Haider Ali

From New World Encyclopedia
Hyder Ali
Ruler of Mysore
Engraving of Hyder Ali by William Dickes, 1846
Reign ? - 1782
Born 1722
Died 1782
Chittoor
Successor Tippu Sultan

Hyder Ali or Haidar 'Ali (c. 1722 - 1782), was the de facto ruler of the Kingdom of Mysore in southern India. A soldier-adventurer, Haider Ali became one of the most formidable rivals the British ever encountered during their colonial presence in India. He is perhaps only excelled by his own son, Tippu Sultan as the champion of anti-colonial resistance. He was regarded as one of the greatest Generals to have walked the face of Asia. His father was a chief constable in the princely state of Mysore. Early military experience exposed Haider to French tactics and weapons and he began to employ European mercenaries to train and advise his troops. He began by forming his own company, funded by his brother then after fighting for the Rajah of Mysore he was commissioned as an officer in the Mysore army. By 1761, he was minister of state and placing the Rajah under arrest, he assumed control of Mysore. In 1764 he captured Bednor (Haidarnagar), which he made his own capital, adopting the title of Bahadur (warrior) instead of Naik (Constable).


Biography

He was the great-grandson of an Islamic fakir from Gulbarga, Deccan. His father was a naik or chief constable at Budikote, near Kolar in present-day Karnataka. There is also a fort at Budikote present today at the place where he was born. He was born in 1722, or according to other authorities 1717, however the memorial in Budikote states he was born in 1720. As a youth, Hyder assisted his brother, a commander of a brigade in the Mysore Army, and acquired a useful familiarity with the tactics of the French when at the height of their reputation under Joseph François Dupleix. He is said to have induced his brother to employ a Parsi to purchase artillery and small arms from government of Bombay Presidency, and to enroll some thirty sailors of different European nations as gunners. He is probably the first Indian who armed a battalion with firelocks and bayonets and who used European mercenaries to advise, train and fight.

Commissioned Officer

At the siege of Devanhalli (1749) Haider deployed his battalion, and attracted the favoreable attention of Nanjaraja, the minister of the Rajah of Mysore. For his services, he was awarded a commission in the state army with his own independent command. Within the next twelve years, his energy and ability made him indispensable at court, so much so that in everything but name he ruled the kingdom.

De Facto Ruler

Replacing Mamjaraja as minister, in 1761 he placed the Rajah under house arrest and took over the reigns of power. In 1763, he led the conquest of Kanara, a region that had been ruled by feudal chiefs, seized their treasuries and decided to make Haidarnagar his own capital. In 1765, he inflicted a defeat against the Maratha forces on the Malabar coast, then conquered Calicut. He now attracted the attention of the British in Madras, who in 1766 entered an agreement with the Nizam of Hyderabad and with the Marathas to furnish them with troops to use against their common foe. Haider Ali, however, learning of this triple-alliance against him thwarted the plan by inducing the Marathas to defect (he paid them off). Instead, he took Mangalore and inflicted a humiliating defeat on the British Bombay army. He own troops advanced to within five miles of Madras. Quite willing to use diplomacy as well as his army, he then entered a protection treaty with the British at Madras against the possibility of Marathan retaliation for their earlier defeat. He also entered a commercial treat with the Bombay Presidency. In 1771, the Maratha did attack but Haider Ali discovered that the British did not always keep their word; they did not assist him and consequently he lost a fleet he had just built as well as forts on the western coast. Stung by this treatment, he turned aside from diplomatic dealings with the English, instead seeking an alliance with the French. In 1779, he recruited additional European mercenaries and employed French advisers. He turned to the Nizam of Hyderabad and to the Maratha to form, with the French, an anti-British alliance. He was further enraged when the British occupied the town of Mahé, which was a Frencg concession but within his jurisdiction. The following year he again waged war, gaining territory in the Karnatic and inflicting another defeat on the British. The British responded by again inducing the Nizam and the Marathas to desert Haider, which enabled them to win a series of battles against him during 1781 at Porto Novo, Pollilur, and Sholinghur.At the first of these conflicst, Hyder lost at least 10,000 men. Aided by the French, his son Tippu Sultan led an attack on the British in 1782 at the Coleroon River, where they defeated a small British contingency. Warren Hastings, the British Governor-General then sent a fleet to attack Haider's coastal possessions. Although he sent Tippu to seek French help, this did not materialize before his own sudden death in 1782,


References
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  • This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.
  • Bhagwan S. Gidwani The Sword of Tipu Sultan.
  • 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica references:
    • LB Bowring, Haidar Ali and Tipu Sultan, Rulers of India series (1893)
    • For the personal character and administration of Hyder Ali see the History of Hyder Naik, written by Mir Hussein Ali Khan Kirmani (translated from the Persian by Colonel Miles, and published by the Oriental Translation Fund)
    • The curious work written by M Le Maitre de La Tour, commandant of his artillery, L'histoire d'Hayder-Ali Khan, Paris, 1783
    • For the whole life and times see Wilks, historical Sketches of the South of India (1810-1817).

See also


kn:ಹೈದರಾಲಿ ml:ഹൈദര്‍ അലി ur:سلطان حیدر علی

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