1849 Treaty of Lahore gave Kohinoor to Queen, Punjab and Kashmir to the East India Company

TNN Bureau. Updated: 12/16/2016 12:43:07 AM Front Page

The Jammu-Kashmir Connection

JAMMU: A new book, which is a work of intensive research and has busted many myths about the famed Kahinoor diamond, has brought to fore the precious stone’s Kashmir connection.
In noted historian and writer William Dalrymple’s “Kohinoor: The Story of the World's Most Infamous Diamond”, the author has trashed the statement submitted in the Supreme Court earlier this year by Solicitor General of India Ranjit Kumar, according to which the Kohinoor was a "gift" by Maharaja Ranjit Singh to the East India Company.
"It was given in the 'Treaty of Lahore' in 1849, when Ranjit Singh would have been dead ten years. So he couldn't have given it. It was the spoils of the conquest.
"'Treaty of Lahore' did two things: it gave Kohinoor to Queen Victoria and it gave Punjab and Kashmir to the East India Company," he asserted.
Talking about whether India should reclaim the coveted gem, Dalrymple said he did not know the answer as going back into the history to ascertain the rightful owner would be "problematic".
Dalrymple argues that colonial Britain "consciously" made it into a "unique icon" and the "gem of gems", something that has now turned against them, with most Indians associating it with a symbol of "colonial loot".
"Kohinoor becoming 'the gem of gems' was British creation.
Bigging up their conquest, they consciously put it on show at the Great Exhibition of 1851, and made it into a symbol of what they had taken from India. That has now turned against the British themselves," he told PTI in an interview.
The Scottish writer notes that there were diamonds like the Dari-a-Nur or the Orlov, which were bigger in size than the Kohinoor, but have never been called for return.
"There were other bigger Mughal diamonds - the Dari-a-Nur which was taken by Nadir Shah to Iran and the Orlov, now in Kremlin, also taken by Nadir Shah and later passed on to Russia. Why is no one calling their return? The answer is that the Great Exhibition made the Kohinoor the most famous diamond in the world," he said.
Published by Juggernaut Books, the book which Dalrymple has co-authored with noted UK-based Indian journalist Anita Anand, tells the story of how Kohinoor came to be regarded as the "supreme gem".
It unearths "new" information about the diamond as it moves from the Mughal courts to Persia to Afghanistan; from Maharaja Ranjit Singh's durbar in Punjab to the Queen of England's Crown.
"It is a very interesting history. We try to trace in the book how it became an icon, when it was never the most famous diamond. When it wasn't the biggest diamond. When the Mughals didn't refer to it anywhere in their writings. Nor did any of the Sultanates," he said.
He points out that the Kohinoor was certainly an item of colonial loot but dismissed the popular lores doing the rounds on the Internet about its plunder and transfers as, "simply fantasy".
He said the commonly believed narrative that the Khilijis looted it before passing it on to the Lodhis, who passed it on to the Tughlaks, who in turn passed it on to the Mughals until Muhammad Shah Rangila hid it in his turban and ended up swapping turbans with Nadir Shah, was devoid of any "proof".
Talking about whether India should reclaim the coveted gem, Dalrymple said he did not know the answer as going back into the history to ascertain the rightful owner would be "problematic".
"India too, under the Cholas, invaded Sri Lanka. They broke all the idols in Anuradhapura, they took all the gems back to Tamil Nadu. Should Sri Lanka start suing India? When you start going endlessly into the distant history, it's problematic.
"Everyone has a view. The Indians think it should be theirs. So do the Pakistanis and the British. We (authors) are doing a neutral job. Putting facts as neutrally as we can," he said.


Comment on this Story

Search Fom Archive in This Category