereby all the women within the princely household become
forbidden to others. Even fewer have noticed that kinship terms supplanted references to jural
status, when applied to male slaves under the Sultanate and the Mughals. Thus Aibak ‘gave the
title of son to Iltutmish and honoured him by keeping near his own person’, and Muhammad
Ghori described his Turkish male slaves as ‘sons... they will inherit my lands and continue the
Khutba in my name when I am dead and gone’.93 In 1582, Akbar is said to have announced a
change of nomenclature for the Imperial slaves, who were to be henceforth styled chelas.94
Greater attention therefore to historical linguistics is specially necessary when assessing the records
of the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
By concentrating on historical semantics, one can unearth a basic discrepancy between
historiographical imagination and the information provided in the official Indian records of the
nineteenth century, and the form of slave labour employed in the Atlantic plantations. According
to the slave demographies of the initial years of the middle passage, slave-imports into the colonies
were predominantly adult and male, while the transfers described in the Indian evidence is largely
of infants and females. Between Dacca and Calcutta or Chinsurah the slaves being traded were
‘from two years and upwards, as far as six years’95 while the ages of slaves taken from
Chandernagore to Calcutta were between six and twelve years.96 In 1811, the Magistrate at
Barelly found forty-three slaves, many of whom were ‘infants and unable to refer to the places
where their parents reside’.97 In the late 1830s, an official from Dinajpur noted that children of
about six years old were bought for a few rupees, seldom beyond ten rupees.98
93Dharam Pal, ‘The Influence of the Slaves in the Muslim Administration of India’, Islamic Culture, 18,
1944, pp. 409-17 (reprint, London, 1971).
94Badauni attributed the use of the latter term to the influence of the mendicants called jog is, hinting at
a form of borrowing nomenclatures from within the same cultural milieu, referring to the existence of child-
oblates devoted to a spiritual corporate body. See Irfan Habib, ‘Akbar’s Social Views - A Study of their
Evolution’, Papers of the Indian History Congress, 53rd Session, 1992-93, p. 223. For suggestive analogies,
see John Boswell, The Kindness o f Strangers: The Abandonment of Children in Western Europe from Late
Antiquity to the Renaissance (New York, 1988), pp. 296-321.
95Collr., Dacca, to Committee of Revenue, 2 March 1785, Slavery in India: Correspondence, (PP), 1828,
4, no. 125, p .ll.
97T. Thornhill to T. Brooke, Agent of the Governor-General at Bareilly, 25 Apr., 1811, BPC, P/119/32,
10 May, 1811, no. 109.
y8Civil and Session Judge, Dinajpur, in PP, 1841, Appendix II, p. 308.
28
Travellogues suggest a continuity in the age and gender profiles of the transfers of the
intervening seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Mundy, travelling through western and upper
India in the seventeenth century recounted two separate instances - one in western India and the
other in eastern India - of little girls running away from their m asters." John Marshall, a factor
of the East India Company, noted that during the famine in 1671, when he was offered a twelve-
year-old slave for half a rupee, he refused to purchase the lad ‘beeing so old’; in May 1671, he
bought ‘a Braminie slave boy for 4 rupees... his hight [sic] was 43 inches, his age 7 or 8
yeares’.100 James Forbes, having resided seventeen years in India, found that ‘Malabar children
are generally a cheap commodity at Anjengo’. He had purchased a boy and a girl of about 8 or
9 years of age ‘for less money than a couple of pigs in England’ - again ‘as a present to a lady
at Bombay’.101 For Central India, the predominance of female ‘children and grown-up young
women’ and the widespread nature of slave-holding and slave-trading by Rajputs, Brahmins, and
Banjaras alike was detailed by M alcolm.102
Surely, if agrarian labour was the immediate use to which slaves were to be put, the trade
in infants, a substantial majority of which was also female, was illogical. While this is not to deny
that children, female and male, have been made to labour in various capacities and tasks, what is
being pointed out is the fallacy of searching for a specific mode of production characterised by
infantile and female labour. The premium on youth could represent a mixture of economic and
social reasons. As Bradley pointed out, the reasons for acquiring infant (and unskilled) slaves in
Rome was the low cost to the owner of maintaining a child after purchase, even over a period of
years. From the holder’s perspective, this was financially more attractive than the expenditure of
a much larger capital sum for the acquisition of an adult, presumably skilled and productive, slave.
It is also possible that a child offered a short-term speculative advantage as well as long-term
investment, for she/he could be sold many times over within the period of youth.103
This explanation appears to correspond with the details of the Indian transfers in the
"Richard C. Temple (ed.), The Travels o f Peter Mundy in Europe and Asia, 1608-1667 (London, 1914),
II, pp. 88, 172. In both instances Mundy records his unwillingness to take the runaways into his company
for fear of charges of theft being brought against him.
100S. A. Khan (ed.), John Marshall in India: Notes and Observations in Bengal, 1668-1672 (London,
1927), pp. 125, 137.
1()1James Forbes, Oriental Memoirs: Selected and Abridged from a Series o f Familiar Letters (London,
1813), I, p. 392.
1<>2John Malcolm, A Memoir o f Central India, including Malwa and Adjoining Provinces (London 1823-
24, reprint Delhi, 1970), II, pp. 199-203.
nineteenth century in two aspects. Where prices were concerned, all the Indian agents and vakils
(pleaders and representatives authorised by specific litigants), many of them slave-holders, testified
that children of between five years and eight years of age were far cheaper to buy than young
adult females or males, who cost more.104 It is also evident that such children, when not kept
by the household, ‘changed hands’ frequently. In 1791, one of the French ships transporting slaves
from Calcutta to Pondicherry, carried on it seventeen ‘girls’ between the ages of seven and
seventeen. Nine of them were clearly listed as ‘slave to a person by the name of Jeffery,’ ‘slave
to a person by the name of Bintoor’ ‘slave to a Portuguese woman’ and so on. Significant in this
list is the frequency of descriptions like that of a fourteen-year-old who ‘was stolen from Dana
by Senkaruah Sing, who left her at the house of Mahrua, was sold by her to Petit Jaun and by him
to Jourdan’.105
The problems with decoding the transactions (whether of sale, mortgage, lease or gift)
arise when a seventeen-year-old male or female is described as a ‘boy’ or ‘girl’ in the English
records, or the local equivalents like chhokra and chhokri.m6 Only a comparative reading of
terms with those used in the Atlantic systems reveals that terms applicable to slaves imbued them
with permanent infantilisation, and transferred their legal and civic disabilities into a metaphoric
status. In a similar vein, therefore, when a child is described as sold by, or stolen from, her
‘parents’ in the English records, questions arise about the kind of parenthood of the ‘child’.
Implicit in these descriptions is a notion of natural authority, and possession, resident in an owner-
cum-parent. Much of the English reporting in the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries was
blind to the content of Indian familial terms. Our inability to interrogate this leads to a replication
of those blinkers, and the ideology of the domestic forwarded by the plantocracy. This is
illustrated by the work of Amitava Ghosh.107 On the basis of a legal document of the twelfth
century, which grants manumission to a female slave, Ghosh conjectures that the master Ben Yiju,
‘married’ the Nayar slave girl. Ghosh notes that
slavery appears to have been a means of creating ties of fictive kinship. Wherever
104Evidence of Raj Govind Sen, PP, 1841, Appendix I, p. 224. Tek Loll said ‘children from six to eight
sell for from 10 to 15 rupees’ where adults cost between 50 and 125 rupees, p. 225. The evidence of Dhurb
Singh Das was that ‘a boy of five or six years sells for one-fifth of the price of a young adult: the same of
a girl’, p. 231.
IWiFor a list of fourteen slaves between the ages of 8 years and 17 years, all of whom are named in this
style, ‘Emanee Boy, Foyzun Girl’, see Chief Magt., Calcutta, to Sec., GOB, 21 July, 1837, BCrJ., P/141/14,
27 July, 1837, no. 18; for deeds using terms chhokra and chhokri see Appendix I of this thesis.
1,17Amitava Ghosh,‘ The Slave of Ms.H.6’ in Partha Chatterjee and Gyanendra Pandey (eds), Subaltern
Studies, VII, (Delhi, 1993), pp. 159-220.
30
108Ibid., p. 196.
illKshitish Chandra Moulik (ed.), Pracina Purbabanga Gitika (Calcutta, 1971), II, p. 284. The exact
terminology is gram-shompokke bhaai.
n2This is a point made for Bengal village society by Ronald Inden and Ralph Nicholas, Kinship in
Bengali Culture (Chicago, 1977), pp. 32-34, 87-93.
31
was careful in showing due respect to his ‘mother’, Qutlaq Sultan Begum, he received only
humiliation and ill-treatment from her.113 Only the Begum’s clarification that Muzaffar Bakht
was the son of a slave-girl who had been an attendant in the Delhi palace reveals that something
more than merely ‘fictive kinship’ is involved in this case.
The appropriate term may actually be metaphorical kinship which disregards both
biological relationships and the precise effects ascribed to them.114 Ghosh does not investigate
the effects, or the content, of either. Like other historians who have commented on the
untranslateability of vernacular terms into English, Ghosh selects for his discussion of
untranslateability the terms which fall outside the realm of kinship. For instance, noting that the
eighteenth century official, Buchanan Hamilton did not provide the Tulu or Kannada terms of
‘slave’, Ghosh compensates for this deficiency by supplying the Kannada word tottu, which, in
his words, is ‘an ambiguous term, used for servants and hired workers as well as ‘slaves’.
Examining the range of vernacular terms for marriage, or sonship, could have yielded a subtler
evaluation of the constitution of the household itself through such pawnage mechanisms as he
touches upon.
Very similar attitudes towards kinship, and terms from that domain, were responsible for
the early ethnographers’ compilation of the vernacular terms denoting slave-status. For instance,
James Taylor supplied the words current in Dacca, ghulam, bhandari (for the males) and dasi,
bandi(for the females).115 Yet he, like Buchanan, overlooked, or mistook, the content of kinship
terms also operative in those cultures he wrote about. Thus, it is quite possible that Buchanan
confused genealogical kinship with metaphoric kinship when he characterised as ‘not slaves’ the
children purchased and reared as palokbeta (sons by nourishment) that he found in Rangpur. From
the same region in North Bengal a century later, a jotedar described the transfer of his pottah to
his purchased son (kritaputra) for an annual rent.116
The general denial of such purchased persons being slaves was endemic to the colonial
officials from the eighteenth to the mid-nineteenth century. The incomprehension of such terms
115James Taylor, A Sketch of the Topography and Statistics o f Dacca, (Calcutta, 1840), p. 320.
1!6Nubbee Bux to Col. J.C. Haughton, in Sec. BOR to Sec. Rev., 27 Sept. 1875, BRP, P/237, Nov. 1875,
no. 45. For an earlier document of similar import, and the opinions of pundits in Supreme Court of Calcutta,
see W. A. Montriou, Some Precedents and Records to Aid Enquiry as to The Hindu Will of Bengal
(Calcutta, 1870), pp. 48-54. For H. T. Colebrooke’s insistence on the separation between slave and son, in
denial of contemporary indigenous interpretation, see letter in Sir Thomas Strange, Hindu Law: Principally
with Reference to Such Portions o f It as Concern the Administration o f Justice in the King’s Courts in India
(London, 1830, reprint Madras, 1859), II, pp. 221-23.
32
is evinced in the cases of defamation which followed upon the use of such terms between
indigenous litigants. Consider the case of a Sessions Judge of Chittagong who tried two men for
having defamed a native doctor in Chittagong : the latter’s infamy was brought on by having
addressed the Deputy Magistrate as dharmapeta.ul The force of this kinship term as sarcasm,
and insult, can only be gauged from a story of a thief written between the end of the eighteenth
century and the beginning of the nineteenth extracted below:
... aji hoite tumi amar dharmabap hoile, jokhon je agya koriben eyi bhritto
kritoshaddho pranpone palon koribo. Kamini kohilek... hukar korme sharboda
nijukto thhako,,.tomake chor chor boliya sharbida kahantok daki, aji hoite ami
tomar naam Ramballav rakhilam. Saudagar kohilek je agye mohashoi’...
(...you are my god-father, I accept you as my master. Whatever orders you may
be graciously pleased to pass, it will be my duty as an humble servant to execute
to the best of my power, and even at the risk of my life. Kamini said,...‘I would
simply place you in charge of my huka...how long shall I address you as thief?...I
shall henceforth call you Ramballav.’ The merchant agreed....)118
Yet another instance of the asymmetrical power of the dhurmmbap is evinced by the legal records,
where a man called Ramnarayan Buddee is said to have pleaded with Bholanath Lushkur for three
years to stop preying on the former’s wife, and as a last resort, he had recourse to calling the
Lushkur his dhurrumbap,119
If metaphorical kinship terms implying fatherhood and sonship carried such clear
connotations of mastery and servitude, and were associated with punitive resolutions, what could
be the equivalent terms for females? A document from the Marathi sources suggests that terms
implying daughterhood may have borne similar meanings. This refers to a regulation pertaining
to those ‘girls’ whose husbands died; they were to be classed as rajbeti. If a man wished to
perform a secondary marriage (pat) with her, he had to agree to redeem her from the state (sarkar)
according to custom (chat). But behind this regulation lay complete awareness of the indignity of
such ‘daughterhood’ and secondary ‘wifehood’ for it specified that
Some women the people of the jati do not allow to remain rajbeti because the jati
is lowered (jati hras hote). Therefore some respectable member of the jati agrees
to the nazar and carries out the pat. If the woman is good (changli) then it is
profitable to the state because if one says fifty, another says hundred and the sum
thus increases. This is because the money for a rajbeti is not fixed but depends
mH.C.Richardson, 11 Sept. 1868, in Offg. Commr. Chittagong to Sec. to GOB, 26 Feb. 1869, BJC,
P/433/27, March 1869, no. 257.
llsD. C. Sen, Bengali Prose Style: 1800-1857 (Calcutta, 1921), pp. 17-19. The English translation is
provided by the author. No contemporary dictionary, including that compiled by the missionary Carey,
mentions such terms, widely used both in oral and literal traditions of the period. This, alongwith the
context-dependent meanings of kinship terms, is the reason for the absence of a glossary in my text.
119Government on the prosecution of Ramnarayan Buddee vs. Bholanath Lushkur, Report of Cases
determined by the Nizamut Adalut, 1853, III, Part II, p. 772.
33
l2()Information collected by Vinayak Rao Aurungabadkar for Richard Jenkins, Resident at Nagpur, circa
1813, in Mss. Marathi D. 31, folio 100.
121Report from Indian Law Commissioners, (PP), 1841, Appendix VI, no. 5, p. 404.
124See deed of transfer by one self-acknowledged ‘poor woman’ in letter of Commr. Nagpore to Sec.
to GOB, 1 Oct. 1841, BCrJC, P/141/58, 12 Oct. 1841, no. 47.
‘parents’ sell their children, actual examination of the papers sometimes revealed a greater
complexity. The Agent at Bareilly discovered in 1811 that for the infant-slaves purchased at the
towns of Nujeebabad and Auggeneah -‘established marts where these children are collected in
hundreds’ - the deeds of purchase were executed, not by the genealogical parents of the children
as had been imagined by all the officials, but by the middlemen slave dealers in favour of specific
individuals.126
The existence of such metaphorical kinship terms, in turn, throws the simplest taxonomies
of transfers into confusion. For instance, the ‘gift’ of such metaphoric ‘daughters’ is an obvious
object of reappraisal. As European travellers had noted, the gifting of young slaves to politically
powerful individuals, like chiefs and kings, seemed to have been a well-established feature of
political and economic life. Manucci noted that when envoys from Balkh brought Tartar and
Uzbeg women for sale to the Mughal court, one was first ‘bought by Afticar Can [Iftikhar Khan]
and by him presented to the king’.127 In a similar vein, Bernier noted that the king of Ebeche
[Ethiopia] sent ‘to the Great Mogol twenty-five choice slaves, nine or ten of whom were of a
tender age’.128 This kind of transaction, where a political relationship is mediated through the
surrender of one’s own claims in people to the superior, could take place in various contexts. The
one most familiar to us is that of the vanquished power in a war, but much more frequent were
the occasions when such ‘gifts’ were given in order to extract some other concession from the
recipient, like a concession in taxes. Thus in one of the accounts of the Rajas of Benares, it is said
Mansaram obtained a sanad for his zamindari from Nawab Safdar Jang ‘through Muhammad Quli
Khan whom he had made his patron by making him the present of a slave-girl’.129
Conversely, assertions of supremacy may also have lain in the extraction of such ‘gifts’
from the vanquished. For instance, Khafi Khan’s description of the Mughal commander’s demands
from the Raja of Assam seem to be open to such re-interpretation. Hitherto translators of that
passage have rendered it thus:
it was demanded that he should send his daughter (beti) to become an attendant
of the Imperial household (pesh khidmati) along with five hundred elephants with
fifty lakhs of rupees as tribute (peshkash) and a fixed annual pishkash...
...the daughter of the Raja was sent to join the body of the imperial slaves with
127Niccolao Manucci, Storia do Mogor, trans. W. Irvine, (reprint Calcutta, 1966), II, pp. 38-9.
128Francois Bernier, Travels in the Mogul Empire, trans. A. Constable, revised V.Smith (Milford, 1916),
p. 135.
131William Bolts, Considerations on India Affairs; Particularly Respecting the Present State of Bengal
and its Dependencies (London, 1772), p. 162.
132President and Council in Bengal to Court of Directors, 24 March 1774, in Proceedings o f the
Governor and Council at Fort William Respecting the Administration o f Justices amongst the Natives in
Bengal (London, 1774), p. 91.
133Vishnubhat Godse, Majha Pravasa, ed. D.V.Potdar, (reprint Pune, 1974), pp. 28-29.
134Walter Hamilton, A Geographical, Statistical, and Historical Description of Hindostan and the
Adjacent Countries (London, 1820), p. 102.
36
holder, by which slaves were passed from one holder to another.135 Alongside this were the
transfers of human beings in lieu of fines, in payment of a debt, and so on.
The anthropological discussion, following from the textual one, has concentrated on the
components of the ‘gift’ aspect of the transaction, rather than on the kind of ‘daughterhood’ or
‘sonship’ involved. Since classical texts are silent about the various types of daughters, in contrast
to their eloquence regarding various types of sons (dattakputra, palakputra, and poushyaputra to
name only a few), so too are the ethnographers. Are we then to infer that metaphoric daughterhood
was absent from Indian history?
If we answer in the positive, both nineteenth-century, and later, descriptions of individual
and aggregate transfers of such ‘daughters’ appear inexplicable. The biographer of the Cossimbazar
family noted that Krisnanath Nandi chose as a groom for his sister a man whose mother
Kshudumani had been sold ‘to a well-to-do childless couple for a handful of Kshud or grain’; the
latter then gave her in ‘marriage’ into the family of the Mathrun Nandys, a family of lathials
(armed servants) who also cultivated lands on the Nandi estates.136 A former police official,
author of a series on criminology in Bengal, wrote approvingly of the institution of the noukar
meye - the boatloads of girls brought from various different provinces and sold as wives to men
who were not very distinguished in rank {akuliri).ni The reasons for his praise of this institution
lay in the fact that it acted as a great levelling principle; these girls, regardless of their jati
assumed the ranks and identities of their husbands (svami). Yet another chose precisely the
criterion of disregard of the girls’ jati to condemn this institution of the noukar meye. Speaking
of the ways in which ‘brides’ could be had without the payment of a heavy pana (bride-wealth)
to the bride’s father, he said,
People take a boatload of Bangshaja girls. They may not be Brahmins at all but
they are passed off as such and Bangshaja bridegrooms buy these girls from out
of the boatload... poor people buy these girls. Instances have been known when
Mahomedan girls sold out of the boatload have been passed off as Bangshaja
girls. One such girl after her marriage ordered the servant to bring a cherag,
which is a Persian word for lamp...On cross-examination she was discovered to
be a Mahomedan but she was not driven away by her husband and she remained
in the family, as such a procedure would have entailed a loss of caste, and the
135See deed of transfer of the slaves of the deceased Chiranjiba Barakaistha to Rajguru Sarbananda
Goswami by the Maharani of Cooch Behar, 1783, in Amanatullah Ahmed, ‘Slavery in North East India’,
Indian Historical Records Commission (henceforth IHRC), pt. II, no. 23, 1946. This was a predominant
method of transferring slaves among the households of British officials in the late eighteenth and early
nineteenth century.
136Somendra Chandra Nandi, History o f the Cossimbazar Raj in the Nineteenth Century, (Calcutta, 1986),
I, p. 268.
138Basanta Coomar Bose, Hindu Customs in Bengal (Calcutta, 1929), pp. 33-34. Emphasis added. From
the Introduction it appears that this book was written in 1875.
l4,1Rammohun Roy, A Second Defence o f the Monotheistical System o f the Veds in Reply to an Apology
fo r the Present State o f Hindoo Worship ( Calcutta, 1817), p. 44.
141Itihas-sangraha, 7, 1-3, 1915, pp. 260-61. This document refers to a period about 1800-01.
38
of slavery, and the awareness of all indigenous regimes of the need to regulate it.142
l42For a later report on three marts at Gwalior, each of which was ‘owned’ by different members of the
ruling house, at which slaves were gathered and sold, see letter from Resident, Gwalior to Sec. to the Gov.-
Gen., 8 June, 1832, BC F/4/1467/57728.
mJASB, 56, 1, 1887, pp. 164-167 and 57, 1, 1888, pp. 71-75. In the former, Beveridge had admitted
his uncertainty about the term walidah sabcibi khesh noting only that Elliott had rendered it "his own royal
mother". Shyamal Das responded with the correct translation of this term as a ‘lady regarded as a mother
for some reason’ and even pointed out that terms like brother should not be taken literally, for ‘relatives of
the Rajputs, removed even by ten generations, are called brothers’. Beveridge’s dismissal of the explanation
appears misplaced, especially since the use of metaphoric kinship for slaves had been commented on by his
own compatriot, W.Irvine in ‘Bangash Nawabs of Farrukhabad’ in the pages of the same journal ten years
earlier. Speaking of the four thousand chelahs who were referred to as Tifl-i-sarkar (sons of the State),
Irvine explained that it was a counterweight to the biological and fictive kin of the ruler. See JASB, 47, 1,
1878, pp. 279-345; and W, Irvine, The Army o f the Indian Moghuls : its Organisation and Administration
(London, 1903), p. 103.
39
the rights of the heads of families, Mussulman and Hindoo, which are not to be
included under the title, slavery...your remedial measure should generally begin
with the cases of greatest hardship.144
What some of these forms were can be inferred from the debates in Parliament; in the Commons,
the central issue seemed to be the ‘harems and zenanas’, an intrusion upon which would excite
rebellion.145 Macaulay, Secretary of the India Board, even reassured the House that since ‘due
regard shall be paid to the laws of marriage; those who live in the zenanas may be considered as
coming under this class, the connection in this case is a quasi-marriage’. The simple reduction of
the complex and different grades of slavery within the household into ‘marriage’ relations was
convenient for colonial administrators. As Lovejoy and Hagendorn argue, identical strategies in
the British colony in Nigeria allowed for the persistence of slave-concubinage while
simultaneously curtailing the web of claims and rights accorded them in Islamic law.146 In the
Lords, the Duke of Wellington referred to the female slave in the hut of every [European] soldier
in the Indian army, who could not be dispensed with if the Company was to retain its control in
India. In a similar vein, Auckland, the Governor-General, in 1841, recommended that sales of
children may be prohibited but parenthesised ‘the national custom of adoption’ as one to be
guarded.147 By 1871, some English judges were even claiming that the ‘ordinary "bandhi", or
so-called slave-girl,...is not a slave in the legal acceptance of the term ’.148
Instead of resisting this fiat, all published work on Indian slavery has followed the decree
of exclusion set out by the colonial legislators, refusing even to name the practices of
concubinage/secondary marriages, or of adoption, as a fundamental part of slave social formations.
This has resulted in displacing issues of reproductive politics from the context of a slave-holding
society and their relocation within other kinds of historical narratives, like those of the contest
144Extract Public Letter to India, 10 December, 1834, in Slavery in India: Correspondence (PP), 1834,
44, no. 128, p. 70. Emphasis added.
i45Hansard, Parliamentary Debates, 3rd. series, (London, 1833), XIX, pp. 532 and 798-99.
146Paul Lovejoy and Jan S. Hagendorn, Slow Death for Slavery: the Course o f Abolition in Northern
Nigeria, 1897-1936 (Cambridge, 1993), pp. 111-24; also Paul Lovejoy, ‘Concubinage and the Status of
Women Slaves in Early Colonial Northern Nigeria’, JAH, 29, 1988, pp. 245-266.
i47Minute of the Governor-General, 6 May 1841, in PP, 1841, p. 478. In a private letter to Hobhouse,
1 April 1839, however, Auckland had accepted that various officers and magistrates ‘only look to praedial
slavery...The abominations which grow out of the maintenance of the Jenana and the troops of dancing girls
are of another character and for the most part illegal, but from national customs difficult to check....’in
British Library, Broughton Papers, Add.Mss. 36473, folio 447. In the same collection is a letter from W.H.
Macnaghten, 8 April, 1837, admitting that the condition of female slaves was well known to officials, but
‘... who is to explore the recesses of the haram?’, folio 110.
i48G. G. Morris, Sessions Judge, Backergunge, to Registrar of the High Court, Calcutta, 14 Nov. 1871,
BJC, P/246, Dec. 1871, Enclosure in no. 186.
40
l49See, for example, K. Sangari and S. Vaid (eds), Recasting Women: Essays in Colonial History (New
Delhi, 1989); M. Borthwick, The Changing Role o f Women in Bengal, 1849-1905 (Princeton, 1984);
Malavika Karlekar, Voices from Within: Early Personal Narratives (Delhi, 1991); Prem Chowdhry, The
Veiled Women: Shifting Gender Equations in Rural Haryana 1880-1990 (Delhi, 1994). For micro-level
studies of kinship and marriage, see Lina M. Fruzetti, The Gift o f a Virgin: Women, Marriage and Ritual
in a Bengali Society (New Delhi, 1990); Imtiaz Ahmed (ed.), Family, Kinship and Marriage Among Muslims
in India (New Delhi, 1976); Jack Goody, The Oriental, the Ancient and the Primitive (Cambridge, 1990);
Patricia Uberoi (ed.), Family, Kinship and Marriage in India (Delhi, 1994).
15(lLawrence Stone, The Family, Sex and Marriage in England, 1500-1800 (New York, 1979); Peter
Laslett (ed.), Household and Family in Past Time (Cambridge, 1972); Eli Zaretsky, Capitalism, the Family
and Personal Life (New York, 1976); Jean Louis Flandrin, Families in Former Times, trans. Richard
Southern, (Cambridge, 1979).
15)For a parallel critique of Eurocentric models for the study of Africa, see Steven Feierman, ‘Africa in
History: The End of Universal Narratives, in Gyan Prakash (ed.), After Colonialism: Imperial histories and
Post-Colonial Displacements (Princeton, 1995), pp. 40-65.
41
152Lady Fawcett (trans.) and Charles Fawcett (ed.), The Travels o f the Abbe Carre in India and the Near
East (reprint Delhi, 1990), I, p. 247.
I53S. Rousseau, A Dictionary of Words Used in the East Indies with Full Explanations (London, 1802,
this edition 1805), p. 112.
154George Foster, Sketches o f the Mythology and Customs of the Hindoos (London, 1785), p.73.
156Amongst a vast and sophisticated literature, see E.D.Genovese and E. Fox-Genovese, Fruits of
merchant Capital: Slavery and Bourgeois Property in the Rise and Expansion o f Capitalism (New York,
1983); Robert W. Fogel and Stanley L. Engerman Time on the Cross: vol. I, The Economics o f American
Negro Slavery, and vol. II, Evidence and Methods (Boston, 1974).
157Robert C.- H. Shell, Children of Bondage: A Social History o f the Slave Society at the Cape o f Good
Hope, 1652-1838 (Hanover, 1988); also Christopher J. Hawes, ‘Eurasians in British India, 1773-1833: The
Making of a Reluctant Community’, Ph.D. Dissertation, SOAS, London, 1993, chapters 1-2.
42
second in the sense that s/he was denied the most elementary of social bonds, kinship and
community.158 Building upon this, Orlando Patterson arrived at the characterisation of the slave
as the person who is held in a state of natal alienation, dishonour and violence. He defined the
most distinctive attribute of the slave’s powerlessness as originating conceptually as a substitute
for death, archetypically for death in war, but equally frequently as commutation of capital
punishment, death from starvation and exposure. This conditionally pardoned ‘life’ was then to
be lived in terms of permanent natal alienation, having no socially recognised existence outside
of the saviour/ master, and bearing all the symbolic and material marks of a secular
excommunication. Such a person was denied all claims on, and obligations to parents and living
relations, as well as more remote ancestors and descendants.159
Though this redefinition is persuasive, there are some qualifications that must be entered.
The idea of slavery as an alternative to death was the moral legitimation provided by slave-masters
and acquirers. For late eighteenth-century colonial judges and officials in India, this was the classic
justification. For instance, William Jones, represented his own slave-holding as an act of
mercy/charity. Speaking to a jury in 1785, in a case of a murder of a slave girl by Osborne, her
English master, he referred to his own holding of child-slaves ‘whom I rescued from death or
misery’.160 John Shore, the Governor-General, in the famine of 1788, not only bought up as
many ‘children’ as his servants could find, but also defended his action, in ways reminiscent of
his contemporary slaveholders in the West, that he had done this for the welfare of the children
themselves. ‘Without this,’ he wrote to his wife Charlotte, ‘many must have died, or have been
disposed of to persons who would not have taken as much care of them as I have done’.161 To
use Boswell’s term, the ‘kindness of strangers’ is suspect, when most slave-holders characterised
their own purchasing and rearing of children as acts of charity, and conversely, that the sellers
were ‘saving ...their children’s lives, by interesting in their preservation persons able to provide
158M. I. Finley, The Ancient Economy (1973, revised edition, Hammonds worth, 1992), idem, Ancient
Slavery and Modem Ideology (London, 1980).
16(,Charge to the Grand Jury, cited in S. N. Mukherjee, Sir William Jones: A Study in Eighteenth Centuiy
British Attitudes to India (Cambridge, 1968), p. 134; idem, ‘A Note on Sir William Jones and the Slave
Trade in Bengal’, BPP, 82, 154, 1963, pp. 106-111. One of the slaves he held has been identified as ‘Otto’,
who like the 25 slaves of General Eyre Coote, became a soldier, see R. Llewellyn-Jones, Very Ingenious
Man: Claude Martin in Early Colonial India (Delhi, 1993), p. 72.
lfilLetter, 22 April, 1788, cited in F. J. Shore, Memoirs and Life of Lord Teignmouth (London, 1837),
I, pp. 156-7. John Shore referred to this event as the ‘increase of my family’, yet discussed with pride, not
just the prices at which he had purchased them but also the smallness of the expenditure incurred in
maintaining ‘these brats’. Except one, these ‘children’ were left with him.
43
nourishm ent for them ’.162 In 1836, a judge of Rangpur recom m ended ‘that the transfer of infants,
by their parents or natural guardians, should be sanctioned (whether m ade with or without
consideration)... as being the sole cause of preservation of the lives of thousands of infants’.163
Colonial semantics of charity, of the rescue of children from death, had serious
consequences for the growth of textual law in the eighteenth century, for the separation of ‘fam ily’
law and laws of ‘property’, based as they sometimes were, on m istranslation.164 For such
reasons, it is worth pondering over the co-incidence of terms in C olebrooke’s, or Jones’s, English
translations of texts o f the eighteenth century. To illustrate this, we could read the D igest, for
instance, for its list of the various modes of enslavem ent.165 It would appear that there was little
to differentiate between ‘local’ and ‘colonial’ holders’ terminologies: it was the arbitrary meanings
that have been assigned to each over tim e that reflected the conflict and tensions between the two.
The comments of one British official while discussing the sales and purchases of children in the
M uzzaffarpur district o f Bihar denote this:
After purchase the condition o f these children is often far better than it was
before, and though they are considered the property o f the master, are not looked
upon in the light of a slave,... often acquire property, and in some cases, even
attain to great opulence.
The child when purchased is fed and clothed by its master, and when it gets to
sufficient age to be of any help, is given a small monthly allowance as well...
To call either one custom or the other slavery would be giving a very wrong
im pression.166
From this arises a second reservation about Patterson’s formulation. The correspondence
of affective with genealogical kinship (natal ties) is presumed to be already established, rather than
one in the process o f being so. Colonial observers in India like Forbes appeared to have done the
162H. T. Colebrooke, Minute of 1812, BC F/4/1234/40338. This attribution of charity and humanity
persisted in the rhetoric of the officials who opposed abolition as late as the 1840s. Examples are the
minutes of H. T. Prinsep and A. Amos in BC F/4/1947/84542.
lf,3T. A. Shaw, in Report from Indian law Commissioners, (PP), 1841, Appendix II, p. 307.
164For William Jones’ mistranslation of a Persian term denoting slave-status, ‘kaniz’, as ‘the female of
the species’: see his glossary in Lord Teignmouth (ed.) Collected Works o f Sir William Jones, (London,
1807), V, p. 200.
165Colebrooke, Digest o f Hindu Law, II, p. 225. The commentary on Manu, Narada and others by
Jagannath, translated into English by Colebrooke, offered this explanation of the term ‘anaakala-bhritta’
‘Maintained in a famine;” .., or, in other words, during a dearth; then maintained: that is, whose life has
been preserved for servitude by food then given.’ ( original italics). Or, to take another example,‘prapto
yuddhat’ was elaborated as "Made captive in war;"one whose life has been preserved by his consenting to
slavery, when in danger of his life in battle; and thus acquired by the conqueror’ (original italics).
166Offg. Magt., Tirhoot, to Commr., Patna Division, 30 Sept. 1868, BJC, P/433/27, March 1869, no.
9.
44
same when they characterised slavery both of the royal household and of the humble one as a state
in which ‘the tender ties of parental, filial, and fraternal affection are dissolved’.167 Others
however suggested that ‘kinlessness’ was not a question of consanguinity or affinity but of
metaphor. Thus the Chief of Chittagong in 1774 referred to the process by which ‘any one who
is without a father, mother, or any other relation, and who is not connected with any zemindar or
other in the revenue or cultivation of the country’ sold himself and became a slave.168
Clearly, the applicability of Patterson’s redefinition is contingent upon the historical
records’ distinguishing between ‘natal’ kin and metaphoric kin. In social formations where the
idiom of kinship was a paradigm for the representation of hierarchies of power, the metaphoric
representation of powerlessness was that of ‘kinlessness’. Thus the term ‘orphan’ or ‘foundling’
may equally obscure the jural and social condition of the person concerned. Both the early
stratagems of the Company (the founding of the Military Orphan Schools, for instance) and the
narratives produced by Indians emphasise this correspondence. Thus in 1796, the magistrate of
Ramghur chose to believe the petition of one Mohun which said, ‘In the year 1191 Fussily...
Raddie a young girl, fell near the garden of Ragonautpore under a poplar tree, and was dying -
I took her to my house, and nourished her...169 The English magistrate described her as the
‘adopted daughter’ of Mohun, even though it was apparent from the girl’s own story that she had
escaped from the household and refused to return to it. A document written around 1830 on the
succession of the infant ruler of Datia, a state in Central India, had a similar semantic crossover.
It went
above four years ago a gentleman was travelling from Gwalior through
Nuddeagaon. Early in the morning, the voice of a newly born Infant reached his
Ears as he approached that village. He went to the spot and observed an Infant
lying in a basket, apparently recently born. The gentleman alighted from his
elephant, and observing marks of superior birth in its features took up the child
and proceeded to the Royal fort where he delivered over the infant.170
As investigated by the British Agent at the Datia court, a particular semantic term like orphan may
not refer to a genealogical isolate at all, since the orphan’s mother lived in the zenana of the ruler,
but indicate alienation or isolation of some other sort. Effectively, the ideal of genealogical descent
could overlie its absence. Like the narrative of the king of Datia did, theories of divine and other
legitimations could be generated precisely because of the dissonance between metaphor and
16liCited in Capt. T. H. Lewin, The Hill Tracts o f Chittagong and the Dwellers therein, with Comparative
Vocabularies of the Hill Dialects (Calcutta, 1869), fn, p. 33.
!6yTranslation of Proceedings of Magistrate of Ramghur, BCrJ, P/128/36, 12 Jan. 1798, nos. 8-9.
genealogy. The narrative from Datia proceeded ‘Considering the infant as the Gift of heaven and
myself fortunate in the acquisition I placed it in my bosom and treated it as my son.’ This child
was to be his successor. Similar divine dispensation, both of children and of kingship, was evident
in Bengal. John R. McLane recorded that one of the employees of the Burdwan Raj had told him
that Tilakchandra, one of the Rajas, was found as a baby under a hive with honey dripping into
his mouth and sustaining him. This was recognised as a divine sign by the employees of the Raj
who found him and he was reared in the palace as a son of the childless monarch whom he
succeeded.171
As evinced by such legends and narratives, the idiomatic representation of isolation-as-
kinlessness becomes significant in reassessing the uses to which such people might be put.
Scholars of the ancient Near East, like Isaac Mendelsohn, indicate that slavery may have been
critical to ‘family’-formation itself, when discussing the institution of adoption in early
Babylonia.172 Scholars of interior Africa, especially S. Miers and I. Kopy toff173 similarly
argued that in many African societies, the individual was not only seen as a member of the kin
group but also as part of that group’s corporate wealth. Neither the criterion of property as defined
in Western philosophy, nor that of saleability would be useful in such a context. They proceeded
to outline a ‘slavery-to-kinship continuum’ along which all outsiders/aliens/marginal people
(slaves) pass as they were absorbed into kinship groups, which acquired them through a range of
transactions including capture and purchase. By insisting that slavery had to be discussed along
with other institutions of ‘incorporation’ within dominant society, like marriage and adoption,
without denying the exploitative dimensions of either, this perspective provided for a study of
slavery as a process, rather than a fixed status of either ‘unfreedom’ or ‘property’.
Anthropologists seeking to apply this model to study slave societies in historical South
Asia or Africa disagreed sharply. For instance, James Watson asserted that Miers and Kopytoff’s
model of an ‘open’ system of slavery was characteristic only of regions where there was a vast
surplus of land and shortage of labour as in Africa; and that this could not apply to Asia where
a shortage of land and surplus of labour prevailed. The real issue, it seemed, was not the re
definition of slavery, but the lack of ‘fit’ between this and older teleologies - critically, that of the
‘closed’ Indian system of caste and kinship, and of land-ownership. By ignoring the temporal
framework within which ‘Asian’ societies were to be discussed, Watson appeared to be endowing
l71John R. McLane, Land and Local Kingship in Eighteenth-Century Bengal (Cambridge, 1993), p. 317,
fn.27.
I72lsaac Mendelsohn, Slavery in the Ancient Near East, (New York, 1949).
173S. Miers and I.Kopytoff (eds), Slavery in Africa: Historical and Anthropological Perspectives
(Madison, 1977), Introduction.
46
both slavery and kinship in India with a ‘closure’ that was only historically achieved.174
Claude Meillasoux saw ‘kinship5 predominantly as part of ‘domestic society’, where no
means of production, material or human, was appropriated. These domestic societies were preyed
upon by brigands belonging to military societies, serving ‘merchant societies’ with ‘slaves’. In
other words, in Meillasoux’s theory, kinship and slavery were strictly antinomic, and where slaves
were incorporated at all, it was under ‘fictive kin’ terms which never endowed them with the true
prerogative of kinship i.e. social recognition of their position as genitors. In order to explain the
phenomenon found in specific African societies, - that precisely those who were kinless and non
reproducers, like the eunuchs, were also the most powerful, - Meillasoux constructed a disjunction
between the ‘state’ and the ‘condition’ of slaves.175 In Meillasoux’s glossary, ‘state’ refers to the
social and juridical situation of an individual deprived of status, when ‘status’ itself is defined by
a set of prerogatives enjoyed through membership of a class or order. ‘Condition’ refers to a
person’s (or slave’s) place in the relations of production and reproduction. Though Meillasoux
asserts that the presence of slaves as fictive kin causes the further reification of kinship in those
societies, he attributes relations of implicit co-operation and harmony to the realm of kinship,
meanings that Kopytoff and Miers had specifically abjured.176
Secondly, like Meillasoux, those who criticise the Miers-Kopytoff hypothesis for being
‘assimilationist’ when slavery entailed permanent alienation and disabilities generally ignore the
fact that within each region and social formation a multiplicity of kinship types occur. As indicated
already, where slave women were ‘married’ plural forms of marriage existed : certain forms by
which slaves were contracted by free masters had inferior social consequences from other higher
forms reserved for isogamous marriages between non-slaves. An instance of this from the Indian
evidence is that of nikah. In classical Islamic law, this denoted marriage between two free persons.
Yet in practice, in both nineteenth-century Bengal and Western India, ‘nikah’ seems to have
denoted inferior marriages, at least one of the parties being a slave. Thus a Mussalman goldsmith
who had purchased a ‘Siddi’ (shorthand for Ethiopian) female at Muscat and brought her to Kutch
174James L. Watson (ed.), Asian and African Systems o f Slavery, Introduction. In his own investigation
of Chinese social institutions, however, he was willing to explore the applicability of the Miers-Kopytoff
hypothesis.
I75C. Meillasoux, The Anthropology of Slavery in the Womb o f Iron and Gold, trans. Alide Dasnois
(London, 1991).
,76For an incisive review of Meillasoux, see Jonathan Glassman, ‘No Words of Their Own’, Slavery and
Abolition, 16, 1, 1995, pp. 131-45; idem, ‘The Bondsman’s New Clothes: The Contradictory Consciousness
of Slave Resistance on the Swahili Coast’, International Journal of African History, 32, 1991, pp.277-312
for discussion of Miers and Kopytoff.
47
claimed that he had ‘contracted Nika (a left handed marriage) as is the practice’.177 Similarly,
where young males were purchased for strategies of heirship, plural forms of agnation-filiation
existed, with clear ritual and other criteria. In other words, the Miers-Kopytoff hypothesis allows
the investigation of the plurality of kinship forms and meanings, without endowing to them any
prior and fixed status. Generally overlooked by critics of this hypothesis is its stress on different
aspects of inter-generational and intra-generational incorporation, - the affective, the jural and the
economic. As a newly acquired human being, the alien recruit may thus only be metaphorically
incorporated, and second or subsequent generations may move towards a more substantialised and
complex incorporation within a kin-group and community. This stress on generational change also
leaves open the possibility of the persistent recruitment of slaves, and of the cyclicity of
metaphoric kinship and marginality at the outer boundaries of the host groups. In other words, the
usefulness of this model, especially in the context of the Indian historical records, lies in the
permission it gives the researcher for envisioning the slave of the first generation as a slave-holder
her/himself over time.
However, the validity of this hypothesis is demonstrable only where the records of host-
households are available over a period of time. Obviously, only a tiny handful of households,
especially in the colonial context of India, would qualify for this kind of record-keeping: broadly,
the erstwhile rulers and princes. The history of one of the most important households in Bengal -
that of the Nazims of Murshidabad - offers us a chance to raise these issues as part of the political
economy of the region. The choice of the Nizamut is dictated by its obvious pre-eminence both
as an outpost of the Mughal empire and its simultaneous role as the fulcrum of the East India
Company. Both these aspects are crucial to understanding the transition between a pre-colonial
political economy of slavery to a colonial economy based on slave-labour. The first aspect, of the
Nizamut as a Mughal formation, was important because the records of the eminent households of
this region, like the Debs of Shovabajar or the Nandis of Cassimbazar, the Tipperah and Cooch
Behar houses, the Nadia and Burdwan rulers all argue for the persistence of ideals and structures
that were identifiable as that of a Mughal, not Islamic, elite. If we could comprehend some of the
ways in which slaves functioned in at least one of these households, it would provide us a
paradigm for other similar households in the region.
The second aspect of the Nizamut, as a fulcrum of colonial intervention, is important for
the articulation of values and structures that the East India Company implanted in the course of
the nineteenth century. Most critically, studying the Nizamut suggests the limits of colonial
agendas regarding law, both indigenous and Company Regulation. From there to study the
,77Translation of deposition of Rehun Toolah taken before the Political Agent, in J. Ogilvy to A. Malet,
7 June 1849, BC F/4/2343/123030. For Bengal, see Chapter II of this thesis.
48
complicity of colonial machinery in the maintenance of this structure, and even to re-inforce some
of its aspects, is the final aim of this project. Since slaves were important to both formations, the
colonial and the precolonial, this study in trying to articulate such connections, is obviously Janus
faced. It is thus about two kinds of polities operating with slaves, but reckoning their contribution
in very different ways. The refashioning of one by the other is the process that this thesis sets out
to study.
49
1. Murshid Quli Khan, 1700-1727 (purchased from Deccan, trained in Persia, and returned
to India, served as viceroy of Aurungzeb).
2. Shuja-ud-din, 1727-39 (son-in-lawIdamad of Murshid Quli Khan).
3. Sarfaraz Khan, 1739-40 (son of Shuja).
4. Alivardi Khan, 1740-56 (courtier of Sarfaraz).
5. Siraj-ud-daula, 1756-57 (grandson/son of daughter/ of Alivardi).
6. Mir Jafar, 1758-60 (military commander under Siraj, and brother-in-law of Alivardi).
7. Mir Qasim, 1760-63 (damad of Mir Jafar).
8. Mir Jafar, 1763-65 (the same as 6).
9. Nujm-ud-daula, 1765-66 (son of Munni Begum, b.l740s-d.l812).
10. Saif-ud-daula, 1766-70 (mother difficult to identify).
11. Mubarak-ud-daula I, 1770-1793 (son of Babbu Begum, b.? d.1809.)
12. Babar Ali, Nasiruddin, Mubarak-ud-daula II, 1793-1810 (son of Mubarak I by Faizunnissa,
referred to in records as Walida Begum).
13. Zainuddin Alijah, 1810-1821 (son of Nasiruddin, mother difficult to identify, married to
cousin Ameerunissa Begum).
14. Ahmad Ali Khan, Walahjah, 1821-24 (brother of Zainuddin, mother difficultto identify).
15. Humayunjah, 1824-38 (son of Nujbunnissa).
16. Faridunjah, 1838-1880 (mother Raisunnissa, aka Sahib Jan).
17. Ali Kadr succeeds but not to the position of the Nazim of Bengal, but to the title of
Nawab of Murshidabad.
Chapter I
On 1 November 1880, by an indenture signed between the Nawab Nazim of Bengal, Bihar
and Orissa and the Secretary of State, the process begun in 1765 was finally brought to its logical
culmination when the Nazim Fareedun Jah agreed to withdraw from affairs of government, in
return for a provision for two of his sons and two daughters.1 Thus was formalised the
transformation of eighteenth-century Bengal from a subah of the Mughal empire into the fulcrum
of a colonial state, and the degradation of the household-polity of Murshidabad into a mere
‘family’ of a declining aristocracy. The long period in which these changes were substantialised
has largely been neglected by historians of the East India Company’s conquest of Bengal, who
have generally stopped at the death of Nawab Nazim Mir Jafar in 1765 and the succession of one
minor son after another till 1770,2 This cut-off mark is meant to suggest that since political and
economic powers passed to the Company, the household of the Nizamut ceased to be politically
or socially significant. This is historically inaccurate, given the assiduity with which the
Company’s government in Bengal tried to retain the penumbra of the Nazims. Implicit within the
general historical neglect of the household of the Nizamut are also assumptions regarding
ingredients of a polity, the indices of power, the affects of kinship and the significance of law.
Contrary to previous studies, this chapter begins from 1770: from this date can be traced the
complicity of the Company not only in funding and managing a slave-based polity, but also the
attempted transformation of this polity into a ‘mere’ household of ‘family’ members.
The instrument of these transformations was fiscal- according to a treaty signed with the
Nazim after the Treaty of Allahabad, (by which the revenues of Bengal Bihar and Orissa were
divided between the East India Company, the Mughal emperor, and the erstwhile Nazim), the
Company was to pay 53 lakhs of rupees annually to the latter. A desire for ideological legitimacy
ensured that the Company remained committed to upholding the forms and rituals of the polity,
while its financial commitments to stockholders in Britain, its own mismanagement, and erosion
of profits through famine, private trade, and other related factors led to the drastic reduction of the
amount paid to the Nazim by 1771. The stipend fixed by the Court of Directors, avowedly because
of the minority of the Nazim Mubarak-ud-daula, of 16 lakhs was never again restored to the
amount promised in the treaty of 1765. This reduction of the annual payments to the Nazims
initiated a policy of retrenchments, which gained fresh impetus from the wars of the late
2D. N. Banerjee, ‘The Accession of Nazm-ud-Dowla to the Throne of Bengal and the Position of the
East India Company’, BPP, 60, 1941, pp. 19-34; Niharkana Majumdar, ‘Bengal Politics in 1765’, BPP, 75,
1956, pp.98-117; Nanigopal Chaudhuri, Cartier, Governor of Bengal, 1769-1772 (Calcutta 1970).
51
eighteenth and early nineteenth century, involving the Company in further financial straits, and
creating the need for ‘savings’. Thus between 1773 and 1818, there were at least five committees
appointed by the Government in Bengal to detail the minutiae of expenditures of the Nizamut.3
Though portrayed as attempted repayments of ‘debts’, secret instructions to various Committee
members suggested that such measures were not only political (‘abridge the sources of the Nazim’s
state and dignity as Nawab of Bengal’) but also economic. For from 1775, the Company had tried
to effect the ‘saving’ of specific stipends Ike that of the reigning Begum, which were very
substantial. The monitoring of Nizamut expenditures was thus directly related to the Company’s
efforts to create a Deposit fund, entirely in the management of the Company, and made up of
‘lapsed’ stipends and allowances. The Nizamut Deposit Fund, created in 1818, provided the Agents
and Collectors of the Company the single most important lever with which to refashion the
Nizamut. From these funds came the salaries of various English military officers and civil servants
of the Company, resources for building new palaces, a Nizamat College, experimental horticultural
gardens and a new Imambara. Thus while these Deposit Funds allowed the Company to pay itself,
it also enabled it to behave as a ‘feudal overlord’ apparently redistributing to the populace the
revenues it had extracted, distributing largesse and loans to various members of the Nizamut itself.
Every retrenchment of expenses, and every addition to the Nizamut Deposit Fund, was
guided by an ideology of kinship. For instance, the Committee revising pensions of the household
in 1801 was instructed to give a ‘preference to those who are connected with it by the ties of
consanguinity or who are related to the predecessors of the late and former nabobs over persons
who derive their pensions solely from favour....’4 The repeated attempts to fix standards of
consanguinity according to models derived from European aristocratic genealogies, the
terminologies of descent, filiation, and legitimacy, had various consequences for the recreation of
the kin-based polity of Murshidabad. This chapter attempts to outline some of the principles along
which the household-polity was organised and functioned during the period in which it was under
duress, including the fundamental relationship of the harem to the structures of rule. The first two
sections of the chapter are devoted to an examination of the relationships in the predominantly
‘male’ world of the Nizamut, and the potentials for conflict within this world. These conflicts and
relationships, in turn, represented the playing out of the hierarchies refined and reproduced in the
inner world of the Nizamut. The following sections examine the structures of the harem, and the
material economy of the household upon which the Company’s Agents tightened their grip through
3For a summary of the Government’s attempts over the period 1790-1816 to establish and maintain ‘a
due restraint over the disbursements of the Nizamut’ see note by N. B. Edmonstone, 25 March 1816, BPC,
P/120/45, 23 July 1816, no.l.
5Richard M.Eaton, The Rise o f Islam and the Bengal Frontier, 1204-1760 (London, 1993), p.160.
6Orme’s Historical Fragments of the Mogul Empire, o f the Morattoes, and o f the English Concern in
Indostan (1782, reprint Delhi, 1974), pp. 273-74.
7R. Burt to G. Swinton, 20 July, 1830 in Murshidabad Nizamut: Letters Received (ed. J. Datta Gupta
and S. K. Bose, Calcutta, 1969), II, 1807-55, (henceforth MNLR), p. 213.
53
latter’s entry to power, by displaying his proximity to the throne. This lay at the heart of the
rituals of incorporation and distinction like that of the granting of khilat, by the eighteenth century,
cloth that had come from the Nazim’s wardrobe, symbolising his touch, was considered enough
for the transformation to be complete. At the same time, the khilat that represented the favour of
the ruler also indicated the place of the recipient in the political hierarchy of deference and
dependence. The distinction between different types of khilats - the seven piece one or the five
piece - marked the status of the recipient because it showed the degree of closeness with which
the ruler wished to honour him. As one moved closer to the throne, one partook more and more
of the features of sovereignty: thus the seven-piece khilat not only gave ‘more’ but also was richer
in content. Every ritual of incorporation was thus simultaneously one of differentiation as well.
Similarly, food had conative aspects. To eat the salt of a person was to acknowledge the
protection of the giver in exchange for the complete loyalty of the recipient. Within the corps of
Mughal officers, salt was understood as a substance either ceremonially or metaphorically accepted
and eaten at the hands of the emperor, binding members of the imperials corps horizontally to one
another and vertically to the emperor, expressing corporate solidarity along with submission. Since
salt metaphorically, and food literally, sustained life, accepting it conferred a relationship between
giver and recipient, by which the only return that the recipient could make was that life itself.
Manipulating the symbols of both food and cloth marked political and social hierarchies,
and was thus critical to the maintenance of authority, as we shall see below. However, food and
cloth participated in a wider code of honour and deference, in which many other emblems also
operated in symbolic fashion to indicate status - the terms of address, the style of transport used.
The alleged infringements of this code revealed the tensions and fractures in the polity. The
conflicts over dignities and honours was a window on the state as well as the effects of proximity
to the Nazim. Affinity or consanguinity were immaterial in such considerations for many of the
contests over the symbols of honour and power occurred not between strangers and the Nazims
but between those who in the Western European sense of kinship, were closely related to the
Nazims, like uncles, brothers and sons, as much as with those in the position of mothers and
grandmothers. An illustration of this is the effort of the Nawab of Dacca, whose younger brother
Shamsuddaula was married to the daughter of the Nazim Mubarak-ud-daula I, to obtain permission
to use a nalkee. Upon the Company presenting him with one, the reigning Nazim protested thus,
except that the Nobab Muzuffur Jung as Naib of the three Soubahs of Bengal,
Bahar & Orissa [...] obtained the Royal sanction for using a Nalkee to this time
neither the Subahdar of Patna nor the Naib of Dacca ever asserted Pretensions to
this mark of Distinction ...Nussurut Jungs Position is not such as to give him a
claim to such high token of Consideration.8
translation of a letter from the Nawab, 2 Jan. 1809 in Murshidabad Nizamut, Letters Issued (ed. J.Datta
Gupta and S. K. Bose, Calcutta, 1965) I, 1802-31, (henceforth MNLI), pp. 117-18.
54
Similarly the erection and use of the nahabat by Walida Begum was interpreted both by the
Nazim and the British Agent as a challenge to the authority of the former.9 Or, as in 1824, the
very fact that the head of the mehalserai, Ameerunissa Begum, had fired her musketry after the
firing of the Nazim’s artillery and musketry to observe the ceremony of Id, aroused the Nazim to
accuse her of ‘insulting his dignity by infringing a rule of the deepest importance’.10 On this
occasion, the chief obstacle to a reconciliation between the Nazim and the Begum became the
terms of address to be used by the latter: to the ‘astonishment and serious vexation’ of the Agent,
she refused to send her ‘Bundugee’ to the Nazim, considering this mode of due submission, ‘so
great a degradation’ that she threatened to die if it was insisted upon. She preferred instead on
sending ‘Salaum’, which in the words of the Agent denoted ‘ the mode of an address that of an
equal’.11
Contrary to the given notions of political formations dominated by kinship, the claim to
share in power, manifested in the use of certain insignia, privileges and forms of address, by virtue
of a blood tie was specifically guarded against. Partly as a consequence of the intervention of the
East India Company, and partly for reasons linked to the patterns of reproduction in the Nizamut,
older patterns of accession to the throne were overturned, but still exercised an influence on the
minds of many potential contenders for the throne, like brothers and uncles. At least in
Murshidabad, the absence of fratricide in the mid-eighteenth century seems to be explicable in
terms of the possibility of succession devolving collaterally. As the brothers of a deceased Nazim
reminded his son,
we are not among the dependants or distant connections of the Nizamut, We are
the sons of His late Highness...& are therefore in the first degree of relationship
to this House. And every one of us, in the event of fortune so favouring him, has
a right to succeed to the musnud.12
This was no empty threat: to the musnud of Murshidabad between 1765 and 1770, three brothers
had succeeded each other, Najm-ud-daula, Saif-ud-daula, and Mubarak-ud-daula I. (See List).
Upon the death of the latter in 1793, it was true, his eldest son, Babar Ali, had succeeded him,
but this was possible only because the ruling female Regent, Munni Begum, had overruled
Mubarak’s own preference for a younger son, Abul Qasim Khan, better known as Meer Munglee
to his family. In continuation of this pattern, therefore, when Babar Ali died, she recommended
the 32-year-old Munglee to the throne, in preference to a son of the deceased Nazim, and cited
not just the patterns of collateral succession in Rajmehal and Purnea families but also that of ‘the
uIbid.
present Nabob of Oudh, Saadut Ali Khan’.13 The Government of Bengal defended its upholding
of the principles of lineal succession and primogeniture on the grounds that it was according to
the ‘usages of Hindostan’, the ‘principles of the Mussulman Law’ and the ‘practice of all
countries, Governments and Principalities’.14 In effect lineality and even primogeniture were not
definitively established in Murshidabad till 1838. Quite separate from the interests of the Company
in promoting an infant son to the musnud at various points, over the claims of senior and collateral
candidates, the reversion to collateral succession occurred again in 1821, when the Nazim Alijah
was succeeded by his brother Walajah, with the support of the Company.
Nevertheless, the Company’s efforts at fixing a principle for succession were a composite
of ideological and pragmatic concerns. Working with notions of pedigree, consanguinity, and ideas
of aristocratic classes derived from another locale, the Company could hardly have put these ideas
in place except as a response to the different factions within the Nizamut from the eighteenth
century itself. To understand the structures of faction-formation in the Nizamut of the eighteenth
century, the composition of the court, especially the persons surrounding the Nazim was a key.
In response to a letter from Munni Begum, who sought to procure the office of Meersamani to
the Nizamut for the son of Syed Alii Khan, the previous holder, whom she described as ‘nearly
related to the late Nawbab Mobarcku-dowla’ and had found it bestowed on Imaun Kooly Khan,
who she claimed had no ‘claims of service or long dependence upon this house’, the Governor-
General, Shore, wrote to the Nazim Babar Ali.15 The British intervention in the struggle between
the Nazims and the respective heads of the mehalserai over the control of offices and their
perquisites, through the appointment of men who owed allegiance to one or the other alone, was
based on a significantly different ideological ground.
The Governor-General’s instructions to Nasir-ul-mulk conveyed the range of aspirations
that the Company entertained for the institution of kinship: both purposes of economy and the
‘custom of Hindostan’ would be answered by admitting the claims of the Nazim’s ‘own Family
and [...] relations to hold whatever offices they are fit for’. What was being insidiously urged was
a notion of kinship at odds with the one characteristic of the Nizamut. For, as the descriptions
offered by the Nazim illustrate, it was the content of kinship that was at stake. Referring to Mirza
Koka, whom the Governor-General had objected to, as my Tate father’s foster brother’ and
subsequently as ‘the son of the Nabob Mobarukuddowla’s Nurse’, the Nazim justified the latter’s
proximity to the throne on the grounds that ‘He has been bred up in this family from his
l3Letter from Munni Begum, reed. 17 May, 1810, enclosed in Minto and Colebrooke to the Court of
Directors, 30 May, 1810, BC F/4/312/7142.
15John Shore to J. E. Harington, 3 Feb. 1795 in MNLR, (ed. J.Datta Gupta and S.K. Bose, Calcutta,
1964), pt. I, 1793-1856, pp. 15-16.
56
childhood, always attended on my late father and now continues to attend on me...in consequence
of his long dependence upon this family’.16 Having failed to convince the Nazim to appoint his
‘relations’ to posts in the Nizamut administration, Shore wrote to Munni Begum darkly threatening
‘to adopt other measures’ to bring the recalcitrant Nazim around.17 These measures were fully
worked out under subsequent Governors-General, beginning with the appointment of a Committee
to enquire in to the distribution of stipends in the Nizamut in 1796 and again in 1800-01. The
copy of instructions circulated among the members of the last committee18 laid down the
principle that
the credit of the family is concerned in giving a preference to those who are
connected with it by the ties of consanguinity or who are related to the
predecessors of the late and former Nabobs over persons who derive their
Pensions solely from favour.19
The Nazim’s privileging of those ‘bred’ in the family, the ties of milk and food that mediated
relationships between men, over and above blood-ties, was incomprehensible to British officials
who could not fathom the malevolence of kin, and the tenderness of the sense of honour among
them. Few knew, or cared about, the reasons for the ‘perpetual jealousy and animosity’ they found
in operation between the Nazim and the other members of the Nizamut. This bloodless contest
among those who were deemed to have shared blood, to use the terms employed by Ahmutty, the
Commissioner appointed to investigate the matters of the house in 1821, involved a range of
strategies, from the withholding of pensions and allowances, withdrawing exemptions and
privileges, razing homes and even physical confrontations between groups of personal bodyguards
and attendants - all of which created an ‘incessant succession of broils and confusion’.20 Most
typically, it centred around the refusal of deference, which was related to the absence of personal
16From Nasir-ul-Mulk, May 1795 (covering letter missing), ibid., pp. 22-23.
,8They were Thomas Pattle, Chief Judge, and by virtue of his seniority the President of this Committee,
Edward Colebrooke, Richard Rocke, also judges of the Court of Appeal and Circuit for the division of
Moorshedabad, and Thomas Hayes, Collector at Murshidabad. Simultaneously, T. Pattle was appointed the
Superintendent of Nizamut Affairs. His brief was to be concerned with ‘such portion of the Nizamut stipends
as is now disbursed or to supervise the payment of the stipends and to see that they are regularly and
properly disbursed to the several persons to whom they are payable’, and ‘to interfere for the
accommodation of disputes and dissentions among the Dependants and Servants of the Nizamut’ and
between them and the Nazim and Munni Begum, and of ‘differences which may arise among the members
of the Family’. Extract BPC, 22 Oct., 1801, BC F/4/101/2376.
2HJ. Ahmutty to A. Stirling, Persian Sec. to Govt., 17 Sept. 1822, BC F/4/851/22643. For individual
confrontations between sons of Mubarak-ud-daula I and the Nazim Walajah, see BPC, P/123/4, 11 April
1822, nos. 131-2 and 24 April, no. 21; P/123/9, 7 June 1822, nos. 58-60, P/123/59, 27 Feb. 1824, nos. 45-
47. For confrontations between Nazim Mubarak Ali Humayunjah and other male kin see BC F/4/1475/57976
and F/4/1522/60090A.
57
attendance at the Court. It was said of the ‘uncles’ of one Nazim that they ‘were excluded from
the presence, having the misfortune of labouring under His Highness’s displeasure’.21 Yet another
Nazim, determined to defend his dignity, requested the Agent to direct his relatives ‘to pay the
respect due to him’. Upon this, the latter reiterated the ambition entertained by Shore, ‘of his
having his relatives and the members of the Nizamut family occasionally about him, which would
secure their paying him voluntarily that respect which they might not yield in acquiescence to the
Agent’s order’. But the Nazim would have none of that, declaring that ‘he did not care about
them, that they were all his enemies’.22
The fabric of kin-based European polities required that administrative posts and significant
emoluments were garnered by those who theoretically claimed relations of affinity or
consanguinity to the rulers. The fact that various kinds of male kin and affines in all the different
accounts of the Nizamut between 1773 and 1834 appeared, as sahebzada and aqriba, to have
monetary claims upon the Nazims, made these male kin appear to British officials the appropriate
figures to perform ‘functions’ commensurate to their stipends. Yet virtually no polity in eighteenth-
century India fitted into the paradigm generated from Western European aristocracies. A
convergence between affective and jural kinship, and administrative functions was always a matter
of human manipulation, and not of biological fiat. As the Nawab of Furruckabad put it in 1787,
refusing to make his brother the Diwan of his administration preferring his brother-in-law, ‘it is
an established custom among all the chiefs of Hindustan not to invest a brother or a son with the
management of their affairs nor to entrust any of the said persons with the office of the naib.23
As such comments reveal, it was not just the potentialities of succession that created the
antagonism between individual Nazims and their male kin, but the substance of administration and
finance. Most of the important posts and offices were the focus of these contests. The implication
was that the initiative for nomination to such administrative posts came from among those men
whom the Nawab Nazim surrounded himself with. In each generation, different combinations of
friendship and favour were tried out, and every Nazim could thus be accused of having upset the
arrangements of his predecessor. For instance, while Mir Jafar and Mubarak-ud-daula I continued
to strengthen their faction with sons-in-laws and brothers-in-law from one family, (Mirza Daood
was the son-in-law of Miran, first-born son of Mir Jafar, Daood’s son Khalilullah was the son-in-
law of Mubarak-ud-daula and his Diwan, and Khalilullah’s son, Mirza Jalil, was also brother in
law of Mubarak-ud-daula), the same affinal kin fell foul of the succeeding nazim, Babar Ali, in
1794. Accusing Khalilullah Khan of trying to place another of his brothers on the musnud, the
22AGG Caulfield to H. T. Prinsep, Sec. to Govt., Poll. Dept., 8 August 1838, in MNLI, II, p. 230.
Nazim Nasir-ul-mulk charged the erstwhile Diwan and elderly affine of having violated the
‘established customs of courtesy’, of not signing the pension bills, of not giving in his accounts,
and in a final riposte, ‘In spite of his position as a servant Khalil Allah Khan addresses him
(writer) as his equal’.24
It was this tension between blood-related kin, brothers and uncles, and the fluctuating
claims of specific affinal kin, that created the need for having closest to the Nazim those who
depended on him alone, and not those who could base their claims to the musnud by virtue of the
depth of their descent, from previous Nazims or even from other ruling princes. The best qualified
for such proximity were the slaves of the house, from whom deference could be extracted without
any loss of honour to them for had not the Nazim in fact bestowed it on them, through the khilat,
food, and title to office? If his honour lay in seclusion, and regulated access to his person, as did
the honour of all those who claimed to be related to him, the visibility of slaves near the person
of the Nazim alone ensured a living screen around him. From them alone could be derived that
allegiance to the ruler that his natal kin did not owe him, for slaves alone were that perfectly
kinless people so valued in a kin-structured polity. It was because they ‘owed’ their lives to the
ruler that they could be employed to guard him from the assaults of those enemies within.
Though the sanctity of the person of the ruler was central to political ritual, few Company
officials realised that this determined the function and nature of slaves in the retinue and
administration of the ruler. This incomprehension was evident in the efforts of Cartier and the
Council at Calcutta to diminish the sowar (bodyguard) of the Nazim: Clive had referred to them
as the ‘military rabble’ but the Nazim had described them as ‘old confidential servants ... fixed
upon the Doors of the Mahul’ 25 The composition of the sowar of the Nazims has never been
studied in detail, but from the contemptuous terms in which the slaves surrounding the Nazim
were invariably referred to by the officials of the Company, it seems not improbable that a certain
proportion of the so war were also slaves. One reason for inferring this is the details of the dispute
of 1795, when John Shore vaguely referred to the ‘persons of low rank and characters’ upon
whom the Nazim Mubarak-ud-Daula II (Babar Ali, Nasir-ul-mulk) had ‘bestowed Khillauts, Titles
and allowances’ and thereby exceeded in his monthly charges the amount of his income.26 Some
of the men referred to were slaves, many of whom were listed under the heads of ‘Shagird Pesha’
and ‘Mulaziman Imtiazy’ in the accounts of the Nizamut. For instance, there was Mahomed
Hellall, described by the Nazim Nasir-ul-mulk as an ‘ancient Chela (or Domestic) and faithful
servant of my Grand Father... all the receipts for salaries &ca. are authenticated by his seal, all the
25Cited in Abdul Majed Khan, The Transition in Bengal 1756-1775, A Study ofSaiyid Muhammad Reza
Khan (Cambridge, 1969), p. 286.
Sunnuds, Jewels and the Privy Seal remain under his charge’ 27 Unfortunately, the clarity of this
description of the holder of the post of Darogha Khazana is not paralleled for all the other posts
and offices that male slaves held in the Nizamut. So even though accounts of 1773 and 1802 list
numbers of slaves paid from the Nizamut behla accounts - the latter listing 93 Hindustani chelahs
(slaves), 33 ‘Coffree’ slaves and three other kinds of slaves - the specific offices held and
performed by them are rarely mentioned alongside, except in instances of dispute (like the dispute
over the office of the custodian of the Imambara, held by Hosseini Chela, the slave of the Nazim
Nasir-ul-mulk). Nevertheless, the physical proximity of male slaves to the person of the Nazim,
in the most intimate situations of bodyguards and attendants of his creature comforts, was evident
in descriptions of one official of the final moments in a Nazim’s life:
His Highness’s last directions were that those Khwasses who had always attended
upon him should wash and purify his corpse, and after clothing him, with the
binding sheet of Karbala, should inter him... He desired the Khwasses to fetch
clean clothes... to remove out of sight the close stool.28
27Translation of remarks of the Nawab Nazim on the statements of proposed retrenchments submitted
by the Nizamut Committee, n.d., Doc. F, in BC F/4/250/5602.
2ySee Mary M. Anderson, Hidden Power: the Palace Eunuchs o f Imperial China (Buffalo, 1990):
Taisuke Mitamura, Chinese Eunuchs: The Structure of Intimate Politics trans. C.A. Pomeroy (Tokyo, 1970)
and C. M. Wilbur, Slavery in China during the former Han Dynasty 206 B.C.- A.D.25 (Chicago, 1943).
