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Encyclopedia > Indirect rule

Indirect rule is a type of European colonial policy as practiced in large parts of British India (see Princely states) and elsewhere in the British Empire (including Malaya), in which the traditional local power structure, or at least part of it, is incorporated into the colonial administrative structure. (Note: Not all British colonies were under indirect rule, e.g. Burma experienced direct rule.) A policy is a plan of action for tackling issues. ... A princely state is any state under the reign of a prince, both terms being taken in the broad sense. ... The British Empire was the worlds first global power and the largest empire in history. ...

Contents


Rationale

  • Once a territory has been sufficiently pacified and colonial sovereignty firmly established, it is often too burdensome, or even physically impossible (given distances, poor communications, difficulties in recruiting etc.), for the colonial power to maintain an extensive presence of military, police and civil officials, especially if the subject nations are much more populous than the conquering country is.

Unless the choice is made, as the Phoenician and the Portuguese (pioneering explorers having first choice of vast colonial territories) did, to leave most of the hinterland virtually unoccupied (at the risk of having it taken over by a rival power) and essentially limit effective colonization to the commercially more attractive areas, the authorities have to farm out significant parts of normal administration. One option is to turn to the private sector; corporations and missionary churches take on a good deal of responsibility for roads, utilities, housing, education, health, et cetera. As these organizations draw their recruits mainly from the conquering countries, this may not provide enough human resources. Therefore, tapping in to the ruling class that ruled the countries before they became colonial property is a very attractive and pragmatic move. In the case of the chartered company, nearly all initiative and efforts in a certain zone of activity is handed over to a private initiative, that is thus destined to become sort of a state within the charter-giving state. The arms of the British South Africa Company A chartered company is an association formed by investors or shareholders for the purpose of trade, exploration and colonisation. ...

  • Another motive is a matter of political tactics: the conquerors want the cooperation of the former ruling class (for personal profit and safeguarding much of the dynastic heritage) of the country in order to prevent the risk of a rebellion led by these former rulers.

Cases

British Empire

  • Its main application was in British Asia, in hundreds of princely states, first under the HEIC (mainly the Indian subcontinent and Burma, but also in strategic regions on the route thereto, mainly coastal Persian Gulf states), later in the succeeding Crown Colonies and protectorates.

Typically a British Governor and council of advisors made laws for each colony, but local rulers loyal to the Governor kept some of their traditional authority. A princely state is any state under the reign of a prince, both terms being taken in the broad sense. ...

  • It was also used in other (generally tribal) parts of the British Empire, mainly in black Africa and the Pacific.

Other European powers

  • For the other major Asian system, in the Dutch East Indies (present Indonesia), largely superceding the Portuguese (which had previously experimented with the system) in the Indian Ocean, see Regentschap.
  • Even Belgium found its only colony, the Belgian Congo (started as king Leopold II's 'personal' Congo Free State), later de facto extended, under League of Nations mandate and subsequent UN Trust, with the formerly German Rwanda and (B)Urundi, far to large to govern without indirect rule trough the native chefs = (stam)hoofden (the French and Dutch words for Chiefs)
  • Spain didn't feel much for indirect rule, which seemed anathemate to its rigid Inquisition-type of Catholicism and chose rather to eliminate most of the ruling classes (even whole tribes of Indians, partially accidental as by contagious infections), but ended up the first great power to loose most of its colonies, in Latin America - mainly to the Creoles, and after having great chunks taken from its internally to weak empire by European rivals, mainly the British. Their stand-alone has proved a losing choice!
  • Although its goes against their 'jacobine' tradition of meddling omnipresence of the republican authorities, even more then under royal absolutism, the French too found their colonial empire to vast to be ruled without recourse to some indirect rule. This was least the case in the 'popular colonies' many metropolitan French families migrated to, as in the Maghreb country of Algeria (these pied noir were the main reason that colony was so late to attain independence, and only after an extremely bloody war).
  • The German (originally Prussian) Reich, proverbially even stricter in its organisation, was too late to carve out an empire worthy of its weight in Europe, but in its haste to move in quickly didn't shrink either from some indirect rule, as in Tanganyika (now the continental part of Tanzania).

The Dutch East Indies, or Netherlands East Indies, (Dutch: Nederlands-Indië) was the name of the colonies set up by the Dutch East India Company, which came under administration of the Netherlands during the 19th century (see Indonesia). ... REGENTSCHAP is the Dutch word for Regency, in the sense of the (term of) office of a Regent. ... The Belgian Congo was the formal title of present-day Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) between King Léopold IIs formal relinquishment of personal control over the state to Belgium on 15 November, 1908, to the dawn of Congolese independence on 30 June, 1960. ... The Congo Free State was a kingdom privately and controversially owned by King Leopold II of Belgium that included the entire area now known as the Democratic Republic of the Congo. ... Motto: Unité, Travail, Progrès (French: Unity, Work, Progress) Anthem: Burundi bwacu Capital Bujumbura Largest city Bujumbura Official languages Kirundi and French. ... Flag of Tanganyika Tanganyika was an East African republic within the British Commonwealth, named after Lake Tanganyika, which formed its western border. ...

Sources and References

  • [WorldStatesmen ]

  Results from FactBites:
 
Indirect rule - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (359 words)
Indirect rule is a type of European colonial policy as practiced by the British Empire, in which the traditional local power structure, or at least part of it, is incorporated into the colonial administrative structure.
Therefore, tapping in to the ruling class that ruled the countries before they became colonial property is a very attractive and pragmatic move.
Another motive is a matter of political tactics: the conquerors want the cooperation of the former rulers of the country in order to prevent the risk of a rebellion led by these former rulers.
Colonial Rule (2904 words)
Indirect rule also appeared safer and more effective: by co-opting the chiefs' inherited legitimacy, European colonial powers hoped both to improve their ability to carry out routine functions, such as tax collection and labor recruitment, and to avoid large-scale revolts.
Indirect rule worked best in the regions where strong and highly organized states were already in place, like Northern Nigeria, and where the recognized authorities, like the Sokoto caliph, welcomed European collaboration.
Fundamental to the logic of indirect rule, for example, was the belief that Africa was comprised of hundreds of mutually exclusive, geographically distinct, and centrally ruled "tribes." In reality, African cultural identities were complex and dynamic.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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