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Robert Clive

Robert Clive, 1st Baron Clive, KB, FRS (29 September 1725 – 22 November 1774), also known as Clive of India,[1][2][3] was the first British Governor of the Bengal Presidency. Clive has been widely credited for laying the foundation of the British East India Company rule in Bengal.[4][5][6][7][8][9] He began as a writer (the term used then in India for an office clerk) for the East India Company (EIC) in 1744 and established Company rule in Bengal by winning the Battle of Plassey in 1757.[10] In return for supporting the Nawab Mir Jafar as ruler of Bengal, Clive was granted a jagir of £30,000 (equivalent to £4,300,000 in 2021) per year which was the rent the EIC would otherwise pay to the Nawab for their tax-farming concession. When Clive left India[when?] he had a fortune of £180,000 (equivalent to £25,700,000 in 2021) which he remitted through the Dutch East India Company.[11]

Robert Clive
Lord Clive in military uniform. The Battle of Plassey is shown behind him.
By Nathaniel Dance. National Portrait Gallery, London.
Governor of the Presidency of Fort William
In office
1757–1760
Preceded byRoger Drake
as President
Succeeded byHenry Vansittart
In office
1764–1767
Preceded byHenry Vansittart
Succeeded byHarry Verelst
Personal details
Born(1725-09-29)29 September 1725
Styche Hall, Market Drayton, Shropshire, England
Died22 November 1774(1774-11-22) (aged 49)
Berkeley Square, Westminster, London
Spouse
(m. 1753)
Children9, including Edward
Alma materMerchant Taylors' School
NicknameClive of India
Military service
Branch/serviceBengal Army
Years of service1746–1774
RankMajor-general
UnitBritish East India Company
CommandsCommander-in-Chief of India
Battles/warsWar of the Austrian Succession
Battle of Madras
Siege of Cuddalore
Siege of Pondicherry
Tanjore Expedition
Second Carnatic War
Siege of Trichinopoly
Siege of Arcot
Battle of Arnee
Battle of Chingleput
Seven Years' War
Battle of Vijaydurg
Recapture of Calcutta
Battle of Chandannagar
Battle of Plassey
Map of India in 1765, showing the territory administered by the East India Company (pink): Bengal and the Northern Circars, during the time of Clive.

Blocking impending French mastery of India, Clive improvised a 1751 military expedition that ultimately enabled the EIC to adopt the French strategy of indirect rule via puppet government. Hired by the EIC to return (1755) a second time to India, Clive conspired to secure the company's trade interests by overthrowing the ruler of Bengal, the richest state in India. Back in England from 1760 to 1765, he used the wealth accumulated from India to secure (1762) an Irish barony from the then Whig PM, Thomas Pelham-Holles, 1st Duke of Newcastle, and a seat for himself in Parliament, via Henry Herbert, 1st Earl of Powis, representing the Whigs in Shrewsbury, Shropshire (1761–1774), as he had previously in Mitchell, Cornwall (1754–1755).[12][13]

Clive's actions on behalf of the EIC have made him one of Britain's most controversial colonial figures. His achievements included checking French imperialist ambitions on the Coromandel Coast and establishing EIC control over Bengal, thereby furthering the establishment of the British Raj, though he worked only as an agent of the East India Company, not of the British government. Vilified by his political rivals in Britain, he went on trial (1772 and 1773) before Parliament, where he was absolved from every charge. Historians have criticised Clive's management of Bengal during his tenure with the EIC and his responsibility in contributing to the Great Bengal Famine of 1770, which historians now estimate resulted in the deaths of between seven and ten million people.

Early life

Robert Clive was born at Styche, the Clive family estate, near Market Drayton in Shropshire, on 29 September 1725 to Richard Clive and Rebecca (née Gaskell) Clive.[14] The family had held the small estate since the time of Henry VII and had a lengthy history of public service: members of the family included a Chancellor of the Exchequer of Ireland under Henry VIII, and a member of the Long Parliament. Robert's father, who supplemented the estate's modest income by practising as a lawyer, also served in Parliament for many years, representing Montgomeryshire.[15] Robert was their eldest son of thirteen children; he had seven sisters and five brothers, six of whom died in infancy.[16]

 
St Mary's in Market Drayton, whose tower Clive is reputed to have climbed

Clive's father was known to have a temper, which the boy apparently inherited. For reasons that are unknown, Clive was sent to live with his mother's sister in Manchester while still a toddler. The site is now Hope Hospital. Biographer Robert Harvey suggests that this move was made because Clive's father was busy in London trying to provide for the family.[17] Daniel Bayley, the sister's husband, reported that the boy was "out of measure addicted to fighting".[18][19] He was a regular troublemaker in the schools to which he was sent.[20] When he was older he and a gang of teenagers established a protection racket that vandalised the shops of uncooperative merchants in Market Drayton. Clive also exhibited fearlessness at an early age. He is reputed to have climbed the tower of St Mary's Parish Church in Market Drayton and perched on a gargoyle, frightening those down below.[21]

When Clive was nine his aunt died, and, after a brief stint in his father's cramped London quarters, he returned to Shropshire. There he attended the Market Drayton Grammar School, where his unruly behaviour (and an improvement in the family's fortunes) prompted his father to send him to Merchant Taylors' School in London. His bad behaviour continued, and he was then sent to a trade school in Hertfordshire to complete a basic education.[16] Despite his early lack of scholarship, in his later years he devoted himself to improving his education. He eventually developed a distinctive writing style, and a speech in the House of Commons was described by William Pitt as the most eloquent he had ever heard.[15]

First journey to India (1744–1753)

 
Clive House at Fort St. George, Chennai
 
Plaque at Clive House

In 1744 Clive's father acquired for him a position as a "factor" or company agent in the service of the East India Company, and Clive set sail for India. After running aground on the coast of Brazil, his ship was detained for nine months while repairs were completed. This enabled him to learn some Portuguese,[22] one of the several languages then in use in south India because of the Portuguese centre at Goa. At this time the East India Company had a small settlement at Fort St. George near the village of Madraspatnam, later Madras, now the major Indian metropolis of Chennai,[23] in addition to others at Calcutta, Bombay, and Cuddalore.[24] Clive arrived at Fort St. George in June 1744, and spent the next two years working as little more than a glorified assistant shopkeeper, tallying books and arguing with suppliers of the East India Company over the quality and quantity of their wares. He was given access to the governor's library, where he became a prolific reader.[25]

Political situation in south India

The India Clive arrived in was divided into a number of successor states to the Mughal Empire. Over the forty years since the death of the Emperor Aurangzeb in 1707, the power of the emperor had gradually fallen into the hands of his provincial viceroys or Subahdars. The dominant rulers on the Coromandel Coast were the Nizam of Hyderabad, Asaf Jah I, and the Nawab of the Carnatic, Anwaruddin Muhammed Khan. The Nawab nominally owed fealty to the nizam, but in many respects acted independently. Fort St. George and the French trading post at Pondicherry were both located in the Nawab's territory.[26]

The relationship between the Europeans in India was influenced by a series of wars and treaties in Europe, and by competing commercial rivalry for trade on the subcontinent. Through the 17th and early 18th centuries, the French, Dutch, Portuguese, and British had vied for control of various trading posts, and for trading rights and favour with local Indian rulers. The European merchant companies raised bodies of troops to protect their commercial interests and latterly to influence local politics to their advantage. Military power was rapidly becoming as important as commercial acumen in securing India's valuable trade, and increasingly it was used to appropriate territory and to collect land revenue.[27]

First Carnatic War

 
Portrait by Charles Clive, c. 1764

In 1720 France effectively nationalised the French East India Company, and began using it to expand its imperial interests. This became a source of conflict with the British in India with the entry of Britain into the War of the Austrian Succession in 1744.[24] The Indian theatre of the conflict is also known as the First Carnatic War, referring to the Carnatic region on the southeast coast of India. Hostilities in India began with a British naval attack on a French fleet in 1745, which led the French Governor-General Dupleix to request additional forces.[28] On 4 September 1746, Madras was attacked by French forces led by La Bourdonnais. After several days of bombardment the British surrendered and the French entered the city.[29] The British leadership was taken prisoner and sent to Pondicherry. It was originally agreed that the town would be restored to the British after negotiation but this was opposed by Dupleix, who sought to annex Madras to French holdings.[30] The remaining British residents were asked to take an oath promising not to take up arms against the French; Clive and a handful of others refused, and were kept under weak guard as the French prepared to destroy the fort. Disguising themselves as natives, Clive and three others eluded their inattentive sentry, slipped out of the fort, and made their way to Fort St. David (the British post at Cuddalore), some 50 miles (80 km) to the south.[31][32] Upon his arrival, Clive decided to enlist in the Company army rather than remain idle; in the hierarchy of the company, this was seen as a step down.[33] Clive was, however, recognised for his contribution in the defence of Fort St. David, where the French assault on 11 March 1747 was repulsed with the assistance of the Nawab of the Carnatic, and was given a commission as ensign.[34]

In the conflict, Clive's bravery came to the attention of Major Stringer Lawrence, who arrived in 1748 to take command of the British troops at Fort St. David.[34] During the 1748 Siege of Pondicherry Clive distinguished himself in successfully defending a trench against a French sortie: one witness of the action wrote Clive's "platoon, animated by his exhortation, fired again with new courage and great vivacity upon the enemy."[35] The siege was lifted in October 1748 with the arrival of the monsoons, but the war came to a conclusion with the arrival in December of news of the Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle. Madras was returned to the British as part of the peace agreement in early 1749.[36]

Tanjore expedition

The end of the war between France and Britain did not, however, end hostilities in India. Even before news of the peace arrived in India, the British had sent an expedition to Tanjore on behalf of a claimant to its throne. This expedition, on which Clive, now promoted to lieutenant, served as a volunteer, was a disastrous failure. Monsoons ravaged the land forces, and the local support claimed by their client was not in evidence. The ignominious retreat of the British force (which lost its baggage train to the pursuing Tanjorean army while crossing a swollen river) was a blow to the British reputation.[37] Major Lawrence, seeking to recover British prestige, led the entire Madras garrison to Tanjore in response. At the fort of Devikottai on the Coleroon River the British force was confronted by the much larger Tanjorean army. Lawrence gave Clive command of 30 British soldiers and 700 sepoys, with orders to lead the assault on the fort. Clive led this force rapidly across the river and toward the fort, where the small British unit became separated from the sepoys and were enveloped by the Tanjorean cavalry. Clive was nearly cut down and the beachhead almost lost before reinforcements sent by Lawrence arrived to save the day. The daring move by Clive had an important consequence: the Tanjoreans abandoned the fort, which the British triumphantly occupied. The success prompted the Tanjorean rajah to open peace talks, which resulted in the British being awarded Devikottai and the costs of their expedition, and the British client was awarded a pension in exchange for renouncing his claim. Lawrence wrote of Clive's action that "he behaved in courage and in judgment much beyond what could be expected from his years."[38]

On the expedition's return the process of restoring Madras was completed. Company officials, concerned about the cost of the military, slashed its size, denying Clive a promotion to captain in the process. Lawrence procured for Clive a position as the commissary at Fort St. George, a potentially lucrative posting (its pay included commissions on all supply contracts).[39]

Second Carnatic War

The death of Asaf Jah I, the Nizam of Hyderabad, in 1748 sparked a struggle to succeed him that is known as the Second Carnatic War, which was also furthered by the expansionist interests of French Governor-General Dupleix. Dupleix had grasped from the first war that small numbers of disciplined European forces (and well-trained sepoys) could be used to tip balances of power between competing interests, and used this idea to greatly expand French influence in southern India. For many years he had been working to negotiate the release of Chanda Sahib, a longtime French ally who had at one time occupied the throne of Tanjore, and sought for himself the throne of the Carnatic. Chanda Sahib had been imprisoned by the Marathas in 1740; by 1748 he had been released from custody and was building an army at Satara.

Upon the death of Asaf Jah I, his son, Nasir Jung, seized the throne of Hyderabad, although Asaf Jah had designated as his successor his grandson, Muzaffar Jung. The grandson, who was ruler of Bijapur, fled west to join Chanda Sahib, whose army was also reinforced by French troops sent by Dupleix. These forces met those of Anwaruddin Mohammed Khan in the Battle of Ambur in August 1749; Anwaruddin was slain, and Chanda Sahib victorious entered the Carnatic capital, Arcot. Anwaruddin's son, Muhammed Ali Khan Wallajah, fled to Trichinopoly where he sought the protection and assistance of the British. In thanks for French assistance, the victors awarded them a number of villages, including territory nominally under British sway near Cuddalore and Madras. The British began sending additional arms to Muhammed Ali Khan Wallajah and sought to bring Nasir Jung into the fray to oppose Chanda Sahib. Nasir Jung came south to Gingee in 1750, where he requested and received a detachment of British troops. Chanda Sahib's forces advanced to meet them, but retreated after a brief long-range cannonade. Nasir Jung pursued, and was able to capture Arcot and his nephew, Muzaffar Jung. Following a series of fruitless negotiations and intrigues, Nasir Jung was assassinated by a rebellious soldier. This made Muzaffar Jung nizam and confirmed Chanda Sahib as Nawab of the Carnatic, both with French support. Dupleix was rewarded for French assistance with titled nobility and rule of the nizam's territories south of the Kistna River. His territories were "said to yield an annual revenue of over 350,000 rupees".[40]

Robert Clive was not in southern India for many of these events. In 1750 Clive was afflicted with some sort of nervous disorder, and was sent north to Bengal to recuperate.[41] It was there that he met and befriended Robert Orme, who became his principal chronicler and biographer. Clive returned to Madras in 1751.

Siege of Arcot

 
Clive at the siege of Arcot (1751)

In the summer of 1751, Chanda Sahib left Arcot to besiege Muhammed Ali Khan Wallajah at Trichinopoly. This placed the British at Madras in a precarious position, since the latter was the last of their major allies in the area. The British company's military was also in some disarray, as Stringer Lawrence had returned to England in 1750 over a pay dispute, and much of the company was apathetic about the dangers the expanding French influence and declining British influence posed. The weakness of the British military command was exposed when a force was sent from Madras to support Muhammad Ali at Trichinopoly, but its commander, a Swiss mercenary, refused to attack an outpost at Valikondapuram. Clive, who accompanied the force as commissary, was outraged at the decision to abandon the siege. He rode to Cuddalore, and offered his services to lead an attack on Arcot if he was given a captain's commission, arguing this would force Chanda Sahib to either abandon the siege of Trichinopoly or significantly reduce the force there.

Madras and Fort St. David could supply him with only 200 Europeans, 300 sepoys, and three small cannons; furthermore, of the eight officers who led them, four were civilians like Clive, and six had never been in action. Clive, hoping to surprise the small garrison at Arcot, made a series of forced marches, including some under extremely rainy conditions. Although he did fail to achieve surprise, the garrison, hearing of the march being made under such arduous conditions, opted to abandon the fort and town; Clive occupied Arcot without firing a shot.

