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Siraj ud-Daulah

Mirza Muhammad Siraj-ud-Daulah (Persian: میرزا محمد سراج الدوله; 1733 – 2 July 1757), commonly known as Siraj-ud-Daulah[a] or Siraj ud-Daula,[6] was the last independent Nawab of Bengal. The end of his reign marked the start of the rule of the East India Company over Bengal and later almost all of the Indian subcontinent.

Nawab Siraj-ud-Daulah
Mansur-ul-Mulk (Victory of the Country)
Siraj ud-Daulah (Light of the State)
Hybut Jang (Horror in War)
Nawab of Bengal
Siraj-ud-Daulah
Nawab Nazim of Bengal and Bihar
Reign9 April 1756 – 23 June 1757
PredecessorAlivardi Khan
SuccessorMir Jafar
Born1733
Murshidabad, Bengal Subah
Died2 July 1757(1757-07-02) (aged 23–24)
Murshidabad, Company Raj
Burial
Khushbagh, Murshidabad
Spouse
IssueUmme Zohra (Qudsia Begum)
Names
Nawab Mansur ul-Mulk Siraj ud-Daulah Shah Quli Khan Mirza Muhammad Haybat Jang Bahadur
FatherZain ud-Din Ahmed Khan
MotherAmina Begum
ReligionSunni Islam[1][2]
Military career
Allegiance Mughal Empire[3] (nominal)
Bengal Subah
Service/branchNawab of Bengal
RankNawabzada, Nawab
Battles/warsMaratha invasions of Bengal
Battle of Plassey

Siraj succeeded his maternal grandfather, Alivardi Khan as the Nawab of Bengal in April 1756 at the age of 23. Betrayed by Mir Jafar, the commander of Nawab's army, Siraj lost the Battle of Plassey on 23 June 1757. The forces of the East India Company under Robert Clive invaded and the administration of Bengal fell into the hands of the company.

Early life and background

 
Painting of Siraj ud Daula

Siraj was born to the family of Mirza Muhammad Hashim and Amina Begum in 1733. Soon after his birth, Alivardi Khan, Siraj's maternal grandfather, was appointed the Deputy Governor of Bihar. Amina Begum was the youngest daughter of Alivardi Khan and Princess Sharfunnisa, the paternal aunt of Mir Jafar. His father, Mirza Muhammad Hashim was the youngest son of Haji Ahmad, the elder brother of Alivardi Khan. Siraj's great-grandfather was Mirza Muhammad Madani, who was of either of Arab or Turkic ancestry, the son of a foster-brother of the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb; Madani himself began his career as a cup-bearer under the latter's son Azam Shah.[7][8] His great-grandmother belonged to the Turkic Afshar tribe of Khorasan. Through her, he was a grandnephew of Shuja-ud-Din Muhammad Khan, the two having shared a common ancestor in Nawab Aqil Khan.[7][9]

Siraj was regarded as the "fortune child" of the family. He received the special affection of his grandfather and was raised at the Nawab's palace with all necessary education and training suitable for a future Nawab. Young Siraj also accompanied Alivardi on his military ventures against the Marathas in 1746. In 1750, Siraj revolted against his grandfather and seized Patna, but quickly surrendered and was forgiven. In May 1752, Alivardi declared Siraj as his successor. The former later died on 9 April 1756 at the age of eighty.[10]

Reign as Nawab

 
Bust of Siraj ud-Daulah by the Palashi Monument situated in Nadia, West Bengal.
 
A painting showing the Sang-i-dalan, Kala Masjid, the tombs all surrounded by the Motijhil Lake

Siraj ud-Daulah's nomination to the Nawab ship aroused the jealousy and enmity of his maternal aunt, Ghaseti Begum (Mehar un-Nisa Begum), Mir Jafar, Jagat Seth (Mehtab Chand) and Shaukat Jang (Siraj's cousin). Ghaseti Begum possessed huge wealth, which was the source of her influence and strength. Apprehending serious opposition from her, Siraj ud-Daulah seized her wealth from Motijheel Palace and placed her under confinement. The Nawab also made changes in high government positions by giving them to his own favourites. Mir Madan was appointed Bakshi (paymaster of the army) in place of Mir Jafar. Mohanlal was elevated to the rank of peshkar (courtclerk) of his Dewan-khane and he exercised great influence in the administration. Eventually, Siraj suppressed Shaukat Jang, governor of Purnia, who was killed in a clash.

Black Hole of Calcutta

 
Pindari's loyal to Siraj ud-Daulah carry out the Black Hole of Calcutta atrocity, 20 June 1756.

During this period, the British East India Company was increasing their influence in the Indian subcontinent, particularly in Bengal; Siraj soon grew to resent the politico-military presence of the East India Company in Bengal. In particular, he was angered at the Company's alleged involvement with and instigation of some members of his own court to a conspiracy to oust him. His charges against the company were broadly threefold. Firstly, that they strengthened the fortification around the Fort William without any intimation or approval; secondly, that they grossly abused trade privileges granted them by the Mughal rulers – which caused heavy loss of customs duties for the government; and thirdly, that they gave shelter to some of his officers, for example, Krishnadas, son of Rajballav, who fled Dhaka after misappropriating government funds. Hence, when the East India Company began further enhancement of military strength at Fort William in Calcutta, Siraj ud-Daulah ordered them to stop. The Company did not heed his directives; consequently, Siraj retaliated and captured Calcutta (for a short while renamed Alinagar) from the British in June 1756. The Nawab gathered his forces together and took Fort William. The British captives were placed in the prison cell as a temporary holding by a local commander, but there was confusion in the Indian chain of command, and the captives were left there overnight, and many of them died.[11]

