CLick HERE for part 1 of this article
Online International Interdisciplinary Research Journal, {Bi-Monthly}, ISSN2249-9598, Volume-III, Issue-IV, July-Aug 2013
Dipesh Karmarkar /Assistant Professor, Department of Geography, Smt CHM College, Ulhasnagar – 3, Maharashtra, India
2.2 Shivaji’s Navy:
The conquest of Konkan along with the formation of his navy in 1659 played a great role in the decline of the Portuguese influence over the Arabian Sea (Yasin, 1995; Karmarkar, 2005). No continental empire, namely the Mughals, the Ahmednagar or the Bijapur could develop naval power, equal to Shivaji’s Navy’. The Mughals and the Bijapur were land based power and thus neglected building up a navy. Their pilgrim and merchant ships depended largely on Gujaratis, Parsis and Europeans in the sea. Under such circumstances, Shivaji’s stress on naval activities reveals his far-sightedness. With his insightful understanding of the European presence along the Konkan coast, Shivaji Maharaj determined to make the sea an integral part of his Swarajya. Construction of navy and sea-forts, thus, was a part of his plan to defend the maritime frontiers of Swarajya. Similarly, he aimed at the economic benefits of controlling the seas. Later successful expeditions were planned with support from the naval bases of Kalyan and Bhiwandi. Malwan, Vengurla and coastal areas in the south up to the borders of Goa were brought under Shivaji’s control followed by interior centers like Kudal, Sawantwadi and Rajapur. North Konkan also came under his rule and in 1670 Kalyan, Bhiwandi and Mahad became his new bases. Ports of Daman, Vasai, Thane, Chaul, Panvel and Khanderi islands followed suit.
Shivaji’s interest in navy was a result of his concern for the safety and security of the coastal tract that was required for his subjects. As mentioned earlier, peace (stability) in the coastal tract of Konkan was significant to maintain trade contacts with Konkan and protect his subjects who were stationed in the unproductive areas of the Deccan. Shivaji Maharaj had understood that his enemies might try to starve him into submission by stopping provisions from their country. Bahadur Shah actually did so (Yasin, 1995). If command of the sea was in his hands, he could get an abundant supply from the ports of the South even when the usual land (trade) routes of the country were blocked. Shivaji’s trading vessels loaded with goods traded with Persia, Basra and Mocha in western Arabia. He had not only salt boats but also regular ‘May Fleet’ which piled between his ports and those of Arabia and Persia (Yasin, 1995). Evacuation of Siddis of Janjira was also a major objective behind the building of the navy (Khobrekar, 2002). However, the Siddis of Janjira never surrendered to Shivaji even after twenty years of confrontation.
The Shivaji-Portuguese conflict essentially arose out of the Portuguese domination over the Indian seas. It was for the first time that the naval supremacy of the European merchant group was challenged by a king based on land. Portuguese made it mandatory for all those using western coastal route and the Red Sea route to buy passes or cartaz. Cartaz was like a pass that gave permission to use the sea route. It not only fetched handsome revenue to Portuguese but also established a strong political hold over the sea. Refusing to buy the Portuguese cartaz was not a joke at the time when the Portuguese were known for their ruthless violence along the coast. But Shivaji Maharaj refused to take cartazes from the Portuguese and continued to sail in the coastal waters (Khobrekar, 2002). His nationalism challenged him to wrest the revenue from the Europeans traders, when his people were living on the slender resources of his sterile motherland (Yasin, 1995). He also opened a straight military conflict against them. Portuguese letter dated 6th August 1659 says, “Shivaji, a son of Shahaji, rebel against Adilshah, has captured the areas near Bassein (Vasai) and Chaul. He has grown strong. He has constructed some fighting vessels in the Bhiwandi, Kalyan and Panvel ports of the Bassein region. We are therefore forced to remain alert. We have ordered the Portuguese captain not to allow these vessels to come out of the ports and see that they do not move out on the seas.” The fact that the Portuguese avoided war with Shivaji Maharaj and remained strictly neutral during his wars with the Mughals and the Bijapur strongly proves the strength and authority of Shivaji Maharaj.
