The Indian legal system underwent significant transformation under British colonial rule. Rather than reforming the existing indigenous legal traditions, the British gradually replaced them with a new legal framework designed primarily to serve colonial interests. The judiciary emerged as one of the most powerful institutions through which the colonial administration exercised authority and implemented laws suited to its political and economic objectives. The princely state of Cochin provides a significant case study for examining this transformation. The legal history of Cochin can be broadly divided into three phases: the pre-British era based on caste and customary laws, the period of legal coexistence marked by pluralism, and the colonial phase characterized by codification and institutionalized courts. Through treaties with the British East India Company and administrative reforms under figures like Colonel Munro, the judicial system in Cochin gradually evolved into a colonial legal structure. This paper analyses the process of judicialization in Cochin between the early nineteenth and mid-twentieth centuries and highlights how colonial legal institutions reshaped governance, society, and emerging political consciousness.
Dr. Jose Kuriakose (Mon,) studied this question.