3lEhud R. Toledano, ‘The Imperial Eunuchs of Istanbul: From Africa to the Heart of Islam’, Middle
Eastern Studies, 20, 1984, pp. 379-390. The phrase seems to refer to the widely held view of the eunuchs
acting as the guards of the harem, suited by their castration, for the task of protecting the celibacy of the
inmates of the harem, This is an over-simplification.
32See reference to the 24 nazir eunuchs in the Jat ruling house of Bharatpur in Jadunath Sarkar’s
translation of the Persian history authored by Franz Gottlieb Kuhn, BPP, 75, 1956, pp. 71-86, and to the
panchkanya (castrated slaves) in the ruling houses of Rajasthan in Varsha Joshi, Polygamy and Purdah
60
in the Nizamut records comes from the household list of 1772, where the eunuch Amber is listed
as Darogha Mashalkhana. Another eunuch, Golam Mahomud Cawn[Khan] is described as Daroga
Meer Shekaran.33 Against such obvious positions of trust given to them the Company officials
periodically protested. While the Governor-General believed that these men ‘neither by station or
merit are entitled to the honour of your confidence’, the reply of the Nazim illustrated the very
different criteria by which such positions of honour and trust were bestowed. Arguing that the
eunuch ‘Seedy Amber ... is an old inmate of the household’, the Nazim pointed out that he ‘had
been entrusted by my late Father with the charge of the kullumdaun khana department. I have now
out of consideration for his length of services (for there is none among the Khauja Serays of
longer standing or more trustworthy) appointed him Nazir of my honoured Mother’s Dewry’.34
From this flowed the elevation of rank and perquisites, as he put it,1 to give him a greater degree
of Respectability, I according to the custom of this house conferred on him the title of Khaun’.35
Such titles as were conferred on the eunuchs included those of ‘Nawab Nazir,’( mainly for the
chief eunuchs) ‘Meah’ (sometimes used as an equivalent for eunuch) and of course Khan Sahib.
The solidity of this custom was attested to by the request of the mother of the Nazim in 1841,
Raissunissa Begum, regarding the eunuch in charge of the business of her deori, Meah Feroz, in
which she said,
It is a long established custom in this family for the Nazir [Nazim] to bestow on
the person appointed to the situation of Nazir a Khilat and the titles of Nuwab
Nazir and Khan to render his post respectable, such as the Nazirs attached to other
Deorees have the titles of Nawab Nazir and Khan. Many affairs of the Dheorees
are transacted thro’ the medium of the Nazirs and the Papers Dated by
them...inconvenience results from the want of a Seal such as is used by the other
Nazirs.36
The persistent association of eunuchs with specific offices in the administration of the
polity was no co-incidence. The office of the Kullumdankhana, through which the wealth of the
house was governed, was, at least in the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, always filled by
eunuchs of the Nazims. Not only were wages passed on their receipts, but all accounts remained
in their charge. As one Nazim wrote of the ‘Sidhee Umber Ulee Khan, the Daroga of the
Kulumdaun Khana’, he had been appointed as ‘tutor to both my father and uncle, had the
33List of persons under the head of Khajaserai in BMisc.C, P/154/38, 23 Jan. 1773.
36Reisoonissa to AGG, 7th Rumzan 1256, in MNLI (ed. J. Datta Gupta and S. K. Bose, Calcutta, 1967),
II, 1834-72, p. 289.
61
management ... of their pecuniary affairs’.37 The treasuries of particular deoris was also in the
custody of the eunuchs of the particular mehalserai. Thus, it was reported that the eunuch Bussunt
Ali Khan and Meah Zummurud, the head eunuch of the Doolhin Begum’s deori, had received
charge of 2200 bhurries of silver from the department of the Khas Tehvil and deposited the articles
in the mehalserai according to the orders of the Nazim.38 The person who received the articles
of gold and silver in Bahoo Begum’s deori had also been the head eunuch of that establishment,
Itbar. The fact that Bussunt Ali Khan was also mentioned as having been in charge of the entire
money inherited by the Nazims, including the profits arising from trade and the collections of the
various revenue mehals, offers a good explanation of political eunuchism itself.
Karl Wittfogel has characterised the institution as a formidable weapon of autocracy for
supervising and controlling the ranking officialdom. Hopkins and Patterson extend this further by
describing it as a weapon in an absolute monarch’s control and neutralisation of the aristocratic
classes. Both functions may have been critical in the Nizamut, since the bureaucracy, noticeably
constituted by ‘Hindus’ of writer and accounting groups, had become, or tended to become, a self-
perpetuating one. The most obvious example of this trend can be seen in the office of the Diwan,
also an office of importance in the fiscal administration of the state. In this office, the claims of
the descendants and relatives of previous incumbents was recognised; the office became a source
of contention between the rival centres of power because of this inheritability. In addition to this,
the Company’s insistence on affinal and other male kin being appointed to administrative offices
in the Nizamut. Against this apparently hereditary principle, the eunuchs appear to have acted as
counter-weights. They were best qualified to do this because they had no separate identity apart
from their master; being the living surrogates of the master, they could deal in precisely those
financial spheres which were closest to the master’s interest, yet retain within his/her control the
office itself by virtue of their genealogical isolation as slaves.
Stratification existed among and between other male slaves and eunuchs. The eunuchs in
turn had slaves and young trainee eunuchs. It is not quite certain whether it was the privilege of
the Chief eunuch of the Nazim, or whether it was one shared by other eunuchs as well, to have
his own slave, sometimes an entire establishment of slaves. During the lifetime of one of the
eunuchs, Bussunt Ali Khan, for instance, according to a list prepared by the Agent, Caulfeild,39
he commanded the services (and also made the payments of) eighty-one men and women, of
whom eight were listed as khowas, with monthly wages varying from one to five rupees. However
two other lists exist, made up exclusively of chelahs, one with twelve names of those attached to
39Enclosure A, B, and D in J. Caulfeild to H. T. Prinsep, Sec. to Govt., Poll. Dept., 5 June 1838, MNLI,
II, pp. 185-89.
62
the Kuddumshureef at monthly receipts of two to four rupees, and another showing thirteen names,
without specific duties, but receiving between two and six rupees per month. All three lists pertain
to the year 1239 (1833); in the last however there are some payments listed to the mothers of
chelahs like ‘Bukshhe Khanum, mother of Khyrat Ali Chellah’, and two ‘widows’ of chelahs are
also mentioned like ‘Mussamut Bodhun widow of a chelah whose name is not recorded’ and ‘Jan
Beebee, widow of Seedee Punchoo Chelah’. From this we may possibly infer that these latter
slaves or chelahs were not eunuchs themselves, but served their eunuch masters. In addition, they
did not enjoy the same privileges of rank that the eunuchs might have enjoyed. For instance, in
1853 while on a shikar expedition of the Nazim and the Agent, a tin box containing property
worth 700 Rupees was stolen from the custody of Flossainee Shaikh, who was the chelah of the
eunuch Meeah Urjoomund, who though not a chief eunuch, thus did have his own slaves.40 The
youth who was accused of having stolen the box, though also described as a ‘chelah of the
Huzoor’ did not belong to this group of eunuchs: his status was that of ‘the son of a Gholam in
the service of the Nizamut’. One can infer that this was a lesser status, compared to that of the
eunuchs, because of the sleeping arrangements mentioned by witnesses; Etwaree, the father, was
described as living in a pal ‘two or more haths from the Meeahs’ tent, more or less, according to
the nature of the ground’ 41
The criterion operative in the formation of this hierarchy is not very clear. Going by the
arrangement of space and functions within the Camp of 1853, one could infer that the highest rank
among the eunuchs came again from proximity to the Nazim. For instance, the three principal tents
were reserved one for the Nazim, one for Aman Ali Khan, an Abyssinian eunuch who was ‘chief
in dignity’ among all the eunuchs, and the other tent for all the other Meahs. According to an
English lawyer, Aman Ali Khan’s seniority may have been signalled by the post he held: that of
Naib, ‘or Lieutenant of His Highness. Under him, in various gradations were the others, including
the Darogah, or superintendent of the Elephants, and of the kitchen department, also the Urzbegy
(who is not a Meah)’.42 Similarly, while Aman Ali Khan accompanied the Nazim on the hunt,
the others did not. Conversely, though the other eunuchs ‘regularly dined with the Nazim’, the
chief eunuch was permitted from time to time to excuse himself from this group.
In addition, the length of service was an important determinant of ranking among the
eunuch corps. From the scattered evidence we have at present, the terms of years each had served
is difficult to calculate, Etawar Ali Khan, an eunuch in the service of the Nujbulnissa Begum was
40Evidence of Hossainee, in Report of the Sessions Judge of Murshidabad, Indian Records With A
Commercial View o f The Relations Between The British Government and The Nawabs Nazim, o f Bengal
Behar and Orissa (1870, reprint Delhi, 1985), p. 171.
41Evidence of Mohammad Ameen, another eunuch in the service of the Nawab, ibid., p. 178.
42Ibid., p. 147.
63
said to have served 34 years in the Nizamut by 1836. Rough inferences can be attempted from the
fact that the Nazim referred to the eunuch Aman Ali Khan as ‘an old officer of my establishment,
and the one of all others whom I had been taught from my earliest childhood to regard with entire
confidence’.43 In this instance, the age of acquisition or length of service can be calculated :
Aman Ali Khan, in 1853, was stated to be 33 years old, when the Nazim described himself to
have been 25 years old. Therefore the former would have served, by 1853, anywhere between 20
to 25 years already. Thus while Aman Ali Khan’s seniority in position may have derived from
this, it may be possible to infer from the ages shown against the other eunuchs like Meah
Arjoomund (in 1853, aged 30), Meah Belal (27), Meah Ekbal (25) that they would have served
a lesser number of years, compared to Aman Ali. However, seniority by age itself could not have
been the only criterion, since another eunuch in the same group was Joahir Ali Khan, 60 years old
in 1853, or even Hajee Tamash who was 50.
The alternative or complementary organising principle of this hierarchy among the eunuchs
may have been the standing of the immediate master or mistress they were responsible to: thus
Meah Afreen, estimated to be a 30-year-old eunuch of the deori of Begum Sahib, and not an
eunuch of the Nazim, did not merit the same privileges as did Aman Ali. Similarly, though the
oldest in terms of age, Joahir Ali seemed to have been the Nazir of the Buhoo Begum. Certainly,
this view is warranted by the way official accounts sometimes listed eunuchs according to the
hierarchy of the deoris they were attached to. By implication the rank of the eunuch was inferrable
from the rank of the person he served. In the 1773 accounts of Mubarak-ud-daula’s household, 22
eunuchs are shown under the charge of Saadatmund Khan, in the service of Babbu Begum, at this
time considered by the Council at Calcutta to be the head of the mehalserai, for an allowance of
Rs. 886. Then comes Aitbar Alii Khan, in the service of Munni Begum, for Rs. 92. After him, is
listed Acbal in the service of Najm-ud-daula’s family.
Individualised submission also implied that they were individually acquired, rather than
by one centralised recruiting centre. The records imply that this was the case: under the
disbursements of allowances from the head of the mehalserai in 1818 are a list of six eunuchs,
five of whom were purchased by Babbu Begum, and who were taken over by the Nazim after her
death and reassigned to serve one of his consorts.44 Similarly in the list of Munni Begum’s
establishment of eunuchs, five African slave eunuchs appear to have received smaller stipends and
allowances (of 10 rupees each) than the older eunuchs apparently ‘hired’ from other deoris (who
received between 40 to 25 rupees each).
As in the case of the Ottomans, who combined the use of African with Caucasian eunuchs,
43Nawab Nazim to Duke of Argyll, Sec. of State for India, July 1869, ibid., p. 303.
44Statement of monthly distribution of Sicca Rupees 3797-4 from the Deori of the Walida Begum,
through Rozeufzoon Khan, Nazir, BPC, 13 Feb., 1818, no. 35, BC F/4/618/15418.
64
the Nizamut also seems to have acquired its eunuchs from different regions. The prefix ‘Siddi’
indicated that some of them were from Africa, like Amber, referred to by this prefix. But there
were eunuchs of Indian origins as well, for instance Bussunt Ali Khan who was described in one
record as a ‘native of Hindostan... purchased together with another eunuch named Bahar Ali Khan
...by Eithbar [sic] Aly Khan’ and as ‘a slave bought for the Begum when he was twelve years
old’.45 The eunuch Rozeufzoon was also described as a ‘native of Upper Hindostan’, purchased
in his childhood by Babbu Begum: after the latter’s death he was taken into the Walida Begum’s
service, while Zummurud, another eunuch, was acquired from Hyderabad by Bussunt Ali Khan.46
Whether such different areas of origin and individual acquisition and post-mortem transfers
acted to keep the eunuchs from forming one corporate identity is unclear. However, it is possible
to infer that each set of eunuchs may have been incorporated at differential ages. For instance, in
the court records of 1853, asked for particulars, the African eunuchs had written against them -
name of father unknown. The eunuchs of Indian origin, on the other hand seemed to know the
names of their fathers; this might imply that the African eunuchs were acquired at ages younger
than the Indian eunuchs. However, in most instances, the infancy during which they were
incorporated in the household, as well as their ‘exotic’ origins, appeared to have worked less
harshly for them under indigenous regimes, (where they were sometimes powerful enough to
manipulate their masters and mistresses), than in the legal regimes under Company rule. For
instance, the inability of one eunuch of African origin to gain redress in territorially limited courts
of English law was visible when Siddi Nuzzer Ali, of the Nizamut, charged the AGG, Torrens,
with forcibly placing a guard over him and his property. In the roobukaree held by the Officiating
Magistrate, C. F. Carnac, a letter was read from the Advocate General which said that for purposes
of Act 53, Geo.3, c.155, the prosecutor had to prove himself to be a native of India, which
‘Asiatics ... are not’. Nuzzer Ali was accordingly called and asked to state from what country he
is, ‘but he was unable to name the place of his birth, or that of his Father-....’47 The case against
Torrens collapsed. So much for the claims of Act V of 1843, that the wrongs done to a slave and
that done to a freeman were equally punishable in a court of law.
Given the nature of their individualised belonging, it is not surprising that the eunuchs
were major targets of political manoeuvres and vendetta: they seemed to have acted as the
scapegoats for the master or mistress an enemy would ideally have liked to have destroyed or
humiliated. This was a consistent pattern both in conflicts within the Nizamut and in the relations
45<Statement in detail of Her Highness the Munny Begum’s Monthly Establishment of Servants and
Pensioners’, by T. Brooke, BPC, P/120/45, 6 July 1816, no. 51.
46AGG to Persian Sec., 6 Dec. 1823, BPC, P/123/56, 9 Jan. 1824, no. 56.
between the Nizamut and the Company. In 1772-3, after the accession of Mubarak-ud-daulah and
the regency of Munni Begum, the attribution of culpability to Aitbar Ali Khan, the Regent’s
eunuch, by both the Nazim and the Clavering-led faction within the Council was an obvious
example of this. Amongst the complaints that the Nazim made against Munni Begum, one referred
to the administrative monopoly established by her eunuch thus:
that most of the ancient servants of his Household had been divested of their
employments...to make room for a set of people that, he knew nothing of, the
creatures of the Begum’s eunuch - Atawar Ally Cawn.... the Eunuch had
instructed the servants not to suffer him to learn any thing by which he might
make himself acquainted with business.48
In turn, one of the men, the Naib Daroga of the Nazim’s Household Treasury, who had been
dismissed by Aitbar, then found employment with James Grant, an accountant at Murshidabad,
before whom he laid a complaint of mis-appropriation against Munni Begum.49 Similar
information-garnering by the officials of the Company in 1818 utilised the breaches into which
eunuchs were inserted. Rozeufzoon Khan, the Daroga of Babbu Begum’s deori for eighteen years,
and in 1802, in charge of the khajaserai, including one ‘Seedey Feroze’, was caught up in the
tussle between the Nazim Zainuddin Alijah, the head of the mehalserai and the representatives of
the Company. Upon the death of Babbu Begum in 1809, and the succession of Walida Begum,
he was allowed to retire on his usual allowance of 200 rupees, and Amber Ali Khan, another
African eunuch, was appointed to his post. However, in 1810, with the accession of a new, young
Nazim, trouble erupted. Walida Begum found the counsel offered by the Nazir eunuch, Amber,
to his young master fraught with danger to her authority. Accusing the eunuch of instilling
‘pernicious counsel into the mind of the young Nabob in the same manner as it was notorious he
had done earlier’, she suspended him from the post, and reappointed Rozeufzoon Khan. When the
latter was sent to the Nazim to ‘present his nuzzer’, he was refused, and threatened with the
stoppage of his pay and customary allowances. This represented a humiliation meted out to his
mistress, for her alleged breach of the system ‘under which no Nazir or Darogah of the deoree was
appointed without the previous knowledge of the Nazim’. In 1817, therefore, when the Agent of
the Governor-General was seeking information about the expenditures of the mehalserai against
the wishes of the Nazim, it was Rozeufzoon Khan he turned to: the latter ‘filled with indignation
and instantly resolved to expose His Highness’s disingenuous conduct... furnished with an account
of the appropriation of such portion of the sum ... as was disbursed from the Walide Begum’s
Deurie’.5Q
49Ibid., p. 147.
So while they were vulnerable, such powerful functionaries could also manipulate tensions
among kin. This was especially critical during the internal struggles of the Nizamut. In 1813, for
instance, at the decease of Munni Begum, the reigning Nazim submitted to the Agent at
Murshidabad a will supposed to have been written by her, and carrying the seals of the eunuchs
of her deori, Bussunt Ali Khan, Bahar Ali Khan, Tehseen and Baharufzoon. None would have
discovered this subterfuge if these men had not subsequently confessed the manner in which their
seals were appended to the document. According to one version, the Nazim addressed them in
these words,
‘Now you are all become mine, and those who are desirous of advancing their
interests will affix their seals to this will.’- Accordingly we ... seeing that we had
no protector, with a view to preserve our honour, in the spirit of obedience placed
our seals before His Highness, saying Your Highness is our Lord and Master.
In another version, separately issued under the seals of Tehseen and Behar Ufzoon, it was said that
four Hubshees were stationed over us for the purpose of obliging us to repair with
the Seals to His Highness’s presence. As it is human nature to have a regard for
one’s life and honour, we at last, having no alternative, repaired to His Highness’s
presence,...51
While two aspects of the organisation of male slaves is clear from the above account - the
transfers of slaves from one master to another, and the susceptibility of even powerful slaves to
other slaves acting on behalf of another master, other accounts suggest that the impetus to acquire
mastery over the slaves of a dead mistress rested on the special skills and attributes of these slaves,
namely their androgyny. Western observers did not appreciate the importance of androgyny and
ambivalence as political attributes, making these slaves powerful agents in enforcing the particular
will of a Nazim or of a head of a deori. Yet the persistent association of eunuchs with cruelty, and
violence,52 must be understood in the context of the special ability of these androgynous beings
to breach the various boundaries separating male from female worlds, the world of the living and
of the dead,53 of the Nazim, the deori heads, and the populace in general. Manucci, the Venetian
traveller in Mughal India during the last half of the seventeenth century and the beginning of the
eighteenth, was perhaps typical in the contempt with which he described them: terms like ‘brute’,
‘animal’, ‘baboons’ abound in his descriptions of these men.54 The Earl of Moira, visitor at the
deoris of the Murshidabad household, was
52For another Agent’s suspicion of the eunuch Nazir of Buhoo Begum, Jawaharali Khan, for murder,
see Magt. Berhampore to AGG, 23 July 1844 in MNLR, II, p. 497.
53For a subtle analysis of the multiple conditions embodied by eunuchs see Shaun Marmon, Eunuchs
and Sacred Boundaries in Islamic Society (New York, 1995).
S4Niccolao Manucci, Storia do Mogor trans. W. Irvine, (London, 1907, this reprint, Calcutta, 1966), II,
pp. 72-74.
67
surprised at the insolent authority with which the head eunuch (who was on our
side of the curtain) spoke to the poor woman [Bahoo Begum]. She probably had
not understood something which Mr. Brooke [the Agent] said to her on my part,
on which the eunuch in a high voice and tone of reprehension asked her why she
did not answer. Remarking this to the gentlemen next to me,... I was told these
fellows were allowed to treat the women with great harshness.55
Alternately, describing the scene at the annual festival of Be rah one newspaper reported
the presence of ‘a few tall white robed eunuchs, whose presence, as they wandered from group
to group called down a low and general obeisance from courtiers, whose polished manners and
graceful salaams told how well versed they were in all the etiquette of the durbar’.56 Or as
another AGG translated in 1837, it was this deference shown to eunuchs like Darab Ali Khan that
prevented clashes between the British-controlled police and others in Murshidabad from becoming
riots, and helped to quell the ‘disorders and quarrels., among the Female establishments’.57
Clearly this deference, of the ‘highest value’ to the British administrative authorities, only
reiterated the special power of these androgynous beings on behalf of the particular deori they
were associated with. The paying of deference itself by a general populace, as well as the
contending relatives, was the finest criterion of the successful deployment of eunuchs, since they
were the immediate and visible agents of individual masters and mistresses. The visibility of the
eunuchs was the compensation and safeguard for the shadowy sacredness of the Nazims, their
mothers and concubines. This was too often misrepresented: the visibility of their power was
explained in terms of the psychological impairment that followed upon castration. As a judge,
referring to the charges of cruelty against five eunuchs of the Nazim’s Camp, put it:
The publicity of the acts...may be attributed to the presumption ...that as members
of His Highness’s household they had within his camp the power to apprehend
and punish for theft, and to the gratification which some of them, peculiarly
circumstanced as they are, might naturally feel in openly displaying that
co
power....
Few could explain the existence of eunuchism in terms of the polity itself. The eunuchs were the
embodiment of commercial and political ‘agency’ for the ‘business’ of law-keeping and therefore
punishment, for economic wealth generation and management of wealth, for the mundane and vital
tasks of ruling, and of gathering information and reporting, on the basis of which orders and
decisions were taken.
55Marchioness of Bute (ed.), The Private Journal of the Marquess o f Hastings (London, 1858), I, pp.
84-85.
58J. D. Money, Sessions Judge, Murshidabad, to Registrar of the Sadr Nizamut Adalut at Calcutta, 22
September 1853, in Indian Records, p. 187. Italics in original.
68
Though the power of the eunuchs, especially within a literate, numerate bureaucracy,
stemmed from their function as administrative managers, we have no means right now of knowing
how, and if, they were trained for these functions. We have only two references to this vital issue.
The first comes from the 1772 accounts of the household of Mubarak-ud-daula, in which we find
the payment of tutors for the ‘education of the slaves of the Nazim’. The second is a reference to
the appointment of a tutor receiving a monthly wage of 80-100 rupees, because the Nazim wished
‘that the two eunuchs Meeans Uman and Nuzeer, his personal attendants, might be taught the
English language, ... they have themselves evinced a desire to learn’.59
However, their literacy, account-keeping and proximity to their individual masters and
mistresses did not release them from ‘slave-ness’ and the procedures employed against all such
revenue servants. No eunuch was ever exempted from complete accountability to the individual
whom he served. Thus for instance, Zummurud Ali Khan, the eunuch Nazir serving Ameerunissa
Begum, was described by her as having ‘incurred my displeasure in consequence of disobeying
my orders by which I required him to furnish certain accounts, and he was then accordingly
removed from his situation’.60 Only a full explanation of accounts and expressed contrition could
avert further measures against him. This sequence of events was repeated again in 1852, when
Nuzzer Ali Khan incurred the wrath of the Nazim and the Agent of the Governor-General for not
having delivered a full set of accounts, for which reason he was accused of embezzlement.61
This represented the paradox of the institution of eunuchism itself. Important as an
institution of anti-kinship, eunuchs individually remained susceptible to the conflicts amongst kin.
By virtue of acting not just as the human barriers between the person of the master/mistress and
the rest of the world, but as his/her agents, their proximity to their masters and mistresses, and
their lack of wider kin ties was the pre-condition of their power. Yet they remained vulnerable,
as slaves, to the wishes of their immediate masters, and often to the wishes of his/her heirs as well.
A further paradox was that though individually unable to produce heirs of their own bodies, even
where they were sometimes married to female slaves, they did reproduce subordination by
acquiring younger cadet slaves and eunuchs themselves. It is this last feature that can be seen as
paradigmatic of slave-reproduction as a whole in the Nizamut and elsewhere in India: the most
obvious is the pattern of recruitment of young female slaves by older skilled slave-women and
freedpersons.
59Capt. G. D. Showers, Superintendent of the Education of the Nawab Nazim to Maj.Gen. F.V. Raper,
AGG, 19 April, 1843, MAY/, II, p. 463.
6lSee correspondence between Offg. Magt., Murshidabad, C. F. Carnac, the AGG, H. Torrens, and Sec.
to GOB, J.P. Grant, between February-June 1852 in BC F/4/2491/141010.
69
Both the issues touched on above - the tensions between male kin and the Nazims, as well
as the administrative importance of slave-eunuchs, harked back to the intimate relationship of the
zenana deoris of the Nizamut to the structures and processes of the polity itself. Though the
chronology of events in the outer world, like the trial of Nanda Kumar in 1775, or the
imprisonment of Shumsud Daula in 1799, has not explicitly been connected with fluctuations of
power within the harem of the Nazims, there is sufficient evidence to suggest this. Before we can
postulate this connection, we will examine the peculiarities of the organisation of the harem itself.
fl3Ghulam Husain Salim, Riyazu-s-Salatin or a History o f Bengal trans. Abdus Salam (reprint Delhi,
1975), pp. 321-22.
70
64Letter to Mr. Loch, 8 Oct. 1824, cited in Caulfield to Prinsep, 2 July 1838, MNLl, II, p. 214. Italics
in original.
71
addition to her own personal stipend which rose from 500 rupees at the start of her career to 1200
rupees per month by the end.
In the case of the Murshidabad Nizamut, the hierarchy of rank between the women was
signalled by the size, embellishments and location of accommodation. Within the Nizamut before
the construction of the new palace, there were principal, but ranked apartments: occupation of
these denoted the rank of the occupier. Thus the apartment occupied by Munni Begum, till her
death in 1812-3, came to be associated with the specific position of head of the mehalserai. The
apartments occupied by Babbu Begum, who died in 1809, came to be associated with the position
of the second ranking woman of the mehal and one of the chief markers of the rise of a woman
to authority was achieved in terms of this spatial movement, from one set of apartments to
another. These positions in turn were associated with the command of the inhabitants in the lesser
apartments, and specifically with the giving out of the allowances, in cash and kind, to the various
members of these lesser deoris. Though eldership was prized, ‘lesser’ status did not tally with the
ages of the occupants of the various deoris as is suggested by the fact that among the deoris
commanded by Babbu Begum were those like the Rounuck Afza, which contained the concubines
and relatives of previous Subahdars and Nazims, including those of Mir Jafar, and the Choughura
deori, comprising the apartments of the concubines of Saif-ud-daula. Right from the outset of our
period the principles of headship of the mehal occasioned many disputes, and the intervention of
the representatives of the East India Company according to the political and financial exigencies
of the moment.
The position of the second ranking woman was no less substantial, as we can decipher
from the conflict that erupted when with the death of the Babbu Begum, that position became
vacant. Faizunissa, the mother of the Nazim, Babar Ali, considered her claims to the set of
apartments and emoluments vacated by Babbu as having been established by her deceased son
himself. For in 1810, her personal allowance had been raised from 1000 rupees (her stipend for
the greater part of the time that her son was on the musnud) to 3000 rupees, and an additional sum
of Rupees 2000 had been allotted to her for ‘the support of the immediate dependants and
domestics of her late Highness the Babboo Begum’.70 However, Babbu Begum had had, apart
from this, the payment and distribution in cash and clothing (meersamani) of Rupees 20,000
annually to various other deoris and departments. It was this latter prerogative that the incumbent
Nazim was wont to claim for his chief consort, maintaining that Faizun’s ‘right and control’ were
merely confined to the immediate personal establishment of Babbu Begum, unconnected with the
an n a^ ^ ® ^ i g » inM3fe^6ike8 tiklSgP9ffltl,lW ?y4l(b92M§§0?1 Zainuddin asked her to vacate the
72
apartments of Babbu Begum, in which she had been installed by her son. Faizun (Walida Begum)
complained bitterly both about having to return to her former apartments, and having to relinquish
the ‘victuals, clothing and other customary rights and privileges’ which, she argued, appertained
to ‘the person who succeeds to them and not in the mere place or name’.71 Consequently, the
removal of the person already invested with them from one set of apartments to another did not
imply their forfeiture or indeed, any diminution of her rank or authority. The significance of the
apartments was emphasised by Zainuddin; stressing the fact that the deori of Babbu Begum ‘is that
of my late Grandfather, my father and my own’, he urged that it should be maintained ‘in a more
splendid style and on a larger scale than the others’,72
Having accepted the promotion of Walida Begum to the position of Babbu Begum in 1809
as a matter of a ‘domestic nature not requiring the expression of the sentiments of Government’,
and moreover, in having acknowledged, by default, Walida Begum’s right to control the
‘immediate dependents’ of the deceased Babbu Begum, the Government in Bengal was caught in
a cleft stick. Referring to her investiture by her son, the previous Nazim, the Vice-President in
Council decided that Walida Begum was entitled to both the apartments of the Babbu Begum
(‘the latter are understood to be far superior to her own in point of accommodation and have
always been considered as appertaining to the lady holding the superior rank’) and the meersamani
allowances. The Earl of Moira, who visited Murshidabad after assuming the office of Governor-
General, perceived a difference in the style of decoration of each of the women’s apartments he
visited despite his general contempt of the household. Taken first to Walida Begum, whose abode
just behind the grand hall of audience was marked off by ‘sheets or coarse table-cloths sewed
together’, he implied that a breach of the ranking system had occurred since another woman, the
‘favourite’ wife of the Nawab Zainuddin, was ‘better lodged than the Walideh;... The curtain was
of rather better materials’.73 In addition to this, the sum formerly allotted to Walida from the
meersamani - believed by the Government in 1811 to be a paltry sum of Rupees 693 annually,
but in reality closer to Rupees 13,998 - was also continued to her, though it appears from later
report that when she vacated her former apartments in favour of the Bahoo Begum, Walida Begum
also gave up the ‘allowances for cloths and shawls and for kitchen expenses in favour of the
Bahoo Begum '.74 But the Council at Port William tried to appease the Nazim by fixing tor his
“ Extract Poll. Letter from Bengal, 17 March 1820, BC F/4/732/19792.
consort a meersamani allowance of 300 Rupees and the apartment vacated by Walida.
67Naib Subah’s letter in Proceedings o f Controlling Council o f Revenue at Murshidabad (ed. W.K.
Firminger, Calcutta, 1919), under date 3 Jan. 1771, III, p. 10.
68Shah Khanam, step-sister of Alivardi Khan, who had born to her one son, Sadiq Ali Khan (Miran) and
a daughter who was married to Mir Qasim. Shah Khanam died ‘in the time of Nidjim-ut-Dowlah’ according
to Reza Khan, which presumably indicates sometime in 1766.
filJFrom a list of 1790, it appears that the ganjes in question were transferred to the holding of Babbu
Begum. From 38 shops in these three ganjes which sold liquor, a revenue of Rs. 2205 accrued to the holder.
See Collr. J. E. Harington, 16 Aug. 1790 in BBOR (Misc.), P/89/36, 29 Oct. 1790, Statements 1-6.
^’Superintendent of Nizamut Affairs, R.Rocke, to J. Monckton, Persn. Sec. to GOB, 31 Jany. 1811, BC
F/4/372/9260.
As this conflict showed, women graduated to positions of authority and privilege over
time: one elder’s death causing the promotion of another. As each position fell vacant, the claims
of women lower down in the hierarchy were improved. This was however not a full-fledged
system of bureaucratic transfers, because the rise of a particular woman depended increasingly on
the network of relationships she could build up through her children, clients and dependants, with
the Agents of the Company. The latter, which had been under financial pressure from the Court
of Directors since 1773, and especially after the expensive wars associated with the Governor-
Generalship of Wellesley, became more and more involved with the control of stipends, and
through this key feature of the internal economy, to control decisions of which woman would be
declared the head. For instance, in 1818, the Government of the Company allowed for one of the
Nazim’s consorts a personal stipend of Rupees 2000 per month, which had no precedent, ‘in
exchange for the Nazim’s ‘commendable’ conduct in agreeing to ‘discharge the floating debt out
of the late Munni Begum’s property’ and in agreeing to reduce his household to the amount of
Rupees 14,400 which relieved a financially straitened Company of a greater portion of its obliga
tions.76
Despite the apparent fluidity of the hierarchy, one can discern a set of possible principles
that determined its form and function. To begin with, the principles which determined the headship
itself, though in flux in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, did seem to have some
underlying commonalities. In the case of Zebunnissa, it may have been as the mother of Sarfaraz,
and for Nafisa, as the sister of Sarfaraz. The ages of these women can never be verified, but it is
almost certain that their headship coincided with a certain post-sexual status, one made so by
having borne a child, the other perhaps beyond child-bearing herself, but subsequently
strengthening her rank through ‘adopting’ the ‘illegitimate’ son of Sarfaraz, born on the day his
father died. The determinacy of this principle was at stake in the 1770s when the claim for the
headship of the Mehal was contested between Munni and Babbu.
The privilege and authority that was associated with the position of the head of the
mehalserai was strengthened when the ruling Nazim was her son, as evident from the power that
accrued to Munni Begum upon the accession to the musnud of the son born of her, Najm-ud-daula.
So critical was this power that even when he died and Saif-ud-daula came to the throne, she
retained the gaddi, because as Reza Khan was to put it later, the latter had no mother.77 But this
changed when in 1770, when Mubarak-ud-daula I ascended the musnud. Born of Babbu Begum,
this meant that the gaddi should have gone to this birth-mother. In the words of Reza Khan,
formerly
the most respected of all Myr Jaffiers Begum... was the mother of Sedek Ally
Cawn [Sadiq Ali Khan, Miran]. After the death of Sedek Ally Cawn when as
Nigim & Doulah [Najm-ud-daula] was the next son; His mother rose to
Preminence after Myr Jaffiers Death, when the Nizamet devolved to Nigimul
Dowlah his mother derived her claims from Her Sons Station as Nazim.78
However, in the conflict that erupted, Reza Khan proposed that authority and rank be shared by
both, though the ‘right is in the mother of Mebareck ul Dowlah’. For Cartier, this was impossible.
So he invested Babbu Begum in the gaddi. This did not resolve the conflict between the two
Begums, since Babbu became identified with the championship of Reza Khan and thus had to
share in his fortunes. It was not that Munni Begum contested the right of a mother to the gaddi,
but that she contested Reza Khan’s notion of motherhood. She claimed that Mir Jafir,
according to custom, committed him to my Bosom,& having brought him up for
12 Years, the Nabob Mozuffer Jung has now separated him from Me...he has to
my Dishonor publish’d that Bew the mother of Mobarik ul Doulah is appointed
to the principal authority in the Mehal Serai,....79
Two differing conceptions of motherhood seemed to be at issue: Munni claiming the position of
chiefship not by virtue of a biological mandate, but by virtue of having nurtured Mubarak-ud-
daula ( ‘for 12 years’) and Reza Khan, conceiving of chiefship of the mehalserai strictly in terms
of the blood-tie with the Nazim. Nor was this the first time that Reza Khan had argued thus: when
Babbu Begum reported to Cartier that despite assuming the headship of the Mehalserai, her
circumstances were straitened and Cartier had enquired from the Naib Diwan, the latter had
claimed that the ‘place of honour’ rightfully belonged to Babbu Begum. The Governor had, in
1770, upheld this claim, only urging Babbu Begum to treat Munni as her superior. Which concept
of motherhood, and therefore the succession to the headship of the Deoris, was to prevail depended
on a host of factors, not the least being the existence of factions in the outer court.
In 1772, Warren Hastings’ restoration of Munni to the principal position in the Mehalserai
was tied up with the commercial interests of the East India Company, whose representatives from
1770 had been pressing the Naib Nazim, Reza Khan, to curtail the expenditure ol the Nizamut and
77Historians have, uncritically jn.the past, described Saif-ud-daula as a ‘son ’ of Munni Begum without
a letter to the Council at Murshidabad, Proceedings, (ed. W. Firminger), III, p. 10, 3 January, 1771.
Begum.
78Lettp)j(pfijMitIT<yP%<i k ^ ^ i <0 ftvtB. ph77lf?dfl $9J^iMi^e^§8c§ei&Qon to the musnud,
80See Abdul Majed Khan, The Transition in Bengal 1756-1775, (Cambridge, 1969).
75
Council at Calcutta insisted upon the elevation of the ‘seniormost’ woman, Faizunissa, one of the
concubines of Mubarak-ud-daula I, to the gaddi, despite the wishes of the Nazim Zainuddin Alijah
to have the privilege conferred upon his consort, the daughter of one of the damads of Mubarak-
ud-daula I, Akbar Ali Khan (Shamsher Jung), Ameerunnissa. The conflict between the Nazims’
wishes to initiate a rule by favourites and the traditional rule by mothers created a space for the
redefinition of the criteria of headship of the mehalserai itself. In its instructions to the Superin
tendent, the Government observed
that the age, rank and character of the Waulida Begum would alone render her the
fittest person to have the guardianship of the late Munni Begum’s Deurie... by the
usages of the country and the actual practice in the Nizamut it becomes a positive
right, of which she could not be justly deprived.81
This emphasis that the representatives of the Company put on the ‘advanced age’ of the woman
‘to whom the other begums looked up to as a Mother’ was not the whole truth: while it
underscored the fact of authority in the mehal following upon the condition of post-fertility, it
marked a change in that age had not been the critical factor in Munni Begum’s authority, so much
as her rank as mother. In highlighting seniority within the mehal as corresponding with
chronological age, the Governor-General changed the basis of that authority, and left the door open
for further modifications subsequently.
Around 1821, just when the succession to the musnud in the outer court was reverting
back to a brother, the principles of succession to the inner government began to change in the
hands of the Magistrate of Murshidabad, Magniac. Instead of post-sexuality, and motherhood to
the Nazim, other criteria, like the form of marriage, birth, the degrees of affinity as the British
understood it began to be brought to bear upon the choice of the candidate. Thus Ameerunnissa’s
claim to the position began to be privileged on the grounds that she was ‘the first cousin and
favourite wife’ of Zainuddin: moreover, it was claimed that ‘she had been married to him by the
Shadee Ceremony’,82 This was a new concern: few officials had raised this issue when promoting
the claims of Faizunissa to the headship, even though we know that Faizun who had borne three
daughters (Badrunnissa, Motee, Sahebzadee) and one son (Babar Ali) had belonged to the set of
gaens (skilled slave musicians) in the harem of Mubarak-ud-daula I and no questions had been
raised about the ceremony under which she had become the ‘wife’ of the Nazim. Furthermore,
there were those women who were older, like Shurfoonissa, another of the concubines of Mubarak-
ud-daula I. who was also the mother of Meer Munglee, apart from the first-acquired concubine
of th'^NazktanZaiflatddfitn, Altj<alh, l^f3vi’MlVfiy?^5ItlppBitllob4Begum. The claims of the former were
she was ‘a mere Khuwas, of no family or respectability; and His late Highness never manifested
any desire to bring her forward into any prominent situation of the kind’.83 Yet, Government was
apprehensive of recognising Ameerunissa’s claims to the headship immediately, for with the
influential position her father, Shumsher Jung, held in the court of her husband, Zainuddin, the
control of such a woman in the mehal would enhance the power of the Nazim. Thus it was not
till the death of Zainuddin and the accession of his brother, Ahmed Ali Khan Walahjah, that
Ameerunissa was recognised as the head of the mehalserai and as the Walida Begum herself. This
belated recognition of Ameerun by the Company, however, had completely ignored their own
criterion of age-based seniority, since Ameerun, by other accounts, was in her late teens and
younger than the Nazim Walajah. Moreover, she was no Nazim’s mother.
With the exception of Ameerun’s term as head of the mehalserai, every Nazim on the
musnud of Murshidabad from 1770 had to contend with a chain of command made up of
matriarchs and grandmothers. These were his reign-mates, not any woman who was in the category
of ‘wife’. The continuous attempts of each Nazim from 1793 to have their favourite consorts
installed as gaddinashin over and above the rightful matriarch involved all the male Nazims in
bitter conflicts with women who were - in the matrix of kinship terms - their grandmothers and
mothers. Each matriarch could in turn manoeuvre the contests among male kin against the Nazim
on particular issues, like appointments to office, accession to the musnud, allowances, and so on.
The power of this chain of matriarchs in the zenana, in turn, was remarkable because of the fact
that the political position of mother had little to do with jural status; slaves like Munni Begum,
and slave-born like Babbu Begum, through the service of either bearing children, or through
rearing them, could eventually assume positions of command. Munni Begum was born to a widow
of Balkunda, a village near Sikandra; she was sold to Bisu, Sammen Ali Khan’s slave-girl, who
lived ‘for five years at Delhi where she taught Munni the art of dancing’.84 Brought to
Murshidabad around 1745-46 by Bisu who had been summoned by Nawab Shahamut Jung
(Nawazish Muhammad Khan) on the marriage of his ‘adopted’ son Ikram-ud-daula - the younger
brother of Siraj-ud-daula - the whole party seems to have been subsequently taken into the service
of Mir Jafar for a monthly stipend of Rs. 500. This group also appeared to have contained the
daughter born of Sammen Ali Khan to Bisu, known subsequently as Babbu Begum, the second
concubine of Jafar referred to by Vansittart.
83Ibid.
84Brajendranath Banerji,‘The Mother of the Company’, BPP, 32, 63-64, 1926, pp. 38-48; idem, Banglar
Begum, (Calcutta, 1913); P. N. Bhalla,‘The Mother of the Company’, Journal o f Indian History (henceforth
JIH), 22, 2&3, 1943, pp. 128-44.
77
85The data for 1818 is taken from Monckton’s survey in BPC, 13 Feb. 1818, nos. 33-42, BC
F/4/618/15418 and for 1822, from BPC, P/123/13, 26 July 1822, nos. 78-82.
78
86Letter from the Nabob Mahomed Reza Khan, in Proceedings (ed. Firminger), III, p. 10.
88W. Irvine, Later Mughals (ed. J.N.Sarkar, Calcutta, 1921), II, p. 141.
79
important political one. Various accounts touch upon the sagacity or diplomatic skills of the
mother of a prince, especially at key moments of succession, or battle. Thus Muhammad
Muazzam’s mother Nawab Bai ‘gave good counsel to the Prince, and strongly dissuaded him from
yielding an assent; and from giving any aid, assistance or intercession on behalf of the Rajputs’,
while passing through the Rana of Udaipur’s territory.89 Similarly, Farrukhsiyar’s mother is
mentioned as having first negotiated with the mother of one of the Sayyid brothers for his support
in the battle of succession. When the faction which had killed one of the Sayyids, decided to do
away with the other brother, the members tried to ‘establish communications with the mother of
Muhammad Shah’.90 In such a polity, where the mother was so critical a political personage, no
woman could be allowed to have claims upon her authority contested between two uterine sons.
In the early years of Mir Jafir’s household, a similar policy of single-sonship for each of the
concubines is decipherable, though there was no policy of limiting daughters. We can begin with
the concubines of Jafir himself: to Munni Begum was born Nujm-ud-daula, to Babbu Begum,
Mubarak-ud-daula (and possibly one daughter, Shumsuddee Begum, who, however is never
referred to in the English records as the daughter of Mir Jafir, though she is always referred to as
the sister of Mubarak-ud-daula). The same policy appears to have prevailed in the harem of
Mubarak-ud-daula I: for the names of the concubines we do have, there are only the single sons
listed against the names of each, like Sherfoonissa Khanum, mother of Meer Munglee, Lutfunissa
mother of Meer Mehndee, and Mubarakunissa Khanum, the mother of Meer Mohamed Ali.91 This
pattern was then continued by each of the sons of the deceased Mubarak-ud-daula I, and was
shared by the in-marrying males. For instance, each of the daughters of Mubarak-ud-daula for
instance, had only one son (Badrunissa, the mother of Kummur-ud-daula, Omdutunissa the mother
of Wahed Hussain), The implications for the outer male world was that though technically
brothers, through a common father, each male was the lone son of a mother, whose ability to
generate support for her son and for herself conditioned the dissensions among brothers, uncles
and affinal males. Single-sonship was both an admission of the importance of the mother to struc
91Both British officials and subsequent historians paid no attention to these finer details, and confused
counts beginning with the former passed into the historiography as in the case of Najm-ud-daula and Saifud
Daula, both of whom were described as sons of Munni Begum. Similar errors exist in official accounts of
the sons of Mubarakud Daula and their mothers. The only corrective when two sons are listed against one
mother is to check the life histories of the daughters of the same mother, from where only one emerges as
‘own brother’. One instance of this is the two sons ascribed to Lutfunissa, Meer Mehndee and Abool Husun,
by AGG F.W, Russell in letter to Prinsep, 25 June 1821, BPC, P/12/58, 7 July 1821, no. 78. However, both
Russell’s own subsequent description of the family of the daughter, Ruheemunissa, and earlier descriptions
from the period 1809, refer only to Meer Mehndee as her brother.
80
tures of political authority, and the signal of the changed status of the concubine, heightened by
the fact that those who seem not to have borne children continued to be addressed as Bee Haufia,
Joogna, and so on, without the benefit of a title.
The significance of motherhood for the concubine was in turn tied up to her access to
power, and privilege as the head of the household should her son succeed to the musnud. This
helps to explain why those concubines who had failed to become birth-mothers in turn purchased
children from their own stipends and stood forth as the social mothers of these infants, in what
appears as a mirroring of the practice of the heads of the mehalserai. Though they remained
distinct from the birth-mothers, such attempts at prestige-claiming by concubines further refined
the status-ranking and claims within the mehals. Thus the lower stipend of Bunny Khanum, a
concubine who was listed as a mother of a daughter, was in reality the ‘social’ mother of another
slave-born daughter.92 In 1818, when, for the first time a detailed account of the deoris of the
mehalserai was drawn up by the Agent of the Governor-General, it was found that a system
existed of ‘the concubines of departed Nazims... adopting Children, and thus introducing into the
Nizamut persons totally unconnected with that Establishment’,93 The person this referred to was
one male slave, Bubroo, who was ‘the son of a behistee, but he calls himself the adopted son of
the late Beebee Oojagur, a hurrum of Nabob Syefood Daulah’.
The conception and metaphors of motherhood held out by Munni Begum as legimations
of claims upon specific young males and females was widely shared in the political culture of
Murshidabad as well as of the sub-continent. For almost contemporaneously, claims by the Ranis
of Bharatpur94 and Rewakantha showed that it was not birth but ‘public acknowledgement’ as
‘mother’ which was the effective determinant of the privileges of the women, as well as the
relation of authority between the Rani and the incumbent ruler. Is it possible to speculate then, that
both isogamous wives as well as unsuccessful concubines within particular dynasties might have
been forced to fail as birth-mothers, and compensated for this by purchasing and rearing children
whom they then ceremonially ‘adopted’ as their own? 95
92According to one official description, this daughter, Mubarakunnissa was ‘brought up from her infancy
with Bunne Khanum who treated her as a Daughter... she bears the most respectable character of any of the
illegitimate children’ of Mubarak-ud-daula, G. Swinton to M. Ricketts, 23 Oct. 1820, MNLR, II, p. 198.
94The memorial of the Rani of Bharatpur specified that the son of the slave-girl was not reared by the
birth- mother but was ‘adopted as her own child’, BC F/4/1350/53514.
95Capt. A. Macdonald, ‘Brief Historical Sketch of the Petty State of Baria in the Rewa Kantha’,
Selections from the Records o f the Bombay Government: Sketches o f the Native States (New Series, Bombay,
1856), no. 23, p. 121. The ages of the children purchased were ‘about two months old’ and the sums varied
between Rs. 200 and Rs. 125. Not all the children mentioned were direct purchases; in one instance, the
direct purchaser then gifted the child to the Rani, as in the case of the infant purchased by Gopaljee Kotaree,
a native of Baria, who brought the child to the Rani, by whom he was named Gumbheer Singh.
81
Within the deoris, apart from a powerful group of mothers and concubines, there was a
second group made up of a service and skilled corps attached to these concubines and mothers,
in capacities like mogulanee (interpreted as waiting women) some of whom were trained in literary
or accounting skills, implied by the description of one such mogulanee of Munni Begum’s deori,
‘employed as her Secretary’.95 Other skills and services included those of furrash (cleaner),
seamstresses, hookaburdar (preparer of the hooka, for smoking), wet-nurses and mid-wives with
the prefix ‘dudda’, ‘mama’ and ‘dai’.97 In a polity where becoming a mother was important, the
availability of slave-midwives and nurses was critical for the survival of a particular infant. At the
same time, having suckled an infant, the potential of becoming a ‘foster-mother’ to a Sahebzada
or Sahebzadi and thus moving into positions of status was ever-present. One such slave-nurse was
considered to be the major figure in the harem of the Nazim Walajah. The range of these stipends
was not as vast as for the concubines and mothers: the furrash getting 3 rupees, the tailor at 5
rupees, the mogulanees getting between 5 and 10 rupees, the nurses getting between 10 and 15
rupees. A third group, called aseel, in turn served the previous group, whose names carried the
prefix ‘mama’ and whose stipends ranged between 2 and 4 rupees.
In the Choughura deori, considered to be the apartments of the concubines of Saif-ud-daula,
the stipends of the service and skilled corps seemed to be higher. The mogulanees, some of whom
were stated to be very old, appeared to have received 25 rupees at the senior levels but retained
the same levels (between 5 and 10 rupees) at other levels. The same seems to have been true for
the gaens, who at the highest levels received a personal stipend ranging between 20 and 25 rupees,
a middle group receiving 14-15 rupees and another level of gaens received 9 and 10 rupees.
However, it is not easy to determine on what grounds these variations occurred, whether on the
basis of the number of years they had served, as in the case of the Mogulanees, or whether
according to the degrees of skill, or whether the gaens who received higher stipends did so as
concubines of the Nazim Mubarak-ud-daula I. For it was also recorded against the names of gaens
like Jehanabadee, Nowab Bai, Noor Jehan and Ruttun Cooer that they were the ‘hurrums’ of the
Nazim. For the seven other gaens receiving personal stipends of 10-15 rupees each, no such
additional description exists in the records of 1818.
Certainly, an overlapping of function and status was true of the lists of the Murshidabad
mehalserai. Thus it is noted that in the deori of the Bahoo Begum, many of the female khawas
seem also to have been counted among the concubines of preceding Nazims; there were the names
97The allowances of individual slave wet-nurses and midwives could vary according to the rise in power
or status of the child she had suckled. Thus one of the sons of the Nazim Mubarakud ud Daula I, Sayyid
Ali Reza paid to ‘Dada Noorun who nursed [him] in his infancy’ a sum of Rs. 16 per month, independent
of the sum of Rs. 12 that this woman received from Babbu Begum. See AGG to C. Lushington, 23 Sept.
1817, BPC, P/120/72, 10 Oct. 1817, no. 36.
82
of Joogna Khowas, who though a concubine of Babar Ali, received only 5 rupees while Murad
Buksh described as the ‘hurrum of the present Nazim before he ascended to the musnud’ appeared
to have received 20 rupees. It is also significant that to the gaens at the upper levels were attached
three girls whose individual stipends of 3 rupees could have denoted either their juniority in
training or their place among the service group attached to the establishment as a whole. This
latter group made up of those who served them, like the ‘mama’, the tailor and the 1 0 wanna whose
stipends were 3 and 4 rupees respectively. However, what is truly significant- and suggestive of
the pattern of recruitment to this group- is that the three ‘juniors’ are called chokree, thus
indicating a pattern of renewal by which slave women themselves either acquired or gave birth
to other female slaves. This was im portant: one British official described the gaens paid by Munni
Begum as ‘girls purchased were instructed in Singing - the Women on the present Establishment
are advanced in years, but as they die away their places are filled by Girls born in the Deury’.98
The pattern of slave-concubines, and skilled performers, acquiring slaves, suggested by
the records of 1818, is confirmed by a comparison with deori lists of the 1850’s, when presumably
many of these newly acquired slaves would have served for some years. Thus from the deori of
one of the daughters of the Nazim Mubarak-ud-daula (Badrunissa, also counted as a wife of
Shumsud-daula, nawab of Dacca), the sixteen female khawas had served between fifty-eight and
twenty years," and had begun service between the ages of six and fifteen. From another list of
1854 too, of the same Choughura deori listed in 1818, the impression remains, that despite the
Company’s efforts at resuming the allowances of all who were not ‘family’ i.e. were only
‘dependents’, the patterns of recruitment into the deori remained as they had previously. Thus, in
1854, among the gaen of the Choughura, apart from Murad Buksh who was described as an ‘aged
woman... the only Gaen now alive’ from the list of 1818, there were ten fresh names, to the
despair of the Agent who could not fathom when these had been enrolled on the records of the
Sheristah Nizamut.100
However, one significant feature of the allowances meted out by specific heads of deoris
was that there was no automatic correspondence between the deori from which their stipends were
issued and the actual residence of the stipendiaries. Clearly, the payment of these stipends
determined who possessed final control over them, and not necessarily their residence. This
explains the division between the female khawasses (slave-attendants) some of whom were paid
by one Begum and some paid by another, though all of them seem to have been acquired during
98Brooke’s remarks on Enclosure F, Statement in BPC, P/120/45, 6 July 1816, no. 51.
"Statement of the old servants of the late Budrunissa Begum in AGG, Lt. Col. Macgregor to Sec. to
GOB, 10 Feb. 1857, BC F/4/2708/194266.
the reign of Mubarak-ud-daula I. Thus six women received between 3-8 rupees from the Walida
and thirteen received between 2 and 8 rupees from the Bahoo Begum. The impression that they
may have been transferable from one deori to another is strengthened by the fact that among them,
some of the women of the lesser service corps, though paid by the W alida Begum, resided in the
apartments vacated by the former in favour of the Bahoo Begum. Similarly, some concubines
stated to have apartments in the Choughura appeared to have resided elsewhere: as in the case of
Bootee Khanum, a concubine of Mubarak-ud-daula I in ‘a separate house of her own near the
Palace yard’ or as in the case of Mehr-un-nissa, a concubine of Saif-ud-daula, in the Rounuck
Afza deori, where also all the gaens seemed to have resided even though listed under the Chough
ura. Similarly, as explicitly stated by a steward of a son of Mubarakud Daula I, many of the slave-
servants and concubines did not ‘reside in his House... they received wages from the Bubboo
begum’s Deurie and he [Meer Mogul, the son] made them occasional presents consisting of
Articles of Wearing Apparel’.101
It would help us to ponder over this aspect of residential location a while, in order to
understand that ‘domestic’ slavery did not imply that slaves of the household only resided in the
household of the person who first acquired them. As we have seen with the eunuchs, a large
number of female slaves, first acquired by the Babbu Begum were found subsequently ‘stationed’
with the sons and daughters of subsequent Nazims, many of whom were themselves born of
concubines.102 Thus both in the cases of Meer Moghul touched on above, and of Sayyid Ali
Reza (aka Meer Moulvi), both of whom were sons of Mubarak ud Daula I, the concubines and
slaves were either ‘presented ’ or ‘transferred’ by the matriarchs of the deoris. The distinctions
between the servants and the served lay in the differential stipends received by each group. For
instance, female servants received between 3 and 12 rupees, while those they served, like the
daughters of Mubarak-ud-daula received between 250-500 rupees. Similarly, for the male slaves,
and those they were stationed with, the Sahibzada, there was a vast gulf in stipends: the latter
receiving, at the juniormost levels, between 300 and 500 rupees, while even the most important
of the eunuchs did not receive more than 170 rupees-250 rupees. Apart from the spatial mobility
generated by the inheritance and gift transfers of slaves from one deori to another, there was also
inter-generational mobility: for example a ‘singing woman’ called Laboo Bai, who had been in
the service of Meer Jafir, and then in the service of Munni begum for 58 years (in 1816, she was
I(,1AAGG Monckton to C. Lushington, 8 Oct. 1817, BPC, P/120/73, 17 Oct. 1817, no. 52. The steward
Mirza Khadem Ali, detailed the origins of the five women on whose petition for subsistence this
investigation had occurred thus, ‘Bee Jaun was purchased by Meer Mogul for 200 Rupees,... Bee Nafurman
was transferred to his service by Mubarak Khanum, the mother of one of Mubarakud Daulah’s
sons,...Goonbharree and Sook Chyne had been formerly slave Girls of his Mother and ... Noorunissa had
been his wet nurse.’
l02For a detailed break-down of slaves paid from specific deoris but serving in others, see enclosure in
Persian Sec. to F. Magniac, 25 July 1822, BPC, P/123/13, 26 July 1822, no. 79.
84
said to be in her nineties), for which she received Rs. 200, resided in the bazar in the Chouk in
Murshidabad (whose revenues went to the Begum till her death).103
The non-correspondence between residence and the source of stipends also helps to explain
the phenomenon of male slaves, comprehended within the group Shagird Pesha, and called Zahir
Khowas, Meer Wahid Alii Khowas, Gholam Hyder Khowas and so on, who, though paid personal
stipends by the Begums, did not reside within the mehalserai. Unfortunately, we have no informa
tion on where they resided, except for the eunuchs on Munni Begum’s establishment, who were
said to ‘have all separate houses and separate establishments’.104 As for the non-eunuch male
slaves, it seems likely that they performed certain important tasks outside the mehal as its agents,
and may also have lived on lands and houses belonging to the deoris and the Nizamut. It is in this
capacity that the individual khawasses of the Shagird Pesha received between 3 and 5 rupees each,
whereas the men who tended to the gardens in and around the city which belonged to the Nizamut
appeared to have received even less. Alongside them, there were other men and women who
performed in different capacities, like masalchi, bhistis and even the odd kabiraj (Bhagobut Misr)
all of whom received between 2-4 rupees monthly. Another level of higher stipends was however
given from the mehal to certain members of the ‘Moolazimaun Imtiazee’Qit. distinguished
servants), which included the eunuchs receiving between 15 and 20 rupees from the lesser deoris
but sums like 150 rupees per month from the head deori, as in the case of Rozufzoon Khan from
Babbu Begum. It also included men like the Daroga who managed the gunges at Patna on behalf
of Babbu Begum, who received 40 rupees from her. Within this group of higher servants of the
mehal could also be found the Begum’s principal munshis, and mohurrirs of the deoris, the
Khasnavis, a post equivalent to the secret intelligencer under the Mughals but in the Nizamut, put
down as the writing master of the Sahebzadas, and the Karis (readers of the Quran at the tombs,
and the chanters of the murseea).
The patterns of recruitment to this level of servants of the mehal was, in turn, linked to
the internal structure in as much as men in this group appear to have been the sons of the nurses
and mogulanees in the deoris: for example, one of the highest stipends issued by the Walida
Begum to this group of men, 58 rupees per month, went to a man who was described as a foster-
brother of Mubarak-ud-daula I in that he was born to the same woman who nursed the infant
Nazim. Similarly, another man who received 10 rupees per month, was the son of a favourite
mogulanee of the Babbu Begum. Yet other male servants within this category of Imtiazee, whose
lll3Enclosure K, Statement in BPC, P/120/45, 6 July 1816, no. 51. For details of the lands, gunges and
houses from the rents and sayer duties of which Munni Begum derived a net revenue of Rs. 14,100-0-19-1,
see two accompanying lists in same file.
stipends were paid by the Bahoo Begum, were described as the ‘son of a wet-nurse of a daughter
bom to Ruheemunnissa’, a daughter of Mubarak-ud-daula I, or as one man who received 15 rupees
was ‘the grandson of Bebee Rehmut’, a concubine of Mir Jafir.
10SPetition of Muhbooba, Fukrufroze and others, BPC, P/127/32, 12 July, 1836, no. 3 and 27 Sept. 1836,
no. 9.
106Petition of Ushrufulnissa Hubos in Commr., Dacca, to Sec. to GOI, 9 Aug. 1843, BC F/4/2091/97369.
86
Munni Begum’s Deurie under a fictitious name’.107 Nor were the sums written against the names
of individuals the whole of what they received. Again, the deori of Munni Begum offered the
example of a sum listed as 65 rupees to a woman whose husband told the enquiring Agent that
only fifty of those rupees were received; upon the latter’s persistence, the Dewan clarified that the
sum in question ‘had been sent for a long course of years to the Munni Begum’s deurie under the
fictitious name of Sheherbanoo’.108 One could argue from the ubiquity of the benamee that there
was some loss of honour for those claiming to be independent in being seen to be the direct
recipient of a sum of money: not only was this true for Munni Begum, but extended to the Nazim,
who was also found to be receiving a sum of 221 Rupees under the name of Khodeja Begum and
passing regular receipts for it ‘under a fictitious seal’. The possibility that this was emulated by
others was suggested when a woman, Pearunissa, complained to the Agent in 1859 that she had
received nothing of the sum of 50 Rupees supposed to be given to her. The ‘head of the
household’, Syed Khorshed Hossain, claimed that the woman who had claimed the sum of fifty
rupees was actually a ‘maid-servant’ called Pearee, who was supposed to receive only four rupees,
and the original recipient was the ‘Nuzum’ of a step-son of one of the Begums, to whose existence
he adduced a paper with sixteen seals. The Nazim, who investigated the matter through his
eunuchs, reported that there were two women of the same name, one the ‘hurm’ (concubine) and
the other the ‘reekabdarnee’ (housekeeper): he believed that the former’s complaint held
substance.109
Why, for the Nazim or anyone claiming to be the head of a household, did resort to the
benamee become an important measure? Did dishonour inhere to the visibility of receiving, and
honour to the visibility of giving? Joseph Miller studying what he called a ‘political economy of
followers’110 outlined a polity that stressed people as sources of productivity, so that becoming
economically wealthy and politically powerful meant aggregating human dependents of different
kinds. Material goods were critical to this economy of deference in that their transfers became a
mediating procedure for acquiring this deference; according to standards of patronage, gifts and
largesse these goods were redistributed among dependents. Such transactions - misrepresented by
107AAGG to Sec. to Govt., 18 Oct. 1817, BPC, 14 Nov. 1817, no.86, BC F/4/618/15418.
1{,8Ibid.
109C. Mackenzie to Sec. to GOB, 22 May 1860, BPC, P/127/59, June 1860, nos. 45-48; Memorial of
Syed Khoorshed Hossein to the Lt. Governor of Bengal, 19 Dec. 1860, BPC, P/127/61, Jan. 1861, nos. 80-
81.
110Joseph C. Miller, Way of Death: Merchant Capitalism and the Angolan Slave Trade,1730-1830,
(London, 1988).
87
Thus the various sums, referred to as wages/ stipends/ salaries/ allowances in English,
should be understood not to have followed upon services rendered, but as advances critical to
initiating, and retaining, services within a relationship of dependence and deference. Though
money was a significant component of this larger realm of the gift, however, there were other
components as well. Chief among these was cloth, followed by food. From the deori of the Munni
Begum alone, according to her Diwan, a sum of Rupees 20,807 for ‘white cloths’ annually
(salleana) were disbursed in the Mehals not according to any fixed rule but according to the
112Petition of Muzzeedun Nissa Begum (Potee) to Dy. Gov. of Bengal, 25 March 1838, BPC, P/127/38,
25 April 1838, no. 19.
113Daood Ullee Khan to Persian Sec. to Govt., reed. 24 Dec. 1821 in MNLR, I, p.200.
1"Dilawar Jung to Persian Translator in Edmonstone to Pattle, 1 Dec. 1798, MNLR, I, pp.43-44.
89
!l5For the symbolic nature of cloth see Bernard S. Cohn, ‘Cloth, Clothes and Colonialism: India in the
Nineteenth Century’ in Jane Schneider and Annette B. Weiner (eds), Cloth and Human Experience
(Washington, 1991), pp. 304-354; Mary Ellen Roach and Joanne B. Eicher, ‘The Language of Personal
Adornment’ in Justine Cordwell and Ronald Schwarz (eds), The Fabrics o f Culture: the Anthropology of
Clothing and Adornment (The Hague, 1979), pp. 7-21.
116For tests of fineness in muslins, the weight of the cloth in proportion to its length and the number of
threads in each warp, and the place of each kind Sharbat, Shabnam and Abrawan in the range of muslins
see T.N.Mukharji, Art-Manufactures of India (Calcutta, 1888, reprint Delhi, 1974), pp.315-20; idem,
Dictionary o f Economic Products o f India (Calcutta, 1890) and N.N. Banerjee, Monograph on Cotton
Fabrics of Bengal (Calcutta, 1898).
90
and finally the Azeemabadi ruzzaee which seemed to have been the cheapest of them all at 2
rupees each.
It is thus not difficult to discern the principle underlying the access to different kinds of
cloth in the Nizamut: the costliest cloths would be reserved for a small number of recipients and
the cheaper, coarser varieties were for general disbursements. Thus those women who received
only the cheapest kind of ruzzaee, the Azeemabadi, (made at Azeemabad, or modern Patna)
presumably ranked the lowest in the hierarchy of the mehal, whereas the slightly superior among
the gaens in the Chougurrah seemed to have received the Radhanagree balaposh and Bundree
ruzzaee along with single shawls worth 31 rupees 8 annas each, while those who served these
women in turn received only the Azeemabadi. Within the category of shawls, too, there were
differences in the value of each : the single shawls of the gaens were of lesser value than the
single shawls given to the concubines of previous Nazims, as we infer from the fact that one of
Mir Jafir’s concubines received one valued at 75 rupees, while the concubines of Mubarak-ud-
daula received single shawls valued at 119 rupees. Only those who had borne sons to the Nazims
received a doshala (translated literally as a pair of shawls) valued at 150 rupees.
The sensitivity of cloth as a barometer of stratification was not a reflection of its
commercial value alone; it was a major insignia by which the wealth and standing of the giver was
reckoned. The intimate connection between the gift of cloth and the creation of deference/dep-
endence was perhaps glimpsed even by the most economy-minded Agent in 1818; eager to
substitute these for a fixed cash sum, Monckton soon relinquished the scheme since ‘if it were to
be reduced to the system suggested by me, it would materially affect the patronage and character
of the Nizamut’. Since to accept material goods was, at base, to acknowledge one’s dependence
on the giver, what slaves received - the cash allowances as well as cloth stipends - must be
qualified as ‘indirect’ gifts of the masters to themselves, not just expressions of ‘benevolence’ of
Indian masters in caring for their slaves. Adequacy was always defined by owners, and generosity
both in matters of food and clothes, could always be manipulated as ‘rewards’. The converse of
this, the denial of food and clothes, also worked in turn to discipline some of the recalcitrant
slaves some of the time. Moreover, the kind of clothes slaves wore, determined by various
owners/masters, may sometimes have also indicated the work they were meant to perform. This
may have been particularly applicable to slave-attendants who were also soontaburdars (holders
of silver standards) and the gaens. In both instances, rich or fine clothes (as well as jewellery),
worn on occasions when their owners wanted to advertise their wealth and taste, could themselves
91
ll7See K. R. Bradley, Slavery and Society at Rome (Cambridge, 1994), pp. 81-98. Somatic distinctions
along with dress, jewels and body decorations, shaving of heads, appear to have had some significance in
the Nizamut. Phrases like halka bagose used to denote the male slave with ears bored to carry rings, in the
will of Soulut Jung, L/AG/34/29/42, I, p. 178 indicate this. Vernacular narratives, in which ‘degradation’
is denoted by the wearing of ear-rings by married wives, or ‘release’ of particular women is signalled by
the breaking of jewellery, have yet to be worked into our appreciation of the material ‘signs’ distinguishing
the body of the slave from that of the non-slave.
tax of three and one-third per cent... too heavy a burthen’.120 Such pressures increased after the
creation of the Deposit Fund in 1818 and the compromise of 1834, by which the Company
confirmed its sole control over lapsed stipends in exchange for its nominal withdrawal from the
appointment and dismissal of officers like the Diwan of Nizamut and the naib Diwan, which
subsequent agents infringed anyway.121
Based on a broadly two-pronged approach, separating kin from servants, the Company’s
agents attitude towards the stipends and allowances of concubines, slaves and servants was to treat
each stipend as an ‘ordinary life provision’, which would lapse to the Deposit Fund with the death
of each, regardless of any heirs they may have left. However, if a ‘relation’ of the Nazims died,
and left dependants ‘the support of whom would be a duty incumbent upon the surviving heirs’,
some of the relation’s stipend/allowance would be made over to the heirs for such
dependants’.122 In other words, the control of slave-servants and concubines of a deceased
‘relation’ through the manipulation of funds, and putting an indirect bounty on their heads, was
connived at by the Governor-General’s Council. In addition to such policies on the stipends, the
Company’s other revenue-generating measures also impinged on this group of stipend-holders
because of another twist in the complex political economy of the household as a whole, as with
the resumption of lakhiraj lands.
While assignments of revenues for the maintenance of slaves was an integral feature of
the household-polities of the late eighteenth century, a further complication within the general
system of allowances and stipends was their relation to different kinds of tenures and lands. The
strategies of carving out private holdings separate from assignments of revenue attached to the
office of the Subehadar, in turn, was aided by the registering of many such holdings in the names
of slaves, slave-born women and men, concubines and wives. In many instances, through the
nineteenth century, such slaves and freedmen and women in turn exercised particular kinds of
rights in turn vis-a-vis these holdings. Thus according to a list prepared in the late nineteenth
century, different Nazims, gaddinashin Begums, and heads of collateral branches (like Purneah,
Chitpur and Dacca ruling houses) continued to acquire different mehals comprising both lakhiraj
mAGG, Capt. Thoresby to Dy. Sec., C.E.Trevelyan, 17 Feb. 1834, BPC, P/127/12, 13 Mar. 1834, no.40
and enclosure for the provisions of the agreement. Trevelyan noted about this arrangement that out of the
General Nizamut Fund of 16 lakhs, ‘about 6 lacs are now at the acknowledged disposal of the British
Government’. Renaming this the Deposit Fund was Thoresby’s idea: Trevelyan was content to characterise
it as ‘by far the most valuable part of the Sixteen lakhs...to have obtained a final release for it ...is a great
point gained’.
