The expansion of the British East India Company was a triumph of institutional organization over feudalism.
Major wins of the British East India Company army
Battle of Plassey (1757)
Battle of Buxar (1764)
Anglo-Mysore Wars (1767-1799)
Anglo-Maratha Wars (1775-1818)
Anglo-Sikh Wars (1845-1849)
Reasons behind consistent wins of British East India company army
Political Factors
Fragmented Indian polity – Eg- Marathas, Nizam, and Awadh failed to form a sustained anti-British alliance.
Diplomacy – Company isolated enemies before military confrontation. Eg- Wellesley’s Subsidiary Alliance system neutralised Indian rulers politically.
Economic Factors
Superior financial resources – Eg- Diwani rights (1765) funded continuous military expansion.
Commercial-military synergy – Trade profits sustained long wars without fiscal collapse.
Technological Factors
Standardised firearms and artillery – Eg- Effective use of field artillery at Buxar overwhelmed numerically superior forces of Awadh, Mughal, and Bengal Nawab.
Military innovations – Better logistics, military engineering, and disciplined infantry formations.
Leadership and Organisation
Professional military leadership – Officers trained in European warfare doctrines. Eg- Clive and Eyre Coote employed coordinated infantry-artillery tactics.
Unified command structure – Clear hierarchy ensured swift decision-making unlike feudal Indian armies.
Social Divisions within Indian Armies
Feudal composition of Indian forces – Loyalty based on personal allegiance, not the state. Eg- Defection of Mir Jafar at Plassey.
Caste and regional divisions – Eg- Mahar regiment fighting against Peshwa army in Anglo-Maratha wars
Ideological and Psychological Factors
Absence of nationalism – Indian soldiers fought for rulers, not a national cause.
Company’s corporate discipline – Soldiers motivated by regular pay, promotion, and military professionalism.
The European conquest of India was not just a conquest of territory but a conquest of the Indian soul, changing the very ethos of Indian society.” – Rabindranath Tagore