Important wars and battles in Indian History
Second Anglo Burmese War 1852 A.D.
Second Anglo Burmese War 1852 A.D.
After the First Anglo-Burmese war, the
Treaty of Yandabu was signed between Burma and East India Company on February
24, 1826. For next 20 years the relations were normal, but the Burma Kings were
chaffed of the English merchants who started flocking in the country and got
settled over there. In 1851, these merchants complained their overlords sitting
in Calcutta about the oppression of the Burmese officials at Rangoon. The issue
was taken seriously by the East India Company and the Lord Dalhousie asked
Burma for compensation. No reply was sent from the other end. The idea was to
made it a reason for an imposed war on Burma. Apart from that there were minor
bilateral issues regarding the Treaty of Yandabu. However, exactly under which
circumstances, this war was fought was not made public. The war started in
April 5, 1852 and as soon as the war started the port of Martaban was taken on
the same day. On 12th April Rangoon was annexed and in June Pegu was taken. In
January 1853, a proclamation of annexation was read out and thus this war ended
without any treaty signed. The outcome of this war was that Pegu was annexed to
the British Empire and it was renamed Lower Burma. British dominion now was
from Chittagong to Singapore in the East. Lord Dalhousie was able to change the
map of British India considerably. It was he, who waged a war against Burma
(Second Anglo-Burmese War) without any considerable reasons other than his
desire to exclude all other European powers from Burma and expand the territory
of the British Empire. The second Anglo Sikh war ended in the annexation of
Punjab. Both of these annexations were made by Proclamations and not by any
treaty. Lord Dalhousie reduced the Punjab and planted British standard at
Peshawar, and then he became involved with the government of Burma which had
always been obstinate and foolhardy in dealings with the foreigners such as
Chinese and British. The Burmese could not guess in the war of 1826 (First
Anglo Burmese War) that they were practically at the mercy of a very strong
maritime power in the Bay of Bengal, which could occupy the whole of their
seaboard and penetrate up to the Irawadi River. The over intelligent rulers of
Burma could understand the military supremacy of Britain only after the second Anglo
Burmese War, which ended with the official proclamation of annexation of Lower
Burma (Pegu) on December 20, 1852. This conquest made the British Possessions
continuous along the Eastern Shores of the Bay of Bengal, from Chittagong to as
far as Singapore. The British settlement in Calcutta led to the conquest of
Burma and the first step was to set up Rangoon as capital of British
Possessions at the bank of River Irawadi.
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