The abolition of Sati in 1829 stands as one of the most significant legal and social milestones in modern Indian history. The practice, which involved the self-immolation or forced burning of a widow on the funeral pyre of her deceased husband, was prevalent among certain upper-caste communities, particularly in the Bengal Presidency and parts of Rajputana. The campaign against Sati marks the first successful instance of an indigenous intellectual movement collaborating with the colonial state to enact social legislation, effectively challenging orthodox religious hegemony.
Key Structural Catalysts for the Abolition
The institutional drive to criminalize Sati was accelerated by specific socio-economic and intellectual shifts in early 19th-century India.
The Rise of the Bengal Intelligentsia
The spread of Western education in Calcutta created a new class of enlightened Indian thinkers who viewed Sati as an indefensible humanitarian crisis and a visible symbol of Indian societal decay.
Colonial Economic Motives
In Bengal, the Dayabhaga school of Hindu law prevailed, which granted widows certain property rights in the absence of male heirs. Reformers and contemporary observers noted that orthodox families frequently coerced widows into Sati to prevent them from inheriting the family property, converting a religious ritual into an economic crime.
Christian Missionary Pressures
Missionaries stationed at Serampore (like William Carey) collected extensive data on the number of Sati incidents and petitioned the British Parliament, creating strong public opinion in England against the East India Company’s policy of non-interference in native religious matters.
The Reformist Crusade: Raja Ram Mohan Roy
Raja Ram Mohan Roy was the central figure in the anti-Sati crusade. His involvement became deeply personal after witnessing the forced immolation of his own sister-in-law, Alakamanjari, in 1811.
The Scriptural Strategy
Roy understood that a purely Western or secular critique would be dismissed by orthodox Hindus. He systematically studied ancient texts and published numerous pamphlets demonstrating that the Upanishads and early Vedic literature did not mandate Sati. He argued that the practice was a later, corrupted distortion designed to subjugate women.
Media Advocacy
Through his vernacular journal, Sambad Kaumudi (established in 1821), Roy published articles detailing the horrors of Sati, presenting dialogues between an advocate and an opponent of the practice to educate the public.
Direct Vigilance
Roy formed vigilante groups that visited the cremation grounds of Calcutta to monitor funerals, talk down families intending to perform Sati, and prevent orthodox priests from binding widows to the pyres.
The Legislative Milestone: Regulation XVII of 1829
Initially, the East India Company hesitated to ban Sati, fearing a violent mutiny among its native sepoys. However, the arrival of Lord William Bentinck as Governor-General in 1828 shifted the administrative stance toward active intervention.
Enactment
On December 4, 1829, Lord William Bentinck promulgated the Bengal Sati Regulation (Regulation XVII of 1829).
Key Legal Provisions
- The regulation declared the practice of Sati, or burning alive of Hindu widows, illegal and punishable by the criminal courts.
- Anyone convicted of aiding and abetting Sati, whether voluntarily or under coercion, was deemed guilty of culpable homicide.
- In cases where violence or drugs were used to overpower the widow, courts were empowered to hand down the death penalty to the perpetrators.
Jurisdiction and Expansion
Initially applicable only to the Bengal Presidency, the regulation was extended with minor modifications to the Madras and Bombay Presidencies in 1830.
Orthodox Resistance and Counter-Mobilization
The abolition of Sati was not accepted unanimously; it triggered a fierce conservative backlash that helped organize the orthodox elements of Hindu society.
The Dharma Sabha
In direct opposition to Raja Ram Mohan Roy’s Brahmo Samaj, Radhakant Deb founded the Dharma Sabha in 1830. The primary objective of this organization was to defend orthodox Hinduism and protect traditional social customs from colonial legislative interference.
Appeal to the Privy Council
The Dharma Sabha gathered signatures and filed a formal petition arguing that Regulation XVII violated the British promise of non-interference in native religious practices. They appealed the ban directly to the Privy Council in London.
The Counter-Defense
Raja Ram Mohan Roy traveled to England in 1830 (partly as an envoy of the Mughal Emperor Akbar II). While there, he presented a counter-petition to the British Parliament on behalf of progressive Indians, successfully convincing the authorities to uphold the ban. The Privy Council officially dismissed the Dharma Sabha’s appeal in 1832.
Quick Reference Fact Sheet for UPSC Prelims
| Dimension | Details |
| Year of Abolition | 1829 (December 4) |
| Legal Nomenclature | Bengal Sati Regulation XVII of 1829 |
| Governor-General | Lord William Bentinck |
| Chief Indian Reformer | Raja Ram Mohan Roy |
| Primary Media Mouthpiece | Sambad Kaumudi (Bengali weekly) |
| Orthodox Opposition Leader | Radhakant Deb (Founder of Dharma Sabha) |
| Legal Appeal Outcome | Privy Council rejected the orthodox appeal in 1832 |
Historical Trivia and Long-term Impact
Pre-1829 Interventions
Bentinck was not the first ruler to attempt a ban. The Portuguese Governor Alphonso de Albuquerque banned Sati in Goa around 1515, the Mughal Emperor Akbar discouraged it throughout his reign, and Peshwa Baji Rao II banned the practice within his immediate dominions in the early 19th century. However, the 1829 regulation was the first comprehensive, legally enforceable codification against it.
Ideological Shift
The successful abolition of Sati established a critical historical precedent in British India: the colonial state possessed the legal authority to override religious scriptures and customs in the interest of modern humanitarianism and the “Rule of Law.” This paved the way for subsequent legislations like the Hindu Widows’ Remarriage Act of 1856.
Last Modified: June 10, 2026