Thursday, May 21, 2020

Sir Rollo Gillespie and the Battle of Nalapani: Why Nepla's Claim holds no water

A look at the world of politics, statecraft, diplomacy and books

Today's Newpaper headline screams about the territorial assertions made by the Prime Minister of Nepal and India has rightly rejected his claim that it lacks historical merit, And what exactly is the historical merit India has so boldly claimed. We will address that issue and History offers us the only correct way of dealing with such controversies. Does Nepal have truth on its side or is the Prime Minister Grand Standing his new Patrons, the Chinese.

Much of Indian political landscape was shaped in the eighteenth and early nineteenth century as the Mughal Empires declined and new powers arose to fill the space evacuvated by the Fall of the Mughal Empire. Sir Jadunath Sarkar was spot on when he arued that the dyning Mughal Empire was more significant to India than the Empire at its peak. The new power of course was the Easi India Company whose "corporate violence and pillage" as Darlymple put is framed the political and military history of India fr nealy a century and to this we maust add the important role played by Maharaja Ranjt Singh and the short lived Sikh kingdom which essentially stopped the Tibetans and the Nepalese from occupyig parts of India east of the Sutlej and if Ladhak is an integral part of India it is due to the successful occupation of Lahsa by the forces of Maharaja Ranjit Singh. The Nepal warlord Amar Singh Thapa tried to take the fort of Kangra but the Sikh forces drove him out

Political change was on the horizon in the Kingdom of Gorakh as well. Prithivi Narayan Shah tried unifying the kingdom of Nepal and set his eyes on the land beyon the Ghandaki river especially the region of Gharwal whose ruler suought the support of the East India Company; The expansion into Tibet was repulsed by the Chinese who in turn imposed the Treaty of Betrawati on Nepal by which Nepal agreed to pay tribute to China and lost its sovereignty to the Middle Kingdom. The Prime Minister of Nepal is following the same dangerous game today.
Sir Rollo Gillespie

There is a saying in Nepal: With the merchants come the musket with the Bible the Bayonet. This popular saying refers to the circumstances surrounding the Anglo Nepal War which arose out of territorial disputes and the demand for Down a soft wool a very valuable commodity. The notoriously tempramental river the Mahakali was officially recognized as the boundary and herein lay the oot of the conflict.

The historical considerations that the Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India alludes to are the making of one man, Sir Rollo Gillepie.In South India he is reviled as the butcher of Vellore when in July 1806 he led a small contingent of arounf 100 native and European troops scaled the ramparts of the Vellore Fort within which a Mutiny had taken place in the morning of July 8 when the troops massacred around 300 or so Europeans in their beds. Gillespie had earler served with distinction in Jamaica and after the suppression of the Vellore Mutiny he was sent to Java where he succeeded in capturing Jakarta. Gellespie was brutal as he was brave and both in Java and in Vellore he left benind a trail of blood and gore.The first recorded use of the Anglo Saxon method of mass execution by tying soldiers to the cannon and blowing them to bits was introduced by Rollo Gillespie to be followed ears lated by General Neill during the Distrurbances of 1857.

In 1814 Rollo Gellespie commanded the East India Company troops at the Battle of Nalapani where the troops of the the Nepal Army were soundly defeated and that victory paved the way for the signing of the Treaty of Sugauli by which the entire Terrai and the gharwal region of Nepal was annexed in  1816. And so India is quite right in assering its rights over the region that Nepal now claims. As for Rollo Gillespie he died in the Battle of Nalapani in 1814 and his remains were transported to Meerut where he lies burried in the St John's Church.
Gillespie Memorial

In this neglected graveyard is the Grave of the warrior to whom India is indebted for acquiring by conquest the Terrai region of the present day state of Uttarakhand.

I wish Indian Historians will leave their obsession with the so called National Movement and move on to the study of issues like this which have a bearing on India its strategic and domestic interests.