Shivaji also laid the foundation of the ship building industry of the Marathas after he captured Konkan in 1650s. Kalyan was made a naval base and dockyards were built accordingly (Khobrekar, 2002). The work of building 20 fighting vessels started under trained hands. Kalyan was essentially used by the Marathas to plunder the Portuguese territories that provided a fresh impetus to urban growth in Konkan. Vasai, Thane, Kalyan, Bhiwandi, Alibag, Bankot, Vijaydurg, and Malwan emerged as the chief ship building centers of the Marathas (Kulkarni, 1997). The choice of these locations was in line with the availability of fine quality teak wood in these areas. D’silva (1990) notes that the ships built at Agashi, near Vasai, were able to make voyages to Europe and stood equal with Portugal’s art of ship building. The natural harbors and port towns gave a boost to ship building activities of the Marathas. Chaul, Dabhol, Kalyan, Bhiwandi, Vengurla emerged as the active port towns while Dahanu, Tarapur, Kelva-Mahim, Agashi, Uttan, Vasai, Bandra, Mahim, Nagothana and Shrivardhan emerged as centers of coastal trade (Karmarkar, 1996; Kulkarni, 1997). Shivaji had a naval policy formulated under Adnyapatra.
2.3 Significance of Planned Warfare Strategies vis-à-vis the Nature of Terrain: Shivaji Maharaj’s understanding of the terrain of the Sahyadri and the Deccan was well reflected in the kind of warfare he developed – the Ganimi Kawa or the Guerilla Warfare. His mobility and terrain spoke to British military concerns in India (Kincaid, 1937). Shivaji Maharaj realized that the most vulnerable point of the large, slow-moving armies of the time was supply. Ganimi Kawa was a strategy evolved by him, in which he used knowledge of local terrain and the superior mobility of his light cavalry to cut off supplies to the enemy. His troops attacked caravans and devastated the rural hinterlands of the enemy camp site. Shivaji regularly refused a decisive plains battle, which tactics of the day demanded. Instead, he left the battlefield and struck some portion of the enemy territory, perhaps hundreds of miles away, forcing the enemy to chase him. He raised the act of guerilla warfare to a high art. It is evident in his encounter with Afzal Khan at Pratapgad, near Wai.
2.4 Shivaji’s Forts and Swarajya:
Shivaji Maharaj understood the importance of forts for the geopolitics of Maharashtra. The forts were of functioning types mainly for the purpose of guarding the region and the army. Shivaji built many forts in areas where forts already existed. This was because he was not sure of the loyalty of the families who held the existing forts. Only by building his own forts could Shivaji maintain them with troops of proven loyalty. Forts in Konkan as well as Ghats played a seminal role in building of the Maratha ‘swarajya’. They acted as centers of huge conglomeration of arms and garrison, points of vigil and also as borders of the kingdom. They not only kept an eye over the sea front but also over the land frontiers in the Deccan and number of passes crisscrossing the Sahyadri. During the early Maratha period, there were about 350 forts (Deshpande, 1982). These forts consisted of gadhis (small residential fortresses), vandurgs (forest forts), sthaldurgs (ground forts), giridurgs (hill forts) and jaldurgs/janjiras (marine forts) (Divekar and Apte, 1927). Very few of them developed into settlements like Rajgad and Raigad where a good number of houses and other buildings were made. Some notable features of Shivaji's forts include:
1. Design changes with the topography and in harmony with the contours 2. No ornate palaces or dance floors or gardens
3. Not much difference in the area of higher or lower ranks
4. Marvelous acoustics in the capital
5. Sanskritization of fort names
6. Community participation in the defense of forts
7. Three tier administration of forts
8. System of inspection of forts by higher ups including the king 9. Distinct feature of forts like double/triple line fortification of Pratapgad, Vijaydurg, etc.
