The Tyrant Diaries
From the memoirs of a French adventurer who
served at Tipu’s court
In December 8, 1988, an old trunk was
discovered in the attic of the house of Elaine de la Taille Tretinville, who
died at 91 in her 14th arrondissement flat in Paris. She was a descendant
of the family of Les Ripaud Montaudeverts. Among the contents was a manuscript
in the hand of the most famous of the Montaudeverts—Francois Fidele Ripaud de
Montaudevert. It starts with these words (in old French): “I, Francois Ripaud,
am old today, but I want to tell you the true story of Tipu Sultan.”
Born in Saffre, northwestern France, in a
middle-class family, Ripaud enrolled as a sailor, aged 11, on the Le Palmier. After many adventures, he settled in
Mauritius, where he married and had two children. In 1797, hearing of Le Grand
Tipu Sultan, he sailed from Mauritius (then called Ile de France) to Mangalore
and sought a meeting with the sultan, promising “to raise a large force in Mauritius
and put it at Tipu’s disposal”. Tipu, who had an early connection with the
French, having been instructed in warfare by French officers in the employ of
his father, jumped at the idea and gave Ripaud letters of credential. On August
19, 1798, Ripaud came back to Mauritius and made a proclamation seeking
volunteers for an “expedition to travel to Mysore to assist Tipu in his
resistance to British encroachment in south India”. It must be noted that, two
months earlier, Napoleon had invaded Egypt and dreamt of establishing a
junction with India against the British, so the governor of Mauritius received
instructions to collaborate and Ripaud was able to sail to Mangalore with a
shipload of French soldiers who were welcomed there like heroes.
Life at Tipu’s court was a dream for our
hardy adventurer, but he began to have some misgivings. In his diary entry of
January 14, 1799, he writes: “I’m disturbed by Tipu Sultan’s treatment of these
most gentle souls, the Hindus. During the siege of Mangalore, Tipu’s soldiers
daily exposed the heads of many innocent Brahmins within sight from the fort
for the Zamorin and his Hindu followers to see.” Even so, he cast his doubts
aside and put up for Tipu’s benefit a demonstration of the egalitarian
political ideas of France: in 1799, a French paper entitled ‘Proceedings of a
Jacobin Club formed at Seringapatnam by the French Soldiers in the Corps
Commanded by Francois Ripaud’ was found in Tipu’s palace. It listed 59
Frenchmen in the pay of “citizen Tipu” and described a “primary assembly” of
May 5, 1797, to elect a president (Ripaud) and other office-bearers. The
‘Rights of Man’ were proclaimed and the sultan formally received a small
delegation from the club.
After this interval, we find another diary
entry in which Ripaud is appalled at what he witnessed in Calicut (Kozhikode):
“Most of the Hindu men and women were hanged...first mothers were hanged with
their children tied to their necks. That barbarian Tipu Sultan tied the naked
Christians and Hindus to the legs of elephants and made the elephants move
around till the bodies of the helpless victims were torn to pieces.
Temples and churches were ordered to be burned down, desecrated and destroyed.
Christian and Hindu women were forced to marry Mohammedans, and similarly,
their men (after conversion to Islam) were forced to marry Mohammedan women.
Christians who refused to be honoured with Islam were ordered to be killed by
hanging immediately.” These events were corroborated by Father Bartholomew, a
famous Portuguese traveller, in his memoir, Voyage to
East Indies.
Another diary entry of Ripaud says: “To
show his ardent devotion and steadfast faith in the Mohammedan religion, Tipu
Sultan found Kozhikode to be the most suitable place. Kozhikode was then a
centre of Brahmins and had over 7,000 Brahmin families living there. Over 2,000
Brahmin families perished as a result of Tipu Sultan’s Islamic cruelties. He
did not spare even women and children.”
A disgusted Ripaud left Seringapatnam and
went back to France, where he obtained captainship of a fine fighting ship, the Shapho.On February 23, 1814, fighting an English
frigate, Ripaud had his arm ripped off by a cannon ball. He died the same
evening. Even the British, his arch enemies, gave a 21-cannon salute to this
brave adventurer, once Tipu Sultan’s ‘Great White Hope’.
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