The fort was a rambling structure with a dilapidated wall a mile long (too long for his small force to effectively man), and it was surrounded by the densely packed housing of the town. Its moat was shallow or dry, and some of its towers were insufficiently strong to use as artillery mounts. Clive did the best he could to prepare for the onslaught he expected. He made a foray against the fort's former garrison, encamped a few miles away, which had no significant effect. When the former garrison was reinforced by 2,000 men Chanda Sahib sent from Trichinopoly it reoccupied the town on 15 September. That night Clive led most of his force out of the fort and launched a surprise attack on the besiegers. Because of the darkness, the besiegers had no idea how large Clive's force was, and they fled in panic.

The next day Clive learned that heavy guns he had requested from Madras were approaching, so he sent most of his garrison out to escort them into the fort. That night the besiegers, who had spotted the movement, launched an attack on the fort. With only 70 men in the fort, Clive once again was able to disguise his small numbers, and sowed sufficient confusion against his enemies that multiple assaults against the fort were successfully repulsed. That morning the guns arrived, and Chanda Sahib's men again retreated.

Over the next week Clive and his men worked feverishly to improve the defences, aware that another 4,000 men, led by Chanda Sahib's son Raza Sahib and accompanied by a small contingent of French troops, was on its way. (Most of these troops came from Pondicherry, not Trichinopoly, and thus did not have the effect Clive desired of raising that siege.) Clive was forced to reduce his garrison to about 300 men, sending the rest of his force to Madras in case the enemy army decided to go there instead. Raza Sahib arrived at Arcot, and on 23 September occupied the town. That night Clive launched a daring attack against the French artillery, seeking to capture their guns. The attack very nearly succeeded in its object, but was reversed when enemy sniper fire tore into the small British force. Clive himself was targeted on more than one occasion; one man pulled him down and was shot dead. The affair was a serious blow: 15 of Clive's men were killed, and another 15 wounded.

Over the next month the besiegers slowly tightened their grips on the fort. Clive's men were subjected to frequent sniper attacks and disease, lowering the garrison size to 200. He was heartened to learn that some 6,000 Maratha forces had been convinced to come to his relief, but that they were awaiting payment before proceeding. The approach of this force prompted Raza Sahib to demand Clive's surrender; Clive's response was an immediate rejection, and he further insulted Raza Sahib by suggesting that he should reconsider sending his rabble of troops against a British-held position. The siege finally reached critical when Raza Sahib launched an all-out assault against the fort on 14 November. Clive's small force maintained its composure, and established killing fields outside the walls of the fort where the attackers sought to gain entry. Several hundred attackers were killed and many more wounded, while Clive's small force suffered only four British and two sepoy casualties.

The historian Thomas Babington Macaulay wrote a century later of the siege:

... the commander who had to conduct the defence ... was a young man of five and twenty, who had been bred as a book-keeper ... Clive ... had made his arrangements, and, exhausted by fatigue, had thrown himself on his bed. He was awakened by the alarm, and was instantly at his post ... After three desperate onsets, the besiegers retired behind the ditch. The struggle lasted about an hour ... the garrison lost only five or six men.[42]

His conduct during the siege made Clive famous in Europe. The Prime Minister William Pitt the Elder described Clive, who had received no formal military training whatsoever, as the "heaven-born general", endorsing the generous appreciation of his early commander, Major Lawrence. The Court of Directors of the East India Company voted him a sword worth £700, which he refused to receive unless Lawrence was similarly honoured.

Clive and Major Lawrence were able to bring the campaign to a successful conclusion. In 1754, the first of the provisional Carnatic treaties was signed between Thomas Saunders, the Company president at Madras, and Charles Godeheu, the French commander who displaced Dupleix. Mohammed Ali Khan Wallajah was recognised as Nawab, and both nations agreed to equalise their possessions. When war again broke out in 1756, during Clive's absence in Bengal, the French obtained successes in the northern districts, and it was Mohammed Ali Khan Wallajah's efforts which drove them from their settlements. The Treaty of Paris (1763) formally confirmed Mohammed Ali Khan Wallajah as Nawab of the Carnatic. It was a result of this action and the increased British influence that in 1765 a firman (decree) came from the Emperor of Delhi, recognising the British possessions in southern India.

Margaret Maskelyne had set out to find Clive who reportedly had fallen in love with her portrait. When she arrived Clive was a national hero. They were married at St. Mary's Church in (then) Madras on 18 February 1753.[43][44] They then returned to England.[43]

Clive also briefly sat as Member of Parliament for the Cornwall rotten borough of St Michael's, which then returned two Members, from 1754 to 1755.[45] He and his colleague, John Stephenson were later unseated by petition of their defeated opponents, Richard Hussey and Simon Luttrell.[46]

Second journey to India (1755–1760)

In July 1755, Clive returned to India[47] to act as deputy governor of Fort St. David at Cuddalore. He arrived after having lost a considerable fortune en route, as the Doddington, the lead ship of his convoy, was wrecked near Port Elizabeth, losing a chest of gold coins belonging to Clive worth £33,000 (equivalent to £5,500,000 in 2021). Nearly 250 years later in 1998, illegally salvaged coins from Clive's treasure chest were offered for sale,[48] and in 2002 a portion of the coins were given to the South African government after protracted legal wrangling.

Clive, now promoted to lieutenant-colonel in the British Army, took part in the capture of the fortress of Gheriah, a stronghold of the Maratha Admiral Tuloji Angre. The action was led by Admiral James Watson and the British had several ships available, some Royal troops and some Maratha allies. The overwhelming strength of the joint British and Maratha forces ensured that the battle was won with few losses. A fleet surgeon, Edward Ives, noted that Clive refused to take any part of the treasure divided among the victorious forces as was custom at the time.[49]

Fall and recapture of Calcutta (1756–57)

Following this action Clive headed to his post at Fort St. David and it was there he received news of twin disasters for the British. Early in 1756, Siraj Ud Daulah had succeeded his grandfather Alivardi Khan as Nawab of Bengal. In June, Clive received news that the new Nawab had attacked the British at Kasimbazar and shortly afterwards on 20 June he had taken the fort at Calcutta. The losses to the Company because of the fall of Calcutta were estimated by investors at £2,000,000 (equivalent to £320,000,000 in 2021).[citation needed] Those British who were captured were placed in a punishment cell which became infamous as the Black Hole of Calcutta. In stifling summer heat, it was reported that 43 of the 64 prisoners died as a result of suffocation or heat stroke.[50][51] While the Black Hole became infamous in Britain, it is debatable whether the Nawab was aware of the incident.[52]

By Christmas 1756, as no response had been received to diplomatic letters to the Nawab, Admiral Charles Watson and Clive were dispatched to attack the Nawab's army and remove him from Calcutta by force. Their first target was the fortress of Baj-Baj which Clive approached by land while Admiral Watson bombarded it from the sea. The fortress was quickly taken with minimal British casualties. Shortly afterwards, on 2 January 1757, Calcutta itself was taken with similar ease.[53]

Approximately a month later, on 3 February 1757, Clive encountered the army of the Nawab itself. For two days, the army marched past Clive's camp to take up a position east of Calcutta. Sir Eyre Coote, serving in the British forces, estimated the enemy's strength as 40,000 cavalry, 60,000 infantry and thirty cannon. Even allowing for overestimation this was considerably more than Clive's force of approximately 540 British infantry, 600 Royal Navy sailors, 800 local sepoys, fourteen field guns and no cavalry. The British forces attacked the Nawab's camp during the early morning hours of 5 February 1757. In this battle, unofficially called the 'Calcutta Gauntlet', Clive marched his small force through the entire Nawab's camp, despite being under heavy fire from all sides. By noon, Clive's force broke through the besieging camp and arrived safely at Fort William. During the assault, around one tenth of the British attackers became casualties. (Clive reported his losses at 57 killed and 137 wounded.) While technically not a victory in military terms, the sudden British assault intimidated the Nawab. He sought to make terms with Clive, and surrendered control of Calcutta on 9 February, promising to compensate the East India Company for damages suffered and to restore its privileges.

War with Siraj Ud Daulah

 
"9 (Plassey) Battery Royal Artillery" of the British Military.

As Britain and France were once more at war, Clive sent the fleet up the river against the French colony of Chandannagar, while he besieged it by land. There was a strong incentive to capture the colony, as capture of a previous French settlement near Pondicherry had yielded the combined forces prizes valued at £130,000 (equivalent to £18,500,000 in 2021).[15] After consenting to the siege, the Nawab unsuccessfully sought to assist the French. Some officials of the Nawab's court formed a confederacy to depose him. Jafar Ali Khan, also known as Mir Jafar, the Nawab's commander-in-chief, led the conspirators. With Admiral Watson, Governor Drake and Mr. Watts, Clive made a gentlemen's agreement in which it was agreed to give the office of viceroy of Bengal, Bihar and Odisha to Mir Jafar, who was to pay £1,000,000 (equivalent to £140,000,000 in 2021) to the company for its losses in Calcutta and the cost of its troops, £500,000 (equivalent to £70,000,000 in 2021) to the British inhabitants of Calcutta, £200,000 (equivalent to £28,500,000 in 2021) to the native inhabitants, and £70,000 (equivalent to £10,000,000 in 2021) to its Armenian merchants.[15]

Clive employed Umichand, a rich Bengali trader, as an agent between Mir Jafar and the British officials. Umichand threatened to betray Clive unless he was guaranteed, in the agreement itself, £300,000 (equivalent to £47,500,000 in 2021). To dupe him a second fictitious agreement was shown to him with a clause to this effect. Admiral Watson refused to sign it. Clive deposed later to the House of Commons that, "to the best of his remembrance, he gave the gentleman who carried it leave to sign his name upon it; his lordship never made any secret of it; he thinks it warrantable in such a case, and would do it again a hundred times; he had no interested motive in doing it, and did it with a design of disappointing the expectations of a rapacious man." It is nevertheless cited as an example of Clive's unscrupulousness.[15]

Plassey

 
Robert Clive, 1st Baron Clive of Plassey, meeting with Mir Jafar after the Battle of Plassey, by Francis Hayman. National Portrait Gallery, London.

The whole hot season of 1757 was spent in negotiations with the Nawab of Bengal. In the middle of June Clive began his march from Chandannagar, with the British in boats and the sepoys along the right bank of the Hooghly River. During the rainy season, the Hooghly is fed by the overflow of the Ganges to the north through three streams, which in the hot months are nearly dry. On the left bank of the Bhagirathi, the most westerly of these, 100 miles (160 km) above Chandernagore, stands Murshidabad, the capital of the Mughal viceroys of Bengal. Some miles farther down is the field of Plassey, then an extensive grove of mango trees.[15]

On 21 June 1757, Clive arrived on the bank opposite Plassey, in the midst of the first outburst of monsoon rain. His whole army amounted to 1,100 Europeans and 2,100 sepoy troops, with nine field-pieces. The Nawab had drawn up 18,000 horse, 50,000-foot and 53 pieces of heavy ordnance, served by French artillerymen. For once in his career Clive hesitated, and called a council of sixteen officers to decide, as he put it, "whether in our present situation, without assistance, and on our own bottom, it would be prudent to attack the Nawab, or whether we should wait till joined by some country (Indian) power." Clive himself headed the nine who voted for delay; Major Eyre Coote led the seven who counselled immediate attack. But, either because his daring asserted itself, or because of a letter received from Mir Jafar, Clive was the first to change his mind and to communicate with Major Eyre Coote. One tradition, followed by Macaulay, represents him as spending an hour in thought under the shade of some trees, while he resolved the issues of what was to prove one of the decisive battles of the world. Another, turned into verse by Sir Alfred Lyall, pictures his resolution as the result of a dream. However that may be, he did well as a soldier to trust to the dash and even rashness that had gained Arcot and triumphed at Calcutta since retreat, or even delay, might have resulted in defeat.[15]

After heavy rain, Clive's 3,200 men and the nine guns crossed the river and took possession of the grove and its tanks of water, while Clive established his headquarters in a hunting lodge. On 23 June, the engagement took place and lasted the whole day, during which remarkably little actual fighting took place. Gunpowder for the cannons of the Nawab was not well protected from rain. That impaired those cannons. Except for the 40 Frenchmen and the guns they worked, the Indian side could do little to reply to the British cannonade (after a spell of rain), which, with the 39th Regiment, scattered the host, inflicting on it a loss of 500 men. Clive had already made a secret agreement with aristocrats in Bengal, including Jagat Seth and Mir Jafar. Clive restrained Major Kilpatrick, for he trusted to Mir Jafar's abstinence, if not desertion to his ranks, and knew the importance of sparing his own small force.[15] He was fully justified in his confidence in Mir Jafar's treachery to his master, for he led a large portion of the Nawab's army away from the battlefield, ensuring his defeat.

Clive lost hardly any European troops; in all 22 sepoys were killed and 50 wounded.[15] It is curious in many ways that Clive is now best-remembered for this battle, which was essentially won by suborning the opposition rather than through fighting or brilliant military tactics. Whilst it established British military supremacy in Bengal, it did not secure the East India Company's control over Upper India, as is sometimes claimed. That would come only seven years later in 1764 at the Battle of Buxar, where Sir Hector Munro defeated the combined forces of the Mughal Emperor and the Nawab of Awadh in a much more closely fought encounter.