122Sec. to Govt., H.T.Prinsep, to AGG, Caulfield, 18 July 1838, BPC, P/127/38, 18 July 1838, no. 13.
93
and khiraj lands and patni estates in the name of their individual slaves.123 For instance, Kismut
Chandpore was purchased from Gangaprosad Singh Roy and Himmat Singh Doobay for Rs.
15,000 in 1809 by Nawab Babar Ali (Mubarak-ud-daula II) in the name of Mahomed Hosseini
Chela.124 The lot Ghordoha in Birbhum was purchased by Nawab Ameerunissa Begum in the
name of her eunuch Nazir Zamurad Ali Khan, from Shivdoyal Chaudhuri at a cost of Rs. 8825
in 1839. Similarly, Nawab Bahu Begum (consort of Nazim Ali Jah) bought one katha and 16.*?.
4
gandas of rent-free land in Rajabazar for Rs. 45 in the name of her eunuch Darab Ali Khan in
1230 B.S./1823 and another 2 kathas of rent-free land in the same area in 1268 B.S./1861 for Rs.
401 in the name of another eunuch of her deori, Mian Johar.
The slave-eunuchs, as agents of the individual masters and mistresses, also acquired landed
estates from others not directly of the Nizamut. For instance, a six-and-a-half-annas share of Dihi
Daibargapara, belonging to one Batul Fatima Begum, was sold to the eunuch Jowahir Ali Khan,
the nazir of Bahu Begum for ‘a diamond ring and a copy of the Al-Q uran' in 1243 B.S./1836. The
remaining portion of the plot, the share of 2 annas and 7 A gds., belonging to one Azizunissa
2
Khanum was given by the latter to Jowahir Ali Khan as remuneration in ‘lieu of attorney-fees’,
for a case successfully conducted by him on her behalf. The onset of the resumption of lakhiraj
tenures, part of the intensification of the revenue-generating drive of the East India Company after
the Charter Act of 1833, revealed yet other lists of lakhiraj holdings in the names of slaves. For
instance, in 1837, the total extent of lakhiraj land in the possession of the eunuchs of the Nizamut
was substantial, as were such holdings of the concubine’s daughters and concubine-mothers in the
Nizamut.125
Apart from the holdings of lakhiraj tenure, slaves also held other tenures of different kinds
of immoveable property, like houses, garden enclosures, and ponds, within lands that theoretically
belonged to the Nizamut. In the khas mehal of Ramdaspore in Murshidabad, for example, a
superintendent of khas and resumed mehals in 1838 reported that the presence of such ‘ryots’ who
were slaves and ‘blood relations’ of the Nawab Nazim had always been the ‘stumbling block in
the way of an efficient collection’ of revenue in this mehal. Even if the mehal was farmed out in
l23Husain Ali Mirza, Nawab Bahadur of Murshidabad to Collr., 25 Feb. 1885, BPC, P/2499, Aug. 1885,
nos. 21-22, Enclosed List nos. 2 and 3.
124For conflict between an incumbent Nazim and his brother over Chumpapukur and Chandpur, the title
deed of one of which named the eunuch Basheer as the proprietor, see AAGG Martin to Persian Sec., 3 July
1818, BC F/4/732/19790.
'“ ‘Abstract of Lakheraj Lands’, BPC, P/127/33, 1 Nov. 1836, no. 5; Prinsep to Pemberton, 10 April
1839, MNLR, II, pp.391-92, Enclosure 2.
94
ijarah, the prospective revenue-farmer offered a very low sum for it because of the difficulty of
realising rents from such ryots.126 Yet none of the holdings listed by the deputy collector,
Benode Ram Sein, were of the kind ordinarily understood to be cultivable lands which might be
let out to better tenants immediately upon default in re venue-pay ments. The important point to
note about these tenancies was that each kind of land, residential (bastu) or non-residential
(garden) paid a rent (jumma) to the privy purse of the Nazim, albeit at a minimal rate. In other
words, slaves were not just the cultivators of individually owned lands (khas mehal), but
themselves the tenants of such lands. This pattern of tenancies of khas mehal lands, by which
lands were held by ‘Relations and Dependants of the family at low Rents and Profits were
appropriated to their own use’ was apparently a widespread phenomenon.127 A similar kind of
tenancy pattern for the khas lands of the Coorg royal household has been studied by
T.P.Vijaya.128 Though Vijaya represents the services and tasks (hitti-bitti-chakri) following upon
the holding of such tenures of land, the evidence from the Nizamut indicates that the relationship
was the inverse i.e. such tenures were granted precisely to those who were already slaves of the
household, and performed military, ceremonial and civil duties.
But did this mean that such slave-servants and officials had effective possession of these
lands and houses and wealth vis-a-vis their masters/mistresses? Though most individual civil
servants recognised that the relationship with immoveable property was consequent upon the
relationship between master and slave, the Company’s policy on these fluctuated widely. Both
‘Islamic law’ and the testamentary principles of English probate law were invoked according to
the fluctuating success of each attempt to bring the lands and wealth of the Nizamut into the
government treasury. Such efforts were particularly visible in the case of eunuch-held promissory
notes, lands, houses, and plate, as erupted in the eighteen fifties when the Nazim and the AGG,
H. Torrens appear to have cooperated in attempting to disgorge the wealth and ‘property of the
Nizamut’ from Nuzerali, another eunuch of the Nizamut, by putting guards over him.129 In this
126L.J.H. Grey to Commr. of Rev. for 14th Division, Berhampore, 8 Oct. 1838, MNLR, II, p.354,
enclosure 3 in no. 983.
l27Graham’s Minute on the Report of the Collr. of Dinajpur, BOR, Misc. (Wards), P/89/61, 7 July, 1795.
128T.P.Vijaya, ‘Honour in Chains: The Problem of hitti-bitti-chakri in Jamma Tenure in Coorg, 1800"
1939’, 1ESHR, 32, 2, 1995, pp. 135-53.
129For the details of the conflict, see Indian Records, pp. 112-25. For a subsequent Agent’s condemnation
of Torrens, see Colin Mackenzie to W.S. Seton Karr, 17 May 1861, BPC, P/127, July 1861, no.17; and
Mackenzie’s criticism of the Govt, of India, in his ‘Narrative or Precis o f the Affairs o f the Nizamut at
Moorshedabad’ in 1859. The publication of the latter drew Cecil Beadon, Secretary to GOI, to rebuke
Mackenzie for being an ‘unscrupulous advocate of claims on the Nawab’s behalf...to comment in a most
unbecoming and insubordinate manner on the acts of the late Governor General and of the Government of
India whom he serves’. For the Narrative and official response, see BPC, P/127/58, Oct. 1859, nos.3-6.
95
instance, a barrister trained in English law and practising in the Supreme Court in Calcutta, who
pleaded on behalf of Torrens, said of one particular slave-eunuch’s ‘possessions’ that
the use of a large portion of the property in the house where Nuzeer Ally Khan
lives, may have been, at any rate, tacitly, permitted to Nuzeer Ally ...though
without any gift being made, or any idea entering the Nawab’s mind that any
opposition would be made to his resuming possession whenever inclined to do
so.130
This observer, presumably trained to categorise acts and entities according to the precise and
quantifiable criteria of English law, knew that the relation to property followed upon, and was not
antecedent to, the relationship between people. It was this aspect - of the relationship between the
master and the servant - that others had also noted while compiling the lists of land-tenures. The
Agent, Melville, tried to indicate in his remarks the contingent nature of these possessions by these
words ‘Excepting the auction purchases specified the rest of the lands seem to have belonged to
the Nizamut to which they will revert on his death,’ against the eunuch Durab Ali Khan’s
name.131 Similarly, for Meean Sooltaun, he noted that ‘it seems to be a common custom in the
Nizamut to hold lands in the name of a Eunuch or servant tho’ the property by custom belongs
to the master....’132
The explanation offered for this peculiarity of Indian revenue - records, offered by the
masters themselves, was that no Nazim, or sovereign ruler, could engage in commerce - whether
the selling and purchasing of land or of other articles of trade like manufactured goods or even
of raw materials - without loss of honour and dignity. Yet others ventured as a reason for these
‘fictitious Registries’ the desire to ‘protect the Nizamut family from the inconvenience and
humiliation of attendance at the local Courts, which a Registration of Landed Properties in their
own names, and the consequent responsibility of Proprietorship, might sometimes necessitate’.133
Besides, this was a widespread practice generally, and the Nazims were no innovators in this
regard: writing the name of a dependent against the earnings from a particular tenure in land,
called ‘benamee’ was only shared by the Nizamut. Thus in 1851, it was found that certain estates
in Midnapore stood ‘in the name of Meer Saduk Ali and Mirza Hossein Ali dead now but
originally benamee for His Highness the Nuwab Nazim’ and these had been farmed to Lewis Teiry
of a Calcutta firm, Messrs. Watson and Company, by the AGG, Torrens,134 without the
130John Newmarch to Torrens, 25 May 1852, MNLI, II, pp.727-29. Emphasis added.
l31Enclosure A in AGG Melville to W.H. Macnaghten, Secy, to GOB, 20 Jan. 1837, MNLI, II, p.55.
I33D. J. Money, Judge, Diwani Adalut, Murshidabad, to B. J. Colvin, Register of Sadr Diwani Adalut,
16 April 1852, ibid., p. 721.
134Seton Karr to Major Lang, Officiating Agent, 1 July 1851, ibid., pp. 664-65.
96
authorisation of the Government. However, Torrens later claimed that the two eunuchs Nuzerali
Khan and Aman Ali Khan had procured the transfer of the Nazim’s landed property in Midnapore
and in the Sundarbuns to Nuzerali Khan on the grounds of ‘consideration of an adjustment of
claims on the Nizamut’ in order to eject Teiry. The eunuchs declared Teiry’s sunud a forgery, and
allied with the zamindar of Takee, Bykunthonath Rai Chaudhuri, promising him ‘the Dewanee of
the Nizamut as the price of his assistance’.135 In the same vein, the attorneys of Teiry
complained that specific numbers of Government promissory notes, bearing interest rates of 4-5%,
had been ‘purchased’ by Nuzerali Khan but that the purchase - money had not been paid to their
client.136
Were these eunuchs acting for themselves, or were they acting only in the capacity of
agents, holding benamee, lands that effectively belonged to the Nazims and the Begums? On what
basis then did various civil servants attempt to adjudicate the inheritance of the ‘possessions’ of
the eunuchs after their decease? Clearly complicit in the conflicts between slaves and masters over
the allottment of revenue, goods, or the management thereof (the peculium) the Company’s
decisions fluctuated according to the size of the wealth purported to have ‘belonged’ to the slaves,
which slaves administered and from which in turn they were maintained by the household,
especially in the case of important and visibly powerful slaves like the eunuchs. As one Nazim
elucidated
it has been the custom that the Property of the Chelas should go to the nazim...At
the time that Bussunt Ulee Khan was bought as a slave, he was poor and had no
property but Numma Manee Begum having made him Nazir over her household
and having given him all the Property of Yatbar Ulee Khan Khoja who was
formerly Nazir, he became possessed of a great deal of money during the time he
belonged to the household and was the slave of Nummah Munee Begum.137
By this reckoning, the wealth of the slave was a temporary endowment by a mistress, (who had
herself been an umm-i-walad), of the capacity to improve and manage resources on the condition
that such a capacity ended naturally with the physical death of the slave, or the will of the
mistress. Since capacities could not be passed in the blood-line where there were no biological
heirs, nor could the material wealth held by the eunuch. Conversely, one slave after another could
be endowed with the same capacity, through the transfer of the office, salary, or wealth {peculium)
of a predecessor to a successor in the same post. This mode of transferring the peculia from one
slave to another however meant that ultimate direction, and the final fruits of such grants, were
the masters’.
l36Attornies at Law (Illegible in original) & Barron, to H. Torrens, 6 May 1852, ibid., p. 725.
137From the Nawab Nazim to Lord Bentinck, 29 Jan. 1834 in Extract Poll. Cons. 6 Feb. 1834, no. 106,
BC F/4/1522/60090A.
97
l38For complaints of Gurudas against these two men see CPC, IV, no. 297, p. 57; no. 355, p. 68; no.
947, p. 169.
four miles from the Killah,141 a removal that deeply offended Munni Begum.142 The investment
by the Governors-General and the Company’s government, in the building of a new Palace from
the 1820s, thus had small but significant beginnings in the early nineteenth century itself.
Disputed successions both in the outer court and to the inner court, and the possibility of
minor males as Nazims, became ideal bargaining counters for finalising the rupture, a policy
whose culmination was visible with the accession of the Nazim Faridunjah in 1838. The events
which led up to this coup for the Company had had their origin in the refusal of the gaddinashin
Begum, Nujeebunissa, to refuse to acknowledge the obeisance of two children whom the Nazim
Humayunjah claimed to have ‘reared’ as his own, one of whom he intended to nominate as his
successor. Nujeebunissa, following the tradition of Munni Begum and a pattern of complaint
carrying deep symbolic resonances, accused the Nazim of having sexual relations with a slave
woman who had been both a concubine of his father, as well as the wet-nurse of the nazim when
he was an infant.143 The Nazim, in her view, had infringed both the moral and the political order
: abusing the bonds of milk, and dishonouring the sanctity of his father by dishonouring his
concubine. Elder males, like Roshunud Daula - a son of the Nazim Mubarak ud Daulah I and an
uncle of two successive nazims - appeared to have reinforced the opposition of the gaddinashin
to the succession of the boy chosen by Humayunjah. The Company’s investigation into this
completed by Sept 1836, it recognised the intended heir as ‘legitimate’ but followed it up with the
condition that he be educated outside the zenana.144 From 1838 therefore when the 9-year-old
Fureedunjah ascended the musnud, a military officer was appointed as the Superintendent of the
Nazim’s Education. Captain G. D. Showers, the first to hold this office, did not have a clear brief,
and appears to have clashed constantly with the AGG, General Raper. Yet both men were
completely agreed on the need to detach the Nazim from his mother Raisunissa (formerly Sahib
Jan, the slave-girl of Motee Taifadar), and to thus further severe the ties that bound the polity
together as a whole. By 1841, Showers had compiled a list of days on which the 12-year-old
Nazim would be allowed to visit his mother and stay with her at night, and a separate list for those
l42See her note to Pattle, reed. 17 May 1810, saying that Babar Ali over ‘the last two years and a half...
acted in opposition to my will...removed from the Killah which was near my residence and went to live at
Nishat Bagh and Furrukh B agh\ BC F/4/312/7144.
l43Translated letter from Nujeebunissa Begum of 29 Rubeeus Sanee 1247 Hijri in BC F/4/1456/57367.
For the symbolic significance of such a charge see F. W. Buckler, T he Human Khilat’, The Near East and
India, 34, 903, 6 Sept. 1928, pp. 411-22. Buckler had urged that the possession of the king’s last wife or
concubine constituted the capture of succession to the kingship, and ‘going unto one’s father’s concubine’
the prelude to taking over the kingdom.
144AGG Melville to W.H. Macnaghten, 23 Sept. 1836, BPC, P/127/33, 4 Oct. 1836, no.2, and P/127/38,
18 April 1838, no. 1.
99
days when he would be allowed to go to the Killah but would have to return to the Mubaruk
Munzil.145 This separation was not carried into effect ‘without some opposition’ on the part of
the ruling matriarch, Raisunissa: Raper complacently expected that ‘the angry feelings which she
now entertains will yield to a just sense of the propriety’ of such arrangements.146 By 1843, the
Nazim’s sleeping in his mother’s deori was discontinued.147 In thus fragmenting the unit of rule,
the degradation of the harem into a narrowly defined social space was hastened. The Company
thus presided over the materialisation of a fantasy in Murshidabad: the harem henceforth figured,
especially in the eyes of the British officials and administrators, as the site of debauchery,
profligacy, poverty and crime. To this re-invented harem, the site of the social as it was apparently
divorced from the political, we will turn shortly. However, before doing this, we should note that
in displacing the mothers, the Agents themselves began to take over the political role of the
mothers. The rubicon was crossed in 1843, when the AGG Raper tried to initiate a marriage
alliance between the Nazim and a daughter of the King of Awadh (and was snubbed by the
latter).148 The Company had indeed come a long way from the time of Cornwallis when despite
being pressed by a Mughal queen to negotiate a marriage with the household of the nazim
Mubarakud Daula, it had tactfully refrained from doing so. However, there was another significant
departure that Raper had attempted - the transformation of the marriage-strategies of the Nizamut.
To understand both these shifts - the delimitation of the harem from a political to a social
universe, and the attempt to steer changes within that social universe, we must look more closely
in our next chapter at the weaving of ‘Islamic’ law in the hands of British officials as they came
face to face with the contribution of slaves to the creation of kinship - networks.
From 1765, when the servants of the East India Company sought to legitimate their choice
of allies and the Company’s involvement in the ‘revolution’ in Bengal, issues of lineage politics
were important to its overall justifications. Thus Vansittart, explaining his choice of Mir Qasim,
the son-in-law of the deposed Mir Jafar, as the Nazim, wrote that the death of Miran removed the
heir-apparent of the government. Mir Jafar, Vansittart, the Governor, wrote, ‘had two sons by
concubines, and a grandson, the child of his deceased son, by a concubine also; the eldest of his
two sons was little above ten years old, and his grandson an infant of a few months, so that they
were incapable of taking care of the business, supposing the objection of their illegitimacy to be
of no weight’.1 Apparently rooted in Western European notions of genealogy, this view of
succession in the Nizamut ellided multiple and discrete issues into one - the issues of status
inheritance (slave/non-slave), filiation and marriage. Notions of legitimacy, rested on the presence
or absence of a marital compact or ritual within the jurisdiction of the Church. The jural status
(slave/free) of the persons in the compact was only implicit, especially in the English colonies, and
there too, by default. In a legal framework, where children born of a Church-sanctioned union
alone were deemed heirs and participated in the patrimony, children born from slave-concubines
domesticated without sacral rites were comprehended both in official language as well as in
colonial practice by terms such as ‘natural’ or ‘illegitimate’. Thus when such terminology was
used to comprehend and inscribe relationships within the Nizamut, the consequence was the
creation of Islamic law within the ideological and legal parameters of English colonial imperatives
and practice.2
The Company’s civil servants in trying to translate the multiple levels at which slave
women could be incorporated within a household, not only displaced a refinement of jural status,
but also considerably simplified and reconstructed ‘Islamic law’. Thus an English official
sympathetic to the claims of the slave-born sons of the Attia (Mymensingh) zamindar reported that
though the mother of the claimants was a ‘kunneez or slave or female servant... this is a difference
of no consequence to the cause as by the Muhammadan Law legitimate and illegitimate sons are
’Henry Vansittart, A Narrative o f the Transactions in Bengal from the year 1760 to the year 1764,
during the Government o f Mr. Henry Vansittart (London 1766), I, p.40.
2For an example of this application, see AGG Cobbe to Sec. to GOB, Macnaghten, 24 June 1835, BPC,
P/127/28, 27 June 1835, no. 12. Cobbe spelt out the applicability of term ‘illegitimate’ to children who were
‘the offspring of khowassen or concubines’ not taken under any form of marriage.
101
3J. Duncan, Preparer of Reports at the Khalsa, to Revenue Dept., 24 Feb. 1783, BRC, P/50/44, 25 Feb.
1783, no. 28.
4Sec. to GOB to Suptdt. of Mysore Princes, Caulfield, 19 July 1836, BPC, P/127/32, 19 July 1836, no.
20 .
Enclosure no. 1, Nawab Tuhower Jung to Sec. to Govt., reed. 22 Aug. 1835, BPC, P/127/29, 10 Sept.
1835, nos. 30-31. The questions submitted for the opinion of learned men begins with the claim to the slave
girl: ‘If a person cohabits with a slave girl belonging to another individual...’. In an accompanying statement,
no. 3, Tuhower Jung went on to show that the slave girl had been purchased by his mother for twelve
rupees, and subsequently placed at the service of his sibling. This document is a classic description of the
modes in which children born of slaves were ‘reared’ as children of the ‘house’, and selectively made
‘heirs’.
f’Nawab Roshunud Daula and Nawab Zoolficar Ali Khan to the Governor- General, reed. 20 Jan. 1835,
IPP, P/193/70, 5 March 1835, no.172. This was apparently common knowledge, judging by articles in the
contemporary press, vide Moorshedabad News, 13 Oct. 1838, and Daily News, 9 Oct. 1838.
102
elsewhere...then an allowance is fixed for her food and clothing... [they] had no
longer the power of going to their former mistresses.7
Explicating a code in which the proximity of a slave-woman to the Nazim was marked out by the
degree to which she partook of the spatial and social seclusion that characterised his person, such
petitions could not be reduced to the ‘legal’ framework that officials tried to bind them within.
Once in 1835-6, and again in the 1870s, investigations were conducted on directives lifted out of
an apparently theological framework. Thus Macnaghten, as Secretary for the newly constituted
Government of India, directed that one of the points of enquiry in the case of the child claimed
by the Nazim was to be the existence of
any proof that the Mother of the Child was united to him by any of the forms of
marriage in use among that sect of Mahommedans to which the Nawab Nazim
belongs, or was the child bom under such circumstances as to warrant his being
claimed by the Nuwab Nazim as his offspring.8
Set against the broad formulaic enunciation of Company officials regarding Islamic law and the
‘legitimacy’ of the slave-born, the attempt to distinguish among the children and the women
according to differing ‘legal’ compact then appeared to have formed the heart of a contradiction
in colonial policies. This contradiction, however, was manifest in the official and non-official
adjudication of the very material and fiscal claims of such persons upon the Company, the ultimate
dispenser of funds.
Contemporary Meanings vs. Classical Prescriptions: Marriage, Slave-Status and Islamic Law
Almost the first test of genealogical descent became, in the eyes of the Company’s officials, the
kind of compact or marriage, that a child was born of, and a woman was taken under. Thus the
conflict between Burke and Hastings, around the accession of Munni Begum to the Regency of
Murshidabad revolved around the absence of a compact for Munni Begum which could be called
marriage in Burke’s terms, and the apparent presence of such a ‘legal ’compact and status for
Babbu Begum. Yet the issue was more complex than the presence or otherwise of marriage
compacts, it was the meaning of terms denoting marriage itself, and the attendant category of
‘contract’. Claims of marriage did exist: in the certificate issued to Clive in 1767 for the five lakhs
7Abstract trans. of letter of Nawab Roshunud Daula, 10 Bysack 1243 B.S./ 22 April 1836 in IPP,
P/194/16, 1 Aug. 1836, no. 89.
8Macnaghten to Commr. for Murshidabad Division, 5 March 1835, IPP, P/193/70, no. 173. For an
illuminating discussion by the Commission of Enquiry (Oldfield, Macleod, and Melville) of the
inapplicability of ‘Islamic law’ as constituted by Macnaghten’s Principles of Moohummudan Law, see Report
of 14 July 1836, IPP, P/194/15, 1 Aug. 1836, no. 81. W. H. Macnaghten, the son of Francis Adam
Macnaghten, an English lawyer who had served in the Supreme Court in Calcutta, derived his ‘principles’
from the cases, the ‘precedents’, that were submitted to the Qazi and muftis in the Sadr Diwani Adalut
between 1814 and 1824, during which term he was the Register of the Court.
103
of rupees in money and effects, Munni Begum had reported the deceased Mir Jafar to have
instructed her to distribute the remainder of his effects ‘after your marriage settlement is paid’.9
Another petition of 1770 says that ‘30 Years prior to this, Meer Mohamed Jaffier Cawn when he
as Buckshy enter’d with me into the bonds of Matrimony, & entrusted Me with the whole
Authority over the Mehal Serai...’.10
The question was broader than the existence of a marriage-settlement between Jafar and
Munni (and the consequences in law); the real issue was the intersection of vernacular terms and
local contracts with classical textual prescriptions and the ability of both the Company and the
members of the Nizamut to manoeuvre the nodal points of this intersection. The significance of
these terms and contracts lay in their contravention of classical prescriptions.
In the compilation of decrees known as the Futwa-i Alamgiri, as well as traditions passed
on about the life of the Prophet, one of the major bars to marriage was slave status. It seems to
be a matter of some doubt whether this prohibition was part of an older practice, having less to
do with law than to do with honour.11 On the other hand, if there were no religio-juridical
prohibition upon marrying one’s slave, how close was the adherence with the Quranic injunction
to masters to manumit their slaves before marrying them? Clearly, much hinges on how marriage
is conceptualised in a specific historical conjuncture. If sexual alliances with slaves were
represented within a grid of polysemous terms like marriage, did the consequences of these
relations differ in law and in practice from the consequences of isogamous or homogamous unions,
where like was married to like?
The problem in assessing the situation in Bengal was the wide difference in the way the
same word represented different meanings in the vernacular and the classical texts, like nikah.
Genealogies submitted in a dispute in the 8-annas share in the Attia zamindari in Mymensingh in
1778 describe a male ancestor of the house as having four wives, two by nikah and two by sheady
[shadi\.n Another man in the next generation in the same family, Khoda Nawaz Khan, was
described by another as having a relation with a slave-woman of ‘that kind of marriage called
‘■Translated Document Under the Seal of Meny [sic] Begum, BPubC, P/1/41, 20 January, 1767, p. 62.
10Progs. of the Controlling Council of Revenue at Murshidabad, 3-31 December 1770, in Walter K.
Firminger (ed,), The Letter Copy Books of the Resident at the Durbar at Murshidabad, 1769-1770 (Calcutta,
1919), II, pp. 95-96.
uSee story of the marriage of the sister of a slave by a Sultan in H. M. Elliott and J. Dowson, The
History o f India as Told by Its Own Historians: The Muhammadan Period (London, 1871), III, p. 184.
12Enclosed in Council of Revenue at Dacca to W. Hastings and Council at Fort William, BRC, P/50/8,
3 Feb. 1778, no. 110A.
104
13Deposition of Ramkunt, 15 May 1781, in F. Gladwin, Collr. of Silberris to J. Duncan, 22 June 1781,
BRC, P/50/44, 25 Feb. 1783, no. 28.
14F. Gladwin, A Dictionary o f Mohammedan Law and o f Bengal Revenue Terms with a Vocabulary,
Persian and English (Calcutta, 1797), p. 38.
,5N. B. E. Baillie, Digest o f Moohummudan Law, on the Subjects to which it is usually applied by
British Courts o f Justice in India, (London, 1865), I, p.l, fn 1 specifies that though ‘nikah’ is the proper and
distinctive name of marriage,‘in Bengal it is restricted to what is deemed an inferior kind of marriage, in
opposition to shadee which properly means joy or festivity but is commonly applied to the first or principal
marriage, usually celebrated with festivities and a good deal of expense’.
l6Cited in William Sloan (ed.), Macnaghten’s Principles and Precedents (London, 1860), note, p.479.
I use this citation for two reasons: one, as proof of the British jurists’ awareness of divergences between
classical texts and practice, which thus complicates their imposition of ‘correspondence’. My inability to find
the original version of Herklots’ translation is the second. A heavily revised and re-arranged edition, by
William Crooke, published in 1921, omits this sentence altogether.
,7John Malcolm, A Memoir o f Central India, including Malwa, and Adjoining Provinces (London, 1823,
reprint Delhi, 1970), I, note on p. 368.
105
the divergent status of nikah and beah, or shadi. For example, we hear from Dinajpore of a man
whose wife by beah remained in her parent’s house, while his wife by nikah lived with him.18
Much more explicit was the charge laid by a woman from Purneah against a man who ‘proposed
to take her daughter in marriage by nikah but that she had as often refused compliance with his
wishes, stipulating that if he wished to make her daughter his wife he must marry her in the proper
and regular manner’.19 The same distinction is sought to be warned against in one of the tracts
issuing from the nascent movement to classicise Islam in Bengal in mid-century, in which Mullah
Samiraddin says,
Shonore Allahr banda nekar khabar
Shadi nahi kahe ketab bhetor...
Nekar bay an Allah apani koyechhe.20
(O believers, hear the description of nikah
The Book says nothing of shadi
Allah himself described nikah).
Such comments suggest that the meanings of terms like nikah were in flux throughout the
first half of the nineteenth century; a flux that came from the tension between the practice of
slave-holders and the prescriptions of texts. The differential between contemporary, contingent,
vernacular meanings and classical textual prescription and form appears to have permeated the
interpretations of those very muftis and maulvis employed by the Company to be the
spokespersons of an uniform theological or canonical interpretation. Not only were there
significant differences between maulvis and muftis attached to provincial courts and those of the
Sadr Diwani Adalut, there were differences over time within each of the groups of ‘law officers’
on these issues. Despite the propensity of English collectors and magistrates to reduce issues of
filiation to issues of legitimacy when submitting questions to the muftis in the Sadr Diwani Adalut,
the answers of the latter revealed layers of subtlety and attempts to understand classical injunction
in terms of local practice. For instance, in one such contest where the law officers were asked to
state the requisite forms of nikah (which one claimant of the half-share attributed to his mother
and three other slave-women of a zamindar called Jafur Ali in Seriaul pergunnah of Mymensingh),
the maulvis’ answers revealed a greater flexibility than the format of the questions allowed. After
setting down the requirements of reciprocal ejaub-o-kubool (declaration and consent) the
18Government vs. Gookoora Nusho, in Report of Cases Determined in the Court o f Nizamut Adawlut,
(henceforth RNA), 1853, III, Pt. I, (Calcutta, 1854), p.393.
19Musst. Guleeah vs. Syed Babar Ali and Musst. Najoo in RNA, 1852, II, pt. I, (Calcutta, 1853),
p.544.
2()Maulvi Samiruddin, Bedar Ghafelin (Calcutta, 1877), p. 88. For a historical study of the movement,
see Rafiuddin Ahmed, The Bengal Muslims 1871-1906 : A Quest for Identity (Delhi, 1988).
106
witnessing by two free, adult and sane men, or one man and two women with the same
qualifications, the maulvis said,
Modern lawyers have, on prudential grounds, held marriage with slave girls to be
advisable,... With respect to ostensible slave girls, bought in times of scarcity, at
a low price, from Moohummudans or infidel subjects, and kept for concubinage,
there is a doubt as to the legality of their embrace; wherefore marriage with them
to ensure the lawfulness of it, has been held preferable.21
The maulvis’ validation of marriage (not concubinage) with slave-girls appears to have been an
attempt to reconcile practice in the eighteenth century with the classical textual requirements and
meanings of nikah. Were all sexual relations with slave-women then assimilable to one form of
cohabitation - nikah? The attempt to cut through the complexity of practice by some kind of
standardisation, evinced by the moulvis earlier, flowed back into the translations authored by the
Company’s jurists. For instance, N. B. E. Baillie’s translation of the Futwa-i-Alumgiri tried to
assimilate this difference by aligning it with the different kinds of compacts allowed by different
schools of Islamic doctrinal law. Thus he wrote that the chief difference between different kinds
of marriage was the length of the ‘contract’ that earned it the name of ‘nikah’: to cite him,
according to the Hanifites, the contract must be for the life of the parties, or the
woman be the slave of the man: and it is only to a relation founded on a contract
for life that they give the name of nikah or marriage. According to the Sheeas, the
contract may be temporary, or for life, and it is not necessary that the slave should
be the actual property of the man; for it is sufficient if the usufruct of her person
be temporarily surrendered to him by her owner. To a relation established in any
of these ways they give the name of nikah or marriage; which is thus...of three
kinds; permanent, temporary, and servile.22
This usufructuary compact had a specific nomenclature; it was known colloquially as mutaa and
technically as nikah-i-mutoot. This was characterised by the fixing of a term (for so many months)
or the fixing of a sum (for so much) prior to the establishing of the relationship and closely
resembled hire lease arrangements in practice. The recognition of this compact in Shia doctrine
did not endow the children born of it, or the woman thus taken, with the rights of inheritance23 -
precisely because title to this woman was not permanently established in the progenitor. Sunni
doctrine, on the other hand, while holding to the invalidity of this form, decreed that the blood-tie
Cnasb) of the child of this union was established in the man, and by implication to the category
2lSee Gholam Husun Ali vs. Zeinub Beebee (on the p art of her son, Himmut Ali) in Report o f Cases
Determined in the Court o f Sudder Dewanny Adawlut, 1791-1811, (ed. W. H. Macnaghten, Calcutta, 1827),
I, pp. 48-52.
22N. B. E. Baillie, Digest o f Moohummudan Law, Containing the doctrines o f the Imameea Code of
Jurisprudence on The Most Important o f The Same Subjects, (London, 1865, this edition 1869), II, pp. xiv-
xv. Emphasis added.
of heirs.
For both Shias and Sunnis in Bengal in the first half of the nineteenth century, the relation
between the slave woman and a man, either her master or one chosen by her master or mistress,
could be comprehended within the term nikah. Therefore, it is probable that Quranic proscription
notwithstanding, Islamic legal practice of the late eighteenth century and later did not insist on the
manumission of the female slave prior to ‘marriage’, for marriage itself included the relationship
with the slave in ordinary parlance. Yet all wives were not slaves, just as all female slaves did not
become wives/concubines of their masters, or the males of the households in which they were
incorporated. The same stratification that existed within professions and skills within slave-based
households characterised the stratification among ‘wives’. The children born of each kind of wife
in turn had access to differential honours and privileges, claims and exemptions. The latter, most
visible when the issues of inheritance of land, honorific titles or powers were concerned, was also
in keeping with the concern that legal doctrine in pre-Islamic Arabia had with kafa’a, roughly
translated as equality of birth and social status especially in reproductive relationships. According
to Lewis, this had its antecedents in tribal custom and was not sanctioned by the Quran; yet, it
survived and became part of the holy law of Islam with different schools modifying the constituent
features of kafa’a rather than overthrowing the whole principle.24
Secondly, where the Quran and legal opinion concurred about emancipation for a female
slave, it was as a consequence of such a relationship: when a slave had borne a child to her
master which he acknowledged, she became his um-i-walad, the mother of his child, a status that
ensured, in theory, her immunity to further sales and entitled her to emancipation at his death.25
However, these privileges were also contested by the different schools. The Hanifites considered
these permanent but the Imameeas held that the exemption from sale was restricted to the life of
the child if she had borne a child to the master, and her title to emancipation was at the expense
of her child’s share in the master’s estate; where the child’s father had only the usufructuary right
in the mother, she did not acquire the status of the um-i-walad because the claim of her original
owner upon her continued.
24Bernard Lewis, Race and Slavery in the Middle East: An Historical Enquiry (New York, 1990), pp.
85-86.
25For a study of the impact of such shared codes on the sales of pregnant slaves, see Ehud R. Toledano,
‘Slave Dealers, Women, Pregnancy, and Abortion: The Story of a Circassian Slave-Girl in Mid-Nineteenth
Century Cairo’, Slavery and Abolition, 2, 1, 1981, pp. 53-68.
108
followers of Ithna Ashari (followers of the twelve Imams) Shi’ism, at the same time that canonical,
public prayers were conducted according to the Sunni traditions associated with the
acknowledgement of the supremacy of the Mughal Emperor. In the early years after the
establishment of the Diwani, the Company’s servants did not need to distinguish between the
different schools of Islamic law applicable to the members of the Nizamut, till Munni Begum’s
countenance to the ‘change in the Established forms of Mahomedan worship’ in 1810-11 caused
a certain group of Sunni inhabitants of Murshidabad to protest about the ‘alteration of the form
of prayer’ sanctioned by the ‘King of Delhi, which has always prevailed in Hindoostan, and which
in fact he is bound as Nazim to maintain’.26 Notwithstanding the general willingness of the
Company officialdom to follow Munni Begum’s directions in most matters pertaining to the
Nizamut, the Governor-General intimated to her the intention of upholding the Sunni law since
it was the one ‘by which the decisions of the Courts of Justice when under the superintendence
of the Nabobs of Bengal and since that time, under the authority of the British Government have
been regulated in all causes’.27 Yet not only was the Company’s intervention in the maintenance
of Sunni law and canonical worship a political necessity, Munni Begum’s own response showed
little theological dogmatism. Accordingly, where she had required the Sunnis in Murshidabad to
perform their prayers ‘under the fly of a tent’ at the periphery of the Nizamut masjid, on being
handed over the letter from the Governor General, she ‘waived her objection to the ceremony
being performed in the Musjid’.28
This apparent divide between personal faith and leadership of public prayers lay at the
heart of the problem, given the fluidity and complexity of faith and ritual practices in the Nizamut.
For apart from the syncretic Behra festival, when illuminated paper boats were floated on the
Bhagirathi in homage to Khwaja Khizr to guard the waterways and protect travellers, there were
many indications that underneath a formal Shi’ism, many life-cycle rituals were non-classical. For
instance, alongside references to circumcision ceremonies of young boys were references to
horoscopes prepared by ‘Hindu’ astrologers at the birth of a child.29 The birth of a child,
especially to a slave-concubine favourite of the ruling male, was prefaced by the huftmasih and
nehmasih - ritual offerings of sweetmeats among all relations and friends in the seventh and ninth
26G. Swinton, Dy .Persian Sec. to Govt., to R. Rocke, Superintendent of Nizamut Affairs, 18 Dec. 1810,
Murshidabad Nizamut: Letters Issued (ed. J. Datta Gupta and S. K. Bose, Calcutta, 1965), (henceforth
MNLI), I, pp. 37-8.
28R. Rocke to Persian Sec., 3 Jan. 1811, BPC, P/119/24, 19 Jan. 1811, no. 97.
months of pregnancy, common to all communities in Bengal.30 Similarly, among funerary rites
were noted ‘gift to a Brahmin’, and in the case of a Nazim’s corpse in 1824, the ‘custom of the
family to wash the body in the Ganges previous to its being carried to the M usjid’.31 The lack
of correspondence between the faith/customs of the household and the public law it upheld formed
the first obstacle in the Company’s fulfillment of the commitment of 1773 to administer issues of
inheritance and succession in the Nizamut according to Islamic law.
However, the terms of that guarantee also relegated the maintenance of Islamic law to the
sphere of the ‘domestic’ alone - that is to issues of marriage and succession - and thus undercut
the political link between Islamic law and the ruler. This in turn set up a grave political and
philosophical issue for the Company - the imagined relationship between canonical law and
temporal sovereignty (state). Was the Nazim then a ‘domestic’ ‘private’ person to whom Islamic
law was applicable, or was he a sovereign prince beyond the jurisdiction of the Company’s law-
courts? Furthermore, in a household-polity where Shia, Sunni and syncretist elements coexisted,
by what criteria were ‘marriages’ and ‘contracts’ to be assessed?
3()See evidence of Zummurood Ali Khan, eunuch Nazir of Amerunissa Begum, 2 May 1836, and of
Darab Ali Khan, Eunuch Nazir of Nazim Humayunjah, 4 May 1836, IPP, P/194/15, 1 Aug. 1836, no. 84.
Yet, this acceptance was a product not of the understanding of the political rituals that
incorporated slave-women and their children into the Nizamut but on a degradation of the polity,
33Ali Kadr to the Agent to the Governor-General, 4 April 1877, BPC, P/1168, Jan. 1878, File 17 B, nos.
28-9.
34Enclosed in J.Caulfeild, AGG, to the Nazim, 26 June, 1838, MNLI, II, pp.210-11. Emphasis added.
35H. C. Cockerell, Offg. Sec. to GOB, to Sec. to GOI, Foreign Dept., 31 Dec. 1877, BPC, P/1168, Jan.
1878, 17B, no. 30.
Ill
of the ossification of the canonical meaning of nikah, the privileging of contract, and of a
reconstructed ‘Islamic’ law. In the earlier part of the nineteenth century, the Company’s agents and
servants did attempt to represent the social world of the Nizamut in textual ‘Islamic’ terms. The
premise of such attempts was the separation of the political from the ‘domestic’ realm, and the
subsequent judgement of the latter in terms of the failure of canonical prescription. Thus, an
official commented on the mother of the child of one of the uncles that it was ‘doubtful whether
the connection that subsisted between the Nuwab and these two females ever received any formal
sanction, but in this respect they are on a par with the majority of the Ladies attached to the
Nizamut, and may therefore, agreeable to custom, be termed munkoohas’.36
As the particularity of the taxonomy employed suggests, the British residents dealing with
the affairs of the Nizamut had been trained in the course of their studies in Persian and Arabic
especially for the political-judicial service of the Company. Their representation of these unions
in strictly textual terms could not adequately explain the lack of convergence between the textual
prescriptions of status - bestowing formal nikah and the differential in practice. In using this
taxonomy, therefore, some recognised the customary and local meanings of terms which had
classical textual equivalents. For example, an official deputed by the Government to Murshidabad,
having described a woman as a ‘munkooa widow’ then noted in the margin for his political
superior that
a munkooa wife is a wife of inferior rank, with whom the Ties of Marriage have
been regularly performed, but without expense, or the observance of those external
forms, which under the denomination of Shadee are customary on a public
marriage, and which imply equality of rank between the parties marrying.37
If ‘mankooha’ denoted an inferior wife, did the slave-concubine merit another nomenclature?
According to some agents they were to be called mumtooah by nikah and yet other slaves who had
been hired for a specific term were to be called concubines ‘by nikah o ’mutah\ 38 This official
then went on to clarify that ‘mumtooah described to me as a temporary compact inferior to nika,
and renewable at the pleasure of the male party.’ Yet this very taxonomy suggested the problem
such officials were mired within - the presumption that specific kinds of textual compacts were
the criteria of social rank.
The search for particular forms of canonical ritual rather than the complex hierarchies of
jural and political status that made specific women subject to these rituals and contracts, led most
36C.Thoresby to Macnaghten, 5 Dec. 1833, BPC, 19 Dec. 1833, no. 100 in BC F/4/1475/57976.
37AAGG Monckton to C. Lushington, Sec. to Govt., 23 Sept. 1817, BPC, P/120/72, 10 Oct. 1817, no.
36.
38See list in Superintendent of Nizamut Affairs to Persian Sec., 7 July, 1809, BPC, P/118/43, 15 July
1809, nos. 65-66.
112
civil servants to extremely detailed investigations into the ceremonies and compacts under which
each woman was incorporated. Such investigations were of importance mainly when it came to
recognition of particular males’ or females’ rights and claims to titles, honours and fiscal claims.
On the occasion upon which Ali Kadr’s statement was taken, there had been a full investigation
of the status of his mother revolving entirely upon the form of the ceremony of nikah. The Agent,
J. Muir, asked the mother of the reigning Nazim whether the position of the late Mehr-lakha
Begum was that of munkooah or mumtood, to which she replied that though she knew nothing
from personal knowledge, it
is the custom in the family on the occasion of a nika to send garlands, scents, and
pan round to all. It was on these appearing, and my inquiring of the nazir
(eunuch) of my deorhee, Firoz Ali Khan, why they had been sent, that he told me
they had come in consequence of the nika of the nawab Nazim with Husseena...
another reason why I gathered he had entered into nika with her and Mujleh
Saheb’s and Amir Saheb’s mothers is, that it is only the custom to give the "nath"
[...] and "baina" [...] to Munkooahs; and much later, when the Nawab Nazim
brought all three to me to present their nuzzers, they all three were wearing those
ornaments. This was before the shadi (marriage) with Nawab Shumsejehan
Begum.39
As this evidence showed, the marriages of males of the Nizamut combined apparently
homogamous (like with like) unions called shadi, alongside unions with those considered
‘outsiders’, with whom different arrangements like nikah and mutah occurred. The problem
however lay in the constant movement of statuses among such wives. Even the homogamy of
particular marriages was in fact a consequence of the political role of the mother, or senior
matriarch, in every male’s life. Where a non-slave woman was involved, marriage entailed bilateral
obligations and a certain amount of ceremonial deference not just to the equal status wife but also
to the household from which she came. A first generation slave-wife or concubine did not carry
with her identical political aspirations that the family of a woman of the indigenous elite might
have entertained, or the political leverage that they might attempt to exert. Yet it was in order to
generate similar kinds of claims that each gaddinashin Begum of a deori ‘reared’ slave-girls, who
would then be ‘given’ in marriage to a particular nazim or other male of the household. Therefore,
each Nazim’s, and other males’, access to homogamous wives was predicated upon the processes
of filiation and social reproduction within the harem.40
39Cited in Report by W.J.W.Muir, 4 May 1877, BPP, P/1168, Jan. 1878, File 17B, nos. 28-9, Appendix
B.
4t)For a suggestion that this was parallelled in non-Islamic hegemons’ ‘marriage’ strategies, see P. C.
Mahtab, ‘The Bengal Nobles: A Status Group, 1911-19’, BPP, 92, 1973, pp. 26-7. He notes that brides of
‘lesser’ status, ‘made to lose all basic connections with their previous relatives and friends... grew from near
infancy to womanhood in their bridegrooms’ homes’. With reference to the Tripura ruling household, he
notes that ‘taking new-born female children into the household’, and rearing them as kaccha brides,
113
In looking for the textual pre-requisites of marriage, British Agents were not just misled
by the apparent coherence and applicability of a particular terminology, but also evinced no desire
to challenge the modes by which specific heads of mehals stood forth as the social mothers and
patrons of the slave-mothers and slave-born sons and daughters. In fact, officials even
recommended that one concubine’s daughter, Hussainee, be separated from the birth-mother - ‘a
Woman of 111 repute’- and be placed ‘under charge’ of the ‘legal wife’ of one of the sons of a
previous Nazim.41 The Government of Bengal though aware that such a measure might be
objectionable, suggested that the ‘family... find means of reconciling her to the surrender of the
child’ 42 This kind of patronage was based upon the ability of each head of a mehal to nurture
and rear a pool of ‘kinless’ beings who owed allegiance to the head alone and constituted a part,
as well as gauge of, the wealth and power of each head of deori. As the memorial of one head of
the Dacca mehalsarai put it in 1843, ‘in the families of natives of rank especially in harems a
number of females are maintained who have either lost their natural protectors or from other
misfortunes are entitled to the commiseration of the charitable’ 43
As in Dacca, so in the Nizamut mehalserai, the means by which many of these infant and
young females could be accumulated included both purchase and birth from such purchased girls.
As can be inferred from a letter of the AGG to the Chief Magistrate of Calcutta regarding a girl
named Mobaruck Kudum found in the deori of Ameerunissa Doolhin Begum,44 the anxiety of
the Agent that she would not be able to identify her relatives in Calcutta was the only clue to the
possible infancy of the girl when she had been sold for fifty rupees. Both first-generation
acquisitions and second-generation assimiles in the control of matriarchs of ruling households were
important precisely because their birth-fathers and mothers were not those from whom such
progeny derived their filiation: their reproduction as ‘sons’ and ‘daughters’ of the lineage
depended crucially on the matriarch head’s command over material resources such as funds,
clothes, and food. In turn, this material investment in a male or female infant, while ‘socially’
reproducing this child as a son or daughter, also reaped a wealth of allegiance, service and returns
in the future, as by the ‘marriages’ of such sons and daughters, networks of clients and dependants
could be arranged for the strengthening of particular factions within the Nizamut.
simultaneously released both the grooms from affinal obligations, and any children born of competing
bilateral claims.
41AGG Russell to Persian Sec., 4 March 1822, BPC, P/123/4, 11 April 1822, no. 128.
43Memorial of Hyatunissa Begum, 14 Dec. 1843, BPC, P/127/48, 26 Dec. 1843, no. 32.
45Fatima Mernissi, The Veil and the Male Elite: A Feminist Interpretation o f Women’s Rights in Islam
(New York, 1991), pp. 175-6. Thomas Strange, the Chief Justice at Madras, also characterised adoptions
among Muslims in India as ‘spurious’ and ‘unwarranted by the Koran’ in his Hindu Law (London 1830,
reprint Madras, 1859), I, p. 103.
46George Mountmorris, Viscount Valentia, Voyages and Travels in India, Celon, the Red Sea, Abyssinia
and Egypt in the Years 1802-1806 (London, 1811), I, p. 184.
115
at variance with the Nawab’.47 However, if this particular adoptee could have posed a challenge
to the Nazim, other such adoptees did not. Thus Najm-ud-daula, Munni Begum’s uterine son, was
reputed to have ‘brought up’ a boy named Rumzaun Ali, who was clearly listed as a
c/ie/a.48Similar divergences existed in the eighteen-twenties among the adopted daughters of other
heads of deoris, like the adopted daughters of Bahoo Begum, and of Ameerunissa Begum, both
consorts of the Nazim Alijah.
The fact that the destinies of these sons and daughters were determined by the matriarch
heads of the deoris, even though they were loosely filiated to some male as ‘his’ daughter or ‘son’
is significant for various reasons. Many of such ‘adopted’ children were born of mothers who had
been slaves of the specific matriarchs. Thus as in the case of the daughters described as adopted
by Ameerunissa (Doolhin) Begum and the Buhoo Begum, the birth-mothers had been the slaves
of the Walida Begum (Faizunissa), and continued to serve the succeeding heads of the deoris. To
quote the Agent
Beebee Azeemun is the mother of the eldest daughter, and she, with her child,
have for many years past lived in the Muhul Seraie of the Dhoolin Begum. The
Begum... upon the death of her own child adopted this girl,... The Bhow begum
never had any children by His late Highness, and to compensate for the
disappointment, he committed to her care and adoption the two other daughters
who with their mothers Beebee Lootfun & Beebee Zeentunissa have lived with
the Begum since then, and are in every respect members of her family.49
Yet not all slave-women gave birth sexually to children: they too ‘reproduced’ the wealth
of a household simply by rearing infants handed over to them. As one of the khowas in the regime
of Mubarakud Daulah put it in her petition, the Nawab had ‘left with her an adopted son named
Nasiruddeen Hyder...whom she nourished up from his Infancy’.50 Similarly for ‘daughters’,
concubines like Bunnee Khanum reared children like Mubarakunissa, who were not born of them,
but of other women either in the household or located outside.51 Thus in Dacca, in 1849, it was
47Description by Monckton in Doc. K, Mutfurcaut Sheristah, BPC, P/120/45, 6 July 1816, no. 51. This
phenomenon clearly resembled the institution of daughter’s sons becoming heirs and successors to their
maternal grandfathers found in other parts of India.
49AGG Loch to A. Stirling, Persian Sec. to Govt., 14 Aug. 1824, MNLI, I, pp. 306-9.
50Petition of Surphunissa Begum to Charles Metcalfe, Gov-Gen. of India, n.d., BPC, P /127/29, 8
Dec. 1835, no.24. When the AGG enquired of one of the remaining sons of Mubarakud Daula, he was told
that the woman had been in the ‘establishment’ of the deceased Nazim, at whose death she had not been
‘considered or provided for even as a hurram she was fed like the numerous other females attached to the
[Munni] Begum’s’.
51According to Dale the AGG in 1828, who reported the death of a woman called ‘Nawab Bhye’, she
was the birth-mother of Mubar akunissa, the daughter of Mubarakud Daula I.
116
reported that one Hosseinee Begum had reared ‘two young girls named Pearee and Larly... who
were left under her charge, the former by Nawab Cummerdowlah and the latter by Nawab
Gazeeooddeen Mahomed and were maintained by her during her lifetime’.52 Another such
‘adopted child’ of the Dacca household was initially ‘made over’ to the Nawab Ghaziuddeen when
she was an infant by a ‘wandering fakeer’; the Nawab, on his death bed, transferred her to his
concubine Sultanee.53
However, the most important feature of such adoptions would be, as in the Nizamut, the
rearing of purchased and slave-born ( ‘adopted’) female children as ‘wives’ of the reigning men.
Thus in the 1840’s, the darogah of the Dacca Nawab’s Mother’s Deori, asked to describe the
antecedents of the two wives of the Nawab Ghaziuddeen Hyder, Roopkumar and Ameerun,
answered that the previous Nawab Kummur-ud-daula
purchased the daughter of some respectable parents and kept her there...from their
childhood. Roopkumar has waited on the Nawab 5 or 6 years, and Ameerun about
2 years. They do not recollect their parents, but sometimes call me their father’.
Another man who had served the establishment ‘since his childhood’ however claimed that the
purchase had been made much earlier: ‘Roopkuwar about 20 years, and Ameerun about 15 years
since... Lai Mama Aseel told me that Ameerun was purchased for 22 Rupees’. A petition from
‘Fyz oorf Ameerun Nissa’ also states that ‘she had been brought up from infancy by the late
Kummurud Dowlah with the view of giving her in marriage to his son Ghazeeoodin Mahomed,
but that before the Nuwab could fulfil his intention he died’ .54
In a pattern repeated through the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, both apparently
equal-status (homogamous) and other wives of the Nazims and the Sahibzada were similarly
young women born of the differentially incorporated slave-women in each generation. Though we
know that Siraj-ud-daula’s principal wife was the daughter of the courtier Irich Khan, it was his
concubine Lutfunessa, a slave girl named Rajkunwar, reared and gifted to him by his mother,
Ameena Begum,55 who has been aggrandised by historians as ‘the epitome of ideal wifehood’.56
52Collr. Dacca to R. H. Mytton, Commr. of Rev. 15th Divn., 5 Sept. 1849, BC F/4/2396/128775. Further
investigation ordered by the Commr. of Revenue into ‘the manner in which they have been treated in the
late Begum’s family vizt. as equals or as menials’, elicited the information that Pearee had been taken when
‘two months old and placed under the charge of Hosseinee Begum’ and Larly had ‘been maintained for ten
months by Gazeeuddeen’ who on his deathbed, transferred her to Hosseinee.
53Mytton to Sec. GOB, 3 June 1850, and Collr. Dacca to Mytton, 15 May 1850, BC F/4/2433/133242.
55Seir Mutaqherin, I, p. 94 and p. 187; also Sirajul Islam (ed.), History o f Bangladesh 1704-1971
(Dhaka, 1992), III, pp. 41-2. Most histories of this period mention the grand celebrations occurring over
several days of the weddings of Siraj-ud-daula and his brother Akram-ud-daula in 1746: for a description
of this event, which acquired legendary status, see Charles Stewart, The History o f Bengal (reprint Delhi,
117
Though the origins of all such wives is difficult to establish, in a significant proportion of
instances, these wives were born to slaves or been themselves purchased by the previous Head of
the mehalserai, from where they were then taken into the harem of the incumbent ruler. The
returns expected upon this gift were enormous: the children born of these women were claimed
by the deori heads as ‘grandchildren’, and this further strengthened their authority over incumbent
generations of Nazims and Sahibzada, as well as established fiscal claims in the wealth and
holdings of the state as a share in the ‘patrimony’. It was against infringements of this provision
of ‘wives’ by deori heads that many matriarchs protested bitterly.57
Such infringements could occur because of the machinations of other courtiers, officials
or servants contracting their women (slaves and non-slaves alike) to an incumbent ruling male. For
instance, Badrunissa, the grandmother of the Nawab Ghaziuddeen of Dacca complained against
two men who had persuaded the Nawab ‘to marry and to settle, in addition to large dowries
secured to them by written documents, handsome pensions for their support... to marry a low
woman ... and to settle an allowance of 1500 Rupees per month for her maintenance [which] they
punctually receive as soon as the stipend is paid out of the Collector’s treasury’.58 At other times
such infringements occurred because the reigning male did not seek the permission of the deori
head and thus denied her the status and control associated with gifting her ‘reared’ one as a bride.
For example, Haseena, the woman in question in the 1870s, was described by the mother of the
Nazim as
an African slave in my personal service ...I had made arrangements for her
marriage ...when I discovered that my son, the Nawab Nazim, who was still living
in my quarters (deorhee), had entered into a liaison with her. I also found he had
entered into a liaison with the mothers of Mujleh Saheb and Amir Saheb (second
and third sons), who were also two of my personal attendants. I was very angry
and we had words, and the Nawab Nazim then and there carried all three off to
his own quarters... after wards he begged of me Haji Begum, who had been
1971), p. 473.
56 See Brajendranath Bandopadhyay, Banglar Begum (Calcutta, 1913), p.7. The exact words used to
describe her are ‘Hindu - Musalmaner adarsha patni’.
57Translated letter from Nujeebunissa Begum of 29 Rubeeus Sanee 1247 Hijri, BC F/4/1456/57367. Her
claim that it was not customary to acknowledge as ‘sons’ those born outside the mehal was substantiated
by Darab Ali Khan in 1836 who said ‘the nazim’s mother was opposed to her son’s having affairs with
women out of the zunanah',
58Budderunissa Begum to Dy. Gov. of Bengal, 18 June 1838, BPC, P/127/38, 18 July 1838, no. 6. For
one of these women who claimed a ‘nicca’ [nikah] marriage with the Nawab, and thus the status of widow
after his death, see petitions of Goolzar Begum, 4 Feb. 1844 and 25 May 1846, BPubC, P/13/58, 3 June
1846, nos. 81-84.
118
59Cited in report of AGG, W. J. W. Muir, 4 May 1877, BPC, P/1168, Jan. 1878, 17 B, nos. 28-9.
cllTwo different reports exist to substantiate this: one by the AGG, reporting the birth of a son to
Humayunjah on 29 Oct. 1829, which meant that he had ‘three children alive - namely a son and two
daughters... all the offspring of concubines’ in Dale to Stirling, 15 Nov. 1829, BPC, P/126/6, 20 Nov. 1829,
no. 51. The birth of this son had followed the death, in 1828, of another son, born presumably of another
concubine, since AGG Melville had refused to pay the correct condolence on this occasion because the child
was ‘illegitimate’. See Melville to Stirling, n. d. [circa 1828] BC F/4/1228/40156. Neither officer mentioned
the ‘homogamous’ wife of Humayunjah as the mother. The details of the birth of Faridunjah were the cause
119
daughter of one of the concubines’ daughters in 1845. Yet his heir and successor was, as the
evidence of the 1870’s indicated, the son of a slave belonging to his mother. Thus slave-
concubinage both produced over time a cluster of homogamous marriages, at the same time that
it provided alternatives to homogamy itself.
At the present it is impossible to discern any specific codes by which the childlessness of
the homogamous wife was reproduced. However, since in the Nizamut, such homogamous wives
were born of slave-women to presumably free fathers, such childlessness was important. On one
hand it revealed the limits of their jural incorporation as half-sisters or cousins within the lineage,
and as wives, since they did not reproduce ‘free’ members of the lineage themselves. The
opportunities for establishing matriclaims upon the Nizamut then required establishing control over
other slave-women who bore children to the Nazims.
This general childlessness of homogamous wives is possible to decipher through a large belt
of territory in India in the nineteenth century. How this was connived at is not clear, but it could
not have been either exclusive to Islamic households nor only accidental. There is sufficient proof
of its elevation to something like a ‘policy’ across several generations in a non-Islamic court, as
one Rani of Bharatpur attested to. Claiming a custom ‘for centuries throughout Rajpootana’, she
stated that from the time of
Takoor Buddun Sing, the founder of the Bhurtpore family, and father of
Maharajah Soorujmull, who died in the Christian year 1754, upto the present
period of 8 successive Rajahs, no one has left a son born of a Rannee, but the
successive heirs have all without exception been sons born of female slaves and
adopted by the Ranee for the time.61
A similar childlessness is noticeable in the Marathas, especially among the royal wives of the
Holkars, as well as among ruling houses in central India.62 Similarly, in the case of the Raja of
Birbhum, Mohamed Zaman Khan, it had been noted that in 1794, his ‘royal’ wife, the daughter
of the Raja of Kunukpur, had been married to him, and come to stay with the Raja’s mother;
of the investigations of 1836, IPP, P/194/15, nos. 85-87, and P/194/16, nos. 90-93.
61Memorial from the Rani of Bharatpur to the Chairman and Court of Directors, n.d., BC
F/4/1350/53514. The list provided by her shows two separate columns against the name of each Raja - one
for the name of his Rani and the other for the name of the ‘Dassee’ whose son had been adopted by the
Rani. For similar claims by the Rani of Kalyan Singh, former naib Nazim of Bihar, that all the slave-
concubines and their children were ‘obedient’ to her, see BPC, P/123/29, 9 May, 1823, no. 158.
62For the Bundela Raja of Datia, see BC F/4/1498/58823. The Agent of the Governor -General in Bund-
elkhand, Ainslee, recommended to the raja that it was ‘desirable’ to select the son of ‘one of your Relations’
to which the Raja replied ‘none of my Relations have a Son whom I wish or who is fit to succeed me’, 28
Oct. 1830.
120
‘after continuing here for six months and the Raja never going near her’,63 she resided with her
own father. Meanwhile, he had ‘two of Goopee Tanadar’s daughters’, one of whom was described
as ‘being with child’ as well as ‘two very young girls’, Jaun and Maun, at Husanabad, who
‘always wish to depart, but he will not suffer them,...kept by his Order in his Bungalow there, with
Peons over them’. This impression is strengthened from the list of his household submitted after
his death, which is headed by the ‘married Ranny’ who has no children listed against her name
but one who is termed ‘neckye’ and eleven others are shown to have been mothers of children
between the ages of one and eight years old.64 The systemisation of this pattern is again sug
gested by the fact that the previous Raja, Bahadur Zaman Khan, had himself been born to a slave-
girl belonging to Asad-us Zaman Khan’s mother;65 he, in turn, was said to have ‘kept’ the daugh
ter of Punna Bai, a ‘nautch woman’, as well as one girl from the set of Tunsook Bai, from whom
he had two sons respectively.66 Asked by the Court whether he had ever ‘heard of the head
Ranny after coming to her husband’s house returning to her family during her husband’s lifetime’,
one witness had replied that this indeed was the custom.67
Given this pattern of distance between homogamous spouses, the political role of slave
concubines, and their children, especially their daughters, in extending the network of kin and
clients was important to the polity as a whole. For one, though the Company’s records are
remarkably negligent of this issue, succession to the musnud prior to the intervention of the
Company seems to have devolved through daughters. Murshid Quli Khan had favoured the
succession of his daughter’s son, Sarfaraz Khan, only to have the husband of his daughter inter
vene. Alivardi Khan, who usurped the musnud from Sarfaraz, in turn favoured the youngest
daughter’s son, whom he is said to have adopted as his successor as Siraj-ud-daulah. In turn,
Siraj’s accession was opposed by another of Alivardi’s daughters, Ghasiti Begum. The successor
to Siraj, Mir Jafar too was related to the Subahdar through his marriage with the ‘half-sister’ of
Alivardi Khan, and had thus counted as a brother-in-law. In turn, he seems to have lived in some
fear, and distrust of, Mir Qasim, married to the daughter born of Jafir’s union with Shah Khanum.
Yet she was by no means the only daughter in the household of Mir Jafir. Four decades later,
63Evidence of Buddun Metre, in Extract Progs, of the SDA, 6 July 1796, J. H. Ernst, Actg. Collr. of
Beerbhoom vs. Raja Mahomed Zaman Khan, BC F/4/19/767.
66Evidence of Mohammed Jummil and of Dilawar Zaman Khan, SDA Progs. F/4/19/767.
67Evidence of Motyollah, ibid. One of the sons of Kalyan Singh urged a similar pattern of homogamous
wives living apart from husbands, and the latter residing mainly with slave-concubines, in letter to Govt.,
1 April 1823, BPC, P/123/29, 9 May, 1823, no. 157.
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upon the death of Munni Begum it was discovered that there had been at least two other daughters
whose claims upon the Nizamut had been acknowledged by Munni Begum. Though this, by no
means, proves the existence of a structure, avunculineal or otherwise, it certainly draws our
attention to the possible kinship strategies at work in the acquisition of grooms for such daughters.
Just as women were made Begums by the favour of the Nazim, certain men became
damads (son-in-law) by virtue not of a particular sacralised ceremony but by virtue of the damadi
khilat bestowed on them. The value of these may have risen over time. In the accounts submitted
by Manick Chund, the Dewan of Munni Begum, to the Committee, it is said that ‘the distribution
of khillauts occasioned at least 7000 Rupees each time’.68 Both the financial expenditure incurred
in these, as well as the political implications of such grants, worried the Agents and the
Government of Bengal. One way of regulating both was the device of setting up of a fund (from
deductions from the sixteen lakhs annuity) for the marriages of daughters, a device first thought
up in 1796. By the 1820s, this money was in turn being used by the Agents and the Nizamut
stipendiaries alike to fund the marriages of numerous daughters, many of whom were described
by the Agent either as ‘adopted’ or as ‘illegitimate’.69
Peirce has argued that in the context of the Ottoman dynasty, a standard feature was the
making of the highest ranking members of the male slave elite into imperial damads.10 By thus
enhancing the status and authority of the official, damadhood created a strong bond of personal
loyalty and indebtedness to the sultan and to the whole dynastic family. For Murshidabad,
however, the determination of the status of these men - slaves or freedmen - is dependent entirely
69 Enclosure 1, in AGG W.Loch to Persian Sec. to Govt., 30 Aug. 1824, MNLI, I, pp. 317-321. A
scrutiny of this list, compared with evidence of other files, reveals that the apparent ‘cross-cousin’ marriages
that were being funded were unions between various concubines’ children, male and female. Thus in one
instance, the daughter of Meer Munglee is proposed to be married to the son of Oomdah Begum. Both
Munglee and Oomdah are normally referred to as ‘son’ and the ‘youngest daughter’ of Mubarakud Daula
I respectively. Like Munglee, born of a slave concubine, Oomdah too was born of the concubine
Brijmahabuksh, and was reared in the mehal of Mubarakud Daula’s mother Babbu Begum vide AGG Russell
to H.T.Prinsep, 23 June 1821, BPC, P/122/58, 7 July 1821, no. 76. Oomdah’s marriage with Taleb Hussain
Khan brought in not only Oomdah’s son called Wahed Hussain Khan, but also Taleb Hussain Khan’s other
slave-born children, for which see AGG Ricketts to Persian Sec., 21 Nov. 1822, BPC, P/123/24, 7 Dec.
1822, nos.56-57. Three of these daughters, born of Taleb’s concubine Lutfunissa, were then ‘married’ into
the Nizamut, as revealed in Loch’s list of 1824. A similar deduction follows from the consideration of other
names on Loch’s list, like that of the daughter of Mubarakunissa Begum. The latter was also one such
daughter of Mubarak brought up by Bunnee khanum. Mubarakunissa’s marriage with Yasubuddeen brought
in Yasubuddeen’s slave-born children as well as his children with Mubarakunissa. As for the marriage of
the daughter of Ruhimunissa with the son of Torab Ali, see section on inheritance disputes.
on vague ascription,71 and on their upward mobility in the scale of stipends.72 Some of those
who counted as damads, like Mirza Daood, an Ispahani merchant with whom Munni Begum
appeared to have had certain building contracts, and Khalilullah Khan, came from outside Bengal.
Others like Yasubuddeen Ali Khan and Acbar Ali Khan Shamsher Jung appeared to have already
been nephews or junior kin: the latter is likely since Shamsher Jung was also a concubine-born
son of the Rajmehal household (of Ihteramud Dowlah, brother of Mir Jafir), with little independent
wealth or property of his own.73 The choice of these men as damads may have been dictated by
the same kind of criteria that governed the policy of concubinage for the Nazims; too well-
connected a man may have endangered the ruler. Furthermore, as the Nazims were pushed more
and more into a fiscal corner, the impetus may also have been economic: as Mubarakud Daula
himself put it, it was preferable to get sons-in law ‘from families where he can avoid heavy
expenses’.74 As one Nazim said of one such damad, Himmait Ally Khan Behader Rustum Jung,
he was not of very illustrious or distinguished Birth still his parentage was
respectable & therefore my deceased father invited him from Benares to give him
his niece in marriage daughter of his own sister & invested him with a high Title
and settled upon him a Stipend of Rs. 1200 per mensem exceeding that granted
to his sons by marriage with his own daughters above whom he also greatly
distinguished Rustum Jung....75
Significantly enough, there is another aspect of the treatment of damads that argues for the choice
of less powerful men: the established practice for the Nazim to reclaim the marriage portions of
the females of his family. This was evident not just in the case of Murshidabad itself, but also in
71For instance, a man called Hakeemjung, whose wife was counted by the Agents in the group of ‘grand
daughters’ of Mubarakud Daula (daughter of Salihutoonissa begum, aka Motee Begum, a daughter of
Mubarakud Daula) was described as the ‘Mootuburra’ of Munni Begum, vide AGG Sotheby to Prinsep, 19
March 1823, BPC, P/123/35, 29 March 1823, no. 93. This is a mis-spelling of the term mudabbara, or a
slave with whom there has been an agreement of freedom or tadbir.
72In the case of Torab Ali, the husband of Rezeeatoos Sultan, this is implied because his name figures
in the list of 1802 among the Shagird Pesha on a very small stipend. This explains his struggle to actually
receive the stipend of his ‘wife’ in 1808-11. About this attempt, Munni Begum was to say, ‘before marriage
he lived upon twenty six rupees, is it not very unreasonable ...that now instead of being satisfied with three
hundred and fifty rupees ... he claims four hundred more ....’ For further details see BC F/4/308/7064 and
F/4/332/7633.
73For Shumsher Jung’s antecedents, see AGG Cobbe to Macnaghten, 29 June 1833 in Extract Poll. Cons,
of 11 July 1833, BC F/4/1475/57976. For two other damads from the Rajmehal household, Taleb Hussain
Khan and Yasoobudeen Ali Khan, see Schedule I in C.E. Trevelyan to AGG Thoresby, 13 Feb. 1834,
MNLR, I, pp.286-7. Taleb Hussain Khan, married to one of the daughters of Mubarakud Daulah I, Omdah
Begum, was described as ‘illegitimate’ son of Abool Cassim, late Nawab of Rajemahal in AGG Loch to A.
Stirling, 10 Sept. 1824, BPC, P/123/77, 8 Oct. 1824, no. 38.
75Translation of a letter from the Nawab, 16 October 1808, MNLI, I, pp. 97-8.
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the houses allied to it, like for instance those of Reza Khan’s family, from where a son-in-law of
Soulut Jung (grandson of Reza Khan) complained that on the decease of his wife, the daughter
of the Nawab, he had been deprived of all his effects which he had taken with him when he went
to live in the house of her father.
