History
Indian Navy
Bhāratīya Nau Senā
Indian Navy logo.png
Indian Navy crest
Founded 1612; 406 years ago
Country India
Type Navy
Size 67,228
Part of Indian Armed Forces
Garrison/HQ Integrated Headquarters, Ministry of Defence (Navy)
Motto(s) शं नो वरुणः (Sanskrit)
Sham No Varunaḥ (IAST)
May the Lord of the Water be auspicious unto us (English)
Colours
Navy blue, white
March Jai Bharti (Victory to India)
Anniversaries Navy Day: 4 December
Operational fleet
as of March 2018[show]
Engagements
Major wars and operations[show]
Website indiannavy.nic.in
Harrappa Rig Veda Atharva Veda Varuna Devas Danavas Aditi Kashayapa Chandragupta
Aryabhatta Vijaynagaram Kalinga Portuguese Vasco da Gama Moghuls Shivaji HMS Hindostan
Cornwallis Bombay Dock.
India's maritime history predates the birth of western civilisation.
The world's first tidal dock is believed to have been built at Lothal
around 2300 BC during the Harappan Civilisation, near the present day Mangrol
harbour on the Gujarat coast.
Malan ni pothi. 19th century Kutchi mariner's log bookThe Rig Veda, written
around 2000 BC, credits Varuna with knowledge of the ocean routes commonly
used by ships and describes naval expeditions which used hundred-oared ships to
subdue other kingdoms. There is a reference to Plava, the side wings of a vessel
which give stability under storm conditions: perhaps the precursor of modern stabilisers.
Similarly, the Atharva Veda mentions boats which were spacious, well constructed and comfortable.
In Indian mythology, Varuna was the exalted deity to whom lesser mortals turned for forgiveness of their sins.
It is only later that Indra became known as the King of the Gods, and Varuna was relegated
to become the God of Seas and Rivers. The ocean, recognised as the repository of numerous treasures,
was churned by the Devas and Danavas, the sons of Kashyapa by queens Aditi and Diti, in order
to obtain Amrit, the nectar of immortality. Even today the invocation at the launching
ceremony of a warship is addressed to Aditi.
History
The influence of the sea on Indian kingdoms continued to grow with the passage of time.
North-west India came under the influence of Alexander the Great, who built a harbour
at Patala where the Indus branches into two just before entering the Arabian Sea. His
army returned to Mesopotamia in ships built in Sind. Records show that in the period after
his conquest, Chandragupta Maurya established an Admiralty Division under a Superintendent
of Ships as part of his war office, with a charter including responsibility for navigation
on the seas, oceans, lakes and rivers. History records that Indian ships traded with countries
as far as Java and Sumatra, and available evidence indicates that they were also trading with other
countries in the Pacific and Indian Oceans. Even before Alexander there were references to India
in Greek works, and India had a flourishing trade with Rome. The Roman writer Pliny speaks of Indian
traders carrying away large quantities of gold from Rome, in payment for much-sought exports such as
precious stones, skins, clothes, spices, sandalwood, perfumes, herbs and indigo.
Trade of this volume could not have been conducted over the centuries without appropriate
navigational skills. Two Indian astronomers of repute, Aryabhatta and Varahamihira, having
accurately mapped the positions of celestial bodies, developed a method of computing a ship's
position from the stars. A crude forerunner of the modern magnetic compass was being used around
the fourth or fifth century AD. Called Matsya Yantra, it comprised an iron fish that floated in
a vessel of oil and pointed North.
Between the fifth and tenth centuries AD, the Vijaynagaram and Kalinga kingdoms of southern and
eastern India had established their rule over Malaya, Sumatra and Western Java. The Andaman
and Nicobar Islands then served as an important midway point for trade between the Indian
peninsula and these kingdoms, as also with China. The daily revenue from the eastern regions
in the period 844-848 AD was estimated at 200 maunds (eight tons) of gold. In the period
984-1042 AD, the Chola kings despatched great naval expeditions which occupied parts of Burma,
Malaya and Sumatra, while suppressing piracy by the Sumatran warlords. In 1292 AD,
Marco Polo described Indian ships as " ...built of fir timber, having a sheath of boards
laid over the planking in every part, caulked with oakum and fastened with iron nails.