Siraj Ud Daulah fled from the field on a camel, securing what wealth he could. He was soon captured by Mir Jafar's forces and later executed by the assassin Mohammadi Beg. Clive entered Murshidabad and established Mir Jafar as Nawab, the price which had been agreed beforehand for his treachery. Clive was taken through the treasury, amid £1,500,000 (equivalent to £210,000,000 in 2021) sterling's worth of rupees, gold and silver plate, jewels and rich goods, and besought to ask what he would. Clive took £160,000 (equivalent to £22,800,000 in 2021), a vast fortune for the day, while £500,000 (equivalent to £70,000,000 in 2021) was distributed among the army and navy of the East India Company, and provided gifts of £24,000 (equivalent to £3,400,000 in 2021) to each member of the company's committee, as well as the public compensation stipulated for in the treaty.[15]

In this extraction of wealth Clive followed a usage fully recognised by the company, although this was the source of future corruption which Clive was later sent to India again to correct. The company itself acquired revenue of £100,000 (equivalent to £14,300,000 in 2021) a year, and a contribution towards its losses and military expenditure of £1,500,000 sterling (equivalent to £210,000,000 in 2021). Mir Jafar further discharged his debt to Clive by afterwards presenting him with the quit-rent of the company's lands in and around Calcutta, amounting to an annuity of £27,000 (equivalent to £3,900,000 in 2021) for life, and leaving him by will the sum of £70,000 (equivalent to £10,000,000 in 2021), which Clive devoted to the army.[15]

Further campaigns

Battle of Condore

While busy with the civil administration, Clive continued to follow up his military success. He sent Major Coote in pursuit of the French almost as far as Benares. He dispatched Colonel Forde to Vizagapatam and the northern districts of Madras, where Forde won the Battle of Condore (1758), pronounced by Broome "one of the most brilliant actions on military record".[15]

Mughals

Clive came into direct contact with the Mughal himself, for the first time, a meeting which would prove beneficial in his later career. Prince Ali Gauhar escaped from Delhi after his father, the Mughal Emperor Alamgir II, had been murdered by the usurping Vizier Imad-ul-Mulk and his Maratha associate Sadashivrao Bhau.[54]

Prince Ali Gauhar was welcomed and protected by Shuja-ud-Daula, the Nawab of Awadh. In 1760, after gaining control over Bihar, Odisha and some parts of the Bengal, Ali Gauhar and his Mughal Army of 30,000 intended to overthrow Mir Jafar and the Company in order to reconquer the riches of the eastern Subahs for the Mughal Empire. Ali Gauhar was accompanied by Muhammad Quli Khan, Hidayat Ali, Mir Afzal, Kadim Husein and Ghulam Husain Tabatabai. Their forces were reinforced by the forces of Shuja-ud-Daula and Najib-ud-Daula. The Mughals were also joined by Jean Law and 200 Frenchmen, and waged a campaign against the British during the Seven Years' War.

Prince Ali Gauhar successfully advanced as far as Patna, which he later besieged with a combined army of over 40,000 in order to capture or kill Ramnarian, a sworn enemy of the Mughals. Mir Jafar was terrified at the near demise of his cohort and sent his own son Miran to relieve Ramnarian and retake Patna. Mir Jafar also implored the aid of Robert Clive, but it was Major John Caillaud, who defeated and dispersed Prince Ali Gauhar's army.[15]

Dutch aggression

While Clive was preoccupied with fighting the French, the Dutch directors of the outpost at Chinsurah, not far from Chandernagore, seeing an opportunity to expand their influence, agreed to send additional troops to Chinsurah. Despite Britain and the Dutch Republic not formally being at war, a Dutch fleet of seven ships, containing more than fifteen hundred European and Malay troops, came from Batavia and arrived at the mouth of the Hooghly River in October 1759, while Mir Jafar, the Nawab of Bengal, was meeting with Clive in Calcutta. They met a mixed force of British and local troops at Chinsurah, just outside Calcutta. The British, under Colonel Francis Forde, defeated the Dutch in the Battle of Chinsurah, forcing them to withdraw. The British engaged and defeated the ships the Dutch used to deliver the troops in a separate naval battle on 24 November. Thus Clive avenged the massacre of Amboyna – the occasion when he wrote his famous letter; "Dear Forde, fight them immediately; I will send you the order of council to-morrow".

Meanwhile, Clive improved the organisation and drill of the sepoy army, after a European model, and enlisted into it many Muslims from upper regions of the Mughal Empire. He re-fortified Calcutta. In 1760, after four years of hard labour, his health gave way and he returned to England. "It appeared", wrote a contemporary on the spot, "as if the soul was departing from the Government of Bengal". He had been formally made Governor of Bengal by the Court of Directors at a time when his nominal superiors in Madras sought to recall him to their help there. But he had discerned the importance of the province even during his first visit to its rich delta, mighty rivers and teeming population. Clive selected some able subordinates, notably a young Warren Hastings, who, a year after Plassey, was made Resident at the Nawab's court.[15]

The long-term outcome of Plassey was to place a very heavy revenue burden upon Bengal. The company sought to extract the maximum revenue possible from the peasantry to fund military campaigns, and corruption was widespread amongst its officials. Mir Jafar was compelled to engage in extortion on a vast scale[citation needed] in order to replenish his treasury, which had been emptied by the company's demand for an indemnity of 2.8 crores of rupees (£3 million).[55]

Return to Great Britain

 
 
Robert Clive's coat of arms (left) and the arms in relief at Claremont (above)

In 1760, the 35-year-old Clive returned to Great Britain with a fortune of at least £300,000 (equivalent to £48,300,000 in 2021) and the quit-rent of £27,000 (equivalent to £4,300,000 in 2021) a year. He financially supported his parents and sisters, while also providing Major Lawrence, the commanding officer who had early encouraged his military genius, with a stipend of £500 (equivalent to £100,000 in 2021) a year. In the five years of his conquests and administration in Bengal, the young man had crowded together a succession of exploits that led Lord Macaulay, in what that historian termed his "flashy" essay on the subject, to compare him to Napoleon Bonaparte, declaring that "[Clive] gave peace, security, prosperity and such liberty as the case allowed of to millions of Indians, who had for centuries been the prey of oppression, while Napoleon's career of conquest was inspired only by personal ambition, and the absolutism he established vanished with his fall." Macaulay's ringing endorsement of Clive seems more controversial today, as some would argue that Clive's ambition and desire for personal gain set the tone for the administration of Bengal until the Permanent Settlement 30 years later. The immediate consequence of Clive's victory at Plassey was an increase in the revenue demand on Bengal by at least 20%, which led to considerable hardship for the rural population, particularly during the famine of 1770.[56]

During the three years that Clive remained in Great Britain, he sought a political position, chiefly that he might influence the course of events in India, which he had left full of promise. He had been well received at court, was elevated to the peerage as Baron Clive of Plassey, County Clare; had bought estates, and returned a few friends as well as himself to the House of Commons. Clive was MP for Shrewsbury from 1761 until his death. He was allowed to sit in the Commons because his peerage was Irish.[46] He was also elected Mayor of Shrewsbury for 1762–63.[57] The non-graduate Clive received an honorary degree as DCL from Oxford University in 1760, and in 1764 he was appointed Knight of the Order of the Bath.[58]

Clive set himself to reform the home system of the East India Company, and began a bitter dispute with the chairman of the Court of Directors, Laurence Sulivan, whom he defeated in the end. In this he was aided by the news of reverses in Bengal. Mir Jafar had finally rebelled over payments to British officials, and Clive's successor had put Qasim Ali Khan, Mir Jafar's son-in-law upon the musnud (throne). After a brief tenure, Mir Qasim had fled, ordering Walter Reinhardt Sombre (known to the Muslims as Sumru), a Swiss mercenary of his, to butcher the garrison of 150 British at Patna, and had disappeared under the protection of his brother, the Viceroy of Awadh. The whole company's service, civil and military, had become mired in corruption, demoralised by gifts and by the monopoly of inland and export trade, to such an extent that the Indians were pauperised, and the company was plundered of the revenues Clive had acquired. For this Clive himself must bear much responsibility, as he had set a very poor example during his tenure as Governor. Nevertheless, the Court of Proprietors, forced the Directors to hurry Lord Clive to Bengal with the double powers of Governor and Commander-in-Chief.[15]

Third journey to India

 
Clive meeting with Emperor Shah Alam II, 1765

On 3 May 1765 Clive landed at Calcutta to learn that Mir Jafar had died, leaving him personally £70,000 (equivalent to £10,200,000 in 2021). Mir Jafar was succeeded by his son-in-law Kasim Ali, though not before the government had been further demoralised by taking £100,000 (equivalent to £14,500,000 in 2021) as a gift from the new Nawab; while Kasim Ali had induced not only the viceroy of Awadh, but the emperor of Delhi himself, to invade Bihar. At this point a mutiny in the Bengal army occurred, which was a grim precursor of the Indian rebellion of 1857, but on this occasion it was quickly suppressed by blowing the sepoy ringleader from a gun. Major Munro, "the Napier of those times", scattered the united armies on the hard-fought field of Buxar. The emperor, Shah Alam II, detached himself from the league, while the Awadh viceroy threw himself on the mercy of the British.[15]

 
Miniature of Al-Khidr, from the "Small Clive Album" thought to have been given to Clive on his 1765–67 visit to India by Shuja ud-Daula, the Nawab of Awadh. The Album contains 62 folia of Mughal miniature paintings, drawing and floral pattern studies. The binding is from Indian brocade silk brought home by the 2nd Lord Clive, who served as Governor of Madras, 1799 to 1803. Acquired by the Victoria and Albert Museum in 1956.

Clive had now an opportunity of repeating in Hindustan, or Upper India, what he had accomplished in Bengal. He might have secured what is now called Uttar Pradesh, and have rendered unnecessary the campaigns of Wellesley and Lake. But he believed he had other work in the exploitation of the revenues and resources of rich Bengal itself, making it a base from which British India would afterwards steadily grow. Hence he returned to the Awadh viceroy all his territory save the provinces of Allahabad and Kora, which he presented to the weak emperor.[15]

Mughal Firman

In return for the Awadhian provinces Clive secured from the emperor one of the most important documents in British history in India, effectively granting title of Bengal to Clive. It appears in the records as "firman from the King Shah Aalum, granting the diwani rights of Bengal, Bihar and Odisha to the Company 1765." The date was 12 August 1765, the place Benares, the throne an English dining-table covered with embroidered cloth and surmounted by a chair in Clive's tent. It is all pictured by a Muslim contemporary, who indignantly exclaims that so great a "transaction was done and finished in less time than would have been taken up in the sale of a jackass". By this deed the company became the real sovereign rulers of thirty million people, yielding a revenue of £4,000,000 sterling (equivalent to £580,000,000 in 2021).[15]

On the same date Clive obtained not only an imperial charter for the company's possessions in the Carnatic, completing the work he began at Arcot, but a third firman for the highest of all the lieutenancies of the empire, that of the Deccan itself. This fact is mentioned in a letter from the secret committee of the court of directors to the Madras government, dated 27 April 1768. The British presence in India was still tiny compared to the number and strength of the princes and people of India, but also compared to the forces of their ambitious French, Dutch and Danish rivals. Clive had this in mind when he penned his last advice to the directors, as he finally left India in 1767:[15]

"We are sensible that, since the acquisition of the dewany, the power formerly belonging to the soubah of those provinces is totally, in fact, vested in the East India Company. Nothing remains to him but the name and shadow of authority. This name, however, this shadow, it is indispensably necessary we should seem to venerate."[15]

Attempts at administrative reform

Having thus founded the Empire of British India, Clive sought to put in place a strong administration. The salaries of civil servants were increased, the acceptance of gifts from Indians was forbidden, and Clive exacted covenants under which participation in the inland trade was stopped. Unfortunately this had very little impact in reducing corruption, which remained widespread until the days of Warren Hastings. Clive's military reforms were more effective. He put down a mutiny of the British officers, who chose to resent the veto against receiving presents and the reduction of batta (extra pay) at a time when two Maratha armies were marching on Bengal. His reorganisation of the army, on the lines of that which he had begun after Plassey, neglected during his absence in Great Britain, subsequently attracted the admiration of Indian officers. He divided the whole army into three brigades, making each a complete force, in itself equal to any single Indian army that could be brought against it.[59][60]

Clive was also instrumental in making the company virtual master of North India by introducing his policy of "Dual system of government". According to the new arrangement enforced by him, the company became liable only for revenue affairs of Bengal (Diwani) and Bihar while the administration and law and order was made a prerogative of the Nawab. An office of "Deputy Nawab" was created, who was at the helms of all the affairs vis a vis revenue of two of the richest provinces of India besides being the company's representative while the Nizamat (Law and order) remained in the hands of the Nawab who appointed his own representative to deal with the company. This system proved to be detrimental for the administration of Bengal and ultimately the "Dual system of government" was abolished by Clive.[61]

Retirement and death

Clive left India for the last time in February 1767. In 1768, he lived at the Chateau de Larzac in Pézenas, Hérault, Languedoc-Roussillon in southern France. Local tradition is that he introduced local bakers to a sweet pastry, le petit pâté de Pézenas, and that he (more obviously, his chef) had brought the recipe from India as a refined version of the savoury keema naan.[62] Pézenas is known for such delicacies.

 
Plaque in memory of Lord Clive in Pézenas

Later in 1768, Clive was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society[58] and served as treasurer of the Royal Salop Infirmary in Shrewsbury.[63]

In 1769, he acquired the house and gardens of Claremont near Esher and commissioned Capability Brown to remodel the garden and house.

In 1772 Parliament opened an inquiry into the company's practices in India. Clive's political opponents turned these hearings into attacks on Clive. Questioned about some of the large sums of money he had received while in India, Clive pointed out that they were not contrary to accepted company practice, and defended his behaviour by stating "I stand astonished at my own moderation" given opportunities for greater gain. The hearings highlighted the need for reform of the company; a vote to censure Clive for his actions failed. Later in 1772, Clive was invested Knight of the Bath (eight years after he has been made knight bachelor),[58] and was appointed Lord Lieutenant of Shropshire.

A great famine between 1769 and 1773 reduced the population of Bengal by a third. It was argued that the activities and aggrandisement of company officials caused the famine, particularly abuse of trade monopoly and land tax used for the personal benefit of company officials.[64][65] These revelations and subsequent debates in Parliament reduced Clive's political popularity.[citation needed]

Clive continued to be involved in Parliamentary discussions on company reforms. In 1773, General John Burgoyne, one of Clive's most vocal critics, pressed the case that some of Clive's gains were made at the expense of the company and of the government. Clive again made a spirited defence of his actions, and closed his testimony by stating "Take my fortune, but save my honour." The vote that followed exonerated Clive, who was commended for the "great and meritorious service" he rendered to the country. Immediately thereafter Parliament began debating the Regulating Act of 1773, which significantly reformed the East India Company's practices.

On 22 November 1774 Clive died, aged 49, at his Berkeley Square home. His death was caused by a cut to his throat from a penknife he held. The manner of his death has long been the subject of controversy. No inquest was carried out, the absence of which caused contemporary newspapers to report his death as due to an apoplectic fit or stroke.[66][67] 20th-century biographer, John Watney, concluded: "He did not die from a self-inflicted wound ... He died as he severed his jugular with a blunt paper knife brought on by an overdose of drugs".[68] While Clive left no suicide note, Samuel Johnson wrote that he "had acquired his fortune by such crimes that his consciousness of them impelled him to cut his own throat".[69] Clive's demise has been linked to his history of depression and to opium addiction, but the likely immediate impetus was excruciating pain resulting from illness (he was known to suffer from gallstones) which he had been attempting to abate with opium[citation needed]. Shortly beforehand, he had been offered and declined command of British forces in North America.[70] He was buried in St Margaret's Parish Church at Moreton Say, near his birthplace in Shropshire.