Tuesday, May 19, 2020

William Roxburgh and Indian Botany Plants Empire and Trade

A look at the world of politics, statecraft, diplomacy and books
William Roxburgh

The Scottsh Enlightenment had a profound impact on India and historians have failed to study the impact of the intellectual movement that emerged as a consequence of the Act of Union, 1707. I have been studying a number of Scots who worked in India during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries; Mark Wilks, Colin Mackenzie, and am now beginning a more detailed study of William Roxburgh. My work on Col Mark Wilks has been cited in the latest English Historical Review and have worked earlier on Colin Mackenzie, the first Surveyor General of India. I now hope to write a longer work on the Scottish Nation in India and its contribution to the understanding of India, it History, Literature and the Natural World. Obviously an Intllectual History of the sort we propose sits uncomfortably with the modern notions of post colonial study which negates the very idea that the past is accessible to human knowledge and is open to truthful and rational investigation. With these words let me move on to the study of William Roxburgh.

Government House Madras, Chennai
Perhaps the most honoured botanist of his day and was second only to Sir Joseph Banks. William Roxburgh was educated at the University of Edinburgh which was the instirutional centre of the Scottish Enlightenment' Born in 1751 Roxburgh died in 1815 and came from a family that had close ties with Henry Dundas who was the Chairman of the Board of Control of the East India Company and an influential politician in Georgian England. roxburgh stdied under John Hope who initiated the young William into the world of botanical study. Botany was still in its infancy, though the Royal Gardens of Kensington and Kew had been established it was under Sir Joseph Banks that these botanical gardens became centers of an ever widening web of botanical exchange, ropagation of plants and collection of seeds for further reseach and study. Indeed the very establishment of the Botanical Garden at Kew was itself a Scottish foundation as it owed its origin to John Stuart, the Earl of Bute in the 1760s. With the intervention of hs patrons in the Company establihsment, William Roxburgh got a position as Assistant Surgeon in the Madras Headquarters of the East India Company. Arriving in Madras after rounding the Cape of Good Hope in May 1776. The job of the Assistant Surgeo seems to have been extremely light as roxburgh found the time to indulge his passion for collecting botanical specimens.

Botanical nvestigation was rather chaotic in the early eighteenth century, a situation that was destined to change due to the theoretical and empirical work of the great Swedish naturalist Charles Linnaeus. The plants were studied on the bais of their external charecteristics rather than the inherent sexual and reproductive functions which were performed in numerous ways by plants. Linneaus introduced the taxonomic method by which the charecteristic features of plants were studied according to its Taxonomic feature, generic features and thereby the species was identified. The morphology of plants and their parts were studied in a scientific manner and Herberia were manitained for ready reference.

In Madras now renamed Chennai, Roxburgh mt Dr Koenig a pupil of Dr Charles Linneaus. Koenig was associated with the Danish settlemnt of Tranquebar, a notorious slaving station on the coromandel coast run by the Dutch East India Company and of course Protestant missionaries like Ziegenbang did not find anything offensive ethically or morally in the odious trae of indegenous people as slaves. Both Roxburgh and Koenig went of Plant collection expeditions all over the Coromandel region collecting specimens. The East India Company was particularly interested i economically beneficial plants like Teak, Indigo and of course Spices. We do not know what happened to this early collection. When Koenig died he left his papes to Sir Joseph Banks, the President of the Royal Society. In 1781 Roxburgh was transferred to Samalkota, near the estuary of the River Godavari and the wild life reserve Forest of Coringa and it was here that a mounumental tragedy struck.

( to be continued in Part II)






Sunday, May 17, 2020

From Hortus Malabaricus to Flora Indica: William Roxburgh and Botany

A look at the world of politics, statecraft, diplomacy and books

Horti Malbarici
"A seed hidden in the heart of an apple is an orchard invisible", is a well known Welsh proverb. The worlf of Plants and their place in the Natural World has seized the imagination of Poets, Philosophers and Scientists. And in the eighteenth century with the dawn of the Scottish Enlightenment, the search for botanical specimens and their exploitation for economic or medical purposes became a vital ingriedient of the global network of botanical gardens with Kew Garden at the top of the chain and spreading right round the world to places as far distant as St. Helena, Cape Town, Calcutta, Singapore and Penang. Sometimes called Company Gardens these botanical spaces collected stored and transmitted palnt specimens from across the lobe. Till tis day Kew Garden holds the world's largest seed bank and contains Plant Plasma from almost all known species. Eminent botanists like Sir Joseph Banks the Patron of the famous William Roxburgh ( 1751-1815) were associated with and worked for the Collections now located in Kew and Kensington Gardens. The exchange of seeds and botanical specimens rom the tropical world to the Americas is a story that needs to be revisited as the prticipation of "natives" in this process is largely ignored and white scientists are given almost a divine stature in existing literature.

