Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

State Procession of the Nawab of Awadh (Oudh)

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Unknown company artist, Awadh
Watercolor on paper, c. 1841–7
Brown University Library, Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection


The prosperity of Awadh in the late eighteenth century attracted numerous Indian painters, poets, musicians and performers. It likewise enticed many Britons and Europeans into long-term residencies where they served in military or advisory roles. They subsequently attracted European artists, stimulating dynamic cross-cultural exchanges in arts and architecture, which produced works like this scroll featuring a procession through Lucknow of Wajid Ali Shah (r. 1847–56), the final ruler (nawab) of Awadh, and his minister. Wajid Ali Shah inherited a throne virtually bereft of political power. In 1856, two days before the ninth anniversary of his coronation, the BEIC fully annexed Awadh. The nawab was exiled to Kolkata with a generous pension. Major-General Sir James L. Sleeman, the “famous suppressor of Thuggee” (Indian cults of professional robbers and murderers) sent this sixteen-foot-long scroll to England in 1850. Sleeman strictly opposed outright annexation, but his reports of “lawlessness” in Awadh helped justify the endeavor.