Dr. Ram Prasath Manohar IAS

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Dr. Ram

Study Materials

General Studies - Modern History

Anglo–Maratha Wars (1775–1818)

Overview

  • A series of three wars between the British East India Company and the Maratha Confederacy
  • Time period: 1775–1818
  • Resulted in:
    • Collapse of the Maratha Empire
    • British paramountcy in India
  • Root cause: Maratha internal divisions and British expansionist ambitions

Reasons for the Anglo–Maratha Wars

  • Aftermath of the Third Battle of Panipat (1761) → weakened Maratha unity
  • Succession disputes within Peshwaship
  • Confederate nature of Maratha polity (Gaekwad, Bhonsle, Holkar, Sindhia, Peshwa)
  • British ambition to replicate Bengal-type dominance in western India
  • Treaty politics & alliances were exploited by the British
  • Pindari problem (especially the Third War)

Rise & Weakening of Peshwaship

  • Peshwa evolved from PM to de facto ruler
  • Balaji Vishwanath → made Peshwaship hereditary
  • Bajirao I → expanded Maratha power via confederacy
  • Defeat at Panipat (1761) → weakened central control
  • Death of Madhavrao I (1772) → factionalism intensified

Maratha Confederacy

  • Gaekwad – Baroda
  • Bhonsle – Nagpur
  • Holkar – Indore
  • Sindhia – Gwalior
  • Peshwa – Poona

First Anglo–Maratha War (1775–1782)

Cause

  • Succession dispute after the death of Madhavrao I
  • Raghunathrao vs Barabhai Council (Nana Phadnavis)
  • Treaty of Surat (1775) → British support to Raghunathrao

Important Treaties

  • Treaty of Surat (1775)
    • Salsette & Bassein ceded to the British
  • Treaty of Purandar (1776)
    • Raghunathrao pensioned
  • Treaty of Wadgaon (1779)
    • British defeat by Mahadji Sindhia
  • Treaty of Salbai (1782) → Final settlement

Treaty of Salbai

  • Salsette was retained by the British
  • Bassein restored to the Marathas
  • The British withdraw support from Raghunathrao
  • No European power (except the British) was to be supported by the Peshwa
  • Mahadji Sindhia → guarantor

Outcome

  • Maratha political victory
  • British diplomatic learning
  • 20 years of peace between the Marathas & British

Second Anglo–Maratha War (1803–1805)

Cause

  • Ineffective rule of Bajirao II
  • Murder of Vithuji Holkar
  • Defeat of Peshwa at Hadapsar (1802) by Holkar

Treaty of Bassein (1802)

  • Peshwa accepted the Subsidiary Alliance
  • British troops stationed at Poona
  • Surat ceded
  • Chauth claims on Nizam abandoned
  • External relations controlled by the British

Course

  • Sindhia & Bhonsle resisted → defeated
  • Holkar’s coalition attempt failed

Outcome

  • Marathas reduced to British vassals
  • British strategic dominance strengthened

Third Anglo–Maratha War (1817–1818)

Causes

  • Lord Hastings’ imperial policy
  • Pindari menace
  • Resentment against the Treaty of Bassein
  • End of Company monopoly (Charter Act, 1813)

Course

  • Peshwa attacked the British Residency at Poona
  • Battles:
    • Khirki – Peshwa
    • Sitabuldi – Bhonsle
    • Mahidpur – Holkar

Key Treaties

  • Treaty of Poona (1817) – Peshwa
  • Treaty of Gwalior (1817) – Sindhia
  • Treaty of Mandasor (1818) – Holkar

Outcome

  • Peshwaship abolished
  • Bajirao II pensioned at Bithur
  • The Maratha Confederacy dissolved
  • Satara State was formed under Pratap Singh

Impact of Anglo–Maratha Wars

  • End of Maratha political dominance
  • The British emerged as the supreme power in India
  • Annexation of Pune, Nagpur, and Central India
  • Traditional Maratha nobility weakened
  • Expansion of British administrative control
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