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It is two hundred and twenty-seven years to the day, when a most violent public execution of a police chief was carried out at the hands of an enraged mob in Pune, the capital of the Maratha Empire then at its peak. Indeed, the eighteenth century was quite unlike the times we live in. Then again, perhaps it was not. We find cruelty in medieval times, yet we see enough of it in our own days. Corruption, nepotism, and lawlessness with rioting is fairly commonplace even today. With the Maratha power seemingly invincible and Pune as its capital at the peak of its days of glory, the times of Ghashiram kotwal hold a mirror to the ills of absolutism, the abuse of power, the power of a riotous mob and public anger - at all times and in all nations. The entire Ghashiram episode occurred between 29 and 31st Aug 1791.
Pune was built
bit by bit under the two-decade rule of Nanasaheb Peshwa, and then shortly
after his death in 1761, there was an outbreak of war with the Nizam. While the
Peshwa attacked Bhaganagar (Hyderabad), the Nizam descended on the city of Pune
and burnt nearly two third of it, besides looting it and desecrating the
temples of Parvati. Eventually, in a seminal battle in August 1763, Madhav rao
Peshwa dealt Nizam Ali a crushing defeat near Aurangabad. The young Peshwa then
began to rebuild the lost Empire, taking the Maratha Empire from Kumaon to
Srirangapatnam in the next seven years. And in
order to enforce discipline and establish law and order, Madhav rao instituted
the office of the Kotwal in Pune in 1764.
The Kotwal
had to preserve the peace and apprehend offenders, towards which a police force
and an intelligence network was established; the responsibility of which was
given to the Peshwa’s confidante Nana Phadnis. Nana performed this task
impeccably and the security of the people of Pune was ensured as a consequence.
However, on Madhav rao’s death in 1772, and his brother Narayan rao’s
assassination in August 1773, the task of the Kotwal became even more
important. The Anglo-Maratha war, the incidents of betrayal among close
associates like Sakharam Bapu, pushed Nana to give greater leeway to the Kotwal
to use all means to crush opposition, employ an elaborate spy network and
enforce order.
Sometime in
1777, with the Anglo Maratha war in full flow, a Gaud Brahmin man from
Aurangabad named Ghashiram Savaldas had come to Pune and showed that he had the skills to police the city. He was
appointed as kotwal by Nana Phadnis. Ghashiram grew in power with
every passing year. Rumours about his ability to hold the Nana in his thrall
was attributed to his daughter who supposedly had amorous links with the
minister. Although the first references to this alliance – if there was one –
were written in a couple of narratives almost six decades after Nana died, they
have remained in public memory. It is almost impossible to determine the truth
of the matter, given that no contemporary papers mention any such incident.
Ghashiram took
his task seriously initially and inspired the confidence of his master. Law and
order in the city improved. There was a night curfew in Pune in those days and
thefts, lawlessness as well as crimes against women were severely punished.
Gradually, the police force itself began to indulge in criminal excesses and
became a powerful body subject to few checks. Even when brought to the notice
of Nana Phadnis, in the interest of keeping a check on the populace, he was
loathe to openly act against the police chief or his men.
The period that
Ghashiram was kotwal was a period when the English power was initially
at war with the Marathas, then at peace and finally in alliance against Tipu
Sultan. During this time, ‘nazarbaaz’ or detectives were recruited in
the police force, which was divided in five stations with a manpower of over a
hundred. Their jurisdiction extended over citizens only and the ruling
ministers were outside their purview. The people of Pune are said to have lived
in fear during the decade of Ghashiram’s rule, however his patron Nana Phadnis
is said to have been pleased with his work. Ghashiram
built his house in present day Pune Cantonment and parts of the house
still remain. He laid gardens and built a lake around that part which was named
after him.
By 1791, the
young Peshwa Sawai Madhav rao was growing to adulthood when Ghashiram’s term as
the police chief was at its zenith. The Regency of Nana Phadnis had protected
the infant Peshwa from the attempts of Raghunath rao Peshwa to grab the Peshwa musnad.
Raghunath rao was implicated in the murder of the former Peshwa Narayan rao and
his alliance with the English led to the prolonged Anglo Maratha war from 1775
to 1783. By 1783, Nana was widely accepted as the de facto ruler of the Maratha
state. However, the situation began to change when Sawai Madhav rao began to
assert his own power and position.
The annual Shravan
month (usually in August) was a time when a very large number of Brahmins
came to Pune to seek recognition for their learning and obtain the dakshina that
was distributed in the Ramana, a building at the foot of the Parvati
hill temple. Regulating the surging crowd and ensuring orderly behaviour was
the task of the kotwal. In 1791, the strict regulations including a
night curfew was enforced in the Shravan month as usual. However, this time there was a flare up that led to a revolt.
A Marathi letter of 2nd September 1791 describes
the sequence of events.