 
Plassey House, now part of the University of Limerick

Clive was awarded an Irish peerage in 1762, created Baron Clive of Plassey, County Clare; he bought lands in County Limerick and County Clare, Ireland, naming part of his lands near Limerick City, Plassey. Following Irish independence, these lands became state property. In the 1970s a technical college, later the University of Limerick, was built at Plassey.

Family

On 18 February 1753 in Madras, Clive married Margaret Maskelyne (d. 28 December 1817[41]) on 18 February 1753,[41] sister of the Rev. Dr Nevil Maskelyne, fifth Astronomer Royal. They had nine children:

  • Edward Clive, 1st Earl of Powis (b. 7 March 1754, d. 16 May 1839)
  • Rebecca Clive (b. 15 September 1760, bapt 10 October 1760 Moreton Say, d. December 1795, married in 1780 to Lt-Gen John Robinson of Denston Hall Suffolk, MP (d. 1798.)
  • Charlotte Clive (b. 19 January 1762, d. unm 20 October 1795)
  • Margaret Clive (bapt 18 September 1763 Condover, Shropshire, d. June 1814, married 11 April 1780 Lt-Col Lambert Theodore Walpole (d. in Wexford Rebellion 1798)
  • Elizabeth Clive (bapt 18 November 1764 Condover, d. young)
  • Richard Clive (d. young)
  • Robert Clive (d. young)
  • Robert Clive Jnr (b. 14 August 1769, d. unm 28 July 1833), Lt-Col.
  • Jane Clive (d. young)

Criticism

Clive's actions have been criticised by modern historians due to actions in India, particularly his involvement in the Bengal Famine of 1770 and his economic management of India. The 21st-century Scottish historian William Dalrymple has called Clive an "unstable sociopath. Changes caused by Clive to the Indian revenue system and existing agricultural practices, designed to maximize profits for the East India Company, increased the level of poverty in Bengal.[71]

Clive himself commented on the poor conditions of Bengal under Company rule:

I shall only say that such a scene of anarchy, confusion, bribery, corruption, and extortion was never seen or heard of in any country but Bengal; nor did such and so many fortunes acquire in so unjust and rapacious a manner. The three provinces of Bengal, Bihar and Orissa producing a clear revenue of £3 million sterling, have been under the absolute management of the company's servants, ever since Mir Jafar's restoration to the subahship; and they have, both civil and military, exacted and levied contributions from every man of power and consequence, from the Nawab down to the lowest zamindar.

Petitions have called for removal of a statue of Clive from The Square in Shrewsbury.[72] No more than 20,000 signatures supported such a move, and on 16 July 2020 Shropshire Council voted 28–17 to retain the statue.[73] A similar petition for removal of Clive's statue from outside the Foreign and Commonwealth Office in Whitehall, accrued some 80,000 signatures.[74]

In light of criticism of Clive's legacy, in 2020 Haberdashers' Adams school in Newport, Shropshire announced that Clive House was to be renamed “Owen House” (after the Shropshire poet Wilfred Owen).[75]

Legacy

 
A statue of Clive stands tall in Shrewsbury Square
 
A later statue of Clive stands in King Charles Street London
 
Robert Clive Statue in Victoria Memorial, Kolkata
  • Robert Clive's desk from his time at Market Drayton Grammar School is on display at Market Drayton museum complete with his carved initials. The town also has a Clive Road.
  • Robert Clive's pet Aldabra giant tortoise died on 23 March 2006 in the Kolkata zoo. The tortoise, whose name was "Adwaita" (meaning the "One and Only" in Bengali), appeared to be 150–250 years old. Adwaita had been in the zoo since the 1870s and the zoo's documentation showed that he came from Clive's estate in India.[76]
  • A statue of Clive stands in the main square in the market town of Shrewsbury, as well as a later one in King Charles Street near St James's Park, London.
  • Clive is a Senior Girls house at the Duke of York's Royal Military School, where, as at Welbeck college, all houses are named after prominent military figures.
  • Clive was a house at Haberdashers' Adams school in Newport, Shropshire which in 2021 was renamed Owen house, after the poet and soldier Wilfred Owen who was born near Oswestry in Shropshire. This follows criticism of Robert Clive in light of the George Floyd protests.
  • Clive Road, in West Dulwich, London, commemorates Baron Clive[77] despite being so named close to a century after his death. Following the completion of the relocation of The Crystal Palace from Hyde Park to what is now Upper Norwood in 1854, the West End of London and Crystal Palace Railway was opened on 10 June 1854 to cope with crowds visiting the Crystal Palace. This led to a huge increase in employment in the area and a subsequent increase in the building of residential properties. Many of the new roads were named after eminent figures in British imperial history, such as Robert Clive.
  • There is a settlement[which?] named after Clive in the Hawke's Bay province of New Zealand.
  • Clive's coat of arms can be seen (impaled with his wife's) in relief in the pediment at Claremont in Surrey, which Clive had rebuilt.
  • A bestselling children's novel, G. A. Henty's With Clive in India: Or, the Beginnings of an Empire (1884), celebrates Clive's life and career from a pro-British point of view.
  • R. J. Minney's stage play Clive of India (1933) portrays the life of Clive, particularly focusing on his victory at the Battle of Plassey. It was based on a biography of Clive that Minney had written two years earlier.[78]
  • The 1935 film Clive of India, based on Minney's play, starred Ronald Colman, Loretta Young, and Clive's descendant Colin Clive.[79]
  • "Clive" was a house at Merchant Taylors' School, Northwood, where he was a student for seven years before his expulsion. Members were distinguished by their red striped ties. In January 2021 the house was renamed after former pupil and sportsman John Raphael.[80]
  • Robert Clive established the first slaughterhouse in India, in Calcutta in 1760.[81]
  • "Clive of India" is a brand of curry powder manufactured in Australia by McKenzie's Foods.
  • With the re-capture of Calcutta by Clive in 1756, the cultivation of poppies for the opium trade soon came to be the mainstay of the East India Trading Company's commerce with Imperial China.[82]
  • Clive is responsible for opening the first organized brothel within the Army cantonment of Calcutta. He was not interested in eradication of prostitution but in regulation so that their own soldiers and sailors could be protected from venereal diseases. However, two properties in central Calcutta owned by women named Ishwari and Bhobi, whom the Company identified as prostitutes, were seized in 1753.[83]
  • Robert Browning's 1880 poem Clive recounts a fictional episode in which Clive, as a young clerk, duels a card-sharping soldier. Clive shoots and misses; the cheat then admits his crime and spares Clive's life. The poem's narrator, and those watching the duel, initially believe that the episode shows Clive's courage in standing up honestly; but Clive rebukes them that the magnanimous cheat showed far more honour. The poem largely focuses on the relationship between courage and fear, and closes with an allusion to Clive's suicide ("Clive's worst deed — we'll hope condoned").

Notes

  1. ^ G. A. Henty (1 March 2012). With Clive in India: Or, The Beginnings of an Empire. The Floating Press. ISBN 978-1-77545-628-5. Retrieved 9 June 2020.
  2. ^ John Basil Watney (1974). Clive of India. Saxon House. ISBN 9780347000086. Retrieved 9 June 2020.
  3. ^ "Hundreds sign petition to remove 'Clive of India' statue in UK". India Today. 9 June 2020. Retrieved 9 June 2020.
  4. ^ He "was celebrated in so many subsequent histories as the founder of 'British India.'" Emma Rothschild, The Inner Life of Empires: An Eighteenth-Century History (Princeton UP, 2011) p. 45.
  5. ^ C. Brad Faught, Clive: Founder of British India (2013)
  6. ^ Lord Clive: The Founder of the British Empire in India, a Drama in Five Acts. St. Joseph's Industrial School Press. 1913.
  7. ^ Raj: The Making and Unmaking of British India. Macmillan. 12 August 2000. ISBN 9780312263829.
  8. ^ "Robert Clive".
  9. ^ "Robert Clive (1725–74) | Statue by John Tweed, 1912".
  10. ^ Sibree, Bron (19 September 2019). "The Anarchy: how the East India Company looted India, and became too big to fail, explored by William Dalrymple". Post Magazine (Book review).
  11. ^ Clive of India, by John Watney, published 1974, p.149
  12. ^ "CLIVE, Robert (1725–74), of Styche Hall, nr. Market Drayton, Salop; subsequently of Walcot Park, Salop; Claremont, Surr.; and Oakley Park, Salop". The History of Parliament.
  13. ^ "Robert Clive – Biography, papers and letters written by him". www.britishonlinearchives.co.uk. British Onlive Archives. Retrieved 8 June 2017.
  14. ^ Arbuthnot, p. 1
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Chisholm 1911.
  16. ^ a b Harvey (1998), p. 11
  17. ^ Harvey (1998), p. 10
  18. ^ (Malleson 1893, p. 9)
  19. ^ Arbuthnot, p. 2
  20. ^ (Malleson 1893, p. 10)
  21. ^ Treasure, p. 196
  22. ^ Harvey (1998), pp. 18–21
  23. ^ Harvey (1998), pp. 23–24
  24. ^ a b Harvey (1998), p. 30
  25. ^ Harvey (1998), pp. 24–29
  26. ^ (Malleson 1893, pp. 16–32)
  27. ^ Harvey (1998), pp. 29–30
  28. ^ Harvey (1998), p. 31
  29. ^ (Malleson 1893, p. 35)
  30. ^ Harvey (1998), pp. 31–34
  31. ^ (Malleson 1893, p. 38)
  32. ^ Harvey (1998), pp. 35–36
  33. ^ Harvey (1998), p. 39
  34. ^ a b Harvey (1998), p. 41
  35. ^ Harvey (1998), p. 42
  36. ^ (Malleson 1893, pp. 40–41)
  37. ^ Harvey (1998), p. 46
  38. ^ Harvey (1998), pp. 46–47
  39. ^ Harvey (1998), pp. 47–48
  40. ^ Keay, John, The Honourable Company—A History of the English East India Company, HarperCollins, London, 1991, ISBN 0-00-217515-0 p. 289.
  41. ^ a b c Stephen, Leslie, ed. (1887). "Clive, Robert" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 11. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  42. ^ Thomas Babington Macaulay, "Lord Clive," Essays (London), 1891, pp.511–13 (First published in the Edinburgh Review, January 1840).
  43. ^ a b Bowen, H. V. (2004). "Clive [née Maskelyne], Margaret, Lady Clive of Plassey (1735–1817), society figure". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/63502. Retrieved 20 January 2021. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  44. ^ "Peggy, the other Clive". The Week. Retrieved 20 January 2021.
  45. ^ Gibbs, Vicary, ed. (1912). The Complete Peerage, Volume III. St Catherine's Press. p. 325.
  46. ^ a b "CLIVE, Robert (1725–74), of Styche Hall, nr. Market Drayton, Salop; subsequently of Walcot Park, Salop; Claremont, Surr.; and Oakley Park, Salop". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 8 September 2017.
  47. ^ . Dodington Family. Archived from the original on 14 January 2005. Retrieved 10 July 2008.
  48. ^ Russell, Alec (9 October 1997). "South Africa seeks its share of Clive's pounds 1/2 m treasure trove". The Telegraph. p. 21.
  49. ^ Keay, John, The Honourable Company—A History of the English East India Company, HarperCollins, London, 1991, ISBN 0-00-217515-0 p. 269.
  50. ^ Wolpert, Stanley (2009) [First published 1977]. A New History of India (8th ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 185. ISBN 978-0-19-533756-3.
  51. ^ D. L. Prior, Holwell's biographer in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, reports figures of 64 prisoners and 21 survivors.
  52. ^ H.E. Busteed, Echoes from Old Calcutta (Calcutta), 1908, pp.30–56.
  53. ^ Sir William Wilson Hunter (1886). The Indian Empire: Its Peoples, History, and Products. Trübner & Company. pp. 381–. Retrieved 11 July 2012.
  54. ^ S.R. Sharma (1 January 1999). Mughal Empire in India: A Systematic Study Including Source Material. Atlantic Publishers & Dist. pp. 767–. ISBN 978-81-7156-819-2. Retrieved 11 July 2012.
  55. ^ (P. J. Marshall 1987, p. 83)
  56. ^ (P. J. Marshall 1987, p. 144)
  57. ^ . Shrewsbury Town Council. Archived from the original on 29 November 2014. Retrieved 19 November 2014.
  58. ^ a b c Gibbs, Vicary, ed. (1912). The Complete Peerage, Volume III. St Catherine's Press. p. 326.
  59. ^ Curzon, G.N. Complete book online – British Government in India: The Story of Viceroys and Government Houses. Retrieved 22 March 2019.
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  79. ^ "Colin Clive, Actor, Dies in Hollywood. Star of Screen and Stage, 37, Scored First Hit as Stanhope in 'Journey's End'. Made Debut Here in 1930. Appeared in 'Clive of India,' a Picture Based on Life of His Ancestor. Descendant of Empire Builder Played Frankenstein Role". The New York Times. 26 June 1937.
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References

Secondary sources

  • Mark Bence-Jones (1974). Clive of India. Constable & Robinson Limited. ISBN 978-0-09-459830-0.
  • Chaudhuri, Nirad C. Robert Clive of India: A Political and Psychological Essay (1975).
  • Faught, C. Brad (2013). Clive: Founder of British India. (Washington, D.C.: Potomac Books, Inc.).
  • Harrington, Jack (2010), Sir John Malcolm and the Creation of British India, ch. 6, New York: Palgrave Macmillan., ISBN 978-0-230-10885-1
  • Harvey, Robert A Few Bloody Noses: The American Revolutionary War. Constable & Robinson, 2004.
  • Harvey, Robert. Clive: The life and Death of a British Emperor. Hodder and Stoughton, 1998.
  • Alfred Mervyn Davies (1939). Clive of Plassey: A Biography. C. Scribner's sons. ISBN 9780598503046.
  • Michael Edwardes The Battle of Plassey and the Conquest of Bengal (London) 1963
  • P. J. Marshall (1987). Bengal, The British Bridgehead: Eastern India 1740–1828. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-25330-7.
  • Treasure, Geoffrey (2002). Who's Who in Early Hanoverian Britain, 1714–1789. Stackpole Books. ISBN 0-8117-1643-0.
  • Bowen, H. V. "Clive, Robert". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/5697. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Arbuthnot, Alexander John (1887). "Clive, Robert" . In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 11. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Clive, Robert Clive, Baron". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 6 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 532–536.
  • Baynes, T. S., ed. (1875–1889). "Robert Clive" . Encyclopædia Britannica (9th ed.). New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.

