Heroes
of Freedom
Struggle
- 11
Rani
Chennamma of Kitturu
Dr Nanditha Krishna*
It
is a little known fact that most of the revolts against British began in South
India. Puli Thevar and Veerapandi Kattaboman, Palayakkarars (Poligars) of the
mid- and late eighteenth centuries in Madras Presidency; the Marudu Pandyan
brothers who revolted between 1799 and 1801; the Vellore Sepoy mutiny of 1806;
and the revolt of Pazassi Raja of Kottayam in Kerala (1792 to 1805), are but a
few examples of pre-1857 revolts. All the mutineers were ruthlessly killed –
hanged, decapitated, or blown from canons - but they refused to apologise and
get reinstated under British rule. There was great dissatisfaction in South
India where the British were arbitrarily annexing lands and destroying flourishing
local economies – textile, metallurgy and agriculture, among others – to be
supplanted by revenue-generating transportation of local resources to the
United Kingdom for boosting the British economy.
Rani
Chennamma, the queen of Kitturu was one such warrior who led a war against
British forces in early part of 19th Century when not many rulers
were familiar with the evil designs of the British. She was the first Indian
ruler to lead an armed rebellion against the British East India Company. She
was outnumbered and arrested, but she is still remembered for leading the
revolt against British rule in India.
Chennamma
was born in Kakati, a small village in today’s
Belagavi district of Karnataka. She became queen of
Kitturu (now in Karnataka) when she married Raja Mallasarja of the Desai family. They had one son who
died in 1824. After the death of her son, she adopted another
child, Shivalingappa, and made him heir to the
throne. However, the British East India Company did not accept this under the Doctrine
of Lapse, a policy of annexation
devised by the British
East India Company.
According to the doctrine, any princely state or territory under the
paramountcy (direct influence) of the British
East India Company as a “vassal” under
the British subsidiary system, would automatically be annexed if the ruler was
either "manifestly incompetent or died without a male heir". This Doctrine rejected the
long-established right of an Indian ruler without an heir to choose a
successor. The doctrine was regarded by Indians as illegitimate. It was an arbitrary policy which snatched away
kingdoms when there was no direct heir. The princely state of Kitturu was taken over by the
British East India Company in 1824 by imposing the 'doctrine of lapse', even before
it was officially articulated by Lord Dalhousie, Governor General
for the British East India Company, between
1848 and 1856. It was probably the first instance of its application. Lord
Dalhousie merely made it official in 1848 by documenting it officially.
Dalhousie's annexations and the doctrine of lapse caused great anger among the ruling
princes in India, making it one of the causes of the Indian Mutiny of 1857.
The British ordered Rani Chennamma to exile the adopted child
Shivalingappa, using the policy of paramountcy and complete authority. But
Chennamma defied the order. Rani Chennamma sent a letter to Lord Elphinstone, Lieutenant-Governor
of Bombay Presidency, to plead the cause of Kitturu, but her request was turned down, and war broke out. The British tried to confiscate the
treasures and jewels of Kitturu, valued at around Rs. 1.5 million, but in vain. With a force of 20,000 men and 400
guns, mainly from the third troop of Madras Native Horse Artillery, they
attacked Kitturu. In the first
battle on October 1824, British forces lost heavily and the Collector and political agent, St. John Thackeray, was killed by the
Kitturu forces. Amatur Balappa,
Chennamma’s lieutenant, was responsible for his death and the losses to the British
forces. Two British officers, Sir
Walter Elliot and Mr. Stevenson, were
also taken as hostages. Rani
Chennamma released them after a promise from the British
that the war would end. But the British cheated her and re-started the war. This time, the British officer Chaplin actually
continued the war with more forces. Mr.
Munro, nephew of Sir Thomas Munro and sub-collector
of Solapur, was killed. Rani Chennamma fought fiercely with
the help of her lieutenants, Sangolli
Rayanna and Gurusiddappa, but
was outnumbered and ultimately
captured and imprisoned at Bailhongal Fort,
where she died on 21 February 1829.
Chennamma
was defeated in her last battle but she will always be remembered for her
valour and for leading the first armed revolt against British rule in India. Chennamma’s first victory and her legacy are
still commemorated annually in Kitturu, during the Kitturu Utsava held from October 22–24. Rani
Chennamma’s is buried in Bailhongal taluk. Her samadhi is situated in a
small park maintained by the Government.
On
11 September 2007, a statue of Rani Chennamma of Kitturu was unveiled at the
Parliament complex in New Delhi by India’s first woman President, Smt. Pratibha
Devisingh Patil. The statue was donated by the Kittur Rani Chennamma
Memorial Committee and sculpted by Vijay Gaur.
******
* Dr.
Nanditha Krishna is a Chennai based historian, environmentalist and author
of several books. She is also a professor at CP Ramaswami Aiyar Institute of
Indological Research, affiliated to the University of Madras.
Views Expressed in the Article are her
personal.