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Impeachment of Warren Hastings

The impeachment of Warren Hastings, the first governor-general of the Bengal Presidency, was attempted between 1787 and 1795 in the Parliament of Great Britain. Hastings was accused of misconduct during his time in Calcutta, particularly relating to mismanagement and personal corruption. The impeachment prosecution was led by Edmund Burke and became a wider debate about the role of the East India Company and the expanding empire in India. According to historian Mithi Mukherjee, the impeachment trial became the site of a debate between two radically opposed visions of empire—one represented by Hastings, based on ideas of absolute power and conquest in pursuit of the exclusive national interests of the colonizer, versus one represented by Burke, of sovereignty based on a recognition of the rights of the colonized.[1]

The trial did not sit continuously and the case dragged on for seven years. When the eventual verdict was given Hastings was overwhelmingly acquitted. It has been described as "probably the British Isles' most famous, certainly the longest, political trial".[2]

Background[edit]

Appointment[edit]

Born in 1732, Warren Hastings spent much of his adult life in India after first travelling out as a clerk of the East India Company in 1750. Hastings developed a reputation as an "Indian" who sought to use traditional Indian methods of governance to run British India rather than the policy of importing European-style law, government and culture favoured by many of his colleagues and representatives of other colonial powers in India. After working his way through the ranks of the Company he was appointed in 1773 as governor general, a new position that had been created by the North government in order to improve the running of British India. The old structure of rule had come under strain as the company's holdings had expanded in recent decades from isolated trading posts to large swathes of territory and population.[3]


The powers of the governor general were balanced out by the establishment of a Calcutta Council which had the authority to veto his decisions. Hastings spent much of his time in office marshalling his own supporters on the Council in an effort to avoid being outvoted.

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Mukherjee, Mithi. "Justice, War, and the Imperium: India and Britain in Edmund Burke's Prosecutorial Speeches in the Impeachment Trial of Warren Hastings." Law and History Review 23.3 (2005): 589-630 . Also see Mukherjee, India in the Shadows of Empire: A Legal and Political History (New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2010).

online

Brian Smith. "Edmund Burke, the Warren Hastings trial, and the moral dimension of corruption." Polity 40.1 (2008): 70-94 .

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Patrick Turnbull (September 1975). . New English Library. ISBN 978-0-450-02588-4.

Warren Hastings

Peter Whiteley (1996). . Continuum. ISBN 978-1-85285-145-3.

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Wickwire, Franklin B.; Wickwire, Mary (April 1980). . University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-1387-4.

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Warren Hastings; Edmund Burke (1786). . London: J. Debrett.

Articles of Charge of High Crimes and Misdemeanors, Against Warren Hastings, Esq., Late Governor General of Bengal: Presented to the House of Commons, in the Months of April and May 1786

Warren Hastings (1796). . London: J. Debrett.

The History of the Trial of Warren Hastings, Esq. Late Governor-General of Bengal, Before the High Court of Parliament in Westminster-Hall: On an Impeachment by the Commons of Great-Britain, for High Crimes and Misdemeanors : Containing the Whole of the Proceedings and Debates in Both Houses of Parliament, Relating to that Celebrated Prosecution, from Feb. 7, 1786, Until His Acquittal, April 23, 1795

John Logan (1788). London: John Stockdale.

A Review of the Principal Charges Against Warren Hastings Esquire, Late Governor General of Bengal.

Warren Hastings (1788). . London: John Murray.

The answer of Warren Hastings to the Articles: Delivered at the bar of the house of Peers, on Nov. 28, 1787

Joseph Gurney; Warren Hastings (1859). E. A. Bond (ed.). . Vol. I. London: Longman.

Speeches of the managers and counsel in the trial of Warren Hastings

Joseph Gurney; Warren Hastings (1860). E. A. Bond (ed.). . Vol. II. London: Longman.

Speeches of the managers and counsel in the trial of Warren Hastings

Joseph Gurney; Warren Hastings (1860). E. A. Bond (ed.). . Vol. III. London: Longman.

Speeches of the managers and counsel in the trial of Warren Hastings

Joseph Gurney; Warren Hastings (1861). E. A. Bond (ed.). . Vol. IV. London: Longman.

Speeches of the managers and counsel in the trial of Warren Hastings