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  1. Lord Wellesley (as Governor General) came to India in 1798 at a time when the British were locked in a life and death struggle with France all over the world. Lord Wellesley decided that the time was ripe for bringing as many Indian states as possible under British control. By 1797, the two strongest Indian powers, Mysore and the Marathas, had ...

  2. They could now maintain a large army at the cost of the Indian states. Lord Wellesley signed his first Subsidiary Treaty with the Nizam of Hyderabad in 1798. The Nizam was to dismiss his French-trained troops and to maintain a subsidiary force of six battalions at a cost of £ 241,710 per year. In return, the British guaranteed his state ...

  3. 10 de jan. de 2022 · Under the Subsidiary Alliance System used by Lord Wellesley, every ruler in India had to accept to pay a subsidy to the British for the maintenance of the British army. In return, the British would protect them from their enemies which gave British enormous expansion. The system was extremely advantageous to the British.

  4. In 1792, under the treaty of Seringpatam, Tipu had to give up nearly half of Mysorean territory to the British, the Marathas and the Nizam. In addition, he had to pay a war indemnity of three crores, for which the British took Tipu’s two sons hostage. British Expansion in India under Lord Wellesley (1798-1805) Wellesley was an expansionist.

  5. 7 de out. de 2021 · Notes of BA III Sem, BA History paper III EXPANSIONIST POLICY UNDER LORD WELLESLEY.docx - Study Material Introducing the World's First AI-Enabled Connected Classroom Technology Click Here

  6. In this article we will discuss about the expansion of British rule in India under Lord Wellesley and Lord Hastings. Expansion of British Rule under Lord Wellesley ( 1798 –1805): The next large-scale expansion of British rule in India occurred during the Governor-Generalship of Lord Wellesley who came to India in 1798 at a time when the British were locked in a life-and- death struggle with ...

  7. Lord Wellesley decided that the time was ripe for bringing as many Indian states as possible under British control. By 1797 the two strongest Indian powers, Mysore and the Marathas, had declined in power. Political conditions in India were propitious for a policy of expansion: aggression was easy as well as profitable.