Carnatic region
The Carnatic region is a historical territory in southeastern India, encompassing the lowland areas between the Eastern Ghats mountain range to the west and the Coromandel Coast along the Bay of Bengal to the east, extending approximately from the Krishna River in the north to Cape Comorin (Kanyakumari) in the south.[1][2] Originally referring to the Kanarese-speaking plateau areas inland from the coast, the term broadened after the 16th-century fall of the Vijayanagara Empire to include the southern coastal plains dominated by Tamil-speaking populations and polities.[1] Historically, the Carnatic was ruled by ancient Dravidian kingdoms such as the Cholas and Pandyas, which fostered advanced irrigation systems, temple architecture, and maritime trade, before transitioning under the Vijayanagara Empire's oversight in the medieval period.[1] In the 17th and 18th centuries, Mughal imperial expansion led to the appointment of subahdars, culminating in the establishment of the semi-autonomous Carnatic Sultanate under Nawabs headquartered at Arcot, with Saadatullah Khan I (r. 1710–1722) consolidating control over territories from the Krishna to the Kaveri rivers.[3][1] The region became a focal point of European colonial rivalry during the Carnatic Wars (1746–1763), where British East India Company forces, allied with local Nawabs like Muhammad Ali Khan Wallajah, prevailed over French interests, securing British hegemony in southern India and facilitating the integration of Madras (Chennai) as a key colonial port.[1] Economically vital for its fertile deltaic soils supporting rice agriculture, pearl fisheries, and textile production, the Carnatic's political fragmentation and strategic location defined its role in the transition from indigenous to colonial dominance.[1]Etymology
Derivation and historical usage
The term "Carnatic" represents the anglicized and Portuguese-influenced form of "Karnatik" or "Karnata," derived from the Sanskrit "Karṇāṭaka," an ancient designation for a southern Indian territory mentioned in texts like the Mahābhārata as a distinct country south of the Vindhyas.[4] This nomenclature originally encompassed Kannada-speaking highlands of the Deccan plateau, with "Karṇāṭa" possibly alluding to the region's black cotton soil ("karu-nādu" in Kannada) or tribal origins, though exact derivations remain debated among historians.[5] In medieval usage, "Karnata" denoted polities ruled by dynasties such as the Western Chalukyas (10th–12th centuries) and the Vijayanagara Empire (1336–1646), the latter explicitly termed the "Karnata Empire" in contemporary inscriptions and accounts, reflecting its core in Kannada heartlands while extending southward to Tamil territories.[6] By the 16th–17th centuries, under Deccan Sultanates and early Mughal oversight, the term shifted to signify the suba (province) south of Hyderabad, governed semi-autonomously by Nawabs appointed from 1692 onward, with Saadatullah Khan I (r. 1710–1722) formalizing the Carnatic as a domain from the Krishna River to the Kaveri River, incorporating Arcot as capital.[3] European records from the 17th century onward, including Portuguese and British maps, applied "Carnatic" to this coastal plain and its Nawabi domains, emphasizing its role in trade and proxy conflicts; this crystallized during the three Carnatic Wars (1746–1748, 1749–1754, 1756–1763), where British and French forces vied for dominance by backing rival claimants to the Nawabship, such as Muhammad Ali Khan (r. 1749–1795), thereby fixing the term in colonial historiography to the erstwhile Madras Presidency's core territories in modern Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh.[7] Post-independence, the name persists in historical contexts but has largely yielded to modern state delineations, with "Karnataka" revived for the Kannada state in 1973.[6]Geography
Physical features and boundaries
