Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Lord Wellesley was regarded as a very expensive and ambitious ruler; the greater part of his administration had been a scene of war and conquest; war and conquest in India had been successfully held forth to the British nation as at once hostile to the British interests and cruel to the people of India; with a ruler possessing the disposition of Lord Wellesley, it was supposed that the ...

  2. 17 de nov. de 2015 · Lord Mornington - the Marquis of Wellesley (the Duke of Wellington's elder brother) - was the Governor-General from 1797 to 1805 and his predecessor was Cornwallis who administered India using Pitt's India Act. To Wellesley the British paramountcy with a sort of federal set-up in India was dearer to him than anything else, and he had begun to ...

  3. 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.

  4. www.upscwithnikhil.com › article › historyFourth Anglo-Mysore War

    22 de fev. de 2024 · The fourth Anglo-Mysore war was held in the year 1798-1799. This war was between the East India Company and Hyderabad Deccan against the Kingdom of Mysore. This was the last battle or war of the Anglo-Mysore wars in which the Tipu sultan died. The British took control of Mysore's capital. The Wadiyar family was reinstated to the throne after ...

  5. 17 de nov. de 2019 · Napoleonic Wars: Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington. Arthur Wellesley was born in Dublin, Ireland in late April or early May 1769, and was the fourth son of Garret Wesley, Earl of Mornington and his wife Anne. Though initially educated locally, Wellesley later attended Eton (1781-1784), before receiving additional schooling in Brussels, Belgium.

  6. Wellesley was a member of the Board of Control for India from 1793, and in 1797 was appointed as Governor-General of Bengal. In 1799 he was created Marquess Wellesley in the Irish peerage. He remained in India until 1805, and extended British control through various wars against Indian rulers. In 1809 he went to Spain as an ambassador ...

  7. 3 de abr. de 2019 · Answer b) Lord Wellesley The doctrine of subsidiary alliance was introduced by Lord Wellesley, British Governor-General in India from 1798 to 1805. Early in his governorship Wellesley adopted a policy of non-intervention in the princely states, but he later adopted the policy of forming subsidiary alliances.