WHAT WAS THE CAUSE OF THE SEPOY REBELLION? A: Gardiner's [PDF]

Mar 1, 2017 - Option 1: DBQ Prompt: What caused the Sepoy Rebellion? Construct a valid ... Sourcing the Documents: Expla

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Idea Transcript


Name: ________________________________________________________________

Per: ______

Date: _____ / _____ / _____

PERIOD 5: INDUSTRIALIZATION AND IMPERIALISM: THE BRITISH IN INDIA

WHAT WAS THE CAUSE OF THE SEPOY REBELLION? A: Gardiner’s English History Source:  What type of document is this? When was it written?  Who wrote it?

Audience:  For what audience did the author write the document?  What was the author’s purpose for writing it?

Claims:  What claims does the author make about the causes of the Sepoy Rebellion?  Does the author use evidence to support his claims?

Evaluate:  Does this source seem trustworthy to you? Explain why or why not?

B: Sita Ram

C: Sayyid Ahmed Khan

Name: _______________________________________________________________ Period 5.2 – British Imperialism in India

Directions:

Per: _____

Date: _____ / _____ / _____

Using the documents provided and your knowledge of world history, please respond to one of the following prompts. Use supporting evidence and details from the documents. Attach this sheet to your response.

Option 1: DBQ Prompt: What caused the Sepoy Rebellion? Construct a valid thesis that responds to the prompt. Support your thesis with evidence from at least two documents. Explain the significance of the point of view of at least two authors in your analysis. Option 2-4: R.A.F.T. Assignment: R.A.F.T. stands for role, audience, format, and topic. Select one of the options below and structure your response around the elements that are listed. Role: Sepoy working for the British army Calcutta. Audience: Family member Format: Letter Topic: The British East India Company has recently taken over the city of Oudh, and Christian missionaries have started to move into the area. Explain what was going through your mind at the time and how this may affect your personal beliefs.

Role: British officer in the British East India Co. Audience: Self Format: Diary Topic: After a year of fighting, the rebellion has ended. You were present at the execution of some of the Sepoy soldiers in Madras. Reflect on why the rebellion occurred, your response to the rebellion, and whether it could have been prevented.

Role: Children’s book author Audience: American children Format: Comic strip Topic: A decade following the rebellion, an American textbook editor asks you to construct a 6-panel comic that depicts the major events of the rebellion. Consider: What was the origin of the conflict? What impacts from the rebellion should students learn about?

DBQ Prompt Rubric: Thesis (1 point) Thesis: Present a thesis that makes a historically defensible claim and responds to all parts of the question. The thesis must consist of one or more sentences located in one place, either in the introduction or the conclusion. Document Analysis (2 points) Use of Documents: Utilize the content of at least two of the documents to support the stated thesis or a relevant argument.  Doc A

 Doc B

 Doc C

Sourcing the Documents: Explain the significance of the author’s point of view, author’s purpose, historical context, and/or audience for at least two documents.  Doc A

 Doc B

 Doc C

R.A.F.T. Assignment Rubric: Scoring Elements Focus Reading/ Research

Conventions

Content Understanding

Advanced

Meets Expectations

Approaches Expectations

Not Yet…

4

3

2

1-0



Addresses all aspects of prompt appropriately with a consistently strong focus and convincing position.



Accurately presents information relevant to all parts of the prompt with effective selection of details from reading materials.



Demonstrates and maintains a welldeveloped command of standard English conventions and cohesion, with few errors. Language and tone consistently appropriate to the audience, purpose, and specific requirements of the prompt.





Integrates relevant and accurate disciplinary content with thorough explanations that demonstrate in-depth understanding.



Addresses prompt appropriately and maintains a clear, steady focus. Provides a generally convincing position.



Presents information from reading materials relevant to the prompt with accuracy and sufficient detail.



Demonstrates a command of standard English conventions and cohesion, with few errors. Response includes language and tone appropriate to the audience, purpose, and specific requirements of the prompt.





Accurately presents disciplinary content relevant to the prompt with sufficient explanations that demonstrate understanding.



Addresses prompt appropriately and establishes a position, but focus is uneven.



Presents information from reading materials relevant to the purpose of the prompt with minor lapses in accuracy or completeness.