The expnsion of the European world into parts of Asia and Africa was the first step that enabled the systematic transfer of Asian botanical knowledge acquired over centuries of reflection to networks of knowledge exchange that sprung up all along the maritime routes linking Asia to Europe. India was the first Asian Civilization ro be plundered of its traditional knowledge and once plundered rendered illlegitimate in the eyes of the newwly triumphant West. A good example is the creation and publication of the Hortus Malbaricus whose title page is illustrated.

The Dutch East India Company or the VOC was in Asia even before Queen Elizabeth I granted the Charter to Gentlemen Traders on the last day of December 1600. The VOC comanded the Cape of Good Hope and had a significant presence in Java with Batavia as the centre of an ever expanding web of exchange involving Plants, Slaves and Missionaries. The Spice Islands which produced the spices of the world which were in great demand like Nutmeg, Cinnamon,Pepper and Cloves. And to facilitate the cultivation of such spices and economically useful plants it was necessary to appropriate local knowledge and with Kochi falling into the hands of the Dutch the path was opened for systematic exploitation of indigenous knowledge. The Portuguese had already started the process in Goa but their addicion to religious propaganda and the Inquisition left them with little time to pursue more academic ends'

The Governor of the Dutch territory along the Mlabar with Cochin now Kochi as the capital was Hendrik van Rheede who conceived of the idea of assembling the entire botanical kingdom of the Western Ghats into a lage compendium which would enhance the Materia Medica available to the western world. The capture of local medicinal knowledge was vital as the soldiers from Europe were following seriously ill with tropical diseases for which the dark skinned native seemed to have the cure with herbs plant extracts and the like. Over a period of 30 yeas the Flora of the Western Ghats was collected illustrated and published in Netherlands. It may be added that Hortus Malabaricus which has been translated into English by Dr Manilal, a botanist and Historian from Kerala. The 12 volumes with rich illustrations was one of the most expensive publications of the time and only 6 complete copies of this great work are known to exist and none in India.

Th extract local knowledge and its  medical uses it was necessary to involve local bearers of knowledge: Ranga Bhatt, Vinayaka Bhatt and Appu Bhatt along with a vaidhya of the Ezhava Community Itty Achutan were the ones who collected the specimens and gave the names in malayalam language. Here again we find that the exchange of knowledge was facilitated by men who were willing to collaborate. From Malayalam the name were translated into Portuguese and then a Latin trnaslation was made. The myriad linguistic registers involved and the expense of makinf the Copper engravings of the Plants as illustrations and the publication of the huge volumes all show how valuable the local  knowledge was. If Intllectual Property is claimed over this knowlefge the entire Pharmacuetical Industry of Europe and  America will collapse.

The 12 volumes desribed in detail 742 plants and since the taxa of Charles Linneaus was still a century away, the classification was made using local principles. Unfortunately the herbarium records of this Project were lost and the plants in this splendid volume can be identified only up to the generic level. The morphology of plants was not understood when Hortus was completed. The creation of this spectacular work itself stimulated botanical collections in India and other parts of the world'

                                            (to be continued in Part II)


Friday, May 8, 2020

H C Rawlinson: The DEcipherment of the Cuneiform Script

A look at the world of politics, statecraft, diplomacy and books

Every now and then the Indian newspapers carry the sensational headline stating that the Harppan Script has been deciphered. Tamil enthusiasts have even found a reference to Muruga on one of the seals and others have read the same seal as a reference to one or the other Indiac deity. When identity politics hijacks archaeology strage things happen and the net result is confusion. I am witing this Blog to high light the process of deciphermet on the basis of my study of the methods used by Col. H C Rawlinson, the soldier and epigraphist who unlocked the secrets of the ancient Babylonian script or the Cuneiform system of writing.
a Biography of Rawlinson

