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ID164878
Title ProperWarriors and States
Other Title InformationMilitary labour in southern India, circa 1750–1800
LanguageENG
AuthorVartavarian, Mesrob
Summary / Abstract (Note)The consolidation of numerous regional polities in the aftermath of Mughal imperial decline presented favourable socioeconomic opportunities for South Asian service communities. Protracted armed conflicts in southern India allowed a variety of mercenaries, soldiers, and war bands to accumulate resources in exchange for mobilizing manpower on behalf of states with weak standing armies. This article focuses on British imperial efforts to obtain sufficient quantities of military labour during its struggle with the Mysore sultanate. As the sultanate assumed an increasingly hostile attitude towards independent warrior power, local strongmen sought more amenable arrangements with alternate entities. The British East India Company received crucial support from autonomous warrior groups during its southern wars of conquest. Warriors in turn utilized British resources to consolidate local sovereignties. Thus, the initial British intrusion into peninsular Indian society further fragmented the political landscape by patronizing petty military entrepreneurs.
`In' analytical NoteModern Asian Studies Vol. 53, No.2; Mar 2019: p.313-338
Journal SourceModern Asian Studies 2019-04 53, 2
Key WordsMilitary Labour ;  Southern India ;  Warriors and States