Thug: The True Story Of India's Murderous Cult Read online
‘A gripping read’ Daily Mail
‘Dash peppers his fascinating story with anecdotes and pictures that bring it alive … his account reads like a thriller’ South China Morning Post
‘Fascinating and immensely readable’ Times Literary Supplement
‘Extraordinary … Mike Dash is an amazing storyteller. Apart from the beauty and eloquence of his prose, the book is painstakingly researched’ Deccan Herald
‘Admirable … captures the poignancy and excitement of the macabre’ Independent
‘Storming narrative grounded in historical and political detail … the thrillerish pace is kept up throughout’ Geographical
‘Glorious … Dash has produced a history that is stylistically riveting, thorough in detail and rich in analysis’ Outlook India
‘A strange, sometimes bizarre and often gruesome tale … This is a fine book, well sourced, engagingly written, level-headed and clear-eyed’ Sunday Herald (Glasgow)
THUG
The True Story of India’s
Murderous Cult
MIKE DASH
For my parents, who made so much possible
Table of Contents
Praise
Title Page
Dedication
Table of Contents
AUTHOR’S NOTE
GLOSSARY OF INDIAN WORDS
Maps
Epigraph
PROLOGUE: The Road to Lucknadown
CHAPTER 1: ‘Murdered in Circumstances Which Defied Detection’
CHAPTER 2: ‘An Independent Race of Men’
CHAPTER 3: ‘Awful Secrets’
CHAPTER 4: Mr Halhed’s Revenge
CHAPTER 5: ‘The Infamous System of Thuggee’
CHAPTER 6: Scarf and Sword
CHAPTER 7: Feringeea
CHAPTER 8: Sleeman
CHAPTER 9: ‘A Very Good Remuneration for Murdering a Man’
CHAPTER 10: The Devil’s Banker
CHAPTER 11: Approvers
CHAPTER 12: The Omen of the Owl
CHAPTER 13: ‘A Double Weight of Irons’
CHAPTER 14: Sleeman’s Machine
CHAPTER 15: In Cutcherry
CHAPTER 16: Demon Devotees
CHAPTER 17: The Last Days of Thuggee
CHAPTER 18: The Gallows and the Drop
CHAPTER 19: Across the Black Water
APPENDIX: How Many Dead?
NOTES
Acknowledgements
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX
Plates
About the Author
By the Same Author
Copyright
AUTHOR’S NOTE
This book tells the story of the Thugs of India, from the earliest days described in their own oral histories to the final months of the last surviving members of their gangs. It is based on three years of research among the voluminous records of the East India Company, which still fill literally miles of shelf space in archives in London, Delhi and Bhopal, and incorporates material exhumed from thousands of pages of centuries-old manuscripts – trial transcripts and official correspondence, private letters and legal memoranda – not to mention dozens of volumes of memoirs, travelogue and academic history. I have done my best to ensure that it takes account of the most up-to-date research on the subject.
At this point most readers will probably want to turn to the opening pages of the book itself. But a few words of further comment may be of interest to those with knowledge of the historiography of India.
The pursuit, arrest and conviction of the Thugs caused a huge sensation in the Subcontinent of the 1830s. Their crimes were so monstrous, and the number of their victims so enormous, that they quickly assumed the stature of bogeymen. Several historical accounts of their depredations, based to a large extent on official papers, were published – albeit in relatively obscure journals or in books produced only in small editions. Many of the authors had been involved themselves in the campaign to eradicate ‘Thuggee’, and their works contained, as might be expected, a certain amount of exaggeration and glorification of the parts that the writers had played in the whole affair. The homogeneity of the Thug gangs and of their methods was exaggerated, making the gangs seem more formidable than they had been. The prisoners’ motives were also distorted, and in particular far greater stress was placed on their religion, and their devotion to Kali, the Hindu ‘goddess of destruction’, than had been the case when the Thugs themselves were brought to trial.
These early accounts influenced the way in which Thuggee was perceived, both in India and elsewhere. They were expanded on in a hugely successful contemporary novel entitled Confessions of a Thug (1839)*, written by Meadows Taylor, a British officer based in Hyderabad. Taylor turned his own experiences of the anti-Thug campaign into what was widely acclaimed as the greatest ‘chiller’ of its day, and his protagonist (a murderer named Ameer Ali, whose ‘confession’ was based on the deposition of a real Thug) was more ruthless, more successful and more free from the pangs of conscience than even the killers whose confessions had peppered the first historical accounts. Ali’s ‘guiltless confessions of multiple murder’ were – a reviewer in the Literary Gazette declared – ‘enough to freeze the blood in our veins’; the young Queen Victoria herself was so impatient to read the final chapters that she could not wait for the pages to be bound, asking that the running sheets to be sent directly to her as they came off the press.
