Who introduced Civil Service in India ?
Lord Cornwallis
Lord Cornwallis started the Civil
Service in Indian to effectively administer British territories in
India. He introduced strict regulations for the officials, raised their
salaries and linked promotion to seniority. These measures made the
Civil Service a coveted profession. To train young civil servants, the
Fort William College was set up at Calcutta I AD 1801. Another
institution that trained them was the East India College in England.
Initially, the civil servants came through nomination of the Directors
of the East India Company. In AD 1853, this system ended and all
appointments began to be made through a competitive examination.
Indians were not allowed to enter the
higher levels of the Civil Service. All posts worth more than £ 500 a
year in salary were reserved for the Britishers. Indians could only get
selected to subordinate posts.
The civil servants were expected to
perform many duties. British possessions in India were divided into
districts. Each district had three main officials- the collector to
supervise revenue collection and the overall administration of the
district, the magistrate who maintained law and order and the judge who
administered justice. All of them thought only of furthering British
interests in India and never involved the Indians in the task of
administration.
No comments:
Post a Comment