Key Points
|
How it began |
Targets of attack |
Spread and communication |
Leadership |
Popular participation |
|
Mutinies began with signals like firing of evening guns or sounding of bugles |
Bell of arms, treasury and government buildings were seized |
News of revolt travelled quickly from one cantonment to another |
Initial leadership by sepoys |
Ordinary people gradually joined the uprising |
|
Sepoys attacked jails, courts, record rooms and telegraph offices |
British officials and symbols of authority were attacked |
Sepoys sent messengers and letters between regiments |
Mughal emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar accepted symbolic leadership |
Peasants, artisans and townspeople participated |
|
Proclamations were issued in Hindi, Urdu and Persian |
Moneylenders and rich Indians allied with British were targeted |
Cantonments showed similar patterns due to coordination |
Local leaders like Rani Lakshmi Bai and Kunwar Singh emerged |
Rebels attacked moneylenders’ houses and looted them |
|
Revolt turned violent as British control collapsed |
British residences were looted and destroyed |
Religious and social networks helped spread ideas |
Religious leaders and fakirs mobilised people |
Revolt became a mass rebellion in towns and villages |
|
Mutiny quickly transformed into a widespread rebellion |
All symbols of colonial rule became targets |
Panchayats and collective decision-making played a role |
Leadership varied from region to region |
Unity of Hindus and Muslims was emphasised |
|
Cause/Issue |
British Action |
Impact on Awadh |
Result/Reaction |
|
Annexation of Awadh (1856) |
Awadh was annexed by the British |
Nawab Wajid Ali Shah was removed from power |
Widespread anger and resentment among the people |
|
Subsidiary Alliance |
British troops were stationed in Awadh |
Authority of the Nawab was reduced |
Talukdars and chiefs opposed British rule |
|
Dispossession of Talukdars |
Talukdars were disarmed and their forts destroyed |
Traditional rural power structure collapsed |
Talukdars joined and supported the revolt |
|
High Revenue Demand |
Summary Settlement was introduced |
Peasants faced heavy tax burden |
Peasants participated actively in the revolt |
|
Sepoy–Peasant Connection |
Grievances of sepoys were ignored |
Discontent spread from villages to army lines |
Awadh became a major centre of the 1857 revolt |
|
Rebel Demand/Idea |
Explanation |
Evidence/Examples |
|
Unity of Hindus and Muslims |
Rebels appealed to people of all castes and religions to unite against British rule and fight together. |
Proclamations issued in the name of both Hindu and Muslim symbols; Azamgarh Proclamation (1857). |
|
End of British Rule |
The British were seen as oppressive rulers who had broken treaties and annexed Indian kingdoms unjustly. |
Use of the term firangi raj; condemnation of annexations and broken promises. |
|
Protection of Religion and Culture |
Rebels feared that the British wanted to destroy Indian religions and convert people to Christianity. |
Rumours about religious interference; proclamations urging people to protect faith and traditions. |
|
Restoration of Traditional Order |
Rebels wanted to restore the pre-British social and political system, especially the Mughal authority. |
Appeal to Bahadur Shah Zafar; revival of Mughal symbols and court culture. |
|
Removal of Economic Oppression |
British land revenue systems and foreign trade had ruined peasants, artisans, and landlords. Rebels wanted relief from these policies. |
Attacks on moneylenders, burning of account books, protests against revenue settlements. |
|
British Actions |
Laws and Measures Used |
Areas Affected |
Impact on Rebels and People |
Result |
|
Declaration of martial law |
Ordinary laws and trials were suspended |
North India |
Suspected rebels were punished without legal trials |
Fear and complete breakdown of civil rights |
|
Passing of special Acts (May–June 1857) |
Death penalty made the only punishment |
Rebel-controlled regions |
Severe punishments discouraged open resistance |
Brutal suppression of rebellion |
|
Large-scale military operations |
Troops sent from Britain and Punjab |
Delhi, Awadh, Gangetic plain |
Heavy fighting, loss of lives on both sides |
Gradual British military control |
|
Two-pronged attack strategy |
Advance from Calcutta and Punjab |
Delhi and surrounding regions |
Rebels surrounded and isolated |
Fall of Delhi in September 1857 |
|
Divide-and-rule tactics |
Rewards to loyal landholders |
Uttar Pradesh and Awadh |
Unity between peasants and landlords broken |
British authority re-established |
|
Type of Image |
Who Created It |
What Is Shown |
Message/Purpose |
|
Paintings celebrating British heroes |
British artists |
British officers rescuing Europeans, defeating rebels |
To glorify British victory and portray them as saviours |
|
Images of women and children |
British painters |
Helpless English women and children under threat |
To evoke sympathy and justify harsh repression |
|
Cartoons and allegorical images |
British newspapers and journals |
Rebels shown as violent, savage, and cruel |
To spread fear and support revenge against rebels |
|
Execution scenes |
British illustrated magazines |
Public hangings and blowing rebels from guns |
To perform terror and warn people against rebellion |
|
Nationalist images (later period) |
Indian artists and writers |
Leaders like Rani Lakshmi Bai as brave warriors |
To inspire nationalism and remember the revolt as heroic |
