"Tipu's proclamation created universal resentment and the whole country rose in rebellion. Fearing forcible conversion about 30,000 Brahmins alone fled to Travancore. The Kottayam and Kadattanand Rajas sought the English East India Company's protection. Calicut was attacked in November, 1788. Tipu's officers laid hands on the Karanavappad of Manjeri. The Nairs of Calicut and South Malabar headed by Ravi Varma and other princes of the Padinjare Kovilakam turned in despair on their oppressors. Tipu set 6,000 troops under M. Lally to raise the siege, but Ravi Varma could not be driven out of the field. Earlier, in 1789, Tipu himself came down to Malabar via the Tamarasseri Ghat to enforce his proclamation at the point of his sword. General orders were issued to his army that 'every being in the district without distinction should be burned, that they should be traced to their lurking places, and that all means of truth and falsehood, force or fraud should be employed to effect their universal conversion'. The Kadattanad Raja's fortified palace at Kuttipuram was surrounded and 2,000 Nairs, forced to surrender after a resistance of several days, were circumcised and regaled with beef. Several. Rajas and rich land owners fled to Travancore where the Dharma Raja rendered them all help to rehabilitate themselves in their new surroundings. The poor Nairs, however, retreated into the jungles and were relentlessly pursued by Mysorean troops. From their jungle homes the Nairs could engage themselves in a kind of guerrilla warfare against the enemy forces. Hence Tipu organised a regular and systematic Nair hunt with the help of his soldiers. He then proceeded to Cannanore and after celebrating the marriage of his son with the daughter of the Ali Raja, marched along the coast of Chowghat to overawe the native population by a show of his power. From there he retired to Coimbatore after making arrangements for the administrative reorganisation of the province and leaving a permanent army of occupation to frighten the population into passive submission.""
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Kerala District Gazetteer, quoted in IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT BOMBAY Writ Petition No. 5435 of 1989 in : Tipu Sultan - Villain or Hero (1993)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Tipu_Sultan
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Tipu Sultan
149 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Tipu Sultan →
Related Quotes
"Who are my people? All of them – Yes those that ring the temple bells and those that pray in the mosque – they are my…"
"People who have sinned against such a holy place are sure to suffer the consequences of their misdeeds at no distant …"
"[ ….In a proclamation issued to the people in 1788 Tipu Sultan outlined his new scheme of social reform as follows:] …"
"To begin the so much desired work of the conversion of the Hindoos and to seize on the Brahmins, ... and make them ex…"
"Oh! Almighty God! Dispose the whole body of infidels! Scatter their tribe, cause their feet to stagger! Overthrow the…"
"In the hills the unbelievers of the land of the enemy have forbidden fasting and prayer; convert them all to Islam, s…"
"It is our constant object and sincere intention, that those worthless and stiff-necked infidels, who have turned asid…"
"It is our constant object and sincere intention, that those worthless and stiff-necked infidels, who have turned asid…"
"Meer Husain Ali has been dispatched [to you] with two kushoons. With the assistance of Almighty God, and guided by th…"
"To live like a lion for a day is far better than to live for a hundred years like a jackal."