The Last Mughal: The Fall of a Dynasty: Delhi, 1857 by William Dalrymple

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: March 2007
  • 560pp
  • Sales Rank: 373,778
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: March 2007
    • Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
    • Format: Hardcover, 560pp
    • Sales Rank: 373,778

    Synopsis

    On a hazy November afternoon in Rangoon, 1862, a shrouded corpse was escorted by a small group of British soldiers to an anonymous grave in a prison enclosure. As the British Commissioner in charge insisted, “No vestige will remain to distinguish where the last of the Great Moghuls rests.”

    Bahadur Shah Zafar II, the last Mughal Emperor, was a mystic, an accomplished poet and a skilled calligrapher. But while his Mughal ancestors had controlled most of India, the aged Zafar was king in name only. Deprived of real political power by the East India Company, he nevertheless succeeded in creating a court of great brilliance, and presided over one of the great cultural renaissances of Indian history.

    Then, in 1857, Zafar gave his blessing to a rebellion among the Company’s own Indian troops, thereby transforming an army mutiny into the largest uprising any empire had to face in the entire course of the nineteenth century. The Siege of Delhi was the Raj’s Stalingrad: one of the most horrific events in the history of Empire, in which thousands on both sides died. And when the British took the city—securing their hold on the subcontinent for the next ninety years—tens of thousands more Indians were executed, including all but two of Zafar’s sixteen sons. By the end of the four-month siege, Delhi was reduced to a battered, empty ruin, and Zafar was sentenced to exile in Burma. There he died, the last Mughal ruler in a line that stretched back to the sixteenth century.

    Award-winning historian and travel writer William Dalrymple shapes his powerful retelling of this fateful course of events from groundbreakingmaterial: previously unexamined Urdu and Persian manuscripts that include Indian eyewitness accounts and records of the Delhi courts, police and administration during the siege. The Last Mughal is a revelatory work—the first to present the Indian perspective on the fall of Delhi—and has as its heart both the dazzling capital personified by Zafar and the stories of the individuals tragically caught up in one of the bloodiest upheavals in history.

    The New York Times - Tobin Harshaw

    While Zafar is the title character of The Last Mughal, his life is just the thread along which William Dalrymple continues to explore a theme that has fascinated him for two decades: the utter collapse of relations between the British and the inhabitants of their Indian dominions…Dalrymple excels at bringing grand historical events within contemporary understanding by documenting the way people went about their lives amid the maelstrom.

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    Biography

    William Dalrymple is the author of five acclaimed works of history and travel, including City of Djinns, which won the Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year Award and the Thomas Cook Travel Book Award; the best-selling From the Holy Mountain; and White Mughals, which won Britain’s most prestigious history prize, the Wolfson. He divides his time between New Delhi and London, and is a contributor to The New York Review of Books, The New Yorker and The Guardian.

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    Last Mughal: The Fall of a Dynasty: Delhi, 1857by Anonymous

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    August 08, 2008: This magnificent book is based on Persian and Urdu documents in India?s National Archives. It vividly portrays Mughal Delhi and its destruction in 1857. The last Mughal Emperor, Bahadur Shah Zafar II (1775-1862), was at the heart of a court of great brilliance, home of `the greatest literary renaissance in modern Indian history?. Architectural historian James Ferguson called his palace `the most splendid palace in the world?. Dalrymple shows that the Uprising resulted from the Raj?s growing racism and hatred, its `steady crescendo of insensitivity?. Its arrogant schemes to impose Evangelical Christianity and Christian laws on India `ushered in the most obnoxious phase of colonialism?. The uprising was `along distinct class lines?, with workers to the fore. It was the most serious armed challenge to imperialism in the 19th century, posed to the world?s greatest military power. Dalrymple notes the rebels? military, strategic, administrative, logistical and financial failings and their war crimes. But the accusations of rape by the rebels were false: the official inquiry found not a single case of rape the only mass rapes were by British soldiers after the reconquest of Delhi. He reveals for the first time `the full scale of the viciousness and brutality of the British response?, as detailed in the records of the revived British administration. ?The orders were to shoot every soul. ? It was literally murder ? Heaven knows I feel no pity ?? wrote British officer Edward Vibart. Colonel A. R. D. Mackenzie boasted that we ?exterminated them as men kill snakes wherever they meet them.? After killing three unarmed captive princes, Captain William Hodson wrote to his sister, ?I am not cruel, but I confess I did enjoy the opportunity of ridding the earth of these wretches.? Lieutenant Charles Griffiths wrote of John Clifford, the former collector of Gurgaon, ?He shook my hands, saying that he had put to death all he had come across, not excepting women and children, and from his excited manner and the appearance of his dress ? which was covered with blood stains ? I quite believe he told the truth.? Governor-General Lord Canning told Queen Victoria that the British forces displayed `a rabid and indiscriminate vindictiveness?. Palmerston said that Delhi should be deleted from the map, `levelled to the ground?. British forces sacked, looted and emptied Delhi and massacred great swathes of its people. Much of the palace and its surrounding areas were razed. Most of its leading inhabitants were killed or transported to die in the Raj?s new Andaman Islands camp for 10,000 prisoners. As far as the Mughal elite were concerned, the British response was `approaching a genocide? and `would today be classified as grisly war crimes?. Dalrymple sums up, ?That massacre of the inhabitants of Delhi, commanded and justified in the eyes of Victorian Evangelicals by their reading of the Christian scriptures. ? `In the city no one?s life was safe,? wrote Muin ud-Din Husain Khan. `All able-bodied men who were seen were taken for rebels and shot.? Ghalib, who had disliked the sepoys from the beginning, was now no less horrified by the barbarity of the returning British. `The victors killed all whom they found on the streets,? he wrote in Dastanbuy. `When the angry lions entered the town, they killed the helpless and weak and they burned their houses. Mass slaughter was rampant and streets were filled with horror. It may be that such atrocities...