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Images of the village community: a study in Anglo-Indian Ideology

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2008

Clive Dewey
Affiliation:
University of Leicester

Extract

To a degree exceptional even in that age of historical recovery and sociological discovery, awareness of the village community was a creation of the later nineteenth century. With due allowance for the contribution of the German historical school, it was—within the English-speaking world—an Anglo-Indian creation. In England, save for a handful of ‘survivals’, the village community was a purely historical phenomenon, studied by historians; but in India it was an omnipresent reality, utilized by revenue officials in assessing and collecting the land revenue. From the efforts of these groups—historians and revenue officials—to comprehend substantially similar institutions two intellectual traditions derived. Originating in complete independence of one another, both traditions converged in the third quarter of the nineteenth century for a brief, intense, period of cross-fertilization—only to separate as totally again. What made their convergence possible was the rising popularity of evolution and ‘comparative method’—which insisted on the essential identity of the defunct English village community and the living Indian village, separate in space and time, but co-existent in the same phase of social evolution. Then disillusion with unilinear evolutionary schemes and the exhaustion of comparative method—its apparent inability to produce any fresh discovery—drove them apart.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1972

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References

I am grateful to the Research Board of the University of Leicester for financial assistance with the research (on Indian agrarian history) of which this paper is a by-product.

1 The village community is currently the property of anthropologists. So complete has been its capture that the annexation of Indian anthropology by the village community has aroused protests (e.g. Dumont, Louis and Pocock, D., ‘Village Studies’, in Contributions to Indian Sociology, Vol. I (1957), pp. 2342)Google Scholar; but the legitimacy of the village community as a unit of anthropological analysis appears to have been reaffirmed (e.g. Mandelbaum, David G., Society in India (Berkeley, 1970, 2 vols, Vol. II, pp. 325 ff.).Google Scholar The dominance of the anthropologists, however, is a recent phenomenon. Prior to the post-war anthropological boom, the village community was the plaything of historians and administrators. This article is a survey (and interpretation) of the polyglot literature they produced.

2 Between 1860 and 1917 a fierce discussion raged about the Russian village community which bore many parallels with the Anglo-Indian debate. See Gerschenkron, A. ‘Agrarian Policies and Industrialisation: Russia 1861–1917’, in Habakkuk, H. J. and Postan, M. M. (eds) The Cambridge Economic History of Europe, Vol. VI (Cambridge, 1965)Google Scholar; idem., ‘The Problem of Economic Development in Russian Intellectual History of the Nineteenth Century’ in Economic Backwardness in Historical Perspective, (New York, 1965)Google Scholar; essays by Byrnes, R. F., Malia, M. E. and Radkey, O. L. H. in Simmons, E. J. (ed.), Continuity and Change in Russian and Soviet Thought (Cambridge, Mass., 1955)Google Scholar; Mosse, W. E., ‘Stolypin's Villages’, Slavonic and East European Review, Vol. 43 (19651966).Google Scholar

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5 Malcolm found similarities in Central India: Never did a country afford such proofs of the imperishable nature of this admirable institution. After the Pindarry war, every encouragement was held out for the inhabitants to return to their desolate homes. In several districts, particularly those near Nerbudda, many of the villages had been waste for more than thirty years. The inhabitants who had been scattered, followed all occupations: many Potails, who had been obliged to leave their lands, had become plunderers, and remained at or near their ruined villages; some of their relations and friends followed their example; others cultivated grounds at a distance of several hundred miles from their homes; while a great majority went to the large towns, where they found a temporary asylum, and obtained subsistence by labouring in gardens or fields. But there is no people in whose hearts the love of the spot where they were born seems more deeply implanted than the Hindus; and those of Central India, under all their miseries and dispersion, appear never for a moment to have given up the hope of being restored to their homes. The families of each village, though remote from each other, maintained a constant communication—intermarriages were made, and the links that bound them together were only strengthened by adversity. When convinced that tranquility was established they flocked to their roofless houses. Infant Potails (the second and third in descent from the emigrator) were in many cases carried at the head of these parties. When they reached their villages, every wall of a house, every field was taken possession of by the owner or cultivator, without dispute or litigation amongst themselves or with government; and in a few days everything was in progress as if it had never been disturbed. A Memoir of Central India (London, 1924, 2nd ed.), Vol. II, pp. 20–2.Google Scholar See also Tod, James, Annals and Antiquities of Rajasthan, Crooke, W. (ed.) (London, 1920), Vol. I, pp. 574 ff.Google Scholar

