Tipu Sultan’s foreign diplomacy through the letters of Thomas Jefferson
Research and author: Ameen Ahmed
Thomas Jefferson, a founding father of USA and the author of its independence declaration a recorded Tipu Sultan’s foreign missions in his official correspondence. By Rembrandt Peale - https://www.whitehousehistory.org/galleries/presidential-portraits, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=72792044 |
Introduction
Tipu Sultan was a
modern Indian king with a truly international outlook. While his father Haidar
Ali recruited European soldiers and even received fighting men from Persia,
Tipu went a step ahead. Not only did he continue his military contacts with the
Europeans, chiefly the French, he also sent his emissaries on foreign trade and
diplomatic missions to Europe and Arabian Peninsula. Aware of the global reach
of British, his arch enemy, he relentlessly sought to establish global
alliances with political and military powers outside India. The fact that Tipu
sent ambassadors to other parts of south Asia, West Asia and also Europe is
fairly well-known to students of modern Indian history. Let us explore an
interesting phase of global diplomacy when a founding father of America recorded
Tipu Sultan’s foreign missions in his official correspondence.
Tipu
and foreign powers
Born and raised at a
time when European powers were in a race to colonise Indian sub-continent, Tipu
had to wade through a minefield of foreign relations to try and save his kingship.
Tipu learnt of his father Haidar Ali’s death in December 1782 and was preparing
to take over the reign of Mysore kingdom amidst a war with the British, in
which the French were his principle ally (1). At the same time, Americans, also
supported by the French, were fighting for independence from the British (2).
American revolutionaries not only took inspiration from Mysore Kingdom’s
battles against the British under Haidar Ali but also celebrated his many
victories, including that of Tipu Sultan’s at the battle of Pollilur (3). But, signing
a peace treaty in September 1783, England and France agreed not only to cease
hostilities against each other but also to stop supporting each other’s allies
that were in conflict with these two nations in the Indian subcontinent. The
fact that France signed the treaty without consulting Tipu, its ally in India,
upset him (4). He looked to form alliances with other international powers that
could help him permanently uproot British from south Asia.
Tipu’s
international diplomacy
Tipu sent a large
number of diplomats to Constantinople, capital of Ottoman Empire in 1785. He
instructed these diplomats to then travel to Paris to meet French King Louis
XVI and onward to London to meet the King of England before returning back to
Srirangapatna, his capital. He wanted them to meet these two kings to convince
them not to support Marathas and the Nizam in his conflict with them. But Tipu
recalled the diplomats from Constantinople and instead sent a separate embassy
to France in 1787. Until recently, historians believed one of Tipu’s objectives
in sending his embassy to Constantinople was to have himself recognized as a
sovereign by Ottomans. However, Iqbal Husain presented a paper relating to this
embassy at the Indian History Congress in 2001 in which he argued that Tipu
treated himself at par with the monarchs of Ottoman Empire, France and England.
Nowhere in his communication directed to these kings, particularly to the
Ottoman king, did he address himself as someone who was of a lesser stature (5).
‘Louis XVI receives the ambassadors in 1788 negotiating Franco-Indian alliances’ By Voyer, after Emile Wattier - [1], Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=13098785 |
Tipu’s
French embassy through the eyes of Thomas Jefferson
Thomas Jefferson is a founding father of America and the
principal author of Declaration of Independence. He was also its third
president (6). After America formally gained independence from Britain in 1784,
he was the country’s ambassador to France. A nascent America was keen to
develop commerce with East Indies- India and its neighbouring region as it was
known then (7). It is no surprise that America’s
founding fathers followed the affairs of India’s rulers particularly Tipu
Sultan, both within Indian subcontinent as well as in Europe. In his official correspondence
from Paris, Jefferson provided, and received, regular updates on the reception
of Tipu’s ambassadors at the French court.