Empires of the Plain is an excellent biography of Col. H C Rawlinson and is based essentially on the published letters and the short biography of the Soldier penned by his brother. There is little on the actual process by which H C Rawlinson deciphered the Cuneiform Script,but it does provide adequate material to  help us understand the rigours of deciphermnt. A Script is like a cipher hence the process of reading or unlocking it is called decipherment. The basic and fundamental requirement for any decipherment is a known key that cn be used to unlock the forgotten / mysterious script or code. Joseph Champilion who deciphered the Egyptian Hyreoglypics had as his key the Rosetta Stone discovered by Napoleon's scholars on the banks of the river Nile just before the Battle of Trafalghar. It was written in Egyptian Hireogluphic, Greek and Demotic scripts. Since Greek could be read, Champollion rightly assumed that the proper names in the Greek could appear in trnasliterated form in the Egyptian script and he was able to read Ptolemey and tht started off the whole process of decipherment. Similarly, the earliest script of India is the one used by Ashoka in his Rock Inscriptions and Edicts both minor and major, In spite of the effort of some Tamil nationalists to give the credit to the ancient Tamils or Srilanks, the fact that the lipikara in some of the inscriptions sign themselves in kharoshti, a script derived from the Achemened Empire suggests otherwise. James Princep, used the Gree legends founs in the coins of the Selcucids, the successors of the Great Alexander to extrapolate Greek sound value on Brahmi characters in Kushana coins and thereby rightly read De va namo piya as a titl of Ashoka. This is the real and time tested method of decipherment. Wuthout a known key a language and its script remains eternally locked,
The Beihistun Inscription

The picture on the left is that of the most famous Inscription of the ancient world the Behistun Inscription of the Persian King Darius I (BC 522-486) writeen on the escarpent of the Zagaros Moutains in resent day Iran in three languages: old Persian, Elamite, and Akkadian. One of th Persian kings Cyrus is even called called annointed of God in the Hebrew Old Testament as he was reposnsible for freeing the Jewish people from captivity when he conquered Egypt. The inscription was essesntially a record of the conquests of Darius I and given te length and details given it raises the legitmate suspicion that Darius like Ashoka waded through blood to seize the throne and then claimed that Ahuramazda had blessed him and thefore his legitimacy was beyond question.

The Cuneiform was a script and not a language and was the earliest script designed to help the ancient Babylonan and Assyrian Empires keep records of their wealth and economic output. This historical conjuncture between writing and  imperial political systems suggets that Empires facilitated record keeping as an instrument of control. It derives its name from the peculiar wedge shaped characters incised on wet clay tablets with a reed flattened at one end to make it capable of inscribing wedge strokes on a clay surface. Sir Henry Austen Layard, the archaeologist who discovered Nineveh, the city of the Assyrians mentioned in the Old Testament found a veritible library of clay tablets recording the activities, politicl and military, of Nebuchednazzer and his successors. Unfortunately on 50 000 of such documents have been published and a vast majority of these clay documents are ichicago's famus Art Institute.

Given the importance of this region in the Old Testament, a number of European scholars took up the study of the ancient records of the Near Esat, Middle East or the Oreint as it was called. In the nineteenth century these palces were under the nominal authority of the Ottoman Empire whose writ was directly propotionl to the armed battalion stationed in these provinces. Persia where Rawlinson worked as Consul was nominally independent and this independence was contingennt upon playing Russia against the British Empire in India. H C Rawlinson was an Officer in the Army f the East India Company stationed in Bombay now Mumbai. Having learnt Persian well form Sir John Briggs and John Malcolmn he was sent to Baghdad as th Consul to represent British economic and military interests there.

