Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

“Siege of Bharatpur (Bhurtpore)”

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Ram Dutta (attr. artist)
Opaque watercolor on paper, c. 1805
Brown University Library, Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection


In the Siege of Bharatpur (1805), capital of the Jat Kingdom in Rajasthan, sepoy infantry and cavalry comprised over half of British forces. Called the “Bengal Native Infantry,” these locally hired soldiers aided in neutralizing the power of Maratha-allied Jat forces and their French-trained armies. This commercial album, likely once owned by BEIC associate William Jenkins, features a battle scene that mirrors verses in Gīt Bharatpur rau, the Rajastanti martial epic recounting this siege. In this painting, Maratha horsemen charge against the heavy gunfire and artillery of British forces as defensive cannons from the fort fire down on the encroaching British lines. Meanwhile, the royals enjoy a dance performance at the heart of an elaborate garden palace constructed in the Mughal mode. Fire from the Jat defenders rained so fiercely that the British eventually abandoned the siege, but they succeeded in capturing Bharatpur in their second siege in 1825.