- A grand darbar was held by Mahadji Scindia in Pune exactly 227 years ago on 22 June 1792.
The 18th
century was a time when the Maratha power stretched through most of India, from
Odisha in the east to Gujarat in the west and from Kumaon in the north to the
Cauvery in the south. Many personalities contributed to the growth of this
Empire and given the extent of the country, regional satraps were given this
direction as early as 1719 by Balaji Vishwanath Peshwa - and supported by the
sagacious Chhatrapati Shahu – leading to explosive growth in a matter of a
decade.
Therefore,
Bajirao Peshwa I lead the northward growth, bringing Gujarat, Malwa and
Bundelkhand to the Maratha fold, while Raghuji Bhonsle led armies into the far
south and the east. Scindia and Holkar and the Pawars were instrumental in the
conquest and later administration in Malwa. Govind pant Bundele, Gaikwads in
Gujarat, Murar rao Ghorpade and the Patwardhans in the south held fort. Many
stellar personalities that remain in the shadows like Trimbak mama Pethe who
brought the combined armies of Hyder and Tipu to their knees near Srirangapatnam
in 1771 or the Visaji Krishna Biniwale and Ramachandra Kanade and the Rethrekar
family were all instrumental in winning many a war. Among the Peshwas, Balaji Bajirao and Madhavrao were Empire builders,
and Sadashivrao Bhau was the one who stemmed the invasion from the north-west
at the lost battle of Panipat. Of all these, it was Mahadji Scindia who took command of the entire north and his rule over huge
stretches of Hindustan went on until 1803.
After the treaty
of Salbye in 1782 that signalled the end of the first Anglo Maratha war,
Mahadji went to the north to take firm control of Delhi. Facing tremendous
odds, Mahadji, an astute statesman, managed to overcome all his enemies and
take the Mughal Emperor under his fold. The decrepit Shah Alam II was
reinstated in 1771, in the last years of Madhavrao Peshwa by an army led by
Scindia and since that date, Delhi was a Scindia
protectorate. He also brought the entire Rajputana under his control
besides Malwa and Bundelkhand. The Mughal Emperor, a weak man whose only weapon
was deception, depended on this protector for his monthly sustenance and heaped
a number of illusory titles that made Mahadji the most anointed of all Mughal
nobles in the history of their rule.
It was on 14
November 1784 somewhere near Fatehpur Sikri that the Mughal
king Shah Alam II appointed Mahadji Scindia as Waqil-i-Mutlaq or Regent
Plenipotentiary – and handed over the twin offices of Wazir and Mir Bakshi to
him. Modestly, Mahadji asked that these be handed in the name of the Peshwa –
as Maharajadhiraj - and he would serve as his deputy in Delhi. The next four
years saw a number of battles, during which Delhi was won and lost, until
Scindia finally established full control after defeating all his enemies. The
villainous Ghulam Qadir was captured by Ali Bahadur, the grandson of Bajirao and Mastani,
and brought before Scindia. Scindia punished the rogue severely for his tyranny
in Delhi and his blinding of Shah Alam II. At Shah Alam’s request, he blinded
the prisoner and dispatched his eyeballs to the blind occupant of the Red fort,
who fondled the objects and gratified his sense of revenge. The grateful Shah
Alam heaped accolades on Mahadji, who finally decided to come to Pune.
Mahadji took a circuitous
route to Pune passing by Beed where he paid respects to his Muslim guru Sheikh
Mansur. From here, he came to his fort at Jamgaon and then proceeded to Pune. On
13 June 1792, he entered the Shaniwar wada and paid his respects to the young
Peshwa Sawai Madhavrao by placing his head on his feet. The Peshwa in turn
placed his own pearl necklace on Mahadji’s neck. Mahadji’s object to return to
the Deccan was two-fold. He not only wished to settle his accounts for the
expenses he incurred in the north but also wished to influence the young Peshwa
In the days that
followed Scindia met Nana Phadnis and expressed a desire to hold a grand darbar
called the ‘farman-badi’, whence the insignia of office of Wakil-i-mutlaq and
the title of ‘Maharajadhiraj’ would be presented to
the Peshwa. Five farmans issued by Shah Alam were to be publicly read
before the assembled nobles. Nana Phadnis however demurred saying this title
was the Chhatrapati’s privilege. Scindia then obtained the blessings of the
Chhatrapati and paid a visit to the Peshwa on 21 June 1792 and took a place
below all the Peshwa’s officials. He proceeded to pay his respects by placing a
new pair of slippers on the Peshwa’s feet and carrying away the old slippers in
the bag under his arm. ‘This’, he murmured, ‘was my father’s occupation and it
must also be mine’. Scindia’s modesty was in
direct contrast to his power and wealth, which was then at its prime.