Early during his stay, H C Rawlinson visited the Behistun Rock and wondered at the message staring down from a hieght of nearly 400 feet of smooth roch. It was obvious that Darius had taken the precaution of rendering the entire surface of the rocck and its access so smooth that it was impossible for anyone to climb to take a close look. This raises anothe question regarding literary practices in early empires, including the Brahmi Inscriptions of Ashoka. Who could read these Inscriptions and what purose did they serve if they were inscribed so high that they are just barely visible.
COL H C RAWLINSON

In his two important records presented to the Royal Society of London and in his Cuneiform Inscriptions of Old Persia Col Rawlinson has outlined his journey to the decipherment. In the nineteenth century there was almost an unseemly competition among the various "civilized nations" of the world to be the first to unlock the ancient script. Quite early M Burnouf, a Frenchman had published the Inscription of Hamadan. This too was a trilingual record and  was inscribed during the reign of the son of Darius Xerxes and was an enumeration of royal titles. Bournuf also visited the site of Persepollis the capital city which was burnt and destroyed by Alexander as act of innane vandalism. Saint Mrtin another Frenchman and a close understudy and student of Joseph Champollion also started working on the Cuneiform Inscriptions around the same time as H C Rawlinson. In his letters we see a trace of desparation. Rawlinson wanted to be the first to accomplish the great feat.

To to end then, H C Rawlinson did what even we living in the twenty first century would hesitate to do. He had himself suspended by ropes on to the surface of the rock so that he could trce out the chaacters that ran like serried columns all along the face of the rock. Working thus, one small miss step would have resulted  death, Rawlinson trace out/copied the entire record. Now he had the material at hand to decipher the script.

Once again the key was found in the work of an earlier scholar, a Frenchman who lived in Pondicherry for seveal years, Anquetil du Perron who was one of the earliest scholars of the Zens Avesta and Old Sanskrit. Using insight from Du Perron, Rawlinson was able to make out the names of the early kings from the Avestan and trnasposed the to old Cuneiform. The book that he published on the Behistun Inscription provides all the technical details.

H C Rawlinson died on arch 5, 1895.





Wednesday, April 29, 2020

An Indian Doctor in Imperial Service: Dr Kaiwar Raghvendra Rao and Indian Agency in Times of Crisis III

A look at the world of politics, statecraft, diplomacy and books

1918-19 were bad years for most of the Globe. The War in Europe that stretched from 1914 to 1918 saw slaughter on an industrial scale. The battlefiels of Verdun, Somme, Flanders are seared into the collective memory of Europeans and India too was not unaffected as soldiers from India participated in the war and nealry a million lives were lost. It is sad that the commonwealth War Memorial Commission does not regard Indian war graves worth of memoralizing. 1918 saw the gradual return of peace and with it came the deadly Pandemic, known as the Spanish Influenza.

Pandemics have been part of history and the historical record is rich in detail about the impact they have had. The Black Death or the bubonic Plague that raced through Europe in the Fourteenth Century taking nearly a quarter of its population has left iys macabre signature in the child's nursery rhyme: Ringa Ringa Roses, Pocket Full of Poises, Hush Busha WE ALL FALL DOWN. The rash on the skin and the fatal bout of sneeze are sharply brought out. 1918-19 saw the spread of the Influenza Epidemic in India and one of the worst affected places was Madras. The year was also ne that was amrked by large scale social and political disturbances as grain price sharply incresed and surpus grain was shipped off to Europe to feed the every hungry Arimes of the Imperial Powers. It is against this background that we have to evaluate the work of Dr Kaiwar Raghavendra Rao who as the Halth Officer of the Madras Corporation had to oversee the Influenza Campaign as well.

Lady Willingdon, the wife of the Governor of Madras Presidency took keen interest in the affairs of the Corporation and we find Dr Raghavendra Rao thanking her for her assistance to the cause of Public Health. One initiative of the Lady that needs to be highlighted is her interventions in matters relating to Maternal and Child health. Lady Willington took personal interest in the Lying=in Hospitals which was the then contemporary usage for Maternity Hospitals. And at this point a remarkable woman enters the picture: Dr L N Virasinghe-Chinappa, a colleague of Dr Rao who is made the Superindendent of the Maternity Hospitals in Madras now Chennai. Unfortunately, in some of the earlier volumes of the Reports her name is inexplicably given as L Vira Singh. But in 1919 her signature appears alongside that of Dr Raghavendra Rao.