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21 Spencer, H.. Man Versus the State (London, 1884), p. 1.Google Scholar

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27 In SirHunter, W. W., The Life of Lord Mayo (London, 1876), Vol. II, pp. 165–6.Google Scholar

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30 George, H., Progress and Poverty (London, 1883)Google Scholar; de Laveleye, E., Primitive Property, Marriott, G. R. L. (trans.) (London, 1878)Google Scholar; Brodrick, George C., England Land and English Landlords (London, 1881)Google Scholar; and Engels, F., The Origins of the Family, Private Property and the State (London, 1889).Google Scholar Engels follows Morgan's approbatory line, ostensibly in fulfilment of an ambition of Marx, but cf. Marx's impassioned denunciation of the Indian village community, in Selected Works, Adoratsky, V. (ed.) (London, 1942, 2 vols), Dutt, C. P. (trans.), Vol. II, pp. 655–6Google Scholar: We must not forget that these idyllic village communities, inoffensive though they may appear, had always been the solid foundation of Oriental despotism, that they restrained the human mind within the smallest possible compass, making it the unresisting tool of superstition, enslaving it beneath traditional rules, depriving it of all grandeur and historical energies. We must not forget the barbarian egotism which, concentrating on some miserable patch of land, had quietly witnessed the ruin of empires, the perpetration of unspeakable cruelties, the massacre of the population of large towns with no events, itself the helpless prey of any aggressor who deigned to notice it at all. We must not forget that this undignified, stagnatory and vegetative life, that this passive sort of existence evoked on the other part, in contradistinction, wild, aimless, unbounded forces of destruction and rendered murder itself a religious rite in Hindustan. We must not forget that these little communities were contaminated by distinctions of caste and by slavery, that they subjugated man to external circumstances, that they transformed a self-developing social state into never changing natural destiny, and thus brought about a brutalising worship of nature, exhibiting its degradation in the fact that man, the sovereign of nature, fell down on his knees in adoration of Hanuman, the monkey, and Sabbala, the cow.

31 Vinogradoff, P., Villainage in England (Oxford, 1892), pp. 30 ff.Google Scholar Vinogradoff discussed ‘this attempt to connect the development of historical study with the course of politics’ with Maitland. See Maitland, to Vinogradoff, , 12 03 and 28 04 1889Google Scholar, in Fifoot, C. H. S. (ed.), The Letters of Frederic William Maitland (London, 1965), pp. 5760.Google Scholar

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35 Parliamentary Papers, 1881, Vol. XVIIIGoogle Scholar, Report of H.M. Commission of Inquiry into the Working of the Land and Tenant (Ireland) Act, 1870, p. 8.Google Scholar Virtually the entire report is an astonishingly thorough-going application of the ‘relativist’ and evolutionary approach pioneered by Maine.

36 de Coulanges, F., The Origin of Properly in Land, Ashley, M. (trans.) (London, 1881).Google Scholar

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42 Baden-Powell, B. H., The Indian Village Community (London, 1896), pp. vivii.Google Scholar But see Hewitt's, J. P. reply: ‘The Communal Origin of Indian Land Tenures’, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, N.S., Vol. 29 (1897), pp. 628–41.Google Scholar Hewitt argued that land in villages newly settled by matriarchal groups was held in common, at least amongst Dravidians, , ‘In these South Indian villages,’ he wrote, ‘the claim of any individual to a right of property in land he had worked would have been regarded as rank rebellion’ (p. 632).Google Scholar And these customs the Dravidians exported to the north, although individual property—introduced by Aryan immigrants—competed for ascendency.

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44 Ibid., p. 399.

45 Ibid., pp. 400–1.

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47 Ibid., pp. 344–5.

48 Ibid., p. 346.

49 Maitland, F. W. and Pollock, F., The History of English Law Before the Time of Edward I (Cambridge, 1895, 1st ed.; I used the 1968 reissue of the 2nd ed. of 1899), Vol. I, p. 623.Google Scholar

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54 ‘The exposition given by Maitland and Vinogradoff and closely followed by Sir Frank Stenton has been modified for certain areas; it has seldom been questioned as a whole.’ Aston, T. H., ‘The Origins of the Manor in England’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 5th ser. Vol. 8 (1958), p. 59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar