In May 1817, the East India Company posted judges to Khurda to sentence the captured rebels. The sentences handed out included
execution,
penal transportation and imprisonment. Between 1818 and 1826, Company troops undertook several operations in the jungles of Khurda to capture or kill rebels who had managed to escape. The leader of the remaining band of rebels, Jagabandhu, surrendered to the East India Company in 1825 and lived as their prisoner in Cuttack until 1829, when he died. Jagabandhu had offered to reinstate Raja Mukunda Deva – whom the Company had dethroned in 1804 and exiled to Puri – as the Raja of Khurda, however Raja of Khurda rebuked Jagabandhu and compelled him to apologise and surrender to the British and accept a pension. The East India Company also appointed a commission to inquire into the causes of the rebellion. The Company set about reorienting their administration under the newly appointed Commissioner of Cuttack, Robert Ker, to ensure such a rebellion would not repeat itself. These attempts remained halfhearted at best, with the Company authorities viewing Odisha largely as a convenient land-based link between their
presidencies of Madras and
Bengal. Further Odia resistance continued in campaigns against Company rule in Tapanga in 1827 and involvement in the Banapur Rebellion of 1835. Other major uprisings against the rule of the East India Company were followed by two separate Kandha uprisings under Dora Bisoi and Chakra Bisoi, Kol rebellion, the Sambalpur uprising led by
Veer Surendra Sai and
Gond Sardars, Bhuyan uprising under Dharanidhar Naik, etc. The revenue policies of the Company in Odisha, which was a major cause of discontent to the local population, remained unchanged. In October 2017, the
Odisha government formally proposed union government to recognize the Paika Rebellion as first Indian war of independence, replacing the
Indian Rebellion of 1857. In Winter Session of Parliament of 2021, Union Culture Minister
G Kishan Reddy through a written reply to a question by BJD MP
Prashanta Nanda in the Rajya Sabha, said the Paika rebellion cannot be called the First War of Independence. However the minister declared that it would now be included in the curriculum of Class VIII history textbook of NCERT, as it was among the first popular uprisings against the British in India, and lasted for a long time from 1817 to 1825. ==Paika Rebellion Memorial==