The stress of the Epidemic and the need for a qell equipped diagnostic lab neccisitated the construction of a Laboratory complete with the Clayton's Apparatus which was used apparently for nebulizing sera. Dr Raghvendra Rao writes that 1919 began with " omnious possibilities of sickness and death".By the end of December 1918 itself Plague had started claiming lives in Triplicane and Cholera had spread to the northern part of the city. The disease was notified as an epidemic in January 1919 and it subsided only to be replaced by the Influenza Pandemic by March 1919. The frightful pace at which the Influenza spread, resulted in the formation of a Committee with Dr Lt Col C Donovon IMS as the Chairman and Dr Raghvendra Rao, then Health Officer as the Convener.

The Committee met on the 21st of July 1919 and recommended a series of Public Health Measure to te Government of the Prsidency:

1) Temporary Structures be set up as isolation units Quarintine those affected by the Influenza
2) Requst people to go to the Influenza Homes so that the spread of the disease could be curtailed
3) Requisitioned drugs

For meeting the expenses the Corporation of Madras sanctioned a sum of Rs. 15,000. Public awareness was sought to be increased by printing Influenza Posters both in English and vernacular lnguages which adviced those suffering from the defined symptoms to report to the nearest Infuenza Homes. In just 10 days after the Meeting, the Government notofied Influenza as a "dangerous disease" under the Madras Municipal Act and a GO # 1208 dated 13 August 1919 was passed. Roypuram was chosen as the quarintine zone and we know that it was kept at full capacity as the emigrants bound to South Africa were kept here. Dr Rao took on the challenge of vaccination and spent his energy ensuring that children below the age of 1 year were vaccinated for small pox. Thus, he reduced the morbidity of the disease in Madras which had acquired a dubious fame as the centre of the diseas.

Given the fact that Madras Presidency was the most seriously affected by the Influeza Epidemic second only to Bombay, the eager exwertions of Dr Raghavendra Rao contributed in no small measure in reducing the human toll'

I thank Mrs Sudha Vyas for giving me a photograph f Dr Kaiwar Raghavendra Rao.


Sunday, April 26, 2020

An Indian Doctor in Imperial Service: Dr Kaiwar Raghavendra Rao and Indian Agency in times of Crisis

A look at the world of politics, statecraft, diplomacy and books

Part II
Dr K Raghavendra Rao BA, Mb&CM, DPH
(Cantab)

In Part I we traced the intellectual and historical context in which the career of Dr Kaiwar Raghavendra Rao is best studied. He was amongst the earliest Indians to qualify himself as a Doctor and devoted his entire life to public service in that he chose to work within the limits of governmental institutions eschewing the more lcrative pastures of private pratice. He lived through hard but interesting times and at the high noon of Empire carved out a niche for himself in the public realm. The fact that Lord Curzon was the Viceroy of India may have contributed to the steady but relentless entry of Indians into the portals of the Indian public service. Beginning his life as a Malaria Officer, Dr Raghavendra Rao steadily rose in prominence, becoming the Health Officer of the Madras Corporation under Chartes Molony in 1915 and retired as the first Director of Public Health in 1940. Dr Kaiwar Raghavendra Rao medical exertions intersected two very grave challenges: first, the Malaria with its seasonal recrudesence and secondly, the 1918-19 Influenza Pndemic which claimed at least 12 million lives in India and upward of 50 million lives world wide. Today as we live through another Pandemic, the Chinese virus or the COVID 19 virus, we can reflect on the past and learn the impact the Pandemic had on India in the year following the end of World War I.

The English Administration had always identified Malaria as the great disease of India, a killer that struck with alarming regularity contributing to the very high mortality rates both among Indians and the European population. One immediate consequence of the feared morbidity of the disease can be seen in urban town planning: the European part of the cities and towns were sequestered from the main City. Paradoxically, the very measures taken by the British to make Empire pay for itself were  responsible for spreading the dreaded disease, The expansion of irrigation and canal building activites meant that large pools of stagnant water were available for the vector to breed. In 1897 the Venice Conference on Helath and Sanitation threatened embargo (in today's less politile language we would say Sanctions)  on Indian goods if Hygenine and Sanitation were not significantly improved. This measure ould have certainly hurt British interests as it would have curtailed the export of manufactured products from Britain. Immediate action was needed and we find Ronald Ross discovering the Anopholene vector as the cause for the spread of Malaria winning him the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1900.

