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The Residency system has its origins in the system of subsidiary alliances devised by the British

after the Battle of Plassey in 1757, to secure Bengal from attack by deploying East India
Company troops of the Bengal Army within friendly Native States.[1] Through this system, the Indian
Princes of these Native States were assured of protection from internal and external aggression,
through deployment of company troops. In return they had to pay for the maintenance of those
troops and also accept a British Resident in their court. The Resident was a senior British official
posted in the capital of these Princely States, technically a diplomat but also responsible for keeping
the ruler to his alliance.[2] This was seen as a system of indirect rule that was carefully controlled by
the British Resident. His role (and all were men) included advising in governance, intervening in
succession disputes, and ensuring that the States did not maintain military forces other than for
internal policing or else form diplomatic alliances with other States.[2][3] The Residents attempted to
modernize these Native States through promotion of European notions of progressive government.[2]

The first Native States to enter such subsidiary alliances included Arcot, Oudh,
and Hyderabad.[2] Before the Rebellion of 1857, the role of the British Resident in Delhi was more
important than that of other Residents, because of the tension that existed between the
decliningMughal Empire and the emerging power of the East India Company.[4] After the
establishment of Crown rule of British India in 1858, the indigenous States ruled by the Indian
princes retained their internal autonomy in terms of political and administrative control, while their
external relations and defence became the responsibility of the Crown. An area over two-fifths of
the Indian subcontinent was administered by native princes,[5] although nothing like such a high
proportion in terms of population.

The continuation of Princely rule allowed the British to concentrate their resources on the more
economically significant areas under their direct control and also obscured the effective loss of
independence of these States in their external relations.[2]

The Resident was a permanent reminder of the subsidiary relationship between the indigenous ruler
and the European power.[3] The physical manifestation of this was the Residency itself, which was a
complex of buildings and land modified according to the aesthetic values of the suzerain power. The
Residency was a symbol of power because of its size and position within the prince's capital.[6] In
many instances, the local prince even paid for the erection of these Residencies, as a gesture of his
support for and allegiance to the British. The Nawab of Oudh, one of the richest native princes, paid
for and erected a splendid Residency in Lucknow as a part of a wider programme of civic
improvements.[5]

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