The bottoms were smeared with a preparation of quicklime and hemp, pounded together and mixed
with oil from a certain tree which is a better material than pith."
History
A fourteenth century description of an Indian ship credits it with a carrying capacity of
over 100 people, giving a fair idea of both the shipbuilding skills and the maritime ability of
seamen who could successfully man such a large vessel. Another account of the early fifteenth
century describes Indian ships as being built in compartments so that even if one part was damaged,
the rest remained intact, enabling the ship to complete her voyage — a forerunner of the moder
n day subdivision of ships into watertight compartments; a concept then totally alien to
the Europeans.
The crest of the second "Cornwallis"
The decline of Indian maritime power commenced in the thirteenth century,andIndian sea power had almost
disappeared when the Portuguese arrived in India. The latter imposed a system of licence for trade, and
set upon all Asian vessels not holding permits from them. A Naval engagement in Bombay Harbour in 1529
resulted in Thana, Bandora and Karanja agreeing to pay tribute to the Portuguese, and a grand naval review
was held by them in 1531. They took complete control of the harbour in 1534 and finally ceded it to the
British in 1662, under a treaty of marriage between Charles II and Infanta Catherine of Braganza.
The piracy by the Portuguese was challenged by the Zamorin of Calicut when Vasco da Gama, after obtaining
permission to trade, refused to pay the customs levy. Two major engagements were fought during this period.
The first, the Battle of Cochin in 1503, clearly revealed the weakness of the Indian navies and indicated to
the Europeans an opportunity for building a naval empire. The second engagement off Diu in 1509 gave the Portuguese
mastery over Indian seas, and laid the foundation of European control over Indian waters for the next 400 years.
Indian maritime interests witnessed a remarkable resurgence in the late seventeenth century, when the Sidis
of Janjira allied with the Moghuls to become a major power on the West Coast. This led to the Maratha King
Shivaji creating his own fleet, commanded by able Admirals like Sidhoji Gujar and later Kanhoji Angre. This
Maratha fleet along with the legend of Kanhoji held sway over the entire Konkan Coast, keeping the English,
Dutch and Portuguese at bay. The death of Angre in 1729, left a vacuum in leadership, and this resulted in
the decline of the Maratha sea power.
Despite the eclipse of Indian kingdoms with the advent of western domination, Indian shipbuilders continued
to hold their own well into the nineteenth century. Ships displacing 800 to 1000 tons were built of teak
British shipbuilders on the River Thames that they protested against the use of Indian-built ships to
many Indian ships were inducted into the Royal Navy, such as HMS Hindostan in 1795, the frigate Cornwallis
in 1800, HMS Camel in 1806 and HMS Ceylon in 1808. HMS Asia carried the flag of Admiral Codrington at the
Battle of Navarino in 1827 — the last major sea battle to be fought entirely under sail.
History
Treaty of Nanking being signed onboard 'Cornwallis' on 29 Aug 1842Two Indian-built ships witnessed
history in the making: the Treaty of Nanking, ceding Hong Kong to the British, was signed on board
HMS Cornwallis in 1842, whilst the national anthem of the United States of America, "The Star Spangled
Banner," was composed by Francis Key on board HMS Minden when the British ships were at war and attempting
to reduce Fort McHenry in Baltimore, Maryland.
Numerous other ships were also constructed, the most famous being HMS Trincomalee, which was launched
on 19 October 1817, carrying 46 guns and displacing 1065 tons. This ship was later renamed Foudroyant,
and is reputed to be the oldest ship afloat built in India.
The Bombay Dock was completed in July 1735 and is in use even today. The period of 4000 years
between Lothal and Bombay Dock, therefore, offers tangible evidence of the seafaring skills
the nation possessed in the days of sail. Thus, in the early seventeenth century, when British
naval ships came to India, they discovered the existence of considerable shipbuilding and repair
skills, and a seafaring people—an ideal combination for supporting a fighting force.
Copyright 2018
This Page is desighned by Amit Geed