Dr Kaiwar Ragavendra Rao was appointed as the first Malaria Officer of the Coroporation and later became its Health Officer. As the Malaria Officer we find Dr Rao presenting extremely lucid and detailed Reports on the anti Malaria work undertaken by him. From 1914 when Retrenchment had reduced his staff to the barest minimum we find his identifying the breeding brund of malaria infested vectors by catching mosqutoes and identifying them, He identified a number of areas of Madras now Chennai as disease ridden: Washermanpet, Puruswakkam, Triplicane, Buckingham Canal, Saidapet and Egmore. The preence of stagnant water provided ample scope for the larvae to breed and so in consultation with the Authorities Dr Rao enthusiastically introduced a number of measure, In large ponds he introduced Ducks and as he ruefully notes in his Report the experiment with American ducks turned out to be a failure while the native breed was more effective. And he used to power entrusted  to him by the Corporation to have particular ponds or well filled. In Edward Elliot;s Roar and Mobrray's Road were large ponds which were filled at the expense of the owners. Introduction of fish was another measure. I puddles left behind by the monsoon rains he "petrolized" meaning thereby disinfected the puddles using a mixture of crude petroleum and other chemicals. Un doubtedly Dr Kaiwar Raghavendra Rao was a successful and diligent Malaria Officer and his hard work was rewarded whn he was made Health Officer of the Corporation of Madras and when the Influeza Pandemic struck Madras in 1918-19 we see him hard at work in his Ripon Building Office as the Health Officer.

The portofolio of the Health Officer combined Anti Malarial tasks as well as adminstering and overseeing a number of public dispensaries located all over Chennai. Dr Raghavendra Rao points out in his Reports quite frequently that there is season vriation in mortality rates and levles throughout the year. He now has to deal with Cholera and Malaria and they struck at different times and the demographics of the disease were different. The construction of the Madras harbour was a factor that caused considerable damage to the environment and the coast stretching from the Harbour to Ennore was chock a block with health hazzards, Cholera being the most deadly. He now began advocating Housing --well ventilated-- housing as the answer to some of the health issues faced by Madras. Tuberculosis was a a major factor leading to essentially a lowering of the average or mean mortality of the male to a mere 20 years. A significant drop in mortality level. As Health Officer we find him putting the weight of his experience and office behind the Madras Tramway Corporation as he felt that decongestion of morbid areas like Georgetown, Puruswakkam and Triplicane will lead ti improvement in health.

1918 marked the end of World War I. But even before the war ended a strange new disease had entered Madras. Like the present Pandemc caused by the Chinese Virus or COVID 19, the Influenza Epidemic was also cause by a "corona" virus as has been esablished a century later through tests carried out on the tissue samples preserved from that era. Dr Rao is not just a medical professional. He is a statistician as well. He gives detailed breakdown of the age and gender of the victims of the disease and suggests that Quarintie measures be taken to contain the disease. I am not sure from the records available to me if he used the Indian Infectious and Epidemic Disease Act of 1897 but he did recomend strict quaritine as a measure to contai the spread of the disease. Throughout 1919 the toll taken by the Influennza Pandemic was relentless and by 1920 disappeared.

After his success with the Influenza Epidemic, Dr Kaiwar Raghavendra Rao was sent to Cambrigde for the course on Public Health. He seems to have spent at least 18 months in England, and I am unable to determine the exact duration or dtes of his stay there. On his return he was made the Director of Public Health,and occupied the position until he retired.


Saturday, April 25, 2020

An Indian Doctor in Imperial Service Dr Kaiwar Raghavendra Rao and Indian Agency in times os Crisis

A look at the world of politics, statecraft, diplomacy and books

A few days back I read a small piece in Madras Musings about Dr K Raghavendra Rao and since primary sources are unavaiblabe due to Lockdown I have written this Blog on the basis of evidence culled from the 10 volumes of "Health Department Reports" presented to the Corporation of Madras whose Health Officer was Dr Raghavendra Rao. This is only the first part of my work and will return to the theme as and when interest material and inclination permit.