Demonstrates an uneven command of standard English conventions and cohesion. Uses language and tone with some inaccurate, inappropriate, or uneven features.





Briefly notes disciplinary content relevant to the prompt; shows basic or uneven understanding of content; minor errors in explanation.



Attempts to address prompt, but lacks focus or is off-task.



Attempts to present information in response to the prompt, but lacks connections or relevance to the purpose of the prompt.



Attempts to demonstrate standard English conventions, but lacks cohesion and control of grammar, usage, and mechanics.



Attempts to include disciplinary content in argument, but understanding of content is weak; content is irrelevant, inappropriate, or inaccurate.

Document A: Gardiner’s English History Samuel Rawson Gardiner (1829-1902) was an English historian and a professor of history at King’s College in London. He wrote several books on English history. The excerpt below comes from a book he wrote for young students.

The Indian Mutiny of 1857 The religion of the Hindus, who form a great part of the natives in India, teaches many things which seem very strange to Englishmen. Among other things they are taught that they will be defiled if they eat any part of a cow. By this defilement they will meet with much contempt from their fellows, and will suffer much after death in another world. The bulk of the army in India was composed of Hindus. It happened that an improved rifle had lately been invented for the use of the soldiers, and that the cartridges used in this rifle needed to be greased so they could be rammed down easily into the barrel. The men believed that the grease was made of the fat of cows, though this was not really the case. There was, therefore, much suspicion and angry feeling among the native soldiers, and when ignorant men are suspicious and angry they are likely to break out into deeds of unreasoning fury. Source: Gardiner’s English History for Schools, an English textbook edited for American students, 1881.

defiled: made dirty, spoiled, ruined contempt: disrespect cartridge: ammunition for a gun or rifle fury: extreme anger

Document B: Sita Ram Sita Ram was a sepoy who remained loyal to the British. Yet even he had his "doubts" about them. The following is an excerpt from memoirs he wrote sometime in the 1860s about the rebellion.

It chanced that about this time the English Government sent parties of men from each regiment to different garrisons for instruction in the use of the new rifle. These men performed the new drill for some time until a report got about, by some means or other, that the cartridges used for these new rifles were greased with the fat of cows and pigs. The men from our regiment wrote to others in the regiment telling them of this, and there was soon excitement in every regiment. Some men pointed out that in forty years of service nothing had ever been done by the English Government to insult their religion…. Interested parties were quick to point out that the great aim of the English was to turn us all into Christians and they had therefore introduced the cartridge in order to bring this about, since both Muslims and Hindus would be defiled by using it.… I had never known the English to interfere with our religion or our caste in all the years since I had been a soldier, but I was nevertheless filled with doubt. . . . I had also remarked the increase in Missionaries during recent years, who stood up in the streets of our cities and told the people that their cherished religion was all false, and who exhorted them to become Christians. Source: Sita Ram, From Sepoy to Subedar: Being the Life Adventures of Subedar Sita Ram, A Native Officer in the Bengal Army, Written and Related by Himself.

Document C: Sayyid Ahmed Khan Sayyid Ahmed Khan was a Muslim scholar who worked as a legal expert for the British East India Company. At the time of the uprising, he was loyal to the British. Later, he came to blame several British policies and mistakes for the uprising. He explained his views in a book he first published in 1858. The book was translated into English in an edition published in 1873. This passage is from the English translation:

The evils which resulted to India from the non-admission of natives into the Legislative Council of India were various. . . . The people had no means of protesting against what they might feel to be a foolish measure. . . . Whatever law was passed was misunderstood by men who had no share in the framing of it. At length the Indians fell into the habit of thinking that all the laws were passed with a view to degrade and ruin them. . . . Although the intentions of Government were excellent, there was no man who could convince the people of it; no one was at hand to correct the errors which [the government] had adopted. And why? Because there was not one of their own number among the members of the Legislative Council. Had there been, these evils that had happened to us, would have been avoided. There is not the smallest doubt that all men whether ignorant or well informed, whether high or low, felt a firm conviction that the English Government was bent on interfering with their religion and with their old established customs. They believed that Government intended to force the Christian Religion and foreign customs upon Hindu and Muslim alike. Source: Sayyid Ahmed Khan, The Causes of the Indian Revolt. Medical Hall Press, 1873.

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