Sir William Meredith, during the Parliamentary inquiry into Robert Clive's actions in India, vindicated Siraj ud-Daulah of any charge surrounding the Black Hole incident: "A peace was however agreed upon with Surajah Dowlah; and the persons who went as ambassadors to confirm that peace formed the conspiracy, by which he was deprived of his kingdom and his life."[11]

Murshidabad.[citation needed]

Conspiracy of British

The Nawab was infuriated on learning of the attack on Chandernagar. His former hatred of the British returned, but he now felt the need to strengthen himself by alliances against the British. The Nawab was plagued by fear of attack from the north by the Afghans under Ahmad Shah Durrani and from the west by the Marathas. Therefore, he could not deploy his entire force against the British for fear of being attacked from the flanks. A deep distrust set in between the British and the Nawab. As a result, Siraj started secret negotiations with Jean Law, chief of the French factory at Cossimbazar, and de Bussy. The Nawab also moved a large division of his army under Rai Durlabh to Plassey, on the island of Cossimbazar 30 miles (48 km) south of Murshidabad.[12][13][14][15]

Popular discontent against the Nawab flourished in his own court. The Seths, the traders of Bengal, were in perpetual fear for their wealth under the reign of Siraj, contrary to the situation under Alivardi's reign. They had engaged Yar Lutuf Khan to defend them in case they were threatened in any way.[16] William Watts, the Company representative at the court of Siraj, informed Clive about a conspiracy at the court to overthrow the ruler. The conspirators included Mir Jafar, the paymaster of the army, Rai Durlabh, Yar Lutuf Khan and Omichund (Amir Chand), a Sikh merchant, and several officers in the army.[17] When communicated in this regard by Mir Jafar, Clive referred it to the select committee in Calcutta on 1 May. The committee passed a resolution in support of the alliance. A treaty was drawn up between the British and Mir Jafar to raise him to the throne of the Nawab in return for support to the British in the field of battle and the bestowal of large sums of money upon them as compensation for the attack on Calcutta. On 2 May, Clive broke up his camp and sent half the troops to Calcutta and the other half to Chandernagar.[18][19][20][21]

Mir Jafar and the Seths desired that the confederacy between the British and himself be kept secret from Omichund, but when he found out about it, he threatened to betray the conspiracy if his share was not increased to three million rupees (£300,000). Hearing of this, Clive suggested an expedient to the committee. He suggested that two treaties be drawn – the real one on white paper, containing no reference to Omichund and the other on red paper, containing Omichund's desired stipulation, to deceive him. The Members of the Committee signed on both treaties, but Admiral Watson signed only the real one and his signature had to be counterfeited on the fictitious one.[22] Both treaties and separate articles for donations to the army, navy squadron and committee were signed by Mir Jafar on 4 June.[23][24][25][26]

Lord Clive testified and defended himself thus before the House of Commons of Parliament on 10 May 1773, during the Parliamentary inquiry into his conduct in India:

"Omichund, his confidential servant, as he thought, told his master of an agreement made between the English and Monsieur Duprée [may be a mistranscription of Dupleix] to attack him, and received for that advice a sum of not less than four lacks of rupees. Finding this to be the man in whom the nawab entirely trusted, it soon became our object to consider him as a most material engine in the intended revolution. We, therefore, made such an agreement as was necessary for the purpose, and entered into a treaty with him to satisfy his demands. When all things were prepared, and the evening of the event was appointed, Omichund informed Mr Watts, who was at the court of the nawab, that he insisted upon thirty lacks of rupees, and five per cent. upon all the treasure that should be found; that, unless that was immediately complied with, he would disclose the whole to the nawab; and that Mr. Watts, and the two other English gentlemen then at the court, should be cut off before the morning. Mr Watts, immediately on this information, dispatched an express to me at the council. I did not hesitate to find out a stratagem to save the lives of these people, and secure success to the intended event. For this purpose, we signed another treaty. The one was called the Red, the other the White treaty. This treaty was signed by everyone, except admiral Watson; and I should have considered myself sufficiently authorised to put his name to it, by the conversation I had with him. As to the person who signed Admiral Watson's name to the treaty, whether he did it in his presence or not, I cannot say; but this I know, that he thought he had sufficient authority for so doing. This treaty was immediately sent to Omichund, who did not suspect the stratagem. The event took place, and success attended it; and the House, I am fully persuaded, will agree with me, that, when the very existence of the company was at stake, and the lives of these people so precariously situated, and so certain of being destroyed, it was a matter of true policy and of justice to deceive so great a villain."[27][28]

Battle of Plassey

 
Robert Clive meeting with Mir Jafar after the Battle of Plassey, dramatized painting by Francis Hayman
 
A plan of the Battle of Plassey, fought on 23 June 1757 by Robert Clive against the Nawab Siraj ud-Daulah of Bengal

