翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Capture of Jenin
・ Capture of Jericho
・ Capture of Jisr ed Damieh
・ Capture of Kazan by the White Army
・ Capture of Kiev by the White Army
・ Capture of Kimathi
・ Capture of Klisura Pass
・ Capture of Korytsa
・ Capture of Kufra
・ Capture of La Boisselle
・ Capture of Le Quesnoy (1918)
・ Capture of Le Sars
・ Capture of Lesboeufs
・ Capture of London
・ Capture of Luanda
Capture of Lucknow
・ Capture of Maastricht
・ Capture of Mahdiye (1550)
・ Capture of Malacca (1511)
・ Capture of Malolos
・ Capture of Mametz
・ Capture of Mannheim
・ Capture of Martinpuich
・ Capture of Mazatlán
・ Capture of Mexicali
・ Capture of Mexico City (1863)
・ Capture of Minorca (1708)
・ Capture of Minorca (1798)
・ Capture of Montauban
・ Capture of Monterey


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Capture of Lucknow : ウィキペディア英語版
Capture of Lucknow

The Capture of Lucknow (Hindi: लखनऊ का क़ब्ज़ा, ) was a battle of Indian rebellion of 1857. The British recaptured the city of Lucknow which they had abandoned in the previous winter after the relief of a besieged garrison in the Residency, and destroyed the organised resistance by the rebels in the Kingdom of Awadh (or ''Oudh'', as it was referred to in most contemporary accounts).
==Background==
Oudh had been annexed by the East India Company only a year before a general mutiny broke out in the Company's Bengal Army. The annexation had been accompanied by several instances of expropriation of royal and landholders' estates on sometimes flimsy grounds of non-payment of taxes, or difficulties in proving title to lands. Many sepoys (native soldiers) of the Company's Bengal Army had been recruited from high-caste and landowning communities in Oudh. There was increasing unrest in the Bengal Army, as privileges and customary allowances they had previously enjoyed were withdrawn. With uncertainty over their rights to property in Oudh, they felt that their status both as soldiers and citizens was under threat.
When the rebellion broke out in May 1857, it threatened British authority in several areas of India, but most particularly in Oudh, where the resentful dispossessed rulers and landowners joined with the mutinied regiments (Bengal Native troops, and Oudh Irregular units formerly belonging to the Kingdom of Oudh) in what became a national rebellion.
From 1 July to 26 November, 1857, the British had withstood the siege of the Residency to the north of the city. When the besieged garrison was finally relieved by the British commander-in-chief, Sir Colin Campbell, the Residency was evacuated, as Campbell's communications were threatened. He returned to Cawnpore from where the relief expedition had been mounted, with all the civilians evacuated from the Residency and the sick and wounded. However, he left a division of 4,000 men under Sir James Outram to hold the Alambagh, a walled park two miles south of the city.
During the following winter campaigning season, Campbell re-established his communications with Delhi and with Calcutta. He also received fresh reinforcements from Britain and built up a substantial transport and supply column. After capturing Fatehgarh on 1 January, 1858, which allowed him to establish control over the countryside between Cawnpore and Delhi, Campbell suggested leaving Oudh alone during 1858, concentrating instead on recapturing the state of Rohilkhand, which was also in rebel hands. However, the Governor General, Lord Canning, insisted that Oudh be recaptured, so as to discourage other potential rebels. Canning wrote
Oudh is not only the rallying point of the sepoys, the place to which they all look, and by the doings in which their own hopes and prospects rise and fall; but it represents a dynasty; there is a King of Oudh "seeking his own".〔Edwardes, p.123〕〔The last phrase is associated with the proclamation of Charles Edward Stuart, a pretender to the English and Scottish thrones, when he launched an unsuccessful uprising in 1745〕


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Capture of Lucknow」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.