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  1. 22 de dez. de 2023 · A: A Subsidiary Alliance is a diplomatic and military strategy employed by a stronger state to control a weaker state without annexing it. This concept was notably implemented by Lord Wellesley, the Governor-General of India, during the early 19th century. In a Subsidiary Alliance, the weaker state agrees to maintain a British subsidiary force ...

  2. 24 de set. de 2019 · The Subsidiary Alliance as imposed by Wellesley on the native rulers was the most effective instrument for the expansion of the British territory and political influence in India. Wellesley did not originate it. It was first devised by the French governor Dupleix. He started the practice of providing military help to native rulers in return for ...

  3. 20 de set. de 2019 · Lord Wellesley attempted to make the Company the Supreme Power in India by means of wars, mediatisation and the Subsidiary Alliance. He fought the fourth Mysore War with Tipu in 1799, annexed most of the territory of Mysore and restored a part of it to the previous Hindu ruler who became a dependent ally of the English.

  4. 6 de dez. de 2022 · What is Subsidiary Alliance. Lord Wellesley established the Subsidiary Alliance System, which was effectively an agreement between the princely kingdoms and the British East India Company. Princely states gave over their sovereignty to the British under the subsidiary alliance system in exchange for safety. Read about : Freedom Fighters of India.

  5. 3 de nov. de 2020 · Framed by Lord Wellesley, the Governor-General of India from 1798 to 1805, the Subsidiary alliance was a major process that led to the building of the British Empire in India. By Jagranjosh Nov 3 ...

  6. The rulers of Jodhpur, Bundi, Peshwa, Jaipur, Mysore, Oudh, Macheri, Tanjore, Bharatpur, Berar, and the Nizam of Hyderabad all supported Wellesley’s “subsidiary alliance” philosophy. In 1798, Lord Wellesley came to India as Governor-General when the British fought a global war with France. More about Lord Wellesley

  7. One such policy that later proved to be a political master-stroke was the policy of Subsidiary Alliance that had been formally introduced by Lord Wellesley in 1798. While a bevy of Indian states fell prey to it, the most telling fallout of the policy was the annexation of Awadh by Lord Dalhousie in 1856 that had vast consequences and Awadh ...