“The Skull of Alum Bheg”
(Life and Death of a Rebel of 1857)
By Kim A. Wagner, Penguin.
“I walked straight to the scattered and smoking floors before the guns. I
came first to an arm, torn off above the elbow, the first clinched, the bone
projecting several inches, bare. Then the ground was sown with red grisly
fragments, then a black-haired head and the other arm still held together…close
by lay the lower half of the body of the next, torn quite in two, and long
coils of entrails twined on the ground. Then a long cloth in which one has been
dressed rolled open like a floor cloth and on fire. One man lay in a complete
and shattered heap, all but the arms; the legs were straddled wide apart, and
the smashed body on the middle of them; the spine exposed; the head lay close by,
too. The last body was that of a native officer, who was the arch fiend of the
mutiny; he was a short man, with a cruel face. His had been cut clean off, but
the muscles of the neck and contracted round the throat like a frill. His face
was half upturned and calm, the eyes shut. I saw no expression of pain on any
of them. What had been his body lay on its face, the legs as usual not
shattered, but all the flesh torn like cloth from a sharp angle in the hollow
on the back, off and off, till it merged in one mangled heap…The troops
immediately marched off, and I rode home at speed, and when I dismounted the
dogs came and licked my feet”
‘An Execution in India’
published in The Times 3rd December 1857
(Scene of Canon Execution in British India of rebels reproduced
by Wagner)
Kim A. Wagner has written this book
on a human skull which was discovered in 1963 in a pub in England with an
introduction about the name and rank of the Indian soldier written on an old
paper folded and inserted in the eye-socket of his skull. It described him as
under-
“Skull of Havildar Alum Bheg, 46th
Regt. Bengal N. Infantry who was blown away from a gun…He was a principal
leader in the mutiny of 1857 & of a most ruffianly disposition…Alum Bheg
was about 32 years of age; 5 feet 7 ½ inches high and by no means an ill
looking native.”
This is the story of Alum Bheg, who was a soldier of mutiny
(for British) and first war of independence (for Indians) in 1857 and of Caption A.R.Costello (Capt. 7th Drag. Guards), who was on duty when Alum Bheg was blown by canon and who took
his skull as a trophy to Ireland. Records by his name could never be found by
the author but his guess is that Alum
Bheg was a sunni Muslim and recruited from Cownpore where 46th
Bengal Native Infantry was raised.
46th Bengal Native Infantry
Regiment (46th BNI) revolted on 9th July 1857 in Sialkot (Pakistan).
Author never found any record of any soldier named Alum Bheg despite his massive search of the records of executions.
Only three names of that regiment at Sialkot survives today and they are of
course of the three non-commissioned officers who remained loyal to British.
Such was the resolve of the rulers then and apathy of government now that not
even names of the soldiers of the first war of independence survive except the
ones who remained loyal to the British. The author of this book in its
introduction itself makes it clear that ‘mindless empire - bashing’ as well as ‘empire-nostalgia’
both make poor history and his purpose for writing is to have a more ‘critical and
nuanced-understanding of the past’.
A completely new perspective of the
reasons of revolt of 1857 have been listed by Wagner. Not many remember that
prior to 1857 mutiny, there was a preliminary round also, which happened in
1824 as Barrackpore Mutiny when the Bengal army was disarmed and this initiated
a perpetual fear among the sepoys of
being disarmed again. Another reason Wagner mentions is that by the early nineteenth
century ‘high caste’ status of the British army was being demolished by the British
themselves. Then General Order of 1834 was passed to enlist non-high caste Hindus
and Muslims into army in order to break the high–caste monopoly of the Bengal
Army. General Enlistment Order of 1856 mandated overseas services for new
recruits, which also created fear in already serving older soldiers that sooner
or later they may also be asked to serve overseas which was a taboo in high-caste
Hindus. Apart from seniority determination and low payments, annexation of
Awadh in 1856 when the British dethroned the King of Awadh on the pretext of
misrule, broke the patience of soldiers like Alum Bheg. Awadh was the native country for majority of recruits in
Bengal Native Infantry. Annexation of Awadh, perhaps for the first time introduced
a sense of disloyalty to the country in the men like Alum Bheg and they started looking at the British as enemies of ‘their
country’. Introduction of common messing in the colonial jails in 1840s. Removal
of prisoner’s brass vessel the lota
necessary to maintain purity, hit hard on the high caste inmates and in turn
created fear among the sepoys too. Social
ostracizing of the soldiers returning from defeat and disgrace in Afghan War in
1842 are the reasons listed for revolt by the Wagner.
