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| Islamic Articles Tipu SultanAn
article written by one of the descendants of the Tiger of Mysore. Tipu
Sahib Shaheed, King of Mysore, was a genius rather different in nature
from his father, Haidar Ali Khan Sahib. Whereas, according to the British,
Haidar's attitude was frankly secular, and he cared not at all what a
man's religion might be, so long as he were a good soldier, Tipu was before
everything, devout. It
has, however been claimed that Haidar was of the Sunni or Orthodox Islamic
faith, in which case the difference between them may rather have been
that where his religion was of the conventional order, Tipu was a mystic,
with a mystic's fervour. Tipu
Sahib regarded himself as a defender of the faith. More especially, he
believed himself to be inspired by the direct tutelage of Ali, the son-in-law
of Mohammed (SAAW). His
mother, Fakhr-un-nisa, the beautiful and pious sister of Abdul-ul-Hakim,
the Nawab of Kalapa, had been, on the eve of his birth, to visit the ascetic,
Tipu Mastan Aulia, to ask for his blessing on her first-born, and some
indication concerning his future. That he ascribed some spiritual character
to the child appears in that he told the Begum Fakhr-un-nisa she should
give it his own name. Concerning
the origin of the name Tipu, there is some controversy, but on the grounds
other than linguistic, the thesis which would make it a deviation from
the Kanarese word for 'tiger' recommends itself. From
the first, Tipu took this beast as his personal symbol, and upon his accession
to the throne in 1782, he made it the official emblem of the state of
Mysore. The tiger's head figured as his armorial bearing, and the word
'sher' [tiger] or it's initial letter, appeared stamped, embroidered or
engraved upon every article of his use. Throughout
India, he was known as 'The Tiger of Mysore'. Even the stripes upon his
clothing, and upon the upholstery of his throne and the cushions of his
chamber, represented the stripes of the tiger. His throne had eight corners,
surmounted by eight tiger heads, and the whole was set as though across
the back of a tiger, whose huge gold head projected in front. Live
tigers upon chains guarded the great doors of his palace on the fortified
island of Seringapatam, and inside the palace more tigers were kept, some
in cages, and some upon chains - and it is said that two of his ministers,
having incurred his gross displeasure, were thrown to them alive. The
proud words for which he was best known were, 'Better two days as a tiger,
than two hundred years as a sheep' Tipu
Sultan inherited the war with England in an hour when it was going badly.
He was unable ever to make up his father's losses, and in 1792, the eleventh
year of his reign, he was obliged to sign a treaty with Britain by which
he lost nearly half his dominions. His
dearest ambition, however, was not merely the restoration of the former
boundaries of the Sultanate, but nothing less than the total expulsion
of the British from India. For its accomplishment, he knew that he must
be dependant upon a French alliance, and he was content to bid his time.
His
first embassy to France, in 1778, had been dissapointing in its results.
His delegates had been, indeed, courteously and lavishly entertained by
the king, Louis XVI, but had returned without concrete guarantees. Under
the growing shadow of popular discontent, Louis hesitated, understandably,
in sending to Tipu, arms and supplies which he might need at home. The
French Revolution coming in the same year that Tipu lost half his dominions,
was a source of peculiar embarrassment to the Sultan. A monarch himself,
profoundly convinced of the divine consecration, inspiration and right
of kings, he could not feel sympathy toward a popular government which
had arrived by the decapitation of the consecrated head. Nevertheless,
France and Mysore were natural allies. He did nothing precipitate. A little
time passed. The Republic, when it took time to considering affairs in
the East, expressed itself desirous of maintaining those relations of
amity which had always obtained between France and Mysore. Tipu broached
the question of a supply of men and arms. Gradually
both began to find their way into the Sultanate. On May 14, 1797, the
Tricolor was formally hoisted in the city of Mysore, and Fracois Ripaud
proposed a toast to 'Citizen Tipu !" The
presence of French troops on his soil, though very welcome, was not entirely
without embarassment to the Sultan. A devout observer of the prescriptions
of the Koran, he had early in his reign issued an edict forbidding the
sale and consumption of spirituous liquors in his dominions, and had followed
this up by sending his officials out to require from every previous distiller
or vendor an engagement to turn to another occupation. To a minister who
had represented to him the loss of revenue which must be consequent, he
had retorted that 'a king should be inflexible in his orders, and God
had forbidden the use of wine'. It
was not until the news of Lord Nelson's victory in the Nile reached Calcutta
on October 31st, that the Governor-General felt in a position strong enough
to reveal to Tipyu his knowledge of his relations with the French and
evident intent to violate the terms of his treaty of 1792. On
February 3rd, 1799, the Governor-General signified that he now considered
England to be at war with Tipu Sultan. In March, Colonel Wellesley was
apponted to the command of the British forces serving with the Nizam of
Hyderabad; and in the same month, the army marched. After
some manoeuvres and skirmishing, the Sultan found himself obliged to a
defensive action, and fell back upon his island fortress of Seringapatam,
in the Cauvery river, a few miles to the north of the city of Mysore.
On
the evening of May 3rd, British guns breached the ramparts, and at half
past one on the following afternoon, General Baird led the forward storming
party. The
fighting was fierce. The Sultan himself stood with those who were attempting
to hold the breach, firing with his own hand. When it became evident they
could not stem the invasion, he turned abruptly, and attempted to force
his way through the press on horseback, toward the Zenana. According to
Rajah Khan, the only person to have been at his side the whole afternoon,
the thought of the ladies of the household had been in his mind since
the moment when he realised the fort was going to fall, and he had considered
it his duty to put them to the sword with his own hand, lest they be exposed
to outrage in the tumult. The
great gateway, when the Sultan and Rajah Khan reached it, presented already
a scene of carnage. Trying to push his way through a melee, in which British
soldiers and his own were closely mingled, the Sultan was wounded, first
in his breast, then in his right side. Rajah Khan, seeing how heavily
he was afflicted, cried out to him that he should make his identity known
to the British soldiers, who would surely treat his person with respect.
"Are
you mad?" shouted Tipu. "Be silent!" Rajah Khan attempted
to disengage him from the saddle and they both fell to the earth together.
Rajah Khan, wounded in the leg himself, was yet able to drag the Sultan
a little to one side, and so prop him up under the relative shelter of
a the arch of the great gate. An English soldier, catching sight of the
rich gold buckle with which the Sultan's belt was fastened, stooped and
tried to take it off him. Tipu, however, was not dead yet. So many bodies
had fallen across his own that he could not get to his feet, being pinned
amongst the dead and dying; but he reached out with his hand, laterally,
plucked a sword from one of those who had fallen, and struck upwards,
slashing the grenadier across the knee. The grenadier, incensed, raised
his musket, put it straight to the Sultan's temple, not knowing who he
was, and shot him. Even
in death, wrote one present, he carried such a vivacity of hatred for
the English that Arthur Wellesley, standing over him in the flickering
torchlight, could not believe him dead till he had felt the heart and
pulse. He
was dressed in a white linen jacket, and loose drawers of flowered chintz,
with a crimson cloth of silk and cotton round the waist. He was of small
stature, a trifle corpulent, very dark of complexion, with aqualine nose,
bold eyes and prominent chin. His brows were finely arched, and his hands
and feet remarkably small and delicately shaped. The
following day, four companies of Europeans marched with his bier. It was
borne by his personal attendants, and accompanied by the Kazi, chanting
verses from the Quran. Thousands of the faithful prostrated themselves
as the Sultan passed on his last journey through the streets toward Lal
Bang, where they laid him with his father; the occasion of the last obsequies
being rendered more awful by the bursting of a mighty thunderstorm. |
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