PartI 

The late Nineteenth century and the early Twentieth centuries were Hard Times for India and Indians. Charles Dickes was able to see Hard Times for his people in England but an astute observer would see te same in India, as well. The Railways, the Suez Canal, the introduction of Telegraphs and the gradual introduction of electricity were all factors that changed the urban landscape. And in this times of change stradling the lte nineteenth and early twentieth century we encounter Dr Kaiwar Raghavendra Rao, a trained Physcian and a Public Health specialist with higher qualification from the University of Cambridge. As his name suggests, the Doctor was probably hailed from the Kaiwar region of present day Karnataka, and was born in 1884. He took his BA degree from Bangalore Central College, the nucleus of the Bangalore University and came to Madras now Chennai to join the Madras Medical College,

Medical Education in Madras Presidency was undergoing a major change at around the time Raghavendra Rao entered th Medical Clooge. Until just a few years earleir Indians who wanted to qualify for the Medical Profession and practice in the Presidency were restricted to the LMP certification which was essentailly a Licentiate in the field of Medicine. Theferfore Dr Raghavendra Rao was one of the first qualified mediacal professionals in India. The introduction of the MB&CM degree from 1904 meant that Indians did not have to make the costly trip to England to take their qualifying examinations for the Royal College of Suregeons/Physicians at London or Edinburgh, Scotland. Dr Rao lived though the time when Medical traditions and practices were slowly but surely undergoing irreversible changes.

Indians traditionally depended on their vaids, acharyas, siddhas for medical needs and were quite content to leave their fate to the enthusiastic though largely unqualified people. The East India Company opened a small dispensary for its Englih soldiers in Fort Saint George and the practice of Western Medicine. Right from the start there was an undercurrent of competition, indeed hostility, between the two traditions: the Native and the European. Traditional Indian medical practices were neither codified nor were there any prescribed cerification for its practioners.

Indians traditionally depended on their vaids, acharyas, siddhas for medical needs and were quite content to leave their fate to the enthusiastic though largely unqualified people. The East India Company opened a small dispensary for its Englih soldiers in Fort Saint George and the practice of Western Medicine. Right from the start there was an undercurrent of competition, indeed hostility, between the two traditions: the Native and the European. Traditional Indian medical practices were neither codified nor were there any prescribed cerification for its practioners. Introduction of Western Education, particularly the establishment of the University of Madras in 1857 was to change native perceptions. The immense prestige of Western Education began to outpace the validity and legitimacy of Indian medical practices. Efforts were made from time to time to drive Indian practices under ground by creating the smokescreen of Quakery. It is against this background that young men like Dr Raghavendra Rao, fresh from College, were attracted to the brave new world of scientific medicine. At the time when Dr Rao was a student the Medical Degree course consisted of 4 years with six months of internship. I have not been able to locate a copy of the Syllabus of the Madras Medical College. However, it may not have been that much different from other medical colleges. Chemistry, Physiology, Anatomy, Medical Statistics and Hygine together with exposture to reallife on the ground training in an establsihed Hospital must have formed part of his training. Dr Rao retained th lesson learnt well because as Medical Officer of the Madras Corporation during the Influenza Pandemic of 1918-19 he drew upon all these methods in order to study the Influenza Pndemic in the Madras Preseidency. We are running ahead of the story.

Dr Kaiwar Raghvendra Rao lived in Madras and died in the city in 1944 just as World War II was drawing to a close. He lived through two major Wars and died a few yeras shy of the transfer of power in 1947 folloing the Partition of India. I have been able to  piece together a part of his professional life from the Reports of the Health Department of the Cororation of Madras. He seems to ve joined as an Assistant Health Officer soon after he graduated and spent the rest of his life serving Madras Presidency. The introduction of the minto-Morley Reforms in 1919 saw Public Health as a transfered subject and a Department of Public Health established with Dr Raghvendra Rao as its first Director of Public Health.

To be continued in Part II