With reasonable arguments, author has
dismissed the ‘greased cartridge theory’. Any lawyer even if not conducting
trials, can easily infer that the testimony of the then Inspector General of
Ordnance, Colonel A. Abbott’s given in later proceedings, in fact seems too
general to derive that cow or pig’s fat was used to grease the new Enfield
rifle cartridges. As per records, no native soldier till 1857, ever used any
such greased cartridge or even ever was asked to use Enfield rifle in 1857. British
60th Regiment stationed at Meerut, having all white soldiers, was
the only regiment equipped with Enfield rifle in 1857 therefore they were the
only ones who could have used greased cartridges. E. Martineau during the trial
of Bahadur Shah deposed categorically that ‘not even a single greased cartridge
for the Enfield was even distributed to sepoys
anywhere during 1857’. However Wagner accepts that greased cartridges, even in rumors,
played vital role in 1857. Mangal Pandey has found mention in the records. 8th
April 1857 is the date when Mangal Pandey was executed and it was the first
execution by the British for open mutiny. It was an open execution in front of
all sepoys of the regiment. The Delhi
Gazette published on 18 April 1857 mentions Mangal Pandey as “criminal” and
also that this execution had a very disheartening effect on the regiment.
Following Maratha and Mughal
tradition, blowing by canon was favored method of execution of the British before
deportation to Andaman Islands was introduced as a new method of penal
punishment.as it saved the hassle of last rites too. Wagner has very well portrayed
the scene of execution of Alum Bheg and other native soldiers in the book as
under.
It
was 10 July 1858, Saturday at 04:30 A.M, 7th Dragoon Guards Sialkot Regiment.
With sunrise, order of court martial against Alum Bheg was read over finding him guilty of committing murder of
Englishmen. Alum Bheg was blown by
canon. All that remained a heap of flesh with head remained intact, when
Captain A. R. Costello of the 7th Dragoon Guards, picked up the
severed head of condemned Alum Bheg with
blood still flowing out of it as a trophy. Head of Alum Bheg then traveled to
Ireland with Captain Costello when he left India after three months of this
execution However Wagner found in the end that execution of Alum Bheg was as a case of mistaken
identity, executed for murders he did not commit!
Wagner concludes that displaying the
head of enemy was both respectable and gentleman behavior for a colonial
officer in those times. It was a tradition of British officers in that period
to take back home skulls of dead soldiers killed in India. Body parts of the Indian mutineers were collected as souvenirs.
Reference has also been made of the hanging of Indian rebel leader Tantia Tope
in year 1859. He records the great scramble by officers to get the lock of hair
from the hanging dead body of Tantia Tope. Costello was not the only soldier in
English army who brought skull back home. Skull of sepoy was an easy found and available at will in British India during
1857.
We should be thankful to Wagner, for bringing Alum
Bheg back into the pages of history from which he remained lost for almost
more than one and half century. Wagner hopes that through this book people may
be aware of the complex issue involved in searching the final resting place for
Alum Bheg.
I wonder where the skull
of Alum Bheg will return, if it will ever return at all ? This is not the same
country where Alum Bheg was born and
died. This is not the place from where Alum
Bheg left. Time has traveled and with it politics of geography has already
changed. Will he return to the place he was born in India perhaps Cawnpore or
will he return to Sialkot in Pakistan, where he was executed.
Kartikey

1 comment:
mindless empire - bashing’ as well as ‘empire-nostalgia’ both make poor history and his purpose for writing is to have a more ‘critical and nuanced-understanding of the past
This is something that we need to learn...loved the article kartikey....
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