A few years later, the French writer Eugene Sue inserted another murderous Thug – this one a cultivated, clever man, lethal as a panther, who haunted the salons of Paris rather than the forest paths of India – into the pages of his novel The Wandering Jew. This book, too, was astonishingly successful, and by the second half of the nineteenth century the popular image of the Thugs themselves had become more or less fixed. They were perceived as a fearsome cult of religiously inspired killers, for whom the act of murder was akin to human sacrifice. The robbery of their victims – which captured Thugs had always acknowledged as their motive for murder – was relegated to the status of a secondary objective, and it was generally accepted that the Thugs formed a hereditary fraternity, devoted to killing solely by strangulation and thus without shedding blood. At about the same time the number of killings assigned to the gangs became exaggerated, a consequence of the misinterpretation of some unpublished manuscripts and of some generous assumptions concerning the antiquity of Thuggee. By the time James Sleeman published his book Thug, Or A Million Murders in 1920, it was commonly accepted that the Thugs had murdered somewhere between 40,000 and 50,000 victims a year over the course of perhaps seven centuries. Thuggee was now described as ‘a hideous religion of murder’.
Books and theses based on these early accounts continued to be published for several decades. (One of the last, by the German historian Gustav Pfirmann, set out a detailed account of the apparent religious beliefs of the gangs.) But, beginning in the 1950s, historians began to reassess the portrayal of the Thugs: Hiralal Gupta, Stewart Gordon, Christopher Bayly and Radhika Singha have all published critiques that portray the murderers as more or less ordinary criminals. For Gupta, the Thugs were a product of British dominion in India – mostly soldiers thrown out of work by the imposition of the Pax Britannica on the Subcontinent. For Gordon, they were marauders hired by minor rajahs and other landholders to generate the revenues required for state building. Bayly and Singha saw them as bandits of no fixed modus operandi, who had been given the label ‘Thug’ by their British captors.
These studies have been followed by those of a new generation of literary critics such as Parama Roy who – ignoring the mass of manuscript material contained in the
East India Company archives, and arbitrarily designating a variety of published texts as a coherent ‘Thug Archive’ – assume that the ‘Thugs’ picked up by the British authorities in India were actually no more than a miscellany of ordinary bandits, thieves, rebels against British rule and innocent men. Thuggee, in the view of this group of revisionists, never existed at all.
The latter view has proved very influential. It is certainly ‘politically correct’, for it turns on their heads all the colonial histories of Thuggee – filled as they are with tales of corrupt, demonic Hindu devotees thwarted by altruistic British officers – and offers in their place a potent criticism of imperialism itself.
The revisionists do make valuable points. It is true, as they suggest, that the thousands of men put on trial as Thugs after 1829 were scarcely the products of ‘organized crime’ in the modern sense. They possessed no central organization; there was no ‘Chief Thug’ and no complex Thug hierarchy; nor were punishments meted out to traitorous stranglers or their immediate families. Captured Thugs admitted to killing in a variety of ways. And it seems certain that their crimes were not committed in the name of any religion. All this does not mean, as the revisionists suggest, that Thuggee cannot be succinctly defined and that it is therefore impossible to distinguish the Thugs themselves from other sorts of highwaymen and bandits. Yet their rejection of the reality of Thuggee rests on precisely this assumption.
Criticisms advanced by Parama Roy and her colleagues betray their lack of familiarity with the primary sources. To suggest that Thuggee was a construct because not all the Thugs’ victims were strangled, because some Thugs shed blood, because not every member of the Thug gangs was descended from a long line of murderers, or because few if any of their crimes were religiously inspired is to ignore the fact that the men captured and tried by the British did indeed possess a unique modus operandi. The distinguishing feature of the Thugs was that they invariably murdered their victims before robbing them. This remarkable habit has no parallel, so far as I am aware, anywhere else in the world, and yet it crops up time and time again in hundreds of depositions and other accounts compiled by dozens of Company officers, travellers and others over a period of well over half a century. In the earliest cases, at least, it is clear that the writers of individual accounts were unaware that very similar reports were being made from elsewhere in India.
This is not all. By the 1830s a huge mass of evidence for the reality of Thuggee had been compiled, not only by British prosecutors, but by the authorities in various independent Indian states who tried and punished Thugs from time to time. It is certainly true that the most important statements against the alleged murderers came from ‘approvers’ – informers who had saved their own lives by turning King’s Evidence. But the officers of the East India Company went to considerable lengths to keep their informants isolated, and to check the testimony they obtained from each new source against that already obtained from other approvers. In addition, a considerable quantity of evidence was collected from the families of Thug victims. Finally, and perhaps most importantly of all, the bodies of nearly a thousand men, women and children killed by various Thug gangs were exhumed from the places where they had been buried – spots successfully identified by approvers who had taken part in the murders themselves. The Thug trials conducted in India between 1829 and 1848 may have been deficient by modern standards, not least in the entire absence of counsel for the defence. But they were not unusual by the standards of the time. Thousands of men have been convicted of murder, in India, in Europe and America, on far less evidence than that assembled against many Thugs.