A group of
Brahmins from Telanga had come to Pune for the dakshina and indulged in
several incidents of irregular behaviour that disturbed the peace. They
disobeyed the regulations and indulged in theft and rioting. On 29 August that
year, thirty-five (thirty-four in some places) Telanga Brahmins were
apprehended by a police officer on duty and shut up in a room in the chowky at
Bhavani peth. Ghashiram personally did not visit the prison cell, which was in
the form of a tunnel with poor ventilation. The prisoners remained in the cell
for an entire day and a night and on the third morning, (an eminent chief named)
Manaji Phakde (a cousin of Mahadji Sindia) was passing that way, when he heard
noises. He personally went to the cell and broke open the locks to find that
twenty-one of the Telinga Brahmins had died. He promptly informed Nana and the
Peshwa of the tragedy.
Nana sent four
soldiers with a karkun (clerk) to enquire of the incident. Just
then, Ghashiram reached his house and said they had consumed opium, were
indulging in thefts in the town and died of an opium overdose. Nana said we
will await a report from the karkun. Later Ghashiram met Nana again and
sought permission to cremate the bodies. Just then, the Peshwa summoned Nana to
the palace and asked him that since Ghashiram had caused the death of the Brahmins,
what punishment was being awarded to him.
As news spread,
over a thousand Brahmins gathered outside Nana’s house and demanded that
Ghashiram be punished. Nana sent (the chief judge) Ayya Shastri to meet them,
but he was assaulted and his clothes torn off. A crisis seemed to be brewing in
the Maratha capital and the cause of the citizens’ ire was Ghashiram and his
long record of tyranny. Seeing this, Nana ordered
the arrest of the kotwal.
The Telanga
Brahmins however, were not appeased. Ghashiram was arrested and placed on an
elephant facing backwards, with his hands tied and paraded round the city under
a strict guard of Gardi infantrymen. Some Brahmins threw stones at the kotwal.
He was then taken to the Ramana near Parvati hill, shackled and
confined.
By the 31st
of August, the mood in the city was extremely agitated. The Brahmins sought
justice and asked for the death penalty for Ghashiram. The Peshwa ordered that
the kotwal was culpable and death would be a just punishment for him.
Two chiefs were sent to the Ramana, his shackles removed and he was tied
and mounted on a camel, seated facing its tail. He was brought to the main kotwali
and here his head was shaved drawing five lines with a razor, and then filled
in with red lead before he was once again placed on the camel and paraded
across all the eight peths of Pune. He was then taken to Garpir (an
open space at the time on the outskirts of Pune city). Here, he was let loose.
The guards were withdrawn and the Brahmins following the procession were told
to forgive or punish him as they pleased.
The news of the entire incident was reported by the English
Resident Sir Charles Malet in one of his dispatches to James Forbes,
‘The day
following (the death in custody), the clamour grew more violent being
encouraged by many persons desirous of mortifying the ruling minister,
through the ignominy of his Kotwal, his dependent. The unhappy man was tied
backward on a camel and in that disgraceful manner reconducted into the city,
amidst the reproaches of the people; here he was made to alight, and his head
having been publicly shaved, he was again placed in the same manner on the
camel and having been carried through the principal streets of Poonah, escorted
by a strong guard, he was for the last time led to a spot about a mile from the
city, and there ordered to dismount: one of his hands was then strongly fastened
to the end of a turban between twenty and thirty feet long, and the other end
committed to some Hallalcores, the lowest outcastes of the Hindoo
tribes, who contaminate all other castes by their touch. It was then made known
to the Telinga Brahmins that the Kotwal was delivered up entirely to their
disposal either as a sacrifice to their vengeance, or an object for their
mercy…’
The Brahmins,
angered by a decade of tyranny and the recent deaths of the Telanga Brahmins
did not grant Ghashiram any mercy. Picking up stones they began a barrage on
the former kotwal, until he died. Charles Malet describes the final act,
'Twelve Brahmins of that tribe, in the most savage manner, immediately attacked the fallen magistrate with large stones. The hallalcores who held the turban, by
straightening it, kept him to full length, by repeated blows on the head and
breast, brought him to the ground, and there, with an eagerness disgraceful to
humanity, though merciful to the prostrate object of their cruelty, these
Brahminical murderers despatched him by a succession of large stones thrown
violently on his head and breast’.
Nobody was
permitted to cremate the dead body and all his property was confiscated by the
Government.
A letter from Nana Phadnis a month later mentions the entire
episode,
‘..the kotwal’s
crimes had crossed all limits, hence he was punished. If anybody has written
anything to the contrary, it is false. People are known to start rumours. That
is the way of the people of Pune…’.
Ghashiram’s rise
and sudden fall is echoed in the ends of so many dictators in our own time.
Despite appearances, neither humans nor their nature has changed. Two hundred
and twenty-seven years later, Ghashiram is remembered for Nana Phadnis’
patronage, for his tyrannical policing of the city of Pune for over a decade,
his involvement in the death of the Telanga Brahmins and the sanction for his
violent execution at the hands of ordinary men who exacted a terrible revenge
for the actions of his officers.
To read all
articles by the Author
Also read
1 Nanasaheb Peshwa – The Architect of an Empire and a City