The Carnatic region encompasses the southeastern coastal plains of the Indian peninsula, bounded on the west by the Eastern Ghats, on the east by the Bay of Bengal, on the north by the Krishna River, and extending southward approximately to the Kaveri River.[8][9] This delineation aligns with the historical extent of the Coromandel Coast's southern segment, spanning roughly 600 miles in length along the shoreline and varying from 50 to 100 miles in inland breadth.[9] Physically, the region features predominantly flat to gently undulating alluvial plains, with elevations generally below 200 meters above sea level, formed by sedimentary deposits from eastward-flowing rivers draining the Eastern Ghats.[8] The Eastern Ghats, though discontinuous and lower in elevation compared to the Western Ghats (rarely exceeding 1,200 meters in this sector), form a rugged escarpment that impedes moisture from the southwest monsoon, resulting in semi-arid conditions inland contrasted with the humid coastal belt.[10] Key rivers shaping the landscape include the Pennar, Palar, Ponnaiyar, and especially the Kaveri, whose extensive delta south of the region proper supports fertile paddy fields but marks a transitional boundary in broader definitions.[8] Historically, the Carnatic was subdivided into Northern, Central, and Southern portions for administrative purposes: the Northern Carnatic extended from the Krishna to the Pennar River, the Central from the Pennar to the Coleroon (a Kaveri distributary), and the Southern south of the Coleroon toward present-day Tiruchirappalli.[9] These divisions reflect the terrain's uniformity, with sporadic hillocks and tanks for irrigation supplementing riverine agriculture, though the core area lacks significant mountain ranges or plateaus beyond the Ghats' foothills.[11]Subdivisions and administrative divisions
The Carnatic region has been historically subdivided into three geographical parts: Northern Carnatic, extending from the Krishna River in the north to the Kaveri River in the south; Central Carnatic, between the Kaveri and Coleroon rivers; and Southern Carnatic, south of the Coleroon River down to Cape Comorin.[12] These divisions reflect variations in terrain, river systems, and historical polities along the Coromandel Coast.[13] Under the Nawabs of Carnatic, who ruled from the early 18th century until British consolidation around 1801, the administration followed the Mughal model with two primary subahs (provinces): Arcot Subah, encompassing Nellore, Chengalpattu, and Arcot districts, and Trichinopoly Subah, covering Tirunelveli, Madurai, and Trichinopoly districts.[14] Each subah was headed by a subahdar appointed by the Nawab for a typical tenure of three years, responsible for governance, law, and order, while revenue collection fell to a provincial diwan. Further subdivisions included sarkars (districts) managed by faujdars for security, parganas (taluks) under shiqdars, and villages led by kotwals, with judicial matters handled by qazis applying Sharia law.[14] The system incorporated approximately 30 nawabis, smaller semi-autonomous units, emphasizing centralized control under the Nawab aided by a council of ministers.[14] Following the Carnatic Wars and the 1801 cession by Nawab Muhammad Ali Khan Wallajah, the region integrated into the British Madras Presidency, with key districts including Nellore, North Arcot, South Arcot, Madurai, Trichinopoly, Tinnevelly, and Tanjore directly administered as Carnatic Districts.[15] British reforms reorganized these into collectorates for revenue and judicial functions, standardizing land assessments and local governance under collectors appointed from the Indian Civil Service. In the post-independence era, the historical Carnatic aligns with northern districts of Tamil Nadu such as Vellore, Tiruvannamalai, and Cuddalore, alongside southern Andhra Pradesh districts like Nellore, reflecting state reorganizations in 1956 and 2014 that prioritized linguistic boundaries over historical ones.[15]History
Ancient and classical periods
The Carnatic region, corresponding to the coastal and adjoining inland areas of present-day northern and central Tamil Nadu, features archaeological evidence of Iron Age settlements associated with megalithic culture dating from approximately 1200 BCE to 200 BCE. These include burial sites with dolmens, cairns, and urns containing iron tools, weapons, and pottery, indicating a pastoral-agricultural society with early iron technology.[16] Excavations at Keezhadi near Madurai have uncovered a sophisticated urban settlement along the Vaigai River, with carbon-dated artifacts from the 6th century BCE (around 580 BCE), including brick structures, drainage systems, and Tamil-Brahmi inscribed pottery shards evidencing literacy and craft specialization. This pushes back the timeline of literate urbanism in the region, challenging earlier views that confined advanced Tamil society to later periods.