I am not alone in my conviction that Thuggee was very real. Stewart Gordon accepts the existence of ‘a small core of families, members of which had been murderers for several generations’; Radhika Singha notes that ‘the existence of band lore, a common slang, and a shared knowledge of major attacks does suggest long terms of association, as does the ability to coordinate action in large gangs’. Within the last year or two, moreover, a new generation of historians has returned to the manuscript sources and begun to take issue with the arguments advanced by the revisionists. Acceptance of the Thugs as worthwhile objects of study is thus growing once again. Given the controversial nature of the subject, however, I feel it is important to make my own position on the matter clear.
A note on currency
The prevailing rate of exchange in India in 1830 was two Madras rupees to the pound sterling, and one pound in 1830 was worth the equivalent of £30 today. Thus one rupee in the Thugs’ time would be worth around £15 now, and a lakh of rupees (Rs 100,000) had a value equal to £1,500,000 in 2004.
There were 16 annas to the rupee, four pice to the anna, and thus 64 pice (each worth about 23 modern pence) in a rupee. A Thug willing to kill for eight annas – which some were – received a little over £7 for committing murder.
India was vast enough to support more than a hundred different currencies and coins. Among those most commonly met with by the Thugs were pagodas (gold coins from the Deccan, each worth 4 rupees) and mohurs (each worth 16 rupees).
A note on place names
The approved spelling of Indian place names has altered considerably since the heyday of the Thugs. The current trend is to abandon, or at least modify, British colonial names. Calcutta has become Kolkata, Madras is now Chennai, the Jumna river the Yamuna, and Bombay has changed its name to Mumbai; but the changes have been spotty, and in search of consistency – and also, I confess, because I find the old place names evocative – I have stuck with early nineteenth century Anglo-Indian usage as it appears in the manuscript sources and the gazetteers of the time. For this reason, readers will find themselves in Jubbulpore rather than Jabalpur, crossing the Nerbudda river instead of the Narmada, and traversing not Rajasthan but Rajpootana.
Mike Dash
London, May 2004
*The book was written in the course of a voyage home from India and the completed manuscript was fortunate to survive its passage through quarantine in Malta, where, Taylor recalled, ‘the three volumes were first scored through with knives, then smoked with sulphur till the ink turned pale, and finally delivered to [the author’s cousin] by means of long tongs, through a narrow slit in the grating’.
GLOSSARY OF INDIAN WORDS
adalat court of justice
barkandaze (burkindaz) watchman or guard, armed with a sword and shield or matchlock
bebee (bibi) woman; often applied to the Indian lovers and mistresses of East India Company men
Brahmin member of the highest Hindu caste
cakari military service
chokie (chauki) customs post or guardhouse
chaukidar village watchman
chuprassee messenger, courier – usually a government servant
cutcherry ‘private office’, or courtroom, often in a magistrate’s home, where new cases were brought before the Company authorities and decisions were taken as to which should be referred to trial
dacoit member of an organized gang of robbers
dafadar sergeant; the head of a party of police
darogah head of a police thanah, and the most senior police officer likely to be encountered by an Indian villager
datura poison made from the seeds of the thorn apple, used by Thugs and other robbers to stupefy their victims
dhoti cotton loincloth or wrap for the lower body
ghat either a mountain pass or a river landing stage – frequently, in the latter case, one with a customs post
godna needle used to make tattoos; also tattooing itself
jagir a grant for the maintenance of troops; the term also described the lands generating revenues for this purpose
jemadar native officer, equivalent to an army lieutenant; leader of a Thug gang
khunjur low-caste herdsmen from one of India’s ‘wandering tribes’
lakh, lac one hundred thousand
lathial armed retainer, usually employed by a zamindar to collect rent
s and enforce his decisions
mofussil the countryside, the provinces – as used by the inhabitants of Calcutta, Madras or Bombay, a somewhat derogatory expression
moonshee teacher of Indian languages; the term was also applied to the secretaries or confidential agents of East India Company residents and other senior officers
nujeeb mounted militiaman
nullah gully or watercourse, frequently dry outside the monsoon season
pargana district, comprising anything up to 200 villages, that was the main component of both the Mughal and Company revenue collection systems
pundit learned Brahmin, specifically a student of Sanskrit
rumal scarf or kerchief; the Thugs’ strangling cloth
sepoy, sipahi, sepahee Indian soldier
seth banker
shikari big game hunter
sirdar headman; also the headquarters of district administration
subadar native officer, equivalent to an army captain; senior Thug leader
tank small reservoir or man-made pond, providing drinking water for men and animals and used for washing and sometimes irrigation
thanah regional police station or militia post; an area of jurisdiction under both the Mughals and the Company
zamindar under the Mughals, a local notable with powers to collect taxes and recruit militias, and the duty to improve the lands placed in his charge; under Company rule he became a landholder with obligations to pay rents due on his property
zillah district – one of the major building blocks of the Indian revenue administration
GAZETTEER