External links

  • "Archival material relating to Robert Clive". UK National Archives.  
  • "Lord Clive," an essay by Thomas Babington Macaulay (January 1840)
Military offices
Preceded by Commander-in-Chief, India
1756–1760
Succeeded by
Preceded by Commander-in-Chief, India
1765–1767
Succeeded by
Honorary titles
Preceded by Lord Lieutenant of Shropshire
1772–1774
Succeeded by
Lord Lieutenant of Montgomeryshire
1773–1774
Succeeded by
Peerage of Ireland
New creation Baron Clive
1762–1774
Succeeded by
Parliament of Great Britain
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Mitchell
1754–1755
With: John Stephenson
Succeeded by
Simon Luttrell
Richard Hussey
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Shrewsbury
1761–1774
With: Thomas Hill 1761–1768
Noel Hill 1768–1774
Charlton Leighton 1774
Succeeded by

robert, clive, other, people, named, disambiguation, clive, india, redirects, here, other, uses, clive, india, film, clive, india, play, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliabl. For other people named Robert Clive see Robert Clive disambiguation Clive of India redirects here For other uses see Clive of India film and Clive of India play This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Robert Clive news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Robert Clive 1st Baron Clive KB FRS 29 September 1725 22 November 1774 also known as Clive of India 1 2 3 was the first British Governor of the Bengal Presidency Clive has been widely credited for laying the foundation of the British East India Company rule in Bengal 4 5 6 7 8 9 He began as a writer the term used then in India for an office clerk for the East India Company EIC in 1744 and established Company rule in Bengal by winning the Battle of Plassey in 1757 10 In return for supporting the Nawab Mir Jafar as ruler of Bengal Clive was granted a jagir of 30 000 equivalent to 4 300 000 in 2021 per year which was the rent the EIC would otherwise pay to the Nawab for their tax farming concession When Clive left India when he had a fortune of 180 000 equivalent to 25 700 000 in 2021 which he remitted through the Dutch East India Company 11 The Right HonourableRobert CliveKB FRSLord Clive in military uniform The Battle of Plassey is shown behind him By Nathaniel Dance National Portrait Gallery London Governor of the Presidency of Fort WilliamIn office 1757 1760Preceded byRoger Drakeas PresidentSucceeded byHenry VansittartIn office 1764 1767Preceded byHenry VansittartSucceeded byHarry VerelstPersonal detailsBorn 1725 09 29 29 September 1725Styche Hall Market Drayton Shropshire EnglandDied22 November 1774 1774 11 22 aged 49 Berkeley Square Westminster LondonSpouseMargaret Maskelyne m 1753 wbr Children9 including EdwardAlma materMerchant Taylors SchoolNicknameClive of IndiaMilitary serviceBranch serviceBengal ArmyYears of service1746 1774RankMajor generalUnitBritish East India CompanyCommandsCommander in Chief of IndiaBattles warsWar of the Austrian SuccessionBattle of MadrasSiege of CuddaloreSiege of PondicherryTanjore ExpeditionSecond Carnatic WarSiege of TrichinopolySiege of ArcotBattle of ArneeBattle of ChingleputSeven Years WarBattle of VijaydurgRecapture of CalcuttaBattle of ChandannagarBattle of PlasseyMap of India in 1765 showing the territory administered by the East India Company pink Bengal and the Northern Circars during the time of Clive Blocking impending French mastery of India Clive improvised a 1751 military expedition that ultimately enabled the EIC to adopt the French strategy of indirect rule via puppet government Hired by the EIC to return 1755 a second time to India Clive conspired to secure the company s trade interests by overthrowing the ruler of Bengal the richest state in India Back in England from 1760 to 1765 he used the wealth accumulated from India to secure 1762 an Irish barony from the then Whig PM Thomas Pelham Holles 1st Duke of Newcastle and a seat for himself in Parliament via Henry Herbert 1st Earl of Powis representing the Whigs in Shrewsbury Shropshire 1761 1774 as he had previously in Mitchell Cornwall 1754 1755 12 13 Clive s actions on behalf of the EIC have made him one of Britain s most controversial colonial figures His achievements included checking French imperialist ambitions on the Coromandel Coast and establishing EIC control over Bengal thereby furthering the establishment of the British Raj though he worked only as an agent of the East India Company not of the British government Vilified by his political rivals in Britain he went on trial 1772 and 1773 before Parliament where he was absolved from every charge Historians have criticised Clive s management of Bengal during his tenure with the EIC and his responsibility in contributing to the Great Bengal Famine of 1770 which historians now estimate resulted in the deaths of between seven and ten million people Contents 1 Early life 2 First journey to India 1744 1753 2 1 Political situation in south India 2 2 First Carnatic War 2 3 Tanjore expedition 3 Second Carnatic War 3 1 Siege of Arcot 4 Second journey to India 1755 1760 4 1 Fall and recapture of Calcutta 1756 57 4 2 War with Siraj Ud Daulah 4 3 Plassey 4 3 1 Further campaigns 4 3 1 1 Battle of Condore 4 3 1 2 Mughals 4 3 1 3 Dutch aggression 4 4 Return to Great Britain 5 Third journey to India 5 1 Mughal Firman 5 2 Attempts at administrative reform 6 Retirement and death 7 Family 8 Criticism 9 Legacy 10 Notes 11 References 11 1 Secondary sources 12 External linksEarly life EditRobert Clive was born at Styche the Clive family estate near Market Drayton in Shropshire on 29 September 1725 to Richard Clive and Rebecca nee Gaskell Clive 14 The family had held the small estate since the time of Henry VII and had a lengthy history of public service members of the family included a Chancellor of the Exchequer of Ireland under Henry VIII and a member of the Long Parliament Robert s father who supplemented the estate s modest income by practising as a lawyer also served in Parliament for many years representing Montgomeryshire 15 Robert was their eldest son of thirteen children he had seven sisters and five brothers six of whom died in infancy 16 St Mary s in Market Drayton whose tower Clive is reputed to have climbed Clive s father was known to have a temper which the boy apparently inherited For reasons that are unknown Clive was sent to live with his mother s sister in Manchester while still a toddler The site is now Hope Hospital Biographer Robert Harvey suggests that this move was made because Clive s father was busy in London trying to provide for the family 17 Daniel Bayley the sister s husband reported that the boy was out of measure addicted to fighting 18 19 He was a regular troublemaker in the schools to which he was sent 20 When he was older he and a gang of teenagers established a protection racket that vandalised the shops of uncooperative merchants in Market Drayton Clive also exhibited fearlessness at an early age He is reputed to have climbed the tower of St Mary s Parish Church in Market Drayton and perched on a gargoyle frightening those down below 21 When Clive was nine his aunt died and after a brief stint in his father s cramped London quarters he returned to Shropshire There he attended the Market Drayton Grammar School where his unruly behaviour and an improvement in the family s fortunes prompted his father to send him to Merchant Taylors School in London His bad behaviour continued and he was then sent to a trade school in Hertfordshire to complete a basic education 16 Despite his early lack of scholarship in his later years he devoted himself to improving his education He eventually developed a distinctive writing style and a speech in the House of Commons was described by William Pitt as the most eloquent he had ever heard 15 First journey to India 1744 1753 EditSee also First Carnatic War Clive House at Fort St George Chennai Plaque at Clive House In 1744 Clive s father acquired for him a position as a factor or company agent in the service of the East India Company and Clive set sail for India After running aground on the coast of Brazil his ship was detained for nine months while repairs were completed This enabled him to learn some Portuguese 22 one of the several languages then in use in south India because of the Portuguese centre at Goa At this time the East India Company had a small settlement at Fort St George near the village of Madraspatnam later Madras now the major Indian metropolis of Chennai 23 in addition to others at Calcutta Bombay and Cuddalore 24 Clive arrived at Fort St George in June 1744 and spent the next two years working as little more than a glorified assistant shopkeeper tallying books and arguing with suppliers of the East India Company over the quality and quantity of their wares He was given access to the governor s library where he became a prolific reader 25 Political situation in south India Edit The India Clive arrived in was divided into a number of successor states to the Mughal Empire Over the forty years since the death of the Emperor Aurangzeb in 1707 the power of the emperor had gradually fallen into the hands of his provincial viceroys or Subahdars The dominant rulers on the Coromandel Coast were the Nizam of Hyderabad Asaf Jah I and the Nawab of the Carnatic Anwaruddin Muhammed Khan The Nawab nominally owed fealty to the nizam but in many respects acted independently Fort St George and the French trading post at Pondicherry were both located in the Nawab s territory 26 The relationship between the Europeans in India was influenced by a series of wars and treaties in Europe and by competing commercial rivalry for trade on the subcontinent Through the 17th and early 18th centuries the French Dutch Portuguese and British had vied for control of various trading posts and for trading rights and favour with local Indian rulers The European merchant companies raised bodies of troops to protect their commercial interests and latterly to influence local politics to their advantage Military power was rapidly becoming as important as commercial acumen in securing India s valuable trade and increasingly it was used to appropriate territory and to collect land revenue 27 First Carnatic War Edit Further information Carnatic Wars and War of the Austrian Succession Portrait by Charles Clive c 1764 In 1720 France effectively nationalised the French East India Company and began using it to expand its imperial interests This became a source of conflict with the British in India with the entry of Britain into the War of the Austrian Succession in 1744 24 The Indian theatre of the conflict is also known as the First Carnatic War referring to the Carnatic region on the southeast coast of India Hostilities in India began with a British naval attack on a French fleet in 1745 which led the French Governor General Dupleix to request additional forces 28 On 4 September 1746 Madras was attacked by French forces led by La Bourdonnais After several days of bombardment the British surrendered and the French entered the city 29 The British leadership was taken prisoner and sent to Pondicherry It was originally agreed that the town would be restored to the British after negotiation but this was opposed by Dupleix who sought to annex Madras to French holdings 30 The remaining British residents were asked to take an oath promising not to take up arms against the French Clive and a handful of others refused and were kept under weak guard as the French prepared to destroy the fort Disguising themselves as natives Clive and three others eluded their inattentive sentry slipped out of the fort and made their way to Fort St David the British post at Cuddalore some 50 miles 80 km to the south 31 32 Upon his arrival Clive decided to enlist in the Company army rather than remain idle in the hierarchy of the company this was seen as a step down 33 Clive was however recognised for his contribution in the defence of Fort St David where the French assault on 11 March 1747 was repulsed with the assistance of the Nawab of the Carnatic and was given a commission as ensign 34 In the conflict Clive s bravery came to the attention of Major Stringer Lawrence who arrived in 1748 to take command of the British troops at Fort St David 34 During the 1748 Siege of Pondicherry Clive distinguished himself in successfully defending a trench against a French sortie one witness of the action wrote Clive s platoon animated by his exhortation fired again with new courage and great vivacity upon the enemy 35 The siege was lifted in October 1748 with the arrival of the monsoons but the war came to a conclusion with the arrival in December of news of the Peace of Aix la Chapelle Madras was returned to the British as part of the peace agreement in early 1749 36 Tanjore expedition Edit The end of the war between France and Britain did not however end hostilities in India Even before news of the peace arrived in India the British had sent an expedition to Tanjore on behalf of a claimant to its throne This expedition on which Clive now promoted to lieutenant served as a volunteer was a disastrous failure Monsoons ravaged the land forces and the local support claimed by their client was not in evidence The ignominious retreat of the British force which lost its baggage train to the pursuing Tanjorean army while crossing a swollen river was a blow to the British reputation 37 Major Lawrence seeking to recover British prestige led the entire Madras garrison to Tanjore in response At the fort of Devikottai on the Coleroon River the British force was confronted by the much larger Tanjorean army Lawrence gave Clive command of 30 British soldiers and 700 sepoys with orders to lead the assault on the fort Clive led this force rapidly across the river and toward the fort where the small British unit became separated from the sepoys and were enveloped by the Tanjorean cavalry Clive was nearly cut down and the beachhead almost lost before reinforcements sent by Lawrence arrived to save the day The daring move by Clive had an important consequence the Tanjoreans abandoned the fort which the British triumphantly occupied The success prompted the Tanjorean rajah to open peace talks which resulted in the British being awarded Devikottai and the costs of their expedition and the British client was awarded a pension in exchange for renouncing his claim Lawrence wrote of Clive s action that he behaved in courage and in judgment much beyond what could be expected from his years 38 On the expedition s return the process of restoring Madras was completed Company officials concerned about the cost of the military slashed its size denying Clive a promotion to captain in the process Lawrence procured for Clive a position as the commissary at Fort St George a potentially lucrative posting its pay included commissions on all supply contracts 39 Second Carnatic War EditFurther information Second Carnatic War The death of Asaf Jah I the Nizam of Hyderabad in 1748 sparked a struggle to succeed him that is known as the Second Carnatic War which was also furthered by the expansionist interests of French Governor General Dupleix Dupleix had grasped from the first war that small numbers of disciplined European forces and well trained sepoys could be used to tip balances of power between competing interests and used this idea to greatly expand French influence in southern India For many years he had been working to negotiate the release of Chanda Sahib a longtime French ally who had at one time occupied the throne of Tanjore and sought for himself the throne of the Carnatic Chanda Sahib had been imprisoned by the Marathas in 1740 by 1748 he had been released from custody and was building an army at Satara Upon the death of Asaf Jah I his son Nasir Jung seized the throne of Hyderabad although Asaf Jah had designated as his successor his grandson Muzaffar Jung The grandson who was ruler of Bijapur fled west to join Chanda Sahib whose army was also reinforced by French troops sent by Dupleix These forces met those of Anwaruddin Mohammed Khan in the Battle of Ambur in August 1749 Anwaruddin was slain and Chanda Sahib victorious entered the Carnatic capital Arcot Anwaruddin s son Muhammed Ali Khan Wallajah fled to Trichinopoly where he sought the protection and assistance of the British In thanks for French assistance the victors awarded them a number of villages including territory nominally under British sway near Cuddalore and Madras The British began sending additional arms to Muhammed Ali Khan Wallajah and sought to bring Nasir Jung into the fray to oppose Chanda Sahib Nasir Jung came south to Gingee in 1750 where he requested and received a detachment of British troops Chanda Sahib s forces advanced to meet them but retreated after a brief long range cannonade Nasir Jung pursued and was able to capture Arcot and his nephew Muzaffar Jung Following a series of fruitless negotiations and intrigues Nasir Jung was assassinated by a rebellious soldier This made Muzaffar Jung nizam and confirmed Chanda Sahib as Nawab of the Carnatic both with French support Dupleix was rewarded for French assistance with titled nobility and rule of the nizam s territories south of the Kistna River His territories were said to yield an annual revenue of over 350 000 rupees 40 Robert Clive was not in southern India for