The Battle of Plassey (or Palashi) is widely considered the turning point in the history of the subcontinent, marking the start of British rule in India. After Siraj-ud-Daulah's conquest of Calcutta, the British sent fresh troops from Madras to recapture the fort and avenge the attack. A retreating Siraj-ud-Daulah met the British at Plassey. He had to make camp 27 miles away from Murshidabad. On 23 June 1757 Siraj-ud-Daulah called on Mir Jafar because he was saddened by the sudden fall of Mir Mardan who was a very dear companion of Siraj in battles. The Nawab asked for help from Mir Jafar. Mir Jafar advised Siraj to retreat for that day. The Nawab made the blunder in giving the order to stop the fight. Following his command, the soldiers of the Nawab were returning to their camps. At that time, Robert Clive attacked the soldiers with his army. At such a sudden attack, the army of Siraj became undisciplined and could think of no way to fight. Much of the army retreated. Betrayed by a conspiracy plotted by Jagat Seth, Mir Jafar, Krishna Chandra, Omichund, etc., Siraj lost the battle and had to escape. He rode away and went first to Murshidabad, specifically to Heerajheel or Motijheel, his palace at Mansurganj. He ordered his principal commanders to engage their troops for his safety, but as he was bereft of power due to the loss at Plassey, they were reluctant to offer unquestioning support. Some advised him to deliver himself up to the English, but Siraj equated this with treachery. Others proposed he should encourage the army with greater rewards, and this he seemed to approve of. Yet the numbers in his retinue were considerably diminished. Soon he dispatched most of the women of his harem to Purneah, under the protection of Mohanlal, with gold and elephants. Then, with his principal consort Lutf-un-Nisa and very few attendants, Siraj began his escape towards Patna by boat, but was eventually arrested by Mir Jafar's soldiers.[29]

Death

 
Tomb of Siraj ud-Daulah
 
Masouleum of Siraj-ud-Daulah at Khushbagh

Siraj-ud-Daulah was executed on 2 July 1757 by Mohammad Ali Beg under orders from Mir Miran, son of Mir Jafar in Namak Haram Deorhi as part of the agreement between Mir Jafar and the British East India Company.

Siraj-ud-Daulah's tomb is located at Khushbagh, Murshidabad. It is marked with a simple but elegant one-storied mausoleum, surrounded by gardens.[30][self-published source?]

Critics

Siraj ud-Daulah has gained a positive reputation in India, Bangladesh, and Pakistan for his opposition to the beginning of British rule over India.

In 1985, Sarkar wrote:[31]

After the death of Alivardii Khan, his immature grandson became the nawab of Bengal, taking the name Miirza Mohammed Siraj-Ud-Daola. In addition to his young age, he had many kinds of defects in his character and conduct.

Historian Sushil Chaudhary argued that Siraj ud-Daula’s villainous character is a misrepresentation.[32]

Legacy

The end of Siraj ud-Daulah's reign also ended Bengali autonomy and marked the beginning of British power in India. In the Bengali version of the end of his rule, Mir Jafar and Robert Clive are the villains and Siraj is the victim. Even though he is rarely if ever depicted as an attractive person, he is regarded as having been sinned against, rather than as a sinner. As the movement for Indian independence gathered strength, Siraj along with Tipu Sultan and the heroes of the First War of Indian Independence including the last Mughal Emperor, Bahadur Shah II, gained iconic status as people who resisted the imperial aggression. In Bangladesh, he is regarded as the last legitimate ruler until Sheikh Mujibur Rahman emerged as leader following independence from Pakistan in 1971, a gap of some two hundred and fourteen years or so.

Siraj's legacy has become the subject of cultural war between those who want to offer some moral defense for Western imperialism as a civilizing mission and those who see the colonial period as one in which the strong exploited the weak, and reject the contention that Europe had much to offer India in terms of culture or that Europeans conducted themselves in a morally superior way.

Chayamanab (2022) is a Bengali novel has been written by Soumen Jana based on his tragic life.


The family descendants from the linage of Siraj ud Daulah live in Calcutta , West Bengal . They include Late Rabia Sultana , and her daughters Zayika Iman , Rashda Iman , Atiya Iman and Noor Iman , and their respective children Abrar Iman , Jabeen Mumtaz , Farheen Ahmed and Asna Ahmed.


Namesakes

In popular culture

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Other spellings exist including the corruption "Sir Roger Dowler"[4] which is also used in phrases such as "Sir Roger Dowler method" referring to early non-systematic and distorting Romanisation schemes for Devanagari script.[5]
  • ^ Ġulām Ḥusain chaklim (1902). The Riyazu-s-salatin, A History of Bengal. Translated by Salam, Maulavi Abdus. Calcutta: The Asiatic Society. p. 363-370.
  • ^ Seid-Gholam-Hossein-Khan (1926). The Sëir Mutaqherin or Review of Modern Times. Vol. II. Calcutta: R. Cambray & Co. link to searchable text at the Packard Humanities Institute