This aspect of post-marital residentiality, of grooms in the house of the wife’s family,
identified by sociologists as uxorilocality, and the near-adrogation that was implicit in these
marriages, was characteristic of the lives of the sons-in-law of the Nazims. For instance, one
daughter of the Nazim Mubarak-ud-daula I, Badrun-nissa lived with her husband Shams-ud-daula
in the palace, till the latter was convicted of conspiring to overthrow the East India Company in
1799, exiled from Murshidabad and allowed to reside in Dacca,76 from where eleven years later
he pleaded to have his wife sent to him. On this occasion, the Agent noted that it would be the
first time that a woman of the family had left the Killa.77 Similarly, the husband of one of the
women identified as a ‘grand-daughter’, fought a long and unavailing contest with Munni Begum
to remove his wife from the killah to a rented house.78 On this occasion a bewildered
Superintendent, noting that the matriarch would not relinquish her ‘right to control’ this
granddaughter, demanded that she be sent to ‘her husband’s residence which is ... situated within
this city’.79 Another damad, Shumsher Jung, who fell foul of the newly appointed Nazim
Walajah, and was asked by the Agent not to intervene in the affairs of the deori where his
daughter Ameerunissa ruled, was described as living in the city while his wife, one of the
‘daughters’ of Mubarakud Daula, lived within the Killa.
Though the Ispahani damads do not seem to have taken up permanent residence among
the Sahebzada, the general pattern of uxorilocality amongst the damads raised further questions
about the nature of the ‘marriage’ itself. If one scrutinises the lives of these daughters and damads
over the period that the records allow, a very subtle relationship emerges between wealth creation
and lineage formation, which suggest that these so-called marriages of the daughters of the Nazim
were extremely complex transactions. If these ‘marriages’ had been intended to have created
permanent political alliances, they failed. Both the Ispahani damads and the Murshidabad based
76Extract BJC, 18 Dec. 1800, Progs, of trial of Shums-ud-daula and others, BC F/4/128/2371; Nandalal
Chatterji, ‘Shamsuddaulah’s Intrigues Against the English’, BPP, 53, 1, 1937, pp. 31-34; and N.K.Sinha,1
The Case of Mirza Jan Tuppish: A Treason Trial of 1800’, BPP, 72, 1953, pp. 39-42.
79Pattle to Munni Begum, 6 April 1808, ibid. In the same collection is a letter from Munni Begum
regarding the resourceless state of Torab Ali: ‘when he married he resided with his wife in Salia Begum’s
house ... went from thence to reside in a house at Akram Gunge, which is very much out of repair and by
no means private’.
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grooms had very tenuous relationships with the ‘wives’ who were daughters in the Nizamut: death
and the swings of political fortunes within the Nizamut ensured quick separations, sometimes after
the birth of a child. In at least two instances, the death of one such wife led to remarriage with
another of the daughters of the Nizamut, leading very often to bitter disputes between rival
factions over the dower and inheritance claims when such a damad died and such a daughter
became a widow.80 Even more significant was the apparent suspicion that attached to these
grooms, since guarantees were sought to be procured by the matriarchs from these men through
‘marriage settlements’ promising extraordinary sums of compensation as mihr should these grooms
set up alternative lineages.81 In other words, though Nazims signed no kabinnamahs, these lesser
males did: did this differential reflect on the function of the document that so much ‘legal’
emphasis was laid upon?82
Clearly, the attempt to create clients, rather than permanent and equal-status allies, through
the control of concubines’ children itself explained the existence of slave-concubinage in the core
of the ruling group, so that every Subahdar and Nazim had control of the largest number of such
girls and women through whom the extent of one’s followership could be increased. At their
simplest level, these ‘gift-giving’ transactions in which the girls gifted were themselves slaves or
born of slaves, but over whom the claims of their original owners continued, were only
usufructuary and of fixed durations. The children born of these unions were claimed by the
Nizamut, and in the language of the claimants, been ‘protected’ and reared with their mothers in
the mehalserai. At their most complex, the transactions in such girls approximated to loaning the
80See below a discussion of disputes over the property and stipend of Shahamut Jung, damad through
marriages with Afzulinissa and Ruheemunissa Begum, BPC P/118/48, 10 Oct. 1809, nos. 54-59, BC
F/4/312/7131, and over the estate of Rustum Jung damad through marriages with Shumsuddeen Begum and
Sharokh Begum, BPC, P/118/43, 15 July 1809, nos. 63-66, P/118/48, 3 Oct. 1809, nos.44-46 and BC
F/4/304/7006 and F/4/333/7635. The latter contest is even more significant because Sharokh, though
described by the Agents and Superintendents as the ‘granddaughter’ of Babbu Begum initially, was not just
born of a slave concubine, but was also ‘deranged’. What kind of marriage then had been arranged between
this woman and the damad may be worth investigating. After Munni Begum’s death, the Nazim Alijah
handed over control of ‘her person’ to various men ‘on condition of receiving a large portion of her stipend’
vide AGG to E.S. Montague, 10 July 1822, BPC, P/123/15, 9 Aug. 1822, no. 70.
82This differential would partially explain the difficulties the Government of Bengal faced in the 1870s
in enforcing registration of ‘Muslim marriages’.
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usufruct, which required payments in cash closely resembling the mihr of free marriages. So
critical was the wealth and influence manipulated by the contracting of these slave-born daughters,
that their control became one of the focal issues of conflict between contending deori heads as
well as between the deori heads and the Nazims at different points.
Especially visible in cases of childless Begums, like Ameerunissa, who alone among the
gaddinashin Begums had not been elevated to this position by virtue of having given birth to a
Nazim, her ‘gift’ of Alijah’s concubine-born daughter to a young Nazim in 1826 finally achieved
for her the motherhood of a male that was a prerequisite to authority over other women. Thus
Ameerunissa’s fostering of specific kinds of daughters was contested by the reigning Nazim in
1824, Walahjah, who it was reported, had begun to ‘prepare for the marriages of his three neices,
the daughters of his late brother’, Nazim Alijah. The contest over what superficially appeared to
have been an avuncular and patriarchal privilege, was actually a battle for the control over female
children between the ages of 8 and 14 who had been born to the slave concubines of the previous
Nazim.83
The Begums claimed that both precedent and right was on their side in the matter of the
marriages of these girls: not only had all such ‘daughters’ of Mubarak-ud-daula been thus
‘bestowed’ by the heads of the mehalserai, but also that this right had been ‘confirmed to them
by the act of their husband who had committed those children to their care’. The Agent clearly
believed that this was ‘a rule that ought to be observed’. Besides, he suspected, that the Nazim’s
demand of three lakhs of rupees from the Government as ‘marriage portions of his nieces’ was
pretext for procuring ‘a large sum of money to be put at his disposal’. Insufficient as an
explanation for the desire to control such slave-born daughters, it was the wider strategies of
clientage-creation that could provide a better insight into a direct political investment in such
daughters. Bestowing a wife was simultaneously a political act in that it reinforced the deference
owed by the bride-receiver to the bride-giver, and an economic transaction, related to the
protection afforded in law to the financial estates of wives. The theoretical principle was that the
mihr (dower) paid by the groom became the property of the wife. By extension, if such a wife was
also the slave-born adoptee of the Begums or of the Nazims, the wealth that accrued to her in
‘dower settlement’ came directly to the coffers of the bride-giver. Thus both the mehal heads and
the Nazims tried to expand their resources of human and inanimate wealth by manipulating the
‘marriages’ of such daughters.84 Even in the 1840s and 50s, this concern was evident in the
83AGG Loch to A. Stirling, Persian Sec. to Govt., 14 Aug. 1824, MNLI, I, pp. 306-09.
84For the conflict over the choice of grooms for three of Alijah’s daughters, Bahoo Begum choosing men
born of women in her faction, and Ameerunissa choosing grooms from her faction, see Poll. Letter from
Bengal 3 Oct. 1829, BC F/4/1228/40157.
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machinations of the Nazim to marry two such daughters to the sons of the Vazir of Awadh, though
Awadh had explicitly spurned an earlier attempt.85 Noticeably, the slave-women who had borne
these daughters were neither the initiators of such ‘alliances’, nor the beneficiaries of the dower
claims upon the estates of the damads. Nor, when such damads died, were there claimants other
than their ‘own’ slave-born lineages - no fathers/uncles, mothers/aunts, or siblings.
85See correspondence on the marriage of the daughters in BC F/4/2708/194269. The absence of expense-
accounts for these marriages, significant in the context of a close surveillance of expenses by the
Government of Bengal, would suggest that they did not occur. For subsequent accounts of expenses for the
marriages of the daughters, and damadi Khilats, see BPC, P/263, Dec. 1874, file 254A, nos. 1-2; P/927, Feb.
1877, file 17, nos. 3-4, and April 1877, file 17, nos. 1-3 and P/1168, Jan. 1878, File 17B, nos. 28-9.
^Superintendent of Nizamut Affairs to Sec. to Govt., 19 Oct 1808, BPC, P/118/30, 14 Nov. 1808, nos.
35-38.
127
Begum claimed the property of the damad Rustum Jung, when the blood-related hiers of the
‘father’ of Sharokh Begum were alive - like Khalilullah’s sons, as well as M iran’s heirs like Syed
Murteza - was the ‘deed of Gift’ by which the owner/mistress, Saliha Begum, transferred her
‘establishment’ to Munni Begum.87
Both claims were referred to the Qazi ul Quzat of the Sadr Diwani Adalut. As the
Government saw it, recognition of the Nazim as ‘legal heir’ was dependent on the size of the
wealth/ estate estimated to be held by the deceased person. In this instance, the estate was apprized
to be substantial:
it would have been right that property so considerable as 55,000 Rupees should
be brought to account and applied to the payment of His Highness’s debts to the
Company. In no case ...could His Highness be allowed to succeed to property of
such extent without rendering an account of it to Government which... is entitled
to claim the application of any available assets to the reimbursements of the
amount [debt to the Company].88
This in turn led to considerable convolutions in the representation of doctrinal law; and the
upholding of one over another school of inheritance. The Qazi ul Quzat and the maulvis gave a
decision according to Sunni law, while observing that there was no objection to the recognition
of Shia law should the two parties (Munni Begum on behalf of Sharokh the concubine’s daughter,
and the Nazim on behalf of Shumsuddee, his father’s niece) claiming the property wish it so. The
Government of Bengal not only disallowed this accommodation in principle, it deliberately
misinterpreted the decision of the Qazi ul Quzat. Thus though the fatw a of the Qazi ul Quzat
decreed that all property proved to have belonged to Shumsuddee Begum either as marriage
portion from her family or gift by her husband was to devolve on her husband and on her own
relations on ‘the male side’, the Government of Bengal decided that the Nazim could not claim
because he was not kin ‘by the male side’.89 This was a travesty of the truth: both the Nazim and
the Babbu Begum had claims on Rustum Jung because of their relationship to Mubarak-ud-daula.
(Note that there were no claimants on behalf of Shumsuddee’s father). Intent on the admission of
Rustum Jung’s own slave-born children to the inheritance in order to pre-empt any claims on the
stipend of the father on their behalf, the interpretation of legal doctrine itself was subordinated to
secular exigencies. Particularly since the Superintendent reported that in the opinion of the Sunni
maulvis of the Provincial Court for Murshidabad Division, the concubines taken in mutaa
87From Fuzeelutunissa Begum, reed. 31 Aug. 1797, BPC, P/116/31, 6 Oct. 1797, no.27.
8yTranslate of the Answer by the Muhammadan law Officers of the S.D.A. and Monckton to Pattle, 28
April 1809, BPC, P/118/40, 6 May 1809, nos. 87-88.
128
(Soortellee and Daodee) and their children were not entitled to any share of the damacl's
property,90both the Government of Bengal and the Superintendent quickly changed their
preference. Now the Shia law of inheritance was forwarded as the law by which matters were to
be decided, because belatedly, it was discovered, that school allowed the wealth left by the
deceased to pay for the maintenance of the slave-and concubine-born children.
Thus, despite holding the Nizamut hostage to Sunni canonical forms of public worship,
the Government of Bengal proceeded to now uphold Shia law of inheritance, and apportion the
estate of the deceased damad thus: 2/16th to the woman supported by Munni Begum as the sole
surviving ‘widow’, Sharokh, and 14/16th of the estate to be divided up into seven shares which
included the children born of the mumtood women.91 Fully aware that the interests of Sharokh
(and Munni Begum) were not compatible with the partibility of the estate in the manner proposed
by the Government, the latter then invoked another doctrine from canonical text - the doctrine of
iqrar or acknowledgement. Arguing that Rustum Jung always ‘acknowledged his illegitimate
offspring to be his children, ... and as it was not to be supposed that he would have publicly
pronounced them to be illegitimate’, the Governor-General in Council decided that they might be
considered to be entitled even according to the Sunni law to participate in their father’s property, -
‘in the same manner as if they had been bom in wedlock’.92 Such cynicism affected the lives of
both the slave-born daughter whose person and property was controlled by Munni Begum, as well
as the other slave-concubines and their chidren. The Government knew full well that the claims
of the slave-concubines taken in fixed-time contracts to a share in the property of Rustum Jung
depended upon their ability to prove that the sums promised in payment had not been met. The
Government of Bengal believed that it was ‘probable ... that they have no such claims since the
sums given on those occasions being generally inconsiderable are usually paid at the time when
the engagements are contracted’.93
Within ten days of this decision of the Government, a claim for the payment of 68,000
rupees as ‘marriage’ settlement was submitted, on behalf of Sharokh Begum, by Munni Begum,
complete with a mihrnama bearing the seals of other damads.94 This effectively stymied the
^’Translation of Answer returned by the Law Officers of the Provincial Court of Murshidabad in
Superintendent of Nizamut Affairs to Persian Sec., 7 July 1809, BPC, P/118/43, 15 July, nos.65-66.
91Ibid.
92Monckton to T. Pattle, 3 Aug. 1809, BPC, P/118/46, 5 Aug. 1809, no. 91. Emphasis added.
93Ibid.
94Translated letter from Munni Begum to Pattle, reed. 17 Aug. 1809, in Pattle to Swinton, 25 Aug. 1809,
BPC, P/118/48, 3 Oct. 1809, nos. 44-46. In her letter, Munni Begum explicitly denied Soorteellee’s, and the
other concubines’, claims either to the stipend or to the material goods of Rustum Jung, by the Shia doctrine.
129
attempt of the Company to arrange for a partition of the estate. This claim of ‘dower settlement’,
referred to their Law Officers again, elicited the opinion that the claim for payment of the widow’s
dower superseded all rights of inheritance and like other debts on the estate it must be satisfied
before any division of the property can be made amongst other heirs. Their hands forced thus, the
Government reluctantly sanctioned a measly Rupees 200 out of the damadi stipend, for the
maintenance of the concubines and their children. It would however bend no further: in 1810,
when Munni Begum clearly tried to channel the resumed Rupees 1000 of the stipend in the names
of the ‘domestic dependants of the family of late Nawab Rustum Jung’, the Government decreed
that Sharokh Begum had been given possession of ‘ample resources to provide for the maintenance
of her late husband’s dependants’.95
An identical trajectory was witnessed in the case of another damad. In June 1809, the
damad Nuzr Ali Khan Shahamut Jung, the husband of Ruheemunessa, died, leaving four sons, five
daughters, and six ‘wives’ apart from Ruheemunissa.96 In the conviction that the partibility of
the wealth left by the deceased could be proceeded upon on the basis of the kind of ‘compact’
each child had been born from, the Superintendent asked both the sons and Ruheemun to submit
a list of the claimants. One list submitted by the adult sons of Shahamut Jung counted seven
women under the category of widows by nekah, and ten women as khadimah. The Superintendent
of Nizamut Affairs, doubtful that the former could ‘produce any proofs ... to sustain their assertion
of marriage contracts having passed between their deceased father and mothers’, compared this
with the second list submitted by Ruheemun, who claimed to be the legal heir, and found that all
the women of the first list were characterised as keniz (slave).97 Three of these ‘illegitimate’ sons,
Syyud Ali, Bubber Ali and Jaffer Ali, all of whom were older than the five-year-old Bakir Ali,
born of Ruheemunissa, came to the attention of the British authorities because the Nazim Nasirul
Mulk complained that these sons ‘by concubines’ had obstructed the agents of his ‘sister’
She thus found a ground for claiming the whole which had to be acceeded to by both Sunni and Shia
schools - the dower claim. In the mihrnama she submitted on behalf of Sharokh Begum, no mention was
made of Sharokh’s birth-mother, Mohumdee, herself a daughter of a concubine of Miran’s, a fact that would
have acceded the right of Miran’s male heirs to Sharokh’s share. She submitted a futwa under the seals of
Muhammad Rubbee and Ghulam Survur upholding the payment of mihr-i-maujjul (dower payable on
demand).
95AGG Rocke to G. Swinton, 26 March 1810, and 6 April 1810, BPC, P/119/2, 10 April 1810, nos. 46-
49. Rocke’s list of ‘eight females and two slaves’ is a perfect example of the androcentric assumptions that
went into defining slavery, discussed in Introduction of this thesis.
96Pattle to Monckton, 1 July 1809, BPC, P/118/43, 8 July 1809, nos. 57-58 and enclosures.
Ruheemunissa, when they had tried to hold the punyah in her name.98 Many of the lands acquired
by Shahamut Jung were registered in the names of these sons, and after his death had been taken
‘possesion’ of by the former.99 As Pattle summed it up to the Collector, the Government, called
upon to ‘make provisions from the Funds of the Nizamut for the support of’ these women and
children, possessed ‘too great an Interest in the application of the property of the deceased to its
just purposes to abstain from the exercise of interference on that point’.100 On this ground,
attachment of all the landed property in dispute was ordered. The government of Bengal too wrote
to the Court hoping that the stipend it had been forced to disburse to this damad could be
henceforth resumed from a ‘family which possessed so large a property... even altho’ the stipend
of Shehamut Jung... had been declared hereditary’ in 1796.101
By 23 October 1809, (approximately two months after Munni Begum had shown the
success with which such claims might be made), Ruheemun put in a claim upon the entire wealth
of the deceased Shahamut Jung on the ground that her claim to ‘the liquidation of her marriage
settlement’ had priority over all other claims. This marriage settlement, (referred to as a mihrnama
in her letter to Pattle) was for the sum of seven lakhs, and by implication included the stipend
claimed by the damad. All these claims were in turn submitted by the Government in Bengal to
the Law Officers of the Sadr Diwani Adalut. Forced to accept a principle of ‘Islamic law’ that
claims of mihr had to be satisfied before any division or partition of an estate could occur, a
principle laid down in the earlier case of Rustum Jung’s property, the Government of Bengal then
transferred Ruheemunissa’s stipend of Rs. 250 per month to the maintenance of the nine
‘illegitimate’ sons and daughters and sixteen concubines and female slaves, and the complete
resumption of Rs. 1000 into the Deposit Fund. When the Nazim, like Munni Begum, tried to
ensure the payment of this resumed stipend in the name of his minor ‘nephew’ Bakir Ali, the
Government refused to comply: the large property which had been adjudged to Ruheemunissa
Begum in payment of her dower left no good reason for making any further provision for her and
her children out of the resumed stipend.
Yet the ability to cite principles of Islamic law depended, as hinted by the cases of
98Pattle to Monckton, 11 July 1809, BPC, P/118/46, 5 Aug. 1809, no. 79.
"Pattle, Superintendent of Nizamut Afairs to Persian Sec. Swinton, 19 Aug. 1809, BPC, P/118/48, 10
Oct. 1809, no. 54. According to the amins, the taluqs, which included sub-leases and lakhiraj land, were
rated at Rs. 42,933-12-15-1, and paid revenue amounting to a sum of Rs. 25,000. By a different
computation, the mass of wealth, including houses, jewellery, clothes, and revenues from land in the holding
of Shahamut Jung amounted to four or five lakhs.
Ruheemun and Sharokh, on particular sets of circumstances on the ground. Just as Munny
Begum’s ability to manipulate events and factions, including the Agents, had led to successful
claims for dower, after almost a year after the death of the damad and timed perfectly to halt the
partition of the wealth among all the children and concubines and slaves, Ruheemun’s ability to
claim this ground depended on the strength of her ‘brother’ and mother within the power-groups
of the Nizamut. Therefore, if a particular daughter belonged to a faction at that moment out of
favour either with the Nazim, or with the Agent, her ability to claim anything at all was seriously
jeopardised, Islamic law notwithstanding. Noorunissa, another of the daughters of a Nazim, found
this out for herself when one deori head, Ameerunissa Begum, took up cudgels on her behalf
against the husband with whom she had ‘long been on a footing of bitter enmity’.102 However,
the fact that this damad, Meer Mohsin Salabut Jung, was favoured both by the Agents and by the
Nazim Humayunjah, both keen to curb Ameerun’s power, meant that Noorun’s chances of gaining
anything at all were slim from the outset. In 1837, in an effort to repay her debts and incensed by
the fact that all the wealth accumulated by Salabut Jung as a damad was being gifted away (to
those ‘prostitutes ... by whom many children are born to him to whose maintenance he applies that
stipend which my parents provided for my support’), Noorunissa’s Diwan, Munshi Nadir Ali, filed
a claim for Rs. 60,000. The Agent, the husband and the Nazim combined forces to crush the suit
as ‘contrary to the usages of the Nizamut’.
Amidst a flurry of charges and counter-charges made by both sides was one which had
significant political and economic implications - ‘adultery’ with another man (in sixty-year old
Noorun’s case, with her Diwan). In a context in which many slave-concubines and slave-born
daughters, especially after the death of their masters, were described as ‘widows’, the alacrity with
which specific masters, mistresses and British officials combined to accuse such women of sexual
misconduct overlay other moral, political and economic agendas only dimly apprehended. Thus
Hussainee Begum, the concubine’s daughter who had been married off under the aegis of Bahoo
Begum in 1829 and was ‘widowed’ in 1833, was accused of ‘exposing herself in a cheep on the
river’. Another concubine’s daughter, Shahzadee Begum, was accused of ‘conduct... the most
barefaced... a public scandal to the whole family’.103 In both of these instances, such charges
were preliminaries to the re-establishing of control over their bodies and any possible stipends
attached to them, by various mistresses and masters. Even women like Ruheemunissa, who had
undergone a long and harrowing time in the courts, were not above accusing the ‘hurm of her late
brother Nuwab Abul Hossein,’ of having formed an ‘improper acquaintance’ with a servant
!03AGG Cobbe to Sec.to GOB, Macnaghten, 14 Oct. 1835, BPC, P/127/29, 27 Oct. 1835, no. 27.
132
Khadem Hussun oorf Meer Hussun Ali, and having the woman’s pension resumed.104
The Agents were happy to go along with such punitive measures, and to reinforce them
wherever they could, in the interests of the ‘observance of common decorum’. Using these charges
against specific women to diminish their stipends was, as can be expected, conducive to a fiscally
straitened Nizamut; and any diminution of stipends was welcome to the British Collectors and the
Agents. Thus another woman, who had identified herself as ‘mother of Cauzim Ali’ was denied
both claims on her deceased ‘son’s’ house and a continued pension because she ‘had formed an
illicit and disgraceful connection with a servant of her own named Roostum with whom she
continued to cohabit in a separate house until the death of her paramour’.105
But such charges carried a very heavy symbolic and political load. In the received and lay
understanding of many, charges of sexual misconduct were serious because the purity of the
lineage was threatened by the sullying of the womb. This concern for the purity of the child’s
descent would have been important if this was indeed proven to be of any great significance in
practice. In the light of what we have tried to argue, lineage-making could occur with different
kinds of heirs - first generation slaves, second-generation slaves and slave-born children, and so
on. The purity of blood or descent was not of primary or overt significance. Furthermore, the
purity of blood and descent were important only in contexts of claims over the child: where there
were few contending claimants to a child, in the sense that both maternal and paternal natal kin,
and extended kin, did not exist, or as slaves in the Nizamut, could not exercise roles of paternal
and maternal authority, the question of ascertaining the purity of the womb as a way of
establishing claims over its product seem implausible as motives for the policing undertaken by
the members of the Nizamut against their own kind.
The real symbolic charge in such an accusation was that of faithlessness. Occurring as they
did precisely after the death of a deceased ‘husband/master’, they obscured the fact that post
mortem manumission to a slave-concubine, especially if she had borne a child, was both morally
enjoined as well as practised in fact. However, this particular gift of ‘freedom’ could be confirmed
only by the dead man’s heirs. In the increasing fiscal embarrassment in the Nizamut, what
appeared to have happened was a negotiation by heirs of deceased males, to indemnify themselves
for this ‘gift’. But even more significant, since slave-concubines were accepted as near ‘extensions’
of the master/husband’s persona, the ‘freeing’ of the slave at the death of the master meant that
he was resurrected in the living person of his favourite. This was both a source of anxiety to the
105AGG F. V. Raper to Secy, to GOB, F. J. Halliday, 1 Nov. 1844, BPubC, P/13/52, 8 Jan. 1845, no.
51. A similar pecuniary punishment was meted out to Besmillah Begum a ‘hurm’ of the deceased Syud
Wahed Ali in 1852, vide Gen. (Poll.) Letter from GOB to Court of Directors, 24 June 1852 in BC
F/4/2476/138839.
133
surviving heirs of a dead man, as well as cause for the renewed obligation of the slave-wife or
concubine to be as ‘inviolable’ as the master had been in his lifetime. Thus charges of ‘exposure’
of the person of the concubine and wife, after they had become mothers of the lineage, and after
they had been ‘widowed’, was to charge these women with a grave lapse of obligation to the
master, to his lineage, and to his heirs. Especially if she had been a concubine of a Nazim, this
was the equivalent of political disloyalty, a declaration of resistance that called forth swift
retribution. Moreover, the involvement of other slaves and servants in such resistance appeared
to have made this charge a formidable weapon in the disciplinary regimes of very ordinary
households also.
As if pecuniary reprisals were not adequate for curing this so-called ‘notorious profligacy
and disregard of appearances ... among the female branches of the Nizamut’, other methods were
devised by English officials as prophylaxis.106 Convinced that the ‘natural and most suitable
guardian of a woman’s honour’ was a husband, Melville in 1836 initiated a policy of getting all
such widows ‘re-married’. In a repetition of earlier efforts by Loch to get the ‘illegitimate’
daughters ‘married’, this Agent set about arranging matrimonial alliances for ‘widows’. The Agent
had discovered
a custom of this family ... that the widows never remarry ... finding this usage
does not obtain in society generally and that it derives no sort of sanction from
the Mahomedan Law, I ... quietly consulted] His Highness on the propriety of
reverting to the Law, instead of abiding by the practice.107
Playing political football with Islamic law was dangerous for the lives and limbs of the women
subject to such measures. Few Agents had stopped to think of what these ‘marriages’ might have
implied for the women who were to be subjected to them repeatedly. Just when the opportunity
appeared, for a rest or release from the cycles of reproductive and productive labours, they were
to be re-entered on the conveyor belt which tied their wombs to the demands of the market and
the household economy. Re-establishing the authority of ‘husbands’ and ‘sons’ according to some
grand patriarchal design of domesticity was conducive to the ethos of slave-control that the
Company built up and maintained. There were enough indications that those who inherited control
over these concubines did hire such women out in turn to different men, depending on the direness
of the straits they were in. This was as true for women who were metaphorically ‘mothers’ of an
heir [but in reality the slave-women or kaneezan of deceased males] as it was of ‘widows’ and
106AGG Melville to Macnaghten, 20 June 1836, BPC, P/127/32, 28 June 1836, no. 2.
107Ibid.
134
‘daughters’.108 Such women in turn became vulnerable to measures of punitive moral taxation
from the 1850s and 60s, as prostitutes. Since some of these slave-concubines may indeed have
been working out their ransom payments, under the supervision and management of older ex
slaves and erstwhile masters and mistresses, the effort to tax this group of ‘businesses’ in the
1860s was another instance of how colonial policies colluded in reinforcing, and in appropriating
for financial ends, older modes of slave-management.109
108For an instance of the former, see AGG to Sec. to GOB, 28 Nov. 1835, BPC, P/127/29, 8 Dec. 1835,
no. 18. In this the son of Meer Mehndy, a youth called Mobarak Ali, was punished by the Nazim for having
taken the ‘hurm of his father’ with him on a boat, and having her visited by a servant of the Nazim’s, the
Darogah of the Shuterkhanah. For an instance of the latter, see Commr. of Dacca to Ch. Sec. Swinton, 14
Jan. 1832, BC F/4/1432/56565. According to this, some men of Dacca had complained against a woman
called Kuneez Fatimah, who had been ‘widowed’, had been taken as a ‘mistress of a Hindoo merchant of
property’ and was subsequently said to have been ‘little better than a common prostitute’.
110AGG Caulfield to Prinsep, Sec. Poll., 18 Dec. 1838, BPC, P/127/40, 2 Jan. 1839, no. 4.
135
An illustration of the Company’s manipulation of both Islamic law and the custom of the
household is the suppression of a doctrine implicit to all slave-holding households in Bengal
between the late eighteenth and nineteenth century. Premised upon the peculia granted to slaves,
enjoining upon slaves the further task of adding to the income and wealth of the whole household,
the incompatibility of Company’s revenue-extraction measures with the maintenance of this
specific feature of ‘Islamic law’ was obvious from the very start.
The fluctuations that we have noticed above in the way contests over inheritance were
framed and handled by the Company revolved around discrete but inter-twined issues: that of
inheritance from slaves, and the other was the claims of slave-born children within the households
of which they were a part, in contest with other members. These two issues in turn were premised
on the customary practices of many households in Bengal with regard to the maintenance and
provisions of slaves. Especially important was the intimate connection of slaves with the different
kinds of tenure-holding, and the monetary allowances stipulated for each. From the accounts of
the Parganahs of Baharbund and Beterbund (part of the Nattore Raj before the reorganisation of
1793), the Committe of Circuit in 1772 reported that alongwith the varying sums allotted from the
collections to paiks, lattials, muhurrirs, sums of Rs. 193-17 were given to the bhandaris (male
slaves, described as ‘servants attending the Zemindar’s house at Burnagore’). Another sum of Rs.
65-18 was marked out for the bhandaris who attended the purohits (‘Bramins’) and Rs. 15-1 was
given to the dasis of Rani Bhavani.111 In 1794, a Rajbari establishment for the zamindar of
Dinajpur, containing 150 bhandaris on a ‘monthly salary’ of Rs. 563-8-0, and 18 dasis ( ‘for
beating wheat’) at a monthly salary of Rs. 36 was fixed by the Collector and the Council at
Calcutta.112
One of the key strategies that slave-holding societies in the Mediterranean had developed
to encompass the simultaneous and dual aspect of wealth was what in Roman legal terms has been
called the peculium. According to Finley, it encompassed property in whatever form (including
slaves, buildings or goods) ‘assigned for use, management, and within limits, disposal to someone
who in law lacked the right of property’. In strict Roman law, it was a purely voluntary grant by
the master, which involved her/him in legal responsibility to third parties up to the amount of the
peculium, and which s/he was free to withdraw at any time. In practice, the holder may have had
a free hand in the management of it and could also ransom him/herself from the profits and
112Collr. Dinajpur to President, BOR, 11 July 1794, BOR Misc. (Wards), P/89/60, 25 July 1794, no.2;
also Sirajul Islam, The Permanent Settlement in Bengal: A Study o f Its Operation 1790-1819 (Dacca, 1979),
pp. 206-7, table 12, for 1152 bighas of chakeran lands, held by the (male) slaves of the Dinajpur Raj.
136
continue to use it after manumission.113 Thus the critical role of the peculium was its use as a
device to motivate slaves to work at skilled and demanding occupations, while preserving both the
honour and the profits of the master.114
As Watson urged in his critique of Tushnet, English law, and English-derived law had no
equivalent for the recognition of the peculium as one of the legal possibilities of a slave-
society.115 The sums of money, slaves, plots of land or buildings that were ‘benami’- belonging
to the master or mistress but written against a slave’s name - were the Indian equivalent of the
peculium. Such ‘benami’ pattahs were held in the case of the Nizamut, and of other households,
of both revenue-paying lands (khiraj) and of lakhiraj tenures. But this could cause great difficulties
when such slaves in turn tried to claim the property as ‘their own’ or ‘self-acquired’ property,
which like the slave-born sons of Shahamut Jung, many did attempt. Furthermore, when such a
slave died, the disputes over the slave’s or freedman’s peculia were acrimonious, involving the
prior questions not of slavery or freedom, but whose slave she or he had been. This was a peculiar
dilemma, especially since slaves were transferred between masters and mistresses for various
reasons and in different economic forms. For instance in a contest between two blood-brothers in
Chittagong in 1796 over the division of hereditary property, exclusive of self-acquired lands, the
younger brother claimed that certain villages (Cherowtee and Gyah) acquired by his grandfather
as a gift had in turn been entered as Turruf Nychund after Nychund ‘an industrious and attentive
slave’ to whom the management of these villages had been made over.116 These villages,along
with the self-purchased slaves of the grandfather, had in turn been gifted to one of the unclesof
the plaintiff, and therefore had not been subject to further division among heirs. The elder
brother’s rejoinder was :
There was a slave of my Grandfather by name Punchaun who having acted as
Khedmutgaur to the Lala and acquired some money by his industry purchased at
his own expense villages Chorawtee Gyah &ca. which he caused to be entered at
the Sudder as a Turruff and after paying his Revenue whatever profits remained,
he appropriated to his own use. He with his own money bought Four slaves
Nvchand Chandah &ca. for his own service - lala Nundram [the uncle] never
114For a comprehensive discussion of the peculium arrangement, see Aaron Kirschenbaum, Sons, Slaves
and Freedmen in Roman Commerce (Jerusalem, 1987), pp. 31-87.
llsAlan Watson, Review Essay ‘On The American law of Slavery 1810-1860’, Yale Law Journal, 91,
5, 1982, pp. 1034-47, and Slave Law in the Americas (New York, 1989), p. 72; Tushnet’s reply, ‘Critical
Method in Legal History’, Cardozo Law Review, 9, 1985, pp. 997-1011.
ll6Progs. of the Diwani Adalut of Zillah Chittagong before J. E. Colebrooke, in case of Ramdulloll vs.
Ramkishore of 28 June 1783, in Proceedings of the Sadr Diwani Adalut, P/153/11, 27 April 1796, nos. 13-
14.
137
I18P. Crone, Roman, Provincial and Islamic Law: The Origin o f the Islamic Patronate (Cambridge,
1987), p. 77.
three apparently contradictory statements about slave-property in the same breath. (1) Slaves
purchased their freedom from their earnings/ thus establishing that the property possessed or
realized by a slave in servitude is his own’. (2) The property of a slave reverts to the master upon
the death of the latter, but slaves seldom have anything to leave of their ow n/their clothes and
every thing they have on, or what they have for use, belong to their masters, who provide them
with everything’. In this context he gave the eunuchs of the Nawab Nazim of Murshidabad as his
example, to whom their many landed estates had reverted upon the death of the former. (3) Slaves
succeed by will to the property of their masters.120 Cheap’s comments, in fact, endorse the
existence of the peculium as the existence of specific capacities, stopping well short of the capacity
to alienate permanently, logically enough, as far the master was concerned, because the capacity
to bestow/ bequeath/ was specifically his/her own. It also permits the formulation of the peculium
as the grant of specific capacities in relation to a material thing, rather than the thing itself. The
denial of all the capacities was maintained by the fact that the peculium lapsed with the death of
the slave. This is also what the Nazims seem to imply by their actions when a slave died.
The special incapacity of slaves, thus to dispose of their persons, and certain kinds of
material goods, both in Roman law as well as in Islamic law, continued even after manumission.
The device through which this incapacity was articulated in the former was the paramone, and in
the latter it was the institution of wala. Strictly speaking, the paramone is the provision of support
by a slave to the master/ mistress and acting as a condition for the former’s manumission, a form
of retaining the services and income from the slave but not responsibility for his/ her delicts.121
This kind of paramonar manumission seemed to have been widely prevalent and may be compared
to the kitabut and tudbeer forms of manumission in Islamic law, and the whole to the endowment
of the relationship of wala between manumittor and slave.
The main legal incidents of wala were (a) title to the freedman’s estate, on which there
was no disagreement between either Sunni or Shia law. The differences arose between the two
schools in the ways they represent this title: in Sunni fiqh, the master inherited as the last agnate
of the freedman, taking the residue after Quranic heirs, be excluded by a genuine agnate and
himself exclude remoter relatives, like a sister’s son. The Shias, however, held that the
manumittors’ title rested on sabab (tie, connection) rather than nasb (blood-relationship) and
excluded the manumittor from succession in competition with any blood relation of the freedman,
120Appendix II, Report from Indian Law Commissioners, {PP), 1841, no.47, p.293.
12lFor an instance of this kind of manumission, see Charu Chandra Ray, ‘Slaves and Slavery in old
Chandernagore’, BPP, 6, 1910, pp. 257-265. In one deed, Antoine Manhon, 6/7 year-old slave, ‘native of
Balasore’, was freed on the promise that he would pay his owners/masters Rs. 6 per year for the period of
six years, as repayment for the sum expended on him. The repayment was facilitated by his being ‘bound
over’ to the merchants of the Royal Company of France.
139
regardless of proximity of relationship. Other obligations tied up with being a wall (guardian)
included (b) the obligation of paying blood-money on behalf of the freedman, and (c) the claims
of manumittors to act as marriage guardians to the freedwoman or the freedman’s daughter. The
manumittor’s rights and duties extended to the freedman’s descendants, as well as to his freedmen
and their freedmen in perpetuity. And on his own death they passed to his descendants in
perpetuity. This relationship could not be the subject of sale, gift or other kinds of alienation. Thus
at these points the wala relationship came closest to resembling a kinship-tie.
The difference was that the rights and duties vested in kinship ties were usually reciprocal
whereas in the wala, it was unilateral. The manumittor acquired rights and duties vis-a-vis the
freedman but the freedman did not acquire the same claims upon the manumittor. In other words,
wala as an institution continued the relationship of dependence between slave, freedman or woman
and master or mistress, through the maintenance of specific incapacities on the part of the ‘lower
m aw la ’ (the ex-slave) and the retention of specific capacities in the ‘higher m aw la ’ (the
manumittor).
master of an enfranchised slave’.122 In the section of Principles of Inheritance in the same book,
in the discussion of the distant ‘kindred’ it is stated that if ‘the estate to be inherited belonged to
an enfranchised slave, his manumittor and the heirs of such manumittor inherit, in preference to
the distant kindred of the deceased’.123 This is the closest Macnaghten got to the institution
without its name.
The absence of the term wala from this influential text has to be explained before we can
proceed to see its consequences for the Nizamut and such slave-holding households. One of the
possible reasons for this may have been semantic, for as eighteenth-century lexicographers
noted,‘There is no single word in our language fully expressive of this term. The shortest
definition of it is, the relationship between the m aster (or patron) and his freedm an; but even this
does not express the whole meaning’.124 Furthermore, the silence may have been the
consequence of the term’s absence from pleading itself so that if a claimant did not use the term
it may not have entered the early English jurist-official’s field of enquiry. Certainly, Cheap, Judge
of Mymensingh was categorical that claims to the property of deceased slaves never become a
subject of inquiry in a criminal court, and he had no instance of this from the zillah court he
presided over.125 One of the reasons for the non-appearance of the term may also have been the
result of procedure. In the majority of ‘civil’ cases submitted by the provincial courts to the
appellate jurisdiction of the Sadr Diwani Adalut, the statement of the case by the lower-level judge
would already have framed the issue for judgement. This is where the local official’s definitions
of who was or was not a slave would impinge on the submission; all too often, the reference to
the Qazis and Muftis obliterated the fundamental relationships between persons, referring to them
as A,B,C ad infinitum, as though each individual was jurally ‘free’ and socially autonomous. In
the process, the wide range of incapacities that corresponded with the varieties of slave-status were
erased from the British judicial and legal records. Any remaining chances of inferring capacities
on the basis of relationships between persons was attenuated further when the substance of slave-
status was depicted in the language of kinship.
The likelier explanation for the suppression of wala in the Principles o f M oohumudan law
was political. In Shia law, the failure of heirs meant that the property in question fell, to the share
of the Imam. The only equivalent for this in English law was the term ‘escheat’; it was a term
liberally used by the early Company men in their discussion of land-tenures, and in deciding
122Macnaghten, Principles and Precedents, (ed. Sloan, Calcutta, 1860), Case XXVII, pp. 103-105.
l24Francis Gladwin, A Dictionary o f Mohammedan Law (Calcutta, 1797), p. 52, no. 755, ‘willa’.
125Appendix II, Report of the Indian Law Commissioners, (PP), 1841, p. 293.
141
whether the land belonged to the sovereign, in this case, the Mughal Emperor.126 After 1765,
having received the Diwani from the Emperor, it became even more critical to many functionaries
of the Company to acquire those attributes that characterised, in their eyes, Mughal sovereignty.
Claiming the rights of the Imam tallied almost too neatly with the fiscal interests of the Company
after 1773, when with the passing of the Regulating Act, the control over its revenues became
subject to the governance of Parliament. In the range of measures taken to ensure the stability and
volume of revenues from India, a process just as important as the reification of land occurred in
the case of the Nizamut - the obliteration of boundaries between ‘private’ property and Subahdari
jagirs (state property). The broad interpretation that the Company put on the treaties of 1765-66
was that the Nazim Mir Jafar had given up all his jagirs to the Company in return for a fixed
monetary stipend. There was little formal, or treaty-based, recognition of the custom by which all
Mughal officials and subahdars had tried to create private holdings separate from those which were
attached to their office. As one scion of the house explained it in the late nineteenth century, the
officials ‘were obliged to do this, as otherwise, in the event of any withdrawal of the favour of
the Emperor,... they would have been left penniless’.127 The only lands the Supreme Council in
Calcutta informally recognised as the ‘private’ holdings of the Nazim were the rumnah (lands
attached to hunting lodges, and including grazing lands). All other kinds of land were deemed to
be State property: thus acquisitions of wealth in jewellery, lands, and other properties by purchase,
inheritance, gift, either by the individual Nazims, or in their private capacities by members of the
household, were understood by all Agents and Company officials alike to be liable to the demands
of the State. This, while explaining the avidity with which the resources of the Nizamut were
scrutinised, obscured a more fundamental haziness about the source of political legitimacy. Who
represented the State? In the initial years after the assumption of the Diwani, the Company
operated within an ideational edifice, according to which the Nazim represented one (judicial)
aspect of the State and the Company another (revenue). After the turn of the century, the Company
attempted to replicate the relationship of the Emperor and Subehdar in its relations with the
Nazims.
These convolutions conditioned the discussion and implementation of wala and had
significant consequences in the creation of Anglo-Islamic law. By eliminating the term from their
discussion, the mid-century English jurists eliminated different types of wala - one flowing from
12f’For a brief discussion of the Mughal emperors exercise of mastery through escheat, see J.F.Richards,
‘Norms of Comportment Among Imperial Mughal officers’ in idem Power, Administration and Finance in
Mughal India, (London, 1993), p. 264 and M. Athar Ali, The Mughal Nobility Under Aurungzeb (Aligarh,
1966), pp. 63-66.
l27Husain Ali Mirza to Collr. of Murshidabad, 25 Feb. 1885, BPC, P/2499, Aug. 1885, nos. 21-22.
142
the original kinless status of slaves, and another by which temporary relationships of clientage
were established. Thus the importance of the musahibs (companions-cum-non-slave male clients)
in various men’s lives was ignored. In addition to ignoring these claims between non-slaves, the
claims of masters and mistresses upon slaves and slave-born members were displaced. Thus the
substance of wala and related terms and usages were relegated from the realm of the patronate to
that of family inheritance, and of ‘family’ and ‘inheritance’ law, from which it never
recovered.128
After all, the policy of the various committees on the allowances and stipends of the
slaves, and slave-born members of the varying households of the Nizamut, had furthered the denial
of slaves and slave-born upon the Company and the Nizamut. As shown in Chapter I, the
Company’s Agents, and Collectors, tried to deal with the complex problem by separating the cash-
allowance for a slave-servant (part of the matayyanah of a relative), from the mamulaat (lit.
assistance, which a relative had from the Nizamut treasury in cash) and resuming the former on
the reported death of the slave-servant or concubine on the premise that this was a life provision
only. But to many of the holders and masters of such slaves, the importance of transferring the
sum to another slave and thus continuing the relationship of service and dependence was critical.
Thus the battles over the custody of particular slaves between the members of the Nizamut were
simultaneously battles over the funds and inheritance from slaves.
At the same time, the appearance of ‘intra-family’ disputes over ‘inheritance’ were actually
disputes over wala, as in the instance of the conflict between the Nazim in 1810 and his uncles
over the wealth of Babbu Begum.129 It was noteworthy that the claimants in her ‘property’ did
not include the blood-relatives of Summen Ali Khan, the putative father of Babbu Begum, heirs
who were alive at the time of Babbu Begum’s death. A similar case can be made for the damad’s
estates in Murshidabad.
Secondly, and this had particular relevance to the claims of slave-women, the question
whether having borne a child to her master, she also acquired the capacity to inherit from him, or
bequeath the material wealth she had enjoyed and accumulated to her slaves and children, was
never adequately refined in legal terms. Yet this was the cornerstone of the entire structure of
land-and wealth-holding by slaves upon which personal fortunes rested, and which remained the
single most important source of conflict between the Nazims, their collaterals and the Company.
After all, the very creation of the Deposit Fund in 1818 had been premised upon the Governor-
128Though Neil B.E.Baillie restored the term to discussion in his Digest o f Moohummudan Law, by the
1860s, the discussion had become a singularly academic one, since all official decisions continued to insist
that the relation of slave and master had been de-legalised by Act V, 1843.
General’s claim that the stipend of the ex-slave, Munni Begum, lapsed to the Company, rather than
to the heirs and descendants of her manumittor i.e. the brothers and sons of Mir Jafir. Thus the
Agent had taken a very active role in intervening in the conflicts between the sons of Mubarak-ud-
daula and the Nazim Alijah (1810-21) over the property and wealth supposed to have been
accumulated by the deceased Begum. The important additional factor where slave-born daughters
were concerned was when they had been ‘given’ in marriage to specific men chosen by the
Begums of the deoris. The claim of dower according to doctrines of Islamic law upon the estates
of such bridegrooms in turn reveals the complex interweaving of the inheritance from that of the
client who had been acquired by marriage.
The modification-by-suppression, of the principles of wala, at the hands of the Company
was even more visible in the cases of the peculia of the eunuchs, the slave-officials whose death
had serious implications for the household and treasury. When the death of an eunuch or a
concubine was imminent, the putting of seals of the master on the papers, rooms, goods was thus
the first step in the exercise of the right of wala - as an ailing eunuch, Bussunt Ali Khan found
in 1833. Finding the house he lodged in surrounded by guards sent by the Nazim, led by the
Nazim’s own eunuch, Feroze, with orders to put seals on his house and property ‘so as to prevent
his even having access to his Linen, food or medicines’, Bussunt appealed to AGG Cobbe, who
then wrote to the Superintendent of Nizamut Buildings resident in the Killah, Colonel McLeod,
to personally remove the seals and guards, and to ensure the drawing up of a will by the infirm
eunuch. Whether the papers were actually drawn up and transferred to the Agent we do not know,
but McLeod reported that the invalid ‘stated his intention to bequeath all his landed possessions
to the Company, with a request that a provision therefrom of comparatively small extent, should
be made for the support of his dependants...that he meant to make over the Kuddum Shurreef to
the Buhoo Begum & ...his personal property to his friend (Bhaii) Bahr Ally Khan’.130 This
disposition surprised the Englishman because the eunuch ‘did not once mention’ the mistress he
had served so long, the Doolhin Begum, Ameerunissa. The ‘brother’ the term Bhaii refers to was
also another eunuch, belonging to the deori of Munni Begum.
As evident in the case from Chittagong referred to earlier, the dilemma for the Company’s
officers lay in the fact that there were too many claimants to the same slave’s goods, precisely
because in one lifetime a slave could have served various different persons. Coupled with the fact
that the Company’s officers treated all acquisitions and divestments of the individual members of
the Nizamut as though these were in ‘State’ property, the claims of individual masters and
mistresses to inherit from deceased slaves necessarily involved them in a tussle with the judicial
administration of the Company, while many of the decisions of the Company in these instances
I3,1Coll. D. McLeod to AGG Cobbe, 10 June 1833, BPC, 21 June 1833, no. 70, in BC F/4/1475/57976.
144
were conditioned not by the dictates of Islamic law but by prevailing fiscal and political demands.
Thus when the eunuch Bussunt Ali Khan died in 1833, there were three separate claimants: the
Nazim Humayunjah, Nawab Ameerunissa Begum and finally, the Buhoo Begum conjointly with
another eunuch Bahar AH Khan. The evidence that emerged made it impossible for the Company
to conform to formal sharia principles without loss to itself. Therefore it made a pragmatic secular
decision calculated to benefit its finances.
The fact that a slave never retired, and was recalled to office under a succeeding mistress
was the basis of the claims made by Ameerunissa Begum in 1834. After the death of Munni
Begum, Bussunt Ali Khan though receiving his allowance of Rs. 350 appears to have held no
office, until Ameerunissa’s accession to the rank of the Ja-Nushin, or head of the Deoriat. Since
Ameerunissa then re-appointed Bussunt as Nazir, a post for which he received a ‘salary’ of Rs.
200, Ameerunissa’s claims rested both upon h er succession to headship and to the perquisites of
that status, one of which was the services of all those slaves who had served the earlier head. This
was significant because even though at the end of his life, Bussunt Ali Khan suffered from palsy
and was unable to actually conduct the affairs of his office, and another eunuch, Zumurood, was
the real functionary, the office and title of Nazir, along with the salary, remained with Bussunt.
Therefore, instead of really challenging the Nazim’s claims, Ameerunissa only built upon the
presumptions implicit in the former.
The fundamental challenge came actually from the very existence of the third claimants,
a process that involved the complicity of the Agent and the overarching English ideas of
proprietorship, wealth and modes of transmission. Thinking that the eunuchs possessed the wealth
they managed, successive AGG tried to devise testamentary evidence from Bussunt Ali Khan
himself as to the modes in which the wealth would be bequeathed upon his death. Perhaps, the
eunuch recognised the possibilities that the Agents represented of dispensing with something like
his ‘self-acquired’ wealth, and also realised that the cupidity of the Company’s officials would
ensure the success of even the tiniest act of defiance. The AGG, in 1833, at least believed that
Bussunt Ali Khan would, by his will, leave to the Company were worth ‘about 3 lacs of Rupees
the provision for his followers will involve a very trifling expense’.131 However, in the paper
that he wrote at the behest of the AGG, Bussunt Ali left the ‘whole of his property moveable and
immoveable’ in trust to Buhoo Begum and Bahar Ali Khan who were directed to appropriate 2/3
to the support of the Kuddum Shureef Masjid and the Imambara at Begum Gunge, and the
remaining third was to be used for his own funerary expenses. The supervision of the Government
in the expenditure of the funds was requested, especially if ‘opposition be offered in any quarter’.
The AGG apparently remonstrated on the ‘difference’ of the above disposition ‘from that which
131AGG Mcleod to Sec. to GOB, Macnaghten, 12 June, 1833, BPC, 21 June 1833, no.70, ibid.
145
was understood some time before was to be made’.132 Even though the ailing eunuch clarified
that there was no discrepancy, the sums mentioned in this clarification were substantially less than
the 3 lakhs the AGG had looked forward to. In fact, the total annual income from the zamindaris
were calculated by the eunuch to be between Rs. 8000-9000. As Thoresby put it, Bussunt Ali
Khan had written nothing of the ‘small houses and some Gardens and patches of ground’ in
Murshidabad, a statement of which he tried to procure from the mutsuddis of the deceased eunuch.
(See Appendix II). As far as the English materialist ethos was concerned, the ‘proprietorship’ of
these zamindaris, jewels, plate was enough for one Agent to insist that ‘Bussunt Ulee Khan was
a free servant of the Nizamut’ 133 (in direct opposition to the Nazim’s claims). This arbitrary
ascription of ‘freedom’, in turn, was meant to establish the ability of the eunuch to dispose of his
wealth, in ways that evaded the erstwhile masters.134
The fact that the eunuch had not mentioned Ameerunissa Begum who had been his
employer for the last decade of his life was not as revealing as the Agents thought. Nor had he
tried to bequeath anything to his own chelas, Mian Juwahir and Mian Qumbux, nor had he
mentioned Zummurud, the slave he had personally bought from Hyderabad. Perhaps the eunuch
had not mentioned either because it was taken for granted by him that title to various houses,
lands, gardens were not his to dispose of. In fact, in the very people he named as trustees lay the
indication of this knowledge; Bahar Ali Khan was yet another eunuch, albeit the eldest of the
Khajasera of the Nizamut, and serving at the deori of the Buhoo Begum. Though appointed a
trustee of the estate of Bussunt, he never actually exercised this power, possibly because of
factional machinations which caused him to resign: by 1838, Bahar too had died.135 In any case,
the Government of Bengal upheld the testamentary evidence, on the grounds that Bussunt Ali
Khan ‘appeared to have been a Free person having a right to dispose of his own property’.136
Five years later, it changed its mind: then the Government accepted that ‘Bussunt Ali Khan was
a purchased Eunuch slave his heir therefore, failing any near relations or dispositions by will of
133Ibid.
134For identical attempts to resume lands ‘gifted’ by Walida Begum to her eunuch Rozeufzoon, see
letters of Cobbe and McLeod to Nawab Nazim, 16 June, and 7 Sept. 1835 and 9 March 1836, MNLI, II,
pp. 9, 14 and 23.
I35Melville to Macnaghten, 1 May 1837, MNLI, II, pp. 84-5 and 157.
136Extract Poll. Letter to Court of Directors, 13 Nov. 1834, para 230, BC F/4/1522/60090A. One of the
factors influencing the decision was the fact that ‘several of the villages in default of payment of the
Government dues were advertised for public sale’. See para 228, ibid.
146
the Estate, will be, according to the Mahomedan law, his late master’.137 This admission however
came after the intervention of the earlier Agent in taking over the charge of the estate and
appointing another manager had failed to yield the expected profits and revenues.138 Finally,
when this manager too failed to satisfy the Agent, the issue of handing back the estate to the
Nazim or to the Begums was reopened. But after 1839, there was a new and very young Nazim
on the musnud (ten-year-old Faridunjah), who was deemed ‘unqualified for such a charge’. So,
despite the fact that the eunuch’s deposition had specified Buhoo Begum, the charge of the estate
was handed over to Ameerunissa Begum.
This was not an accidental choice. Capitalising on the proclivity of the current Agent,
Melville, to believe unproblematically in the ‘dissoluteness’ of all females in the Nizamut, and
continuing a tradition of politico-symbolic gestures, the Nazim Humayunjah accused Buhoo
Begum of ‘sexual misconduct with a Chela of the Nizamut named Shooja Koolee alias
Flingoo’.139 The superintendence of Buhoo Begum was effectively destroyed : after a summary
investigation, involving typically depositions by the eunuch Bahar Ali Khan himself and other
slaves of the Nazim, Melville authorised the removal of the ‘grey headed old and nearly toothless’
Buhoo Begum from the deori from which she claimed her rank. Though a subsequent Agent
showed how ‘impossible’ this charge was, it was clear that one of the reasons for the Nazim’s
conflict with a woman who in kinship terms was both ‘mother’ and ‘uncle’s wife’ was his desire
to appropriate the ‘property of one of her late husband’s concubines’.140
The blanket and formal sweeping away of such issues, spelt out in Act V of 1843, was
thus the culmination of a long process of attrition of the very doctrines that had been guaranteed
in 1773 i.e. the preservation of sharia law to Muslims in the matter of succession, marriage, and
inheritance. It is noteworthy that Prinsep, who vehemently opposed any legislative enactment on
the abolition of slavery, as much as the majority of the Law Commission, appeared to agree on
one issue regarding the A c t: that masters no longer be allowed to inherit from slaves. Though the
specific instances Prinsep used to illustrate his argument were those of the main eunuchs of the
Awadh and Nizamat households,141 the resumption of the stipends and the lands held by slaves
i37H. T. Prinsep, Sec. to GOB, to AGG, R.B.Pemberton, 13 Feb. 1839, MNLR, II, pp. 384-85.
l3RFor ‘Abstract Accounts of Receipts and Disbursements from 1240 B.S. to 1243 B.S.[1834-5 to 1837-
8]’ furnished by Bahar Ali Khan, see BPC, P/127/40, 13 Feb. 1839, no. 7.
139Nawab Nazim to Melville, 24 June 1837, BPC, P/127/35, 25 July 1837, no. 7.
140AGG Caulfield to Prinsep, 26 April 1838, and enclosures, MNLI, II, pp. 171-74.
I4lMinute of 31 July 1841, BC F/4/1947/84542. Prinsep discussed the differential in British policies: on
one hand, allowing the Nawab of Awadh to claim as heir of the eunuch-slave of his grandfather, Darab Ali
Khan, and on the other, refusing to resolve the claims in Murshidabad.
147
and ex-slaves into the coffers of the Company rather than that of any specific master or mistress
was neither new nor specific to eunuchs. As the Nazims pointed out from 1836 to 1870, the
Company had built up the Deposit Fund from 1818 by resuming Munni Begum’s stipend, rather
than allow the Nazim or successive gaddinashins to inherit it, even though in terms of Islamic law,
they were the ‘legal heirs’. The subsequent policy of ‘lapsed stipends’ and ‘resumption’
proceedings in land had only continued this suppression of wala, all to the advantage of the
various municipal and political measures that this Fund financed.'42
In a fairly representative denouement of events, in 1878 the Government of India instituted
an enquiry into the availability of funds from ‘Muslim’ endowments to meet expenses of another
Agency - for Indian pilgrims at Jeddah. One official wrote then of the Kuddum Shareef in
Murshidabad that though Bussunt Ali Khan had endowed the mosque and Imambara with a third
of his wealth, the ‘estate was encumbered with a heavy debt, and had to conduct expensive
lawsuits brought against it’.143 How had matters come to such a pass in an institution cherished
by slaves,144 and managed under the authority of the colonial government? Establishing control
over the revenues of such mosques, evident in the case of other mosques like the one founded by
Munni Begum145, was to drive Act V of 1843. The culminating paradox was that the denial of
masters’ claims in the wealth slaves had donated, in this instance, to the cause of a higher being,
only come about by a suppression of the sharia and fiqh.
As we have seen in this chapter, colonial policy on the civil consequences of enslavement
and slave use was conditioned not by attention to doctrinal law, as to other contingent factors. To
understand the cumulative nature of the changes brought about by colonial adjudication and
legislation, we must turn to what had become by mid-century the Company’s legal regulation of
slavery.
142Apart from the palace, upon which the sums spent appear incalculable even by the Government’s own
admission, for an example of ‘public works’ financed from the Deposit Fund see India F&P, P/203/31, 7
Jan. 1859, nos. 6-7.
l430ffg. Sec. to BOR to Sec. to GOB, 21 Nov. 1879, BPC, P/1493, March 1880, file 19, no. 6.
144The same complex, the Kuddum Sharif, contained a mosque built in 1780 by Itwar Ali Khan, Munni
Begum’s chief eunuch, according to Perween Hasan,‘Art and Architecture’ in Sirajul Islam, History of
Bangladesh, III, p.664.
l45For advice to establish control over the revenues while omitting the care of the slave-servants fixed
to the mosque in Chouk Nowabad, see Macnaghten to AGG, 21 June 1836, BPC, P/127/32, 19 June 1836,
no. 3.
Chapter III
As the previous chapters have shown, the interpretation of classical and Quranic doctrine,
by qazis and maulvis as well as by British scholar-officials, occurred in the context of a social
history inflected with slavery. Sadly understudied in the present scholarship of indigenous law in
India,1the reconstitution of ‘Islamic’ law specifically, and of Regulation Law generally, as a result
of the intersection of slave-laws of a different historical formation in the case of India proved to
be particularly critical for slaves.2 Hence, this chapter traces one aspect of practice within
adjudicatory regimes of the late eighteenth century, namely that of the theft or ‘enticing’ of slaves.
It argues that (a) in local regimes, this single mode of complaining covered a multitude of
functions and had different consequences for parties involved and (b) since it was a concern
common to all slave-holders in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the Company’s readiness
to reinforce the claims of masters, by special attention to this complaint, conditioned the enactment
and construction of statute regarding the ‘trade’ in slaves. Thus the apparent delegalisation of
slave-holding by Act V of 1843 was undercut by the practice of the courts that continued to
adjudicate in matters concerning claims in slaves, and vitiated administrative practice into the
1870s.
An analysis of the conditions under which Englishmen in India in the late eighteenth
century asserted that there were legal categories they should use, has to take into account a
conjunction of three different historical conditions. These were the convolution of the East India
Company with the existing Mughal forms of adjudication around slaves, the judicial developments
'See Upendra Baxi, ‘People’s Law in India, The Hindu Society’ in Masaji Chiba (ed.), Asian Indigenous
Law: In Interaction with Received Law (London, 1986), pp. 216-66; Michael R. Anderson, ‘Islamic Law
and the Colonial Encounter in British India’ in Chibli Mallat and Jane Connors (eds), Islamic Family Law
(London, 1990), pp. 205-23; idem ‘Work Construed : Ideological Origins of Labour Law in British India
to 1918’ in P.Robb (ed.), Dalit Movements and the Meanings o f Labour in India (Delhi, 1993), pp. 87-120;
Radhika Singha, ‘The Privilege of Taking Life; Some "Anomalies" in the Law of Homicide in the Bengal
Presidency’, IESHR, 30, 2, 1993, pp.181-214; J. Fisch, Cheap Lives and Dear Limbs; the British
Transformation of the Bengal Criminal Law 1769-1817 (Weisbaden, 1983). Despite their significant
contributions, these scholars say very little about the adjudicatory norms regarding slaves and slavery in the
dialectic of received and indigenous law.
2For comparative studies, see Ahmad A. Sikainga, ‘Shari’a Courts and the Manumission of Female
Slaves in the Sudan, 1898-1939’, UAHS, 28, 1, 1995, pp. 1-24; Martha Mundy, ‘The Family, Inheritance,
and Islam: a Reexamination of the Sociology of Faraid Law’ in Aziz Al-Azmeh (ed.), Islamic Law: Social
and Historical Contexts (New York, 1988), pp. 1-123 and Elsa Y. Goveia, The West Indian Slave laws of
the 18th Century (Barbados, 1970).
149
in ‘slave-law’ in the Atlantic colonial and metropolitan judiciaries, and the insertion of the East
India Company into the older European and indigenous transactions in slaves. Through the
seventeenth century and the early eighteenth, merchants of the Company had lived within the local
faujdar’s or governor’s orders and rulings, at the same time that a system of M ayor’s courts had
been functional.3 In 1698, a grant from the Mughal governor of Bengal, Azim-us shan, of the
zamindari of Calcutta, Sutanuti and Govindapur to the Company, had permitted a merchant-
zamindar of the Company to collect revenues and preside over cases between the inhabitants of
the three villages. The setting up of the Supreme Court by the Regulating Act of 1773 would not
have been the first instance of the imposition of British law: the M ayor’s Courts, to all intents and
purposes, had administered English law in India since 1661, confirmed by the Charters of 1726
and 1753. Though the Diwani was acquired in 1765, the local faujdari courts continued to
function, even in the Company’s zamindari of Calcutta.
The years between 1766 and 1772, however, were critical for the slave-trading interests
in England, for the first legal challenges being instituted on behalf of slaves to remain within
England against the wishes of various owners. By the latter date, it was estimated that the number
of African slaves ( ‘blacks’) in England amounted to 14-15,0004; from England, they were
transported, by means of ‘crimping’ (a species of kidnapping), to various colonies in the West
Indies, the Americas and to India. The involvement of the East India Company in India in this
trading is evidenced by bills passed by the Council at Fort William to the owners of the ship
Solebay for victualling fifty of the Company’s military and 44 slaves, men, women and 2 boys,
at one shilling per diem for the former and 15 shillings per diem for the latter.5 For the use the
3Charles Fawcett, The First Century o f British Justice in India: An Account o f the Court o f Judicature
at Bombay established 1672 and o f Other Courts of Justice in Madras, Calcutta and Bombay from 1661 to
latter part o f the Eighteenth Century (Oxford, 1934); idem (ed.), The English Factories in India 1670-1677
(Oxford, 1952); Tarit K. Mukherji,1 Aldermen and Attorneys - Mayor’s Court Calcutta’, Indian Historical
Quarterly, (henceforth IHQ), 26, 1, 1950, pp. 51-66, and ‘Dispute between Court Cutcherry and Mayor’s
Court Calcutta’, IHQ, 27, 1, 1951, pp. 35-43; L. P. Dutt, ‘Administration of Justice in Bengal in the Last
Decades of the Eighteenth Century’, BPP, 54, 1-2, 1937, pp. 18-24.
4This estimate was given by Davy, counsel for Somerset in 1772, see F.O. Shyllon, Black Slaves in
Britain (London, 1974), p. 105. However, some contemporary estimates, like that of the Gentleman’s
Magazine in 1765, had put it down to 20,000 in London alone, see Peter Fryer, Staying Power: The History
o f Black People in Britain (London, 1984).
5BPubC., P/1/38, 21 Nov. 1765. The "Solebay" was one of two ships furnishing the Company’s
settlement at Fort Marlbro with slaves from Madagascar. See Third Report of the Select Committee of the
HOC in L/PARL/2/6, p. 388, para. 45. For slaves belonging to Clive shipped to Bengal, see George Gray
to his son, in 1761, see Mss. Eur. D.691, folio 8B.
150
Company made of some of the male slaves in the army,6 it may be that the two groups mentioned
above were not always distinct. The identity of some of these soldiers is revealed by the
description of one Captain John Butler as ‘born at Bristol of African Parents’. He had ‘arrived in
India a private in the Company’s Regiment of Madras Europeans before the first siege of
Tanjore... served also at the second siege in 1773 with the rank of Serjeant’; by 1816, at the age
of seventy, he had command of the Resident’s Court at Tanjore.7 The Company did not just use
slave-born or slave labour for its own military ends; it gave gifts of slaves, like the African boy
it presented as nazar to the Nawab of Bengal in 1759.8 Besides this, the extent to which slave-
concubinage among officers, merchants and factors of the Company in the late eighteenth and
nineteenth century contributed to the growth of a pool of subordinate labour within the Company’s
territories was important in highlighting Company regulation. Thus from the second half of the
eighteenth century the Company’s participation in the exogenous slave-trade between India and
its neighbours added a significant dimension to its administrative management of slave-transfers.
For instance, Holwell’s account of the zamindari of Calcutta in 1752 suggests that the Company,
in continuation of local practice, levied a sum of four annas on every slave bought and registered
in the Cutcherry,9 a practice evident on the back of slave-deeds of the French settlements as well.
(See Appendix I). It was thus important for the Company to argue that slave-dealing and transfers
were ‘legal’ in India when the legal challenges began in England.
6One muster-roll of the European garrison of Fort St. George of 1746 lists 2 slave boys, drummers by
the name of Jacob De Rozario and Michael De Rozario, as well as a ‘Black sent from England’ by the name
of Hannibal Julian who along with others had deserted. See W. S. Seton Karr (ed.), Selections from the
Calcutta Gazettes o f the years 1784-1788 (Calcutta, 1864), I, p. 161.
7W, Blackburne to Chief Secretary, Fort St. George, 8 December 1815, and 17 January, 1816, BC
F/4/527/12629; also see Chapter IV of this thesis.
9J. Z. Holwell to R. Drake, 15 Dec. 1752 in A Vindication o f Mr. Holwell’s Character from the
Aspersions Thrown out in an Anonymous Pamphlet o f 1764 (London, 1764), p. 56.
151
the liabilities of both enslavement and transfers of slaves. Terms of enslavement and transfers were
very clearly understood within indigenous adjudicating regimes. Not only was there an emphasis
on documentation of transfers, (Appendix I) but the subject of the transfer was clearly described.
Thus in a decision given on the 25 February, 1774, in a complaint by Naintarra against Gocul,
Tittue, Grammie and Ramkishore, for unlawfully detaining and making the complainant a slave,
the maulvis of the Faujdari Adalut in Calcutta found that ‘Naintarra was of good parents and never
was a slave’.10 The woman was declared a ‘free woman’ and the men including Ramkishore
Braminy were punished to varying degrees. The possibility that recourse to formal adjudicatory
mechanisms in the eighteenth century occurred as acts of ‘registration’ in turn, is suggested by the
number of decisions of this court that declared title to, or the jural status of, the slave. (See Table
II, Appendix I).