many of these events In 1750 Clive was afflicted with some sort of nervous disorder and was sent north to Bengal to recuperate 41 It was there that he met and befriended Robert Orme who became his principal chronicler and biographer Clive returned to Madras in 1751 Siege of Arcot Edit Main article Siege of Arcot Clive at the siege of Arcot 1751 In the summer of 1751 Chanda Sahib left Arcot to besiege Muhammed Ali Khan Wallajah at Trichinopoly This placed the British at Madras in a precarious position since the latter was the last of their major allies in the area The British company s military was also in some disarray as Stringer Lawrence had returned to England in 1750 over a pay dispute and much of the company was apathetic about the dangers the expanding French influence and declining British influence posed The weakness of the British military command was exposed when a force was sent from Madras to support Muhammad Ali at Trichinopoly but its commander a Swiss mercenary refused to attack an outpost at Valikondapuram Clive who accompanied the force as commissary was outraged at the decision to abandon the siege He rode to Cuddalore and offered his services to lead an attack on Arcot if he was given a captain s commission arguing this would force Chanda Sahib to either abandon the siege of Trichinopoly or significantly reduce the force there Madras and Fort St David could supply him with only 200 Europeans 300 sepoys and three small cannons furthermore of the eight officers who led them four were civilians like Clive and six had never been in action Clive hoping to surprise the small garrison at Arcot made a series of forced marches including some under extremely rainy conditions Although he did fail to achieve surprise the garrison hearing of the march being made under such arduous conditions opted to abandon the fort and town Clive occupied Arcot without firing a shot The fort was a rambling structure with a dilapidated wall a mile long too long for his small force to effectively man and it was surrounded by the densely packed housing of the town Its moat was shallow or dry and some of its towers were insufficiently strong to use as artillery mounts Clive did the best he could to prepare for the onslaught he expected He made a foray against the fort s former garrison encamped a few miles away which had no significant effect When the former garrison was reinforced by 2 000 men Chanda Sahib sent from Trichinopoly it reoccupied the town on 15 September That night Clive led most of his force out of the fort and launched a surprise attack on the besiegers Because of the darkness the besiegers had no idea how large Clive s force was and they fled in panic The next day Clive learned that heavy guns he had requested from Madras were approaching so he sent most of his garrison out to escort them into the fort That night the besiegers who had spotted the movement launched an attack on the fort With only 70 men in the fort Clive once again was able to disguise his small numbers and sowed sufficient confusion against his enemies that multiple assaults against the fort were successfully repulsed That morning the guns arrived and Chanda Sahib s men again retreated Over the next week Clive and his men worked feverishly to improve the defences aware that another 4 000 men led by Chanda Sahib s son Raza Sahib and accompanied by a small contingent of French troops was on its way Most of these troops came from Pondicherry not Trichinopoly and thus did not have the effect Clive desired of raising that siege Clive was forced to reduce his garrison to about 300 men sending the rest of his force to Madras in case the enemy army decided to go there instead Raza Sahib arrived at Arcot and on 23 September occupied the town That night Clive launched a daring attack against the French artillery seeking to capture their guns The attack very nearly succeeded in its object but was reversed when enemy sniper fire tore into the small British force Clive himself was targeted on more than one occasion one man pulled him down and was shot dead The affair was a serious blow 15 of Clive s men were killed and another 15 wounded Over the next month the besiegers slowly tightened their grips on the fort Clive s men were subjected to frequent sniper attacks and disease lowering the garrison size to 200 He was heartened to learn that some 6 000 Maratha forces had been convinced to come to his relief but that they were awaiting payment before proceeding The approach of this force prompted Raza Sahib to demand Clive s surrender Clive s response was an immediate rejection and he further insulted Raza Sahib by suggesting that he should reconsider sending his rabble of troops against a British held position The siege finally reached critical when Raza Sahib launched an all out assault against the fort on 14 November Clive s small force maintained its composure and established killing fields outside the walls of the fort where the attackers sought to gain entry Several hundred attackers were killed and many more wounded while Clive s small force suffered only four British and two sepoy casualties The historian Thomas Babington Macaulay wrote a century later of the siege the commander who had to conduct the defence was a young man of five and twenty who had been bred as a book keeper Clive had made his arrangements and exhausted by fatigue had thrown himself on his bed He was awakened by the alarm and was instantly at his post After three desperate onsets the besiegers retired behind the ditch The struggle lasted about an hour the garrison lost only five or six men 42 His conduct during the siege made Clive famous in Europe The Prime Minister William Pitt the Elder described Clive who had received no formal military training whatsoever as the heaven born general endorsing the generous appreciation of his early commander Major Lawrence The Court of Directors of the East India Company voted him a sword worth 700 which he refused to receive unless Lawrence was similarly honoured Clive and Major Lawrence were able to bring the campaign to a successful conclusion In 1754 the first of the provisional Carnatic treaties was signed between Thomas Saunders the Company president at Madras and Charles Godeheu the French commander who displaced Dupleix Mohammed Ali Khan Wallajah was recognised as Nawab and both nations agreed to equalise their possessions When war again broke out in 1756 during Clive s absence in Bengal the French obtained successes in the northern districts and it was Mohammed Ali Khan Wallajah s efforts which drove them from their settlements The Treaty of Paris 1763 formally confirmed Mohammed Ali Khan Wallajah as Nawab of the Carnatic It was a result of this action and the increased British influence that in 1765 a firman decree came from the Emperor of Delhi recognising the British possessions in southern India Margaret Maskelyne had set out to find Clive who reportedly had fallen in love with her portrait When she arrived Clive was a national hero They were married at St Mary s Church in then Madras on 18 February 1753 43 44 They then returned to England 43 Clive also briefly sat as Member of Parliament for the Cornwall rotten borough of St Michael s which then returned two Members from 1754 to 1755 45 He and his colleague John Stephenson were later unseated by petition of their defeated opponents Richard Hussey and Simon Luttrell 46 Second journey to India 1755 1760 EditFurther information Great Britain in the Seven Years War In July 1755 Clive returned to India 47 to act as deputy governor of Fort St David at Cuddalore He arrived after having lost a considerable fortune en route as the Doddington the lead ship of his convoy was wrecked near Port Elizabeth losing a chest of gold coins belonging to Clive worth 33 000 equivalent to 5 500 000 in 2021 Nearly 250 years later in 1998 illegally salvaged coins from Clive s treasure chest were offered for sale 48 and in 2002 a portion of the coins were given to the South African government after protracted legal wrangling Clive now promoted to lieutenant colonel in the British Army took part in the capture of the fortress of Gheriah a stronghold of the Maratha Admiral Tuloji Angre The action was led by Admiral James Watson and the British had several ships available some Royal troops and some Maratha allies The overwhelming strength of the joint British and Maratha forces ensured that the battle was won with few losses A fleet surgeon Edward Ives noted that Clive refused to take any part of the treasure divided among the victorious forces as was custom at the time 49 Fall and recapture of Calcutta 1756 57 Edit Following this action Clive headed to his post at Fort St David and it was there he received news of twin disasters for the British Early in 1756 Siraj Ud Daulah had succeeded his grandfather Alivardi Khan as Nawab of Bengal In June Clive received news that the new Nawab had attacked the British at Kasimbazar and shortly afterwards on 20 June he had taken the fort at Calcutta The losses to the Company because of the fall of Calcutta were estimated by investors at 2 000 000 equivalent to 320 000 000 in 2021 citation needed Those British who were captured were placed in a punishment cell which became infamous as the Black Hole of Calcutta In stifling summer heat it was reported that 43 of the 64 prisoners died as a result of suffocation or heat stroke 50 51 While the Black Hole became infamous in Britain it is debatable whether the Nawab was aware of the incident 52 By Christmas 1756 as no response had been received to diplomatic letters to the Nawab Admiral Charles Watson and Clive were dispatched to attack the Nawab s army and remove him from Calcutta by force Their first target was the fortress of Baj Baj which Clive approached by land while Admiral Watson bombarded it from the sea The fortress was quickly taken with minimal British casualties Shortly afterwards on 2 January 1757 Calcutta itself was taken with similar ease 53 Approximately a month later on 3 February 1757 Clive encountered the army of the Nawab itself For two days the army marched past Clive s camp to take up a position east of Calcutta Sir Eyre Coote serving in the British forces estimated the enemy s strength as 40 000 cavalry 60 000 infantry and thirty cannon Even allowing for overestimation this was considerably more than Clive s force of approximately 540 British infantry 600 Royal Navy sailors 800 local sepoys fourteen field guns and no cavalry The British forces attacked the Nawab s camp during the early morning hours of 5 February 1757 In this battle unofficially called the Calcutta Gauntlet Clive marched his small force through the entire Nawab s camp despite being under heavy fire from all sides By noon Clive s force broke through the besieging camp and arrived safely at Fort William During the assault around one tenth of the British attackers became casualties Clive reported his losses at 57 killed and 137 wounded While technically not a victory in military terms the sudden British assault intimidated the Nawab He sought to make terms with Clive and surrendered control of Calcutta on 9 February promising to compensate the East India Company for damages suffered and to restore its privileges War with Siraj Ud Daulah Edit 9 Plassey Battery Royal Artillery of the British Military As Britain and France were once more at war Clive sent the fleet up the river against the French colony of Chandannagar while he besieged it by land There was a strong incentive to capture the colony as capture of a previous French settlement near Pondicherry had yielded the combined forces prizes valued at 130 000 equivalent to 18 500 000 in 2021 15 After consenting to the siege the Nawab unsuccessfully sought to assist the French Some officials of the Nawab s court formed a confederacy to depose him Jafar Ali Khan also known as Mir Jafar the Nawab s commander in chief led the conspirators With Admiral Watson Governor Drake and Mr Watts Clive made a gentlemen s agreement in which it was agreed to give the office of viceroy of Bengal Bihar and Odisha to Mir Jafar who was to pay 1 000 000 equivalent to 140 000 000 in 2021 to the company for its losses in Calcutta and the cost of its troops 500 000 equivalent to 70 000 000 in 2021 to the British inhabitants of Calcutta 200 000 equivalent to 28 500 000 in 2021 to the native inhabitants and 70 000 equivalent to 10 000 000 in 2021 to its Armenian merchants 15 Clive employed Umichand a rich Bengali trader as an agent between Mir Jafar and the British officials Umichand threatened to betray Clive unless he was guaranteed in the agreement itself 300 000 equivalent to 47 500 000 in 2021 To dupe him a second fictitious agreement was shown to him with a clause to this effect Admiral Watson refused to sign it Clive deposed later to the House of Commons that to the best of his remembrance he gave the gentleman who carried it leave to sign his name upon it his lordship never made any secret of it he thinks it warrantable in such a case and would do it again a hundred times he had no interested motive in doing it and did it with a design of disappointing the expectations of a rapacious man It is nevertheless cited as an example of Clive s unscrupulousness 15 Plassey Edit Main article Battle of Plassey Robert Clive 1st Baron Clive of Plassey meeting with Mir Jafar after the Battle of Plassey by Francis Hayman National Portrait Gallery London The whole hot season of 1757 was spent in negotiations with the Nawab of Bengal In the middle of June Clive began his march from Chandannagar with the British in boats and the sepoys along the right bank of the Hooghly River During the rainy season the Hooghly is fed by the overflow of the Ganges to the north through three streams which in the hot months are nearly dry On the left bank of the Bhagirathi the most westerly of these 100 miles 160 km above Chandernagore stands Murshidabad the capital of the Mughal viceroys of Bengal Some miles farther down is the field of Plassey then an extensive grove of mango trees 15 On 21 June 1757 Clive arrived on the bank opposite Plassey in the midst of the first outburst of monsoon rain His whole army amounted to 1 100 Europeans and 2 100 sepoy troops with nine field pieces The Nawab had drawn up 18 000 horse 50 000 foot and 53 pieces of heavy ordnance served by French artillerymen For once in his career Clive hesitated and called a council of sixteen officers to decide as he put it whether in our present situation without assistance and on our own bottom it would be prudent to attack the Nawab or whether we should wait till joined by some country Indian power Clive himself headed the nine who voted for delay Major Eyre Coote led the seven who counselled immediate attack But either because his daring asserted itself or because of a letter received from Mir Jafar Clive was the first to change his mind and to communicate with Major Eyre Coote One tradition followed by Macaulay represents him as spending an hour in thought under the shade of some trees while he resolved the issues of what was to prove one of the decisive battles of the world Another turned into verse by Sir Alfred Lyall pictures his resolution as the result of a dream However that may be he did well as a soldier to trust to the dash and even rashness that had gained Arcot and triumphed at Calcutta since retreat or even delay might have resulted in defeat 15 After heavy rain Clive s 3 200 men and the nine guns crossed the river and took possession of the grove and its tanks of water while Clive established his headquarters in a hunting lodge On 23 June the engagement took place and lasted the whole day during which remarkably little actual fighting took place Gunpowder for the cannons of the Nawab was not well protected from rain That impaired those cannons Except for the 40 Frenchmen and the guns they worked the Indian side could do little to reply to the British cannonade after a spell of rain which with the 39th Regiment scattered the host inflicting on it a loss of 500 men Clive had already made a secret agreement with aristocrats in Bengal including Jagat Seth and Mir Jafar Clive restrained Major Kilpatrick for he trusted to Mir Jafar s abstinence if not desertion to his ranks and knew the importance of sparing his own small force 15 He was fully justified in his confidence in Mir Jafar s treachery to his master for he led a large portion of the Nawab s army away from the battlefield ensuring his defeat Clive lost hardly any European troops in all 22 sepoys were killed and 50 wounded 15 It is curious in many ways that Clive is now best remembered for this battle which was essentially won by suborning the opposition rather than through fighting or brilliant military tactics Whilst it established British military supremacy in Bengal it did not secure the East India Company s control over Upper India as is sometimes claimed That would come only seven years later in 1764 at the Battle of Buxar where Sir Hector Munro defeated the combined forces of the Mughal Emperor and the Nawab of Awadh in a much more closely fought encounter Siraj Ud Daulah fled from the field on a camel securing what wealth he could He was soon captured by Mir Jafar s forces and later executed by the assassin Mohammadi Beg Clive entered Murshidabad and established Mir Jafar