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Papadu

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Papadu (also known as Papanna and Pap Rai) (died 1710) was a highwayman and bandit of early-18th century India who rose from humble beginnings to become a folklore hero. His deeds have been described by historians Barbara and Thomas Metcalf as "Robin Hood-like",[1] while another historian, Richard Eaton, considers him to be a good example of a social bandit.[2][a]

Papadu lived during the period when the Mughal Empire had expanded its interests in South India and when tensions between the Muslim ruler Aurangzeb and his Hindu populace were rising. Towards the end of his life, after the death of Aurangzeb and amid the subsequent power struggle for succession, Papadu was able to dramatically enhance his fortunes, in particular as a consequence of a raid on the wealthy city of Warangal. Although of humble origin, he assumed some of the manners of a king.

Between 1702 and 1709 Papadu and his men were besieged four times while occupying the fort at Shahpur. He was captured and executed in 1710.

Sources

Much of the information relating to Papadu is of the quasi-historical type. His exploits, and those of other folk heroes of his area and era, are documented primarily in ballads that have passed through the generations and are still sung locally. It is in the context of studying folklore and linguistics that much of the evidence, such as it is, has been collected. However, there is also the work of Khafi Khan, a contemporary chronicler who based his writings on official reports circulating in the Mughal empire.[4]

Historical context

Papadu was born in the 17th century to a Telugu family of a caste whose occupation was that of toddy tapping.[1] Which of the several Telugu toddy-tapping castes he may have belonged to is uncertain. It had been suggested, in 1874,[5] that the name Papadu but Eaton believes that he was a Gamalla or Goundla, Gowda [6] and other modern scholars such as the Metcalfs refer only to the occupation.[1][b] Eaton has noted that numerous castes recite the Papadu folklore and that this infers his later actions and the support for them were not caste-based.[9] Eaton also notes that there are versions of the ballad still recited today that suggest his family may have attained positions in society outside those usually assigned to their caste: his father may have been headman of a village and his brother a minor commander in an army, whilst his sister married into considerable wealth.[7]

Papadu's family lived in the Golkonda region and his birthplace may have been Tarikonda, a village around 25 miles (40 km) southwest of Warangal.[6] Until 1323 this region had been ruled by a Hindu maharajah and thereafter was under the control of Muslim Mughal Emperors. The Bahmani Sultanate broke up into five smaller kingdoms in the sixteenth century and Golkonda came under the control of the Qutb Shahi dynasty. They inherited an area that was relatively easy to govern as, even prior to the sultanate, there was an accepted social structure, which included warrior-cultivator groups and chieftains as well as a shared use of the Telugu language and literature. Sultans such as Ibrahim Qutb Shah (r. 1550–1580) patronised Hindu society and customs, as well as investing in projects to improve irrigation, all of which cemented a relationship reasonably similar to that which might have existed had they been Hindu rulers themselves. The native people of Golkonda or, at least, those in positions of influence, were won over and this was particularly significant with regard to the Nayaka chieftains, whom Eaton describes as having "an ethic of courage and steadfast loyalty to their political overlords."[10]

The mutual respect that ensued enabled Golkonda to become an extremely wealthy region, as evidenced by the construction of Hyderabad. However, by the 1630s it was apparent that troubles lay ahead. Shah Jahan, who was the Mughal emperor at Delhi, began to exact tribute from the Qutb Shahi sultan and then sent his son, Aurangzeb, to represent him in Golkonda. Aurangzeb eventually succeeded in gaining total control of the region in 1687, making it the last of the independent sultanates to be annexed to that of Delhi. Many changes followed this event, and they generally caused a reduction in the influence of those people who had once been notable within Golkonda.[11] Furthermore, the conquest had caused or coincided with crop failures, famine, cholera epidemics and other disasters, between 1686 and 1690,[12] while the post-conquest era saw Aurangzeb bleeding Golkonda of its wealth in order to finance projects elsewhere.[13]

