The British Conquest of India (1798-1806)
V. The 2nd Anglo-Maratha War: Holkar
Hi, and welcome to Strategy Stuff. This is Part V of a five-part series on how Britain and its East India Company, between 1798 and 1807, established hegemony over India through conquest.
In the last Part, British India had, within a year, first vassalized the nominal Maratha leader or Peshwa, and then destroyed the Europeanized armies of the Maratha lords Shinde and Bhonsle. In the process, the British gained control of not just the core Maratha territories in central India, but also the northern regions of Hindustan and Rajputana, including the Mughal Emperor in Delhi.
At this point, the chief official of British India, Richard Wellesley the Earl of Mornington, might have finally considered his expansionist ambitions fulfilled. But conquering all this land was only half the equation: the new territories also had to be defended and held. And this was easier said than done, since British Indian forces were now stretched thin throughout the subcontinent, and Mornington’s bosses in the EIC refused to let him hire any more. This was especially dangerous, considering that the British had not actually defeated all the Maratha domains: there was still one left – that of Holkar.