as Nawab the price which had been agreed beforehand for his treachery Clive was taken through the treasury amid 1 500 000 equivalent to 210 000 000 in 2021 sterling s worth of rupees gold and silver plate jewels and rich goods and besought to ask what he would Clive took 160 000 equivalent to 22 800 000 in 2021 a vast fortune for the day while 500 000 equivalent to 70 000 000 in 2021 was distributed among the army and navy of the East India Company and provided gifts of 24 000 equivalent to 3 400 000 in 2021 to each member of the company s committee as well as the public compensation stipulated for in the treaty 15 In this extraction of wealth Clive followed a usage fully recognised by the company although this was the source of future corruption which Clive was later sent to India again to correct The company itself acquired revenue of 100 000 equivalent to 14 300 000 in 2021 a year and a contribution towards its losses and military expenditure of 1 500 000 sterling equivalent to 210 000 000 in 2021 Mir Jafar further discharged his debt to Clive by afterwards presenting him with the quit rent of the company s lands in and around Calcutta amounting to an annuity of 27 000 equivalent to 3 900 000 in 2021 for life and leaving him by will the sum of 70 000 equivalent to 10 000 000 in 2021 which Clive devoted to the army 15 Further campaigns Edit Battle of Condore Edit While busy with the civil administration Clive continued to follow up his military success He sent Major Coote in pursuit of the French almost as far as Benares He dispatched Colonel Forde to Vizagapatam and the northern districts of Madras where Forde won the Battle of Condore 1758 pronounced by Broome one of the most brilliant actions on military record 15 Mughals Edit Main article Treaty of Allahabad The Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II as a pensioner of the British East India Company 1781 Clive came into direct contact with the Mughal himself for the first time a meeting which would prove beneficial in his later career Prince Ali Gauhar escaped from Delhi after his father the Mughal Emperor Alamgir II had been murdered by the usurping Vizier Imad ul Mulk and his Maratha associate Sadashivrao Bhau 54 Prince Ali Gauhar was welcomed and protected by Shuja ud Daula the Nawab of Awadh In 1760 after gaining control over Bihar Odisha and some parts of the Bengal Ali Gauhar and his Mughal Army of 30 000 intended to overthrow Mir Jafar and the Company in order to reconquer the riches of the eastern Subahs for the Mughal Empire Ali Gauhar was accompanied by Muhammad Quli Khan Hidayat Ali Mir Afzal Kadim Husein and Ghulam Husain Tabatabai Their forces were reinforced by the forces of Shuja ud Daula and Najib ud Daula The Mughals were also joined by Jean Law and 200 Frenchmen and waged a campaign against the British during the Seven Years War Prince Ali Gauhar successfully advanced as far as Patna which he later besieged with a combined army of over 40 000 in order to capture or kill Ramnarian a sworn enemy of the Mughals Mir Jafar was terrified at the near demise of his cohort and sent his own son Miran to relieve Ramnarian and retake Patna Mir Jafar also implored the aid of Robert Clive but it was Major John Caillaud who defeated and dispersed Prince Ali Gauhar s army 15 Dutch aggression Edit While Clive was preoccupied with fighting the French the Dutch directors of the outpost at Chinsurah not far from Chandernagore seeing an opportunity to expand their influence agreed to send additional troops to Chinsurah Despite Britain and the Dutch Republic not formally being at war a Dutch fleet of seven ships containing more than fifteen hundred European and Malay troops came from Batavia and arrived at the mouth of the Hooghly River in October 1759 while Mir Jafar the Nawab of Bengal was meeting with Clive in Calcutta They met a mixed force of British and local troops at Chinsurah just outside Calcutta The British under Colonel Francis Forde defeated the Dutch in the Battle of Chinsurah forcing them to withdraw The British engaged and defeated the ships the Dutch used to deliver the troops in a separate naval battle on 24 November Thus Clive avenged the massacre of Amboyna the occasion when he wrote his famous letter Dear Forde fight them immediately I will send you the order of council to morrow Meanwhile Clive improved the organisation and drill of the sepoy army after a European model and enlisted into it many Muslims from upper regions of the Mughal Empire He re fortified Calcutta In 1760 after four years of hard labour his health gave way and he returned to England It appeared wrote a contemporary on the spot as if the soul was departing from the Government of Bengal He had been formally made Governor of Bengal by the Court of Directors at a time when his nominal superiors in Madras sought to recall him to their help there But he had discerned the importance of the province even during his first visit to its rich delta mighty rivers and teeming population Clive selected some able subordinates notably a young Warren Hastings who a year after Plassey was made Resident at the Nawab s court 15 The long term outcome of Plassey was to place a very heavy revenue burden upon Bengal The company sought to extract the maximum revenue possible from the peasantry to fund military campaigns and corruption was widespread amongst its officials Mir Jafar was compelled to engage in extortion on a vast scale citation needed in order to replenish his treasury which had been emptied by the company s demand for an indemnity of 2 8 crores of rupees 3 million 55 Return to Great Britain Edit Robert Clive s coat of arms left and the arms in relief at Claremont above In 1760 the 35 year old Clive returned to Great Britain with a fortune of at least 300 000 equivalent to 48 300 000 in 2021 and the quit rent of 27 000 equivalent to 4 300 000 in 2021 a year He financially supported his parents and sisters while also providing Major Lawrence the commanding officer who had early encouraged his military genius with a stipend of 500 equivalent to 100 000 in 2021 a year In the five years of his conquests and administration in Bengal the young man had crowded together a succession of exploits that led Lord Macaulay in what that historian termed his flashy essay on the subject to compare him to Napoleon Bonaparte declaring that Clive gave peace security prosperity and such liberty as the case allowed of to millions of Indians who had for centuries been the prey of oppression while Napoleon s career of conquest was inspired only by personal ambition and the absolutism he established vanished with his fall Macaulay s ringing endorsement of Clive seems more controversial today as some would argue that Clive s ambition and desire for personal gain set the tone for the administration of Bengal until the Permanent Settlement 30 years later The immediate consequence of Clive s victory at Plassey was an increase in the revenue demand on Bengal by at least 20 which led to considerable hardship for the rural population particularly during the famine of 1770 56 During the three years that Clive remained in Great Britain he sought a political position chiefly that he might influence the course of events in India which he had left full of promise He had been well received at court was elevated to the peerage as Baron Clive of Plassey County Clare had bought estates and returned a few friends as well as himself to the House of Commons Clive was MP for Shrewsbury from 1761 until his death He was allowed to sit in the Commons because his peerage was Irish 46 He was also elected Mayor of Shrewsbury for 1762 63 57 The non graduate Clive received an honorary degree as DCL from Oxford University in 1760 and in 1764 he was appointed Knight of the Order of the Bath 58 Clive set himself to reform the home system of the East India Company and began a bitter dispute with the chairman of the Court of Directors Laurence Sulivan whom he defeated in the end In this he was aided by the news of reverses in Bengal Mir Jafar had finally rebelled over payments to British officials and Clive s successor had put Qasim Ali Khan Mir Jafar s son in law upon the musnud throne After a brief tenure Mir Qasim had fled ordering Walter Reinhardt Sombre known to the Muslims as Sumru a Swiss mercenary of his to butcher the garrison of 150 British at Patna and had disappeared under the protection of his brother the Viceroy of Awadh The whole company s service civil and military had become mired in corruption demoralised by gifts and by the monopoly of inland and export trade to such an extent that the Indians were pauperised and the company was plundered of the revenues Clive had acquired For this Clive himself must bear much responsibility as he had set a very poor example during his tenure as Governor Nevertheless the Court of Proprietors forced the Directors to hurry Lord Clive to Bengal with the double powers of Governor and Commander in Chief 15 Third journey to India Edit Clive meeting with Emperor Shah Alam II 1765 On 3 May 1765 Clive landed at Calcutta to learn that Mir Jafar had died leaving him personally 70 000 equivalent to 10 200 000 in 2021 Mir Jafar was succeeded by his son in law Kasim Ali though not before the government had been further demoralised by taking 100 000 equivalent to 14 500 000 in 2021 as a gift from the new Nawab while Kasim Ali had induced not only the viceroy of Awadh but the emperor of Delhi himself to invade Bihar At this point a mutiny in the Bengal army occurred which was a grim precursor of the Indian rebellion of 1857 but on this occasion it was quickly suppressed by blowing the sepoy ringleader from a gun Major Munro the Napier of those times scattered the united armies on the hard fought field of Buxar The emperor Shah Alam II detached himself from the league while the Awadh viceroy threw himself on the mercy of the British 15 Miniature of Al Khidr from the Small Clive Album thought to have been given to Clive on his 1765 67 visit to India by Shuja ud Daula the Nawab of Awadh The Album contains 62 folia of Mughal miniature paintings drawing and floral pattern studies The binding is from Indian brocade silk brought home by the 2nd Lord Clive who served as Governor of Madras 1799 to 1803 Acquired by the Victoria and Albert Museum in 1956 Clive had now an opportunity of repeating in Hindustan or Upper India what he had accomplished in Bengal He might have secured what is now called Uttar Pradesh and have rendered unnecessary the campaigns of Wellesley and Lake But he believed he had other work in the exploitation of the revenues and resources of rich Bengal itself making it a base from which British India would afterwards steadily grow Hence he returned to the Awadh viceroy all his territory save the provinces of Allahabad and Kora which he presented to the weak emperor 15 Mughal Firman Edit In return for the Awadhian provinces Clive secured from the emperor one of the most important documents in British history in India effectively granting title of Bengal to Clive It appears in the records as firman from the King Shah Aalum granting the diwani rights of Bengal Bihar and Odisha to the Company 1765 The date was 12 August 1765 the place Benares the throne an English dining table covered with embroidered cloth and surmounted by a chair in Clive s tent It is all pictured by a Muslim contemporary who indignantly exclaims that so great a transaction was done and finished in less time than would have been taken up in the sale of a jackass By this deed the company became the real sovereign rulers of thirty million people yielding a revenue of 4 000 000 sterling equivalent to 580 000 000 in 2021 15 On the same date Clive obtained not only an imperial charter for the company s possessions in the Carnatic completing the work he began at Arcot but a third firman for the highest of all the lieutenancies of the empire that of the Deccan itself This fact is mentioned in a letter from the secret committee of the court of directors to the Madras government dated 27 April 1768 The British presence in India was still tiny compared to the number and strength of the princes and people of India but also compared to the forces of their ambitious French Dutch and Danish rivals Clive had this in mind when he penned his last advice to the directors as he finally left India in 1767 15 We are sensible that since the acquisition of the dewany the power formerly belonging to the soubah of those provinces is totally in fact vested in the East India Company Nothing remains to him but the name and shadow of authority This name however this shadow it is indispensably necessary we should seem to venerate 15 Attempts at administrative reform Edit Having thus founded the Empire of British India Clive sought to put in place a strong administration The salaries of civil servants were increased the acceptance of gifts from Indians was forbidden and Clive exacted covenants under which participation in the inland trade was stopped Unfortunately this had very little impact in reducing corruption which remained widespread until the days of Warren Hastings Clive s military reforms were more effective He put down a mutiny of the British officers who chose to resent the veto against receiving presents and the reduction of batta extra pay at a time when two Maratha armies were marching on Bengal His reorganisation of the army on the lines of that which he had begun after Plassey neglected during his absence in Great Britain subsequently attracted the admiration of Indian officers He divided the whole army into three brigades making each a complete force in itself equal to any single Indian army that could be brought against it 59 60 Clive was also instrumental in making the company virtual master of North India by introducing his policy of Dual system of government According to the new arrangement enforced by him the company became liable only for revenue affairs of Bengal Diwani and Bihar while the administration and law and order was made a prerogative of the Nawab An office of Deputy Nawab was created who was at the helms of all the affairs vis a vis revenue of two of the richest provinces of India besides being the company s representative while the Nizamat Law and order remained in the hands of the Nawab who appointed his own representative to deal with the company This system proved to be detrimental for the administration of Bengal and ultimately the Dual system of government was abolished by Clive 61 Retirement and death EditClive left India for the last time in February 1767 In 1768 he lived at the Chateau de Larzac in Pezenas Herault Languedoc Roussillon in southern France Local tradition is that he introduced local bakers to a sweet pastry le petit pate de Pezenas and that he more obviously his chef had brought the recipe from India as a refined version of the savoury keema naan 62 Pezenas is known for such delicacies Plaque in memory of Lord Clive in Pezenas Later in 1768 Clive was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society 58 and served as treasurer of the Royal Salop Infirmary in Shrewsbury 63 In 1769 he acquired the house and gardens of Claremont near Esher and commissioned Capability Brown to remodel the garden and house In 1772 Parliament opened an inquiry into the company s practices in India Clive s political opponents turned these hearings into attacks on Clive Questioned about some of the large sums of money he had received while in India Clive pointed out that they were not contrary to accepted company practice and defended his behaviour by stating I stand astonished at my own moderation given opportunities for greater gain The hearings highlighted the need for reform of the company a vote to censure Clive for his actions failed Later in 1772 Clive was invested Knight of the Bath eight years after he has been made knight bachelor 58 and was appointed Lord Lieutenant of Shropshire A great famine between 1769 and 1773 reduced the population of Bengal by a third It was argued that the activities and aggrandisement of company officials caused the famine particularly abuse of trade monopoly and land tax used for the personal benefit of company officials 64 65 These revelations and subsequent debates in Parliament reduced Clive s political popularity citation needed Clive continued to be involved in Parliamentary discussions on company reforms In 1773 General John Burgoyne one of Clive s most vocal critics pressed the case that some of Clive s gains were made at the expense of the company and of the government Clive again made a spirited defence of his actions and closed his testimony by stating Take my fortune but save my honour The vote that followed exonerated Clive who was commended for the great and meritorious service he rendered to the country Immediately thereafter Parliament began debating the Regulating Act of 1773 which significantly reformed the East India Company s practices On 22 November 1774 Clive died aged 49 at his Berkeley Square home His death was caused by a cut to his throat from a penknife he held The manner of his death has long been the subject of controversy No inquest was carried out the absence of which caused contemporary newspapers to report his death as due to an apoplectic fit or stroke 66 67 20th century biographer John Watney concluded