10. Foresight in selection of sites
Although most of the forts were constructed in the Ghats, marine forts and cliff forts played strategic role along the Konkan coast. The significance of marine forts for defending the coastal borders of Konkan against the Siddis and the Portuguese was implicit. As a result, Vijaydurg, Sindhudurg and Suvarndurg were rebuilt, while Padmadurg and Kolaba were constructed by Shivaji. Shivaji built two types of Janjiras, or sea forts. Firstly, forts built on a rocky island, surrounded by sea on all sides and secondly, forts on the sea-shore with its entrance from the land side and rear facing the sea. Sindhudurg, Anjanvel, Yashwantgad or Reddi, Vijaydurg or Gheria, Jaigad, Ratnagiri, Kolaba, Khanderi, Devgad and Bhagwantgad were some of his major marine forts, either constructed, renovated or fortified by Shivaji. All these forts played significant role in monitoring and checking the activities of various powers on the west coast including the Portuguese and also in keeping an outlet for escape by sea (Deshpande, 1982).
Geostrategic location of Shivaji Maharaj’s forts in Konkan and Deccan actually established three lines of defense demonstrating a gradual spatial expansion of Shivaji’s kingdom. The first line of defense extending from the Asheri fort in the northwest to Vishalgad in the south passed through Purandar and was at the core of Shivaji’s kingdom. The second line of defense passed through Konkan incorporating newly built forts like Sindhudurg and Padmadurg and older but strengthened forts, such as, Vijaydurg and Suvarndurg. Both these defense lines established by Shivaji served his descendents, i.e. the Peshwas, as well. Subsequent to his coronation (1674), the third line of defense was built from Vishalgad to Jinji in Karnataka that mirrored the expansion of Shivaji’s empire. This line enabled swift military operation between Raigad, the capital of swarajya, and Jinji and helped Shivaji to defend his kingdom against the Mughals. Symbolically, forts were the spatial (geographic) manifestation of Shivaji Maharaj’s supra-local power. They were the manifestations of kingly authority and architectural genius of Shivaji Maharaj.
2.5 Shivaji and his Urban Perception:
Shivaji Maharaj’s swarajya and his perception of state building were basically rural in nature and much less urban. Though it was not as strongly tied to cities as the Mughal Empire, they were the part of the Shivaji’s strategy. The city-building activities were never on the agenda of Shivaji Maharaj, his capitals continued to get located in forts and not in cities (Gordon, 1993). It was so because, unlike the Mughals, Shivaji’s conception of swarajya was more people-centric (common man at the center), more of a welfare state. Like the Mughals, he did not aim at building royal, capitalist cities with urban elites at the center. The Mughals considered cities as the bases of administration while forts as places of strength and retreat. The Mughal cities thus were strongly defended by their armies. During the peak of the Mughal power, therefore, attacking the city was more difficult than the countryside. In this context, cities became a part of the military-cum-economic strategy of Shivaji. Conquering the countryside and disconnecting its link with the city in the initial stage of the attack was the major part of Shivaji’s strategy. In conquest, therefore, Marathas took the countryside first, the smaller towns in the hinterland second and the city, by then cut off from the hinterland and weakened, much later. The conquests of Surat, Burhanpur and Aurangabad followed this pattern (Gordon, 1993). No doubt, Shivaji viewed Mughal cities as centers of capitalist wealth accumulation. It is also true that the Mughal cities were parasitic in nature and their wealth came from the exploitation of the rural hinterlands (Karmarkar, 2005). That was the reason why, Shivaji attacked and looted the elites in such cities like Surat; to take back the wealth of the common people and reinvest the same for the benefit of his rural subjects. Shivaji was a revolutionary, in this context. Such a kind of Shivaji’s polity created a feeling of nationalism and integrity in the minds of the people of the Deccan.