References

  1. ^ Rizvi, Saiyid Athar Abbas (1986). A Socio-intellectual History of the Isnā ʼAsharī Shīʼīs in India: 16th to 19th century A.D. Vol. 2. Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers. pp. 45–47.
  2. ^ Rieck, Andreas (2015). The Shias of Pakistan: An Assertive and Beleaguered Minority. Oxford University Press. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-19-061320-4.
  3. ^ Rai, R. History. FK Publications. p. 44. ISBN 9788187139690.
  4. ^ Abram Smythe Palmer. Folk-etymology: A Dictionary of Verbal Corruptions Or Words Perverted in Form Or Meaning, by False Derivation Or Mistaken Analogy. G. Bell and Sons, 1882. p. 557.
  5. ^ Francis Henry Skrine. Life of Sir William Wilson Hunter, K.C.S.I., M.A., LL.D., a vice-president of the Royal Asiatic Society, etc. Longmans, Green, and Co., 1901. p. 205.
  6. ^ Dalrymple, W. (2019),The Anarchy p78, London: Bloombsbury
  7. ^ a b Sarkar, Jadunath (1948). The History of Bengal. Vol. II. Dhaka: University of Dhaka. p. 436. ISBN 978-81-7646-239-6.
  8. ^ P. Sensarma (1977). The Military History of Bengal. Kolkata: Darbari Udjog. p. 172.
  9. ^ Subhan, Abdus (1970). "Early Career of Nawab Ali Vardi Khan of Bengal". Journal of Indian History. Trivandrum: University of Kerala. XLVIII (III): 536.
  10. ^ Dalrymple, William (10 September 2019). The Anarchy: The Relentless Rise of the East India Company. London: Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 87. ISBN 978-1-4088-6440-1.
  11. ^ a b Cobbett, William; Hansard, Thomas Curson (1813). The Parliamentary History of England from the Earliest Period to the Year 1803. T.C. Hansard. pp. 449–. ISBN 9780404016500.
  12. ^ Harrington, p. 25
  13. ^ Mahon, p. 337
  14. ^ Orme 1861, p. 145
  15. ^ Malleson, pp. 48–49
  16. ^ Bengal, v.1, p. clxxxi
  17. ^ Bengal, v.1, pp. clxxxiii–clxxxiv
  18. ^ Malleson, pp. 49–51
  19. ^ Harrington, pp. 25–29
  20. ^ Mahon, pp. 338–339
  21. ^ Orme 1861, pp. 147–149
  22. ^ Bengal, v.1, pp. clxxxvi–clxxxix
  23. ^ (Orme 1861, pp. 150–161)
  24. ^ Harrington, p. 29
  25. ^ Mahon, pp. 339–341
  26. ^ Bengal, v.1, pp. cxcii–cxciii
  27. ^ Cobbett, William; Parliament, Great Britain (1813). The Parliamentary history of England from the earliest period to the year 1803, Volume 17. p. 876. ISBN 9780404016500.
  28. ^ The gentleman's magazine, and historical chronicle. Vol. 43. 1773. pp. 630–631.
  29. ^ "We all know Siraj-ud-Daulah lost the Battle of Plassey. How did he escape afterwards?". Scroll.in. Retrieved 19 August 2020.
  30. ^ Basu, Saurab. "Trip Taken from June – 10th to 12th – 2006". Murshidabad – The Land of the Legendary ‘Siraj-ud-Daulah’ Unveiled. History of Bengal. Retrieved 19 June 2015.
  31. ^ Sarkar, Prabhat Ranjan (1996). Shabda Cayanika, Part 1 (First English ed.). Kolkata: Ananda Marga Publications. ISBN 81-7252-027-1.
  32. ^ "The Road to Plassey". 22 June 2020.
  33. ^ . Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha. Archived from the original on 22 February 2018. Retrieved 29 November 2018.
  34. ^ "Siraj ud Daula Road, Karachi". pakistan-streets.openalfa.com.
  35. ^ "Nawab Siraj-Ud-Daulah Sarani, West Bengal". indiaplacesmap.com.
  36. ^ "6 suspected Huji operatives held in Dhaka". Prothom Alo.
  37. ^ "Siraj-Ud-Doula Hall". Sher-e-Bangla Agricultural University (SAU).
  38. ^ "BGIC Branch Network – BGIC Ltd.BGIC Ltd".
  39. ^ "4 hospitals fined, two of them asked to shut". The Daily Star. 17 October 2015.
  40. ^ a b Rajadhyaksha, Ashish; Willemen, Paul (1999). Encyclopaedia of Indian cinema. British Film Institute. ISBN 9780851706696.
  41. ^ Various Artists - Topic (3 November 2014). "Sirajuddaula" – via YouTube.
  42. ^ "Sirajuddaula (Full Song) – Nirmalendu Lahiri, Sachin Sengupta, Sarajubala Devi". JioSaavn. 31 August 2012.
  43. ^ Shriparabat (1960). Ami Sirajer Begum. Rupayani. OCLC 59608078.
  44. ^ http://web.dailyjanakantha.com/details/article/280339/সিকানদার-আবু-জাফরের-নাটক-সিরাজউদ্দৌলা-একটি-অনুভাবনা/[bare URL]
  45. ^ "My Academy :: Digital Book". myacademybd.com.
  46. ^ "Nawab Sirajuddaula (1967) – Review, Star Cast, News, Photos". Cinestaan.
  • Akhsaykumar Moitrayo, Sirajuddaula, Calcutta 1898
  • BK Gupta, Sirajuddaulah and the East India Company, 1756–57, Leiden, 1962
  • Kalikankar Datta, Sirajuddaulah, Calcutta 1971
  • Orme, R. (1861), A history of the military transactions of the British nation in Indostan: from the year MDCCXLV; to which is prefixed A dissertation on the establishments made by Mahomedan conquerors in Indostan, vol. 2

