Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

Indian Supernatural Being Attacking Fort Defended by British Troops

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Unknown Mughal workshop
Opaque watercolor on paper, c. 1791
Brown University Library, Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection


This painting’s Indo-Persian text praises the governor of Bihar (northeast India), who appears in the guise of an angel “with fire flame the length and width of sixty royal kar, who appeared like a rising tornado” against the forces of the BEIC and their newly enlisted sepoy soldiers. Based on the location and architecture, the scene likely depicts the Battle of Buxar (1764). British victories here and at the Battle of Plassey (1757) forced Mughal Emperor Shah Alam to sign over the Diwani of Bengal (the richest province in India at the time), Bihar and Orissa to the BEIC in the Treaty of Allahabad in 1765, giving the BEIC rights to collect land revenues in these provinces. However, not all surviving powers of northern India capitulated to the British. Following the Battle of Buxar, the rulers of Oudh (Avadh) and the powerful zamindars, like the raja of Banaras, expanded and reorganized to continue resisting the British for years.