He did not die from a self inflicted wound He died as he severed his jugular with a blunt paper knife brought on by an overdose of drugs 68 While Clive left no suicide note Samuel Johnson wrote that he had acquired his fortune by such crimes that his consciousness of them impelled him to cut his own throat 69 Clive s demise has been linked to his history of depression and to opium addiction but the likely immediate impetus was excruciating pain resulting from illness he was known to suffer from gallstones which he had been attempting to abate with opium citation needed Shortly beforehand he had been offered and declined command of British forces in North America 70 He was buried in St Margaret s Parish Church at Moreton Say near his birthplace in Shropshire Plassey House now part of the University of Limerick Clive was awarded an Irish peerage in 1762 created Baron Clive of Plassey County Clare he bought lands in County Limerick and County Clare Ireland naming part of his lands near Limerick City Plassey Following Irish independence these lands became state property In the 1970s a technical college later the University of Limerick was built at Plassey Family EditOn 18 February 1753 in Madras Clive married Margaret Maskelyne d 28 December 1817 41 on 18 February 1753 41 sister of the Rev Dr Nevil Maskelyne fifth Astronomer Royal They had nine children Edward Clive 1st Earl of Powis b 7 March 1754 d 16 May 1839 Rebecca Clive b 15 September 1760 bapt 10 October 1760 Moreton Say d December 1795 married in 1780 to Lt Gen John Robinson of Denston Hall Suffolk MP d 1798 Charlotte Clive b 19 January 1762 d unm 20 October 1795 Margaret Clive bapt 18 September 1763 Condover Shropshire d June 1814 married 11 April 1780 Lt Col Lambert Theodore Walpole d in Wexford Rebellion 1798 Elizabeth Clive bapt 18 November 1764 Condover d young Richard Clive d young Robert Clive d young Robert Clive Jnr b 14 August 1769 d unm 28 July 1833 Lt Col Jane Clive d young Criticism EditClive s actions have been criticised by modern historians due to actions in India particularly his involvement in the Bengal Famine of 1770 and his economic management of India The 21st century Scottish historian William Dalrymple has called Clive an unstable sociopath Changes caused by Clive to the Indian revenue system and existing agricultural practices designed to maximize profits for the East India Company increased the level of poverty in Bengal 71 Clive himself commented on the poor conditions of Bengal under Company rule I shall only say that such a scene of anarchy confusion bribery corruption and extortion was never seen or heard of in any country but Bengal nor did such and so many fortunes acquire in so unjust and rapacious a manner The three provinces of Bengal Bihar and Orissa producing a clear revenue of 3 million sterling have been under the absolute management of the company s servants ever since Mir Jafar s restoration to the subahship and they have both civil and military exacted and levied contributions from every man of power and consequence from the Nawab down to the lowest zamindar Petitions have called for removal of a statue of Clive from The Square in Shrewsbury 72 No more than 20 000 signatures supported such a move and on 16 July 2020 Shropshire Council voted 28 17 to retain the statue 73 A similar petition for removal of Clive s statue from outside the Foreign and Commonwealth Office in Whitehall accrued some 80 000 signatures 74 In light of criticism of Clive s legacy in 2020 Haberdashers Adams school in Newport Shropshire announced that Clive House was to be renamed Owen House after the Shropshire poet Wilfred Owen 75 Legacy Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article Clive A statue of Clive stands tall in Shrewsbury Square A later statue of Clive stands in King Charles Street London Robert Clive Statue in Victoria Memorial Kolkata Robert Clive s desk from his time at Market Drayton Grammar School is on display at Market Drayton museum complete with his carved initials The town also has a Clive Road Robert Clive s pet Aldabra giant tortoise died on 23 March 2006 in the Kolkata zoo The tortoise whose name was Adwaita meaning the One and Only in Bengali appeared to be 150 250 years old Adwaita had been in the zoo since the 1870s and the zoo s documentation showed that he came from Clive s estate in India 76 A statue of Clive stands in the main square in the market town of Shrewsbury as well as a later one in King Charles Street near St James s Park London Clive is a Senior Girls house at the Duke of York s Royal Military School where as at Welbeck college all houses are named after prominent military figures Clive was a house at Haberdashers Adams school in Newport Shropshire which in 2021 was renamed Owen house after the poet and soldier Wilfred Owen who was born near Oswestry in Shropshire This follows criticism of Robert Clive in light of the George Floyd protests Clive Road in West Dulwich London commemorates Baron Clive 77 despite being so named close to a century after his death Following the completion of the relocation of The Crystal Palace from Hyde Park to what is now Upper Norwood in 1854 the West End of London and Crystal Palace Railway was opened on 10 June 1854 to cope with crowds visiting the Crystal Palace This led to a huge increase in employment in the area and a subsequent increase in the building of residential properties Many of the new roads were named after eminent figures in British imperial history such as Robert Clive There is a settlement which named after Clive in the Hawke s Bay province of New Zealand Clive s coat of arms can be seen impaled with his wife s in relief in the pediment at Claremont in Surrey which Clive had rebuilt A bestselling children s novel G A Henty s With Clive in India Or the Beginnings of an Empire 1884 celebrates Clive s life and career from a pro British point of view R J Minney s stage play Clive of India 1933 portrays the life of Clive particularly focusing on his victory at the Battle of Plassey It was based on a biography of Clive that Minney had written two years earlier 78 The 1935 film Clive of India based on Minney s play starred Ronald Colman Loretta Young and Clive s descendant Colin Clive 79 Clive was a house at Merchant Taylors School Northwood where he was a student for seven years before his expulsion Members were distinguished by their red striped ties In January 2021 the house was renamed after former pupil and sportsman John Raphael 80 Robert Clive established the first slaughterhouse in India in Calcutta in 1760 81 Clive of India is a brand of curry powder manufactured in Australia by McKenzie s Foods With the re capture of Calcutta by Clive in 1756 the cultivation of poppies for the opium trade soon came to be the mainstay of the East India Trading Company s commerce with Imperial China 82 Clive is responsible for opening the first organized brothel within the Army cantonment of Calcutta He was not interested in eradication of prostitution but in regulation so that their own soldiers and sailors could be protected from venereal diseases However two properties in central Calcutta owned by women named Ishwari and Bhobi whom the Company identified as prostitutes were seized in 1753 83 Robert Browning s 1880 poem Clive recounts a fictional episode in which Clive as a young clerk duels a card sharping soldier Clive shoots and misses the cheat then admits his crime and spares Clive s life The poem s narrator and those watching the duel initially believe that the episode shows Clive s courage in standing up honestly but Clive rebukes them that the magnanimous cheat showed far more honour The poem largely focuses on the relationship between courage and fear and closes with an allusion to Clive s suicide Clive s worst deed we ll hope condoned Notes Edit G A Henty 1 March 2012 With Clive in India Or The Beginnings of an Empire The Floating Press ISBN 978 1 77545 628 5 Retrieved 9 June 2020 John Basil Watney 1974 Clive of India Saxon House ISBN 9780347000086 Retrieved 9 June 2020 Hundreds sign petition to remove Clive of India statue in UK India Today 9 June 2020 Retrieved 9 June 2020 He was celebrated in so many subsequent histories as the founder of British India Emma Rothschild The Inner Life of Empires An Eighteenth Century History Princeton UP 2011 p 45 C Brad Faught Clive Founder of British India 2013 Lord Clive The Founder of the British Empire in India a Drama in Five Acts St Joseph s Industrial School Press 1913 Raj The Making and Unmaking of British India Macmillan 12 August 2000 ISBN 9780312263829 Robert Clive Robert Clive 1725 74 Statue by John Tweed 1912 Sibree Bron 19 September 2019 The Anarchy how the East India Company looted India and became too big to fail explored by William Dalrymple Post Magazine Book review Clive of India by John Watney published 1974 p 149 CLIVE Robert 1725 74 of Styche Hall nr Market Drayton Salop subsequently of Walcot Park Salop Claremont Surr and Oakley Park Salop The History of Parliament Robert Clive Biography papers and letters written by him www britishonlinearchives co uk British Onlive Archives Retrieved 8 June 2017 Arbuthnot p 1 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Chisholm 1911 a b Harvey 1998 p 11 Harvey 1998 p 10 Malleson 1893 p 9 Arbuthnot p 2 Malleson 1893 p 10 Treasure p 196 Harvey 1998 pp 18 21 Harvey 1998 pp 23 24 a b Harvey 1998 p 30 Harvey 1998 pp 24 29 Malleson 1893 pp 16 32 Harvey 1998 pp 29 30 Harvey 1998 p 31 Malleson 1893 p 35 Harvey 1998 pp 31 34 Malleson 1893 p 38 Harvey 1998 pp 35 36 Harvey 1998 p 39 a b Harvey 1998 p 41 Harvey 1998 p 42 Malleson 1893 pp 40 41 Harvey 1998 p 46 Harvey 1998 pp 46 47 Harvey 1998 pp 47 48 Keay John The Honourable Company A History of the English East India Company HarperCollins London 1991 ISBN 0 00 217515 0 p 289 a b c Stephen Leslie ed 1887 Clive Robert Dictionary of National Biography Vol 11 London Smith Elder amp Co Thomas Babington Macaulay Lord Clive Essays London 1891 pp 511 13 First published in the Edinburgh Review January 1840 a b Bowen H V 2004 Clive nee Maskelyne Margaret Lady Clive of Plassey 1735 1817 society figure Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 63502 Retrieved 20 January 2021 Subscription or UK public library membership required Peggy the other Clive The Week Retrieved 20 January 2021 Gibbs Vicary ed 1912 The Complete Peerage Volume III St Catherine s Press p 325 a b CLIVE Robert 1725 74 of Styche Hall nr Market Drayton Salop subsequently of Walcot Park Salop Claremont Surr and Oakley Park Salop History of Parliament Online Retrieved 8 September 2017 Sailing Ship Dodington history Dodington Family Archived from the original on 14 January 2005 Retrieved 10 July 2008 Russell Alec 9 October 1997 South Africa seeks its share of Clive s pounds 1 2 m treasure trove The Telegraph p 21 Keay John The Honourable Company A History of the English East India Company HarperCollins London 1991 ISBN 0 00 217515 0 p 269 Wolpert Stanley 2009 First published 1977 A New History of India 8th ed Oxford University Press p 185 ISBN 978 0 19 533756 3 D L Prior Holwell s biographer in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography reports figures of 64 prisoners and 21 survivors H E Busteed Echoes from Old Calcutta Calcutta 1908 pp 30 56 Sir William Wilson Hunter 1886 The Indian Empire Its Peoples History and Products Trubner amp Company pp 381 Retrieved 11 July 2012 S R Sharma 1 January 1999 Mughal Empire in India A Systematic Study Including Source Material Atlantic Publishers amp Dist pp 767 ISBN 978 81 7156 819 2 Retrieved 11 July 2012 P J Marshall 1987 p 83 P J Marshall 1987 p 144 Former Mayors of Shrewsbury 1638 to present Shrewsbury Town Council Archived from the original on 29 November 2014 Retrieved 19 November 2014 a b c Gibbs Vicary ed 1912 The Complete Peerage Volume III St Catherine s Press p 326 Curzon G N Complete book online British Government in India The Story of Viceroys and Government Houses Retrieved 22 March 2019 Douglas James Complete book online Bombay and western India a series of stray papers with photos of Ajmer London Samson Low Marston amp Co Retrieved 22 March 2019 Administrative Reforms of Robert clive britannica com Retrieved 16 August 2020 Domaine de Larzac Archived 11 September 2016 at the Wayback Machine coolvines com accessed 30 January 2012 Keeling Roberts Margaret 1981 In Retrospect A Short History of The Royal Salop Infirmary North Shropshire Printing Co Ltd p ix ISBN 0 9507849 0 7 Smith Adam 1776 The Wealth of Nations Book 4 Chap 5 Par 45 Dirks Nicholas 2006 The scandal of Empire India and the creation of Imperial Britain ISBN 978 8178241753 Bence Jones Mark 1974 Clive of India Constable p 299 ISBN 0 09 459830 4 Robert Clive was a vicious asset stripper His statue has no place on Whitehall William Dalrymple The Guardian 11 June 2020 Retrieved 31 January 2022 Watney John 1974 Clive of India Saxon House pp 216 217 ISBN 0 347 00008 8 Dalrymple William 2019 The Anarchy The Relentless Rise of the East India Company Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1408864401 Harvey p 160 Dalrymple William 4 March 2015 The East India Company The original corporate raiders The Guardian Retrieved 6 June 2015 Thousands call for Shrewsbury s Clive of India statue to go BBC News 9 June 2020 Retrieved 22 September 2020 Humphreys Nick Clive of India statue to remain in Shrewsbury after council vote www shropshirestar com Retrieved 22 September 2020 Nayar Mandira 23 August 2020 Thug of Hindustan The Week Our Houses Haberdashers Adams Clive of India s tortoise dies BBC News 23 March 2006 Retrieved 10 July 2008 William Darby 1967 Dulwich A Place in History W Darby p 20 Wearing J P The London Stage 1930 1939 A Calendar of Productions Performers and Personnel Rowman amp Littlefield 2014 Colin Clive Actor Dies in Hollywood Star of Screen and Stage 37 Scored First Hit as Stanhope in Journey s End Made Debut Here in 1930 Appeared in Clive of India a Picture Based on Life of His Ancestor Descendant of Empire Builder Played Frankenstein Role The New York Times 26 June 1937 Private school s Clive of India house renamed over links to British Empire Watford Observer Retrieved 9 January 2021 Cow Slaughtering GouGram org Official website of Vishw Mangala Gou Gram Yatra VMGGY Archived 16 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine Eng gougram org 24 May 2011 Retrieved on 11 July 2012 Stewart Terry First Opium War Historic UK Banerjee Sumanta 2000 Under The Raj Prostitution in Colonial Bengal ISBN 1583670351 References EditSecondary sources Edit Mark Bence Jones 1974 Clive of India Constable amp Robinson Limited ISBN 978 0 09 459830 0 Chaudhuri Nirad C Robert Clive of India A Political and Psychological Essay 1975 Faught C Brad 2013 Clive Founder of British India Washington D C Potomac Books Inc Harrington Jack 2010 Sir John Malcolm and the Creation of British India ch 6 New York Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 10885 1 Harvey Robert A Few Bloody Noses The American Revolutionary War Constable amp Robinson 2004 Harvey Robert Clive The life and Death of a British Emperor Hodder and Stoughton 1998 Alfred Mervyn Davies 1939 Clive of Plassey A Biography C Scribner s sons ISBN 9780598503046 Michael Edwardes The Battle of Plassey and the Conquest of Bengal London 1963 P J Marshall 1987 Bengal The British Bridgehead Eastern India 1740 1828 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 25330 7 Treasure Geoffrey 2002 Who s Who in Early Hanoverian Britain 1714 1789 Stackpole Books ISBN 0 8117 1643 0 Bowen H V Clive Robert Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 5697 Subscription or UK public library membership required Arbuthnot Alexander John 1887 Clive Robert In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 11 London Smith Elder amp Co This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Clive Robert Clive Baron Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 6 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 532 536 Baynes T S ed 1875 1889 Robert Clive Encyclopaedia Britannica 9th ed New York Charles Scribner s Sons External links EditRobert Clive at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Data from Wikidata Archival material relating to Robert Clive UK National Archives Lord Clive an essay by Thomas Babington Macaulay January 1840 Military officesPreceded byJohn Adlercron Commander in Chief India1756 1760 Succeeded byJohn CaillaudPreceded byJohn Carnac Commander in Chief India1765 1767 Succeeded byRichard SmithHonorary titlesPreceded byThe Earl of Powis Lord Lieutenant of Shropshire1772 1774 Succeeded byThe Lord CliveLord Lieutenant of Montgomeryshire1773 1774 Succeeded byThe Earl of HertfordPeerage of IrelandNew creation Baron Clive1762 1774 Succeeded byEdward CliveParliament of Great BritainPreceded byThomas ClarkeArnold Nesbitt Member of Parliament for Mitchell1754 1755 With John Stephenson Succeeded bySimon LuttrellRichard HusseyPreceded byThomas HillRobert More Member of Parliament for Shrewsbury1761 1774 With Thomas Hill 1761 1768Noel Hill 1768 1774Charlton Leighton 1774 Succeeded byWilliam PulteneyJohn Corbet Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert Clive amp oldid 1130276750, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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