[17] [18] The Sangam period, spanning roughly 300 BCE to 300 CE based on archaeological and literary correlations, saw the emergence of the three major Tamil kingdoms: the Cholas centered at Uraiyur, the Pandyas at Madurai, and the Cheras at Vanji (modern Karur or Muziris). Sangam literature—anthologies of Tamil poems compiled under royal patronage—describes these monarchs as "crowned kings" engaging in warfare, agriculture, and maritime trade, with corroborative evidence from contemporary inscriptions and foreign accounts.[19] [20] Maritime commerce flourished during this era, particularly with the Roman Empire, as attested by the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea (1st century CE) mentioning ports like Muziris and Kaveripattinam exporting spices, pearls, and textiles in exchange for Roman gold coins, amphorae, and Arretine ware found at sites such as Arikamedu. This trade network, peaking in the 1st-2nd centuries CE, integrated the Carnatic economy into Indo-Roman exchange routes.[21] [22] Following the Sangam era, the region entered a transitional phase under the Kalabhras (circa 3rd-6th centuries CE), often termed a "dark age" due to sparse records, marked by Jain and Buddhist influences and disruptions to earlier dynasties. The Pallavas subsequently rose around the 3rd-4th centuries CE from northern outposts, establishing control over parts of the Carnatic and laying foundations for rock-cut architecture at sites like Mahabalipuram, blending local Dravidian styles with northern influences.[16]
Medieval dynasties and Vijayanagara Empire
After the fragmentation of Chola authority around 1218 CE, the Later Pandya dynasty reemerged as the dominant power in the Carnatic region, with Madurai serving as the capital and center of control over much of Tamil Nadu.[23] Jatavarman Sundara Pandya I (r. 1251–1268 CE) oversaw the dynasty's peak, conducting expansive military campaigns that subdued Hoysala forces near Kanchipuram, temporarily checked Kakatiya incursions from the north, and extended influence into Telugu country, Kalinga, and Sri Lanka, fostering trade links with Southeast Asia.[23] Maravarman Kulasekhara Pandya I (r. 1268–1310 CE) continued this expansion by capturing Kollam and reinvading Ceylon, but internal civil wars between his sons Sundara Pandya and Veera Pandya eroded Pandya cohesion.[23] Pandya decline accelerated with Delhi Sultanate raids, particularly Malik Kafur's invasion in 1311 CE, which sacked Madurai, plundered temples, and extracted tribute, effectively dismantling centralized Pandya rule.[23] Further incursions in 1314 and 1323 CE under Tughlaq forces annexed the region as the Ma'bar province, culminating in the establishment of the Madurai Sultanate in 1335 CE by Jalaluddin Ahsan Shah, a Tughlaq viceroy who declared independence and imposed Muslim governance over the Carnatic heartland until its overthrow.[23] The Vijayanagara Empire, founded in 1336 CE by Harihara I and Bukka Raya I—former feudatories possibly under Hoysala influence—emerged in the northern Deccan as a bulwark against northern Muslim advances, gradually incorporating the Carnatic through southward expansion.[24] Bukka Raya I (r. 1356–1377 CE) directed campaigns that culminated in the defeat of the Madurai Sultanate by his son Kumara Kampana around 1377–1378 CE, restoring Hindu rule and integrating the Carnatic's fertile plains and coastal trade routes into the empire's domain.[23][25] Vijayanagara administered the distant Carnatic provinces via the Nayankara system, under which military governors known as Nayakas received hereditary land grants (amaram) in exchange for maintaining troops, collecting revenue, and providing loyalty during campaigns, fostering semi-feudal decentralization that ensured local stability but sowed seeds for later autonomy.[26] Key Nayakas oversaw regions like Madurai, Tanjore, and Gingee, managing irrigation networks, temple economies, and defense against residual threats.[26] The empire peaked under Krishnadevaraya of the Tuluva dynasty (r. 1509–1529 CE), whose victories over the Gajapati of Odisha and Deccan sultanates secured eastern Carnatic territories, boosted agricultural output through canal systems, and patronized Telugu and Sanskrit literature alongside Dravidian temple architecture.