soldires were unhappy because of crossing the sea they were unhappy to cross the sea because if they cross the sea they will loss their religion as britishers were christians they came to india by crossing the sea the brahmins didn't allow soldiers to cross it but the britishers forced to do that
mahatma gaundi
the british treated Indians like inferior humans. british building had boards saying "dogs and Indians not allowed". during the british rule an estmated 40 million Indians died due to massacres and famines. as a mater of fact: regions longest under british rule were the poorest regions in India.
The artisan was ruined by foreign competition. The factory workers received very low wages. The british made no attempt to encourage agriculture and industry. They treated India as a source from where raw materials could be obtained cheaply and as a market which could absorb British goods. Employment opportunities were limited for the educated Indians. The steady drain of India's wealth increased poverty in India. In trains, some compartments were reserved for white people and Indians were not allowed in them. All these factors resulted in growing opposition to British rule.
Tyler Naquin was the one who was drafted for the Rule 4 Draft for the Cleveland Indians in 2012.
it was easier for rich indians to live under british rule
Indians were under the control of the British . we worked under them as a slave.
To escape British rule. They went north as they were unhappy with British rule that was imposed at the cape. Your welcome
The Indians disapproved of British rule in the late nineteenth century, as they wanted to be independent.
poo r
why were Texans unhappy with Mexicans rule
Answer this question… It made Indians second-class citizens in their own country.
Yes, Gandhi did encourage Indians to NOT buy British goods because it was too expensive in the olden days when India was under the British rule.
he used passive resistance
The foreign rule angered many Indians who wanted independence. The British had not treated the Indians as equals.
The British colonial rule over India was marked by the looting of natural resources, the mistreatment of the local people and the the collapse of the Indigenous Indian Industries.
The Indian farmers were forced to grow Indigo and Cotton crops and were also paid less