Those who were not slaves, whether as a result of a ransom agreement, or because of their
‘good birth’, had their status declared just as clearly as did those who were. Such declarations of
status and title could be asked for in the name of both slave and master alike. At the same time,
the terms of transactions in slaves appear to have been protected by some guarantees, both of
quality and of the monetary aspect of such transactions. Thus in the instance of Anundee’s
complaint against Mannick, to whom the former had paid 28 Rupees for a girl, and the girl upon
delivery was found to be lame, the plaintiff returned her and the defendant was ordered to repay
the sum he had received." Or in the case of non-fulfilment by the purchaser, of the terms upon
which a transfer had occurred, the seller too had some guarantees. Thus when Gonga Bistno
complained against Purbee for taking back a girl he had sold to the plaintiff, the Faujdari Adalut
found that the defendant had sold his ‘daughter’ to the plaintiff for Rs. 20 ready and Rs. 3 to be
paid monthly. The plaintiff had apparently failed to pay the monthly sum of Rs. 3 which made
the defendant take the girl back. Gonga Bistno was ordered to pay the monthly sum and repossess
the girl.12
This kind of conveyancing could not be comprehended within simple or finite categories
like ‘sale’ ‘hire’ or ‘pawn’ since each could slide into the other and the qualities of each
transaction infected others. Slaves were also mortgaged against loans by primary masters, and the
inability of the debtor to repay the creditor generally led to a transfer of title in the mortgaged or
pawned slave. For instance, a letter from a Brahmin of Ratnagiri to a Gadgil offered at least three
1“Proceedings of the Faujdari Adalut, 1774, P/154/39, case no. 333. The judges of this court were Qazi
Abdullah, Darogha, Qazi Ghulam Imam, Ahsanulla Mufti, Nur-al-Huda Maulvi, and Mahmud Ruffadi
Maulvi.
different ways in which slaves could be offered against a loan. The first was a simple mortgage
without possession, with his slave girl (batika) Mani pledged for a sum of Rs. 100. If this was not
acceptable, he offered to deliver possession of the slave-girl along with other goods worth Rs. 75
in return for the money, and the third was an offer of outright sale of the girl for the same
amount.13 From Bihar and Bengal such transfers, by mortgage bond, of slaves, through the mid
nineteenth century14 signalled a complexity in slave-transfers which has been largely overlooked
by historians.15
One of the ways in which slaves either fed themselves, or earned wealth for their holders
was through agreements of ‘farming’ (ijarah) between holders and users: the holder received the
wages the slave earned, or the money paid by the lessor. Such conveyancing was generally
widespread in Bengal in the late eighteenth century, as well as later.16 For instance, the Seir
speaks of Banny begum, third daughter of Rabia Begum, having,
in imitation of the great folks of Hindostan, formed into a band, some of her slave
girls, joined to a number of other loose women, which she had taken into her pay,
she got them instructed in the arts of dancing and singing, ... commenced giving
entertainments to Aaly-hibrahim-qhan ... observing that one of her girls had made
an impression on the Qhan’s heart, offered her to him, adding that she was a girl
of her’s and that she had made him a present of her person ... he sent (at least so
it is reported) two or three times for the girl...,’17
Though this account is silent on any possible sums that may have been received by the mistress,
other descriptions of such mechanisms were more forthcoming on the financial aspect of these
transactions.
Describing the ‘naches’ in the house of Raja Ramchunda during the Durgah Puja of 1819,
one correspondent pointed out that the performer named Bonnoo Jaun had recently been ‘married
for three months only, to a rich Mogul merchant, who paid One thousand Rupees in cash, as a
13D. K. Rajwade (ed.), Bharat Itihas Sanshodhak Mandal (Shaka 1835/1923 C.E.), pp. 191-92.
"See Qeyamuddin Ahmed, ‘A Nineteenth Century Case of a Long-Term Lease, Not Sale, Of Human
Beings’, IHR, 15, 1-2, 1988, pp. 276-280, for a bond which stipulates that the old owners ‘agree not to bring
any charge of abduction (against the lease-holder)’. Also see Chattopadhyay, Slavery in the Bengal
Presidency, p. 15.
15The only discussion of slaves who were subjects of contracts and leases between holders has been
Sebastian Joseph ‘Slave labour of Malabar in the Colonial Context’ in S. Bhattacharya (ed.), Essays in
Modern Indian Economic History (Delhi, 1987), pp. 46-54.
16For descriptions of ijaranamas conveying slaves on long leases of 81 years, see Offg. Commr. of
Circuit 10th. Divn., 24 July 1833, in Constructions o f Regulations and Acts Issued by the Court o f Sudder
Dewanny Adawlut from 1798 to 1847 (Calcutta, 1855), p. 295, no. 812.
Marriage settlement, besides Two Hundred Rupees to be paid monthly’.18 Such conveyances of
skilled slave-girls, for short or long tenures, were noticed again in the 1820s in the western
districts of the Bengal Presidency. Though the English officials, like the Armenian correspondent,
described these long hires as marriage, what had caused the conflicts in court in the first place had
been the non-payment of the stipulated sum by the hirer/holder to the mistress of the slave-girl.
Thus in Mussamat Chutroo vs. Mussamat Jussa 19 the mistress of Chutroo, the slave-girl, had
brought a suit for the recovery of Rs. 1400, the arears of a monthly payment of Rs. 25 which the
girl had apparently contracted to give her mistress but had failed to give. The provincial court of
Benares had not only decreed this sum in favour of the mistress, but had further sanctioned that
Jussa, the mistress, receive Rupees 1,175 on account of the same allowance for the period of
October 1815-September 1819; for as long as Chutroo stayed out of the control of her mistress,
the monthly sum stipulated was to be paid to the mistress. It was only in the Sudder Court that
the agreement to pay was found to have been executed by Baboo Surubjeet Singh, who had before
the case had come to court, paid Rs. 750 to the mistress, Stripped of the confusing details, this was
essentially the case of a mistress suing a man who had hired her slave and had failed to pay the
monthly hire.
Though we know nothing of what Jussa in turn was meant to pay either to the state, or
to anyone else, mistresses like Jussa were important to the economic and symbolic wealth of
hegemonic revenue-collecting households of each region. An instance of the former were the sums
raised by the zamindari of Nadia from the Kusbeeka Chout, a ‘Salamy paid by the keepers of
Brothels on the admission of every new prostitute’ which amounted to Rs. 440 annually.20 As
with the Murshidabad household studied earlier, evidence from the trial of the Raja of Birbhum,
Mahomed Zaman Khan, indicates that such slave-holding and conveyancing also overlapped with
the constitution of kinship-economies. One of the main charges against the Raja had been that he
had defaulted on his re venue-pay ments, and on the payments of his household. This charge was
occasioned by the distribution of a lakh of rupees ‘amongst singers and dancers and in gifts to the
servants’.21 However one of these skilled women, and superintendent of seven slave-girls, was
19Report o f Cases Decided in the Sudder Dewanny Adawlut, III, pp. 188-91.
20Enclosed in Collr. of Nadia, Redfearn, to C. Stuart, 8 March 1791, BOR (Misc), P/89/37, 1 April 1791,
unnumbered. In its response to the Collector, the Board of Revenue was completely silent on the Kusbee
ka Chout, though it considered the zemindar entitled to a deduction of his revenue payments on account of
the ‘Marriage tax’ and the ‘Permanicky’.
21Extract Proceedings of the Sadr Diwani Adalut, 6 July 1796, of J. H. Ernst, Actg. Collr. of Beerbhoom
vs. Raja Mahomed Zemaun Khan in BC F/4/19/767.
154
also the Raja’s grandmother, ‘his father having kept her Daughter and had a son by her - the
Nautch set of Punna Boiee is now at Naghur, but not servants of the Rajahs’.22 The taifa (lit.
group) of Punna Bai ‘attended’ upon the Raja periodically: either for this, or for the relationship
in which Punna stood to the Raja, she received Rs. 100 a month from the treasury.23 Another
witness alluded to the regular hire of such groups in his statement ‘Two or three sets were kept
at a time, but as they came, were hired, dismissed and made room for others... were entertained
at a monthly allowance....’24 The payment of the hire was a matter of some importance, since the
wages of Rs. 250-275 per month stipulated to another dancer, Soopeen, had to be realised against
the guarantees offered by the Raja’s putative brother-in-law.25
Multiple strands emerge: the connection between the acquisition of slave-girls by a
mistress to the provision of skilled and unskilled services to a local hegemon; the complexity of
the relationship between the mistress or superintendent of the slave-girls and the household of the
local ruler, which partook of the monetary economy of the market (wages) as well as of the gift
economy of kinship (stipends); the simultaneity of transactions in two directions, one going from
the Raja to the mistress of the slave-girls, and another going from the mistress to the Raja. Given
this multifaceted and complex form of conveyancing slaves, involving not just two parties, but
multi-lateral transactions, the non-fulfilment of any one party’s commitments could bring upon it
a range of charges, chief amongst which were the charge of the ‘theft’ of the slave.
As a culpable action, it had a long pedigree. Manucci described an incident in which ‘a
soldier took wrongfully the slave-girl of a Hindu clerk. The latter brought a complaint before the
courts. The soldier said the slave-girl was his, and so likewise said the girl herself, as she wanted
to live with the soldier. The charge was transferred to the king’s tribunal... he decreed that the girl
should be made over to the scribe... The soldier was expelled from the service and banished the
country’.26 However, the significance of this story for us lies in realising that such charges of
slave-stealing were inevitably levied by one slave-holder against another, even though the slave
might have preferred the second to the first master.
One of the legal forms in which disputes between owners and lessors, purchasers, and
hirers appeared to have been lodged as judicial complaint was that of ‘theft’ which removed a
slave from the jurisdiction of a previous owner/master. This form of lodging a complaint was not
specific to indigenous regimes alone, but appears to have been shared by most of the eighteenth-
century mercantile European powers. For instance, the Portuguese Governor of Macao in 1773
transmitted to the English Company’s Council in Bengal a charge against Captain Thomas Mercer
of having ‘enticed away’ five young male slaves of Portuguese inhabitants of Macao.27 Though
such a charge implied that this action had robbed the owners of their ‘property’, the Governor’s
complaint suggested that it was much more. Such action, he said, offered encouragement ‘for other
slaves to be faithless to their masters and run away from them on knowing and hearing of the
approach of the foreign vessels’. Within India, Portuguese anxieties on this subject had a long
history: in 1555 during the Viceroyalty of Don Pedro Mascarenhas, the Estado signed a treaty with
a claimant to the Adilshahi throne which stipulated that once in power he would not shelter the
slaves (‘escravos’) of the Portuguese who fled into his dominions but return them to their owners.
If they had become Muslims, then they were to be sold, and the sum realised paid to their masters
instead.28 Such complaints - of the ‘enticing’ or theft of a slave - thus simultaneously embodied
the contradictory pressures of establishing the claims of masters in specific slaves, and denying
the agency of slaves in forsaking them.
Both the form of such complaint, and its implicit contradictions, were registered in the
practices of indigenous law-givers, who then reinterpreted older doctrine and texts into composite
forms, as evinced in the Hidaya. Under the head of theft (saraka), or the secret taking away of
another’s property, there were several actions and objects which did not merit the specific
punishment (huddood) fixed for this offence (amputation of the arm, in this case). So stealing a
free-born infant, (‘ because a free person is not property, and the ornaments are only appendages’),
or even an adult slave was barred from this punishment. The only slave-theft that deserved this
punishment was that of the infant slave.29 One way around this textual delimitation of actionable
slave-theft may have been the representation of all slaves as ‘children’, encapsulated in words like
chhokra/chhokri and beta/bed. However, the records of the Calcutta Faujdari Adalut of 1774 reveal
that much greater complexity was possible in practice. (See Table I, Appendix I).
Apart from the emphasis on documentation as evidence by the law-givers, a notable aspect
of the seventeen cases of ‘enticement’ decided in the Faujdari Adalut of 1774 was the
preponderance of female slaves as the objects of re-possession. It was also plain that charges of
enticement were not made against ‘strangers’. This was particularly important since slaves and
“ Governor of Macao to Generale and Gentlemen of the Council, 22 Nov. 1773, BPubC, P/2/5, 11 April,
1774, no. 5.
servants of the same household could have been disciplined by bringing such a charge against one
for enticing another. For instance, Faizunnisa Begum, of the family of the deceased Siraj-ud-daula,
charged a young sipahi called Rahman Khan, stationed at the zenana of her son Muradud Daulah,
of having ‘seduced a 16 years unmarried daughter ... from the house’.30 In 1828, Burrattee, a
female slave of the household of Fakrunissa, was punished by her mistress, for having ‘enticed
away’ two other slave girls of the household and sold them. In her petition to George IV, the
mistress pleaded that it was an offence which deserved punishment both by the terms of the
‘Mahomedan law; as by ... the provisions of the British legislature in such behalf’.31 The critical
question of whether such slave girls and ‘daughters’ were fleeing, though not directly addressed
by such actions, is suggested again by the 1774 records. In at least two instances, the volition of
the slave-girl, in taking flight, was acknowledged by the court, even though such an action was
found punishable. Local ballads suggested that such women and girls fled with people (also
servants and slaves) they wished to be with, and from their masters,32 current or potential patrons.
Another significant aspect of these decisions was the variety in the punishments ordered for what
appeared to be the same action. And, finally, in at least three instances, the charges appeared to
have been to elicit a judicial declaration of title between two owners, a fact recognised in the
decisions of the maulvis. In other words, the same form covered a range of different possibilities
for action by masters and holders.
When levied against trading partners, or other equal or higher-status individuals, the
allegation of the theft of a slave was to allege a serious breach of trust, a breach that could cover
a multitude of transactions gone awry. Thus both Jagat Seth in 1839, and the Nazim of
Murshidabad in 1838, had complaints lodged against them of a similar kind. In the words of the
former, he had ‘entertained’ a dancing girl Luckee but her ‘mother ... presented a Durkhaust to
3I)CPC, X, Jan. 24 1792, no. 71, pp. 20-21. This appears to have been the main theme of
Bharatchandra’s Vidya Sundar, satirising the loss of a female from the zenana of the Burdwan Raj. The
suggestion of the poet that Sundar had been put up to it by other women of the household is repeated in
other ballads from East Bengal, like that of Rajkanya Rupabati in Kshitish Moulik (ed.), Pracina
Purbabanga Gitika (Calcutta, 1971), II, pp. 109-164. In the latter the Raja’s nafar (second/third generation
male slave) was asked by the principal consort of the Raja to elope with the ‘daughter’. The forces of
punishment sent against the nafar in this story, and against Sundar in the eighteenth-century poem appear
to have many similarities.
32See the ballad of ‘Monir Ojha-Manjur Ma’ in Moulik (ed.), Prachin Purbabanga Gitika, II, pp. 387-
411, also that of ‘Amina Bibi o Nachhar Maloom pala’, pp. 327-378. Both problematise the ‘marriages’
from which both women take flight. In the first, the girl, an ‘orphan’ is picked up by an elderly healer,
reared to puberty, and ‘married’ by him against her wishes. In the second, the girl is offered for by a man
of the village who clearly indicates to the father that she will be kept like a slave (bandi), since he is already
married to a ‘respectable woman’.
157
the magistrate falsely asserting that I had kept her daughter in confinement’.33 In the case of the
latter, the Agent reported that the ‘girl’ in question (then about 18 or 19 years old) had been ‘sold
to His Highnes for 5000 Rs. and a monthly salary of 100 Rs. and that Wuzzeerooddeen and
Bunnee Begum [the complainants] would gladly compromise their claims if they could get half
of the above monthly allowance made over to them’,34
The Maratha records also reveal that such charges made by particular masters against third
parties for the enticing of slaves could function as fiscal instruments, since the adjudicatory
regimes granted specific compensation to masters by the person in whose custody the slave was
found. Thus a soldier, Ali Ismail Piyada, who stole (married nika according to the records) the
slave-girl of Mane Khan Bargir, of the government cavalry, was asked, not to return the slave but
to make monetary compensation to the previous owner.35 Such monetary payments, for eloping
with another’s slave, was not limited to soldiers alone. A nephew of a kasar (worker in brass),
who had eloped with the slave-girl of another man also paid a fine of Rs. 66.36 The inference is
that though ‘slave-stealing’ was recognised as culpable, it merited varying punishments ranging
from paying compensation to the return of the slave, sometimes even a post-factum ‘free gift’ by
the state. Thus the slave-girl who ‘was corrupted’ by a gardi (infantryman), Tom Ingrez, so that
she ran away from her master, was given as bakshish to the soldier, even though he had been held
responsible for her flight.37 In a general sense, then, the allegation of a ‘theft’ of slaves occurred
within the wider context of masters’ ambitions and the judicial recognition of such claims and
titles. But the actual repossession of the runaway/ transferred slaves appears to have been left to
the initiative of the proprietor, who could not automatically presume upon the complicity of the
state officials in effecting such a recapture.38
33From Juggut Seith Govind Chund, reed. 26 March 1839, enclosed in MNLR, II, p. 393.
34AGG Caulfeild to H.T.Prinsep, Sec. to Govt., 26 April 1838, MNLI, II, p. 171. In reply, Prinsep
agreed that Bunnee Khanum’s complaint was ‘open to the suspicion of being mereattempts to extort
money’, in letter to Caulfeild, 2 May 1838, MNLR, II, p. 331.
35V. T. Gune, The Judicial System o f the Marathas (Poona, 1953), Appendix B IV,p. 362. The soldier
was fined Rs. 40, half of which went to the owner, and half to the state.
36Ibid., p. 363.
38For an example of the failure to effect repossession, according to Sanskritic text-based argument, see
the decree of Sachala Misra, pandit in the court of the Raja of Tirhut, on the claim of Tularama Sarman for
the recovery of his ceti Saito in K. P. Jayaswal, ‘A Judgement of a Hindu Court in Sanskrit’, Journal o f the
Bihar and Orissa Research Society (henceforth JBORS), 6, 1920, pp. 246-258; for a recent analysis of this
document, see Richard W. Lariviere, ‘A Sanskrit Jayapatra from 18th Century Mithila’ in idem (ed.),
Studies in Dharmashastra (Calcutta, 1984), pp. 49-80.
158
The issue, as far as female slaves were concerned, was complicated by a set of
interlocking contexts: the first was that given the high demand for them in almost all sectors, the
escapee may sometimes have been further transferred by bonds of sale, mortgage, gift, or lease,
depending upon the material resources of the household holding her or acquiring her. The second
problem arose from the nature of the pressures upon a female slave of reproductive age to take
a ‘husband’ provided by her own master/mistress, in order to expand the group of clients-
followers, and reproduce their subordination. This is suggested both by Haji Mustafa’s account of
his slave-girl, and by the indigenous informants of the 1830’s. Speaking of his ‘collection of
Female beauties’, Haji Mustafa recounted how
a beloved girl of mine was in intrigue with one of my dependents; and the
consequence of that amour soon proved of a nature which self-love could not put
up with ... a young man of about thirty ... was found at last ... I prevailed upon
the girl to accept him. She was repeatedly heard to say that she felt no inclination
for his company, but I objected ... Witnesses were now procured, a contract was
passed, and she was married.39
Three months later, when she appealed for help to her former master, she was told that he had
‘divested [himjself by a public writing of every right over her person’. In 1838, slave-holders
testified to the range of measures that masters could resort to in arranging the connubium of their
female slaves. When they were not removed from their masters’ houses, they were visited by the
rotating husband, the byakara, who was himself a slave or freedman dependant of another master
and who earned some money by the siring of progeny, which all belonged to the master of the
females. In other cases, the slave girl was married to the slave of the same or another master.
Ultimately, it depended upon the masters and mistresses to determine who the slave ‘married’ and
what kind of consequences followed. Thus Raddie, the slave who had asked for some clothes and
rice, was told by her mistress ‘... marry and your husband will give them, and you shall do the
drudgery of my house’.40 Many female slaves were also sexual partners of the masters’
families.41 Therefore, the range of tensions and ambivalences encompassing the lives of female
slaves also infiltrated the workings of the adjudicatory systems, where claims against specific
people for having ‘enticed’ a ‘wife’ came to subsume the jural status (slave/ex-slave) of the
woman concerned.
As an illustration of the overlaps of jural and social identities, we can refer to the instance
of a barber, Ramkaunta, lately promoted to Captain Kyd’s domestic retinue at Farrukabad, who
4l)Translate Progs, of Magistrate of Ramghur at a Cutcherry held 28 August 1797, BCrJC, P/128/36, 12
Jan. 1798, no. 9.
brought a claim for the recovery of Rs. 52,980 against two women, Komaree and Konjoo, both
of whom he claimed as his absconding ‘wives’.42 In the court of the Judge of Shahabad, he was
asked ‘Are they your wives by beeah or nekah ?’ He had answered, ‘Neither, they are my
concubines’. Only the petition submitted on behalf of Komaree revealed the inner ambivalences
of such wifehood/concubinage. It said
at the time of the defeat of Buxar, the villages adjoining to mine were plundered -
among other prisoners who were plundered and seized I with my sister fell into
the hands of Kewulram, the commander of Mr. Morgan’s [Mordaunt’s] Battalion.
I remained eight years in the Superintendence of his House and obtained a great
deal of money. When he arrived at Illeahabad[sic] ... not thinking it advisable to
keep me in compliance of the desire by Ramchurn Rai, General Cootes’ Dewan,
sent me to him ... I staid nine years in the House of the Dewan ... When the
Dewan died in Calcutta as I had no connexion in his House, I went to Monghyr
with my sister and slave girl... 43
Eventually she landed up at Furrukabad in the trail of one of the army regiments, established a
shop for the retailing of grain, hiring out bullocks and carts, selling mats and so on. Here,
according to Komaree, the barber who had meanwhile become a mason in Kydserai, conveyed ‘her
sister and the two slave-girls, one of whom I had purchased at Furrookabad, to the Houses of the
Gentlemen and obtained thereby a large sum of money of which he gave me a small portion and
then deceitfully made us lose cast and got us in his power’. If the vision of a sometime ‘captive’
and concubine, acquiring and hiring out slaves was significant, so was the consistent pattern of
transfers from house to house of Komaree herself. The importance of this pattern for the physical
reproduction of slavery and of the social reproduction of ‘lineage’ politics was surely no small
matter. In reply to Ramkaunto’s claim that he had three children with her, Komaree detailed,
I was four months gone with a Daughter when the plaintiff became acquainted
with me which pregnancy was the result of a connexion with Ramchurn Rai the
Dewan... and the Daughter which was born at Furrookabad was by Adjutant
Kenwall into whose House this very Plaintiff had seduced me and in my name
deceitfully procured money, and the son of which I was delivered was the child
of Sufzeeram Sircar - not even one child was by the plaintiff....44
Though there is no explicit reference to who kept the individual children born in each instance,
for the present it was obvious that Komaree had no wish to be claimed as a ‘wife’ by Ramcaunto,
who had despoiled her of all her earnings, aided by the troops of the Captain. The lessons drawn
from Komaree’s story was that in one lifetime, a slave could experience multiple transfers and
occupy different positions of concubine, wife, trader, mother and slave-holder simultaneously.
42Judge of Shahabad to Register, May 14, 1793, Progs, of the Sadr Diwani Adalut, P/152/41, 29 Aug.
1793, no. 30.
However, the most significant aspect for the purposes of adjudication was the fact that a slave-
woman could experience a range of different economic actions like purchase, hire, lease or
mortgage between different ‘domestic’ sites in one life cycle. Such multiple transfers (between
‘native’ households as well as into an English officer’s) and positions could hardly be
comprehended within the simple binaries of ‘slave/kin’ or ‘domestic use/ trade’ or indeed even
‘domestic/agrestic’ upon which English legal thought was based.
Antony had instituted a suit against the imprisonment of her husband. In response, a set of
regulations were passed whose aim was to reorganise the police of the town of Calcutta.45 These
removed the power of recognising complaints of ‘Christian slave-owners’ from the faujdar to a
Superintendent of Police, who was authorised to punish all slaves and servants that had deserted
(Regulations 3-8). However, Regulation 9 also addressed the European trader, stipulating that he
follow the ‘ancient law of the country (which requires that no slave shall be sold without a
Cawbowla or Deed attested by the Cauzee signifying the Place of the Child’s abode & if in the
first purchase, its parents names, names of the seller & Purchaser & minute description of the
persons of both)’. Following this logic, Regulation 10 stipulated that ‘no person shall be allowed
to buy or sell a slave, who is not such already by former legal purchase’.
There was no subterfuge in this. From 1771, the Council of Revenue had been aware of
the Portuguese proprietors of slaves who applied for the authentication of the bills of sale of slaves
to the Collector’s office in Calcutta.46 In the Minute accompanying the Regulations of 1774, the
targets were particularised. These ‘judicious precautions’ were to prevent the ‘numbers of children
... conveyed out of the country on the Dutch, and especially the French vessels’. While the Minute
did also speak of ‘abolishing the right of slavery altogether’, there were hedges placed around the
Englishman’s rights of property ( ‘where slaves have become a just property by purchase
antecedent to the proposed prohibition’) and that of indigenous masters (‘the most creditable of
the Mussulmen and Hindoo inhabitants’). Therefore, when the Council at Dacca enquired whether
indigenous masters in Dacca could keep the children born of their slaves in bondage, the Calcutta
Council saw no objection in ruling that the right of masters to the children of slaves, already their
property, could not legally be taken from them in the first generation.
The fact that most of the Company Regulations of the late eighteenth century were
directed against the French, Dutch and Portuguese powers in India has escaped the notice of
historians and led to a confused assessment of Company regulations with regard to the slave trade.
For instance, Cassels has argued that because ‘Muslim law had superseded Hindu law in the
Company’s criminal courts’, it was possible for the Government of Warren Hastings to
demonstrate respect for Muslim law and yet at the same time to take a stand against ‘the practice
of stealing children from their parents and selling them for slaves’.47 Not only is this based upon
46For an instance of a slave-holder, Antony Castano, submitting two bills of sale transferring two slave-
boys to one Manoula, and for Mr. Graham’s decision to make the naib Qazi who had attested the bills
indemnify Anthony Castano for one slave, while allowing the latter to keep the other, see Narendranath
Ganguly, ‘A Peep into the Social Life of Bengal in the 18th Century’, BPP, 69, 1950, pp. 46-50.
47Nancy Gardner Cassels, ‘Social Legislation Under the Company Raj: the Abolition of Slavery Act V
1843’, South Asia, 11, 1, 1988, pp. 59-88.
162
a misreading of ‘Islamic law’ as it was practised in the eighteenth century, and insensitivity
regarding historical semantics, Cassels’ portrayal of these regulations as early attempts at abolition,
which were ‘poorly enforced’, has no basis in the historical evidence.
From 1740, the English, both on the Continent and in the colonies were at war with the
French. Even during the intermittent periods of peace between the two powers, complaints against
the French monopoly of trade were aired. Particularly for English officers commanding regiments
of the Company’s armies in India, the French ability to muster strong navies and armies on various
islands in the Bay of Bengal offered a sharp contrast to the East India Company’s difficulties in
recruitment, large-scale desertions by, and deaths of, the native soldiery. Thomas Deane Pearse,
who had served in the King’s Infantry in the West Indies before joining the Company’s army in
Bengal attested to this in 1772. Writing to General Pattison, he said
The French settlement swarms with Europeans; and lately they have entertained
a great many natives as lascars, who are all gone in the ships to Mauritius, where
I dare say they will be thoroughly disciplined, and having once removed from
home, they will not be likely to desert on orders to march here or there.48
The approval of this mode of creating such a navy (of natally alienated beings subject to
a rigorous discipline) with the envy or disapproval of the French for their successful deployment
of this strategy contextualises the Company’s regulation of the slave-trade in India in this period.
The recruitment of slaves for a variety of military functions had become ‘universal practice’
among the Portuguese, Dutch and French powers in the West Indies by the mid-seventeenth
century. It was equally firmly established in the form of the British West India Regiments by the
late eighteenth century.49 With the outbreak of the American War of Independence from 1775,
in which the French joined the colonists, the wars with Mysore between 1789-1799, and the
renewed hostilities of the French Revolutionary Wars from 1792, every success of the French and
allied armies and navies in adding to their labouring groups, was feared by the English Company
in India. A letter to the Court of Directors, which was then communicated to the Supreme Council
at Fort William of 1780, suggests the Company’s acute awareness of the slave-based strength of
the French and Dutch forces.50 By April 1789, an editorial in the Calcutta Gazette referred to the
extensive traffic at Kidderpore in the sale of child-slaves in these terms: ‘...many are annually
48‘Memoir of Colonel Thomas Deane Pearse of Bengal Artillery’, BPP, 2, 1908, p. 316.
49See specially Roger Norman Buckley, Slaves in Red Coats: the British West India Regiments, 1795-
1815 (New Haven, 1979), and David Patrick Geggus, Slavery, War and Revolution; The British Occupation
o f St. Domingue, 1793-98 (Oxford, 1982), pp. 315-55.
50Letter to the Court of Directors from Capt. Joh.Buncle, Commander of the Warren, Cartel Ship, from
the Cape of Good Hope, 20 Dec. 1780, regarding the increase of the military force of the French, the joining
of Dutch and Danish ships with the French fleet, which included ‘soldiers and slaves’. See British Library,
Hastings Papers, Add.Mss.29199, folios 509-512.
163
imported from these Provinces to work for the benefit of our political rivals in other regions’. The
editor then welcomed the ‘effectual measures [that] will be speedily taken for the remedy of so
disastrous an evil’.51
The measure referred to was the Proclamation of July 1789 which forbade ‘Europeans’
from transferring slaves away from India, arranged for the pilots of such boats to be prosecuted,
and offered rewards for information on such transactions. Cornwallis’ letter to the Court of
Directors in August, 1789, clarified the reference to the traffic as specifically ‘carried on in this
country by the low Portuguese, and even by several foreign European seafaring people and traders,
in purchasing and collecting native children in a clandestine manner, and exporting them to the
French islands’.52 The Collector of Chittagong recognised that the Proclamation had aimed ‘only
at the suppression of the practice of transporting... and vending them [slaves] in a foreign country’
but asked whether slaves in Chittagong should be released or whether the practice of transferring
them only in the future suppressed. The clarification of the Council left nothing in doubt. The
Proclamation, it said, referred specially to the exportation of slaves by sea.53
Evidently, the early Company efforts were directed towards establishing a quasi-monopoly
for itself, both by prosecuting private trade and by the wresting of the trade from rival European
powers, rather than the abolition of all slave-transfers or of slavery itself.54 Nowhere in
Regulations 9 or 10 of 1774 had there been any notion that purchase per se was illegal; on the
contrary, all of the evidence cited above proved the high premium placed on purchase deeds. Nor,
after 1789, was there a lack of enforcement: the records, in fact, show the active enforcement of
52Cited in G. Forrest (ed.), Selections from the State Papers o f the Governors-General o f India: Lord
Cornwallis (Oxford, 1926), II, p. 140. The use of ‘children’ was double-edged; the records of the actual
catches show that these were very young slaves, not supposedly ‘free’ children. For an account of
Portuguese friars of Goa selling slaves to the French on the western coast, see Antonio Fransisco Moniz
(compiled and ed.), Noticias e Documentos para a Historia de Damao: Antiga Provincia do Norte (Bastora,
1900-1917), IV, pp. 107-08.
53Collr. of Chittagong, 10 Aug. 1789, BPubC, P/3/47, 21 Aug. 1789, no. 20, and orders thereon.
Emphasis added. Again in 1793, the Superintendent of Police in Calcutta referred the question of liberating,
rather than restoring, slaves to the Council and was told that the ‘Regulations in force relative to slavery
extend only to a Prohibition against exporting Persons as Slaves, and the consequences arising from that
act.’ See Superintendent of Police, J. Miller, to John Shore, Governor-General in Council, 18 Nov. 1793,
BPubC, P/4/24, 22 Nov. 1793, no. 3.
54For similar analysis of British efforts to control the ‘Arab Slave-trade’ in the nineteenth century, see
Anirudha Gupta, ‘Suppression of Slave-Trade and British Imperialist Strategies in the Indian Ocean 1815-
1870’ in U. Bissoondoyal and S. B. C. Servansingh (ed.), Slavery in South West Indian Ocean (Mauritius,
1989), pp.96-105. The broader issue - that of the relationship between antislavery and capitalism - is the
subject of an ongoing debate: for the main arguments see Seymour Drescher, Capitalism and Antislavery
(London, 1986); D. Eltis and J. Walvin (ed.), The Abolition of the Atlantic Slave Trade (Madison, 1981);
Robin Blackburn, The Overthrow o f Colonial Slavery, 1776-1848 (London, 1988).
164
regulations against the French and Danish traders between Chandernagore, and islands of the Bay
of Bengal, whether far afield like Mauritius or not so distant, like Ceylon, which were controlled
by other European powers.55 A cursory glance at the names and destinations of those prosecuted
confirms this.56 The first was Peter Horrebow, Commander of a Danish trading vessel in 1789,
charged with exporting children from Chandernagore (the French settlement in Bengal) to the
French islands. Another was Borel, a Swiss officer in the service of the Dutch at Colombo.
Another vessel under French colours with a bill of lading in the name of Monsieur Jourdan was
prosecuted in 1791, while another French merchant vessel commanded by Monsieur St. Croix,
which had traded between the Andamans and the Prince of Wales Islands was reported to the
French governor of Chandernagore for suitable action.
Though the English East India Company deployed a rhetoric of humanitarianism in
proceeding against its rivals’ slave-holdings or transfers, the underlying concerns were mercantilist.
From the 1750’s the Company had been supplying slaves to and from India.57 The obstacle the
Directors of the Company put in the way of slaves being ‘conveyed’ away from India by
individual Europeans was that of a security bond paid by the transporting holder/ merchant which
was to ensure that the slave would not become chargeable upon the coffers of the Company
subsequently.58 The Directors resented the fact that owners of slaves taken to England on foreign
ships did not indemnify the Company. In 1782, referring to the slave-lascars of the Danish ships
sailing from Bengal and brought to England, the Directors urged that since the ‘expence... for their
maintenance and Cloathing... ought not to be borne by the Company’ the only alternative left was
to discourage the ‘sending of Black Servants to Europe’.59
A similar combination of political and commercial concerns dictated that particular foreign
powers would bear the brunt of the Company’s rhetoric. For instance, the outbreak of the
55For Indian slaves supplied to the French-controlled Mauritius, see Marina Carter, ‘Indian Slaves in
Mauritius (1729-1834)’, IHR, 15, 1987-88, pp. 233-247.
56Slavery in India: Correspondence of Court of Directors and the Government in India, (PP), 1828, pp.
13-24 and 28-41.
57See Press List o f Ancient Records o f the Government o f India in the Public Department, IV, pp. 43-44
for arrangements to be made by the Company for supplying male slaves from Madagascar to the west coast
of India in 1757, and p. 106 for the Directors’ specifications regarding the kind of male slaves to be
supplied from India to St. Helena.
58For the permission to transport slave boys and slave girls from India upon the execution of such
security bonds, see BPubC, P/1/47, 12 Dec. 1770, no. 2; P/1/49, 2 Nov. 1771, no. 9; P/1/51, 7 Jan. 1772,
no. 11; P/2/3, 25 Jan. 1773, nos, 7-8.
59Court’s letter to President and Council at Fort St. George, July 1782 in Home Misc. 163, pp. 175-182,
specially paras 16-17.
165
revolutionary wars and the desire to prevent the reduction of slave-holdings both in the British
Isles and in the British West Indies appears to have influenced Dundas’ Committee Bill of 1792
restricting the ‘exportation of slaves ... to any of the Islands plantations settlements colonies or
Dominions of any foreign State or power’.60 At the same time, the attempt to preserve the
monopoly of the Royal Africa Company against private trade required that no vessel could leave
British ports for the Coast of Africa unless such a vessel was already ‘employed in the African
trade or contracted for and taken up for that purpose previous to 1792’. Similar concerns were
effective in the case of the Company’s territories in India. When in 1794, the Dutch joined the
French revolutionary armies, the Council in India wrote of its fears that the Dutch would succeed
in purchasing Cochin from the Raja of Travancore. This would disadvantage the Company not
only because it would provide a ‘depot for warlike stores’ but also because it would facilitate the
continuation of the ‘traffic in slaves carried on to a considerable extent by the Dutch to the great
detriment of the British possessions on that coast’.61
These essays upon the slave-transfers of other foreign powers rested ultimately on the
Company’s need to conserve both slave-holdings and financial resources. At the same time that
it prosecuted the French and Dutch traders for denuding the Company’s territories of slaves, it
absolved both itself and specific indigenous regimes from the ambit of such legislation. From
Awadh in 1770, two Company servants had corresponded with each other for the grant of a
passport for the eunuch in the service of Shujaud Daula, being sent to ‘purchase a number of boys
and girls who are starving at Patna,... who he intends to bring up for the service of his
household’ 62 In 1795, five years after the Proclamation of 1789, the Governor-General in
Council granted a dastak to a merchant called Muhammad Karbalai who along with other sundry
articles imported nine Abyssinian slaves from Muscat as a ‘gift’ to Nawab Sarfarazuddaula of
Lucknow.63 Nor, when it came to the Company-led armies in India was the Council averse to
60See Dundas’ Committee Bill of April 1792 in Home Misc. 65 (3), pp. 73-271.
'Letter to Court of Directors, 17 January 1794, in Fort William-India House Correspondence, 1792-95
(Delhi, 1955), XVI, p. 317. See Robert C.-H. Shell, Children o f Bondage: A Social History o f the Slave
Society at the Cape o f Good Hope, 1652-1838 (London, 1994), p. 41, fig. 2.1; approximately 1500 slaves
were transferred annually from Bengal and Malabar to the Dutch Cape Colony between 1777 and 1801.
“ Captain Gabriel Harper to James Alexander, 25 March 1770, BS&MC, P/A/10, 15 April 1770.1 thank
Michael Fisher for this reference.
63CPC, XI, p. 233, no. 914; p.323, no. 1320 and p. 329, no. 1343. In 1796, the same merchant
transported five Georgian slaves from Muscat to Calcutta, a‘giff sent by a resident of Baghdad for the
Nawab Vazir at Lucknow. In 1833, another consignment of eighteen slaves, brought from Mokha by two
merchants to Lucknow, were not sent back for reasons which were both financial (the British Government
would have had to incur the expense of the return passage) and diplomatic. Besides, the newly styled ‘King’
of Awadh had offered to provide for them as ‘servants to respectable people’ which was gladly accepted
166
considering the indemnification of indigenous holders whose slaves served in these.64 In 1799,
two Malay male slaves were officially procured by the Company for the Botanical Garden in
Calcutta.
This clarification undermines the argument implicit in scholarly studies that there was a
‘chain of events’ leading to delegalisation of slavery in 1843. The beginning of the chain,
depending upon the historian, may be 1774 (for Cassels) or Richardson’s minute of 1808 (for
Gy an Prakash).65 Considering the brakes applied by the Company’s judicial and executive
officers to the abolition of slave-transfers and slave-holding within the territories of the Company,
both the chain and its origins prove to be imaginary. The ways in which the Council in India
sought to minimise the impact of Parliamentary Statutes, particularly 51 Geo III, Cap:23 of 1807,
remove further doubts on this score. Copies of the Statute were forwarded only to magistrates of
the seaports, as the Governor General in Council ‘did not consider its provisions to be applicable
to the importation or removal of slaves by land’.66 The construction that the Council at Fort
William put on these Acts of Parliament were (a) that these acts had been confined to the
transportation of African slaves only to various parts of His Majesty’s or the East India Company’s
territories (b) the powers vested in the several Admiralty Courts were limited to offences of
importation and removal of slaves by sea. Other kinds of transfers could only be tried in England.
Clearly, if the Acts had been intended to apply to inland transfers of slaves in the territories
subject to the Company, ‘every native carrying or removing a slave from one part of those
territories to another is liable to be sent to England, to be tried for felony’. The transportation of
‘whole nations among whom domestic slavery had existed’, it was urged, could surely not have
been the object of Parliament.67
The scrupulous care with which ‘domestic slavery’ was to be safeguarded by the Company
by the Governor-General in Council. The Court of Directors clarified that there was to be no interference
in the traffic so long as the slaves were not those kidnapped from the British territories. See correspondence
in BC F/4/1479/58157.
64Sub Sec. Council Chamber to Sec. to BOR, 11 May, 1798 in Bengal BOR, P/73/32, 15 May 1798,
no. 23. The instructions are to ascertain ‘what consideration would satisfy’ Raja Munnynath Singh whose
slaves had joined the Ramgurh Battalion. For the original complaint see W.W.Hunter, Bengal Mss. Records,
(London, 1894), III, no. 7404.
“ For the full text of Richardson’s proposals of 1808, inspired partly by the Parliamentary Act of 1807,
Utilitarianism and Evangelical arguments, see BCrJC, P/132/21, 15 March 1816, no. 47.
66Judcl. letter from Fort William to Court of Directors, 29 Oct. 1817, paras 149-170, in Correspondence,
E/4/98.
“ Ibid., See also Judcl. letter from Fort William to Court of Directors, 30 Jan. 1813, paras 146-155, in
E/4/85. Both letters emphasised the fact that the statutes did not affect to the smallest degree the relation
of master and slave wherever it had existed before the Acts.
167
within its territories hinged, in turn, upon the securing of holdings against the depredations of
other ‘foreign’ powers, and upon police regulations within the Company’s territories to ensure the
restoration of fugitive slaves to masters. Thus in the correspondence cited above, Regulation X of
1811 was represented as the definitive attempt of the Company to prevent ‘importation’ of slaves
from foreign territories. What did such claims signify? While we will turn to the history of this
regulation shortly, it should be noted that even for the ‘sea-trade’ a caveat had been entered for
British subjects. Thus clause 5 of Regulation X said that for the more effectual prevention of the
importation of slaves at the port of Calcutta, captains or supercargoes of vessels, with the
exception of the Honorable Company’s ships importing at Calcutta, should execute a bond of Rs.
5000 with the Company before landing their cargoes.68 Considering that the Act of 1807 had
already prohibited all trading in slaves, this exemption not only contradicted Parliamentary statute,
but significantly reinforced the monopolistic position of the Company vis-a-vis other maritime
powers. The inference again seems that the target was not trading per se, but the trade of other
hostile European powers, and in some instances the ‘private’ trade of specific English merchants.
The records of the Marine Department substantiate this interpretation: even in the 1830s stray
commanders of the English East India Company’s ships imported slaves from Africa to India.69
68For the text of the regulation as prepared by Colebrooke, Lumsden and the Nizamut Adalut see BCrJC,
P/130/36, 6 Aug. 1811, no. 62. In this draft, the exemption of the Company’s ship-masters from any bonds
are repeated in two separate sections. For the final draft, see Regulations Passed by the Governor General
in Council o f Bengal (London, 1829), III, p. 460. Anderson, in ‘Work Construed’, argues that the scope of
Regulation X was the trade in African slaves, but offers no explanation of clause 5.
69Letter of Marine Department to Court of Directors, 15 April 1831, BC F/4/1263/50837*. This refers
to John Croft Hawkins, Commander of Company’s Sloop of war, Clive, who had carried 34 ‘boys’ from
Africa to India in 1830. Given the earlier record of John Butler, the African from Bristol, the letter of the
Department appears disingenuous, in that the boys apparently chose to ‘enlist in the service of Government...
under the same forms, as are observed on the enlistment of Europeans’. The letter went on to specify that
the names of the boys ‘were all European’(like Thomas Westry, William Baker, Samuel Burne, Peter May
etc.) and that ‘none of them appeared to recollect their own Country names’. Some of them were assigned
to the Indian Navy, where, it appears, they had already served.
168
Chittagong reported that three slaves had run away from their Indian master; at least one of them
was then ‘servant’ of Mr. Coates, the Commercial Resident. The judge had suspended process ‘for
compelling his return’, but asked the Nizamut Adalut for ‘rules’ to guide him in the matter. The
latter responded by extending the scope of Regulation IV of 1793 (regarding the maintenance of
the laws of the Muslims and the Hindus in suits of succession, inheritance, marriage, caste and
religious usages) to slavery,70
Similarly, the initiative behind Regulation X of 1811 came from a case heard by the
magistrate of zillah Goruckpore between 30 March to 26 April 1810.7] In this, Dusrut Tuppa
[Thapa?] claimed three males and three female slaves who had ‘absconded’ from him to the lands
of the Rajah of Butol. Dusruth, who was both the Buxee of the Nepal Durbar, and nephew of the
Chief ministerial officer of that Durbar, Meer Singh Tuppa, proved that he had received two of
the slaves in lieu of his monthly pay; the others he had purchased four to fourteen years before
the institution of the suit. He demanded either that the slaves be restored to him or that he be
recompensed with their monetary value. The magistrate asked for the opinion of the judges of the
Sudder Dewanny and Nizamut Adawlut. In June 1810, the Register of the superior courts, J.
Shakespear, wrote to the Secretary in the Judicial Department that though the rights in slaves were
recognised by the laws in force, in this instance it involved surrendering the six slaves - ‘subjects
of a foreign state’ - or satisfying the monetary claim of the plaintiff. Instead of restoring the slaves
to the complainant, on 6 July72 the Governor-General in Council authorised the magistrate of
Goruckpore to pay Rupees 226 to the claimant, but added
Unqualified as the Hindoo and Mahomedan laws respecting domestic slavery at
present a re ,... a regulation will be necessary, in order to establish the modification
of it above noticed in the practice of our courts of judicature.73
What was the modification of ‘unqualified’ indigenous laws? The fact that the slaves claimed by
the Nepali official were not returned in person but that a monetary compensation was ordered to
be paid to the claimant was misunderstood by the senior officers given that indigenous
adjudicatory bodies did grant compensation. In accordance with the principle outlined in this note,
the Nizamut Adalut was asked to prepare a draft of a regulation. Before the regulation was ready,
70Slavery in India: Correspondence (PP), 1828, pp. 74-75. This was the ruling that was upheld by the
acting Governor-General in Council in April 1798. Incidentally, J. H. Harington the author of Analysis of
the Regulations and Laws of the Governor General in Council for the presidency of Fort William, was the
Register of this Sadr Diwani Adalut.
72The date is wrongly transcribed in correspondence (PP), 1828, as 6 June, 1810. The comparison with
the original BJC, (Civil), P/148/63, 6 July 1810, nos. 2-3, reveals the error.
73Letter of G.Dowdeswell, Secretary to Government, Judl. to Register of the Sadr Diwani Adalut, ibid.
169
in January 1811, Dusruth formally complained that ‘children’ from the hills were being conveyed
into the Lower Provinces and sold there.74 Thomas Brooke, the Agent of the Governor-General
in the Ceded Provinces, issued orders to magistrates of Moradabad, Meerut, Saharanpur, and
Bareilly directing the restoration of what he imagined were ‘fraudulently’ acquired slaves.75 In
response, the Government informed him that the traffic
not having been prohibited by a formal regulation of Government could not at the
present moment be deemed absolutely illegal„.and that the prohibition which the
Agent directed the Magistrates to issue against the traffick in question ... must be
considered to be strictly speaking irregular.76
However, as the Government of the East India Company was at peace with Nepal, a ‘foreign’
country, and was trying to mediate a boundary settlement prior to the Anglo-Nepalese war, it was
willing to consider the Buxee’s application seriously. Thus Regulation X of 1811 was passed on
6 August 1811.
The ‘moral principle, abstract justice and humane object’ the Government thought was
embodied in this regulation was actually the preservation of the rights of slave-owners in ‘foreign
countries’ to receive the person of the fugitive instead of any monetary compensation. As
conceded later, the Regulation of 1811 was to facilitate ‘the restoration of the slaves of
Governments of neighbouring states with which the Company’s relations were friendly’.77
Accordingly, section 4 of Regulation X stipulated that the magistrate shall ‘cause to be sent back
to their friends or country any slaves so imported’.78 Implicit in this recognition of the rights of
masters to have their slaves returned, was a belief that ‘a slave by entering the Company’s
territories does not become free; nor can he who was lawfully a slave emancipate himself by
running away from one country where slavery was lawful to another country where it is equally
lawful’ ,79
The construction the Nizamut Adalut (there is no record of the muftis and qazi having
been consulted when such constructions were arrived at) put on the regulation of 1811, narrowed
74Translation of letter from Buxee Dusruth Singh, 14 Jan. 1811, in Extract Proceedings of Vice-President
in Council, 26 April 1811, BCrJC, P/130/36, 6 Aug. 1811, no. 60.
75For the priority of diplomatic concerns within which slave-restoration was ordered, see T.Brooke to
Kajee Bimshaw, Soobah of Kumaoon, 22 March 1811, ibid.
77Judcl. Letter from Bengal, 29 October, 1817, BC F/4/1234/40338, and Correspondence, E/4/98.
78W. Blunt and H. Shakespear, An Abstract of the Regulations enacted for the Administration of the
Police and Criminal Justice in the Provinces of Bengal, Behar and Orissa (Calcutta, 1824), p. 127.
down the field of its operation even further. According to the latter, the Act of 1807 prohibited
only the importation of slaves ‘for the purpose of being sold, given away, or otherwise disposed
o f . 80 If Regulation X of 1811 was to be brought in line with the Parliamentary Act, it implied
that even bringing ‘foreign’ slaves into the Company-held territories was permissible so long as
there was no resale subsequently.81 John Adam, Governor-General till the arrival of Amherst,
noted that Regulation X did not interdict ‘the bringing in a man’s domestic slaves for the purpose
of keeping them’.82 In short, the concerns that Colebrooke and other English jurists in the Sudder
Diwani Adalut had about the rights of the masters in their household-slaves, who would naturally
move with their masters when the latter moved between various territories, were written into the
construction of Regulation X. Thus advising the magistrate of Agra in 1812, the Court observed
that ‘no part of the regulation in question was applicable to the sale of slaves not imported into
the British territories’.83 In other words, holding or dealing in ‘indigenous’ rather than ‘foreign’
(African, in the Company’s sense) slaves was not criminal, nor were their transfers between
different parts of the domain of the East India Company.
However, foreignness was a shifting criterion, sometimes defined in terms of territorial
boundaries and sometimes of ethnicity. Thus when some police darogahs caught fourteen men
from the territories of the ‘foreign’ state of Jaipur, who had brought fifty-nine slaves
(predominantly female and young male) from Marwar to sell at Kanpur in 1813,84 the
Superintendent of Police of the Western Provinces, W.Blunt, urged the Nizamut Adawlut for
another clarification that Regulation X was ‘by no means intended... to prohibit or to interfere with
the purchase or sale of slaves within the limits of the Company’s territories, who may not have
been so imported’.85 The Nizamat Adawlut obliged by circulating its construction of 1812 again
to all the Courts of Circuit on 5 October, 1814.
80Constructions by the Courts of the Sudder Dewanny and the Nizamut Adawlut of the Regulations and
Laws for the Civil Government of the Whole of the Territories under the Presidency of Fort William in
Bengal (Calcutta, 1839-43), I, p. 26, no. 99.
slFor a description of an African maid-servant, in the family of John Palmer, brought to India from
England in the trousseau of Palmer’s daughter, the wife of a British civil servant, see William Tayler, Thirty
Eight Years in India (London, 1881), pp. 102, 112 and 202.
83Constructions by the Courts of Sudder Dewanny and Nizamut Adawlut I, p.26, no.99.
84Magt., Zillah Kanpur, to Ch. Sec. to Govt., 19 July and 22 July, 1813, BCrJC, P/131/20, 7 Aug. 1813,
nos.42-43.
85For full text of the letter, see J. Carrau (ed.), Circular Orders of the Court of Nizamut Adawlut
Communicated to the Criminal Authorities from 1796 to 1853 (Calcutta, 1855), no. 141, pp. 52-53.
171
Dissent and query from specific individuals like Richardson, the magistrate of
Bundelkhand, or individual police officers or collectors however reveal that the Company’s
government in India was not as monolithic nor homogenous in its policies as it would have liked
to believe. Similarly, for each construction put forward by a Nizamut Adalut at Calcutta, dissenting
queries were made by Fort St. George or Bombay. In the case of the construction of 1811, a judge
of the Bareilly Court of Circuit by raising some salient questions, highlighted the limits of the
official English debate. W. Leycester, in his report of 1815, pointed out that the local darogahs
of police and the native law officer of the Court of Circuit did not interpret Regulation X as the
Nizamat Adalut did. Then he went on to assert that all importation was disallowed by the
Regulation regardless of the purpose for which such occurred, and such slaves should be
manumitted. From this, Leycester moved on to a critique of the regulation itself, which, he said,
distinguished between ‘indigenous slaves’ and ‘imported’ ones when there was very little material
difference between the two. He gave the telling instance of the
female persons imported as slaves, being let out in retail for the purposes of
prostitution, and any offspring they may have being sold, agreeable to the daily
practice regarding the indigenous slaves of the country, for the benefit of the slave
master.
Leycester, like Richardson, appeared to have distanced himself from the Taw’, as practiced by the
local English magistrates as well as that promulgated by the executive. In 1816, he had dissented
from the magistrate of Farrukabad who had ordered his darogah to recapture a runaway female
slave Gunna on the complaints of her mistress.87 When Leycester was Chief Judge of the
Nizamut Adawlut between 1820 and 1823, he finally gave decision against another magistrate of
Benares, who had restored an identical slave fugitive to her mistress.88 Yet the two cases he had
decided had had ‘prostitute’ mistresses as plaintiffs, with important men of the region as
defendants. Leycester’s vilification of the mistresses and of prostitution, and his decision in favour
of the powerful men who he praised for wanting to ‘marry’ the runaway slave, obscured the fact
that such slave-girls had been hired by the men previously, as well as the fact that the mistresses
too had been slave-concubines to, and had gained their licence, and patronage, from similarly
powerful men of the area.
Similarly, in 1816, Leycester’s arguments obscured the main concern of the executive.
Acting upon the presumption that ‘free’ people were kidnapped and enslaved, Leycester had
87Report of the Law Commissioners, (PP), 1841, Appendix II, pp. 330-34.
88See Mussamut Chutroo vs. Mussamut Jussa in Report o f Cases in the Sudder Dewanny Adawlut,
III, pp. 188-91.
172
argued that resale might occur after a long period after the original acquisition, at which point the
kidnapping would be remembered by very few. However, Leycester had ignored the judicial
evidence of the provincial courts, where cases of kidnap and theft were mostly between slave
holders, and the fact that most of the people said to have been kidnapped were those who were
already enslaved.
Leycester’s omissions were compensated by other British Circuit judges and magistrates.
It was their complaints, rather than Leycester or Richardson’s arguments, that were decisive in
formulating legislation. For instance, another second judge of the Court of Circuit for the division
of Dacca, R. Dick, partly on the basis of communication with the magistrate of Sylhet, had got
to the heart of the matter in his report of 1813. In this, he reviled the traffic in slaves
‘fraudulently’ possessed by people who
entice them to desert their masters, or, by the same seductive influence, cause
them to be inveigled away through the medium of their private agents, and
afterwards be sold at such distant places as to prevent discovery, or the return of
the unfortunate being.89
Though persistently bracketed under the heading of the ‘kidnapping of children’ in the official
records of the Court of Directors and of the Governor-General in Council, Dick’s report minced
no words on the need to restore these slaves to their ‘families’.
Despite this clarity, the Nizamut Adalut asked the Dacca Court of Circuit whether the
persons described as ‘inveigled’ were free or slave. The former magistrate of Sylhet, J.Hayes, who
was in Tipperah by 1816, responded promptly: most of the trials, he said, were for the offence of
inveigling persons already in a state of slavery... the generality of the former
description of persons above alluded to are females, who, being more employed
for domestic purposes than those of the other sex, are in greater demand... These
females are carried to Dacca, Calcutta, Moorshedabad, Patna, and to those opulent
cities which constantly insure for them a rapid and profitable sale.90
Other magistrates were equally emphatic. The assistant in charge of zillah Dacca Jellalpore referred
to the common pattern of disposing of slaves by regular deeds of sale which were registered in
his court,
It rarely if ever happens that persons in a free state are inveigled away under false
pretence ... unless in the instance of young females who being obtained from their
friends under pretence of marriage are disposed of either to public women or to
89Sir R.K. Dick to M.H. Turnbull, Register of Nizamut Adalut, 12 March, 1813, BCrJC, P/132/27, 24
May 1816, no. 41.
9l,J. Hayes to H. Walters, Register to the Court of Circuit for Dacca Divn., 10 Feb. 1816, ibid., enclosure
in no. 42.
173
91H. M. Pigou to H. Walters, 1 March 1816, ibid, no. 44. See also E. J. Harington, the magistrate of
Zillah Mymensingh, to H. Walters, 7 April 1816, for the opinion that no prosecutions had been occasioned
by the enticing away of free persons.
92Register of the Nizamut Adalut to Sec. to Govt., Judcl., 1 May 1816, ibid, no. 42.
93Sec. to Govt, to Register to Nizamut Adalut, 24 May 1816, ibid., no. 46.
95‘A Rule, Ordinance and Regulation for the Good Order and Civil Government of the Settlement of
Fort William’, 23 March 1816, BCrJC, P/132/24, 26 April 1816, no. 27.
spoke of the ‘peace and happiness of families’ which was destroyed by ‘evil disposed women, who
are employed to entice and take away the wives, or female children, of the fixed inhabitants from
their respective houses, for the purpose of rendering them prostitutes, or concubines, or of
otherwise unlawfully disposing them’.98 The context within which this regulation was framed
fleshes out the substance of the familial language, and its anti-slave direction. Clause II provided
that ‘enticing’ any female - whether she was a ‘married woman living under the protection of her
husband, or of any person having the care of her in his behalf or whether she was an ‘unmarried
female under the age of fifteen years, living with her parents or other legal guardians, or any
persons acting in their behalf’- and disposing of her without the consent of the husband or parent
or other guardian, was liable to imprisonment for six months.
As if to ensure that the language of kinship did not mislead the English magistrate, clauses
V and VI empowered the magistrates to also proceed against those ‘workmen and domestic
servants’ who ‘wilfully quit the service engaged for before the expiration of the term agreed upon’
(even though it acknowledged that many domestic servants did not enter into such ‘engagements’).
In the consolidated reproduction of Regulations of 1774 and 1816, such people who ‘wilfully
neglect to perform the work so contracted for’ were made liable to imprisonment of one month
for the first offence and longer terms of imprisonment for repeated misdemeanours of this kind.
Only those recalcitrant ‘workmen and servants’ who could prove that their desertion was
occasioned by ‘gross maltreatment, or by non-payment of wages due’ to the satisfaction of the
magistrates could escape punishment.
It is worth asking why a Regulation that appeared overtly to be protecting ‘wives and
daughters’ from kidnapping and sale should have to provide so minutely for the immobilisation
of all ‘servants’. This Regulation did not just tie all slaves down in whatever location, capacity
or function they were found, it made the ‘husband, parent, guardian’ the sole and rightful authority
for disposing and discharging of the slave in question. In other words, the right of the holder to
initiate a transfer was secured, both against the encroachment of others and the reluctance of the
slave.99 The substance of the crime of ‘kidnapping’, as far as the English law-makers were
concerned, was specifically that of an action by which ‘injury to property’ had been caused; if the
child-woman had not been property in this sense, and had merely been abducted for purposes of
"The text of Regulation VII of 1819 is printed in Papers relating to East India Affairs: Regulations
passed between 1810 and 1824 (House of Commons, 1825).
"For the use of Regulation VII in a case in which the Magistrate of Murshidabad, A. Smelt, issued
process against the eunuchs and servants of the deori of Buhoo Begum for inveigling away the slave-
concubine (mankooher) of Ufzul Ali, a son of Noorunissa Begum, see AGG Thoresby to Sec. Macnaghten,
28 Nov. 1833, BC F/4/1522/60090A. The Agent believed that after having come into some heritable
property, the concubine had absconded ‘as if with the wish of becoming her own mistress’.
175
'“ Opinion of Register of the Nizamut Adalut, NWP, Agra, in letter to Register of Nizamut Adalut, Fort
William, 8 Oct. 1844, regarding Ramjeewun Pandey vs. Hingoo Pandey and Bishnu Pandey, BC
F/4/2294/118156.
l01By subsequent constructions by the Courts of Sadr Diwani and Nizamut Adalut, the ability of servants
of long service to recover their wages shrunk. Under a construction of 1831, a servant could not sue for
sums exceeding one year’s worth of wages, and by other constructions of 1821 and 1846, suits of servants
against European British masters under Regulation VII were disbarred from magistrate’s courts. See
H.C.Tucker, My Notebook o f Rules and Regulations, Collectory and Faujdary (Calcutta, 1850), pp. 274 and
389.
176
presumably Burmese, masters. However, the onset of the Anglo-Burmese war, and famine, made
Scott change tack. In 1825, he permitted male paiks whose labour had been the currency in which
the Assamese kings had paid their ministerial officers, and who had been important in the war
with Burma, to ‘sell’ and bond themselves to individuals and creditors.102 As Scott justified it
in 1828, allowing the alienation of ‘public’ slaves to ‘private’ individuals went hand in hand with
the resumption of the land that had constituted the paiks'' wages (the peculium), and securing
guarantees that the new British-controlled Assamese state did not, in turn, demand the services of
the slave in his capacity of a paik. Such a guarantee, and the transfers, had been confirmed by the
Government of Bengal in 1829.103 Scott subsequently raised the matter of protecting the new
slave-owners’ and creditors’ interests further.
The query rested, not on the existence of Hindu or Islamic law, but on the judicial
implementation of Regulation X of 1811 by a magistrate against a native of Patna for taking his
Assamese slave with him out of the province.104 Since Assam was not to be considered a foreign
country, the new owners, he inferred, should not be punished for removing their slaves to Bengal.
Scott, who had pleaded that owners of slaves should be allowed to transfer slaves to meet their
revenue payments, clearly saw Regulation X of 1811 as an obstacle in the path of the liquidation
of slave-mortgages and debts. For him the basic issue, after 1826, was the protection of the
creditor’s rights to ‘remove’ his newly acquired slaves or to sell the slaves of his defaulting debtor,
without which the creditor himself may have been unable to meet the demands of the state.105
If the construction of 1812 was to hold, then transferring slaves between and within Company’s
territories, should also be applicable to Assam now. Though Scott did not appear to have been
aware of the Construction, or of the Circular Order of 1814, this was broadly the permission he
l02David Scott, AGG on North East Frontier, to Ch. Sec. GOB, 4 March 1828, BC F/4/1115/29887.
Scott’s conceptual failure lay in not recognising that the paiks might have represented ‘public holding’ of
slaves by the Assamese monarchy.
'"Letter from Court of Directors to the Governor-General in Council at Fort William, Poll. Department,
10 March 1830, BC F/4/1371/54510. A contemporary Assamese account of this period suggests that when
the Burmese invaded Assam, they imposed a graded kharikatana, a poll tax, on all Assamese, including one
of 8 annas on freedmen, bondsmen and slaves. Amongst the measures Scott instituted in Assam after 1826,
was the confirmation and extension of the tax payable by slaves. See S.L. Baruah, ‘Sadar Aminar
Atmajivani’, BPP, 97, 1, 1978, pp.79-85.
1<)5D.Scott, AGG on North-East Frontier, to Ch. Sec., 25 March 1829, BPC, P/125/62, 10 April 1829,
no. 60; Scott to Swinton, 31 Dec. 1829, BPC, P/126/11, 26 Feb. 1830, no. 17. In the second letter, Scott
even appeared to recommend that the government acquire the slaves of the debtor (and defaulter) by paying
the creditor (with whom he has mortgaged or pawned his slave) a fixed rate for the slaves which the creditor
is not being allowed to sell. This kind of sale of mortgaged or farmed slaves was precisely what Reza Khan
had tried to prevent, in redraft of Cornwallis’s ajir proposals, CPC, VIII, nos. 1325-6, and no. 1379, pp.
585-88.
177
‘"Register of the Nizamut Adalut to J. Thomason, Dy. Sec. to Govt., Judcl., 19 August, 1831, BCrJC,
P/140/1, 8 Nov. 1831, no. 47.
107W.H. Macnaghten, Sec. to Gov.-Gen. to J.Thomason, 30 Dec. 1831, BCrJC, P/140/5, 13 March 1832,
no. 21.
178
due with reference to the consideration received by the obligor’.108 Put plainly, such ‘children’
would be able to claim their liberty only ‘when their services may be supposed to have repaid the
cost of their maintenance’.109 Clearly, Bentinck’s penurious administration was to take no
chances with the payment of compensation to owners of slaves. Though this clause was dropped
altogether from the final draft, the scope of the regulation was sufficiently anti-slave even without
it. It ensured slave-owners of Assam that they were protected against the ‘removal’ of their slaves
by others not authorised to do so. Clause III specified that persons concerned in the sale and
purchase of slaves ‘so removed, knowing him 01* her to have been so removed’ on conviction
before a magistrate would be liable to imprisonment.110
Chasms in the interpretation of regulations, and in the communications between regional
colonial administrations and the central colonial government, were obvious. Since the restoration
of fugitive slaves was viewed as an important part of diplomacy by the Governor-General in
Council, the problem that a local administrator like Scott had referred to - the mortgage and
eventual sale of slaves by Assamese masters and creditors - could be allowed to resolve itself by
default.111 However, an attempt to paper over the differential priorities of local and central
administrations revealed that the central government in this period itself gave contradictory
assessments of Regulation III. In 1833, the Commissioner of Circuit for Assam submitted a list
of rules to be established by proclamation which included provisions for the slave-born children
in Assam to be bound ‘to serve their Parents or owners’ until the attainment of 18 years, the
registration of slaves and slave-born with putwarries of villages, the rights of ‘parents’ to sell their
‘children’ in times of distress, and so on.112 In the course of discussion, T.C. Robertson who had
served as Commissioner of Assam before being appointed to the Sadr Diwani Adalut, urged that
the practice of borrowing money by pledging ‘personal service’, was very common in Assam and
1(,8W.H.Macnaghten to J. Thomason, 26 Oct. 1831, BCrJC, P/140/1, 8 Nov. 1831, no. 50.
1"'Regulation III of 1832 was entitled ‘A Regulation for extending the provisions of Regulation X,
1811’. For the full text of Regulation HI, see Papers Relating to Slavery in India (PP), 1834-39, pp. 394-95.
By specifying that ‘all slaves... removed... for purposes of traffic...are hereby declared free’, it left the
traditional opt-out clause for slave-holders, that slaves brought from Assam (or elsewhere in India) were for
domestic puiposes, not further sales.
11'For intra-local conflict around the ransoming of approximately 10,000 slaves from their Khamti and
Singhpo masters in Upper Assam, in order to form them into a militia under British command, see F.
Jenkins, AGG North East Frontier to W. H. Macnaghten, Sec. GOB, 16 Jan. 1836, and Major White to F.
Jenkins, 15 Dec. 1835, BPC, P/127/31, 9 Feb. 1836, no.2 and no,5.
U2F. Jenkins to R. D. Mangles, Sec. to GOB, Judcl.Deptt., 22 Aug. 1833, and correspondence, Report
of the Law Commissioners, (PP), 1841, Appendix VI, pp. 405-09.
179
any rule declaring invalid a suit for reclaiming the services of a bondsman would abrogate the
practice. He was reassured by government that no such consequence was intended by these
measures. It was only intended that such personal service should not be transferred by sale to a
third party by the creditor, and the slave/bondsman transferred out of the jurisdiction of the
erstwhile owner.113 The central government in this instance, tried to represent Regulation III as
a measure of protection of the creditor-owners of slaves from the demands of the original masters
of hired-out or mortgaged slaves for repossession or reclamation.
However, to other presidencies, confused by the apparent contradiction between the
Supreme Government’s permission of internal transfers in 1807, and the prohibition of such
transfers in Regulation III of 1832, the central government painted Regulation III in different
clours. The government of Fort St. George pointed out to the Bengal government that clauses I
and II contravened its own construction of the Parliamentary Act of 1807, by now appearing to
disallow the transportation of slaves from the erstwhile ‘foreign’ territories to the Company’s
jursidiction.114 In response, the latter pointed out that no such contradiction existed: Sec. II, it
said, ‘does not declare the removal of slaves by sea to be punishable’, but that slaves removed
after 1811 were to be considered ‘free’ (not paid for?). Moreover, the penalties provided for in the
Regulation were not attached to the ‘removal’ of slaves but ‘for subsequent sale or purchase of
slaves so removed’.115
Strictly drawn notions of territoriality, of the finite boundaries of each economic
transaction, and the bifurcation of ‘domestic use’ from ‘economic exchange’ had evidently come
to bear on the question of what was or was not ‘removal’ or ‘trade’ in slaves. Thus even with
regard to the ‘foreign’ African slave imported by sea from the African coast or Persian Gulf in
the period 1833-1845, the fractures between central and local administrators persisted. In 1834,
the Chief Magistrate of Calcutta, D. McFarlan, asked the Bengal Government to enable pilots of
vessels coming ‘from a certain quarter of the world’ to report to the police every case where they
might suspect that male or female slaves were on the ships coming into Calcutta.116 The Marine
Board, and the Government of Bengal, while broadly accepting such a suggestion, demurred that
113Judcl. Letter from the Governor of Bengal, 6 July 1837 in Papers Relating to Slavery in India (PP),
1834-39, 51, no. 697, pp. 79-80.
l,4Sec. Fort St. George to Ch. Sec. to GOB, 7 Sept. 1832, BCrJC, P/140/11, 25 Sept. 1832, no. 8.
1I5Sec. to Govt, to Actg. Sec. to Fort St. George, 25 Sept. 1832, ibid., no. 9.
the pilots should not be held responsible ‘should any slaves be landed from any particular
vessel’.117 So when one such young male slave, who had been employed as a lascar by his
owner, Ali Abdulla, in the ‘Aden Merchant’, was suspected of having been sold at Calcutta in
1843, the Bombay Government’s enquiry from the Chief Magistrate of Calcutta elicited this reply:
The greater portion of the Arab vessels coming into Port have slaves either as
seamen or domestic servants - So long as trafficking with them is not practised
within these Territories, the Police have not considered themselves bound to
interfere.118
The official belief that slave-use in a ‘domestic capacity’ was separable from ‘sale’ for which the
owner could be prosecuted, flatly failed to comprehend the complex materialities of a slave’s life.
In fact, the ‘use’ of the apparently disembodied ‘services’ of a slave, and the ‘exchange’ of such
services for cash or goods occurred simultaneously or serially within ‘domestic’ holdings. As
evidenced with the leasing/mortgaging of slave women, so too for male slaves. For instance, in
the case of the African male slave, Nusseed, the subject of the enquiry, who had originally
belonged to Ali Hamed of Aden, and had been sold to Ali Abdulla, then put together with three
other male slaves to work as lascars in the ship, the masters’ domestic authority over slaves was
the precondition for their profitability. Ali Abdulla had charged the owners of the ship, Sorabji &
Co. for their wages, as an earlier master too had done when putting Nusseed to work as a khalasi
in a boat.119 Where slaves were the subject of economic transactions, it was the domestic
authority of the master or mistress that determined whether he/she would be the subject of other
economic transactions. Thus Ajeema, the ten or eleven-year-old female slave whom her holder had
kept three or four years in his house (domestic) in Furrukhabad was then taken to Muscat and
sought to be exchanged for a Swahili male slave.120
ll7Sec. to Marine Board to D. McFarlan, 31 May 1834, and Sec. to Govt., Gen. Dept., to D. McFarlan,
9 June 1834, ibid.
ll8Ch. Magt. of Calcutta, J. H. Patton to Sec. to GOB, Judcl., 10/20 March 1845 (error in original letter),
Enclosure II in Sec. to GOI to Ch. Sec. to GOBy,, 18 Apr. 1845, BC F/4/2112/9946.
il9Ch. Magt. of Calcutta to Sec. to GOB, Judcl., 20 Nov. 1843, and Poll. Agent at Aden to Ch. Sec. to
GOBy., 23 Jan. 1844, BC F/4/2066/94848.
