The Bolarum Cantonment Mutiny · September 21, 1855 The forerunner of 1857. September 20: The order that banned Muharram on a Sunday 21 September 1855: The Nizam's cavalry attacked their British commander Colin Mackenzie, after he banned Muharram on a Sunday · 150-200 mutineers. ⚔️ "The Bolarum Mutiny was one of the biggest revolts against the British in British India" — Prof. KSS Seshan Twenty months before the Great Uprising of 1857 shook British India, an explosion of sepoy rage occurred in the quiet cantonment of Bolarum (Secunderabad) . On September 20, 1855 , Brigadier Colin Mackenzie , the Scottish-born Commander of the Nizam's 10,000-strong cavalry, prohibited the traditional Muharram procession after learning that the festival fell on a Sunday. He "didn't want the noise to disturb him." Enraged, on September 21, 1855 , about 150-200 cavalrymen marched to his residence and attacked him. Mac...
Turrebaz Khan · The Rohilla Who Stormed the Residency July 17, 1857 · 500 rebels · A Jamedar’s revolt · “Turum Khan” — a name synonymous with courage in Dakhani Urdu Begum Bazar · Aurangabad Cantonment · Moulvi Ala-ud-din · Siege of the Residency · Kala Pani sentence · Escape · Betrayed · Public hanging at Sultan Bazaar · The granite pillar with four elephants ⚔️ “He put Hyderabad on the map of India’s First War of Independence” When the Great Uprising of 1857 swept across North India, the Nizam of Hyderabad remained “faithful” to the British. But the people of Hyderabad did not. And no one exemplified that defiance more than Turrebaz Khan — a Rohilla Pathan warrior whose name, to this day, is synonymous with courage and valour in the Dakhani Urdu of Hyderabad. Known affectionately as “Turum Khan,” he led a band of 500 Rohillas and Arabs in a dramatic assault on the British Residency on July 17, 1857 . The attack failed. Turrebaz Khan was ...