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Q59 (CDS-II/2011) History & Culture › Modern India (Pre-1857) › British annexation policies Answer Verified

In 1856 Awadh would not have been annexed with the British^ Empire if the Nawab of Awadh had

Result
Your answer: —  Â·  Correct: B
Explanation

The annexation of Awadh in 1856 was unique because it was not based on the Doctrine of Lapse, as Nawab Wajid Ali Shah had heirs [1]. Instead, Lord Dalhousie annexed the territory on the grounds of 'misgovernment' and 'maladministration' [4]. The British had long pressured the Nawabs to introduce administrative reforms to align with Western bureaucratic norms [t1][t6]. Reports by Residents Sleeman and Outram highlighted anarchical conditions, which the British used as a pretext to claim the Nawab had failed his obligations under the Subsidiary Alliance [c2][t1]. Dalhousie initially preferred a permanent British administration while letting the Nawab retain his title, but the Court of Directors insisted on full annexation [c2]. Had the Nawab implemented the specific administrative reforms demanded by the British, the primary legal and moral justification for the 1856 annexation—the 'plea of misgovernment'—would have been removed [c4][t1].

Sources

  1. [1] Rajiv Ahir. A Brief History of Modern India (2019 ed.). SPECTRUM. > Chapter 5: Expansion and Consolidation of British Power in India > Annexed Lapsed States > p. 125
  2. [4] http://indianculture.gov.in/digital-district-repository/district-repository/awadh-and-subsidiary-alliance-wellesley-and
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