External links

  • Siraj in Murshidabad
Siraj ud-Daulah
Born: 1733 Died: 2 July 1757
Preceded by Nawab of Bengal
9 April 1756 – 2 June 1757
Succeeded by

siraj, daulah, nawab, sirajuddaula, redirects, here, 1967, film, nawab, sirajuddaula, film, mirza, muhammad, siraj, daulah, persian, میرزا, محمد, سراج, الدوله, 1733, july, 1757, commonly, known, siraj, daulah, siraj, daula, last, independent, nawab, bengal, re. Nawab Sirajuddaula redirects here For the 1967 film see Nawab Sirajuddaula film Mirza Muhammad Siraj ud Daulah Persian میرزا محمد سراج الدوله 1733 2 July 1757 commonly known as Siraj ud Daulah a or Siraj ud Daula 6 was the last independent Nawab of Bengal The end of his reign marked the start of the rule of the East India Company over Bengal and later almost all of the Indian subcontinent Nawab Siraj ud DaulahMansur ul Mulk Victory of the Country Siraj ud Daulah Light of the State Hybut Jang Horror in War Nawab of BengalSiraj ud DaulahNawab Nazim of Bengal and BiharReign9 April 1756 23 June 1757PredecessorAlivardi KhanSuccessorMir JafarBorn1733Murshidabad Bengal SubahDied2 July 1757 1757 07 02 aged 23 24 Murshidabad Company RajBurialKhushbagh MurshidabadSpouseLutfunnisa BegumZaibunnisa BegumUmdadunnisa BegumIssueUmme Zohra Qudsia Begum NamesNawab Mansur ul Mulk Siraj ud Daulah Shah Quli Khan Mirza Muhammad Haybat Jang BahadurFatherZain ud Din Ahmed KhanMotherAmina BegumReligionSunni Islam 1 2 Military careerAllegianceMughal Empire 3 nominal Bengal SubahService wbr branchNawab of BengalRankNawabzada NawabBattles warsMaratha invasions of Bengal Battle of PlasseySiraj succeeded his maternal grandfather Alivardi Khan as the Nawab of Bengal in April 1756 at the age of 23 Betrayed by Mir Jafar the commander of Nawab s army Siraj lost the Battle of Plassey on 23 June 1757 The forces of the East India Company under Robert Clive invaded and the administration of Bengal fell into the hands of the company Contents 1 Early life and background 2 Reign as Nawab 2 1 Black Hole of Calcutta 2 2 Conspiracy of British 2 3 Battle of Plassey 3 Death 4 Critics 4 1 Legacy 4 2 Namesakes 4 3 In popular culture 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksEarly life and background Edit Painting of Siraj ud Daula Siraj was born to the family of Mirza Muhammad Hashim and Amina Begum in 1733 Soon after his birth Alivardi Khan Siraj s maternal grandfather was appointed the Deputy Governor of Bihar Amina Begum was the youngest daughter of Alivardi Khan and Princess Sharfunnisa the paternal aunt of Mir Jafar His father Mirza Muhammad Hashim was the youngest son of Haji Ahmad the elder brother of Alivardi Khan Siraj s great grandfather was Mirza Muhammad Madani who was of either of Arab or Turkic ancestry the son of a foster brother of the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb Madani himself began his career as a cup bearer under the latter s son Azam Shah 7 8 His great grandmother belonged to the Turkic Afshar tribe of Khorasan Through her he was a grandnephew of Shuja ud Din Muhammad Khan the two having shared a common ancestor in Nawab Aqil Khan 7 9 Siraj was regarded as the fortune child of the family He received the special affection of his grandfather and was raised at the Nawab s palace with all necessary education and training suitable for a future Nawab Young Siraj also accompanied Alivardi on his military ventures against the Marathas in 1746 In 1750 Siraj revolted against his grandfather and seized Patna but quickly surrendered and was forgiven In May 1752 Alivardi declared Siraj as his successor The former later died on 9 April 1756 at the age of eighty 10 Reign as Nawab Edit Bust of Siraj ud Daulah by the Palashi Monument situated in Nadia West Bengal A painting showing the Sang i dalan Kala Masjid the tombs all surrounded by the Motijhil Lake Siraj ud Daulah s nomination to the Nawab ship aroused the jealousy and enmity of his maternal aunt Ghaseti Begum Mehar un Nisa Begum Mir Jafar Jagat Seth Mehtab Chand and Shaukat Jang Siraj s cousin Ghaseti Begum possessed huge wealth which was the source of her influence and strength Apprehending serious opposition from her Siraj ud Daulah seized her wealth from Motijheel Palace and placed her under confinement The Nawab also made changes in high government positions by giving them to his own favourites Mir Madan was appointed Bakshi paymaster of the army in place of Mir Jafar Mohanlal was elevated to the rank of peshkar courtclerk of his Dewan khane and he exercised great influence in the administration Eventually Siraj suppressed Shaukat Jang governor of Purnia who was killed in a clash Black Hole of Calcutta Edit Main article Black Hole of Calcutta Pindari s loyal to Siraj ud Daulah carry out the Black Hole of Calcutta atrocity 20 June 1756 During this period the British East India Company was increasing their influence in the Indian subcontinent particularly in Bengal Siraj soon grew to resent the politico military presence of the East India Company in Bengal In particular he was angered at the Company s alleged involvement with and instigation of some members of his own court to a conspiracy to oust him His charges against the company were broadly threefold Firstly that they strengthened the fortification around the Fort William without any intimation or approval secondly that they grossly abused trade privileges granted them by the Mughal rulers which caused heavy loss of customs duties for the government and thirdly that they gave shelter to some of his officers for example Krishnadas son of Rajballav who fled Dhaka after misappropriating government funds Hence