120Enclosure in letter from Sec. to GOBy., to Sec. to Government of NWP, Agra, 27 Nov. 1843, BC
F/4/2112/99472.
181
represented their own proposals, characterising them as attempts to ensure that the ‘existing state
of the law was altered as little as possible’.121 Nor was there a very material separation between
the British colonial members of the executive and the judiciary in terms of personnel. Many
judicial officers of the Company’s civil service acted in executive capacities right through the
period, like H.T. Colebrooke who was sent as Resident at the Nagpur court in 1801. Thomas
Pattle, the Chief Judge of the Murshidabad Adalut, held the post of the Paymaster of the Nizamut
stipends and acted as the Agent of the Governor-General. W.H. Macnaghten, the son of a judge
of the Supreme Court and an authority on law in his own right, was the Secretary of the Governor-
General in both the Bentinck and the Auckland administration in the 1830s till his death in the
Afghan campaign.
A substantive continuity also existed between the lower and higher rungs of the civil
service and judiciary. Thus civil servants of the Company who began as magistrates in the districts
and eventually became judges of the Sadr Diwani and Nizamut Adalut tended to hold the same
attitudes towards interpretation of law. Though it would be illuminating to study all the judges
between the period 1790-1860, a cursory glance at some key figures suggests the continuum that
could emerge between English magisterial decisions, and Sadr Courts’ decisions. For instance, T.C.
Robertson had served as magistrate in Patna city, and in the Kanpur zillah, then as Commissioner
of Assam Division after the cession of Assam, before being appointed as Judge in the Sadr Diwani
Adalut. Similarly, magistrates who recorded their staunch pro-mastery opinions and actions in the
1830s, gave similarly anti-slave decisions in some cases in the Nizamut Adalut in the 1850s. A
good example was R.H.Mytton, who as magistrate of Sylhet, had thought Regulation III of 1832
did not stop masters selling slaves from Sylhet in adjoining territories, and, as a judge in the Sadr
Diwani Adalut in the 1850s, interpreted another legislative enactment, Act V of 1843, similarly.
Thus if the actions and decisions of magistrates and collectors were influenced by political
and commercial considerations, the opinions of the administration owed their inspiration directly
and explicitly to such officers. For instance, the Minute by which Governor-General Amherst
suspended all discussion of slavery named H. T. Colebrooke as the authority on whose advice this
was done.122 Even when they were not named outright, the judicial civil servants played a very
important role in setting the terms and direction of the discussion. An instance of this role was a
private letter written by W. H. Macnaghten to Lord Auckland in 1837, in which one can discern
the provenance of the subsequent minutes of that administration.123
123W. H. Macnaghten to Lord Auckland, April 8, 1837 in British Library, Broughton Papers,
Add.Mss.36473, folios 105-110.
182
The political secretary’s letter warned the Governor-General not to introduce any ‘rash
measure which would excite the indignation of the people’. As proof that legislation for the
emancipation of slaves was unnecessary, this letter pointed to the practices of the courts as already
sufficiently liberatory. Referring to a Circular Order of the Nizamut Adalut which instructed local
magistrates to refer persons claiming property in a runaway slave to the civil court to prove his
‘right’,124 Macnaghten ingeniously asked, ‘...but whom is he to sue? He might as well sue an
ox or an ass as the slave himself and by suing him he ipso facto admits the invalidity of his
claim’. In the event of the slave being himself sued in a civil action, the courts would uphold the
Taw of the defendant’ and this would prevent ‘a Mahommedan from owning a Hindoo slave and
vice versa’. Having reduced the issue down to the ‘Islamic’ and ‘Hindu’ definitions of a slave,
Macnaghten resorted to another device in the armoury of proslavery legalese: Sec. 15 of
Regulation IV of 1793 and the decision of the Sadr Diwani Adalut in 1798 extending the scope
of this section to include slavery. This was now again cited as proof that, given the legality of
more numerous forms of slavery in Hindu rather than in Islamic law, a British judge could not
avoid passing a decree in favour of a ‘Hindu’ master suing for his slave.
124For text of two constructions one of May 1830 and another of March 1835 to this effect, see
Constructions by the Courts of Sudder Dewanny and Nizamut Adawlut of Regulations, I (Calcutta, 1840),
no. 550, p. 232; II (Calcutta, 1839), no. 939, p. 205.
127Judge of Tirhoot to Register of the Presidency Court of Sadr Diwani Adalut, 20 March 1835, in
Constructions, II, p. 214, no. 955.
183
and Judge of Tirhoot and the Sadr Diwani Adalut. Between them, the latter agreed that ‘Regulation
III of 1832 does not prohibit the transfer of slaves for money; it merely prohibits the removal
[enticing/kidnap] of them for the purpose of traffic from one territory, British and foreign, to any
other territory dependent on this presidency’.
However, if English officers increasingly implanted a different slave-law through
Regulations, indigenous claimants appeared to have obliged and followed the changing norms in
bringing such claims in slaves to a judicial resolution. As with Syed Afzul Ali using Regulation
VII to effect the recovery of his concubine in Murshidabad in 1833, so in 1838 one Hameed
Rassool remembered a similar (identical?) case in zillah Bihar when Afzul Ali had applied to the
magistrate who referred him to the civil court. Here he had brought a regular suit against ‘the
slave, a girl and Salamut Ali, the person who was harbouring her; he got a decree and the girl was
restored to him’.128 Another man spoke of his father who had bought Chanda and Nida from
their master: the women ‘refused to come under his dominion, whereupon he sued them in the
civil court of Sylhet...I continued it, and got judgement, which was confirmed on appeal in the
provincial court of Dacca’.129 The civil and sessions judge of Sylhet in 1836 had confirmed the
fact that ‘on a suit instituted in the civil court, and the claim being proved, an award is given
declarative of the master’s right to the slave: and on application from the master, the slave is
apprehended and delivered to him. If the slave refuse to serve or to comply with the award, he is
imprisoned so long as the master chooses to pay the subsistence money’.130 Macnaghten’s
implication that slaves themselves could not be sued was belied by the number of cases (at lest
ten that were reported) that the Sadr Diwani Adalut had decided between the period 1830-1840
in which slaves themselves had been made defendants in civil suits for repossession.
Despite the half-truths and outright lies, Macnaghten’s letter clarified that the recovery of
a slave by a civil action meant that the slave had to be categorised as property. Once this was
done, the rules applicable to property became not ‘Islamic’ or ‘Hindu’ law, but the rules derived
from colonial slave-law. This had been hinted at by the Register of the Sadr Diwani Adalut in his
instruction to the Officiating Judge of Zillah Shahabad in 1836.131 The lower level judge had
asked the court if it was within the competency of the munsiffs, sadr amins and principal sadr
amins (indigenous maulvis and pundits appointed to these posts) to try and decide suits respecting
the rights in slaves. The response of the Sadr Diwani Adalut was that such suits were cognizable
12Tbid„ p. 256.
because ‘they must be looked upon in the same light as other personal property’. So suits
regarding them must be held cognisable by the native judges. However, the Sadr Diwani Adalut
further directed this subordinate official that it was ‘highly inexpedient that such cases should go
before a native should the reference of them to a European judge be practicable’. Such a
preference for European judges made a mockery of the English claims that ‘Islamic’ or ‘Hindu’
laws were to be applicable to cases involving slaves and slavery. At the same time, the logic of
recovering slaves by civil suits became abundantly clear. Since in theory, cases in criminal law
were still to have been decided by ‘Islamic’ (read faujdan) norms, taking such claims beyond the
jurisdiction of indigenous Taw officers’ was in fact to leave slaves at the mercy of quite different
adjudicatory norms.
The inference that in such civil suits, as well as in many criminal cases, both ‘Islamic’ and
‘Hindu’ customs and law was marginalised is reinforced by the institutional changes occurring as
a result of Company Regulations. Regulation XV of 1805 had provided for the appointment of
‘Mahomedan and Hindoo Law Officers’ of the Zillah and City Courts to the posts of sadr amins
in the zillahs and cities in which they were respectively employed. These maulvis and pundits had
been allowed, as sadr amins, to try referred causes to the value of Rs. 100. Logically, in a civil
suit for the restoration of a slave, they would have been, after 1805, the ‘native judges’ that the
Sadr Diwani Adalut, from 1836 at least, was keen to avoid. By the Regulation I of 1810, judges
of the Court of Circuit, which had supervisory functions over magistrates’ courts, had been
allowed to dispense with the futwa in criminal cases wherever they deemed it advisable.
Regulation XVII of 1817 had enhanced this marginalisation further by providing that wherever the
judge of a Court of Circuit differed in his opinion from the futw a of the Qazi or other
‘Mahomedan law-officers’, notably in areas of evidence, and acquittal, the proceedings were to
be submitted to the Nizamut Adalut. If two or more judges of the latter court disagreed with the
futwa of the law-officers of this court, they could overrule it, and pass sentence accordingly.
The rhetoric of the maintenance of ‘Islamic’ or ‘Hindu’ law persisted in the face of the
evidence of the bureaucracy itself. By the 1830s, various magistrates testified that the ‘Hindu and
Islamic laws’ were marginal to their decisions. An additional judge of Burdwan said ‘magistrates
know very little of either Mahomedan or Hindu law, and they very seldom apply to the molvies
or the pundits of the courts for futwahs or bewusthas’.132 Yet both judicial and executive officers
in the higher echelons of the service continued to cite ‘Muhammadan ’ and ‘Hindu’ law as the
referents of anti-slave and pro-mastery decisions. Probably, instead of any particular law,
magisterial orders were influenced by ideas of right and wrong derived from a composite universe
l32Opinion of R. Macan, Addl. judge of Burdwan, in PP, 1841, Appendix II, p. 277.
185
comprising a different slave-holding legalism, metropolitan abolitionism and the local and political
weight of the contenders, according to their ‘discretion’.133
As the central colonial administrative authorities’ positions hardened, indigenous
adjudicators still tried to interpret both Company Regulation as well as authoritative English
pronouncements flexibly. In 1841, when a female Dher slave ran away from her master and
refused to return, a maulvi of the Faujdari Adalut in Madras repeated what the Qazi-ul Quzat in
Calcutta had urged in 1808. Reiterating the principle that only captives in war and their
descendants were considered ‘true’ slaves in ‘Islamic’ law, this maulvi issued a futwa which by
virtue of this strict delimitation of slave-status, released many slaves ‘received from their parents
during famine or at other times’.134 The pro-slave interpretation infuriated Amos, one of the Law
Commissioners, who characterised the futw a as ‘gross misrepresentation’. Moreover, he asked, in
an explicit abrogation of the Company’s claims regarding criminal jurisdiction,
is the lawfulness of the status of slavery in this country among Hindoos...to be
determined by a reference to the Muhammadan law Officer?... Did the British
Government in applying the Mahomedan Criminal law to Hindoos destroy for all
purposes of Criminal Law the Hindoo status of Slavery, Marriage, fraternity and
other Civil relations?135
Masquerading with such legal masks - Hindu status of slavery, Islamic criminal law - was an
unqualified endeavour on the part of the central judicial and legislative authorities to keep mastery
intact, to force slaves back into the arms of their claimants, to avoid any fiscal demands of slave
holders upon the Company. In the process, they considerably expanded the possibilities of
bondage, and substantially re-wrote Islamic law.
The consolidation and continuity of official insistence on the rights of masters, in an
apparent closing of ranks against the abolitionists in the metropolis136 as well as against
ameliorationists in the Company’s own administration, and against the opinions of maulvis
favouring a pro-slave ethic in judicial cases, should further qualify any consideration of the
133In T. C. Robertson’s words, ‘we have been left to steer our own way between the antagonist
prejudices of the natives ... and of our own countrymen’, ibid., p. 267. The joint magistrate of Midnapore
referred to the discretion of the magistrate in issues between masters and slaves, ibid., p. 275. However,
simple intra-professional pressures, like the goodwill of superiors necessary for promotions, may also have
overcome some magistrates. For a glimpse of conflicts between a magistrate Crawfurd and his superior
officer, F. C. Smith, in 1831, over the restoration of a runaway female slave, see Bengal Hurkaru, 17 Jan.-9
Feb., 1843.
134Cited in Ch. Sec. to Govt., Fort St. George, to T.H.Maddock, 15 March 1841, BC F/4/1947/84542.
136See H. T. Prinsep’s Minute of 31 July 1841, scathing about the ‘exaggerated feeling’ aroused by the
abolitionist movement in England and European British Library, Broughton Papers, Add. Mss. 36473, folios
66-69.
186
‘criminal’ law as it was modified by Company regulation. This caution is even more necessary
for assessing claims of delegalisation of slavery by Act V of 1843. During the years 1837-42, the
Company’s administrators and legislative authorities alike opposed the abolition of slavery. Just
as Macnaghten lied, Governor-General Auckland’s Minute of 6 May, 1839 took the tone set out
by the judicial officer who was also his private secretary, and explicated their joint concern for
the master. In response to an order of September 1838 from the Court of Directors, which urged
the Government in India to pass a law establishing that any act that was a criminal offence
continued to be punishable when done to a slave, Auckland demurred. He stated his personal
preference for not regulating
the conduct of masters towards themselves ... it would seem impossible not to
accompany the enactment of such a law ... with provisions giving to masters some
easy legal means of obtaining the due services of their slaves ... if the Law were
drawn and could be passed without injustice to masters simply in the more general
form ... I should be prepared ... to give my assent to it.137
In yet another Minute of 1841, which referred both to the Report of the Law Commissioners on
slavery of that year as well as to Commissioner Amos’ belief in the masters’ powers of ‘moderate
coercion and restraint’, the Governor-General urged ‘extreme caution in legislation ... for surely,
if we legislate at all, we cannot legislate in favour of the slave’.138 If, he added, the legislature
in England persisted in the demand for an enactment, the masters ‘might, not unnaturally, look
upon themselves as grievously injured’ and demand compensation for the loss of these rights;
worse still, such an ‘open extinction of slavery as a status in any manner admitted by our laws,
may be expected to be received with discontent and resistance’. Two threats, not unrelated to each
other, were erected at once: threats of violent resistance by indigenous masters, and a fiscal drain
upon the Company. These were in turn heard with sympathy by the Court of Directors, who
advised the Company in India to pass some legislation of its own in order to pre-empt a more
drastic solution imposed by the Parliament.139
By 1843, after many drafts of legislation had been emended and discussed between the
Law Comissioners and the Governor-General, a short promulgation was published in the Gazette.
To contemporaries, especially those who were slave-holders, this Act offered a glimpse of
l37Minute of the Governor-General, 6 May 1839, in British Library, Auckland Papers, Add.Mss.37711,
folios 60-65. Emphasis original.
l38Minute of the Governor-General in the Legislative Department, Aug. 27 1841, in British Library,
Auckland Papers, Add. Mss. 37713, folios 114b-115b, Emphasis original.
139Letter from Directors, G. Lyall and J. L. Lushington, 13 Oct. 1841, BC F/4/1947/84542. It is clear
that the Directors’ wish to avoid an ‘act of hurried and imperfect legislation here, which, adopted under
feelings of excitement, and without the local knowledge and information you possess might have
consequences injurious to the public peace’ was consonant with the Governor-General’s wishes.
187
apocalypse. From Assam, ‘almost all the higher classes’ protested against the promulgation of this
Act.140 One group of land-holders from Sylhet predicted that it would ‘tend to the ruin of all
India, especially that of the respectable part of the population’.141 These holders knew that the
object of the act ‘is not emancipation of slaves’ but the issue of restoration of fugitive slaves
(‘forsaking their services’) by the Diwani or Faujdari courts - the sum of Section II of Act V.
Again referring to this section of the Act, another group of slave-holders from Bakarganj
remonstrated that this would take away the ‘control of masters... Because if the rights of persons
in slaves cannot be enforced in courts the term "slave" will be obliterated’.142
Were their fears justified? Did the courts fail to restore fugitive slaves or stop declaring
title to slaves in diverse ways after 1844? The Governor-General too had claimed that ‘Magistrates
do not interfere for the restoration of a runaway slave to his Employer’.143 If this was so, how
does one explain the joint complaints by certain inhabitants of a mohalla in Hughli town who were
‘not relations of the children’ claimed to have been ‘stolen’?144 How do we explain the fact that
the ‘boys’ claimed to have been stolen were between seven years and sixteen years of age? Clearly
the older forms of lodging complaints for the loss of the slave persisted as did the readiness of the
bureaucracy to respond to these charges. In Bengal, few magistrates appear to have doubted the
‘legality’ of their own actions in catching and restoring runaways. For instance in 1844, the
Magistrate of Murshidabad ‘arrested four children ... who state that they have escaped from the
Begum Ruhunissah’s Dheoree’ and asked the AGG to ascertain whether anything has been stolen.
In response, Sitanath Bose, the Dewan of the Nizamut, confirmed that ‘ten maid-servants of the
Begum’ had absconded, four of whom were attached to the Toshakhanah, two to the Rakabkana,
and four were personal attendants.145
14(1F. Jenkins, Commissnr. of Assam, to Under Secy, to GOB Judcl., 9 May 1844, BC F/4/2107/98688.
The fear of aristocratic displeasure, and demands of compensation, also ensured that Act V of 1843 was not
promulgated in any of the ‘native states’ evident in a list in BC F/4/2261/114628. For official justification
of non-promulgation in these states or ‘foreign territory’, see BC F/4/2233/111702. For persistence of
magisterial action regarding fugitive female slaves, see BC F/4/2112/99462 and BC F/4/2112/99475
(Gaikwar’s slaves) and BC F/4/2112/99476 (Dhurrumpur’s slaves).
141Abstract Translation of a Bengali Petition from the Zemindars, Merasdars, Talokdars, Pottahdars and
Ijaradars of Sylhet, (680 signatures), 23 Feb. 1843, ILP, P/207/27, 7 Apr. 1843, no. 13.
142Translate of a Bengali Petition from the Landholders and others of the Distt. of Bakarganj (125
signatures), 10 March 1843, ibid.
143Minute of May 6, 1841, in British Library, Auckland Papers, Add. Mss. 37713, folio 102a.
,44Magt. of Hughli to Under Sec. to GOB, 24 June 1845, BCrJC, P/142/34, 9 July 1845, no. 236.
145Magt. Murshidabad to AGG Berhampore, 11 Aug. 1844, and Sitanath Bose to AGG, 11 Aug. 1844,
MNLR, II, p. 502.
188
146Minute of 6 May 1839, British Library, Auckland Minute Books, Add. Mss. 37711, folio 60b.
147Reports of Cases determined by the Nizamut Adalut (henceforth RNA), II, pt. II, 1852, p. 281.
l48Contemporary barristers like W. Morgan and A. G. Macpherson appeared to have interpreted Act V
in an identical fashion in their The Indian Penal Code (Act XLV o f 1860) (Calcutta, 1861), pp. 319-20.
189
Since chokri did in fact denote the female slave, it is clear that many cases involving
such people were decided in the provincial and Nizamat Adalut, not in favour of the release of the
girls and women believed to have been stolen, but in favour of one or the other claimant. Thus
in the case of Bindoo Bystumee v. Ram Bagdee, Korebun Ali Sheikh, Puddo Khangy, Shama
Khangy149 an 8-9 year old slave-girl, described in the court as Kamini Chookree, ‘daughter’ of
Bindoo Bystumee, was believed to have been carried away by the two men and two women
prosecuted. As in many previous and subsequent cases, the men and women accused of the theft
were neighbours, people whom the child knew well enough to ‘come to their house to play’. The
accused did plead that they had taken her away ‘at her own request’, but were disbelieved by the
Sessions Judge of 24-Pergunnahs, E. Bentall. As he reported it to the higher court, the grounds
for his disbelief were firstly, the fact that Shama and Puddo were ‘prostitutes’ and the ‘abduction
of children by such people is by no means uncommon’. Thus he had sentenced each to three
years’ imprisonment without irons and a range of fines. The higher court upheld the decision. No-
one commented on how Bindoo Bystumee had come by this chokri.
Though such decisions were superficially about ‘daughters’ being recovered by ‘mothers’,
it becomes apparent that the issue at the core of these cases was not just a conflict about the re
possession of the slaves, but the ‘lawful authority’ to transfer the slave-girl. As Mytton had
indicated, most judges held that only the owner had ‘lawful authority’, and not third parties. In
Sonamonee Bewah vs. Purbee Aorut, when a woman was tried for ‘stealing’ the chokri of her
sister, Sonamunee Bewah, and th&futwa of the Rajshahi sessions court had acquitted her, a second
case was made out against her for the charge of ‘kidnapping and concealing’ and for ‘selling’ her
to Dhunmunee Peshagur, of the Myla bazar in the Kheytapoorah thana. On this charge, the futwa
declared her liable to tazeer, and the sessions judge accordingly sentenced her to five years’
imprisonment with labour, with the note ‘Taking away her own sister’s child, and selling it to a
prostitute for the object of prostitution made her offence in my opinion the more heinous’.150
The issue of ‘lawful authority’ to initiate a transfer of a slave either by purchase, or other
conveyancing, and the infringement of such by apparent kin, quite suppressed the question of
freedom for such slaves. Thus in 1855, a battle for such authority broke out between two men in
Government and Bhoobun vs. Chundoo, in which Bhoobun charged the other with having stolen
a girl called Misrun, his ‘daughter’, and of selling her to Mussamut Bunee Begum. The remarks
of the officiating sessions judge of Patna, F.Lowth, revealed that seven years before the case
began, Bhoobun lost his 4-year old ‘child’. Shortly after that, in August 1848, a man was
apprehended and sentenced for this, though the child had never been recovered. In 1854 informed
by Umeerun, one of the servants of the Begum, that the girl was in the Begum’s house at Hajipore
in zillah Tirhoot, he went to recover her. The Begum however claimed that the ‘girl had been
given to her’ by Chundoo, the accused: she had been only six months old and her name was
Imamun.
By 1855, when she was apparently eleven years old, she had lived in the Begum’s house
for approximately six years that she recollected. She even told the sessions court that she had
never been ‘allowed to quit the house’. In the Nizamut Adalut, judges R. Barlow and H.T.Raikes
found that this child had been identified by Bhoobun because of a ‘burn on the posterior’. Yet,
so intent were both courts on establishing the guilt of the men, that neither doubted the validity
of returning the girl to the Begum, which is what the higher court ordered.151
The same divergence of opinion that had been articulated in administrative discussions
resonated in judicial decisions regarding the ‘purpose’ for which a girl was sold. Thus if a slave
was bought for ‘marriage’ or domestic use, it was not culpable, but if the same slave was bought
by a professional (peshagur), the latter could be convicted. In Government and Musst. Kooroani
vs, Adoo, Aradhun, Musst. Gourmonee Peshagur152 the sessions judge of Backergunge, C. Steer,
found that Suffer Jan, a ‘delicate looking thing of 9 years of age’ was married to Aradhun, but
directly after the ceremony, she was taken to Adoo’s house. Adoo then took her to the house of
the nazir of the Sadr Amin of Dacca, Rujub Ally. She fell ill there after four days, and was
removed back to Adoo’s house where she stayed nearly two months. At the end of this time, Adoo
and Aradhun sold her ‘under the name of Mina’ to Gourmonee for 18 rupees. At both the thanah
and the sessions court they admitted the last transaction, but offered what seemed to be important
insights into just how this system worked. Aradhun claimed that Rujub Ally had given him Rs.
15 to get a ‘wife’, on Adoo’s security. Adoo also stated that he had stood security for the Rs. 15
given by the nazir to Aradhun ‘to procure a female slave’, whose sickness caused Rujub Ally to
threaten that ‘if some better person than Suffer Jan was not soon procured, he would disgrace
Adoo’s female relatives’. Thus in consultation with Ram Nidhee Sarkar, a witness for the
prosecution, Adoo sold her to Gourmonee for the stipulated sum, and returned Rs. 15 to the
mother of Rujub Ally, and paid a commission of Rs. 3 to the Sarkar.
Critical to the decision in this case was the silence of the documents on the relationship
between Aradhun and Rujub Ally, the role of securities in what was otherwise a ‘benign’ deed
(getting married), the form of the ‘marriage’, and, most important of all, the complete absolution
of Rujub Ally from the procedure of court. Thus even though the sessions judge admitted that ‘the
marriage of Aradhun was a mere device to obtain a decent girl for Rujub Ally’, punishment stayed
focussed on those who had already been vulnerable to this man.
Despite evidence of this kind, where becoming one man’s ‘wife’ also meant being the
slave of the servant-husband’s patron-master, the courts erected a false dichotomy between
immoral transfer (prostitution) and moral use (marriage). This lent a peculiar twist to the claims
judicially made on behalf of such husbands when various slave-women and girls absconded.
However, such distinctions between moral and immoral transfers were further qualified by resort
to the ideal of lawful authority for such use or transfer. In sum, the ‘lawful authority’ of each
individual master or mistress, or a surrogate, had to be preserved against all infringement from
third or fourth parties. Yet again, from Sarun, the Sessions Judge referred a case in which a seven-
year-old Huneefa Chookree had apparently been stolen from her ‘grandfather’s house’ by
Mudaren, who took her away and kept her for 10-11 days after which she was recovered.153 Yet
Mudaren, who had himself been the servant of the prosecutor, Sheikh Nuzur, pleaded that the
sister of his master had taken Rs. 5 from him for allowing him to marry the Chookree. When he
reached the house of Immam Buksh at Goruckpore for this purpose, the latter refused to perform
the ceremony without Sheikh Nuzur’s orders and took the Chookree away. The Sessions Judge
could not find that Mudarun ‘ever tried to sell her’ but he convicted Mudarun on the grounds that
‘he carried her off from her friends and that he only could have done so from improper and illegal
motives’. The Nizamut Adalut agreed, adding that the ‘sister had no power to give the child to
him... the child was taken without the consent or knowledge of the guardian’.
The implication that professional (peshagur) ex-slaves and concubines appeared to have
been the final recipients in the long chain of slave-transfers had evidently aided many sessions
judges, and the higher court, in determining the guilt of those who were accused of having ‘stolen’
and sold the slave-girls. However, such indictments of peshagur women were not indictments of
prostitution per se, not at least, where the Nizamut Adalut was concerned. Thus in Government
and Musst. Pakeeya alias Solabebee vs. Sheikh Shetabdee, Kurkomaree Peshagur, Assanoolla
Chowkeedar and Sheikh Allum,154 the Sessions Judge of Dacca had reported that Pakeeya, a ten-
year-old girl had been brought from the Rustumpore indigo factory in Faridpur ‘by the direction
of a person in charge of it (whose name is very indistinctly given)’ to the village of Kurrea, where
she had been sold to Kurkomaree. The chowkidar and Sheikh Alum had acquired the stamp paper
on which the endorsement of a bond for Rs. 21 was signed ‘written out as if from the child’ (as
if they were ‘voluntary’ bonds against loans of money). The Sessions Judge had convicted them
all, but had pointed out that Kurkomaree ‘had at one time been evidently the victim of similar
villainy’.
Upon this the Judge presiding over the Nizamut Adalut, A. J. M. Mills, noted that the
‘child’ had not been taken by force or fraud ‘out of the legal custody of its parent or guardian’.
Indeed, the ‘child’ had been ‘made over to him [Shetabdee] by another to sell for that person’s
benefit’. The Regulations, both the accused and the judge pointed out, did not specifically provide
against prostitution. This kind of perspective was one that was shared by administrators like
Prinsep who in 1842 had announced that procuring of girls for prostitution was not a capital
offence. ‘We are not,’ he wrote,‘ dealing now with general criminality and offences against
morality. We are not legislating to prevent prostitution but to prevent the unfortunate victims being
considered and treated as slaves’.155
For these reasons, it appears that the authorities in England were mis-informed about the
import of the decisions in the Nizamut Adalut. In 1859, Stanley, Secretary of State for India,
referred to these decisions above (specially the Gourmonee Peshagur decision of 1853) in
reprimanding the acquittal of a woman in Monghyr, who had taken on a ‘lease of ninety years’
some slave girls referred to as ‘infants’.156 Stanley pointed out that B. J. Colvin and A. Sconce,
two judges of the appellate court, had ignored ‘all the previous decisions of the Sudder Court in
cases of a similar kind’ in giving ‘legal sanction to a slavery of the most revolting and degrading
kind’. The Government of India was unbowed. It referred the matter to the Legislative Council
for consideration with the imminent Penal Code.
The clauses of the Penal Code of 1861 formally declared the holding and trading in slaves
criminal, but continued to punish, under section 361, the taking away of such girls [henceforth
called minors] from ‘lawful guardianship’: the latter, of course, included, the ‘master or mistress
in whose service the child had been placed’.157 In this, the Code did not substantially improve
upon the model prepared by 1838. Under the offence of kidnapping, for instance, there had been
only two sections: the first was kidnapping from the territories of the East India Company, and
the second kidnapping from lawful guardianship.158 Lawful authority, enshrined both in
15f,Judcl. Despatch to India, no. 23, 14 June 1859, in British Library, House of Lords Sessional Papers,
I860, Second Session, VII.
158See The Indian Penal Code as Originally framed in 1837 (Reprint, Madras, 1888), p. 63, sections
353-357.
193
metaphors of kinship, and in the Penal Code, was invoked again and again: the charge of having
taken away female slaves continued to be made by masters in the 1880s and the late nineteenth
century. For instance, Ramjiban Bagdi complained that his ‘daughter’ Prasanna had been abducted
by a sardar from the indigo factory to the Magistrate of Murshidabad in 1885. It transpired in the
course of the investigation that Prasanna was an ‘orphan’, taken to live with the sister of the
complainant, and had been married to a man who sent her away because ‘she fell ill’. Prasanna
herself denied that Ramjiban was her ‘lawful guardian’.159
However, instead of being claimed under Section 361 of the Penal Code, in the eastern
districts of Dacca, Mymensingh, Bakergunj, a large number of women were claimed under
Sections 497-98, clubbed together as ‘offences against marriage’. The continued language of
familialism upon which the courts proceeded reinforced both the languages of the indigenous
holder and the predilections of a plantocratic officialdom. For example, C. Tucker, magistrate in
Sylhet in the 1830s had tried a case in which Mahomed Zama complained against a burkundass,
Gholam Naya, for having taken away his ‘daughter’. Gholam Naya stated that the child was a
daughter of Ghoree, a slave of his, and that Mahomed Zama had taken her away two years ago.
The case was dismissed, but the girl was made over to ‘her father, the complainant’.160 Though
individual local officials both in 1830s and in the 1870s were acute enough to realise that terms
denoting marriage overlapped where female slaves were concerned, most complaints from such
‘husbands’ were treated in the same manner as complaints by ‘parents’. Thus from Faridpur, two
different officers at different times had remarked on the same phenomena. The joint magistrate of
Faridpore in 1836 had noted that
Mussulmans provide against the escape of their slaves by marrying them, under
the form of nekah, and thus, in the event of their running away, they can claim
as wives those whom they could not...legally claim as slaves.161
Another official almost forty years later reported that ‘in lieu of openly keeping her as a slave’,
a poor male householder married the purchased female ‘through the form of the nika marriage
with her himself, or if he is comparatively well-off and possesses golams marries the poor girl
nika to one of them.162 This particular official hinted at the secondary wifehood of such nikahi
women within a polygynous household by insisting that these women were not married for their
‘personal attractions’ but for
161Ibid., p. 293.
162D. O. from W. S. Wells to Offg. Inspector-General of Registration, 22 Aug. 1873, BJC, P/254, Nov.
1873, no. 15.
194
performing duties and labor which would devolve on the favorite wife ... They are
required to fetch all the water for the women to bathe with and for cooking and
cleaning. They have to sweep up, to wash the clothes, watch the children.163
Magistrates were thus aware that at the heart of cases under these sections of the Penal Code, was
‘some "nika" druge [sic] tired of her hard work, or possibly hired by better prospects elsewhere,
deserts her husband’s home’.164 Despite this individual awareness, institutionally little changed.
To cite a laudatory government resolution, ‘substantial justice is in many cases done by
absconding wives being made over to their husbands even when no case lies against any
abductor’.165
Where had these wives been brought from? The patterns of circulation between each
zenana and local kusbi mahals, visible in households like that of the Nawabs, and the households
of European colonial officials, were touched upon repeatedly by administrative officials. According
to Abercrombie, these were ‘women whose husbands have taken as nika wives out of a state of
simple prostitution’.166 He suggested, for the first time in this period, that a system of marriage
registration by qazis be established - it would cost the state nothing, the woman’s consent would
be proven before a sub-registrar, and the husband’s right to prosecute for the return of his
absconding ‘nika’ drudge would follow upon her consent.
The panacea of registration, we have seen, was an old one. In the period after 1860s the
force of this particular remedy was to become evident in the manner with which registration of
such wives, female children and prostitutes was to be conducted by Act XXII and Act XIV. As
a mode of immobilising female slaves and slave-concubines, it surpassed anything that older
precolonial regimes might have systemised. In addition, prompted partly by the decision of the
High Court acquitting three elderly women of the charge of buying slave-girls during the famine
of 1866-67,167 but labouring under the delusion that most children found in the possession of
the dancing-women were ‘kidnapped’, the Government of India instituted an enquiry into the
numbers of girls under 10 years of age who were thus circumstanced.168 The government
clarified that it ‘would at most merely provide that such girls already so circumstanced and below
163Ibid.
164Abercrombie to Offg. Sec. to GOB, Judcl., 29 May 1872, BJC, P/249, June 1872, no. 64.
lfi5Magt. Bakarganj, cited in Annual Crime Report of Dacca Division for 1871, BJC, P/250, Oct. 1872,
no. 104.
167In re. Tofa Bai, Gunga Bai, Poonee Bai, L.R.Tottenham, Registrar of High Court of Judicature Fort
William to Sec. of GOB, 15 June 1867, BJC, P/433/17, June 1867, nos. 208 - 210.
168Sec. to GOI, Home, to Offg. Sec. to GOB, Judcl., 9 April 1872, BJC, P/249, April 1872, nos. 68-9.
195
the age of ten years, should be registered, without interfering in any way with their custody’. Even
with the delimitation of ten years of age imposed by the Government of India as the age above
which such ‘minors’ would not be protected, the Government did not think that the ‘possession’
of such girls could be prohibited. Arguing that under Sec. 373, ‘mere possession with criminal
intent’ was differentiated from ‘obtaining possession with criminal intent’, (a rephrasing of the
domestic use versus resale argument), one official of the Government of India advised the
Government of Bengal against making the former culpable since ‘we become involved in many
very delicate and complicated questions and contingencies’.169 By 1875, having considered the
matter, the GOI wrote that the necessity of legislating against such possession did not exist.
To urge then that the possession, transfers, and the use, of female slaves between different
domestic sites was delegalised by mid-nineteenth century is indicative of historiographical
complacency in the face of a complex and refined mastery. While earlier adjudicatory regimes had
tried to settle matters regarding slaves through a finely calibrated set of distinctions, like that of
one’s own slave/ contracted slave, minor and adult slave and so on, the Company’s Regulations
obliterated various gradations within slaves. Furthermore, these actually led to the full legalisation
of slave-transfers in the name of a lex loci that was neither Sharia-derived Law, nor pro-slave. The
most conclusive evidence of this is legislation like the Cantonment and Contagious Diseases Acts
of the 1860s, which in contravention of the Quranic injunction to holders not to prostitute their
slaves for their own benefit, did precisely that. For a colonial government that had vowed to
uphold the sharia, this legislation offered a glimpse of the contrary process. Furthermore, such
registration comprehensively infringed the provisions of the Penal Code the Government itself had
contrived, especially those penalising the buying and selling of ‘minors’. It is to the reasons why
neither the injunctions of a moral order nor the laws of men could be compatible with colonialism
in India that we will turn our attention next.
169Sec. to GOI, Home, to Sec. to GOB, Judcl., 4 July, 1873, BJC, P/254, July 1873, file 67, no. 97.
Chapter IV
The non-transparency and incoherence of the language of colonial law with regard to
slave-holding and transfers, as the previous chapters have argued, can be understood only in the
light of historical conditions. This chapter argues that in Bengal, both civil law and criminal law
were conditioned by the Company’s own investment in the natalist reproductive aspects of slavery
in India. For this reason, its sensitivity to issues of abortion, fertility of women, and disease were
also rooted in concerns of a political economy where transfers and conveyances of slave-women
and girls had been systemised over a long period. Against this backdrop alone can we attempt to
understand the gamut of legislative measures ostensibly geared to battle the spread of syphilis, the
Cantonments Act (Act XXII of 1864) and Contagious Diseases Act (Act XIV of 1868). Most
historical discussions around these acts place them squarely in the context of a public health
policy.1 Others inscribe these measures within a system of control intimately related to the
consolidation of imperialism, and the demarkation of race, class and gender.2 In attempting a
synthesis of these arguments, I hope to offer a partial corrective, both about the issues of health
and about the nature of colonial intervention. I argue (a) that management of disease,3 and
fecundity of females generally, was critical to Indian regimes as much as to the East India
Company, (b) that the concern of either regime was not with public health but with concerns
which (c) brought them into a sordid contest over the revenues and logistics of one section of the
market in female slaves within Bengal by the end of the nineteenth century.
'See David Arnold, ‘Sexually Transmitted Diseases in Nineteenth and Twentieth Century India’,
Genitourin Medicine, 69, 1993, pp. 3-8; Radhika Ramasubban, ‘Imperial Health in British India, 1857-1900’
in Roy Macleod and Milton Lewis (eds), Disease, Medicine, and Empire: Perspectives on Western Medicine
and the Experience o f European Expansion (London, 1988), pp. 38-60; Mark Harrison, Public Health in
British India: Anglo-Indian Preventive Medicine 1859-1914 (Cambridge, 1994), pp. 72-76.
2Kenneth Ballhatchet, Race, Sex and Class under the Raj: Imperial Attitudes and Policies and their
Critics, 1793-1905 (New Delhi, 1979); Ronald Hyam, Empire and Sexuality (Manchester, 1990); Phillippa
Levine, ‘Prostitution, Contagious Diseases Act and Empire; The Case of British India’, Journal of the
History o f Sexuality, 2, 1995, pp. 579-602., Ratnabali Chatterjee, The Queen’s Daughters: Prostitutes as an
Outcast Group in Colonial India (Bergen, 1992), and contributions by Karen Jochelson, Priscilla Pyet, Kerrie
Macpherson, Bryan Callahan at Conference on ‘Comparative Perspectives on the History of Sexually
Transmitted Diseases’, Institute of Commonwealth Studies, London, 26-28 April 1996.
3For seventeenth century, see John Marshall’s references to three herb-based recipes for treatment of
the ‘French Pox’ in John Marshall in India: Notes and Observations in Bengal 1668-1672 (London, 1927),
pp. 333-35. For the eighteenth century, see Syed Ghulam Hussain Khan, Seir Mutaqherin (reprint Lahore,
1930), IV, p.60 and note 4, and William Jones’s recounting of a treatment suggested by Maulvi Mir
Muhammad Husain, in Lord Teignmouth (ed.), Collected Works o f Sir William Jones (London, 1807), IV,
pp. 367-79.
197
4Capt. Philip D. Stanhope, Genuine Memoirs o f Asiaticus, (London, 1784; reprinted and edited by W.
K. Firminger, Calcutta, 1909), p. 34; Anon., Fifteen Years in India; Sketches o f a Soldier’s life (London,
1822), p. 34.
5Capt. Thomas Williamson, The East India Vade Macum or Complete Guide to the Gentlemen Intended
fo r the Civil, Military or Naval Service o f the Hon. East India Company (London, 1810), I, pp. 451-52.
Emphasis in original.
was renamed James Martin and appears as his heir in subsequent records, and to the eunuchs of
the household. The fact that one of these girls, Boulone (subsequently appearing in the English
records as Buie Begum), was also described ‘as the most chaste virtuous wife’ in the same
document highlights the metaphors of domesticity employed by many such holders of the time.
Such metaphors however did not obscure the mode of her entry into his household. Martin clearly
outlined that he
acquired her for the consideration of a sum I paid to one Carriere, a Frenchman,
who had acquired her by purchase from a cruel and inhuman father and mother
of her; she was at that time an infant of about 9 years of age, in the year 1775....
Among the memoirs of Hickey are found distinct references to two women acquired through
similar transfers between Englishmen in India: one called Jamdani had come from the household
of Mr. Cherry to Hickey, and another from the Paymaster of the Nizamut
My friend, Bob Pott, now consigned to me from Moorshedabad a very pretty little
native girl, whom he recommended for my own private use. Her name was
Kiraun. After cohabiting with her a twelvemonth she produced me a young
gentleman whom I certainly imagined to be of my own begetting,...Young
Mahogany was therefore received and ackowledged as my offspring....9
Did these modes of acquisition make the women and ‘girls’ slaves or were they to be counted as
wives? Those officers afflicted by conscience, and issues of English law, did sometimes stipulate
that a ritual marriage had taken place, albeit of a private and secret nature.10 However, this was
more often the exception than the norm. Pearse did not make such a claim for the ‘female friend
Moortee also a native of Hindostan who has lived with me many years in my zenana and bore me
two female children.’ Others were content to use terms like ‘my Housekeeper’11 for the female
concubine.
Part of the problem was discursive, and like other discourses fashioned in the Atlantic
colonies where slaves were specifically denied canonical ritual in the Church, carried enormous
moral loads. An officer of the Madras native Infantry referred to these as ‘unmatrimonial
connexions between European officers and native women ... The mistresses are obtained from the
Hindu and Mussulmen races, and they are often sold to their masters by their needy relatives’.12
Yet others, mindful of a theoretical distinction between ‘married wife’ and ‘female slave’, referred
to these young adults as ‘prostitute’ when they meant the female slave taken on long or short-term
9Alfred Spencer (ed.), Memoirs o f William Hickey (London, 1925), III, p. 276.
"’Will of Thomas Deane Pearse, L/AG/34/29/6, pt. Ill, p. 26, 13 July 1781.
"Will of Lt. George Hyde, L/AG/34/29/41, (1827), pt. Ill, pp. 273-77.
l2Major H. Bevan, Thirty Years in India, Or A Soldier’s Reminiscences o f Native & European Life in
the Presidencies from 1808 to 1838 (London, 1839), pp. 18-19.
199
leases. Thus Edmund Burke, in opening the sixth article of charges against Warren Hastings in
1789 described Munni Begum as a woman ‘sold as a slave; her profession a dancer; her
occupation a prostitute’.13 It is particularly significant that many English speakers of the early
modern period and later used terms like slave-wives and prostitutes interchangeably.14
Representative of this was F. J. Shore’s comment that ‘the women who live with Englishmen are,
with few exceptions, common prostitutes by profession, bred to the trade’.15 Alternately, females
bought by, and transferred between individual soldiers and officers, were referred to as ‘nikka’
wives, especially in cantonments like Dinapore described by one official as ‘a favourite haunt for
European and half-caste pensioners ... with large families, in straitened circumstances, and
possessing... almost Mahomedan ideas of matrimony’.16 Referring to one such group as ‘women
of the 109th’ at this station, other officials realised that regardless of residential location, this
group of women were ‘common property’.17 This interchangeability of nomenclature was itself
a significant indicator of the ways in which females bought, transferred on long leases and reared
for reproductive purposes were intimately tied up to the making of colonialism.
l3Cited in E. A. Bond (ed.), Speeches o f the Managers and Counsel in the Trial o f Warren Hastings
(London, 1860), II, p. 31.
l4For an earlier instance of this ellision see Thomas Roe’s use of the term ‘whore’ for the female slave
given to him by the Mughal Emperor in W. Foster (ed.), The Journal o f Sir Thomas Roe, 1615-1619
(Oxford, 1926), p. 154 and fn 1, p. 155.
l5Cited in P. Penner and R. Dale (eds), The Rebel Bureaucrat - Frederick John Shore (Delhi, 1983), p.
206. Shore was one of the officials whose anti-slave decrees and pronouncements, as magistrate in
Furrukabad and Narbada-Saugor territories, are spelt out in Home Misc. 790, pp. 137-41.
‘^’Station Staff Surgeon, Dinapore to Magt. of Patna, 19 Aug. 1876, BMC, P/873, Dec. 1876, file no.
34B (1).
17Col. J. Emerson, Cantt. Magt., Dinapore, to Magt. of Patna, 26 Aug. 1876, Enclosure, BMP, P/873,
Dec. 1876, nos. 10-11.
200
soldiers be sent from West Indies to India.18 In the aftermath of 1857 and the reorganisation of
the army in India, identical propositions were floated by important officials and representatives
of the Crown.19 The implication for any studies of ‘European’ soldiers is that there may not have
been a correspondence of colour, ethnicity and geographical area of origin: in other words, the
term European may not in all instances be equivalent to free white. Apart from general references
to the Irish and Scot preponderance among the soldiery, few military historians of the European
forces in India have scrutinised the jural statuses of soldiers. This is important since the earliest
official references to the ‘European women confined’ in the lock hospitals of the Madras
presidency20 refer to the women belonging to the particular regiments, rather than to the ethnicity
of the women. A similar point can also be made regarding ‘native’ women. A Captain of Infantry
instructed his executors to bring the ‘native Girl now in my keeping’ from the Camp at Jaunpore
to Calcutta in order to dissuade her ‘from continuing in the line of life she is at present in’; the
name of the woman was Nancy.21 That specific women belonged to, and moved with, the
regiments is again inferred from the description of a member of the Medical Board of the ‘native
women with the several divisions of the Army’.22 The total number of such women at some of
the principal military stations in 1822 were as follows23
Presidency-114
Berhampore-364
Dinapore-236
Ghazipore-447
Kanpur-110
It is almost impossible to pinpoint the origins and identities of the women and young girls
for various reasons. The nebulous distinction between metaphors of domesticity (wife/concubine/
girl) and the realities of jural status (slave, freedwoman), as well as of issues of ethnicity were
18Lord Castlereagh to Marquess Wellesley, 21 Aug. 1804, in S. J. Owen, A Selection from the Indian
Despatches, Memoranda &ca. o f the Duke o f Wellington (Oxford, 1880), pp. 449-51, fn. 1.
19Questions put by the Duke of Cambridge to Lieutenant-General G.Pollock, Lt. Col. Wyllie, Col. Becher
and Sir G.Clerk, Report of Commissioners Appointed to Inquire into the Organisation of the Indian Army
(Peel Commission), PP, 1859, C. 2515, (London), nos. 150-58, 564 and 838-45.
2l)Extract Mil. Letter from Fort St. George, 12 Feb. 1806, BC F/4/200/4502.
22Doctor W.Ogilvy to Lt.Col. Casement, Sec. to Govt., Mil. Dept., 23 Apr, 1823, BC F/4/835/22253.
symptomatic of the problem of identity experienced by various women and children. Part of the
problem resulted from the patterns of circulation, and constant transfers, within which such women
and children were enmeshed. For instance, when soldiers of the Crown’s regiments returned to
England, as the 66th and 78th did in 1817, ‘their’ women, brought over from Ceylon (Sri Lanka)
to Bengal, were inherited by the soldiers of the 59th stationed at Fort William.24 On the other
hand, some officers also bequeathed very young female slaves and concubines to their friends and
executors upon their death by testamentary writing.25
As some officers’ and officials’ wills lead us to infer, most of the women were acquired
singly through face-to-face transactions. Like Martin and Hickey, who knew the names of the men
from whom they had acquired the young females, Robert Grant also recorded the way in which
he had acquired one of his ‘girls’ from the latter’s uncle at Fyzabad, in exchange for a sum of
money.26 However, these encounters were not as accidental or inorganic as individual wills
suggest. There were other institutional reasons for the availability of such purchases, and
acquisitions, in and around encampments.
Since the late 18th century, the control that was established by the colonels commanding
each regiment over the bazaars provisioning the troops had been part of the source both of their
power and their ‘princely incomes’. The Dragoon Guardsman, Stanhope, had noticed how ‘each
regiment is attended by its own Bezaar ... that pay a small tax to the commanding officer’.27 The
fact that these bazaar emoluments were the perquisites of promotion was evidenced by the ‘white
mutiny’ of 1805-6, ostensibly against slow promotions, but essentially for a share of the increased
incomes that were monopolised by the colonels commanding regiments. Of these, the bazaar
allowance, a duty levied on sales within the cantonment of spirituous liquors, tobacco and
intoxicating drugs, normally yielded to the officer commanding the station an additional income
24Roll of Children of the 66th and 78th Regiment now with the 59th Regiment, in Lt. Col. Mcleod to
Mil.Sec. to Govt., 24 Nov. 1817, L/MIL/5/376. Of the twenty children between the ages of 1 and 9, the
majority, with their mothers, described variously as ‘native of Balle’, ‘native of Bengal’, were inherited by
soldiers of the Crown Regiment of 59th Foot.
“ Robert Grant passed on ‘two young girls’ to his ‘Girl Zeenut’, with an additional clause that if either
party refused this arrangement, then the ‘two girls... to be disposed of at the discretion of my executors’,
in L/AG/34/29/4, codicil of 15 June 1778. Others hinted at these transfers like that of Major Cornelius
Davis, who stipulated that a house be rented for his girl ‘and the children who may remain with her on a
joint allowance until they are 4 years old as per will of George Elliott’, in L/AG/34/29/6, pt. II, p. 40.
of £5000 per year from the sudder bazaar, and of about £1000 a year from the regimental
bazaar.28 The control over the revenues of established markets was however modelled closely on
the local models of establishing bazaars, hats, and ganjes which every big and small hegemon
successfully adopted as part of the revenue-generation of the zamindari, taluqdari, subahdari.
Just as every such bazaar contained at least one establishment listed under the revenue
head of the kusbi mahal (lit. kasb or labour that earns a livelihood), each regimental and sudder
bazaar contained a similar establishment. The bazaars were important because they contained most
of the ‘camp followers’ of each regiment. The system of regimental bazaars, established by
authority of the officer commanding a regiment, but supervised by chaudhuris and kotwals, was
fundamental to the provisioning of troops, the transport and labour needs of the regiment as a
whole. The regimental bazaar (each units’s local pool of labour and materials), far more than the
sudder bazar (the main mart in a particular township or cantonment), was an itinerant one,
accompanying the particular regiment on its marches. The management of bazaars formed a very
significant aspect of the duties of military commandants throughout the early and middle
nineteenth century. Regulations III of 1809 and XX of 1810 vested all police powers and authority
over different regimental military bazars in the Commanding Officer. All persons gaining a
livelihood by supplying troops in cantonments or station military bazaars and all domestic or
menial servants were answerable to martial law. However, not all the traders and servants were
there of their own volition. Certain labouring groups, including artisans and tradespeople, were
often impressed into becoming camp-followers.29 In the 1840s, when this mode of ensuring a
bazaar following came to the notice of the judiciary, and was interdicted by the Medical Board,
one Lieutenant-Governor himself reassured certain army officers that the prohibition on coerced
labour did not apply to ‘the collection of coolies and work people as day labourers’.30 When the
supply of coerced labour in the bazar fell short of the needs of the military officers, civil
authorities were instructed to provide convict labour from the prisons for purposes of road-building
and conservancy in the cantonments.31
Within the broader context of this kind of appropriation of ‘domestic’ labour by the
military authorities was that specific group of women and young girls whose purchase and farming
2KAmiya Barat, The Bengal Native Infantry: Its Organisation and Discipline (Calcutta, 1962), p. 65, fn.
35 a.
31Maj. R.Wyllie, Sec. to GOI, Mil., to J.P.Grant, Sec. to GOB, 25 Oct. 1850, Bengal Mil. Cons., 25 Oct.
1850, nos. 141-143, BC F/4/2400/129521. This happened in the case of one of the cantonments in my study,
Berhampore, the military station nearest to Murshidabad.
203
out was organised by indigenous middlemen and women. The semi-fictional account of Sitaram
suggested that some female camp followers included young slaves, as in the figure of the Thakurni
‘saved from death’ in a campaign, and lodged in the regimental bazaar under the supervision of
the chaudhuri?2 By 1871, the Royal Commission, which asked Dr. Ross, erstwhile surgeon with
the 92nd Highlanders in India, to explain the exact mechanism by which a regiment acquired the
women resident in its bazaars, was told
there is a bazaar attached to each regiment, that is a small settlement, comprising
so many streets of little mud huts, ... and tradespeople and hawkers of every
description are permitted to live in this place, and the kotwal, ... superintends the
system, and there is a head woman, under the name of the matranee, who is at the
head of the kusbees, or prostitutes, she selects the women; she is told that such
and such a regiment is coming into the station, and according to whether the
regiment has had a name sent before it or otherwise, she gets a small or a large
number of women to come to her.33
The short and long term conveyancing of purchased young women had become the backbone of
the chakla system. At core, it was a system premised upon the procuring of females by
commissioning certain indigenous agents with funds provided by the local commander, examining
them for ‘fitness’ in some kind of medical establishment, registering them according to the owners
(and users) regiments, and then storing them in specific houses (on one street or square called a
chakla) or tents, on sites staked out as regimental bazaars, and further away, the sudder bazaar.
The management of sudder and regimental bazaar chaklas appears to have continued under the
aegis of the military authorities during the 1840s and 1850s.34 By 1892-3, there were three
different kinds of chaklas - one, that of tents at the rear of an encampment, belonging to a
regiment on the march; two, the rows of single storey barracks along the lanes of a bazaar taken
over by a regiment; and three, the large single building made up of many small rooms on a piece
of land owned by the Government but leased out to a revenue-paying (and rent-collecting)
individual.
Rarely admitted in the official evidence was the jural status of the woman brought into
the chakla. Army officials forbore from referring to the servitude of the younger women, and the
32Lt. Col. Norgate (trans,), Sitaram: From Sepoy to Subedar, Being the Life and Adventures o f a Native
Officer o f the Bengal Army, Written and Related by Himself (Lahore, 1873), pp. 47-48. It is suggested that
such females might have been transferred further in certain circumstances, for instance, if the Adjutant of
the regiment pressed his offer of four hundred rupees for this woman to the sepoy.
“ Evidence of Dr. Ross, Report of the Royal Commission upon the Administration and Operation of the
Contagious Diseases Act, 1871, nos. 15179-15180, in Baptist Missionary Society to Sec. of State for India,
May 1873, L/MIL/7/13809; also cited in The Shield, 2 Dec., 1871.
34See ‘Memorandum for the Management of Prostitutes in the Sudder and Regimental Bazars’ issued
by the Adjutant-General of Her Majesty’s Forces in India, Colonel A.S.H. Mountain, n.d., in Bengal Mil.
Cons., 8 Feb. 1850, no.10, BC F/4/2241/112578.
204
involvement of many soldiers and officers as patrons of the elder women who bought and leased
the younger ones. Yet, it can hardly be urged that colonial administrators were unaware of the
patterns of holding and circulation of slaves. In discussing the misguided nature of the abolition
of hospitals during the 1830s, the Deputy Inspector General of Hospitals explained, ‘these females
[...] are not free agents being generally kept by or considered the property of interested individuals
who gain a livelihood by the sale of their meretricious favors [sic]’.35
In the aftermath of Act V of 1843, when government asked local officials for reports on
the working of the act, the Commissioner of Tenasserim Provinces had pointed to the rules
promulgated by an earlier commissioner in 1836 for the management of slave-based brothels and
slave-prostitutes. Urging that all these institutions were fed by the purchase of girls and young
women, the Commissioner in 1844 had lamented that a ‘profit was derived to Government in
direct proportion to the number and extent of the brothels’.36 In the 1870s, another official tried
to explain the failure of the dhais (lit. midwives, but used by officials to denote female
supervisors) of the chaklas of Dinapore cantonment (see Map) to conduct the weekly inspection,
in terms of the fact that all three of the dhais were themselves ‘naickas, or owners of women. It
is not very surprising that they should overlook disease in their own women, or accept bribes from
the owners of other women’.37 Though individual officers were aware of the prior jural status of
these ‘girls’ (made over very young ‘to some one willing to feed the little girl... kept in the house
as a slave girl, who performs certain menial duties, and eventually leads an immoral life’38), the
hiring of such girls for ‘single acts of intercourse’ was clearly condoned by the Government of
India in the period between 1872 and 1875.39 By 1890, another superintendent of a chakla, the
dhai (alternately called the mahaldarni in some reports), told the two missionaries, Mrs. Andrew
and Bushnell, that she received funds from the Cantonment magistrate according to the type of
girl required: ‘To buy a very young attractive girl I will be furnished with fifty rupees. There is
always plenty of money to get them with’.40 The transfers of such earning assets between chaklas
“ Official Memorandum of 10 Dec. 1845, Enclosure in Bengal Mil. Cons., 30 Nov. 1849, no. 94, BC
F/4/2379/126518.
“ Annual Report of the Working of the Lock-Hospital, Dinapore for 1877 submitted by M. D. Moriarty,
in Report on the Working of Cantonment Lock-Hospitals for 1877 (London, 1878), British Library, Official
Publications, I.S.be. 41/7.
“ Judcl. Commr. of Awadh to Sec. to Chief Commr., 2 June, 1873, IJP, P/708, Jan. 1875, no. 61.
“ Under Sec. to GOI to Sec. GOB, and other provinces, 17 Jan. 1873, ibid., nos. 58-65.
“ Elizabeth W. Andrew and Katharine C. Bushnell, The Queen’s Daughter in India (London, 1899,
second edition), p. 35.
205
in a cantonment also occurred. A transaction by which one dhai at the Lancers’ chakla in
Lucknow acquired proprietorship of one such woman was described to the Departmental
Committee in 1893.41 The commission appointed by the Government of India to enquire into (and
deny) the veracity of the missionaries’ report, made up of Denzil Ibbetson, Surgeon Cleghorn and
Maulvi Salimullah, in 1893, reported two depots of women in Punjab who were ‘bought up all
over the country; ... sent off by train chiefly to Sindh, there to be placed out as wives, concubines,
or prostitutes’.42
41Minutes of Evidence, Mrs. Elizabeth Andrew, in Report of the Departmental Committee on Indian
Cantonments, PP, 1893, C.7148, p. 18, nos. 552-558.
“ Report of the Special Commission appointed to Inquire into the Working of the Cantonment
Regulations, PP, 1893, C.7217, p.6.
43S. C. Hill, The Life o f Claud Martin, Major-General in the Army o f the Hon. East India Company
(Calcutta, 1901), p. 131. Similar attitudes characterise Ronald Hyam, Empire and Sexuality and P. Levine,
‘Prostitution, Contagious Diseases and Empire’. The notion of consensus and ‘free will’ also underlines the
work of Veena Talwar Oldenburg, ‘Lifestyle as Resistance: The Courtesans of Lucknow’ in D.Haynes and
G. Prakash (eds), Contesting Power: Resistance and Everyday Social Relations in South Asia (Delhi, 1991),
pp. 23-61.
“ Christopher J. Hawes, ‘Eurasians in British India, 1773-1833: The Making of a Reluctant Community’,
Ph.D. Dissertation, London University, 1993.
206
the orphanages were more the institutional expressions of individual officers’ attempts at wiping
out claims of alternate genealogical kin, and less the institutions of charity that they were
proclaimed to be.
As in the indigenous households, what mattered most in the case of the British households
was the consequence of cohabitation with female slaves and concubines, and not always the forms,
ritual and economic, under which such were established. Most often, they were represented as the
mothers of children, as in the will of a Lieutenant-Colonel and Chief Engineer of the Company
in Bengal, who spoke of his ‘Girl Joan, by whom I have a Boy about six months old’ to whom
he gave ‘free liberty’.45 Officers of the Company recognised that ‘offspring is anxiously desired
by the mothers, as it establishes a kind of claim to continued protection’.46 Yet it was precisely
a denial of these claims that buttressed the Company’s forces in India.
A contemporary described how the children were ‘taken from their parents in order to be
sent to the foundation... [tojthe distress of the mothers on such occasions’47 with reference to the
Orphan Institution. He had also described the Orphanage as ‘now so intimately blended with the
military establishments in India, that the Company make it a part of their regulations for all
persons admitted into their military service to become ipso facto subscribers to the orphan
fund’.48 The wills of many British officers of the Company’s armies reveal that the institution
was based on a consensus among slave-holders upon the continuation of rights over the slave-born.
For instance, John Rosewell who had a son born of his ‘servant Tomasa Johnson’, instructed the
men he appointed as ‘guardians’ of this son that they were to have control over ‘all other children
I may have hereafter by my servant Tomasa Johnson...I will never have them sent out of their
country... I do not mean the Mother to have any longer controul over the Child than you may see
fitt’ 49
Similarly, a Lieutenant of Infantry in the Company’s service in 1796, provided for his
‘natural daughter’ bom of his ‘girl’ Newrun Nissah, to be removed from the genealogical mother,
even though the latter was envisaged as alive, since a provision for her was to be made so ‘long
as she remains unprovided with a master’.50 Claud Martin’s will spoke of Sally, the ‘daughter
45Will of James Lillymon, Supreme Court Wills, P/154/60, 4 January, 1775. The phrase ‘free liberty’
refers to manumission without ransom payments.
48Ibid„ p. 459.
49Will of John Rosewell, 8 May 1779, Supreme Court Wills, P/154/60, pp. 65-67.
bastard of Colonel Harper’, of whom Martin required that ‘she never be permitted to see her
mother who is a woman of loos [sic] conduct ... that Girl Sally... was to have been sent to Mr.
Bazet who agreed to let me keep her as he said that Colonel Harper never would acknowledge
her’.51 Terms like ‘Orphan Children’ were used by another Captain in the Company’s army, to
describe his three sons ‘Ranoya, Johny and Pranchand’ born of different mothers, who continuing
alive, were to be provided for by the executors of the will.52 George Ricketts, who had gone from
the Upper Orphan School into the uncovenanted service of the East India Company, and his
brother John William Ricketts, had been taken from their mother, Bibee Zeenut, who died only
in 1824, leaving the ground and house in Collingah to George.53 By 1824, it was clearly
commonplace to stipulate that a son born of a concubine ‘be handed over to the Orphan Fund
together with the property, and a pension to be granted to the Mother during her life by the Fund
to the same amount as usually given to native women who have had children by European
officers’.54 Nor was this materially demolished later, for in 1850, a Captain of the Infantry
stipulated that his child, a boy, ‘living with his mother Begum Jan in the Orderly Bazar
Cawnpore... may be placed in the Military Orphan School Calcutta and it is my particular desire
that he be removed from the charge of his mother....’55
In the moral universe of slave social formations in the indigenous households studied
earlier, the bearing of a child to one’s free master was a passport to status, even if of an attenuated
kind. Denying the claims of social motherhood of these women upon the products of their sexual
labours was a half-way house in the tense dialectic between cultural filiation and economic
marginalisation associated with the Company’s attitudes towards this growing number of women
and children. Many of the slaves and concubines struggled to retain their children with themselves.
Most were unsuccessful,56 but one instance of success was recounted by ‘an Armenian’ in the
pages of a journal in 1819. Describing a very skilled performing artist called Bonnoo Jaun, a
correspondent said,
She is the Daughter of a Woman, whose name was Rutton, at the house of
Bholoo, who is yet living at Calcutta in Colootolah, and has one of the best
56See Emily Eden’s note on the ‘native woman’ of an English colonel, all of whose children ‘she will
never see them again’ in Letters from India (ed. by her niece, London, 1872), I, pp. 324-5.
208
houses built in the European style. The said Girl, whose Father (as I have heard
myself from Bholoo and Rutton) was an English Merchant of Calcutta, was
concealed by the Mother from him;....57
Juxtaposed against contested claims over children born of such women, these orphanages provided
the cutting edge of this contest between indigenous slave-holders and the British army and
administration over the fruits of their holdings - the children born of slave mothers, and the uses
to which such holdings were put. Most significant of all, the policies from which the contest, and
these institutions, sprang were determinedly natalist ones, depending critically on the fecundity and
fertility of the slave concubines and servants. This, contrary to assertions of historians of childbirth
in India,58 set the context of the Company’s (and later Imperial) interest in female ‘health’ in
India.
For the children, born of concubine mothers but deprived of maternal ancestors and
lineages, how far were they assimilated into their paternal lineages? The naming practices that
these children were subject to deserve greater scrutiny than they have received, practices that often
kept them at the boundaries of their patrilineages. A letter written to Mary Barwell by R.B.
(Richard Barwell?) from Calcutta in 1775 clarifies a number of issues. Referring to a ‘boy’ sent
to England under the care of Captain Carr, the letter-writer disclaimed
Whether he is my natural child or not is apocryphal...I understand from my
brother James, the boy is educated after a manner by no means suitable to a
dependent and servile condition, that he has been introduced to you under my
name and as my son ... I never meant he should behold himself in that light, nor
me in any other than that of his patron and friend.
The letter insists that the ‘boy’ ‘regard his birth as low’, that his training in accounts and
penmanship only reinforce in ‘his mind that he is an orphan brought up by the hand of charity’,
and that he be re-baptised with a different surname.59 Similarly, Major-General William
Kirkpatrick, to whom is attributed the idea of the Military Orphan Fund, named his ‘natural son’
by Doolaury Beeby, Robert Walker, notably not allowing him the surname of Kirkpatrick, which
57Letter from an Armenian, 17 Oct. 1819, in S.Das (ed.), Selections from Indian Journals: Calcutta
Journal (Calcutta, 1963), I, pp.356-57. Emphasis added.
58Dagmar Engels, ‘The Politics of Childbirth: British and Bengali Women in Contest, 1890-1930’ in P.
Robb, A.Powell and K.N.Chaudhuri (eds), Society and Ideology: Essays in South Asian History (Delhi,
1993), pp. 222-246. Engels has urged that economic or military engagements cannot explain imperial interest
in childbirth; and the latter was part of an ‘ideological enterprise’ to justify the Raj. The two are not
necessarily separate exercises.
59See George F. Grand, The Narrative o f the Life o f a Gentleman Long Resident in India (Cape of Good
Hope, 1814, reprint Calcutta, 1910), note on p. 283. Emphasis added.
209
would have socially incorporated him into the patrilineage.60 Thus the ideology of ‘illegitimacy’
was fashioned to reproduce the difference between freeborn and slave-born in a systematic manner.
In contrast to methods of filiation, status-reckoning and incorporation in indigenous slave-
holding households like those studied in Chapter II, colonial practice as well as colonial law
endowed the slave-born with permanent jural marginality, while insisting on their cultural
incorporation within religious and educational boundaries. Unlike the predominant ways of
reckoning identity and status patrilineally for the children of ‘white’ European mothers, British
fiscal (pension fund and other such) policy in India insisted that ‘illegitimate’ children were ‘to
be considered of the same country as their mother’.61 Where indigenous households put a high
premium on the slave-born precisely because of the loyalty or deference generated in the absence
of bilateral affiliation, in British colonial officials’ reckoning after American independence and
even more after the revolution in Haiti, it was the potential disloyalty of such groups that
influenced official attitudes.62 The desire to secure the subordination of such marginal beings
(referred to as half-castes) by simultaneously ensuring their immiserisation was evident both in the
pronouncements of administrators like Cornwallis, Munro63 and others, and the strategies of the
Upper and Lower Orphan School in Alipore, Calcutta.
6()Will of William Kirkpatrick, L/AG/34/29/36 (1824), p. 202. Between 1799 and 1801, he held the post
of private secretary to Gov.-Gen. Wellesley, for which see List of the Private Secretaries to the Governors-
General and Viceroys from 1774 to 1908 (Calcutta, 1908).
6'Construction no. 806, July 26, 1833, in F. Skipwith, The Magistrate’s Guide (Calcutta, 1843) p. 22,
no. 165.
62See Arthur Wellesley’s Memorandum on Bengal on the political value of preventing colonisation
through settlement, of European officers’ and soldiers’ ‘legitimate’ families in India in S. J. Owen, Selection
from the Indian Despatches (London, 1880), pp. 775-785. For reported laments of public men about the
‘present mischief and future danger’ presented by the half-caste population, see R. Heber, Narrative o f a
Journey Through the Upper provinces o f India from Calcutta to Bombay, 1824-25 (London, 1828, second
ed.), I, pp. 41-2, and for the association of this ‘intermediate’ cast with the revolutions of the Spanish
Americas and St. Domingo, see Valentia, Voyages and Travels (London, 1811), I, p. 197. See also David
Arnold, ‘White Colonization and Labour in Nineteenth-Century India’, Journal o f Commonwealth History,
11, 2, 1983, pp. 133-158.
them on their arrival and to Lodge Board, Clothe and Educate them till a certain Age’.64 It
appears from the rules of 1783 that such transplantation of orphans was originally meant to ‘top
up’ the labouring classes of the Industrial Revolution. Art. 24 had provided that the male orphans
were to be ‘bound apprentices to the business of their choice’ or be recommended to the Directors
for appointments as cadets in the military service of the Company. The female orphans were to
be placed as ‘apprentices’ to milliners, stay-makers and eventually marry, receiving such dowers
as the managers of the fund thought proper to dispense. However, when these rules were submitted
to the Court of Directors, the latter modified them considerably, allowing only those who had two
parents of European birth to be sent to England, leaving ‘the illegitimate and friendless’ in
India.65
Right from this period then, such orphan ‘boys’ served in the lowest echelons of the army
(drummers and fifers, i.e. soldier musicians) - a feature that received official recognition in 1806
when it was actually authorised - and bureaucracy (as clerks, account-keepers) and such ‘girls’ in
turn served as ‘domestic’ servants in the households of the officers and magistrates of the
Company.66 The route was not always a direct one, from Orphanage to domestic service, but
could also meander through marriage with an European soldier. This constituted a gendered
differential in the trajectory of reproducing kinlessness. For example, the ayah who served Fanny
Eden, sister of Governor-General Auckland, was one twenty-year-old ‘half caste’ brought up at
the Military Orphan School, ‘married at twelve years old to a man forty years older than herself
who came and chose her from the school as was then the custom’. Apparently, such unions even
though called marriage, did not imply permanence since such wives were left in India when the
husbands returned to England.67 Materially fatherless, the importance of God the Father and a
Biblical theology of redemption to such marginal beings could not have been a small one.