Exploits

Rise

Papadu had no desire to remain a lowly toddy-tapper and his refusal to work in the traditional occupation of his caste was one of his early acts of defiance.[6] It has been speculated that the contradiction between the position of his caste and the roles in society that his father, brother and sister may have attained could explain Papadu's refusal to accept the restrictive ritualised norms. That he later married a woman who was almost certainly not of a toddy-tapper caste, since she was the sister of a faujdar (military governor), is also a possible indicator of this.[7]

Papadu had a cruel streak and the folklore describes him raping a bride as well as kidnapping other women.[14] In the 1690s he stole money and property from his wealthy widowed sister, assaulting her in the process. With these funds he built a hill-fort at Tarikonda and drew a band of men around him who were willing to become highwaymen, and then proceeded to rob traders who used the nearby route between Hyderabad and Warangal, the erstwhile capital of Golkonda. The bandits did not stay at Tarikonda for long: the disruption and loss caused by their raids led to them being driven out by the local zamindars (hereditary chieftain-landlords) and faujdars.[15] The opposition of the zamindars was to become a theme of his life, in part because of the destabilising threat that he posed to society and, more specifically, to their own vested interests in inherited lands and the power base implicit in their control of local militias.[16]

Moving over a hundred miles away to Kaulas, Papadu spent a period in the employ of Venkat Rao, a zamindar of that area. It was not long before Rao found it necessary to imprison him, as Papadu's liking for banditry resurfaced, but within months Papadu and all of Rao's other prisoners were freed by the latter's wife, who thought that showing such compassion might cause the health of her sick son to be blessed. Papadu moved to Shahpur, not far from his old haunt at Tarikonda, where he established another hill-fort and again recruited people to pursue his banditry.[15]

It was at this time that he began to kidnap women. The outrage caused by this and by his other disruptive activities caused Aurangzeb to be petitioned in order that something might be done to stop Papadu. A force was sent to serve achieve that end but its faujdar was killed in fighting. The matter was then passed into the hands of Dil Khan, the deputy-governor of Hyderabad, who determined to lay siege on the fort.[15]

Although the siege was successful, forcing Papadu to flee and enabling Khan to blow up the fort, it was not long before the brigands returned. Khan had moved back to Hyderabad and Papadu was able to rebuild the Shahpur fort, this time using a stone construction that was much stronger than the previous edifice. He went on to wage campaigns that resulted in the capture of other local forts and enhanced his growing reputation as a potential regional warlord.[17]

Another imperial attempt to curb Papadu occurred in 1706, when Khan had returned to the region following a posting elsewhere. Khan engaged the services of another bandit, who was probably Riza Khan, to challenge Papadu but the attempt came to naught. A year later, Dil Khan determined to take responsibility for the task himself but again failed. He took a considerable force to Shahpur and laid siege for two months or so, as he had done previously. On this occasion it was money that decided the outcome because Papadu bribed Khan in order to have the siege lifted.[17]

Peak

Papadu was emboldened by this success. On 31 March 1708 he initiated an attack on the heavily fortified former capital city of Warangal with a force of between 2500 and 3500 men. This action was planned to coincide with the eve of the Muslim celebrations of Ashura, when the city walls would be poorly manned, if at all. In a wider context, the timing was opportunistic as the forces of empire were in some disarray due to a power struggle that had developed upon the death of Aurangzeb in 1707. The city, which had become an important commercial centre, was looted extensively but the larger prize came in the form of the abduction of many wealthy and influential residents, who were then imprisoned at Shahpur in a compound constructed that purpose.[18]

The successful raid on Warangal, with all the riches that resulted from it, propelled Papadu to new heights. He was able to arm his fort and his followers with the latest weaponry and, as Eaton describes:

He also began comporting himself in the style of a raja. Élite bearers carried him around in a palanquin, and an élite guard accompanied him when mounted on a horse. If he acted like a king, he had actually become a parvenu landholder. For we hear that he raided passing Banjaras (itinerant grain carriers) and seized their cattle, which he put to work ploughing his fields for him.[18]