[24] The empire's collapse began with the Battle of Talikota (also Rakshasa-Tangadi) on January 23, 1565 CE, where de facto ruler Aliya Rama Raya's forces were routed by a coalition of Deccan sultanates (Bijapur, Ahmadnagar, Golconda, and Bidar), resulting in Rama Raya's execution and the sacking of the Vijayanagara capital at Hampi.[24] This defeat fragmented imperial authority, empowering Carnatic Nayakas to assert independence—such as the Nayaks of Madurai (ruling from 1529–1736 CE) and Tanjore—while the empire lingered in peninsular remnants until around 1646 CE, marking the end of centralized Hindu dominion in the south.[24][26]Rise of the Carnatic Nawabs and Mughal influence
The Mughal Empire's southward expansion into the Deccan during the late 17th century laid the groundwork for administrative structures in the Carnatic region, as Emperor Aurangzeb's forces subdued the Bijapur Sultanate in 1686 and the Golconda Sultanate in 1687, incorporating these territories as Mughal subahs.[3] Following the capture of Gingee from the Marathas and Bijapuri remnants in 1698, Zulfiqar Khan was appointed as the Mughal chief for the southern provinces, establishing initial imperial oversight over the Carnatic, which extended roughly from the Krishna River southward along the Coromandel Coast.[27] This period marked the transition from Sultanate-era fragmentation to Mughal provincial governance, with faujdar positions—military and revenue collectors—imposed to extract tribute and maintain order amid lingering local resistances.[28] The appointment of Daud Khan Panni as faujdar of the Carnatic around 1700 exemplified early Mughal delegation, as he suppressed local chieftains and consolidated control from Arcot, though his recall to Delhi in 1710 amid internal Mughal politics signaled the empire's administrative strains.[14] Saadatullah Khan I, a Mughal officer of Persian descent and Daud Khan's relative, succeeded him as the first Nawab of Carnatic in 1710, confirmed by Emperor Bahadur Shah I; he shifted the capital permanently to Arcot and expanded the Nawab's domain between the Krishna and Kaveri rivers, establishing a semi-autonomous revenue system with an estimated annual yield of several lakhs of rupees from agrarian taxes.[3][29] Under Saadatullah (r. 1710–1732), the Nawabs developed hereditary claims, fostering a Muslim elite that intermarried with local Hindu zamindars while nominally remitting tribute to Delhi, though enforcement waned post-Aurangzeb's death in 1707.[14] Mughal influence persisted through the Deccan subahdar, culminating in Nizam ul-Mulk Asaf Jah I's appointment as viceroy in 1713, who treated the Carnatic Nawabs as subordinates within Hyderabad's orbit after his de facto independence from Delhi by 1724.[3] Saadatullah pledged allegiance to the Nizam, who confirmed Nawabi appointments and mediated disputes, such as the succession after Saadatullah's death in 1732, when his nephew Dost Ali Khan assumed the title amid rival claims.[29] This layered suzerainty—Nawabs under Nizam under nominal Mughal emperor—enabled the Carnatic rulers to build standing armies of up to 10,000 cavalry and infantry by the 1730s, leveraging Mughal jagir grants for local legitimacy while exploiting imperial decline to prioritize regional defense against Maratha incursions.[27] By mid-century, Mughal authority had eroded to symbolic firman confirmations, as Nawabs like Anwaruddin Khan (r. 1744–1749), appointed by the Nizam, navigated European trading companies' growing footholds in Madras and Pondicherry.[30]Carnatic Wars and European rivalries
The Carnatic Wars (1746–1763) represented the extension of Anglo-French imperial rivalries into southern India, where the British and French East India Companies vied for commercial and territorial dominance by exploiting succession disputes among local Muslim rulers in the Carnatic, a dependency of the Nizam of Hyderabad. These conflicts arose amid broader European wars—the War of the Austrian Succession (First Carnatic War), an interlude of local power struggles (Second), and the Seven Years' War (Third)—with each side providing military support to rival claimants for the nawabship, thereby gaining influence over trade routes, revenue, and ports like Madras and Pondicherry. The Carnatic's strategic position facilitated proxy warfare, as European naval superiority and disciplined infantry tipped balances against numerically superior Indian forces allied with one or the other power.