Broken script : Delhi under the East India company and the fall of the Mughal dynasty : 1837-1857 / Swapna Liddle
Material type: TextPublication details: India Speaking Tiger 2022Description: 413pISBN:- 9789354473869
- 954.56 LID-S
Item type | Current library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | BITS Pilani Hyderabad | 900-999 | General Stack (For lending) | 954.56 LID-S (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | INR 899.00 | Available | 48039 |
Browsing BITS Pilani Hyderabad shelves, Shelving location: General Stack (For lending), Collection: 900-999 Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
954.56 KHO-R Idea of Delhi / | 954.56 KUM-S The emergence of the Delhi sultanate 1192-1286 / | 954.56 LID-S Connaught place : | 954.56 LID-S Broken script : Delhi under the East India company and the fall of the Mughal dynasty : 1837-1857 / | 954.56 MIL-S Delhi : adventures in a megacity / | 954.56 NIZ-K Delhi : in historical perspectives / | 954.56 SIN-M Perpetual City : a short biography of Delhi / |
At the start of the nineteenth century, there was a Mughal emperor on the throne in Delhi, but the Mughal empire, in decline for almost a century, was practically gone. A new power had emerged—the British East India Company, which captured the Mughal capital in September 1803, becoming its de facto ruler. Swapna Liddle’s book is an unprecedented study of the ‘hybrid half-century’ that followed—when the two regimes overlapped and Delhi was at the cusp of modernity, changing in profound ways.
With a ground-level view of the workings of early British rule in India, The Broken Script describes in rich detail the complex tussle between the last two Mughal emperors and the East India Company, one wielding considerable symbolic authority, and the other a fast-growing military and political power. It is, above all, the story of the people of Delhi in this period, some already well known, such as the poet Ghalib, and others, like the mathematician Ram Chander, who are largely forgotten: the cultural and intellectual elite, business magnates, the old landed nobility and the exotic new ruling class—the British. Through them, it looks at the economic, social and cultural climate that evolved over six decades. It examines the great flowering of poetry in Urdu, even as attempts to use the language for scientific education faltered; the fascinating history of the Delhi College, and how it represented a radically new model for higher education in India; the rise of modern journalism in Urdu, and various printing presses and publications, exemplified by papers like the Dehli Urdu Akhbar; and the founding of remarkable institutions like the Archeological Society—all of which point to a fast-modernizing society that was being shaped to a significant extent by Western ideas and institutions, but was also rooted strongly in indigenous systems of thought and learning.
The Revolt of 1857 and its aftermath violently disrupted this distinctive modernity. The book draws upon a variety of records—including Urdu poetry written after the revolt was brutally suppressed, proceedings of the trials conducted by the British, private letters and newspaper reports—for a nuanced examination of the events of 1857, challenging many commonly held and often simplistic assumptions. In the process, it details not only the destruction wreaked upon Delhi, but also strategies for survival and early attempts to rebuild and revive individual lives and institutions.
Combining immaculate scholarship with extraordinary storytelling, Swapna Liddle has produced an outstanding book of narrative history—on a great city in transition, and on early modern India—that will be read and discussed for decades.
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