Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

State Procession of Emperor Akbar II

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Unknown Workshop, Mughal Empire
Opaque watercolor (gouache) on paper, 1832
Brown University Library, Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection


By the late eighteenth century, the Mughal emperor acted as a nominal dispenser of legitimacy rather than a governing authority in northern India. Smaller principalities capitalized on this breakdown in centralization to seize control throughout Mughal lands. Likewise, the emperor no longer appointed his regional subordinates, only confirming those who could subdue his rivals. This fraught political landscape allowed the British East India Company (BEIC) to become the dominant political and military actor in mid-nineteenth-century India. That shift materializes in later Mughal painting, such as this scroll in which the visual hierarchy reflects the latest power dynamics. Close behind the elephant carriage (howdah) of Emperor Akbar II (r. 1806–1837), an even taller howdah bears representatives of the BEIC juxtaposed in European dress. That prominent placement befits the growing British role in Indian political life. By this point, the BEIC collected taxes from Delhi and maintained military forces there. In return, the Mughal emperor maintained some acknowledgement from the BEIC, which provided him a pension.