Intrinsic to reproducing a genealogically suspended community (half-caste) alongside an
economically differentiated (working class and middle class) pool of labour were differentials in
fi4Cited in ‘Memorial of the General Management of the Bengal Military Orphan Society’, Bengal
Military Letter, 29 July 1823, BC F/4/712/19454.
fi5Officers of the Crown regiments may have been critical of the transporting of these ‘mulattoes’ to
Great Britain, and supported plans for rendering these children ‘serviceable to their native colonies’. See
Innes Munro A Narrative of the Military Operations on the Coromandel Coast against the Combined Forces
of the French, Dutch and Hyder Ally Cawn (London, 1789), p. 50.
66For a ‘little half-cast girl’ taken from the Free School as a servant into the house of John Pringle,
Judge at Jessore circa 1830, see Lt. Col. D. G. Crawford, ‘Letters from Calcutta and Jessore’, BPP, 4, 1909,
pp. 461-485.
67Janet Dunbar (ed.), Tigers, Durbars and Kings: Fanny Eden’s Indian Journals, 1837-1838 (London,
1988), p. 161. Italics original. The journal mentions six other ‘sisters’ of this ayah who were all married
thus.
211
the fiscal organisation of the Military Orphan Society. Admission to the Upper Military Orphan
School reserved for officers’ ‘orphans’ was not determined by the conditions under which a child
was born - concubinage or marriage - but by the amount, and the control, of the property left by
its father. Thus ‘no child possessed of property is admitted if the total amount of such property
is not lodged for the use and benefit of the Society’s Funds’.68 Officers generally took note: a
major in the Company’s artillery carefully set aside a sum of 8000 Sicca Rupees to be mortgaged
in such a way as to earn sufficient interest to pay for the rearing of his two sons (of his concubine)
in the School of the Orphan Society, and made the managers of the School the final trustees for
the division of the principal between the sons on their reaching adulthood.69 Another officer, a
knighted Lieutenant-General of the Royal army in India left to the Upper Orphan School a bequest
of Rupees 20,000 as the ‘permanent property thereof.’70 As a final clause in the regulations of
1783 had tried to insist, ‘when an officer dies leaving a natural-born child, or children, and
possessed of property not sufficient to preclude such children from the benefits of the Institution,
and does not, by will, make such reasonable provision for his children as his circumstances may
enable him to do, such children are not entitled to the benefits of the Institution’.71 Typical in
its obscurity, the first half of the clause referred to officers whose fortunes were insufficient for
providing an independent livelihood for their ‘natural’ children : the second half of the clause
reiterated that such insufficient funds, alongwith the poorly provided for children, nevertheless had
to be placed with the management.
Thus where the slave-born child of an officer was concerned, the orphanages were the
instrument of establishing control both over the persons and the meagre inheritances of such
children. Investing the bequests of such officers in the Company’s bonds and promissory notes in
turn gave the Company a very real stake in the continuation of this structure. At the same time,
the Company also ensured that it never had to dig into its own coffers for subsidising these
‘orphans’, by instituting a systematic method of revenue generation. This was to make all potential
fathers of such orphans contribute towards the creation of a kind of lottery fund: all commissioned
ranks of the army were, after 1 March 1786, ipso facto members of the Orphan Fund and had their
monthly subscriptions automatically deducted from their pay according to a calibrated scale. A
Major subscribed Rs. 9, a Captain subscribed Rs. 6, an Ensign or Cornet had Rs. 3 stopped from
68Abstract o f the More Important Rules and Regulations of the Bengal Military Orphans Society
(Calcutta, reprint 1846), p. 12, para. 76.
his pay. Initially, Colonels and Lt. Cols, were given the discretion to subscribe, and only after
1805, when the Managers complained that there were 36 Orphans of Officers above the rank of
Majors in the Upper School that a compulsory and calibrated scale was established for all cadets.
While the details of the revenue generated by commissioned officers’ subscriptions is
evident in the records, almost nothing is known of whether any money, and how much, was
docked from the pay of the soldier, the rank and file of the army. In sharp contrast to the
Company’s policy regarding the upper echelons of the British army and officialdom, from 1783
onwards it paid a bounty of 3 rupees per head for each child prior to 1841, (and 2 rupees, 8 annas
subsequently). This lends a particularly menacing air to the functioning of the Lower Orphan
School, substantially qualifying its aim ‘to encourage the European soldier to enter the Marriage
State; to relieve him from the heavy burden of rearing a large offspring with very scanty
means’.72 An unsigned memorandum written about 1818-19 revealed the shallowness of the
Company’s ‘charity’ where the soldier’s half-caste child was concerned. Referring to the poverty,
and ‘undowered’ condition of many of the ‘wives’ taken from the Lower Orphan School, this
memorandum said
The Board probably suppose that the benefits of the Orphan Asylum are confined
to Orphans. It is therefore proper to explain that an allowance of three Rupees a
month is made for each soldier’s child remaining with its father or mother until
it is three years old; that it is then transferred,... to the Orphan School where it is
educated... If not sent to the Orphan School at 3 years of age the allowance of 3
Rupees a month is withdrawn but this seldom* happens....
* Note [sic. orig.] The soldiers are put under stoppages for the amount already
paid if they refuse to send their children to the Asylum.73
Since few soldiers would have risked stoppages from an already minimal wage, the Company’s
willingness to pay for the maintenance and rearing of the soldier’s slave-born child for the first
three years was no charity. Part of a broader and systematic establishment of the Company’s own
claims upon such children, this encouragement to the ‘marriage’ of the European soldier in India
was an inducement to biologically reproduce servile labour, while socially reproducing its
marginality. The multiple deceits lay in requiring the ‘native’ and the ‘European’ women of the
soldiers to do this, without attaining social respectability as mothers, in eroding the genealogical
n Report on the Lower Orphan School, Printed by Order of the General Management (Calcutta, 1850).
This contradicts a notion that has been too readily adopted that soldiers in the army in India were forbidden
to many as a whole. In 1810, Madras adopted a policy of ‘attaching’ soldiers to native women, and a certain
percentage, which fluctuated between 6% and 12% in other Presidencies, were required, or permitted,
depending on the point of view, to marry. For official and indirect encouragement to soldiers’ marriages
with Lower Orphan School girls, for reasons of discipline, see Mil. Sec. to the Commander-in-Chief to Mil.
Sec. to Govt., 31 Dec. 1818, L/MIL/5/376, folios 133a-b; also Myna Trustram, Women o f the Regiment:
Marriage and the Victorian Army (Cambridge, 1984), p.39.
paternity of the soldier, and in erasing the substance of paternal ancestry where such children were
concerned. Thus ‘illegitimacy’ on one hand, and kinlessness had to be produced and reproduced
through a variety of complex manoeuvres which together created the wealth of labour on which
the structure of colonial armies and bureaucracies in India rested.
While the Upper Orphan School provided the uncovenanted servants of the East India
Company, the clerks and accountants of agency houses and indigo concerns, it was from the
Lower Orphan School that the bandsmen of each military corps were recruited. According to a
General Order of 11 June 1798, it was determined that ‘the allowance for the child in the Lower
Orphan House would cease from the day on which each Boy was selected to serve in the Corps
of the Army’.74 Most important of all, it appears that the Lower Orphan School was also meant
to establish a monopoly over these jobs, since it was stipulated that ‘No Boys are to be received
as Drummers and Fifers from the Barracks or from any of the Classes of Natives except in cases
where the Orphan School cannot supply such as are applied for’. In 1807, the Court of Directors
further clarified that from the Lower Orphan School, boys above the age of nine years would be
transferred to the Company’s European Regiments, (receiving half-pay and half-batta of
drummers) with a view to ‘forming a depot for the supply of Drummers and Fifers for the
Army’.75 This policy thus helps to relocate the significance of the ‘rescue’ efforts of the 1830s
in the course of which the young male slaves taken off indigenous middlemen were sent off to the
Military Orphan School. As for the children produced by the members of the army, between 1814
and 1819, the average number of inmates in the Lower Orphan School was 589, while that for the
Upper Orphan School was 145.76
This numerical disproportion between soldiers’ ‘orphans’ and officers’ ‘orphans’ in the two
schools in the first half of the nineteenth century, helps to explain another stark difference between
officers’ wills and soldiers’ wills. A sample survey of the latter between the period 1825-61
reveals that though very often earnings of prize money, ‘off-reckoning’ funds, salaries are
74‘A Statement showing the Origin of the Several Funds Civil and Military at each of the three
Presidencies in India’, L/MIL/5/386/(96a), pp. 122-23.
75Ibid., p. 126.
76Calculated from the ‘Statements of Managers to the Governor-General in Council’, 1 March 1819,
ibid., p. 126, The sex ratio is difficult to calculate from these figures. Between 1800-1818, a total of 380
females had been ‘married’ from the Lower Orphan School alone: of this number 274 were married to non
commissioned officers and privates of the Company’s service, 65 to those of the Royal regiments, and 41
to others. See L/MIL/5/376, folio 146 a.
214
bequeathed to natal kin in the British Isles, and even to wives, seldom is a child mentioned.77
Was it that the soldier had already lost all claims over any child born to him, or was the soldier
of the British army peculiarly infertile? In ordinary situations, the failure of children as heirs may
indicate the predominance of homosexuality, ignorance of paternity in the case of heterosexual
men, disease-inhibited fertility, or actual loss of rights over children born. Though more informed
and sustained research is necessary on all these aspects of the social history of the army in India,
the last-mentioned is distinctly suggested by the practices of the military orphanages.
After 1833, when the Directors in England lost the monopoly of appointments in the army
and administration, the inducement to breeding soldiers’ ‘orphans’ in India, both within an
institutionalised setting and outside it, was enhanced. By swelling the groups of clients controlled
by local officers commanding regiments of European soldiers, such informal and formal
institutions helped to maintain the power and income of the commanding officers. Encouraging
the biological reproduction of soldiers with women upon whom all other affective natal claims had
been extinguished was an important part of the building up of such client groups. It promoted the
attachment of the soldiers’ ‘orphans’ to the persons of these big men: one of the conversion
narratives written by an officer of the Bengal army characterised one such group in Dum Dum
cantonment as ‘Colonel Powney’s "butchas"’.78 Modelled, it seems, on the system of chelas of
the princely -zamindari armies, this account describes an ‘attached band of young Christian
disciples’ of an officer of standing in the artillery regiment, and the efforts of Colonel Wheler to
gather around him ‘the offscourings of that mixed multitude forming a military bazaar’: one of
which, a ten-year-old boy was taken into battle by the author, and was with the army at Lahore
as an adult.79 Evidently, such ‘children of the regiment’ included young females also, who
returned to serve the regiment as the ‘wives’ of sergeants and lived in the barracks and bazaars.
However, the re-organisation of the European army in India between 1859 and 1863 meant
that such commanding sway over the persons and revenues of an encampment came to be shifted
away from long-resident officer corps of the Company’s regiments to the hands of officers of the
Crown’s regiments. Amalgamation with the Queen’s Regiments caused the older officers of the
Company’s European armies in India to lose their seniority, privileges and allowances. At the same
time, the cost of recruiting larger numbers of European soldiers entirely in Britain, and
77The sample was taken from L/AG/34/30/4 (1825-35) and L/AG/34/30/7 (1833-61). Of the thirty-six
wills studied, only two sergeants’ wills mentioned children to whom shares were left. Of the remainder, the
proportion of soldiers who left their worldly goods to other soldiers in the same regiment and company was
as high as fifty per cent.
transporting them to India, was made directly dependent on Indian revenues.80 Officers of the
Company’s armies protested against these multiple changes, pointing out that soldiers of the line
(Crown Regiments) were more expensive because of their greater proneness to disease, from which
European soldiers recruited in India (referred to as ‘local troops’ in the debate) were exempt.81
The officers of the Company’s regiments also claimed that the Eurasian soldier recruited in India
was also more economical because when invalided, he settled in India and thus saved the
Company the expense of a passage back to England, whereas European soldiers of Royal
Regiments only served for short periods and were liable to be transferred, which strained the
treasury further.82 In the minds of both the proponents and the opponents of the reorganisation
of the European army, the pre-eminence of costs and savings obscured the extent to which
natalism and sexual reproduction by slave-women was taken for granted. This lent particular force
to the concern about fertilities, of genital health of soldiers and of ‘their’ women.
8<>Report to Secretary of State for India Regarding Comparative Cost of the Troops of the Line in India
and of the European Troops, (PP), 1860, 50, no. 330.
81Mil. Letter from Governor-General of India, 5 May 1860 in (PP), 1862, 38, no. 298. For comparative
returns of sickness and mortality among Crown and India soldiers for 1858-1870, see L/MIL/5/671.
82For note on recruitment of males of mixed descent, ‘provided they were not too dark’, into the fighting
services, apart from the other wings of the military, see Adjutant General, Brig.Gen. R.C. Stewart to Mil.
Sec. to Govt., Fort St. Feorge , 2 Dec. 1875, L/MIL/7/12778/279. For Eurasian regiments raised between
1858 and 1869 in India, see L/MIL/5/673.
83Kenneth F. Kiple, The Caribbean Slave: A Biological History (Cambridge, 1984), p. 49 and p. 58; for
the effects of congenital syphilis and gonorrhoea in inhibiting natalist potential in female populations see
idem (ed.), The Cambridge World History o f Human Disease (Cambridge, 1993), pp. 757 and 1028-29.
216
The suggestion that disease-induced infertility may have affected some slave-women’s
transfers has recently been corroborated by the new paleo-pathological evidence from the slave
cemeteries of the Barbados.84 Drawing upon other discussions of dentition, which stress that wear
and tear, and caries-related loss erase the evidence of this disease in adults older than thirty years,
this study of the remains of three young adults or adolescents concludes that those who reached
adolescence with congenital syphilis represent a far larger cohort lost before birth or in the first
year of life. This may explain both the high infant mortality in this population, as well as the
higher levels of infertility of slaves on Barbados, whose failure to produce a self-sustaining slave
population, despite the pro-natalist policies of planters, has been called the ‘most striking
peculiarity of slave plantation societies in the Atlantic’.85
Precisely because yaws and syphilis were discussed not as causes of death but as chronic
problems by slave-holders in the plantation economies of the Atlantic, plantation infirmaries and
‘sick houses’ were a necessary part of these slave-economies.86 However, eighteenth-century
plantocratic English fears regarding the viability of slave-populations, and the readiness to believe
in the culpability of slave-mothers for the death/destruction of infants is very suggestive for the
English assessment of the Indian situation.
William Jones’s cryptic pairing of venereal disease with slavery invoked some of the
anxiety of holders and users everywhere. It was ‘imported,’ he wrote, ‘from Africa into the West
India Islands by the black slaves, who carried with them their resentment and their revenge; but
it has been long known in Hindustan....’87 In the light of this belief that syphilis and slavery were
intimately related, it is possible that the Company’s early investment in health measures was part
of an effort to ensure the ‘soundness’ of the slaves it held and used, as well as an investment in
the ability of such slaves to become a self-perpetuating group. Robert Grant, for instance, wrote
84C. Jacobin, F. Cook et al. ‘Syphilis and Slavery’, American Journal o f Physical Anthropology, 89, 2,
1992, pp. 145-58.
85Richard B. Sheridan, Doctors and Slaves: A Medical and Demographic History o f Slavery in the
British West Indies, 1680-1834 (Cambridge, 1985), p. 98.
86See Richard H. Shryock, ‘Black Hospital Care from the Plantation Era through Post-Reconstruction’
in M. F. Rice and W. Jones Jr. (eds), Public Policy and the Black Hospital: from Slavery to Segregation
to Integration (Westport, 1994), pp. 1-14; W. Fisher, ‘Physicians and Slavery in the Antebellum Southern
Medical Journal’ and Todd L. Savitt, ‘Black Health on the Plantation: masters, Slaves and Physicians’ in
Paul Finkelman (ed.), Medicine, Nutrition, Demography and Slavery (New York, 1989), pp. 52-65 and 243-
271; Todd L.Savitt, Medicine and Slavery: The Diseases and Health Care o f Blacks in Antebellum Virginia
(Chicago, 1978). In the British West Indies, the private nature of medical care of plantation-slaves, alongside
the expenditure of public funds for the care of slave-soldiers and military labourers is remarked on by
Richard B. Sheridan, Doctors and Slaves (Cambridge, 1985), pp. 268-69.
of how his ‘girl’ Zeenut, who had been suffering from a ‘cringing disease’ when he bought her,
subsequently miscarried in her eighth month due to measles and ‘a severe fever’.88 Similarly wills
that stipulated provisions for children yet to be born, like that of John Rosewell cited earlier,
highlighted the store that was set upon the slave-concubine’s continued fecundity, for conception
on demand. Certainly, the concern that slave women were more prone to foeticide and infanticide
was entertained by many English officers, including the abolitionist Richardson.89
Thus colonial official discussions in the nineteenth century around venereal diseases
combined two sets of anxieties simultaneously: one about the fiscal costs of slave-holding in the
colonies, and another about the physical reproduction of servile labour. On one hand, venereal
diseases were widely believed by the Company officials in India to have raised the costs of
maintaining an European army: by invaliding men, venereal diseases impeded the fullest utilisation
of military manpower for which the Company paid large sums to the Crown, as well as to its own
agents in England. These costs did not diminish over time: between the early nineteenth century
and the 1870s, the amount paid for each European soldier coming to India rose from 145 rupees
to 300 rupees. Seen as a commercial enterprise, the investment in the European soldiers had to be
both immediately effective and generate returns in the future. On the other hand, diseased women
kept as concubines and servants of the army as a whole, might fail to reproduce the numerical
force which undergirded the system.
These anxieties underlay the official pronouncements on syphilis from the end of the
eighteenth century till the end of the nineteenth, all of which centred around the genital health of
the soldier. It was not that the spirochete of syphilis, Treponema pallidum, was selective about the
social class of the host in whose body it embedded itself. If the figures of the Lower Orphan
School are to be trusted, the genital health of the soldier was critical for purposes other than the
cost-effective utilisation of military manpower. It was critical for the generation of that
‘manpower’ itself. Thus the system of inspection and control that was called the lock-hospital
system, set up in the late eighteenth century and formalised at different times (1805 in Madras
presidency, in 1816 in Bengal90), abolished in 1830s in Bengal and re-instated through Act XXII
and Act XIV ensured the genital health of the soldier’s women, as well as eventual returns on this
investment, both in cash and in the persons of the children born to these women.
88Codicil of 8 Oct. 1779, L/AG/34/29/4. Hickey also recounted the deaths of Jamdani (in childbirth) and
of the ‘remarkably fair’ male child born of her in Memoirs, IV, pp. 140-42.
89Richardson’s main objections to slavery in India were articulated as a belief that slaves, afraid that the
sanctity of their marriages would not be preserved by masters, failed to reproduce children, or allowed them
to die. See his Minute of 23 March 1808 in BCrJC, P/132/21, 15 March 1816, no. 47.
90Code of Regulations for the Medical Dept, of the Army, with effect from 1 Aug. 1816,
L/MIL/17/2/449.
218
92For government attempts to deny the claims of expatriate Englishmen like a member of the Medical
Board, Anthony Dickson, to the house and jewels he had allowed his concubine Beebee Sitamee at
Monghyr, see Messrs. Carr Tagore & Company to Sec. to GOB, Judcl., BCrJC, P/142/1, 17 May 1843, nos.
142-3. For many women transferred from hand to hand, and from one regiment to another, bequests by army
officers deprived them of even short-term benefits, see Lt. Col. W. Hunter and Rehmut in L/AG/34/29/43,
pt. Ill, pp. 265-75.
93For the Horesford estate takeover, see Dy.Sec. to GOI, Mil., to Sec. to GOB, 12 Oct. 1864, BRP,
P/66/54, Jan. 1865, nos.27-28.
219
Furthermore, all non-military servants, including menial servants and other camp-
followers of every description were to be considered subject to Acts XI of 1841 and XXVIII of
1841 in the same manner as enlisted soldiers.94 Furthermore, Regulation XII of 1842 required
that before any person living in a military cantonment could recover unpaid wages ( ‘small debts’),
and loans, in a Military Court, he/she had to prove that at the time for which the action was being
brought, the suitor was registered as a ‘Military Bazarman’ within the cantonment.95 Clearly
registration of servants and slaves as ‘belonging to’ the particular bazaar was an old method of
silencing and controlling clamorous servants, slave-retainers, and concubines simultaneously.
Nor was registration itself a colonial invention; from the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries, European travellers in Mughal India had been struck by this. Edward Terry, chaplain
with Thomas Roe’s embassy remarked on the fact that ‘harlots... are enlisted and enrolled (as they
say) before they can have liberty to keep such an open house....’96 Manrique suggested that such
registration was also part of taxation: describing as large bands of ‘whores’ those ‘who live wholly
by singing and dancing’ at Jaisalmer, he said, ‘besides paying a certain tax to their king for
permission to exercise the freedom and privileges of this disgraceful profession, they pay another
due for leave to flaunt themselves in glittering and rich attire’.97 Stavorinus had noticed that in
the Mughal province of Bengal, there were licensed places, where numbers of women were kept
‘upon payment to the fausdar, or sheriff, of the place, of a certain duty imposed upon the persons
of the females who ... are generally assessed at half a rupee, or fifteen stivers, per month’.98 The
kusbee mahal collections recorded in stray eighteenth century zamindari accounts were clearly part
of these collections, and suggest that both registration and taxation had proceeded apace.
The importance given to registration of slave-holdings by the English colonial
administration in the 1860s, however, was to modify the authority from which such registration
was to proceed. A Circular Order of the Superintendent of Police in 1841 had noted the ‘general
practice for bawds, keepers of brothels, and other persons who retain young females... and for
94For provisions of Acts XII and XXVII, 1841, see Henry Carre Tucker, My Notebook of Rules and
Regulations, Collectory and Faujdary (Calcutta, 1850), pp. 65-66.
95Skipwith, The Magistrate’s Guide, p. 102.Together, these provisions made the recovery of sums by
such ‘bazarmen’ extremely difficult, since the court of requests was made up of three military officers and
suits could be decided exparte,
96Edward Terry, A Voyage to East India; Wherein Some Things are Taken Notice o f (London, 1777,
reprint of 1655 ed.), pp. 284-85.
97C.E.Luard (trans.), Travels of Fray Sebastien Manrique (Oxford, 1927), II, p. 242.
98John Splinter Stavorinus, Voyages to the East Indies (trans. Samuel Hull Wilcocke, London, 1798),
I, pp. 409-10. One stiver was the equivalent of one English penny.
220
persons moving loundis, or alleged slave girls, from place to place to register at the nearest thana
the names of all those whom they purchase, procure or entice to remain with them’.99 This
practice of registering the name of a slave-woman at the cutcheri of the local darogah (who may
also have been the local potentate) was visible again in the decision of two women, Noor Jan and
Juggut Tara, to register the newly recruited kusbin Shonaban at the cutcheri of the zamindar of
Bhanderea.100
If this was true for strategies like registration, it was equally true of the medical
management of the human resources of these bazaars. In 1861, one army officer asked by the
Sanitary Commission his opinion on the venereal diseases said to be preponderant among soldiers,
explicitly denied that it was common in India, and then asserted
You know the native women who frequent the bazaars, and you bring them to the
hospital when necessary ... A list was always sent to me by my bazaar master
every month of the women of that kind found in the bazaar, and, if I found three
or four of the men going into hospital suffering from disease, I then had them all
examined by the surgeon.101
The formal abolition of lock-hospitals in the impecunious 1830s had not meant the abolition of
all hospitals: not only did regiments carry on their strength individual medical men, but
indigenously funded ‘native’ dispensaries and hospices had proliferated in the intervening period.
Moreover, in contrast to the lock-hospitals in Bengal Presidency which were officially abolished
during 1830s, the essentials of the bazaar-structure were reinforced in the 1840s, as seen above.
Informal measures were again attested to in 1861, when a contingent of British troops moved into
Hazaribagh. Finding the ‘Kusbees, Towaifes or dancing women from Behar or other Zillahs to the
westward’ already in residence in the civil bazaars (sudder) of the town, the medical officers of
the regiment sent some of the women from the civil bazaar to ‘attend an Hospital which has been
established in the Military Bazaar for the cure of such patients’.102 Reporting this, the Deputy
Commissioner of Hazaribagh urged the Commissioner of Chota Nagpore that properly organised
lock-hospitals be (re) established at every military station, and that attendance on such hospitals
be made incumbent on all similar parties. Such official prayers were partially answered by the
Sanitary Commissioners’ recommendation to the effect that measures formerly taken be re
"Cited in F. L. Beaufort, A Digest o f the Criminal Law of the Presidency o f Fort William and Guide
to all the Criminal Authorities Therein (Calcutta, 1857), I, p. 413, para 2255.
l(M)Queen vs. Noor Jan and Juggut Tara in Sutherland Weekly Reporter, XIV, 1870, Criminal Rulings,
Appellate, pp. 39-41.
IH1Col. G. Campbell, 1 June 1861, Minutes of Evidence taken before the Commissioners appointed to
inquire into the Sanitary State of the Army, (PP), 1863, 19, C. 3184, p. 246, nos. 4213-216.
l02Commr. Hazaribagh to Commr. Chota Nagpore, 10 Nov. 1861, BJC, P/146/44, Nov. 1861, no. 169.
221
ll)3Report of Commissioners upon the Sanitary State of the Army in India, (PP), HOC, 1863, 19, C.3184,
p.67.
l04See G. E. Knox, The Criminal Law of the Bengal Presidency (Calcutta, 1873), II, pp. 639-61.
105This is in contravention of the hitherto unchallenged interpretation of these measures, which have been
seen as the result of the Contagious Diseases Act. The latter, Act XIV of 1868, did not apply to the
cantonments. See Offg. Sec. to GOI to Sec. to GOB, Medical Dept., 16 Dec. 1875, in BMP, P/873, Dec.
1876, no. 18. This letter also testifies to the GOI’s disavowal of public health aims for Act XIV, arguing that
the miseries of syphilis in Bengal were ‘trifling’ compared with those caused by fever, dysentery or cholera;
only after a better water-supply, better drainage and better conservancy had been secured may venereal
diseases and ‘special measures designed for their prevention ... receive attention’.
106Rules under Clause 7, Sec. 19 of Act XXII, 1864, BJC, P/438/11, July, 1866, no. 43.
222
requirement was that the hospital be a separate building under separate management.107
Temporary arrangements, like hiring a ‘native’ house or a government building, were preferred
to incurring expenditure in erecting new buildings.
Overtly nothing in either Act XXII or the Rules of 1866 were obviously tilted against the
women within the regimental bazaars and chaklas of a cantonment. In the description of ‘offensive
or obnoxious trades’ which the cantonment magistrate was empowered to ban for reasons of health
or that of ‘public nuisance’, there was no mention of prostitution, though butchers’ shops, tallow-
melting, soap-making, dyeing, brick-making, and suppliers of liquor to European soldiers were all
specified. The Select Committee’s commentary appeared to indicate that the intention, at least in
Rule 7, (Cantonment Committees could prohibit the residence of women in specific parts of the
cantonment) if implemented vigorously could bring the women of rival bazaars into the
jurisdiction of the regimental bazaars. This was obliquely suggested by the special committee’s
own explanation. According to the latter, such powers were to prevent ‘more than a certain number
of women being collected in one quarter’.108 A comparison with the Adjutant-General’s
memorandum of the 1850s reveals a similar impetus towards establishing a monopolistic position
of a particular bazaar. The latter required that no prostitute was to be registered in more than one
bazaar and when once registered she would not be allowed to pass from one bazaar to another.109
Was this controlling position to apply to the regimental bazaar or to the sudder bazaar over which
individual regimental commanders of the older Company’s armies had had less direct control, as
distinct from the regimental bazaar?110 It would appear that through the 1840s and 1850s, the
efforts of the military authorities had been in fact to wrest control over the sudder bazaars from
the indigenous local authorities, referred to as ‘chiefs’, and their functionaries (am lah)}u At no
107Committee for framing Rules under Section 19 of Act XXII of 1864 to GOI, Mil. Dept., 14 Aug.
1865, BJC, P/147/12, Dec. 1865, no. 14.
108Ibid.
109Memorandum in BC F/4/2379/126518.
lll)Typically, in concurring with the rules, the Commander-in Chief, picked on the removal of women
to the sudder bazaar as indiscreet. He urged that the sudder bazaar was often far from the regimental lines,
and making women go away from the cantonments would be disastrous. See Quarter Master General to Sec.
to GOI, Mil Dept., 29 Sept., 1865, BJC, P/147/12, Dec. 1865, no. 14.
luSee Report of Major J.Steel to Major of Brigade, 30 Nov. 1846, for military cantonments of Meerut
and Agra, upon a plan devised during his six-year stint as Superintendent of Police Calcutta. According to
this report, the sudder bazaars had to be divested of the control of the ‘native Omlahs’ who had accumulated
‘enormous fortunes’ and ‘purchased estates’ out of the profits of these bazaars, at the same time that overt
quarrels with their ‘chiefs’ was to be avoided by providing an adequate space for the registered followers
of corps and bazaars in a separate spot of ground; also letter of Adj.-Gen. of the Army to Sec. to GOI, 9
June 1847, lauding the control of sudder bazaars by military magistrates, BC F/4/2241/112578.
223
time however, was the destruction of the bazaar itself envisaged: ‘ in the application of this and
other rules, the reduction of the number of prostitutes is not to be specially aimed at’, as the
Special Committee put it in 1866.
To appreciate the significance of this Act, one must look at another section. Section 25
provided that whenever it shall appear necessary for the protection of the health of the troops in
any military cantonment, it shall be lawful for the Governor-General of India in Council to extend
to any place outside the limits of the cantonment, and in the vicinity of such cantonment, the rules
and regulations under clause 7.112 Thus right from the start, the direction of the revenue-
generating efforts of the civil and military authorities were to be directed to establishments which
threatened to rival those within the regimental bazaar chaklas - to the establishments of the towns
within which these cantonments were situated. Nowhere is this more clearly delineated than in the
maps drawn up by the respective cantonment magistrates in the course of the discussion regarding
the territorial jurisdiction within which the rules framed by the Bengal Government under Act
XXII were to be operative.113 (See Maps I-IVa, Appendix II). Taken together, the maps reveal
that an ever-expanding area outside the limits of the cantonments were the focus of military
attention. For the cantonment of Berhampore, the territory over which the Act was operable
extended till the Gora and Khalasi Bazaar, well beyond the limits of the military station.114 In
Hazaribagh, an imaginary circle ‘drawn around the cantonment at a distance of five miles from
the cantonment boundary’ constituted the jurisdiction of the cantonment magistrate.115 The
cantonment magistrate of Dinapore, Major Emerson, established that the rules under Act XXII
would be implemented over four miles from the boundaries of cantonments. For Barrackpore, the
limits were initially three miles, then from 1869, five miles around the cantonment, an area that
included Serampore, Bydibatty, Chuttra and all villages within two miles of the river Hugli
opposite the military station.116 As for Dum Dum, by 1876, the area covered by the rules of
1864 was twenty-four square miles around the military settlement. One has a choice of inferences:
U3Maps I, II, ffl and IV are taken from BJC, P/147/3, Sept. 1864, nos. 108-109, P/147/12, Nov. 1865,
no. 60. All others are from OIOC, Map Collections.
U4Memo. from Magt. Berhampore to Commr. Rajshahi Divn., 2 May 1866, BJC, P/438/11, July 1866,
no. 38.
,I6The territorial extension for Barrackpore was first suggested by R. Menzies, Surgeon of the 6th
Brigade, Royal Artillery, in his Report of 1869, enclosed in Magt. 24-Pergunnahs to the Offg. Commr.,
Presidency Divn., 9 March 1869, BJC, P/433/28, April 1869, no.311. The extension was sanctioned in letter
from Rivers Thompson, Sec. to GOI, Home Department, to Sec. to GOB, Judcl., 27 April 1869, ibid., May
1869, no. 101.
224
either this was an attempt to create a recruiting base for the regimental chakla or that it was an
attempt to protect a monopsonistic position for the older regimental chakla as well as the newly
controlled sudder chakla vis-a-vis outsiders. Perhaps both aspects were important for specific areas
and times.
At Dum Dum, the Station Staff Surgeon noted that of the seventy women registered during
1868, none ‘reside within cantonments’.117 Of the 48 women registered in 1867-8 in Chinsurah,
many resided in the French settlement of Chandernagore, and having no property in Chinsurah,
made the collection of taxes difficult for the magistrate. The Surgeon at Barrackpore was troubled
not just by the women from the other side of the Hugli, but also because the ‘very large number
of coolywomen at the Moneerampore water-works, within a very short distance of the station’118
could not be the regular tax-paying group so desired by the Select Committee in 1866. Similar
concerns appear to have troubled an official at Dinapore in 1869, who noted that the women
caught by the European soldiers were ‘not the regular professional prostitutes of the bazaars, all
of whom...are under perfect control, but they are for the most part...beggars....’119
Just which women were to be registered, and taxed, depended on the pattern of settlement
around each cantonment. Thus, cantonments like Chinsurah, and Dinapore, surrounded by largely
Eurasian populations, would require strategies different from those used in cantonments surrounded
by more heterogenous populations like Barrackpore, Dum Dum or even Fort William. For instance,
the magistrate of Hugli, who oversaw the tiny and unfrequented barracks of Chinsurah cantonment,
had asked in 1866 that the concubines of wealthy residents of Chinsurah be exempted from
registration since they had ‘nothing whatever to do with European soldiers’, but had been over
ruled by the Lieutenant-Governor. The rules, he was told, were to apply to all public prostitutes.
By 1867, he had had 48 of them registered, and angered the gentlemen ‘who have instigated and
encouraged resistance’ by the women.120
Clearly, the interests of a specific class of hegemons had to be weighed against the
potential revenues to be earned from charging such women with unlicensed activity. The fines that
could be levied upon such women, apart from the monthly sum of 8 annas that each registered
woman had to pay, did after all finance the smaller lock-hospitals. As Park himself noted,
The Hospital has so long been self-supporting from the fact that the class of
117Enclosed in Magt., 24 Pergunnahs to Offg. Commr. Presidency Divn., 9 March 1869, BJC, P/433/28,
Apr. 1869, no. 311.
ll9Cantt. Magt. Dinapore to Magt. Patna, 8 March 1869, BJC, P/433/28, April 1869, no. 319.
l20Offg. Magt. of Hooghly to the Commr., Burdwan Divn., 10 July 1867, BJC, P/433/18, Sept. 1867,
no.13.
225
prostitutes who have wealthy frequenters could always pay the maximum fine of
Rupees 50 with ease, and two such fines paid a whole month’s establishment and
salary bill; ...if the rules are still enforced in respect of this class, there will be no
collapse of the finances for some time longer.121
In this instance, the government decided to forego the money partly because the
cantonment itself was so small: it subsequently ordered the registration only of those ‘frequented
by Europeans’. This would leave out the ‘mistresses of the upper class natives, women who do
not consider it necessary or frugal to adhere to one paramour, but who at the same time are not
what may be strictly termed public prostitutes’.122 It was not a concession that was to be
repeated. In 1877, when another petition from rentiers and landholders of Baranagore led by Babu
Murari Mohun Shil, objected to the extension of the Rules to Areadah near Dum Dum, on the
grounds that most of the women registered were those married ‘under the rules of Boistub
Gundhurba and nika systems of marriage, and the remainder ...are kept women of many many
years, living on the same meal and like husband and wife’,(most of whom were tenants of the
petitioners) the government would not give up its demands.123 Though the official reason was
that one never knew where the soldiers roamed, the much more probable reason for the reluctance
to confine the rules to the cantonment was that doing so would destroy the raison d ’etre of the
rules, the simultaneous immobilisation of specific female slaves and concubines, and the generation
of revenue.
12lIbid.
122Commr. Burdwan Division to Offg. Sec. to GOB, 22 July 1867, ibid., no. 12.
!23Babu Murari Mohun Shil, Secy, to the Suburban Town Ratepayers’ Association to Offg. Secy, to
GOB, 2 April 1877, BMP, P/873, Sept. 1877, no. 14. This petition was in response to the extension of
boundaries of Act XXII by GOI Notification 22 of 19 February 1877. The petition repeated the complaints
in the vernacular press on the registration of concubines of long duration (bhadra babur rakhito).
226
of such women pay a percentage to the state. This was one of the ways in which the Contagious
Diseases Acts, by reinventing local hegemons’ taxation as public taxation, made ‘the slave trade
in women an important part of the business of the State’.124
Staff Surgeons attached to European regiments were made Superintendents of the Lock-
Hospitals in all stations, though the actual medical work may have been relegated to the native
doctor, and dhai on the establishment. The collective salaries of this establishment were to be met
by the Cantonment Fund, under the Supervision of the Commanding Officer of the station.125
The constituent elements of the Cantonment Fund were the proceeds of the sales of the natural
resources of the cantonment, like rights to waterways, grazing rights, the fines raised by means
of impounding animals, and of course, the monthly dues paid by the registered women as well as
the fines levied upon women convicted of practising ‘unlicensed’ sexual activity.126 The larger
the medical establishment the greater the drive to generate funds adequate to pay the salaries.
Salary levels formulated in 1867 stayed the same till 1890: by and large, the Superintendent of
the Lock Hospital received 50 Rupees, the native doctor 20 and the dhai 10 rupees per month.
This fiscal imperative driving the engine of registration explained both the quest for greater
numbers of women as well as the use of extra-judicial measures. Certainly, the rules framed by
the Select Committee testified to the revenue-generation impetus behind these rules: Rule 13
required every registered woman to ‘contribute every month to the expense of the lock-hospital,
except while she was under treatment’.127
The important departures from older registration and revenue-extracting regimens
henceforth established by the Bengal Government under rules framed under Act XXII were (1)
instead of the slave-mistress initiating registration to ensure her title, it was made the task of police
chowkidars employed by Cantonment Committees to search out and register women. For instance,
the Draft Rules prepared by the Inspector-General of Police in Bengal for Clause 7 Section 19
urged all policemen to ‘discover by personal observation and enquiry the practice of public
prostitution by persons other than those duly registered’ and to report the woman to the military
or civil authorities. Such reports were, furthermore, not to be entered into the register of the
125For a full exposition on the Cantonment Fund as a municipal fund belonging to Government see
Memorandum on Draft Rules concerning Cantonment Funds, Mss Eur. F.86/265, Richard Temple Papers.
!26For estimates of the Cantonment Fund of Berhampore, see P/433/18, Sept. 1867, nos. 98-101 and 105;
for estimates of Cantonment Fund of Dum Dum, ibid, nos. 126-7. Fort William and Darjeeling had no
cantonment fund according to Off. Sec. to GOI, Mil., BFP, P/880, July 1876, no. 55.
police-station, nor were copies to be retained by the informant.128 Though government continued
to pay lip service to the idea of ‘voluntary’ registration, in practice, a network of informants in
the bazaars acted on behalf of the police. (2) Where other systems required only the mistress to
pay a charge on each new recruit, henceforth both the mistress (described as the brothel-keeper
in the records) as well as each individual woman was made to pay a monthly sum. According to
a set of Supplementary rules passed by the Bengal Government and confirmed by the Governor-
General in Council, every keeper of a brothel was to pay a monthly sum of 1 Rupee, was to be
furnished with a ticket of registration, and was to take on some of the duties of policing by
preventing unregistered women from residing in it.129 The most significant departure, however,
was (3) the payment of eight annas per month by each registered woman.
The earliest evidence of this payment comes from the cantonment of Berhampore,130
(nearly of the same vintage as Dinapore), regarding whose collections from registered women,
there had been an over-estimate.131 The collections on this head almost singly became a litmus
test of the efficiency of local administrators. Thus in 1869, it was noted for Dum Dum that ‘the
total amount received in monthly payment from registered prostitutes comes to Rupees 74 only.
It does not appear that the sums due have been properly or regularly levied’.132 Similarly, the
annual collection at Barrackpore had been only Rs. 168, that from Berhampore a paltry Rupees
1.5,133 that of Hazaribagh Rupees 103-11-3 from all sources, the mistresses, the girls, the fines
for absenteeism from examinations as well as for unlicensed prostitution. Only Dinapore in the
same year could boast of the hefty sum of Rs. 570-6-3: this was made up of two items, the
monthly fees on registered women which amounted to Rupees 442-6-3, and the other the sum of
fines imposed by the magistrate for not registering, Rupees 128.134
Asked to explain the discrepancy between estimates and collections, some magistrates
evinced a lack of understanding of the tasks set to them by the authorities. For instance, the reason
l28Rules for the guidance of Police Officers submitted in letter of Lt. Col. J. R. Pughe, IG of Police to
Sec. to GOB, 29 Dec. 1866, BJC, P/433/15, Jan. 1867, no. 100.
l29Enclosed in Under-Sec. to GOB to the Commrs. of Patna, Bhaugulpore, Rajshahi, Presidency Divn,
and Chota Nagpore, 8 March 1867, BJC, P/433/15, March 1867, no. 59. This clause reactivated in the
context of Act XIV, applicable to Calcutta, caused much discomfiture to the urban landlords to whom the
women paid rents.
I3()0ffg. Commr. Rajshahi Divn. to Sec. to GOB, 30 Jan. 1867, BJC, P/433/15, Feb. 1867, no.123.
l31Commr. Patna Division to Sec. to GOB, 30 March 1867, BJC, P/433/ 16, Apr. 1867, no. 173.
1320ffg. Commr. Presidency Divn. to Sec. to GOB, 12 April 1869, BJC, P/433/28, April 1869, no. 310.
l33Annual Return on the Lock- Hospital for 1869, BJC, P/433/28, Apr. 1869, no. 314.
,34R. P.Jenkins to Sec. to GOB, BJC, P/433/28, April 1869, no. 318.
228
for the low collections at Dum Dum was the Staff surgeon’s belief that the rules required him to
drive away all the women, which he was not prepared to do; nor was he willing to raise the tax
beyond eight annas per head because he thought the women would leave the station.135
Berhampore’s failure was explained by the Commissioner of Rajshahi thus, ‘...Strange as it may
seem, the prostitutes cannot afford a fee, neither with the extended boundaries can they be
compelled... to leave the place and settle elsewhere’.136 Ideas of fairness sat uneasily with
demands of revenue on many individual officials’ minds. They asked for the remission of fees
payable by the women, but they simultaneously urged that registration be made compulsory. By
1873, the military authorities appear to have paid heed to the danger of demanding fees from the
registered women; in a circular order issued by the Quarter Master General of that year, the
payment of ‘registration fees’ was stopped.
However, this did not mean that a revenue-extracting regimen had been dismantled, as that
the task of collection was shifted on to indigenous agents. These formed a level of intermediaries,
introduced into the system by the encouragement given to urban landowners to construct buildings
which could be used to house the regiment’s women. Instead of the women paying directly to the
cantonment magistrate as hitherto they had done, from 1873, they were required to pay ‘house-
rent’ or ‘room-rent’ to the owner of the house (often the builder herself/himself) who was then
assessed for this house by the Cantonment Committee. From the mid-1870s, such new
constructions as were mentioned in the reports, were located at the boundaries of the cantonments
concerned. For instance, the three new buildings mentioned for Dinapore were one ‘on the west
of cantonments’ (described as ‘occupied’ by 1876), the second at Toorhatolee Bazaar, and the third
which had been occupied for longer, in the Sudder bazaar ‘east of cantonments’. (See Maps I, la).
By 1878, it was obvious that the 8 annas forsaken as registration fees were being paid as rent by
each woman in these newly constructed chaklas. Though the cantonment magistrate calculated that
‘eight annas a month rent is about the highest sum one woman has to pay’ (for accommodation
he admitted was ‘very poor’), the medical officer of the same place reported that ‘now they pay
in the sudder and Shahpore chaklas Re. 1 a month, and in the Turhatoli 12 annas... In one
instance, at least,... a woman’s property has been seized by the landlord and sold for rent incurred
while she was a patient in hospital’.137 Ordinarily, Cantonment Committees refused to impose
any ceilings on these rents on the grounds that these buildings were all theoretically private
property. Their concern for the incomes of the proprietors of these buildings was expressed by the
135Magt., Dum Dum, to Magt. 24 Pergunnahs, 7 June, 1867, BJC, P/433/18, Sept. 1867, no. 56.
1360ffg. Commr., Rajshahi, to Sec. to GOB, 14 Feb. 1869, BJC, P/433/28, Apr. 1869, no. 313.
137Annual Report on the Working of the Lock-Hospital Dinapore for 1877,1.S.be.41/7, British Library,
Official Publications.
229
Dinapore Cantonment Fund Committee in the following words: ‘the proprietor of the Shahpore
and Turhatoli chaklas has actually been a loser by having undertaken to build them at all...the
committee does not see its way clearly how interference in the matter of rent can be made’.138
The drive to generate levels of revenue adequate to the salaries of the medical
establishment required that the number of women on the register be constant and high. In
Dinapore, in 1867, 139 women presented themselves at the magistrate’s office for registration, but
only 116 took their tickets. Of the latter, 31 women returned their tickets, which left 85 women
on the register; by February 1867, the number was 87.139 In Dam Dam, and Barrackpore,
however, though the total number of women on the register in 1868 had been 70 and 71
respectively, the average number on the register monthly fluctuated enormously, between 31 and
34 in Dam Dam, and between 46 and 61 in Barrackpore. By 1871, it was said of Barrackpore, that
though ‘295 prostitutes practice their professions in that town...only 22 are entered on the register
at Barrackpore’.140 The suspicion that many registered women were evading payments, or that
they were leaving the station after registration, could not but occur to the authorities. Thus the
civil surgeon at Hazaribagh noted that there were only 14 women on the register for 1869 because
a large number had been taken with the 91st Highlanders on to Kamptee.141 Describing the
number on the register at Chinsurah by 1869 - 11 women - as ‘absurd’, an official shrugged his
invisible shoulders; what better could be expected if your hands were tied to registering only
women kept and visited by Europeans? And when another official reported that the average
number on the register at Berhampore - 5.4 - was a ‘farce’ (‘and this in a place where prostitutes
abound’), the logic of the expanding frontier of Act XXII became doubly manifest.142 To get
adequate numbers on to the register, to compensate for the ones taken away with each regiment
as it moved away from a specific cantonment, some means of tapping into the hinterland had to
be found.
However, the quest for adequate numbers of women on the register was also driven by a
third factor, at least on the part of military authorities. From the 1870s some local officials
explicitly demanded that a larger number of women be provided for the soldiers but that they
138Ex tract Progs, of Dinapore Cantonment Fund Committee assembled on 8 Feb. 1878, ibid..
139Commr. Patna Divn. to Sec. to GOB, 30 March 1867, BJC, P/433/16, Apr. 1867, no. 173.
14l>Offg. Magt., 24 Pergunnahs, to Commr. Presidency Division, 29 July 1871, BJC, P/246, Oct. 1871,
no.120.
141Civil Surgeon Hazaribagh to Dy. Commr., 5 Jan. 1869, BJC, P/433/28, Apr. 1869, no. 324.
142Surgeon-Major, Murshidabad, Report on Berhampore lock-hospital for 1869, ibid., no. 314.
230
should also be ‘less repulsive’ than they were.143 Long before the terms were explicitly stated
in the Quarter-Master General’s Memorandum of June 1886, there is evidence that local officials
were interested in maintaining adequate numbers on the register for other reasons. As the
apothecary at Darjeeling put it, ‘... of 6 registered women in the Depot bazar...only three available
for three hundred men. This number is quite inadequate...not less than 12 healthy women, being
at the rate of 4 per cent, should be maintained’.144 The demand for adequate numbers of healthy
women shaded off imperceptibly into an explicit demand for youthfulness and attractiveness. In
Barrackpore, the Surgeon in charge rued the fact that the ‘women are for the most part old, there
being a very small percentage that could be really called youthful’.145 On 7 January, 1888, the
Cantonment Committee resolved to remove the ‘names of those women from the Public Prostitute
Register, who by reasons of age, should be considered by the medical officer in charge to be
unfit’.146 Since we hear nothing about the efforts of the authorities to prevent conception, we
must wonder whether the emphasis on youth was not also a demand for fecundity. More direct
inducements to ‘breeding’ by these women await the historian of the future.
143Progs. of Dinapore Cantonment Committee, 19 Feb. 1877, BMP, P/873, July 1877, no. 4.
144Senior Apothecary, Lock Hospital Jellapahar, to Senior Medical Officer Darjeeling, 18 May 1886,
L/MIL/7/3903.
145Annual Report for the Lock Hospital at Barrackpore for 1887, ibid.
146Extract of the Progs, of the Cantonment Committee at Barrackpore, in Annual Report for 1887, ibid.
147Magt., 24 Pergunnahs to Offg. Commr. Presidency Div., 9 March, 1869, BJC, P/433/28, Apr. 1869,
no. 311.
!4KSec. to GOB, Judcl., to Offg. Commr. of Rajshahi Divn., 29 Apr. 1869, ibid., no. 315.
231
with practising ‘unlicensed prostitution’; magistrates were to have that charge upheld by judicial
proceedings resulting in a fine, and once convicted, the women would enter their names on the
register and pay their monthly dues. One such magistrate reported on how this worked:
Since the introduction of the new cantonment boundaries, 11 persons have
recently been fined by me for refusing to register, eight of whom reside within the
new boundaries, and three within the old... These last three persons were fined Rs.
20 each...and severe penalties have been inflicted on other persons,...149
Few official records indicate just how the payment of such fines in turn mired a slave-woman
further in a situation of debt-bondage. Speaking of the concubine of a soldier fined for being found
with unlicensed liquor in her house, the American women missionaries described this process
succinctly decades later. They found that in order to pay the fine, the woman borrowed from one
of the mahaldarnees, and then had to repay the loan by entering the chakla over which the
mahaldarnee presided.150
The judicial proceedings themselves had distinct extra-judicial overtones. As an official
testified, he never required ‘positive proof of actual acts of prostitution’ and he never overstrained
the rules of evidence by listening to the ‘bazaar witnesses’, preferring police evidence alone, to
prevent the women’s escape. The difficulties experienced at Berhampore in 1869 and repeatedly
at the other stations till mid-1870s, were mainly those arising from the Code of Criminal
Procedure itself- the standards of judicial proof. What constituted proof of ‘public prostitution’,
and how was such proof to be secured? The magistrate of Berhampore spoke of the ‘bazaar
witnesses’ who invariably ‘turn on their [the women’s] side when examined in court, although they
have previously given information against them when questioned by the police’.151 Mildly
reproachful of such magisterial inhibitions, the Government of Bengal suggested that ‘a very little
interest and energy on the part of the Magistrate would overcome’ the problem. It was, in its
opinion, ‘extraordinary that... the executive authorities ... are unable to produce proof... that a
notorious prostitute is such’.152 Most local officers employed precisely these ‘executive’ powers
to bring women to book. As the cantonment magistrate of Barrackpore put it,
I have been hunting up women who were reported by the police to be practising
149Jt. Magt., Berhampore, to Magt., Murshidabad, 15 Jan. 1869, ibid., Enclosure II, no. 314. However,
it should be noted that by the 1880s, the amounts collected from such fines were dropping in each
cantonment: the fines collected from women convicted of ‘unlicensed’ prostitution and of women convicted
for absconding from examination or the lock hospital itself amounted only to Rs. 5 in 1886, and Rs. 19 in
1887 at Dum Dum. See L/MIL/7/3903.
‘“ Evidence of Kate Bushnell, 15 Apr. 1893, Report of the Departmental Committee Appointed to
Inquire into the Indian Cantonments, (PP), 1893, p. 31, nos. 1021-28.
lslOffg. Magt. to Magt., Murshidabad, 14 Jan. 1869, BJC, P/433/28, Apr. 1869, Enclosure I, no. 314.
l52Sec. to GOB, Judcl., to Offg. Commr, Rajshahi Divn., 29 Apr. 1869, ibid., no. 315.
232
prostitution without a license; in each case an enquiry was held by me into the
woman’s character, and, on conviction, their names were placed upon the
register,... Since the beginning of the year I have added thirteen women to the
register....153
The cantonment magistrate of Dinapore described his own conviction of seven women in 1875 on
charges of practising unlicensed prostitution as fallible. ‘Indeed’, he said, ‘not one-half of the cases
of practising public prostitution ever decided under the existing law would bear the test of the
High Court judges’.154
Emerson’s snide reference to the High Court was a response to the fact that one such
woman had managed, through her patrons, to overthrow her conviction on the charge of unlicensed
public prostitution. This woman, described in the evidence as the ‘wife’ of a railway clerk at
Arrah, was fined 50 Rupees for having been an ‘unregistered’ prostitute, and an order had been
passed by Emerson that she be duly registered after her conviction. Yet if the High Court ruled
that Anna Bella Chuckerbutty was not a public prostitute, it also gave a definition of what
constituted public prostitution.
This definition was disturbing both for its neglect of the structures of hire current at the
time, and for the ideology of voluntarism and of ‘free wage labourer’ that this was based upon.
Thus the High Court found ‘some evidence that she not unfrequently received visits from soldiers;
there is none that any of them ever paid her money, or were ever asked or expected by her to pay
her money...’155 In another identical case the next year, that of the ‘wife’ of Private Cotterill of
the 109th Regiment at Dinapore, the Judge of the Sessions Court of the District went a step
further. Asserting that she was the wife of a soldier ‘now living’, he said ‘the presumption that
she would require remuneration for her intercourse with other men is not so strong as it would be
in the case of a woman living as a single woman without ostensible means of subsistence’.156
The hire (money) was payable to the owners, and not always to the person hired; nor did money-
payments exhaust the whole of the dues payable by the hirer to the person hired, for food,
clothing, jewellery and housing could all enter into the transaction. Officials regularly rued the
153Cited in Offg. Magt 24 Pergunnahs to Commr. Presidency Divn., 3 March 1876, BMP, P/873, Aug.
1876, no. 16.
154Colonel J. Emerson, Cantonment Magistrate of Dinapore, to Magt. of Patna, 26 Aug. 1876, BMP,
P/873, Dec. 1876, Enclosure II, nos. 10-11.
155In the matter of Anna Bella Chuckerbutty, petitioner, High Court of Judicature at Fort William,
Crim. Jurisdiction, 30 June 1876, BMP, P/873, Dec. 1876, no. 4.
156Cited in Cantonment Magt. Dinapore to Magt of Patna, 22 Feb. 1877, BMP, P/873, July 1877, no.4.
It appears that the woman Cotterill called as her witness the soldier with whom she had been accused of
fornication. Corporal Allen deposed that no ‘actual intercourse’ occurred and ‘consequently no remuneration
was paid to her’.
233
difficulty of ‘proving the payment of money’ to a woman they wished to register: they rarely
looked beyond the woman caught in their net. Furthermore, the presumption that the ‘husband’
of such a woman could not profit from the hire of his ‘woman’ contradicted much of the local
evidence.
It would appear that magistrates like Emerson, by ignoring such superficial definitions as
set down by the higher courts, were more conversant with the local economies of hire of such
women and girls. If this is plausible, then their testimony to the wide range of pre-judicial and
extra-judicial measures used to establish and fix the identities of the women appears even more
significant. For by August 1876, the Cantonment Committee at Dinapore had authorised
investigations by the police of every ‘pensioner or resident female in the Dinapore bazaar’.
Needless to argue, such ‘pensioners’ were the concubines, slaves and servants (described by
officers as the ‘ayahs and metranees about the families of European soldiers in barracks’157) of
the camp. But throwing the net wider to catch these women depended not on legal proof of a
‘profession’, but on the state of their bodies. For like Emerson, most local magistrates were
content to use the marks of her body as proof against a woman: this was where medicine became
a forensic tool in the service of slave-taxing regimes. Despite the fact that the Select Committee
of 1865 had thought that ‘registration ought always to precede, and not to follow, medical
examination’ it had also decreed that ‘knowledge that a woman is suffering from venereal disease
is evidently an additional reason for registering her as a prostitute, and for subjecting her to
compulsory treatment’.158 Yet by 1876, the intensification of the registration drive at Dinapore
led to instructions like the following:
3. European women found diseased outside cantonments are to be confined in the
lock-hospital and not sent out of the bazaar and cantonments...
6. All beggars and jungle prostitutes are to be apprehended, and if found diseased,
shut up in the lock-hospital.159
157Progs. of the Lock Hospital Committee at Dinapore, 28 Feb. 1876, Enclosure in P/873, Aug.1876,
nos,37-38.
'“ Committee for framing Rules under Section 19 to GOI, Mil. Dept., 14 Aug. 1865, Enclosure in BJC,
P/147/12, Dec. 1865, no. 14.
159Offg. Commr. Patna Divn. to Magt. of Patna, 11 Aug. 1876, BMP, P/873, Dec. 1876, Enclosure in
progs. 10-11.
234
having persuaded them to undergo a medical examination; being found diseased, ‘they have been
detained for treatment, legally or not, I will not venture to say, in the lock hospital’.160 Another
woman, the concubine of a sepoy, came from Fyzabad to Dinapore: there was no proof of public
prostitution but she too was ‘examined by the medical officer, found diseased, and detained in the
lock-hospital for treatment’. Most serious of all, the medical officer, Dr. Jameson, who had a
private practice alongside his official duties at the lock-hospital, reported a woman, apparently the
‘wife’ of a soldier called Shipley, whom he had seen in his private capacity and diagnosed as a
case of ‘venereal of recent date’.161 Since the state of a woman’s genitals so clearly qualified her
for subjection to a specific labour regime, and her insertion into a specific mechanism of revenue-
extraction, it was only logical that the hospitals played so important a role in the making and
upholding of this complex.
Such hospitals were the maypoles around which the different administrative and military
agendas danced in ever changing patterns. Called upon to function as clearing houses, certifying
the ‘soundness’ of the female slave kusbins for service to European patrons, they also duplicated
as prison-houses where the same slaves atoned for the injustices of others. These were two
separate functions which merged into each other. As at Barrackpore, a woman convicted of
unlicensed ‘public prostitution’ was confined, at least for a night, first, in the hospital till the
medical officer in charge could examine her.162 Then, after her registration and her location in
the chakla, she was obliged to attend medical examination twice a month (till the mid-1870s, after
which till about 1886, they were conducted once every week). If found ‘fit’, the date of the
examination would be stamped on the ticket; if not, she would be entered as a patient. And that
was not all: the day after the examination, a roll of names of women on the register, who had
failed to come for the examination was sent to the police, from where magisterial proceedings (for
breach of lock-hospital rules) were begun.
Conditions within the hospitals were hardly salubrious, if one reads between the lines of
dry-as-dust reports. Part of the explanation may have been the fact that the construction of new
buildings for lock hospitals had not been authorised in 1866; existing buildings were to be hired
or appropriated according to local availability till 1890s. Thus the building that the lock hospital
moved to in Chinsurah was rented from Babu Durga Churn Law for 15 Rupees per month. In
Dinapore, the lock-hospital in the 1860s and 70s was a row of ‘enclosed out-houses’ attached to
the local dispensary. This implied that few of the conditions of ventilation, space between beds,
160Ibid.
16lIbid.
1620ffg. Magt., 24 Pergunnahs, to Commr. Presidency Divn., 3 May 1876, Enclosed in BMP, P/873,
Aug. 1876, nos. 18-19.
235
part of the sanitary ethos of the nineteenth century, were to be met with in these buildings. For
instance, the building used as a lock-hospital in Barrackpore was situated in the sudder bazaar; it
was not only ‘damp and badly lit, it also had ‘only one small room, incapable of holding more
than six patients’.163 In 1873, the same hospital was characterised as ‘prison-like’ by another
official.164 But it is the staccato description of the lock-hospital at Darjeeling that provides a
dark-humoured insight :
I Building - in good repair. A verandah is much needed to prevent the rain
beating in, which would greatly add to the comfort of the sick under treatment.
II Accommodation - Ample room for four sick...
III Ablution - There is no arrangement for this purpose...
IV Latrine - construction good: dry earth system.
V Conservancy - There is no sewage...
VII Diet - Food supplied to the sick in accordance with scale viz. rice 10
chittacks, dhai 2 chittacks, mixed vegetables...cooked by themselves.
VIII Bedding - Consists of condemned mattresses, pillows and blankets and
obtained from the Commissariat Department.
IX Clothing - Patients used their own.165
Despite these conditions, the hospitals would still have served their overt purpose, if we could
conclusively prove that they cured diseases brought in by the women, or that they effectively
prevented the spread of diseases among the male soldiery. For this we need data on the number
of women found diseased at first examination and number of women found diseased at regular
examination. This kind of data was not collected for the cantonments. In any case, any answer we
might attempt is heavily dependent on the reliance one places on the official statistics, which
appeared to have been intricately linked with faulty pathologies, and faulty counting. For instance,
in 1868, in Berhampore, of a total of 10 registered kusbins, there had been 5 admissions for
gonorrhoea, 19 for primary syphilis, 1 for secondary syphilis. As evident from this count, the
number of admissions in hospital exceeded the number on the register. The inference clearly
throws much doubt on the returns of disease: the statistics did not distinguish between first
admission and re-admission for any of the diseases. Most medical officers pointed this out in notes
accompanying the returns; the Surgeon Major at Berhampore wrote for the 1869 report ‘no sooner
were they discharged cured from the Lock Hospital, than they got freshly infected, and in a few
days returned for treatment’.166 It was a tacit admission that venereal diseases were not coming
‘“ Report on the Lock Hospital at Barrackpore, in BJC, P/433/28, April 1869, Enclosure in no. 311.
l640ffg. Magt. 24 Pergunnahs to Commr. Presidency Divn., 5 May 1873, BMP, P/873, Aug. 1876, no.
18.
‘“ Report on the Lock Hospital for Berhampore for 1869, BJC, P/433/28, April 1869, Enclosed in no.
314.
236
from the women to the soldiers but from the soldiers to the women; it was also a tacit admission
of the temporising nature of medical aid given to the women. But as for working out the frequency
of the return of each woman to hospital, each set of calculations is flawed by our ignorance of
whether an admission for primary syphilis returned as an admission for some other disease or not.
Faced with this dilemma, one has but to fall back on the officers’ calculations of frequency of
return to hospital. For Dinapore, for instance, one calculation showed that in 1875, there were 92
women on the register but 219 admissions into the lock hospital i.e. each woman was more than
twice diseased.167 Nevertheless, the high admission figures of women indicate only the failure
of medicine in the face of constant re-infection. As the surgeon of Barrackpore commented, ‘it is
the same women who are constantly being taken into hospital’.168
The value of the returns of disease was administrative - they provided a gauge by which
senior officials could measure the competence or obedience of junior officers. Finally, they were
the fig-leaf covering what was an attempt first to tax slaves’ earnings, and then to keep up the
supply. The residual value of the statistics for the historian of slave health comes from a
comparison of the diseases listed over time. By 1880s, a much wider range of diseases - albeit still
focused around reproductive organs - began to emerge in the statistics. If these later figures are
used as a guide, then other diseases like leucorrhea, ulcers of the uterus and labia, and gonorrhoea,
non-infectious diseases like dyspepsia, a digestive tract ailment, chronic fevers, and even cholera
can be found to have expanded considerably among the slave-women servicing the armies. Thus
as far as the health - not the ‘soundness’ - of the women was concerned, the picture that emerges
by the end of the nineteenth century is no better than at the beginning. If one adds the travails of
compulsory child-bearing to that of compulsory sexual labour, in the conditions of constant
infection, malnutrition and general deprivation, the picture may indeed appear a shade worse.
1670ffg. Commr. of Patna Division to Sec. to GOB, 7 Sept. 1876, BMP, P/873, Dec. 1876, no. 10.
'“ Report on the Lock-Hospital at Barrackpore for the Quarter ending 30 September 1875, Enclosure in
P/873, Aug. 1876, nos.11-12.
237
nor was the Cantonment Act in operation here.169 What then was the logic of Act XIV? Once
again, a close scrutiny of numerical and territorial aspects of the working of the Act reveals a
picture different from the one suggested by official pronouncements,
Act XIV came into force in April 1869. The mean annual number of women registered
during the period 1870-79 was 7374. These figures seem astonishing when compared to the
average strength of European troops in garrison during this period, which varied between 832 and
906. The further breakdown of the figures into areas of the city against which the women were
listed indicates the direction of this measure. For all the registered women did not come from the
region around the Fort. An official notification demarcated the parts of the town and suburbs in
which women visited by soldiers : they resided mainly the southern part of Section H
(Colootollah), and Sections J (Bowbazar), M (Fenwick Bazaar or Esplanade area), N (Taltollah)
and in what counted as the Suburbs, Watgunge and a small part of Bhowanipore.170 (See Map
V). Yet if one looks at the ward-by-ward breakdown of the numbers of women and girls regularly
examined in Calcutta between 1870 and 1877, the highest concentration appeared to have been
in wards of the city where European soldiers did not go i.e. Sections E (Jorabagan) and F
(Jorasanko). Even the Commissioner of Police admitted that these were ‘parts of the native town
chiefly frequented by women of the better class’ and not by European soldiers. 171 By 1881, of
a total of 5647 women registered, the breakdown according to the relevant sections of the town
are compared below:172
SECTION NUMBER OF WOMEN REGISTERED
E 922
F 626
H 482
J 418
M 457
N 204
Jorasanko (F) and Jorabagan (E) were areas particularly associated with the residences and
economic powers of the indigenous rentier groups operating by this period like an aristocracy. The
households of the Tagores, the Malliks, the Seals, the Debs were predominantly located in these
areas. The Calcutta Housing Assessments between 1857 and 1861 had indicated that these families
l69Surgeon-General, Indian Medical Dept, to Sec. to GOB, 16 May 1877, BMP, P/873, July 1877, no.
21 .
l70Sec. to GOB, Medical and Municipal, to Sec. to GOI, Home, 30 Aug. 1881, Appendix, ‘Report of
the Committee Appointed to Examine the Workings of the Contagious Diseases Acts (East India)’, (PP)
1883, 50, no. 200, p.600.
l71Stuart Hogg to Sec. to GOB, Ju d d , 25 March 1876, BMP, P/873, Apr. 1876, no. 12.
owned large numbers of the houses, offices, shops, warehouses, mills and bazaars.173 Indirect
testimony exists that many of the groups of entertainers referred to as baiji were tenants of these
families. For instance, in the ledger books of Harinath Nandi of the Kassimbazar family, there is
an entry against the land owned in Bahubazar (alternately Bowbazar) in Calcutta, which yielded
an income of Rs. 1022-8-0 in 1820-21. Part of this income was made up of rents paid by several
dancing girls, described by the biographer as ‘of mixed and uncertain birth who settled here from
Lucknow and other places in Upper India’.174 Under names such as Bibi Neki, Bibi Roseira, Bibi
Jana, Bibi Pani, these women appeared to have paid between rupees 2 or 3 per month. The
inventories of the estates of some of the males of the rentier groups in Calcutta reveal that house
rent may have been only a fraction of their dues and payments. For instance, one of the
concubines of Raja Jadubindro Krishna (of the Shovabazar Deb household) called Catherine alias
Mani Bibi received both a monthly maintenance from the deceased’s estate as well as owed a debt
to it of Rs. 4210 by 1853.175 Whether rent, or repayment of debt, or a percentage of earnings,
the payment of large and small sums by women listed as Raur and Bewah had become almost a
permanent feature of wealth-making regimens of the period.176 Particularly in the context of the
conversion of monetary income into real estate in the city, the wills of many of these women
themselves revealed the intricate links between these hegemons’ households and the need to
maintain control through ‘legal’ forms177 (see Section I, Appendix III). Thus many of these
l73John McGuire, The Making o f a Colonial Mind: A Quantitative Study o f the Bhadralok in Calcutta,
1857-1885 (Canberra, 1983), p. 17. According to this study, by 1885, this rentier aristocracy owned all but
two of the four European and 27 native bazaars in Calcutta. One of the European bazaars under
consideration, Hogg’s market (the present New Market), was in fact begun in the early 1850s as a ‘public
market’.
174S. C. Nandi, History o f the Cossimbazar Raj in the Nineteenth Century (Calcutta, 1986), p. 93.
175Inventory of Estate of Maharaja Jadubindro Krishno Bahadur, L/AG/34/27/151, pt. I, p. 122. A sum
of Rs. 4000 was given as a promissory note bearing 8% interest, and another sum of Rs. 210 was listed as
a simple loan account. The will of Jadubindro Krishno had described Catherine as ‘my kept woman’,
allowed her to reside in one of his houses, and sanctioned a monthly maintenance of Rupees 50 ‘provided
she lives alone and is not kept by any other person’, vide L/AG/34/29/85, pp. 17-22. This kind of
conditional grant of maintenance sums was fairly typical of contemporary English wills also. Other wills
also bespoke sums of money to named ‘Raurs’, like the will of Radhamadhob Laha, also of Calcutta,
stipulating the payment of Rupees 250 to Luchmun Raur, along with the right to collect rents from other
tenants in the building owned by the testator, vide L/AG/34/29/62, (1840), pt. Ill, pp. 35-42.
176From the estate of Moheshchund Saffoye, for 1870, under the column of cash received on account
of outstanding dues are receipts from Mongolo Raur (1-8-0), Mohinee Raur(l-8-0), Netticolly Raur(8-0-0),
Kauminey Raur(l 1-0-0), Motomohinee Raur( 1-8-0), L/AG/34/27/177, pt. II, p. 75. ‘Raur’ was the vernacular
colloquial term for a female prostitute, though lexicographers persistently translated it as widow.
