Doctrine of Lapse and Annexation Policy
The Doctrine of Lapse was a formal annexation principle articulated under Governor-General Lord Dalhousie (1848–56), allowing the Company to annex a princely state if the ruler died without a natural male heir and adoption was not recognized for succession to sovereignty.
The broader Annexation Policy combined multiple legal-constitutional grounds—misgovernment, treaty breach, forfeiture, escheat, and lapse—to consolidate Company rule into a more territorially contiguous, administratively uniform empire in the decade before 1857.
Early Company Expansion and Succession Dynamics (Pre-1848)
- Mughal and Maratha Antecedents: In pre-colonial India, succession in princely states often involved adoption, with adoptions generally accepted as legitimate for both private ....
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Indian History
- 1 Feudal Polity in Early Medieval India
- 2 Gupta Kings: Chandragupta I, Samudragupta & Vikramaditya
- 3 Decentralized Governance in the Gupta Age
- 4 Mauryan Kings: Chandragupta and Ashoka
- 5 Delhi Sultanate: Dynasties & Rulers
- 6 Delhi Sultanate: Political System & Governance
- 7 Tribal Political Organisation in Early Vedic Period
- 8 Rise of Monarchical Power in Mahajanapadas
- 9 Centralized Monarchy during Mauryan Empire
- 10 Evolution of the Indian Civil Service (ICS) During the British Era