when the East India Company began further enhancement of military strength at Fort William in Calcutta Siraj ud Daulah ordered them to stop The Company did not heed his directives consequently Siraj retaliated and captured Calcutta for a short while renamed Alinagar from the British in June 1756 The Nawab gathered his forces together and took Fort William The British captives were placed in the prison cell as a temporary holding by a local commander but there was confusion in the Indian chain of command and the captives were left there overnight and many of them died 11 Sir William Meredith during the Parliamentary inquiry into Robert Clive s actions in India vindicated Siraj ud Daulah of any charge surrounding the Black Hole incident A peace was however agreed upon with Surajah Dowlah and the persons who went as ambassadors to confirm that peace formed the conspiracy by which he was deprived of his kingdom and his life 11 Murshidabad citation needed Conspiracy of British Edit The Nawab was infuriated on learning of the attack on Chandernagar His former hatred of the British returned but he now felt the need to strengthen himself by alliances against the British The Nawab was plagued by fear of attack from the north by the Afghans under Ahmad Shah Durrani and from the west by the Marathas Therefore he could not deploy his entire force against the British for fear of being attacked from the flanks A deep distrust set in between the British and the Nawab As a result Siraj started secret negotiations with Jean Law chief of the French factory at Cossimbazar and de Bussy The Nawab also moved a large division of his army under Rai Durlabh to Plassey on the island of Cossimbazar 30 miles 48 km south of Murshidabad 12 13 14 15 Popular discontent against the Nawab flourished in his own court The Seths the traders of Bengal were in perpetual fear for their wealth under the reign of Siraj contrary to the situation under Alivardi s reign They had engaged Yar Lutuf Khan to defend them in case they were threatened in any way 16 William Watts the Company representative at the court of Siraj informed Clive about a conspiracy at the court to overthrow the ruler The conspirators included Mir Jafar the paymaster of the army Rai Durlabh Yar Lutuf Khan and Omichund Amir Chand a Sikh merchant and several officers in the army 17 When communicated in this regard by Mir Jafar Clive referred it to the select committee in Calcutta on 1 May The committee passed a resolution in support of the alliance A treaty was drawn up between the British and Mir Jafar to raise him to the throne of the Nawab in return for support to the British in the field of battle and the bestowal of large sums of money upon them as compensation for the attack on Calcutta On 2 May Clive broke up his camp and sent half the troops to Calcutta and the other half to Chandernagar 18 19 20 21 Mir Jafar and the Seths desired that the confederacy between the British and himself be kept secret from Omichund but when he found out about it he threatened to betray the conspiracy if his share was not increased to three million rupees 300 000 Hearing of this Clive suggested an expedient to the committee He suggested that two treaties be drawn the real one on white paper containing no reference to Omichund and the other on red paper containing Omichund s desired stipulation to deceive him The Members of the Committee signed on both treaties but Admiral Watson signed only the real one and his signature had to be counterfeited on the fictitious one 22 Both treaties and separate articles for donations to the army navy squadron and committee were signed by Mir Jafar on 4 June 23 24 25 26 Lord Clive testified and defended himself thus before the House of Commons of Parliament on 10 May 1773 during the Parliamentary inquiry into his conduct in India Omichund his confidential servant as he thought told his master of an agreement made between the English and Monsieur Dupree may be a mistranscription of Dupleix to attack him and received for that advice a sum of not less than four lacks of rupees Finding this to be the man in whom the nawab entirely trusted it soon became our object to consider him as a most material engine in the intended revolution We therefore made such an agreement as was necessary for the purpose and entered into a treaty with him to satisfy his demands When all things were prepared and the evening of the event was appointed Omichund informed Mr Watts who was at the court of the nawab that he insisted upon thirty lacks of rupees and five per cent upon all the treasure that should be found that unless that was immediately complied with he would disclose the whole to the nawab and that Mr Watts and the two other English gentlemen then at the court should be cut off before the morning Mr Watts immediately on this information dispatched an express to me at the council I did not hesitate to find out a stratagem to save the lives of these people and secure success to the intended event For this purpose we signed another treaty The one was called the Red the other the White treaty This treaty was signed by everyone except admiral Watson and I should have considered myself sufficiently authorised to put his name to it by the conversation I had with him As to the person who signed Admiral Watson s name to the treaty whether he did it in his presence or not I cannot say but this I know that he thought he had sufficient authority for so doing This treaty was immediately sent to Omichund who did not suspect the stratagem The event took place and success attended it and the House I am fully persuaded