The peace treaty signed at Versailles, France in September 1783 did
not diminish the French mistrust of the British, as can be seen from Jefferson’s
letter to Moustier on 17 May 1788. He expressed fears that European powers would fight for supremacy in Western Europe. He listed steps that were taken in this direction by various countries including France, which had sent three regiments to India along with French officers to help Tipu (8). In the same letter, as well as another to John Jay on 23 May 1788, he wrote how France was expecting Tipu’s Embassy (9). In his letter to Thomas Jefferson dated 11 June 1788, Stephen Cathalan, Jr., wrote from Marseilles about the arrival of Tipu Sultan’s ambassadors at Toulan. People at Marseilles expected to see these guests on their way to Paris and that ‘a noble reception’ as well as ‘festivals’ was prepared for them (10). Jefferson, in his letter to Andre Limozin dated 18 June 1788, confirmed the arrival of Tipu’s Ambassador in Toulon on 10th June and that they were accorded with ‘a magnificent reception’ (11). In another letter to Robert Montgomery written on the same day, he reconfirmed news of arrival of Tipu’s embassy. He then continued his updates on the upheaval that happened around France in the run up to the French Revolution (12). He wrote to John Rutledge on 13 July 1788 about the continued internal chaos in France as well as the wait for Tipu Sultan’s ambassadors by the French (13). On 3 Aug. 1788 he wrote to John Jay, again about the continued internal chaos in France. He added that Tipu Sultan’s ambassadors had arrived in Paris ‘in pomp and ceremony’, though he was unaware about the purpose of their visit. He noted the beginning of a military conflict between Russia and Sweden, the later being supported by England and paid for by Turkey. Naval battles between Turkey and Russia also took place, according to him (14). This conflict between Turks and the Russians, and the support the former received from England, could have been an important reason for Tipu’s Embassy to Turkey failing to strike a military alliance.
Jefferson wrote to Mary Barclay, on Friday, 8 August 1788 about the reception of Tipu Sultan’s ambassadors at Versailles that Sunday, which he intended to attend (15). He wrote to Moustier on 9 August 1788 that Tipu’s Ambassadors were to be received at Versailles the next day ‘in great pomp’. In the same letter Jefferson wishes that Madam de Brehan was there to paint the event (16). Madam de Brehan, was the sister of Count de Moustier, French minister to the United States in late 1780s. She accompanied her brother to US where she made several original paintings of George Washington starting 1787 (17). It is not known if Madam de Brehan painted did indeed paint this event, but the same was done by Élisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun. Elisabeth also exhibited her paintings of Tipu's ambassadors at a salon the next year in Paris (18).
The next day he wrote to John Jay that Tipu’s ambassadors were received with unusual pomp by the French King amidst numerous people. He added that, from what he could hear only ‘mutual assurances of good will’ were exchanged and nothing more' (19).
Tipu’s mission
to France failed. One factor being that the country was in the throes of a
revolution that would ultimately throw the King. Around the same time, the
Ottomans’ conflict with Russia continued and its alliance with the British
remained in place. These circumstances may have played a role in Tipu failing
to get support for military alliances with either of the nations against the
British before the onset of the 3rd Anglo Mysore War in 1790. Tipu
suffered a huge setback in this war which ended with him having to cede half of
his richest domains to the British and its chief allies- Nizam of Hyderabad and
the Marathas. Till he paid the crippling war indemnity, two of his sons were
held ransom by the British. But he was not to be subdued. He invited Napoleon
Bonaparte and Shah Zaman of Afghanistan to join hands with him to eliminate the
British. He was perhaps the last of kings in Indian sub-continent to fiercely
pursue a foreign policy independent of British, a fact acknowledged by global powers
of that day and age.
Note on research and sources:
This is an original research based story using documents found on 'Founders Online' website and books from late 18th century. In 2010, the National Archives collaborated with University of Virginia to host historical documents related to Founders of USA on a website. Over the decades and centuries, various sources- family, friends, and estates preserved correspondence and diaries related to these men and their companions. The website 'Founders Online' was launched in 2013 with 120,000 freely available historical documents on these men.The number of documents has now has increased to over 181,000. These are fully annotated and taken from the well-researched ‘Founding Fathers Papers’ projects. Some were translated from other languages, including French. Images are in public domain and have been credited accordingly.
References:
1.
Ali, Sheikh B., ‘Tipu Sultan a Crusader for Change’, 2006
2.
Coakley, Robert W., Conn, Stetson., 'The War of the American Revolution',
Center of Military History, 1974
3.
Moore, Frank., ‘Diary of the American
Revolution’, Volume 2, 1860
4.
Hasan, Mohibbul., History of Tipu Sultan, Aakaar books, Delhi, 1971.
5.
Husain, Iqbal., ‘The Diplomatic Vision of Tipu Sultan’, State and Diplomacy under
Tipu Sultan – Documents and Essays, Edited by Irfan Habib, Tulika Books, New
Delhi, 2001.
