RANI CHENNAMMA - INTERNATIONAL News: How Rani Chennamma’s revolt against the British inspired a national campaign for women’s rights

RANI
CHENNAMMA - INTERNATIONAL

News:
How Rani Chennamma’s
revolt against the British inspired a national campaign for women’s rights

 

What's
in the news?

      
Recently, several social groups across the
country organized a national campaign Naanoo Rani Chennamma (I am Rani
Chennamma too) to commemorate 200 years of Rani Chennamma’s rebellion against
the British East India Company.

 

Rani
Chennamma:

      
Kittur
Chennamma (1778 – 1829)
was an Indian freedom fighter and
Rani of Kittur, a former princely state in Karnataka.

      
She is one of the first women freedom
fighters to have fought against British
rule in India.

      
She became queen of Kittur (now in
Karnataka) when she married Raja Mallasarja of the Desai family.

      
She led
an armed force against the British East India Company in 1824 in defiance of
the doctrine of lapse
in an attempt to maintain Indian control over the
region.

      
She was defeated in the third war and was imprisoned at Bailhongal Fort
where she died in 1829.

 

Kittur
Utsav:

      
Chennamma's legacy and first victory are
still commemorated in Kittur, during the Kittur Utsava annually held on 22–24 October.

      
In 2007 a statue of Rani Chennamma was
unveiled at the Indian Parliament Complex by Pratibha Patil, the first woman
President of India. Chennamma was born in Kakati, a small village in today’s
Belagavi district of Karnataka.

 

Kittur
Rebellion:

      
John
Thackery
, the British official at Dharwad, launched an attack
on Kittur in October 1824.

      
In this first battle British forces lost
heavily and the Collector and political agent, St. John Thackeray was killed by
the Kitturu forces.

      
Two British officers, Sir Walter Elliot
and Mr. Stevenson, were also taken as hostages.

      
However, the British army again attacked
the Kittur Fort and captured it.













































      
Rani Chennamma and her family were
imprisoned and jailed at the fort in Bailhongal, where she died in 1829.