will agree with me that when the very existence of the company was at stake and the lives of these people so precariously situated and so certain of being destroyed it was a matter of true policy and of justice to deceive so great a villain 27 28 Battle of Plassey Edit Main article Battle of Plassey Robert Clive meeting with Mir Jafar after the Battle of Plassey dramatized painting by Francis Hayman A plan of the Battle of Plassey fought on 23 June 1757 by Robert Clive against the Nawab Siraj ud Daulah of Bengal The Battle of Plassey or Palashi is widely considered the turning point in the history of the subcontinent marking the start of British rule in India After Siraj ud Daulah s conquest of Calcutta the British sent fresh troops from Madras to recapture the fort and avenge the attack A retreating Siraj ud Daulah met the British at Plassey He had to make camp 27 miles away from Murshidabad On 23 June 1757 Siraj ud Daulah called on Mir Jafar because he was saddened by the sudden fall of Mir Mardan who was a very dear companion of Siraj in battles The Nawab asked for help from Mir Jafar Mir Jafar advised Siraj to retreat for that day The Nawab made the blunder in giving the order to stop the fight Following his command the soldiers of the Nawab were returning to their camps At that time Robert Clive attacked the soldiers with his army At such a sudden attack the army of Siraj became undisciplined and could think of no way to fight Much of the army retreated Betrayed by a conspiracy plotted by Jagat Seth Mir Jafar Krishna Chandra Omichund etc Siraj lost the battle and had to escape He rode away and went first to Murshidabad specifically to Heerajheel or Motijheel his palace at Mansurganj He ordered his principal commanders to engage their troops for his safety but as he was bereft of power due to the loss at Plassey they were reluctant to offer unquestioning support Some advised him to deliver himself up to the English but Siraj equated this with treachery Others proposed he should encourage the army with greater rewards and this he seemed to approve of Yet the numbers in his retinue were considerably diminished Soon he dispatched most of the women of his harem to Purneah under the protection of Mohanlal with gold and elephants Then with his principal consort Lutf un Nisa and very few attendants Siraj began his escape towards Patna by boat but was eventually arrested by Mir Jafar s soldiers 29 Death Edit Tomb of Siraj ud Daulah Masouleum of Siraj ud Daulah at Khushbagh Siraj ud Daulah was executed on 2 July 1757 by Mohammad Ali Beg under orders from Mir Miran son of Mir Jafar in Namak Haram Deorhi as part of the agreement between Mir Jafar and the British East India Company Siraj ud Daulah s tomb is located at Khushbagh Murshidabad It is marked with a simple but elegant one storied mausoleum surrounded by gardens 30 self published source Critics EditSiraj ud Daulah has gained a positive reputation in India Bangladesh and Pakistan for his opposition to the beginning of British rule over India In 1985 Sarkar wrote 31 After the death of Alivardii Khan his immature grandson became the nawab of Bengal taking the name Miirza Mohammed Siraj Ud Daola In addition to his young age he had many kinds of defects in his character and conduct Historian Sushil Chaudhary argued that Siraj ud Daula s villainous character is a misrepresentation 32 Legacy Edit The end of Siraj ud Daulah s reign also ended Bengali autonomy and marked the beginning of British power in India In the Bengali version of the end of his rule Mir Jafar and Robert Clive are the villains and Siraj is the victim Even though he is rarely if ever depicted as an attractive person he is regarded as having been sinned against rather than as a sinner As the movement for Indian independence gathered strength Siraj along with Tipu Sultan and the heroes of the First War of Indian Independence including the last Mughal Emperor Bahadur Shah II gained iconic status as people who resisted the imperial aggression In Bangladesh he is regarded as the last legitimate ruler until Sheikh Mujibur Rahman emerged as leader following independence from Pakistan in 1971 a gap of some two hundred and fourteen years or so Siraj s legacy has become the subject of cultural war between those who want to offer some moral defense for Western imperialism as a civilizing mission and those who see the colonial period as one in which the strong exploited the weak and reject the contention that Europe had much to offer India in terms of culture or that Europeans conducted themselves in a morally superior way Chayamanab 2022 is a Bengali novel has been written by Soumen Jana based on his tragic life The family descendants from the linage of Siraj ud Daulah live in Calcutta West Bengal They include Late Rabia Sultana and her daughters Zayika Iman Rashda Iman Atiya Iman and Noor Iman and their respective children Abrar Iman Jabeen Mumtaz Farheen Ahmed and Asna Ahmed Namesakes Edit Siraj ud Daula College Karachi Pakistan Nawab Siraj ud Daulah Government College Natore 33 Bangladesh Masjid e Siraj ud Daulah Bangladesh Siraj ud Daula Road Karachi 34 Nabab Siraj ud Daulah Road Chittagong Bangladesh Nawab Siraj Ud Daulah Sarani Kolkata India 35 Siraj ud Daulah Park Old Dhaka 36 Bangladesh Siraj ud Doula Hall Sher e Bangla Agricultural University 37 Bangladesh Nawab Siraj Ud Daulah College Kushtia Bangladesh Siraj ud Daula Road Kushtia 38 Bangladesh Nawab Siraj ud Daulah Hospital 39 Bangladesh Nawab Siraj ud Daulah Road Narayanganj BangladeshIn popular culture Edit Shiraz Ud Dowla 1927 Indian silent film directed by