6. Freidel, Frank., Sidey, Hugh., “The Presidents
of the United States of America,”. White House Historical Association, 2006.
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1785,” Founders Online, National Archives,
https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Adams/06-17-02-0302. [Original
source: The Adams Papers, Papers of John Adams, vol. 17, April–November
1785, ed. Gregg L. Lint, C. James Taylor, Sara Georgini, Hobson Woodward,
Sara B. Sikes, Amanda A. Mathews, and Sara Martin. Cambridge, MA: Harvard
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8.
“From Thomas Jefferson to Moustier, 17 May 1788,” Founders
Online, National Archives, https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Jefferson/01-13-02-0095.
[Original source: The Papers of Thomas Jefferson, vol. 13, March–7
October 1788, ed. Julian P. Boyd. Princeton: Princeton University Press,
1956, pp. 173–176.]. Downloaded on June 2nd 2020 from this link https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Jefferson/01-13-02-0095
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10. “To Thomas Jefferson
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Archives, https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Jefferson/01-13-02-0157.
[Original source: The Papers of Thomas Jefferson, vol. 13, March–7
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1956, pp. 249–250.]
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https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Jefferson/01-13-02-0164. [Original
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October 1788, ed. Julian P. Boyd. Princeton: Princeton University Press,
1956, p. 255.]
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12. “From Thomas Jefferson
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[Original source: The Papers of Thomas Jefferson, vol. 13, March–7
October 1788, ed. Julian P. Boyd. Princeton: Princeton University Press,
1956, p. 256.]
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13. “From Thomas Jefferson to John
Rutledge, Jr., 13 July 1788,” Founders Online, National
Archives, https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Jefferson/01-13-02-0261.
[Original source: The Papers of Thomas Jefferson, vol. 13, March–7
October 1788, ed. Julian P. Boyd. Princeton: Princeton University Press,
1956, pp. 358–359.]
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14. “From Thomas Jefferson to John Jay,
3 August 1788,” Founders Online, National Archives,
https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Jefferson/01-13-02-0346. [Original
source: The Papers of Thomas Jefferson, vol. 13, March–7
October 1788, ed. Julian P. Boyd. Princeton: Princeton University Press,
1956, pp. 463–469.]
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August 1788,” Founders Online, National Archives,
https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Jefferson/01-13-02-0359. [Original
source: The Papers of Thomas Jefferson, vol. 13, March–7
October 1788, ed. Julian P. Boyd. Princeton: Princeton University Press,
1956, pp. 478–479.]
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16. “From Thomas Jefferson
to Moustier, 9 August 1788,” Founders Online, National
Archives, https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Jefferson/01-13-02-0371.
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October 1788, ed. Julian P. Boyd. Princeton: Princeton University Press,
1956, pp. 491–492.]
Downloaded
on June 2nd 2020 from this link
17.
Johnston, Elizabeth
Bryant., Original portraits of Washington
including statues, monuments, and medals. Boston Osgood and Company,
Boston, 1882
18.
Élisabeth Louise Vigée
Le
Brunhttp://parismuseescollections.paris.fr/fr/musee-carnavalet/oeuvres/projet-retrospectif-pour-la-presentation-des-ouvrages-de-l-academie-au#infos-principales,
Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=76262116 .
Downloaded on July 19th 2020
19. “From Thomas Jefferson
to John Jay, 10 August 1788,” Founders Online, National
Archives, https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Jefferson/01-13-02-0377.
[Original source: The Papers of Thomas Jefferson, vol. 13, March–7
October 1788, ed. Julian P. Boyd. Princeton: Princeton University Press,
1956, pp. 496–497.]
Downloaded on June 2nd 2020 from this link
~~~
This original, primary research based story was presented as part of Tipu Sultan and USA webinar organised by The American Institute of Islamic History and Culture on July 4, 2020 to highlight the connection of Tipu Sultan and his father Haidar Ali to American Revolution and its founding fathers. All the presentations can be viewed here https://youtu.be/Yl1aocVhB6M
©No part of this work can be reproduced without written permission of the author.
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One on most authentic article . A new angle to the Tipu s thinking. This shows how the world was watching the tussle between him and the British. No other Indian king of that era was so farsighted . He was the last man who tried to save India. Also the whole word was watching Karnataka/ Mysore. it was the only kingdome which defeated yhe Britishers at Polioor and Madras
ReplyDeleteVery methodological written. Interesting read.
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