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Cameron O'Neill-Mullin's List: Black Hole of Calcutta

    •     
         
             
      In  history
             
      The Black Hole of Calcutta (20 June  1756)
         
         
         
         
       

      The Black Hole of Calcutta was a small dungeon where troops of the  Nawab of Bengal held British prisoners of war after the capture of Fort William  on 20 June 1756. According to a disputed account by a survivor, 123 of 146  prisoners died of heat exhaustion in the confined conditions. Certain historians  now believe the number to have been at most  43.

    •     
         
             
      In  history
             
       The Black Hole of Calcutta (20  June   1756) 
         
         
         
         
       

       The Black Hole of Calcutta was  a small dungeon where troops of the   Nawab of Bengal held British  prisoners of war after the capture of Fort William   on 20 June 1756. According to a  disputed account by a survivor, 123 of 146   prisoners died of heat  exhaustion in the confined conditions. Certain historians   now believe the number to have  been at most   43. 

       

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      Fort William had been established to   

      protect British East India Company trade in  the city of Calcutta , in the region of Bengal. In 1756, in preparation  for expected skirmishes with French forces, the British began building up Fort  William's military strength and defences. The Nawab of Bengal, Siraj Ud Daulah,  having achieved his station despite opposition by the East India Company, was  unhappy with British interference and perceived a direct threat to his own  rule.

       

      Siraj organised an army and laid siege to the fort, whose defenders suffered  many casualties. The   

      garrison's commander organised an escape,  and left a token force in the military   fort under  the command of John Zephaniah Holwell, a former military surgeon who    was  a top East India Company civil servant . Desertions by allied troops,  mainly Dutch, made even this temporary defence untenable, and the fort was  taken. Indian soldiers   
      took the surviving 64 to 69 men of the  British contingent prisoner , together with an unknown number of  Anglo-Indian soldiers and other persons of mixed ancestry, many of them  civilians, who had been sheltering in the Fort. During this period some  prisoners were able to escape, and others attacked their guards. The troops,  apparently acting on their own, then packed the prisoners into a guard room    
      measuring 14 by 18 feet  (4.3 by 5.5  mertres) and locked them in overnight. Prisoners begged for water or escape,  growing delirious from heat exhaustion. As time passed, men collapsed from heat  stroke or suffocation, or were trampled on. It seems highly unlikely that the  Nawab was aware of the actions of his troops. The prisoners were not released  until morning, when Siraj ud-Daula awoke. By then, some modern historians  believe, some   
      43  members  of the garrison were dead or missing  

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    • Calcutta, had dealt in Indian cottons and eastern spices to the great profit of  investors back home, but with negligible effect on the overall pattern of Asian  trade
    • Your Williamsons and Dodwells, reading away, cheered up when the arrogant  Amphibians began to intervene in the politics of India as the Mughal emperors  lost their grip. The series of wars against France from the 1690s through to  1815 became a contest for world hegemony, and gave a context, as Linda Colley  has brilliantly shown, to the development among English, Welsh, Scots and many  Irish, of a composite and bellicose common 'British' identity--Protestant,  libertarian and deeply averse to the eating of garlic and snails, let alone  poncy French gallantry and sexual licence. As the East India Company responded  to French aggression in India, that remarkable man Robert Clive was positioned  to win the victory over the Nawab of Bengal at Plassey in 1757 which preluded  British conquest of the subcontinent. Imperialist historians felt able to  justify the cynical plundering of Bengal which followed, reducing India's  richest area to the poverty which prevails to this day, by working up the long  forgotten incident of the Black Hole of Calcutta. The East India Company had  defied the Nawab. He had, quite within his rights, conquered their fort. Like  every British garrison from Inverness to Jamaica, it had a 'Black Hole' in which  disorderly soldiers were deposited to rue their mischievous deeds. The Nawab  quite sensibly commanded that the vanquished Brits should be put into their own  prison. It was a hot night, some were wounded, water was in short supply, and  numbers died--though nothing anywhere near the number later alleged. So Plassey  was a valid 'revenge' for fiendish Asiatic cruelty. And it followed that the  barbaric ferocity with which the British suppressed the Sepoy mutiny of 1857 was  justified by the intrinsic viciousness of Indian natives who would rape every  white woman in sight if they weren't kept severely in their place.
      • See if I can locate this?

    • 146 people are said to have been imprisoned, at the orders of the Nawab, in a  small and airless dungeon at Fort William

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