By now Papadu's support among the landless peasantry must have been considerable, as evidenced by his ability to raise large numbers of people to fight or to build on his behalf and the numbers that would have been required to tend his 10,000–12,000 captured cattle and extensive landholdings.[16][c] Despite his enhanced status, Papadu desired more and raided Bhongir on 1 June 1708, being the occasion of a Muslim festival. Although many hostages were taken – he had promised silver to those who captured females, and gold if they were of high status – the raid was not as successful as that at Warangal, at least in part because an accident caused the insurgents to give away their intentions. Eaton has described it as a "fiasco".[19]

In 1709 Papadu demonstrated his desire for recognition when he attended an audience at Hyderabad with Bahadur Shah I, who by that time was beginning to assert some authority as emperor in the fractious post-Aurangzeb court power struggles. The bandit gave the emperor an array of wealth in his search to be recognised as a tribute-paying chieftain, and he was rewarded with an honorific robe. Loud protests followed this recognition, especially from influential Muslims of the area whose relatives had been kidnapped and people who decried that an emperor would recognise a person of such low caste.[20] Eaton describes that the robe "... seemed to represent official acknowledgement of his status as a legitimate, tribute-paying nayaka-zamindar ... Landholders claiming descent from ancient nayaka families were simply incensed at such impudence."[21] Bahadur Shah had to back down and he announced that Papadu would be killed, with the responsibility for achieving this end being given to Dilawar Khan.[20]

Fall

The beginning of the fall of Papadu can be dated to June 1709. Prisoners at Shahpur – including his brother-in-law, the faujdar – managed to overturn their captors and take possession of the fort while Papadu was besieging another fort elsewhere.[d] Simultaneously, Dilawar Khan was advancing on him and, unaware of the situation at Shahpur, Papadu thought it prudent to defend his position by lifting his siege and retreating to his base.[20] When he reached Shahpur he found that the tables were turned on him: he was fired upon by his former captives, using his own cannon, and with the imminent arrival of Khan he was forced to take refuge in the very compound that he had constructed to imprison them. Finding his position there to be untenable, and facing the desertion of some of his own forces, he decamped to the fort at Tarikonda, leaving Khan to take control of the wealth within Shahpur in accordance with instructions of his superior, the governor of Hyderabad.[22]

Yusuf Khan, the Hyderabad governor, sent a force of several thousand to besiege Tarikonda and this became a prolonged affair, lasting until March 1710. At that point, Yusuf Khan determined to take personal charge, doubling the number of imperial forces to around 12,000 and being further aided by the provision of at least 30,000 soldiers – cavalry and infantry – supplied by local landowners.[22] This concentration of support from Hindu chieftains, together with the fact that they were the first to oppose him when he was originally based at Tarikonda and evidence that he attacked both Muslims and Hindus, demonstrate that Papadu's motivations and the popular support for them were not based on religious considerations. Claims that he was a "Hindu warrior" are further negated by analysis of the names of his followers noted in the ballads, which appear to demonstrate that those within his group included Muslims and non-Hindu tribal peoples in almost equal proportion to Hindus.[23]

Despite the considerable forces set against him at Tarikonda, it was bribery that caused significant losses for Papadu: his men, by now weary, hungry and demoralised, were tempted to defect by offers of double pay made in May. The final straw was when Papadu ran out of gunpowder and was forced to flee in disguise. Although wounded, he was able to reach the village of Hasanabad before being betrayed by a toddy tapper and captured by the brother-in-law who had previously been his prisoner. He was executed a few days later.[22] The traditional accounts say that the method of execution was that of decapitation, and that thereafter his body was cut into pieces and his head sent to Delhi.[22][24]

Richards and Rao refer to Papadu's attempt as a "dual rebellion"[25] and that phrase has been used subsequently by the Metcalfs, among others.[14] They say that in leading such a rebellion "against both imperial and local chiefly authority, Papadu struck too boldly at the most basic ordering of society, and thus mobilized against him all those with a stake in the established hierarchies of caste and wealth."[1]