Dhanjibhai K Desai 40 Sirajuddaula 1938 musical opera by Nimalendu Lahiri 41 42 Siraj Ud Dowla 1952 Indian Bengali language film directed by Amar Dutta 40 Ami Sirajer Begam 1960 historical novel set in Bengal by Sri Parabat 43 Sirajuddaula 1965 play by Sikandar Abu Zafar 44 45 Nawab Sirajuddaula 1967 an Indian Bengali language film directed by Ramchandra Thakur starring Bharat Bhushan 46 Nawab Sirajuddaula 1967 a Bangladeshi film directed by Khan Ataur Rahman featuring Anwar Hossain Ami Sirajer Begam 1973 an Indian Bengali language film directed by Sushil Mukhopadhyay starring Ajitesh Bandopadhyay Based on the 1960 novel by Sri Parabat Nawab Sirajuddaula 1989 remake of the 1967 film by Khan Ataur Rahman Ami Sirajer Begum 2018 Indian Bengali language historical television soap opera Zindabahar Bangladeshi TV series directed by Bangladesh TelevisionSee also EditNawabs of Bengal List of rulers of Bengal History of Bengal History of Bangladesh History of India Shia Islam in India Battle of Chandannagar Siraj ud Daula CollegeNotes Edit Other spellings exist including the corruption Sir Roger Dowler 4 which is also used in phrases such as Sir Roger Dowler method referring to early non systematic and distorting Romanisation schemes for Devanagari script 5 Ġulam Ḥusain chaklim 1902 The Riyazu s salatin A History of Bengal Translated by Salam Maulavi Abdus Calcutta The Asiatic Society p 363 370 Seid Gholam Hossein Khan 1926 The Seir Mutaqherin or Review of Modern Times Vol II Calcutta R Cambray amp Co link to searchable text at the Packard Humanities InstituteReferences Edit Rizvi Saiyid Athar Abbas 1986 A Socio intellectual History of the Isna ʼAshari Shiʼis in India 16th to 19th century A D Vol 2 Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers pp 45 47 Rieck Andreas 2015 The Shias of Pakistan An Assertive and Beleaguered Minority Oxford University Press p 3 ISBN 978 0 19 061320 4 Rai R History FK Publications p 44 ISBN 9788187139690 Abram Smythe Palmer Folk etymology A Dictionary of Verbal Corruptions Or Words Perverted in Form Or Meaning by False Derivation Or Mistaken Analogy G Bell and Sons 1882 p 557 Francis Henry Skrine Life of Sir William Wilson Hunter K C S I M A LL D a vice president of the Royal Asiatic Society etc Longmans Green and Co 1901 p 205 Dalrymple W 2019 The Anarchy p78 London Bloombsbury a b Sarkar Jadunath 1948 The History of Bengal Vol II Dhaka University of Dhaka p 436 ISBN 978 81 7646 239 6 P Sensarma 1977 The Military History of Bengal Kolkata Darbari Udjog p 172 Subhan Abdus 1970 Early Career of Nawab Ali Vardi Khan of Bengal Journal of Indian History Trivandrum University of Kerala XLVIII III 536 Dalrymple William 10 September 2019 The Anarchy The Relentless Rise of the East India Company London Bloomsbury Publishing p 87 ISBN 978 1 4088 6440 1 a b Cobbett William Hansard Thomas Curson 1813 The Parliamentary History of England from the Earliest Period to the Year 1803 T C Hansard pp 449 ISBN 9780404016500 Harrington p 25 Mahon p 337 Orme 1861 p 145 Malleson pp 48 49 Bengal v 1 p clxxxi Bengal v 1 pp clxxxiii clxxxiv Malleson pp 49 51 Harrington pp 25 29 Mahon pp 338 339 Orme 1861 pp 147 149 Bengal v 1 pp clxxxvi clxxxix Orme 1861 pp 150 161 Harrington p 29 Mahon pp 339 341 Bengal v 1 pp cxcii cxciii Cobbett William Parliament Great Britain 1813 The Parliamentary history of England from the earliest period to the year 1803 Volume 17 p 876 ISBN 9780404016500 The gentleman s magazine and historical chronicle Vol 43 1773 pp 630 631 We all know Siraj ud Daulah lost the Battle of Plassey How did he escape afterwards Scroll in Retrieved 19 August 2020 Basu Saurab Trip Taken from June 10th to 12th 2006 Murshidabad The Land of the Legendary Siraj ud Daulah Unveiled History of Bengal Retrieved 19 June 2015 Sarkar Prabhat Ranjan 1996 Shabda Cayanika Part 1 First English ed Kolkata Ananda Marga Publications ISBN 81 7252 027 1 The Road to Plassey 22 June 2020 Week long agriculture technology fair begins in Natore Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha Archived from the original on 22 February 2018 Retrieved 29 November 2018 Siraj ud Daula Road Karachi pakistan streets openalfa com Nawab Siraj Ud Daulah Sarani West Bengal indiaplacesmap com 6 suspected Huji operatives held in Dhaka Prothom Alo Siraj Ud Doula Hall Sher e Bangla Agricultural University SAU BGIC Branch Network BGIC Ltd BGIC Ltd 4 hospitals fined two of them asked to shut The Daily Star 17 October 2015 a b Rajadhyaksha Ashish Willemen Paul 1999 Encyclopaedia of Indian cinema British Film Institute ISBN 9780851706696 Various Artists Topic 3 November 2014 Sirajuddaula via YouTube Sirajuddaula Full Song Nirmalendu Lahiri Sachin Sengupta Sarajubala Devi JioSaavn 31 August 2012 Shriparabat 1960 Ami Sirajer Begum Rupayani OCLC 59608078 http web dailyjanakantha com details article 280339 স ক নদ র আব জ ফর র ন টক স র জউদ দ ল একট অন ভ বন bare URL My Academy Digital Book myacademybd com Nawab Sirajuddaula 1967 Review Star Cast News Photos Cinestaan Akhsaykumar Moitrayo Sirajuddaula Calcutta 1898 BK Gupta Sirajuddaulah and the East India Company 1756 57 Leiden 1962 Kalikankar Datta Sirajuddaulah Calcutta 1971 Orme R 1861 A history of the military transactions of the British nation in Indostan from the year MDCCXLV to which is prefixed A dissertation on the establishments made by Mahomedan conquerors in Indostan vol 2External links EditSiraj in MurshidabadSiraj ud DaulahBorn 1733 Died 2 July 1757Preceded byAlivardi Khan Nawab of Bengal9 April 1756 2 June 1757 Succeeded byMir Jafar Retrieved from 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