Shivaji’s forts played a significant role in the backdrop of the urban decline and destruction by the Portuguese in the 17th century (Das Gupta, 1987). Shivaji’s expertise in building forts and capturing of strategic points of significance in the Western Ghats along the Konkan coast played a significant role in salvaging some nodes, even if not their status. Shivaji built several forts along the Konkan coast and indirectly helped keep some urban centers alive and lend them position of significance in the defense map of the Marathas.
3. RELEVANCE OF SHIVAJI’S GEOGRAPIHCAL VISION:
Shivaji Maharaj is one of the highly politicized historical figures of our times. Today, every political party claims ownership on Shivaji Maharaj’s character. We are very well aware of the kind of society and polity in which we are living. So, there is no need to ponder much on how the above–mentioned facts about geographical vision of Shivaji Maharaj are relevant today. In the guise of globalization, we have shown utmost negligence to look into our own geography and history. Most of our state policies reveal the fact that we have failed in understanding our geography and put it for efficient use. Our state is far away from the welfare state concept conceived by Shivaji. We are not living in Swarajya. Just one example to conclude - if Shivaji Maharaj, in the 17th century, could understand the significance of protecting sea frontier, how can our ‘veteran’ politicians of 21st century Maharashtra ‘generously’ open up our sea frontiers for the terrorists to come in! We have really made a mockery of our own great leader and moreover our own geography!!
REFERENCES:
Mishra, R. (2009): ‘Indian Naval Strategy in the 21st Century’, A Book Review, Journal of Defense Studies, Vol. 3. No.3, Institute for Defense Studies and Analyses, New Delhi
Sardesai, G. (1946): ‘New History of the Marathas’, Vol. I, Bombay.
Gordon, S. (1993): ‘The Marathas, 1600-1818’, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (Reprint by Foundation Books, Delhi).
Khobrekar, V. (2002): ‘Konkan: From Earliest to 1818 AD’, Snehvardhan Prakashan, Pune.
Karmarkar, D. (2005): ‘A Historical Geography of Coastal Gujarat and Konkan: Revisiting Spatial and Social Relations’, an Unpublished Doctoral Thesis, Department of Geography, University of Mumbai, Mumbai.
Nairne, A. (1894): ‘A History of Konkan’, Central Government Press, Bombay.
Das Gupta, A. (1979): ‘Indian Merchants and the Decline of Surat, c.1700-1750’, Manohar, New Delhi.
Tikekar, A. (2004): ‘Sthal Kal’ Mauj Prakashan Gruha, Mumbai. Kulkarni, A. (1996): ‘The Marathas (1600–1848)’, Books and Books, New Delhi.
Yasin M. (1995): ‘Shivaji’s Naval Experiment’, in K. Mathew (ed), ‘Mariners, Merchants and Oceans: Studies in Maritime History, Manohar, New Delhi, pp. 247- 260.
Kulkarni, A. (1997): ‘Ship Building, Navigation and Maritime Activities on the West Coast of India in Medieval Period with Reference to Maratha Power’, in K. Mathew (ed), ‘Ship Building and Navigation in the Indian Ocean Region, c. 1400-1800’, Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers, New Delhi, pp. 1-11.
D’silva, R. (1990): ‘The Golden Days of Ship Building in Bassein’, Sunday Free Press Journal, July 22.
Kincaid, D. (1937): ‘The Great Rebel: An Impression of Shivaji, Founder of the Maratha Empire’, London.
Divekar, S. and Apte, D. (1927): ‘Shivbharata by Parmananda’, Pune.
Deshpande, P. (1982): ‘Maratha Forts and Siege Tactics’, in S. Doshi (ed), ‘Shivaji and Facets of Maratha Culture’, Marg Publications, Bombay, pp. 39-58.
Das Gupta, A. (1987): ‘India and the Indian Ocean, c. 1500-1800: The Story’, in A. Das Gupta and M. Pearson (eds), ‘India and the Indian Ocean, c. 1500-1800’, Oxford University Press, Calcutta, pp. 25-45.
CLick HERE for part 1 of this article