Aside from the folklore upon which much of the knowledge regarding Papadu relies, there has been at least one film production telling his story: Sardar Papanna, directed by Pratani Ramakrishna Goud and starring Krishna, was released in 2006.[26]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Social bandit is a concept devised by Eric Hobsbawm, defined as "peasant outlaws whom the lord and state regard as criminals, but who remain within peasant society, and are considered by their people as heroes, as champions."[3]
  2. ^ Richard Eaton has commented on how the label of "toddy tapper", with its negative connotations of low standing, poverty and such – remained with Papadu.[7] Gijs Kruijtzer has agreed, saying that Papadu "... could never shake off the label of Toddy-tapper even though he was a quite successful entrepreneur in banditry and most of his direct relatives were not directly involved in palm wine production either."[8]
  3. ^ The provenance of his landholdings is not known: they could have been taken from people whom he defeated, developed from previously uncultivated areas, or a combination of these two methods. He did create at least one new village, called Hasanabad.[19]
  4. ^ Papadu's wife assisted her brother and his fellow captives by smuggling files that they used to free themselves from their chains.[20]

Citations

  1. ^ a b c d Metcalf & Metcalf (2002), pp. 30–31
  2. ^ Eaton (2005), p. 155
  3. ^ Hobsbawm (2010), p. 13
  4. ^ Eaton (2005), pp. 155, 160
  5. ^ Boyle (1874), p. 2
  6. ^ a b c Eaton (2005), p. 160
  7. ^ a b c Eaton (2005), p. 174
  8. ^ Kruijtzer (2009), p. 140
  9. ^ Eaton (2005), p. 170
  10. ^ Eaton (2005), p. 156.
  11. ^ Eaton (2005), pp. 157–158
  12. ^ Richards & Rao (1980), p. 97
  13. ^ Eaton (2005), p. 159
  14. ^ a b Singh (2008), p. 108
  15. ^ a b c Eaton (2005), p. 162
  16. ^ a b Eaton (2005), p. 172
  17. ^ a b Eaton (2005), p. 163
  18. ^ a b Eaton (2005), pp. 164–165
  19. ^ a b Eaton (2005), p. 166
  20. ^ a b c d Eaton (2005), p. 167
  21. ^ Eaton (2005), p. 173
  22. ^ a b c d Eaton (2005), pp. 168–169
  23. ^ Eaton (2005), p. 171
  24. ^ Richards & Rao (1980)
  25. ^ Richards & Rao (1998), p. 514
  26. ^ Bharatwaves, 24 August 2006.

Bibliography

  • "Sardar Pananna releasing tomorrow". bharatwaves.com. 24 August 2006. Retrieved 4 January 2012.
  • Boyle, J. A. (January 1874), "Telugu Ballad Poetry", The Indian Antiquary, 3
  • Eaton, Richard M. (2005), A Social History of the Deccan, 1300–1761: Eight Indian Lives, New Cambridge History of India, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-25484-7
  • Hobsbawm, Eric (2010) [1969], Bandits, Hachette UK, ISBN 978-0-297-86531-5
  • Kruijtzer, Gijs (2009), Xenophobia in Seventeenth-Century India, Amsterdam University Press, ISBN 978-90-8728-068-0
  • Metcalf, Barbara Daly; Metcalf, Thomas R. (2002), A Concise History of India, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-63974-3
  • Richards, J. F.; Rao, V. N. (January 1980), "Banditry in Mughal India: Historical and Folk Perceptions", Indian Economic and Social History Review, 17 (1): 95–120, doi:10.1177/001946468001700103, retrieved 31 December 2011 {{citation}}: Unknown parameter |subscription= ignored (|url-access= suggested) (help)
  • Richards, J. F.; Rao, V. Narayana (1998), "Banditry in Mughal India: Historical and Folk Traditions", in Alam, Muzaffar; Subrahnanyam, Sanjay (eds.), The Mughal State 1526–1750, New Delhi: Oxford University Press
  • Singh, Surinder (2008), "Mughal Centralisation and Local Resistance in North Western India: An Exploration in the Ballad of Dulla Bhatti", in Singh, Surinder; Gaur, I. D. (eds.), Popular literature and pre-modern societies in South Asia, Pearson Education India, ISBN 978-81-317-1358-7

Further reading