The next day, at
noon on 22 June 1792, a darbar was held at Garpir
– a fairly large area named after a Muslim pir’s tomb – and the exact spot may
have been anywhere from near the present Collector’s office to where the
Agricultural college stands today. Sir Charles Malet, the English Resident, was
present and described the ceremony in a letter to the Governor General. The
Peshwa approached the farman-badi darbar on an elephant with senior officers,
Scindia received him ‘at the commencement of the carpets’ and escorted him to a
specially created masnad symbolising the Mughal throne. Here, the Peshwa made
three low bows and made a present, before taking his place to the left of it. Shah Alam’s farman was then read out which also
contained ‘a prohibition to slay bullocks
throughout the Timurid Empire’.
Scindia then
presented the young Peshwa dresses, jewellery, a sword, a horse, a nalki – a kind
of a howdah – a palki and other gifts. The Peshwa then went to an enclosure and
wore the royal robes. He then rose and was followed by Scindia and Haripant
Phadke with two morchels – or fans - in their hands to the nalki where he
seated himself, returning to his palace by late evening.
In the palace,
Nana Phadnis – who was not present at the ceremony – welcomed the Peshwa and
offered presents as his nazar. Malet mentions that the Maratha officials did
not participate in the ceremony. In his palace, the Peshwa gave gifts to
Mahadji in return, comprising his own robe, a sword and a kalamdan – or writing
instrument – a naubat, a nalki and a pair of morchels, all accompanied by a
ceremonial cannonade.
Mahadji won over
the Peshwa with this grand ceremony within days of his arrival at Pune and
began advising the young man on matters of state. During his stay, Mahadji brought several Hindustani customs to Pune
such as playing Holi and sports such as hawking. Scindia’s robust martial
deportment was much appreciated in Pune and he made a mark on the city’s
cultural milieu.
The respect
Mahadji commanded among the British Resident is amply seen by the manner in
which Mahadji was treated by him. Not long after the farmanbadi, Mahadji with
his adopted son Daulatrao visited the British Residency where the artist James
Wales noted that Sir Charles, as a representative of the East India Company,
went down “on one knee” to fix a “kind of trufle pin of rose diamonds in
Scinda’s turban” and “a chain around the young prince’s neck with a large Topaz
to hang down on his breast”.
Mahadji lived in
Pune for a total of twenty months. During this his involvement in the politics
of the court as well as help in some of the campaigns where military help was
needed, underlined his primary role in the Maratha court. He also married more
than once at this time, hoping to bear a natural heir to his vast dominions and
huge army trained in the European fashion with guns and cannons superior to
anything that the East India Company possessed at the time.
At the time,
minor ailments easily snowballed into major disease. Fevers of various kinds
were prevalent in the population, and from mid-1793, Mahadji Scindia was
suffering from febrile illnesses. The letters from Poona Residency mentioned his
occasional illness until February 1794, when a cryptic letter announced it was
all over and the great warrior statesman was no more. Mahadji’s
death in 1794, followed by the Peshwa’s the following year took its toll
on the power of the Maratha state.
Pillars of the
state such as Tukoji Holkar, Ahilyabai, Parshurambhau Patwardhan and Nana
Phadnis all departed by 1800. Their successors did not live up to the high
standards of their forebears.
By early 1800s,
there was a sea change in the political map of India. The Peshwa had to sign
the Subsidiary treaty to fight off rebels against his authority, Daulatrao
Scindia’s armies led by various European chiefs faced huge defections just
before the battle with the Company began in August 1803. Five stiffly contested
battles saw the Company emerge the winner and Daulatrao had to sign a treaty
with the East India Company surrendering much of his independence. He remained
the strongest feudatory of British India, and they always ensured the Scindias
did not rise against them again.
Farman-badi - the grand darbar of Mahadji’s power held in 1792 in Pune, by 1803 had become a distant memory. Times had changed, and a new power had entered the Indian hinterland. It was to change India forever.
For more on the battle of 1803 read
1 Background
to the Battle of Assaye
2 Battle
of Assaye
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