[31][32] The First Carnatic War (1746–1748) began when French forces under Governor-General Joseph François Dupleix and Admiral Bertrand-François Mahé de La Bourdonnais captured the British-held Madras on 21 September 1746, following the outbreak of hostilities in Europe. The British, under Nicholas Boscawen, attempted a counteroffensive but failed to seize Pondicherry in 1748; the conflict ended with the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, which restored Madras to British control without altering local power dynamics significantly. This war highlighted the companies' reliance on local alliances, as the Nawab of Carnatic, Anwaruddin Khan, demanded Madras's return but lacked the means to enforce it independently, exposing the fragility of Mughal-era authority in the face of European intervention.[31] The Second Carnatic War (1749–1754) stemmed from a succession crisis after the Nizam of Hyderabad's death in 1748, pitting French-backed Muzaffar Jang (Nizam claimant) and Chanda Sahib (Carnatic claimant, son-in-law of a prior nawab) against British-supported Nasir Jang and Muhammad Ali (son of Anwaruddin). French aid enabled Chanda Sahib and Muzaffar Jang to defeat and kill Anwaruddin at the Battle of Ambur on 3 August 1749, allowing Chanda to seize Arcot and proclaim himself nawab; Muhammad Ali fled to Trichinopoly for refuge. British fortunes turned with Robert Clive's daring capture of Arcot on 31 August 1751 using 210 Europeans and 300 sepoys against a larger garrison, followed by a 50-day defense against 10,000 besiegers under Chanda Sahib's son Raja Sahib (23 September–14 November 1751). Clive's relief of Trichinopoly in 1752 culminated in Chanda Sahib's execution by Muhammad Ali's forces in June 1752, after which the French recalled Dupleix in 1754 amid financial strains. The Treaty of Pondicherry (1754) recognized Muhammad Ali as Nawab of Carnatic under nominal Hyderabad suzerainty, granting Britain de facto influence through subsidies and military protection.[32][31] The Third Carnatic War (1756–1763), aligned with the Seven Years' War, saw renewed escalation as French Governor Thomas Lally sought to reverse gains; British forces under Eyre Coote decisively defeated the French at the Battle of Wandiwash on 22 January 1760, capturing key positions and isolating Pondicherry, which surrendered on 16 January 1761 after a siege. Though the global Treaty of Paris (1763 restored some French trading rights, their military presence in the Carnatic was effectively ended, with Muhammad Ali's regime becoming indebted to the British East India Company for protection against Hyderabad and Maratha threats. These wars underscored causal factors in British ascendancy: superior sea power enabling reinforcements, Clive's tactical innovations in hybrid European-sepoy forces, and French overextension without metropolitan support, contrasting Dupleix's ambitious but underfunded continental-style campaigns. By 1763, British control over the Carnatic's revenue and politics laid foundations for wider subcontinental dominance, as local nawabs traded autonomy for European backing amid declining Mughal oversight.[31][32]British consolidation and colonial administration
Following the decisive British victory in the Third Carnatic War, concluded by the Treaty of Paris on February 10, 1763, Muhammad Ali Khan was formally recognized as the Nawab of the Carnatic, establishing British paramountcy over the region through his nominal sovereignty.[33] The treaty affirmed British rights to the captured French possessions, including Pondicherry, while subordinating French influence and securing Muhammad Ali's alliance, which obligated him to cede revenue collection rights from specific districts to fund British troops stationed for his protection.[34] This arrangement, formalized in subsequent agreements such as the 1765 treaty, granted the East India Company civil and criminal jurisdiction in Madras and the right to maintain a subsidiary force, marking the initial phase of consolidation by tying the Nawab's fiscal autonomy to British military support.