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MAHUA DABAR: THE UNSUNG SAGA OF MILLION MUTINIES

The Business Guardian

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June 12, 2025

Mahua Dabar, a forgotten town in Uttar Pradesh, bravely resisted British rule in 1857-only to be erased. Its story demands remembrance, justice, and national recognition through education, preservation, and public awareness initiatives.

- Dr Shah Alam Rana and Dr Shaleen Singh Kolkata

MAHUA DABAR: THE UNSUNG SAGA OF MILLION MUTINIES

In the quiet hinterlands of eastern Uttar Pradesh, between fields tilled for wheat and the Manorama River's silent bends, there once stood a township that dared to say no to empire.

Mahua Dabar was not a grand city or a famed capital-it was a modest weaving town, home to roughly 5,000 people in 1857. But what it lacked in size, it made up for in spirit. And that spirit would prove too costly.

As India's biggest War of Independence erupted in May 1857, rebellion spread rapidly through the Gangetic plains.

Town after town rose in defiance of the East India Company's iron grip. In the heart of Basti district, whispers of uprising quickly became resolve.

The people of Mahua Dabar, along with neighbouring hamlets, took up arms-not as trained soldiers, but as citizens tired of servitude.

On June 10, along the banks of the Manorama, local resistance fighters ambushed a group of British officers namely Lieutenant English,.

Lieutenant Lindesay, Sergeant Edwards, Lieutenant Thomas, Lieutenant Courtley and Ensign Ritchie were murdered by the villagers of Mahua Dabur. en route to Danapur. It was not just retaliation-it was a signal: rural India would no longer be silent. But the cost of speaking out would be catastrophic.

A COMMUNITY SET AFLAME

Within weeks, the British response arrived—brutal, unrelenting. Martial law was declared. On July 3, 1857, cavalry forces under the colonial administration stormed Mahua Dabar. What followed was annihilation. Homes were torched. Fields were trampled. Granaries and looms—the very source of the town's livelihood—burned into ash. Men, women, and children who resisted were executed. Those who fled were hunted down. And then came the cruelest stroke—not just destruction, but deletion.

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