which were made simultaneously with the political arrangements just described.
It had been calculated that the following troops could be furnished by the native states, their allies and dependencies, against the British Government when engaged in restoring order in Central India:—
Horse. | Foot. | Guns. | |
Sindhia | 14,000 | 16,000 | 140 |
Holkar | 20,000 | 8,000 | 107 |
Peshwá | 28,000 | 14,000 | 37 |
Bhonsla | 16,000 | 18,000 | 85 |
Amír Khán | 12,000 | 10,000 | 200 |
Pindárís | 15,000 | 1,500 | 20 |
Nizám | 25,000 | 20,000 | — |
——— | ——— | ——— | |
Total | 130,000 | 87,500 | 589[1] |
——— | ——— | ——— |
In deciding to crush organised brigandage and all who aided and abetted it, Lord Hastings determined to provide himself with ample means for the purpose. For a long time he had been preparing for the struggle, maturing his plans, and accumulating his resources, and all through the summer of 1817 he was occupied in finally completing his arrangements. The Pindárís were to be rooted out of their haunts which lay in Málwá, somewhat to the east of Ujjain, north of the Narbadá and between Bhopál and the dominions of Sindhia and Holkar; to accomplish this it had been decided to surround them on all sides,—on the north and east from Bengal, on the south from the Deccan,
- ↑ Colonel V. Blacker's Memoir of the operations of the British Army in India during the Maráthá War of 1817–19, London, 1821, p. 19. (Hereafter quoted as Blacker.)