[35] The Nawab's mounting debts to the Company and private British lenders—exacerbated by military expenditures and administrative inefficiencies—accelerated British encroachment on Carnatic governance. By the 1780s, these liabilities, estimated at over 16 lakh pagodas, prompted treaties like the one in June 1785, under which Muhammad Ali surrendered revenue assignments from key districts to service the debt, effectively placing large swathes of territory under direct Company control for collection and administration.[36] A further agreement in 1787 expanded this, assigning additional revenues to repay loans from individual British officers, whose influence—often termed the "Arcot Interest"—lobbied Parliament to prioritize debt recovery over Nawabi independence, thereby deepening economic dependency.[33] This financial leverage suppressed local resistance, including from poligar chieftains who controlled fortified hill tracts, through campaigns like the Poligar Wars (1799–1805), which dismantled autonomous zamindari powers and integrated rebellious territories into Company-administered collectorates.[37] Consolidation culminated in the Carnatic Treaty of July 31, 1801, imposed on Nawab Azim-ud-Daula amid suspicions of his correspondence with Tipu Sultan of Mysore, by which the British East India Company assumed full civil, military, and revenue powers over the Carnatic, rendering the Nawab a titular figure with an annual pension of 1.5 million rupees.[38] This effectively annexed the region into the Madras Presidency, with administration restructured under collectors responsible for land revenue assessment via emerging ryotwari systems—direct settlement with cultivators—superseding the Nawab's jagirdari grants.[34] Judicial functions were centralized in Madras courts applying Company regulations, while infrastructure like roads and irrigation works supported revenue extraction, yielding annual collections exceeding 10 million rupees by the early 19th century, though often at the cost of agrarian distress from over-assessment.[33] British control thus transitioned from proxy rule to direct colonial governance, prioritizing fiscal stability and strategic defense against residual French or Mysore threats.Economy and society
Pre-colonial economic structures
The pre-colonial economy of the Carnatic region centered on agriculture, which supported a dense population through cultivation of rice, millets, cotton, and sugarcane, bolstered by irrigation infrastructure inherited from earlier dynasties and expanded under Vijayanagara rule (1336–1646). Tanks, canals, and reservoirs facilitated wet and dry farming, with state investment in water management enabling surplus production for local consumption and trade. Land tenure operated via systems like nayankara, where military elites (nayakas) received revenue rights over assigned territories (amaram lands) in return for maintaining troops and remitting shares to the sovereign, typically one-sixth to one-fourth of the harvest as assessed revenue. This structure decentralized collection while tying agrarian output to imperial military needs, with villages often comprising self-sustaining units where peasant cultivators (ryots) paid in kind or cash under oversight of local officials.[39][40] Artisanal crafts, particularly textile weaving, complemented agriculture in rural settings, where households integrated farming with production of cotton fabrics using locally grown fiber and simple looms. Professional weavers formed the core of this sector, producing painted and plain cloths for domestic use and export, with guild-like organizations regulating quality and supply in market towns. Metallurgy, pottery, and salt production also thrived, often linked to coastal resources, though these remained subordinate to agrarian revenues that funded rulers and temples. Pre-colonial villages preserved a symbiotic rural economy, with artisans dependent on agricultural surpluses and peasants accessing crafted goods without full market specialization.