- Indian March of Paul
The Indian March of Paul was a secret project of a planned allied Russo-French expedition against the British dominions in
India . It was scuttled following the assassination ofEmperor Paul I of Russia in March1801 .Russia and Britain were allied during the
Revolutionary Wars of the1790s . The failure of their joint invasion of theNetherlands in 1799 precipitated a change in attitudes. Britain's occupation ofMalta in October 1800 incensed Emperor Paul in his capacity ofGrand Master of the Knights Hospitaller . He hastily broke with Britain and allied himself withNapoleon who came up with an extravagant plan of a Russo-French expedition to attack the British possessions in India.Secret plans
The secret plan of the expedition, as preserved in the Russian archives, envisaged the joint operations of two
infantry corps, one French (withartillery support) and one Russian. Each infantry corps had 35,000 men, the total force thus containing 70,000 men, plus artillery and a large contingent of Cossack cavalry.Napoleon insisted that the command of the French corps be entrusted to General
André Masséna . The route of advance schedule for the French corps started in May 1801 via theDanube and theBlack Sea through southern Russia viaTaganrog ,Tsaritsyn , andAstrakhan .At the
Volga estuary , the French were supposed to be joined by Russian forces. Then the joint Russo-French corps was to cross theCaspian Sea and land at theIran ian port ofAstrabad . The whole trip fromFrance to Astrabad was calculated to take eighty days. Further advance would take another fifty days viaHerat andKandahar before reaching the main areas of India in September of the same year.The Indian March was designed to look very much like Napoleon's expedition to Egypt, with engineers, painters and scientists taking part. Also meticulously devised (one can see in it Paul's passion for details) was the public relations side of the Indian expedition. For example, the instructions for trade with the local peoples included the recommendation to sell the cloths "of the colorings most liked by the Asians". The expeditionary force was to have in stock a reserve of fireworks for festive illuminations.
Outcome
In January 1801, the
Don Cossack ataman Vasily Orlov received orders for hiscavalry force to march toward India. The route of advance schedule was to reach the steppe fort ofOrenburg in a month, and from there to move via Bukhara and Khiva to theIndus River . Soon after receiving these orders, the 20,000-strong Cossack force started for the Kazakhsteppe s.In his book about
the Great Game ,Peter Hopkirk narrates that Paul had not been able to obtain a detailed map of India until the Cossacks' departure from Orenburg. He quotes the Tsar as instructing Orlov: "My maps only go as far as Khiva and the RiverOxus . Beyond these points it is your affair to gain information about the possessions of the English, and the condition of the native population subject to their rule".When Orlov's modest Cossack contingent advanced as far south as the
Aral Sea , they received intelligence of the Emperor's assassination. The Indian March was brought to a halt, and before long the Cossacks were commanded to retreat. It is tempting to speculate that the Pahlen plot was triggered by the Indian adventure, given that the high-placed Russian officials did not approve of it and their conspiracy was financed by British diplomacy. There is no evidence to confirm this conjecture.Assessment
The British public learned about the incident years later, but it firmly imprinted on the popular consciousness, contributing to feelings of mutual suspicion and distrust associated with
the Great Game . Hugh Seton-Watson observes that "the grotesque plan had no military significance, but at least showed its author's state of mind". [Seton-Watson, Hugh. "The Russian Empire, 1801-1917." Oxford University Press, 1967. Page 67.] This assessment is echoed by Hopkirk who remarks that "no serious thought or study has been given to this wild adventure".Hopkirk, Peter. "The Great Game: The Struggle for Empire in Central Asia." ISBN 1568360223. Page 29.]ee also
*
Alexander Bekovich-Cherkassky - for the Indian March of Peter I
*Valerian Zubov - for the Indian March of Catherine IIReferences
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.