!77It is possible that many of these wills were directed by holders and patrons of these women, who were
responding to Regulations XXXVI of 1793, XX of 1812, IV of 1824, XXX of 1838, Act XIX of 1843 and
Act IV of 1845 all of which required that mortgage, gift, or sale of real estate, alongside wills and
239
women’s testaments were made out to appear as though a return was made for huge sums of
money borrowed from their patrons, masters and mistresses. Invariably, the principal segment of
the inheritance from such a woman was real estate, either a two-storied, brick-built house, or a
godown, along with other debt-bonded relationships which some of the elderly among them also
controlled. In the 1850s, with the prices of real estate rising sharply in the metropolis, the power
necessary to extract such sums from these kinds of tenants and dependants became even more
important to the rentier families than hitherto.178 The very real tussle over the assessments for
tax of the houses built by such ‘big men’, and for ground-rent collected by them in Calcutta,
provided the context within which Act XIV was to be implemented.179
The act squarely impinged on this complex of metaphoric kinship and revenue-generation,
even though initial official prevarications disclaimed such an obvious intention. A Circular Order
of 1869 commented on the diversity of practice regarding the registration of ‘brothel-keepers’.180
Urging that it was a ‘great mistake’ to register the owner of a house in which prostitutes reside,
as a brothel-keeper, the Superintendent of Police instructed his officers that only such a man
should be registered who had ‘some direct interest in the trade of the women who were to resort
to his house’. If rent did not represent a direct interest, what did? In official parlance, only if a
house-proprietor resided on the premises himself, or managed such a house or rooms did he
qualify as brothel-keeper.181 Going by the evidence from Murshidabad, it would be too simple
to suggest that the administration had misunderstood the relationship between masters and slaves
vis-a-vis real estate. The house-tax measures which had been initiated as early as 1811 but were
only bearing fruit by the 1840s, had after all recognised that a series of under-tenancies removed
the ‘owner’ of the land or house from scrutiny. However, where these house-tax forms allowed
masters to house their slaves-servants in houses owned by the masters, the liability for registering
anumatipatra of adoption, had to be registered. See J.Carrau (ed.), Circular Orders o f the Court o f Sudder
Dewanny Adalut (Calcutta, 1853), pp.309-13.
l78See Raja Radhakanta Deb to Sec. to GOI, 1 Dec. 1851, for a law to enable him to distraint for rents
in Sutanuti on the lines of Act XXIII of 1850, BC F/4/2473/138539. This act had facilitated the collection
of small rents in Calcutta by government, but Radhakanta Deb’s request had not been granted.
179For the list of houses, in areas like Chitpore Road and Mechuabazar, associated with the tenantry of
Radhakanta Deb, see L/AG/34/27/151. See Section II, Appendix III.
180C.O. 34, 20 Sept. 1869, Encl. in BMP, P/873, June 1876, nos. 20-21.
181The Bengali translation of the instructions and the Circular Order reveals that the separation was
significant. See Girishchandra Mukhopadhyaya, Beshya Guide (Calcutta, 1869), pp. 2-3 and p. 14. In this,
the term for brothel-keeper at the beginning is batir karta o rakshak, loosely translated as master of the
house as well as the patron of the house. After the Circular Order, the term for brothel-keeper is batir
dakhalikar o adyaksha, loosely occupant of the premises and manager.
240
these properties and the names of the residents was finally the ‘owners’. The attempted licensing
and registration of these houses and rooms by the immediate occupants’ (the managerial servant,
the elderly ex-slave or concubine) rather than the direct ‘owners’ was an exercise in deflection.
In effect, the government sought to guarantee the continued possession of both bodies and
premises in exchange for a regular sum of money. The same ethos of guarantees to private
property established in the cantonments had secured similar advantages to the men and women
who controlled the chakla while providing that the costs of the maintenance of the institutions
were borne by the indigenous supervisors and slave women. That is why the chakla builders had
been allowed to charge rents without a ceiling.
Concurrent with the efforts of the census enumerators, the effort to register both the
women and the houses of these important collaborators of the regime ran aground almost
immediately. Just like the census takers were faced with ‘empty houses’ by the flight of some of
the residents, so was Act XIV resisted by removal from Calcutta. Yet here again, official reports
suggest that the flight of the women was entirely one of their own volition. Thus the Commission
of 1881 spoke of the ‘large suburb immediately adjoining Calcutta, by resorting to which
prostitutes can evade or defy the Act’.182 But such ascription of volition disguises the fact that
these women (whom officials described as ‘absconding’) were either re-located or hidden by their
patrons, as is suggested by the vernacular literature. A woman called Thakomani told Sivnath
Sastri that she had been brought to Calcutta by her married patron but fear of the Act XIV had
led to her being temporarily lodged in an uninhabited section of Bhabanipur.183 A similar picture
of disruption is presented in the satires and literary pieces of this period, especially Beshyanurakti
Bishambipatti (1864), Beshya Bibarana Nataka (1869), Bahaba Choudda Ain (1869), Panchali
Kamalkali (1872) and others. The anonymous author of Bahaba Choudda Ain noted in his preface
that after the passing of the act the wealthy ‘upapati’ (patrons) had removed their concubines to
Farashdanga, some to Hugli Srirampur, some even to Burdwan.184 An equally sharp
representation of this was Panchali Kamalkali, Choudda Ain (1872) which described the desolation
of the Sonagachi-Mechuabazar areas in Calcutta because of the relocation of the women by their
182Report of the Committee Appointed to Examine the Workings of the Contagious Diseases Acts, 1883,
50, no. 200, p.569.
l84The text is: kaharo kaharo upapati mahadai grosto hoiya ...upapattiidigoke loiya Farashdangaye, keho
ba hugli Srirampur, keho ba Bardhaman rakhiya ashiyachhen...tahadiger tattvabodhaner jonyo keho keho
proti saptahe keho keho dui teen dibash pare keho ba protidin louha marge gaman koriya thaken, p.3.
(Some of the patrons have taken their secondary wives to Farashdanga, some to Hugli Srirampur, and yet
others have taken them to Burdwan. For their superintendence, these patrons have to take the railway at
varying intervals.)
241
owners. Another play tried to comprehend the declining rates of income for the holders. As one
of the characters in Beshyanurakti Bishambipatti put it, if Act XIV meant that most of the women
had been induced to leave Calcutta there should have been higher prices charged in Calcutta as
a consequence of a restricted supply of women, and yet the very reverse had happened. Emptying
of houses and declining rates of hire of the skilled and unskilled artisans living in these in turn
caused consternation in the ranks of the rentier-landlords. Since these were the groups which also
controlled their clients who managed printing presses and newspapers, numerous complaints made
in the press were noted by government. In fact, by the 1880s, there was a remarkable
correspondence between the tenor of the petitions of the British Indian Association and the
vernacular literature surveyed above. The main litany was the desertion of the town, and a
secondary theme in the complaints was the ignominy of the medical examination. Thus Babu
Peary Mohun Mookerjee, the Secretary of the British Indian Association, urged that the Act had
led to the ‘desertion’ of the city because ‘a very large number of the public women left the city
and sojourned in the suburbs and further away’. He went on to urge that no amount of ‘sanitary
benefit could compensate the outrage committed on the remaining women and through them on
society’.185
No complainant, indigenous or colonial, said a word about the fact that in Calcutta, women
could be examined in the houses they lived in. In sharp contrast to the policy in the cantonments,
where there were single institutions called the lock-hospital, in Calcutta, there were multiple
institutions which could examine and treat diseases of women. (See Map V). The first hospitals
opened in 1869 to receive women under Act XIV were (1) at Sealdah, the site upon which the
later Campbell Medical School buildings were erected (2) at Bow Bazaar, till the building was
handed over to the Magistrates’ Courts in 1872, (3) the Alipore lock-hospital, which was opened
in November 1869 and became the main repository of diseased ‘native’ women and (4) a number
of dispensaries at different points in the city, for example the dispensary established in 1792-3 and
renamed after Mayo in 1872, the Chandney and Sulkea dispensaries, apart from the Medical
College wards for the European women patients and finally (5) from September 1870, a system
of examining women in their own houses twice a month. Each woman thus examined paid a
monthly fee of Rs. 4 in advance and the money realised was paid into the office of the
Commissioner of Police, from where it was distributed among the police and the medical staff
185Petition to Sec. to GOB, 17 Nov. 1887, L/MIL/7/13810. The demands in this petition are very
different lfom the demands of another petition of the Calcutta Missionary Conference. The former shows
a willingness to continue the registration of the women of the Europeans, whereas the latter urges that all
such measures be immediately prohibited.
242
operating the Act.186 By 1873, official reports of the number of women on the list of home
examinations hinted that the expense was too large to be availed of by many of the
concubines.187 These medical examinations were no more geared towards the improving
of ‘public health’ than the measures in the cantonments had been. Or if they were still to be
regarded as health measures, the health of female slaves and concubines had clearly been
eliminated from the realm of ‘public’ health. A cautious Superintendent of Lock Hospitals for
Calcutta admitted as much. Referring to the common error of those who thought Act XIV was
about the eradication of all venereal diseases in Calcutta, he said that ‘while the women are
subjected to supervision and periodical examinations in order to protect the male population from
contamination, no protection whatever is afforded them against them being infected by the
opposite sex’.188
Apart from paying for the examination at home, there does not seem to have been any
other charge or payment levied upon the women being brought in to register. This was another
departure from the policy in the cantonments. Given both the existence of home-examination and
the general non-taxability of the registration, why then did the largely male-authored press
complain so vehemently? Was this an ideologically rooted battle over reform, amelioration or even
abolition of such slave-use and transfers, or even about the health of such women and girls? The
evidence negates any such humanitarian concerns. Though neither the indigenous holders of such
slave-women, nor any official had ever pointed it out, the ultimate contradiction represented by
the Act XXII and Act XIV was that these purported to register what the Indian Penal Code,
Sections 372-73, were supposed to prosecute - the sale, purchase, disposal and use of ‘minor’
females for the purposes of prostitution. In 1872-3, official discussion around the ages of the
women who were to receive the protection promised by these two sections of the Penal Code
reveal the collusion of indigenous opinion-maker and colonial official alike. Various police and
medical officers hinted at their own culpability under the provisions of the Penal Code. The
Commissioner of Police of Calcutta, for instance, suggested that the minimum age required for
delimiting Section 373 be lowered to fourteen from the earlier limit of sixteen years, because
‘there are about 2000 prostitutes in Calcutta under the age of sixteen, and a question may arise
as to the legality of registering prostitutes under the legal age’.189 Dr. Payne, the Inspector-
l870ffg. Commr. of Police to Sec. to GOB, Judcl., 19 Apr. 1873, ISP, P/1002, Feb. 1876, no. 20.
General of Hospitals, also recognised that under the Contagious Diseases Acts, ‘many girls of less
age than sixteen are registered, and therefore legally recognised as prostitutes’. He too had
advocated a lowering of the minimum age to fourteen. Such men had ample verification from the
indigenous opinion-givers who added a further twist to that discussion by urging that section 372-3
should distinguish between ‘domestic’ circles and ‘houses of ill-fame’. For the ‘minors’ in the
latter, an age even lower than fourteen was recommended by a well-known doctor, Mohendrolal
Sirkar, who put it plainly thus: ‘if the natural guardian of a girl has designed prostitution as the
means of her livelihood, it is hard that anybody should be punished for turning her to that
use’.190 If all parties were equally uncaring about the physical health or moral values about the
use of fourteen year old female slaves as prostitutes, what then caused the judicial cases around
the operation of the Act?
The answer lay in the battle for ‘ownership’ over these female bodies, centred around
different ideas of registration. Between an administration that tried to use registration as though
it was a contract of service and the tickets as though these were ‘passes’ to regulate the mobility
of the servant thus registered, and an indigenous group of holders that understood that writing
constituted the first step in the handing over of claims from one owner/master to another, the
tussle was inevitable. From regions outside of Calcutta there had been enough evidence regarding
the persistence of registration bonds of the transfer of slaves. For example, from Monghyr in 1858,
it was reported that qazis had registered deeds of sale by owners/parents of female children from
5 to 7 years of age, and that such transactions were common.191 From Dinajpore, another official
reported having seen ‘several deeds of gift, executed on stamped paper’ by which parents handed
over their daughters.192 From Serajgunge in Rajshahi district, another official reported the
existence of registered bonds, ostensibly for money borrowed, but in fact operating as securities
extracted from refractory slave-girls that they would remain with their ‘adopted mothers’.193 It
was the fear of having one’s slaves and concubines taken over by government agencies that
propelled the agitation and evasion of Act XIV in Calcutta. Notwithstanding police and executive
assurances that Act XIV was not operative against the women who were ‘associated with the
190Ibid.
191Sessions Judge of 24 Pergunnahs to Sec. to GOB, 8 Feb. 1873 in WBSA, GOB, Judcl., June 1873,
Progs. B167.
192Offg. Jt. Magt. Dinajpore to Commr. of Circuit, Rajshahi, 15 May 1872, WBSA, GOB, Judcl., Oct.
1872. progs. B260.
193Dst. Magt. Serajgunge to Commr. Rajshahi Divn., 7 May 1872, ibid., no. B265.
244
middle and higher classes of natives’,194 the evidence reveals the intensification of registration
measures of precisely this group of women between 1871-1880. Thus the contest around
registration that developed in the courts became contests over the right to appropriate the person
whose name was written down, and a battle over the profitability of holdings.
A definitive moment for this contest came in 1880. A woman called Nistarini Raur, who
had been registered under Act XIV was arrested by the police in Calcutta on the grounds that she
had failed to present herself for the regular medical examination.195 The Presidency Magistrate
before whom she was first prosecuted found that she had ceased to be a prostitute within the
meaning of the Act, but referred three questions for opinion of the High Court. These questions
related to (1) the validity of Rule 27 under Act XIV, by which a registered woman was liable to
arrest without warrant for non-attendance at medical examination (2) the validity of Rule 13, by
which the Commissioner of Police could refuse to de-register such woman and (3) in case of
prosecution under Act XIV, her right to plead that she had ceased to be a prostitute, which counsel
on her behalf had claimed. The High Court refused to consider the first question. On the second
and third references, the High Court held that it was every registered woman’s ‘right’ to have her
name removed from the book. Any obstruction to this right was therefore invalid in law.
The soul of registration had been bared. The Bengal Government advised the central
government that it had been ‘a fortunate circumstance’ that this judgement had not come
earlier.196 A Committee was called to report on the ways in which Act XIV could be amended,
to overcome the leaks it had developed. This committee however recommended the withdrawal
of Act XIV from most of Calcutta. It is interesting to note that the terms in which the Government
of Bengal couched the withdrawal of the Act from the northern part of the City which contained
Sections E and F, limiting its operation within an imaginary line south of the Circular Road,
echoed the complaints of the landlords’ associations and presses. ‘The system of registration and
inspection... necessitates an interference with the people in their most intimate social relations...
There has throughout been on the part of the native public and press a bitterness of denunciation
of the Act... indicate a more than merely abstract objection to its policy and working’.197
The withdrawal of government in the face of the entrenched rentier interests in Calcutta,
alongside the tightening of the financial screws in the cantonments under Act III of 1880, indicates
194Offg. Sec. to GOB, Judcl., to Sec. to GOI, 19 June, 1871, ISP, P/674, July 1871, no. 6.
196C.Macaulay, Offg. Sec. to GOB to Sec. GOI, Home Rev.& Agr., 26 July, 1880, ISP, P/1664, Jan.
1881, no. 38.
l97GOI, Home (Sanitary), to Sec. of State for India, 16 June 1882, in Report of the Commissioners,
(PP), 1883, p.596. Emphasis added.
245
that where slave-women and concubines were concerned, the parasitism of the colonial state and
the hegemons was re-established after a brief hiatus in the 1860s and 1870s. Such parasitism was
fully demonstrated in 1906, when the same drive to improve municipal taxation led to another
round of conflicts over the control of ‘empty houses’ which the Government of Bengal
characterised as ‘houses of assignation’.198 The government of Andrew Fraser appointed a
Committee to suggest amendments to the Bengal Police Act of 1866. The Commissioner of Police
of Calcutta drew up lists of the principal landholders on whose property the houses of prostitutes
were situated. These lists named the Sett brothers who owned ‘a good many of the Chitpur Road
houses’, the Ghoshals ‘considerable landlords of the Southern Division Suburbs,’ as well as
Promotho Nath Mullick the ‘owner of Haidar Bagan’ and Sitanath Rai Bahadur.199 Curiously
enough, the last two men were members of the very Committee appointed to enquire into the
question. To no-one’s great surprise, the amended bill left a provision for the owners of such
houses to plead ignorance of the use to which the lessee or tenant had put the house in order to
protect themselves, besides enabling police to serve notice only upon a woman residing in the
room or house to cease doing so within ten days.
198Chief Sec. to GOB, to Sec.to GOI, 16 Jan. 1907, in WBSA, Home (Political) Confidential, no. 47 (1-
5)/ 1906.
20<)Dy.Magt. Brahmanberia to Magt. Tipperah, 25 May 1872, WBSA, GOB, Judcl., Oct.1872, no. B271.
246
obtained as gift from outside’ but again kidnapping was not the source of such supply.201
Only the Deputy Commissioner of Police in Calcutta, A.H. Giles, believed that all the
children found in the brothels by the special inspectors under the Act XIV were born of the
women themselves. According to this official, the ‘best evidence’ that most of the very young girls
were the offspring of the prostitutes themselves was the fact that of the very young children found
in the brothels a considerable number were males. Moreover, he urged, the records showed that
about a hundred registered women were annually exempted from medical examination on account
of pregnancy and confinement i.e. in Calcutta, at least fifty female children were born to
prostitutes every year. The other large number of children were those born to widows prior to their
outcasting, and thus followed their birth-mothers to the brothels.202
Apart from the insensitivity of British officials in general to the vulnerability of infant
males to homosexual prostitution, this document reveals a typical ideology of kinship. For
instance, the Commissioner of Police described the 408 females under 10 years found by the
special inspectors as ‘children or nearly related to those with whom they are residing’ even though
he was aware that such female connections were kept ‘partly as servants’ 203 Moreover, nothing
was said of which kind of widows brought their children with them - the nikahi, the mumtood or
the shadi. In contrast to the exquisite distinctions of status of ‘wives’ according to typologies of
marital contracts evinced by colonial officials in matters of inheritance in indigenous households,
in the context of this sector of slave-use, officials refused to distinguish any specific hierarchies
among the kinds of widows. In any case, the number of registered women who continued to be
fecund in each year represented only a tiny proportion of the thousands on the register in that very
year. Yet if the fecundity of these registered women was an established historical fact, it would
substantially modify the picture that many contemporaries had of ‘prostitutes’ being particularly
‘self-interested’ in practising abortion and foeticide.
In her analysis of the widespread use of abortifacients in Bengal in the nineteenth century,
Guha has pointed out the anomalous nature of the explanations offered by colonial officials for
these practices generally.204 Against the stereotypical colonial and medical explanation linking
foeticide with shame at ‘illegitimate’ pregnancies, Guha counters that the tolerance of forms of
concubinage made legitimacy and illegitimacy not only imprecise categories, but also that
201Dy. Magt. Nattore to Commr. Rajshahi Divn., 28 May 1872, ibid., no. B262.
2{)2Memorandum of Offg. Dy. Commr. of Police, 8 May 1872, ibid., enclosed in no. B253.
204Supriya Guha, ‘The Medicalisation of Childbirth in Bengal in the Nineteenth and Twentieth
Centuries’, Ph.D. Dissertation, Calcutta University, 1996.
247
‘illegitimate’ pregnancies were destroyed by patrons and owners of such concubines and
slaves,205 rather than always and everywhere being a gynaecological resistance by the latter.
The logic that Guha invokes appears to have been applicable to households like that of
Murshidabad, Chitpur, Dacca - from where we have noted the connection between tensions around
childbearing and the hierarchies of the harem. Yet her arguments throw up further questions for
the patterns of circulation of female slaves in the nineteenth century. If the logic of a slave-holding
household was to work towards the physical and numerical growth of such holdings, under which
specific circumstances might owners and patrons induce abortions? A curious admixture of
elements from the moral economy as well as from the political one might explain what seems to
have been a phenomenon of selective foeticide by mid-nineteenth century. In that many of Guha’s
reported cases were instances of patrons and masters helping to abort, or kill, pregnancies and
children of their own concubines, they appeared to have erected barriers to the manumission or
elevation of status and incorporation as kin (and jati) of both the slave-woman and the child born
of her. While this could indicate myriad and simultaneous metamorphoses - for instance, the
fashioning of the affective family and genealogical kinship, the shrinking of resources within
various slave-holding groups countermanded by the expansion of the profitability of slave-
prostitution in towns and cantonments, the marriage-in-crisis reform movement - it had begun to
mirror the practices of marginalisation of the colonial holders themselves. There seem to be few
other historically valid explanations for female slaves and concubines to destroy all hopes of social
personhood by destroying their potential chances of becoming mothers.
The question that remains largely unanswered is: had many of the slave-women and
concubine-widows been registered as prostitutes because they had either failed to become birth-
mothers to children within the owners’ households or had been prevented from becoming mothers?
For both kinds of prostitutes - those exempted from examination in the sixties and seventies for
reasons of pregnancy and those not so exempted - there are two kinds of records that together
suggest the failures of natalism among this group of females. The first is a series of testamentary
papers of specific ‘Raurs’ in Calcutta in the period 1826-84, and the second is of the non-official
organisations compiled thirty years later. The former, which appeared to have been created in order
to guarantee the claims of their patrons and creditors upon the wealth acquired and accumulated
by these women, spoke simultaneously of the genealogical isolation of the women (signed as
Bewahs, Raurs) and of the bequeathing of metaphorical sons and daughters to their patrons.206
205Macnaghten (ed.) Reports o f Cases tried at the Sudder Nizamat Adawlut, II, pp.225-227, cited in S.
Guha, Chapter IV.
2(,6Will of Srimottee Wodoycomaree Bewah, L/AG/34/29/69, (1844), pt. I, pp.369-78. This specifies that
the patrons have direction of her palak kanya, translated by the court as foster daughter. Another palito
kanya is left in the will of Sonah Bewah Bariwalli to the charge of her patron’s heirs, L/AG/34/29/129,
248
The second was even more detailed. In a memorial to the Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal in 1907,
the Society for the Protection of Children in India (SPCI) described numerous instances of such
metaphorical daughterhood and the transfers of such daughters. In one instance, the memorial said,
a woman of ‘ill fame’ died in a hospital, leaving a seven-year old girl. Investigations revealed that
the girl was in ‘no way related to the woman but had been... procured by her. The child could give
no account of herself, having been for some time in the woman’s possession’.207 Another five
or six year old girl, found to be living with a prostitute, was also found to be unrelated to her
custodian: the woman stated that the child was being reared in order to give her to a man who
would then maintain the older woman.208 Another such ‘daughter’ aged 2 1/2 years was inherited
by two women in succession till a man claiming to be a relative appeared to remove the child and
endeavour to sell her in several places in the city. The child was eventually found in the
possession of a woman who demanded Rupees 25 for the girl alleging that this was what the child
had cost her.209 The transfers occurred not just within the city of Calcutta, but between the city
and the outlying areas, as for instance, that of a 3-month-old female ‘given’ to a prostitute who
then placed her with a family in a village, from where she was passed to another village and so
on till she died.210 Another eleven year old girl, who ‘had passed into the possession’ of a
prostitute, had then subsequently been sold for Rs. 12 to a woman who she then ‘belonged’ to.211
The SPCI memorial is important because it helps to complicate the official mythology of
‘hereditary’ prostitution, - how did such labour become passed on in the blood when the children
were not born of them? Furthermore, the memorial hinted at the stakes that the Babus of Calcutta
had in the transfers and transactions around such females. For example, the memorial described
one ‘Uriya’ girl, removed from a brothel to a home, being two years later removed from there by
a ‘Babu [who] provided the means, and the girl was taken in a ghari to a house of ill-fame in the
(1884), pt. II, pp. 106-08. This kind of rearing of children does not appear to have been limited to girls, since
the will of Rajcomaree Raur speaks of the fostering of a bhikkaputro, L/AG/34/29/96, (1857), pt. IV, pp.7-
14, as does the will of Rajcoomaree Bewah with regard to a dharmaputtra reared in lieu of an ‘womb-born
son’ in L/AG/34/29/129, pt. II, pp.25-28. The significant differences between the fates of such sons and
daughters however awaits further investigation.
2t,7Case no. 65, 1903, in J.G.Bell, Sec. of SPCI to President of the Committee to consider the Memorial,
31 Oct. 1907, WBSA, GOB, Home (Political), Confidential, File no. 122 of 1907, serial nos. 1-4.
city’.212 Another member of the SPCI sent to recover another purchased twelve-year-old girl
found himself ‘mobbed and deprived of the girl, a Babu in Government service taking a prominent
part in the proceedings’.213 However, it was only the sharp pen of a female lawyer, Cornelia
Sorabji, that could encompass the connection of the Babus with the inner slaving economies, for
which the middlewomen had borne the brunt. She wrote thus
Jalpani (food and water or refreshments) is the name given to the arrangement by
which rich elderly men import children from villages into a town, and place them
in the care of a woman paid for their upkeep - "food and water" - so that they
might be ready and secretly accessible to these men whenever required. They are
imported at the ages of 2 and 3, and are thrown away as sucked oranges, into the
gutters of the common brothels as soon as they mature, or cease to attract their
original and individual patrons.214
Neither government, nor the military officers, nor the indigenous masters in the nineteenth century
tried to abolish this inner economy of slave-transfers: each had tried, in turn, to literally ‘corner
the market’. In one section of the administrative structure, the cantonments, the profits in human
and inanimate wealth, had been successfully gathered into the coffers of the army. But in the non
military sections, the profits had been temporarily threatened by the government, and been
successfully wrested back by the indigenous masters. If this was a triumph, the costs of this
warfare were paid in the currency of slave health.
214Note on the National Council of Women in India: The Traffic in Women and Children in Sorabji
Papers, Mss. Eur. F. 65/155, p. 2.
Conclusions
‘It is an abuse o f language to talk o f slavery’J
This study has attempted to highlight the processes by which a key political and social
institution was erased from the historical record. Partly a result of linguistic strategies within every
group of slave-holders, the obliteration was also the result of contemporary, and subsequent,
assumptions about the role of slaves in a political economy. While British officialdom occluded
non-plantation models of slave-holding and use in order to maintain the socio-political institutions
in which they were deeply imbricated, historians failed to discern the shifting nature of slavery
in South Asia due to an absorption with fixed statuses and dyadic models of slavery. A ‘thick
description’ of different kinds of slaves as they moved within the structure of a household (in
time), as well as between different masters and households (in space), within the Nizamut of
Murshidabad, and similar households in Dacca and elsewhere has been attempted in this thesis.
These chapters have highlighted the degree of stratification within the category ‘slave’ as well as
the complex maneouvers in the making and unmaking of law that arose in the context of the
Company’s efforts to instil a principle of ‘legitimate’ family and succession, to create ‘class’ on
the basis of property rights in which slaves did not share. Taken together, these had implications
for the peculiarities of ‘family’ law as it grew apart from ‘property’ law, significant because they
revealed that many of the Company’s revenue policies were in effect a complex depriving both
slaves and erstwhile masters of material incomes, which were then re-circulated within the colonial
structure.
Contrary to assertions about the ways in which textualisation and codification imposed a
standardised ‘Islamic law’ in the region controlled by the Company, this study has tried to argue
that the very construction of Islamic, family and property law by colonial scholar-officials occurred
through ideological prisms derived from other colonial slave-formations and practices. These lay
at the heart of ideologies by which ‘elite’ classes could be separated from non-elites, and
genealogical kin could be separated from non-kin and ‘illegitimate’ kin. Such separations had
various epistemological, social and legal consequences, one of which was the establishment of
divergent status-reckoning systems, one apparently to apply to slave-born, and another for non
slaves. Illustrated by the practices of the colonial slave-holders themselves, who reserved patriliny
and legitimacy for their children born of ‘regularly married’ co-ethnic women, while denying
patrilineal assimilation to children bom of slaves and concubines in India, the institutionalisation
of divergence underlay the terms within which the Company conducted its investigations in each
of the household-polities involved. The consequences for both, the creation of Anglo-
Muhammadan law and for the households, were substantial. Even as a standardised way of
reckoning legitimacy was generated within a corpus of Anglo-Islamic law within which slave-born
and slaves had earlier been articulated as claimants within and upon the household, the Company
backed off in implementing these doctrines uniformly or simultaneously. Thus even though
patterns of slave-incorporation, concubinage and slave-birth were practically universal, the
Company’s decisions in each case was made not in conformity with its own construction of
‘Islamic’ law but according to secular concerns, like political control and revenue-collection at
specific moments in each region. This can be seen at two different levels. Within a group of
overtly Muslim households like that of Murshidabad, Chitpur and Dacca, while the patterns of the
harem continued to be similar especially with reference to the supremacy of the matriarchs and
their control of the progeny of slave-concubines, the criteria for the Company’s recognition of
particular males as ‘heirs’ to either the zamindari or the musnud in either case fluctuated
dramatically. Thus while a boy born of a slave-prostitute was recognised as Nazim in Murshidabad
in 1836, a boy born of a reared slave-girl was not recognised as Nawab of Dacca in 1843.
Similarly, while the Company persistently claimed that the adjudication of inheritance issues was
to occur according to principles of Islamic law, it suppressed the ‘wala’ claims upon which the
wealth of many slave-holding households was managed. Within the overtly Hindu households,
which I have largely omitted from this study, a similar pattern of fluctuations between colonial
pragmatism and between what was though to be doctrinaire law was visible, as in the case of the
Bharatpore. Most typically, as in the Nazir Deo succession case of the 1860s from Cooch Bihar,
colonial judges, caught in a web of their own interpretations of consanguinous kinship, and of
rituals of marriage, inscribed the language of hypergyny (phoolbibah, nikah.sanga), polygyny, and
an idiom of caste into a classicised Hindu Law, which further ensured the erasure of more
fundamental issues.
The false presumptions on the basis of which divides between marriage, concubinage and
prostitution, especially in a polygynous and slave-holding context, had been constructed by
historians are finally open to re-examination, in the face of a constant circulation of female slaves
through the households and the markets. To quote one of them,
...unlike the wife who sells her body "into slavery once for all", and is made to
turn it into a breeding machine for producing sons (...), the prostitute hires out her
body without the obligation to reproduce. What she produces in the course of her
labour is intangible for herself, but is a purchaseable fantasy for her male client.2
As this thesis proved, any simple separation of sexual labour (one kind which produces children
2Sumanta Banerjee, ‘The "Beshya" and the "Babu": Prostitute and Her Clientele in 19th Century
Bengal’, EPW, 28, 45, 1993, p. 2461.
252
and another kind which produces male fantasies of power) is historically untenable. The evidence
is that instead of the neat ellision of reproductive labour with marriage and other sexual labours
with prostitution, slaves-as-prostitutes, as much as slaves-as-wives, performed the reproductive
labours necessary to the production of human wealth (children) and inanimate wealth (houses, cash
earnings). Depending upon the kind of mores by which status determination occurred, in one case,
they reproduced lineage, and in other non-lineage. And it was this group of women who could not
claim the fruits of their labour (the children, and the status of social mothers) for themselves.
Though this thesis has not dealt with the larger field of sexual labours performed by male slaves,
it must now be recognised that the representation of all sexual labour as the domain of women is
also untenable. Finally, in the context of many slave-holders being women, historians need to
challenge an a priori assumption that the extraction of sexual labour represents the domination of
the adult male. It emerges that the Engelsian equation of the displacement from paid employment
leading to women’s subordination must be turned around: we have to explain who put the slaves,
men and women, to work in the first place, and whether the wages were earned in return for
‘freedom’ as well as to whom the wages were payable.
These conclusions, in turn, suggest that there is good cause to re-evaluate the Company’s
claims of a more ‘humane’ criminal law in India. As Chapters III and IV reveal, as long as a
discourse of law provided moral legitimation for the continuation of slavery, it was not legislative
statute or implementation of legal codes that changed the patterns of slave-holding and slave-
transfers between different sites in the ‘domestic’ economy. Therefore, what validity and accuracy
can be attached to claims made on behalf of colonial law that it made masters culpable for the
murder of their slaves? This, it is usually suggested, was begun by Regulation VIII of 1799, which
withdrew the exemption of the master from kissas, by which compensation in blood or money
could be claimed from the kin group of, or the individual, who had taken the life of a person who
belonged with a household or to a family. The abrogation of masterly exemption (for murder of
slaves) made jurists like Colebrooke claim that since 1799, slaves had ‘not been considered as out
of the protection of the law, either in the case of murder, or of barbarous usage’. Yet, did this
actually protect slaves from violence or did it have the opposite effect of establishing certain levels
of physical brutality as ‘minimum’ and the yardstick of ‘moderate chastisement’?
This was particularly significant in the way that indigenous masters at the end of the
eighteenth century may have responded to the delicts of slaves, an issue completely absent in the
English discussions of ‘Islamic criminal law’ or indeed even of criminality. The issue of noxal
liability, the liability of a slave to punishment by the state for a crime committed against a person
other than the slave’s master/mistress, has never been separated from claims upon slaves, and the
transfers of slaves, both in Indian historiography and in Company regulation. The anecdotal
evidence from the seventeenth century, however, indicates that slaves were not made responsible
253
for their actions against third parties, because of a presumption that they acted on the direction of
their masters. Furthermore, when slave-violence erupted against masters, the readiness of the state
machinery to move against slaves was dependent upon a range of factors. In Dacca, where a group
of slaves fled after murdering their master, the English Collector instructed the Faujdar of the
Nizamat at Dacca to pursue the ‘criminals’, which the latter refused to do until some of his claims
for justice against the English were met.3 Nor were all masters capable of punishing the slave who
had caused trouble: Mir Saidu, one of the ‘sons’ of Miran, who complained that Mian Jan Chela
had been a great ‘mischief-maker’ and the cause of dissension between his mother and brothers,
only requested that the chela be turned out of Murshidabad and sent away ‘beyond the Karamnasa’
after a settling of accounts.4 His contemporary, the wife of Munirud Daulah I, on the other hand,
complained against Daulat Afzun, ‘an eunuch who was brought up from his childhood at her
household and who during the lifetime of the late Nawab was his agent and cashier, managed all
his affairs and signed all his documents for him’ for having wasted money in bribes and for
bringing false charges against her son. Yet, even though she asserted that in ‘Shariat a slave is the
property of his master and his ungrateful behaviour towards him is unlawful’, it was obvious that
her call for ‘deterrent punishment’ of Daulat rested upon her inability to inflict it herself. The fact
that the Company’s courts fulfilled such demands put upon them by indigenous masters obscures
the fact that it was not Islamic law that the Company acted upon.
For one, in the Quran every punishment specified for a free man or woman was halved
when it was a slave who was the guilty party. Furthermore, most indigenous adjudicatory regimes
distinguished between the body of the slave and the free, as they distinguished between the body
of one’s own slave and that of another’s slave. These distinctions appeared to have been eroded
from the onset of Regulation law. Commenting on the report of cases of 1773 of the newly
constituted Nizamat Adalut, Hastings overturned a judgement of diyat given by the maul vis against
a man who had beaten his slave-girl to death on the grounds that ‘...as it does not appear that there
was any intention of murder and Mohammedan Law as well as ours admits of moderate correction
to a slave or even a hired servant, the prisoner ought to be acquitted or forgiven’. The transfusion
of principles of English slave-law, in the image of which all ‘indigenous’ law was to be made, was
equally evident when Hastings transformed another sentence of diyat against a man who had killed
another person’s slave-woman into one of death for the offender.5 The uniformity of the maulvis’
3C. W. Boughton Rous to Warren Hastings, 26 Sept. 1777, in Anon., A Plan for the Government of the
Provinces of Bengal (London, 1772), Appendix, p. 35.
5See N. Majumdar, Justice and Police in Bengal: A Study of the Nizamut in Decline (Calcutta, 1960),
Appendix A, pp. 315-16. Emphasis added.
254
decisions- granting diyat against both the man who had killed his slave-girl as well as the one who
had killed another’s slave - contrasted sharply with Hastings’ differentiating between the two,
acquittal for the former and death for the latter. It is possible to suggest that the maulvis were
indeed closer to other indigenous legal decisions on such issues if we look at the contemporary
Maratha records. In the latter, there is the case of Malhar Balaji Mahajan, who having beaten his
own slave woman as a result of which she died the next day, nevertheless had to pay a gunehgari
(fine) of 25 rupees, and perform a prayaschitta (expiation for sins).6 It was only when a person
had destroyed the slave girls of another man that he had to pay with his own life. Instances of the
payment of monetary compensation for the injury to a slave persisted in many regions. For
instance, in 1791, the Qazi and Mufti of the Patna Court of Circuit found four men guilty of
having wounded a slave, presumably a third party’s, and ordered that a financial restitution be
made.7 In contrast, Hastings’ decrees, while allowing the encroachment on another’s property to
be visited with capital punishment, also acceded the completeness of mastery in oneself to the
extent of depriving the slave of her life.
Clearly, it was not customary practice, nor even textual law that was to be implemented,
but in a mode of borrowing between laws unstudied so far, slave-law of the English colonial kind.
In 1796, for instance, when an English indogo-planter, Mr. Hunter, was tried in the Supreme Court
for having severely wounded two slave-girls of his own household, the counsel for the defence,
Srettell, contended that ‘slavery was legal by Mahomedan law’, as was severe treatment of slaves
‘short of life’ to argue that Hunter should not be punished.8 In situations where slaves could be
hired and leased, and were indeed so conveyed to English soldiers, officers, merchants and indigo-
planters, did the withdrawal of exemption by Regulation of 1799 also extend to English masters
and hirers for destroying a third party’s slaves? The records of punishments in cases where English
masters were involved is susceptible of greater scepticism than the claims of an universal ‘rule of
law’ have hitherto permitted.
As for indigenous slave-holding households, the question of culpability of masters and
mistresses, and of slaves, appear to be in equal need of refinement. Did the standardisation of
punishment actually effect the exemptions of slaves from lesser punishment reserved for slave-
delicts in sharia law? Did colonial regimes, especially with the equalisation of punishment,
actually make some slaves more vulnerable to imprisonment and punishment than hitherto? The
6V. T. Gune, The Judicial System o f the Marathas (Pune, 1953), Appendix B4, p. 354, no. 56, circa
1786-87.
7K. P. Mitra, ‘Matters Criminal (from Behar Records)’, BPP, 73, 1954, pp. 127-136.
8For depositions in the Magistrate’s court at Tirhoot, see BCrJC, P/128/30, 14 Oct. 1796, no. 19.1 thank
Anand Yang for this reference.
255
records of English criminal justice and law suggest a mixed picture: while indigenous jurists tried
in some instances, to absolve slaves from tazeer on the grounds of her ‘minority’,9 the direction
of change in the colonial courts appeared to have been towards removing such absolutions. On the
other hand, the Company’s regulations which prohibited sati did diminish the valorisation of the
sacrifice of female slaves and concubines. Other regulations that disbarred justificatory pleas of
adultery as grounds of murder, suggest that the sharia ideal may have been realised since in the
Quran the ‘infidelity’ of the female slave/concubine deserved only half the penalty reserved for
the free married woman. Yet, if one considers that in many instances, such female slaves were also
‘married’ to male slaves by their masters and mistresses, we have to wonder whether male slave-
spouses, who tried to resist the poaching of others on their slave-mates,10 actually bore the brunt
of regulations like IV of 1822, which were specifically addressed to cases in which the futwa
absolved the guilty slave from punishment.
Moreover, the intellectual and material origins of such regulation and their implementation
seem worthy of renewed investigation. Particularly since the preservation of life appears as an
extraordinary act of humanitarianism, such abolition of sacrifices are usually depicted as part of
the colonial ‘reformist’ agenda. It is true that there are ample records of the anti-slavery agitation
in England bringing regular pressure to bear on successive Governors-General between 1827 to
1853: one of the key letters of Thomas Fowell Buxton, to Bentinck, mentions ‘suttees and
infanticide’ as a criminal waste of lives in Bengal.11 Despite the sustained pressure of the Anti
slavery agitation upon individual Governors-General, it is difficult to record the translation of
ideological imperatives into administrative fiat. While not arguing for the complete detachment
of individuals from ideological motives, it appears illogical that the same abolitionist drive should
have been so effectively resisted in the matter of abolition itself. In the period 1860-90, the same
anti-slavery groups were ostracised by administrators in India when they launched an agitation
against the pattern of ‘army slavery’ that I have highlighted in Chapter IV. Given an effective
administrative resistance to abolitionist agendas, how can we explain the modification of the laws
of murder and punishment? It is probable that a much more critical role was played by the
declining supplies of exogenous slaves through ‘legitimate’ trade in the first half of the nineteenth
century. This, coupled with the Company’s growing demand for labour both within the colony,
and its ability to supply labour to other colonies like Mauritius after its take-over in 1810, may
9See case no. 660, Mr. Thomason against Mohammud Ally and Phini Slave Girl, in P/154/39; for similar
absolution of a 12-year-old girl for cutting off the penis of the man she had been sold to, see Juttee Ram
v, Jye Munnee, RNA, Vol. n , pp. 29-31.
have created conditions within which the ‘preservation’ of life became an important aspect of
mercantilist political economies. All of these pressures were manifest in the renewed pro-natalist
emphasis that had led to the abolition of the marriage taxes in the 1770s. With the re-emphasis
on the reproduction of slaves, related to the failure of the slave-populations in the West Indies to
multiply at the rate of American ones, the preservation of the ‘life’ of the slave while closing all
doors for her escape became evident.
Though there was an intensified natalism in the nineteenth century, the different modes
of status-reckoning, as practised by British slave-holders themselves, set the seal upon effective
jural incorporation within lineages and households. Standards of genealogical ‘purity’, seeping
unacknowledged into the interpretation of indigenous practices, led to the bowdlerised ‘Hindu’ and
‘Islamic’ law which assumed substantive and reified proportions in the courts. These processes had
both epistemological and social ramifications, for gender, community and family histories. At the
level of ideological representation alone, a fluid and manipulable process was overthrown for a
simple and fixed binary formulation comprising an antithesis between blood-related kin and
servants. At the level of the social and material ramifications for gender, doctrines of legitimacy
and proprietorship of wealth - from which slaves were theoretically excluded- substantially eroded
the privileges and possibilities of negotiation not just for the slave-born, but also for their mothers
and fathers, within every kind of corporate group. Thus though male slaves and slave-concubines
were not to be counted as within the group of members sharing blood, the simultaneous remaking
of the affective ‘family’ and ‘kinship’ relegated slaves and slave-born to regions beyond the
boundaries of ‘love’. The ‘love’ of a female or male slave, held on long lease or attached to the
house in the second generation, became particularly a matter of shame, and disgust. Thus the
hegemons’ affective relationship with prostitution became a particular testing site for the redrawing
of the family, while actual household-economies continued to thrive by the labours of slave-
prostitutes. The reconstitution of consanguinous kinship and affective family began in earnest when
various indigenous men began to address the conditions under which particular ‘wives’ were
treated ‘as chattel’. By the end of the nineteenth century, a gestalt switch in the epistemological
field had become obvious: where kinship had been fraught, tense and metaphorical, and slavery
real, now kinship was material and affective, and slavery alone metaphorical. In the process,
slavery and gender became interchangeable signs; a matter merely of analogy. What was lost was
the acknowledgement of the specific and significant contribution that slaves had made to the
physical reproduction of wealth and power, as well as to the lineage, family and community
structures of the region. The processes by which such labours by slave women were replaced by
the labours of non-slaves, in turn, subverts the conventional representation of ‘social’ reform and
legal interventions in India.
There are good reasons to probe the failure of historians in assessing these shifts.
257
Complicit in our blindness is the way in which ‘productive’ labour, or work, is conceptualised:
it is related to our search for a political economy in which this productive labour is seen to be
interrelated to an international economy. Since sexual and suckling labours are imagined, a priori,
as the tasks of females and ‘wives’ whose condition by metaphor and analogy was associated with
subordination, it has been hitherto easy to believe that colonial markets by gaining nothing from
these labours, changed nothing either especially in the context of slavery. This has done injustice
to both male and female slaves. Where male slaves were concerned, we have not investigated
whether they were punished for living with non-slave females, or how acceding patriliny to such
males could reproduce slavery; nor have we studied the sexual labours of male slaves within
prostitution. As for female slaves, androcentrism was no monopoly of colonial officials: twentieth
century historians have equally ensured that the contribution of female slaves should be completely
swallowed up within the fate of males. In addition, since ‘domestic’ slavery is not seen to have
produced exchange value, the physical production of lineage, and kinship, has been relegated to
the boundaries of the ‘social’, and reserved as a ghetto for feminists to ‘do’. Against those
presumptions, this thesis has urged that the production of human wealth and the production of
inanimate wealth was equally critical to most slave-holding households, and the state, in the
nineteenth century. In sharp contrast to the hegemons and historians of the present day, male and
female hegemons of the nineteenth century set a premium upon the reproductive-productive
labours of female slaves,- as concubines to the male holders, as nurses for suckling the infants to
be reared for the lineage, for earning incomes through the conveyancing of this reproductive ability
to others as well from the hire of their embodied skills and services. In attempting to illuminate
some aspects of this work of slaves within different domains of kinship-building, as well as profit-
making under the aegis of colonialism, this study may have tended to err on the side of a static
political economy even though circulation, and mobility, of slaves have been its guiding lights.
In the light of this predisposition, the inevitable question in the mind of the reader must
be: from which direction did change come, and to what degree did colonial intervention change
the contours of a slave-holding society? Contrary to the representation of colonial practice in India
being directed from the metropolis, the various chapters have shown that colonial initiatives
sometimes contradicted metropolitan ones (as in the case of the delegalisation of slave-transfers
during the first half of the nineteenth century) and sometimes preceded and exceeded metropolitan
laws (as in the case of the registration of slave-women and concubines, in the lock-hospitals, and
in the recruitment of the concubines’ children to creating a vast pool of differentiated labour). In
this context, it was ironic that in 1876, Parliamentary Statute (39 & 40 Victoria) authorised the
amendment of three relevant sections of the Indian Penal Code, 367, 370 and 371 to prevent
further transfers and holding of slaves, and yet imperial armies in India continued to subsist on
258
the abrogation of these clauses.12 It must remain for historians of the future to study the
significance of the Indian model of slave-management to other British colonial administrations;
to explain how many, like F.D. Lugard in Africa, or John Peter Grant and William Grey in
Jamaica, had acquired their experience as administrators and officials in the Indian empire before
their appointments elsewhere.
As far as the Company’s territories in Bengal were concerned, colonial practice closely
modelled its own on pre-existing structures, as it imagined those to be. Therefore, if the civil
administration of the Company imagined the physically bounded zamindari-estate into being, its
military arm materially constructed the cantonments as enclaves of extra-territoriality, where only
the writ of the army commander was operable. In the process, colonialism at the end of the
nineteenth century had acquired the attributes both of ‘foreign’ tyrant and homegrown pater
familias. If indigenous masters and mistresses took up the forms and structures implanted by
colonial administrators, the latter acquired this collaboration at a price - resemblance.
For these reasons, it is my argument that in assessing the ways in which the contours and
outlines of a slave-formation changed, the final contribution was not of law, but of extra-legal
institutions like those of the spiritual and religious worlds, and the result of the activity of the
slaves themselves. Much has already been written about slave-resistance - the tiny acts of
manipulation, sarcasm, and silence, as well as those portentuous ones closely scrutinised by the
owners, like flight, poisoning and murder. However, resistance too was no simple matter. For
every slave who helped another slave to run away, there were slaves policing other slaves on
behalf of the master or mistress or acquiring other slaves for themselves or their masters and
mistresses; for every slave who refused the visage of compliance, there were others who
manipulated the very boundaries of ‘belonging’ that hegemons and independent men and women
were in the process of reifying. Thus in the nineteeth century all kinds of identity - family, caste,
community - became simultaneously rife with contest, the renewal of boundaries, accomodation
and exclusion. These processes were as much the result of trying to distance ‘free’ from ‘slave’
as they were the imprint of the corporate presence, the resistance, and the mobility of, different
kinds of slaves.
Since resistance also wore the visage of forms of the dominant and independent, these
individual and corporate acts posed serious problems to the latter (and to later historians).
Unfortunately again, because slavery had been imagined as a problem in coercion and labour and
not as a problematic dialectic between alienation and ‘belongingness’, the significance of religious
and other hegemonic expressions of belonging (identity) for slave-resistance and slave-mobility
]2A Collection o f Statutes Relating to India (Government of India, Legislative Department, Calcutta,
1881), H, pp. 1015-18.
259
is little understood. While this was probably important for a range of religious communities, it was
particularly significant for an appreciation of Christianity and Islam. Much historical ink has been
spilt on denying the connection between devout Islam and slavery; this denial is based upon the
attribution of egalitarian desires to slaves, and the continuation of differentiation within the Islamic
congregation. Yet, evidence of the desire for ‘egalitarianism’ in the breast of slaves is yet to be
established. On the other hand, the physical presence of slaves within the Islamic fold is
undeniable. Explaining the latter requires imagining the jamaat (or brotherhood) as an experience
in belonging with a wider group, and not to a household alone. Belonging with a devotional group
may in fact have compensated for the absence of other corporate identities and networks. In fact,
especially after the 1870s when a classicisation of Islamic practice occurred in Bengal, the promise
held out by the Quran, not of material egalitarianism, but of spiritual freedom to slaves in return
for devoted service to earthly and divine masters became a very real possibility.
Furthermore, religious beliefs and the moral economy had had a subtle and long
relationship with issues of the political economy within which slaves found themselves. In a
context where the bestowal of the peculia, especially inherent in immoveables like land and
buildings by the slave, or ex-slave, was denied by erstwhile owners, the gifting of little parcels
of income/lands/slaves to a God/ Supreme Being could inflict temporal masters with partial
deprivation, and reserve for slaves a tiny portion of the gains of their labour in the form of the
deference of the populace that prayed at these shrines. It was one form of being remembered, in
a social formation which paid homage to ancestors. By the act of donating from their own peculia
to a higher God, successful slaves salvaged some pride and dealt a blow to the masterly conceit
that slaves wanted only to ‘receive’ goods, maintenance, money.13 The establishment of mosques
and madrassahs on specific grants of lakhiraj land for religious and charitable purposes was a
strategy many a master would have found hard to contest. As the disposition of the eunuch
Bussunt Ali Khan revealed, such donations for spiritual benefit were important to slaves.
Marmon’s study of the association of particular eunuchs with the Prophet’s tomb at Mecca and
at Madina, representing an elevation whereby senior eunuch ‘servants of the earthly prince’
became freedmen servants of a more exalted order, has a bearing for conditions in India. By the
same token, lakhiraj tenure-holders in slave-holding households like Murshidabad, Dacca and
elsewhere often had the prior jural status of slave-servant of an earthly master, who had moved
to the service of a higher god: something not yet thoroughly examined by historians of
endowments in colonial India.14 Furthermore, the evidence from the Nizamut suggests that not
13See Carl F. Petry, ‘From Slaves to Benefactors: The Habashis of Mamluk Cairo’, Sudanic Africa, 5,
1994, pp. 57-66.
14See Gregory C. Kozlowski, Muslim Endowments and Society in British India (Cambidge, 1985).
260
only were the slave-c/te/as trained by particular eunuchs reassigned as servants to shrines, but that
the major issue for such servants then became the assumption of authority as freedmen proprietors
of those lands which yielded revenues for the maintenance of the shrine itself. On the death of the
father/ original owner of Babbu Begum, the latter assigned one male slave as mujawir (lit. fixed
to the temple) and five as karees to the tomb of Mahomed Samen Khan. For the maintenance of
the servants of the tomb, she purchased five beegahs of land which formed a part of the Nizamut
Gunjeeyat. By 1844, however, the heir of the deceased man, Amir Ali Khan, reported that the
mujawir, apart from a ‘want of respect’ to the heir of the family, had begun to conceive ‘that he
is the real owner of the land and as such perfectly independent. Instead of reserving a part of the
proceeds for repairing the tombs, he spends the whole as if ... he is answerable to no one for his
acts’ while continuing to receive a monthly sum of Rs. 28 from the deori of Amirunnissa
Begum.15
If this was true of slave men and eunuchs, it was also true of female slaves. Pilgrimage,
as well as service at shrines and tombs associated with erstwhile masters, were important to
concubines and other slaves. However, since the issue of female service at temples attracted
special attention and vilification in the twentieth century, attempts to investigate the interlinkage
between manumission and service to a higher god run the risk of crude simplifications.
Nevertheless, where female slaves were themselves ‘gifted’ to a god, there too the metaphor
remained that of affinity and marriage. Female slaves were described as having been ‘married’ to
the deity. This phenomenon, well studied now by Marglin and others,16 appears to have been
common to the Muslim syncretic tradition in inner Bengal as well. At least all the sukristchhokris
who were rounded up in the course of an investigation into ‘mock marriages’ in 1872, proclaimed
that they had been married to Gazee Meah, a bamboo pole worshipped as a deity in Bankura: this
marriage, they believed, removed them from mortal machinations. ‘It would be a great sin for us
to m any a man’, as one of them put it.17 Celibacy, and alms-collecting, that such ceremonies
committed the seven - and- eleven - year -olds to, appeared to have called forth special enactments
to stop such marriages. Yet like so many other colonial gestures of this kind, such proclamations
missed the more fundamental changes occurring in the metaphysical and religious worlds of many
men and women in Bengal from the seventies. That was part of the story of classicisation of Islam
in Bengal, a process wherein the moral imperatives of Quranic prescription about the manumission
15Amir Ali Khan to AGG Maj. Gen. F.V.Raper, 12 July 1844, MNLR, II, p. 495.
16F. A. Marglin, Wives o f the God-King: the Rituals o f the Devadasis o f Puri (Delhi, 1985); Janaki Nair,
‘The Devadasis, Dharma and the State’, EPW, 29, 50, 1994, pp. 3157-67.
17Cited in Report by W.L.F. Robinson, Commsr. of Rajshahi, 2 Aug. 1872, WBSA, Judcl., Oct. 1872,
nos. 95-97.
261
of slaves, the proscription of putting female slaves to work as prostitutes for the profit of their
holders, and advice to poor men to marry such freed female slaves was propagated by itinerant
and poor maulvis and translated into the everyday actions of small knots of rural Musalmans. By
the end of the nineteenth century, the movement to ‘purify’ Islam of deviations from Quranic law
impinged centrally on the definition of nikah. All these re-definitions were critical particularly for
female slaves. For instance, in 1906, Maulvi Samiruddin had preached that ‘the practice of Hindu
zamindars of keeping prostitutes in the bazars was a bad one, and someone had retorted that the
prostitutes were all Muhammadans. He had replied that disgrace should be removed from the
Muhammadan community, and the women should be taken away and married’.18 A spate of
manumissions, without payment of the customary ransom, appear to have occurred, which colonial
officials reported as the actions of Tow-class Muhammadans’ removing ( ‘took away’) and forcibly
releasing Muhammadan ‘servants’ from their Hindu masters, including ‘prostitutes’ from the hat
of the taluqdars of many sub-divisions of Bengal, like Mymensingh, Bakarganj, Rangpur, Or as
in Jamalpur in April 1907, buildings that encapsulated all aspects of a political economy based on
female slave-use and hire, the nachghars (halls of dance) itself, were demolished at fairs (melas)
and bazars belonging to various under-tenants and zamindars. However, since many of the latter
had also begun to dominate the institutions of the police and the judiciary, these forcible
manumissions increasingly became part and parcel of the growth of communal and nationalist
politics in Eastern India through the stereotype of the ‘rapacious’ Muslim male budmash.19 Such
contests were heir to a long tradition of slave-enticement cases of the eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries. Though framed as contests between volition (of the female) and coercion (by males),
they were principally about belonging, about identity, and about status. Did a slave-woman belong
with, or did she belong to, the newly emergent fundamentalist religious and corporate bodies?
Obliterating the differences in law had left these issues to be resolved elsewhere - in ritual
observances, in naming practices, in behavioural and sartorial symbols. While many slave wives,
concubines and prostitutes embraced these signs as markers of belonging within, perhaps in the
acute consciousness of the absence of blood-related affiliations in the face of a renewed arrogance
around pedigree, to the lawyers, administrators, ethnologists and other hegemons policing the
boundaries, these attempts were always suspect - unless premised upon acknowledgements of their
belonging ‘to’. On these terms, such hegemons had no problem in exacting obedience to the new
18Magt. of Mymensingh to Commr., Dacca Divn., 1 June 1906, in L/P&J/6/826, file 3081, Enclosure
1.
19Pradip K. Datta, ‘ ‘Dying Hindus’: the Production of Hindu Communal Common Sense in Early 20th
Century Bengal’, EPW, 25, 1993, pp. 1305-19; Ritu Menon, ‘Recovery, Rupture, Resistance: Indian State
and Abduction of Women During Partition’, EPW, 28, 27, 1993, pp. WS2-WS11 and Urvashi Butalia,
‘Community, State and Gender: On Women’s Agency During Partition’, ibid., pp. WS12-WS24.
262
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The Bengali text refers to this document as bikrayapatram (document of sale), and to the
subject of the transaction as amar kharida ek chhokra naam dowlut boyesh noye bochhor,
specifying age, name, and the mode in which the seller had acquired the slave. The
Bengali text also refers to the volition of the seller, as well as a guarantee on behalf of the
seller’s heirs and descendants : ami apon khosh bechai tomar sthane nogod dokkhino arkat
at taka paiya bikroye korilam... ei chhokrar shohit amar kono dawa nai... ami o amar
waris keho dawares ebong dawadar... ei bayane ... (I have voluntarily sold to you for the
ready money of eight Arcot Rupees... relinquishing all claims upon this slave/chhokra...
on behalf of my self and my heirs and successors hereafter)
14 March, 1774 John Baptiste Durbaree & Betty, for D urbaree sold the boy to Betty.
enticing away and selling D urbaree to receive 5 Corah and return
no. 363. the plaintiff’s slave-boy. the boy.
12 April, 1774 Sunker Goupie, Ramkishore and Issery found guilty, ordered to receive
no. 408 Isserry, for enticing away 10 ‘shoes’, G oupee and Ram kishore
the ptff.’s slave-girl. not guilty.
20 April, 1774 Johanna Bockull, for enticing the Not guilty. The Girl went away o f
no. 422. pltff’s slave-girl. herself. O rdered she receive 10 ‘latts’.
9 May, 1774 R am cum ar Ariff, for enticing G olaf Proved that A riff enticed away Golaf,
no. 460. the slave-girl. ordered to be punished with 30 latts
round the Town & repay what Jewels
were in G olaf’s possession. G olaf to
receive 10 latts.
12 June, 1774 M ahm ud W arris Chanulla & Sunulla, for C hunulla to be confined 10 days,
no. 530. enticing way the pltff’s Sunulla to receive 10 latts.
slave-girl.
29 June, 1774 Totteram & Salemon M ohon Singh, for To be punished with 5 ‘C habucks’ and
no. 556. running away with the to return the girl in 2 days.
pltff’s slave-girl.
20 July, 1774 T aram unny Neerusam , for taking the T he girl belongs to the defendant.
no. 603. p ltff s slave-girl. Ordered that he give the plaintiff 10
Rupees & the jew els the girl had.
24 July, 1774 Syabcawn Callee, for enticing away G uilty- to be punished with 15 Rattans.
no. 612. p ltff’s slave-girl.
23 Aug., 1774 Mr. Petrie Joanna & Emamdie, for E m am die to be punished with 15
no. 688. enticing away pltff’s Rattans round the town, Joana to be
slave-girl confined in Bridew ell during the p ltf f s
pleasure.
10 Sept., 1774 Treasa Suda Cawn, for enticing To be punished with 5 Rattans.
no. 720. away p ltff’s slave-girl.
29 Oct., 1774 Chandah Ram narain doss, for Proved the Girls is the D efendant’s
no. 802. taking the pltff’s slave- Property. Ordered he have them.
girls.
31 Oct., 1774 Totteram Cunchee, for taking away It appears the slave girls belong to the
no. 806. the pltff’s slave-girls. p ltff s wife. O rdered the Defendant to
return the slave girls to the pltff. as his
w ife’s property.
6 Dec., 1774 Daniel Empson Tom, for enticing away N ot guilty. It appears the Girl was
no. 835. p ltf f s slave-girl. running away o f her own accord.
O rdered her 3 lashes.
28 Dec., 1774 Goverdon Tagoor. Ramdoss & Biragees, for It appears that 5 Bairagues w ere kept
no. 858. enticing away pltff’s in the p ltff s house in his absence by
slave-girl with jew els p ltff s m other & the defdt. was security
and goods. for them, that they ran away with the
p ltff s Girl & goods. Ordered the defdt.
to produce the offenders.
29 Dec., 1774 A nnoo Tibboo & Suruboy, for Not guilty - appears that Tibboo is the
no. 862. enticing away pltff’s p ltf f s slave, and that Saruboi is her
slave-girl, godfather therefore acquit him; ordered
the pltff. to produce the slavery paper
in w hich have no m ention o f her name
or those o f her Father and m other- She
is ordered to return to her godfather
and rem ain a free woman.
Date and Prosecutor Defendant and charge Sentence by the Faujdari Court
Number
Jan. 1774, Jum una M ogalishram , for taking Proved that the pltff. sold the child to the defdt.-
no.250 her son. ordered that the defdt. shall have the boy.
4 March, Sookm oy Anundee, for endeavouring Proved that the pltff. is defdt.’s slave
no. 344 to m ake the pltff. a slave
31 March, Conchunni M oias, for m aking the Proved that pltff. is defdt.’s slave-ordered to go
no. 398 pltff. a slave to his house.
31 March, Tattoo Zettoo, for endeavouring to T he pltff. is not the defdt.’s slave to go where he
no. 400 m ake the pltff. a slave. pleases.
3 Aug., T om D uneego, for m aking the T he pltff. is the defdt.’s slave, ordered to go to
no. 636 pltff. a slave his master.
6 Aug., C am m oo Peggy, for taking the The wom an is the defdt.’s slave & not the pltff.’s
no. 649 pltff.’s wife. wife. Ordered that the defdt. have her.
7 Sept., Caundoo Sorphon, for not staying in The defdt. was the pltff.’s slave but agreed with
no. 713 the pltff.’s house. her m aster to pay him Rs. 200 for her liberty to
which Bargain he also agreed. Ordered to pay
Rs. 200 and she to have her liberty.
26 Oct., Sonam uckee Rotton slave, for running The defdt. is not the pltff.'s slave. Ordered the
no. 796 away. pltff. to pay Rs. 26 to defdt. and go where she
pleases.
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Appendix III
Section I.
Evidence of a co-relation between real estate mentioned in wills of raurs and social geography
of northern parts of Calcutta comprising Sections E and F under Act XIV:
1828- L/AG/34/29/42,1, pp. 81-92: Doorgamoney Raur leaves two cottahs of pottah land
with house in Banstolla Gully, Burrabazar, as repayment of debt of 1500 rupees, to
Juggernath Prasad Mullick.
Ditto, pp. 105-112: Radamoney Raur leaves upper roomed brick built house with land
at Banstolla Gully, formerly belonging to Cossinath Mullick, to Deby Singh jemadar and
his adopted son, Gopal Singh.
1840- L/AG/34/29/62, II, pp. 115-20: Rausmoney Raur leaves two ‘Upper-roomed brick
built houses situated at Sicdarparah Street, no. 18 together with three cottahs of land’ and
a garden at Bagmaree containing four biggahs to Beerchund Dutt, Collypershaud Dass and
Beelasmoney Raur.
1844- L/AG/34/29/69, I, pp.337-343: Surno Raur who rented a house in Baurtolla [sic]
Street in Mechuabazar leaves her jewels and household furniture to Juddonauth Mundle
‘by whom I have been maintained and protected’.
Ditto, I, pp. 369-78: Woodoycomaree Bewah leaves ‘my Puckah two storied homestead,
containing two cottahs of land under pottah in my own name, situate in Haurkattah Gully’,
Shampukur thana, to Neelambor Bandopadhyay, who is to act in concert with Daibnarain
Mookhopadhyaya of Bhowanipur.
Ditto, pt. II, pp.385-390: Fulmoney Raur leaves ‘dwelling homestead’ within Jorasanko,
bounded by Chitpur Road on the east, and by Purnochondro Paul’s house on the west, to
Baineemadhob Kor Baboojee.
Ditto, II, pp.395-400: Puddo Raur leaves ‘upper roomed brick built house with three
Cottahs of land... situate at Chorebagan’ to Govindohurry Burrat, mooktar in the service
of Coomar Krishnenath Roy, and another upper roomed brick built house in the same
place to Hurrinath Burrat, the son of Gobindohurry, and his heirs.
1847- L/AG/34/29/76, III, pp. 181-86: Golokmoney Raur leaves her ‘batee or homestead’
at Pauchy Dhobani Gully, mortgaged with Ramchondro Mullick.
1857- L/AG/34/29/96, IV, pp.7-14: Rajcomaree Raur, leaves house purchased in ‘my own
275
Section II.
Abstract o f the More Important Rules and Regulations o f the Bengal Military Orphans Society
(Calcutta, 1846).
An Abstract o f the Regulations Enacted fo r the Administration o f the Police and Criminal Justice
in the Provinces o f Bengal, Bihar and Orissa (ed. W. Blunt and H. Shakespear, Calcutta, 1824).
Calendar o f Persian Correspondence, (11 vols., Calcutta, 1911 - New Delhi, 1953).
Circular Orders Passed by the Nizamut Adalut and Communicated to the Courts o f Circuit &
Zillah & City Magistrates by the Register o f that Court (2 vols., Calcutta, 1829 - 1838).
Circular Orders Passed by the Nizamut Adalut from 1796 to 1853 (ed. J. Carrau, Calcutta, 1855).
Constructions by the Courts o f the Sudder Dewanny and the Nizamut Adawlut o f the Regulations
and Laws fo r the Civil Government o f the Whole o f the Territories under the Presidency o f Fort
William in Bengal (2 vols., Calcutta, 1839-43).
Indian Records with a Commercial View o f the Relations Between the British Government & the
Nawabs Nazim o f Bengal Behar and Orissa (first ed. 1870, reprint, Delhi, 1985.
278
List o f the Private Secretaries to the Governors-General and Viceroys from 1774 to 1908
(Calcutta, 1908).
Papers relating to East India Affairs: Regulations passed between 1810 and 1824 (London, 1825).
Press List o f Ancient Records o f the Government o f India in the Public Department.
Records o f the Government o f Bengal: The Letter Copy Books o f the Resident at the Durbar at
Murshidabad, 1769-1776 (ed. Walter K. Firminger, 3 vols., Calcutta, 1919).
Report on Cases Decided in the Sudder Dewanny Adawlut (Calcutta, 1827 - 1865).
Selections from Unpublished Records o f Government fo r the years 1748-1767 (ed. J. Long,
Calcutta, 1869).
Selection from the Indian Despatches, Memoranda Scca. o f the Duke o f Wellington (ed. S. J.
Owen, Clarendon Press, 1880).
Selections from the State Papers o f the Governors-General o f India (ed. G.Forrest, Oxford, Basil
Blackwell, 1980).
Selections from, the Records o f the Bombay Government: Sketches o f the Native States (Bombay,
1856).
Selections from the Satara Rajas and Peshwas Diaries (ed. G. C. Vad and K. B. Marathe, Pune,
1902-1911).
The Indian Penal Code as Originally Framed in 1837 (Reprint, Madras 1888).
Murshidabad: Letters Received, 1789-1803. (ed. S. K. Bose and A. Mitra, Calcutta, 1958).
Murshidabad Nizamut: Letters Received, pt. I, 1793-1856. (ed. J. Datta Gupta and S. K.
Bose, Calcutta, 1964).
Murshidabad Nizamut: Letters Issued, pt. I, 1802-1831. (ed. J. Datta Gupta and S. K.
Bose, Calcutta, 1965).
Murshidabad Nizamut: Letters Issued, pt. II. 1834-1872. (ed. J. Datta Gupta and S. K.
279
Murshidabad Nizamut: Letters Received, pt. II. 1807-1855. (ed. J. Datta Gupta and S. K.
Bose, Calcutta, 1969).
Parliamentary Papers:
1828 (House of Commons), vol. 4, no. 125: Slavery in India: Correspondence and abstract
of Regulations from 1772.
1834 (House of Commons), vol. 44, no. 128: Slavery in India: Correspondence.
1837-38 (House of Commons), vol. 51, no. 697: Slave Trade: Correspondence, Orders,
Regulations and Proceedings thereon, 1829-36.
1841 (House of Commons), vol. 28, no. 262: Slavery in India: Report of the Law
Commissioners with Appendix.
1859 (House of Commons), vol. 5, no. C.2515: Organisation of the Indian Army: Report
of the Peel Commission with Evidence and Appendix.
1859 (House of Commons), vol. 17, no. 88: Returns of the number of officers and men
serving in India 1800-1858.
1860 (House of Commons), vol. 50,no. 330: Organisation of HM European Forces serving
in India: Reports of Mr. Hammack on the Comparative Cost of Line and Local Armies
and by Political and Military Committee of the Council of India.
1860 (House of Lords) Session II, no. 272: Judicial Despatch to India on the Leasing Out
of Girls.
1863 (House of Commons), vol. 19, C. 3184: Sanitary State of the Army in India: Report
of Commissioners with Precis of Evidence.
1883 (House of Commons), vol. 50, no. 200: Contagious Diseases (repeal of the Act):
Correspondence.
1888 (House of Commons), vol. 77, no. 158: Contagious Diseases and Cantonment Acts:
Regulations and Correspondence.
1888 (House of Commons), vol. 77, no. 180: Contagious Diseases and Cantonment Acts
and Regulations: Despatch from Secretary of State.
1888 (House of Commons), vol. 77, no. 197: Contagious Diseases: Circular Memorandum
280
1890 (House of Commons), vol. 54, no. 241: Cantonments Act, 1889.
1893-94 (House of Commons) vol. 64, no. C.7148: Report of the Committee appointed
to inquire into Rules, Regulations Practice in Indian Cantonments with regard to
prostitution.
1893-4 (House of Commons) vol. 64, no. C.7217: Cantonment Act and Regulations:
Correspondence.
Itihas Sangraha
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Dissertations
Singha, Radhika ‘"A Despotism of Law": British Criminal Justice and Public Authority in North
India’, University of Cambridge, 1990.