[41][42] Commerce flourished via the Coromandel Coast's ports, such as those near modern Nagapattinam and Pulicat, exporting textiles, spices, and aromatics to Southeast Asia, the Middle East, and East Africa in exchange for metals, horses, and luxury imports. Under Vijayanagara and later Nayak oversight (post-1646), inland trade routes connected agrarian hinterlands to coastal emporia, with merchants handling bulk goods via bullock caravans and riverine transport. Revenue from customs duties and port taxes supplemented land income, while rulers like the Madurai Nayaks divided territories into palayams for efficient toll collection. This trade network, active by the 14th century, integrated the Carnatic into broader Indian Ocean circuits, though it relied on indigenous shipping and brokerage rather than state monopolies. By the early 18th century, under Carnatic Nawabs nominally subservient to the Mughals, subahdars promoted agrarian expansion and commerce to stabilize finances amid political flux, maintaining pre-existing patterns until European military interventions disrupted them.[43][14]Impact of colonial trade and agriculture
The East India Company's assumption of direct control over the Carnatic following the 1801 Carnatic Treaty shifted the region's economy toward revenue maximization and export-oriented production, prioritizing British imperial needs over local sustenance.[44] Trade, initially centered on fine cotton textiles from ports like Madras and Masulipatam, faced rapid deindustrialization as British tariffs and machine competition eroded indigenous weaving; piece-goods exports from the Madras Presidency, encompassing the Carnatic, plummeted from 67.5 lakh rupees in 1825–26 to 29.43 lakh rupees by 1850–51.[44] In parallel, colonial demand redirected agricultural output toward raw materials, with cotton cultivation expanding to nearly 1 million acres by 1852 and exports surging from 1.4 lakh rupees in 1840–41 to 58 lakh rupees in 1850–51, primarily to fuel Lancashire mills.[44] Indigo production similarly grew to 200,000 acres by mid-century, yielding annual exports of about 7,000 chests, though profits remained low at roughly 2 rupees per acre for dry grains in districts like Salem.[44] Agricultural policies under the ryotwari system, formalized by Thomas Munro from 1820 onward in much of the Carnatic and Madras Presidency, recognized individual cultivators (ryots) as proprietors directly accountable to the state, replacing intermediary zamindars and village collectives with cash-based assessments often exceeding 50–55% of gross produce.[45] [46] This system, extended after the Third Mysore War in 1792 to areas like Salem and Baramahal, aimed to fix revenue periodically but involved over-assessments and upward revisions that drove land abandonment—up to one-third to one-half of highly taxed lands in Bellary—and compelled ryots to borrow from moneylenders at 18–24% interest, with indebtedness afflicting 90% in regions like Palghat by the early 1800s and 49% mortgaging crops in Cuddapah and Bellary by 1853.[47] [44] Ryots' net share from wet cultivation dwindled from 42 rupees per unit in 1826–27 to 32 rupees by 1851–52, leaving under 20% for subsistence after revenue and debt servicing, exacerbating vulnerability as traditional food crops yielded to cash varieties like indigo and cotton, which offered scant buffer against price fluctuations (e.g., a price index drop to 50 in 1843–44).[44] These pressures culminated in recurrent agrarian crises and famines, intensified by inadequate irrigation outside select projects like the 1836 Cauvery anicut in Tanjore, which boosted local rice output by 10 lakh rupees annually but failed to offset systemic neglect.[44] Notable disasters included the 1805–07 famine killing 17,000 in Madras, the 1823–24 distress prompting weaver starvation and agricultural overcrowding, and the 1833–34 Guntur famine halving the district's population with losses estimated at 2 crore rupees; revenue collections, peaking at 4.16 crore rupees in 1819–20, declined to 3.23 crore by 1839–40 amid peasant flight and falling prices.[44] The Nawabs' pre-colonial debts, inflated through Company loans and serviced post-1801 by allocating 12,000 pounds annually from land revenues, further entrenched extraction, transforming a subsistence-oriented agrarian base into one subordinated to colonial tribute and export imperatives, with limited takkavi advances (8.5 lakh rupees yearly from 1822–35) providing only marginal relief.[48] [44]| Key Economic Indicators (Madras Presidency, 1800–1850) |
|---|
| Metric |
| Land Revenue Demand |
| Cotton Export Value |
| Piece-Goods Export Decline |
| Famine Mortality Example |
| Ryot Indebtedness Rate |