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The Golden Road
A REVOLUTIONARY NEW HISTORY OF THE DIFFUSION OF INDIAN IDEAS ‘A master storyteller’ Sunday Times India is the forgotten heart of the ancient world For a millennium and a half, India was a confident exporter of its diverse civilisation, creating around it a vast empire of ideas. Indian art, religions, technology, astronomy, music, dance, literature, mathematics and mythology blazed a trail across the world, along a Golden Road that stretched from the Red Sea to the Pacific. William Dalrymple draws from a lifetime of scholarship to highlight India’s oftforgotten position as the heart of ancient Eurasia. For the first time, he gives a name to this spread of Indian ideas that transformed the world. From the largest Hindu temple in the world at Angkor Wat to the Buddhism of China, from the trade that helped fund the Roman Empire to the creation of the numerals we use today (including zero), India transformed the culture and technology of its ancient world – and our world today as we know it. Praise for William Dalrymple and The Anarchy ‘A superb historian with a visceral understanding of India’ The Times ‘Magnificently readable, deeply researched and richly atmospheric’ Francis Wheen, Mail on Sunday
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Nine Lives
From the author of The Last Mughal (“A compulsively readable masterpiece” —The New York Review of Books), an exquisite, mesmerizing book that illuminates the remarkable ways in which traditional forms of religious life in India have been transformed in the vortex of the region’s rapid change—a book that distills the author’s twenty-five years of travel in India, taking us deep into ways of life that we might otherwise never have known exist. A Buddhist monk takes up arms to resist the Chinese invasion of Tibet—and spends the rest of his life atoning for the violence by hand printing the finest prayer flags in India . . . A Jain nun tests her powers of detachment as she watches her closest friend ritually starve herself to death . . . A woman leaves her middle-class life in Calcutta and finds unexpected fulfillment living as a Tantric in an isolated, skull-filled cremation ground . . . A prison warder from Kerala is worshipped as an incarnate deity for three months of every year . . . An idol carver, the twenty-third in a long line of sculptors, must reconcile himself to his son’s desire to study computer engineering . . . An illiterate goatherd from Rajasthan keeps alive in his memory an ancient four-thousand-stanza sacred epic . . . A temple prostitute, who initially resisted her own initiation into sex work, pushes both her daughters into a trade she nonetheless regards as a sacred calling. William Dalrymple chronicles these lives with expansive insight and a spellbinding evocation of circumstance. And while the stories reveal the vigorous resilience of individuals in the face of the relentless onslaught of modernity, they reveal as well the continuity of ancient traditions that endure to this day. A dazzling travelogue of both place and spirit.
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The Anarchy The East India Company Corporate Viole
In August 1765 the East India Company defeated the young Mughal emperor and forced him to establish in his richest provinces a new administration run by English merchants who collected taxes through means of a ruthless private army - what we would now call an act of involuntary privatisation. The East India Company's founding charter authorised it to 'wage war' and it had always used violence to gain its ends. But the creation of this new government marked the moment that the East India Company ceased to be a conventional international trading corporation dealing in silks and spices and became something much more unusual: an aggressive colonial power in the guise of a multinational business. In less than four decades it had trained up a security force of around 200,000 men - twice the size of the British army - and had subdued an entire subcontinent, conquering first Bengal and finally, in 1803, the Mughal capital of Delhi itself. The Company's reach stretched until almost all of India south of the Himalayas was effectively ruled from a boardroom in London. The Anarchy tells the remarkable story of how one of the world's most magnificent empires disintegrated and came to be replaced by a dangerously unregulated private company, based thousands of miles overseas in one small office, five windows wide, and answerable only to its distant shareholders. In his most ambitious and riveting book to date, William Dalrymple tells the story of the East India Company as it has never been told before, unfolding a timely cautionary tale of the first global corporate power.
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Return Of A King (रिटर्न ऑफ अ किंग )
शहाशुजा उल्-मुल्कला तरुण वयातच आजोबा अहमदशहा अब्दाली यांनी स्थापन केलेलं दुर्राणी साम्राज्य वारसाहक्कानं मिळालं. जगातला सर्वांत मोठा हिरा कोह-इ-नूर - कोहिनूर, (प्रकाशाचा पर्वत) आणि ‘फखाज’ (पुष्कराज!) नावाचं माणिक ही या घराण्यातली दोन अत्यंत मौल्यवान नाहीशी झालेली रत्नं शहाशुजाने विश्वासातल्या माणसांकरवी परत मिळवली. शहाशुजा हा उच्चविद्या विभूषित, हुशार, निश्चयी आणि अविचल वृत्तीचा आणि मित्रांशी असाधारण निष्ठेनं वागणारा होता. संपूर्ण आयुष्यात त्याला वारंवार गंभीर आपत्तींना सामोरं जावं लागलं; परंतु तो कधीही खचला नाही किंवा निराशही झाला नाही. त्याच्या संपूर्ण आयुष्यात आशावाद हेच त्याचं बलस्थान ठरलं. शुजाच्या अंगी अनेक दोष होते आणि त्यानं अनेकदा चुकीचे निर्णय घेतले; परंतु जेव्हा नोव्हेंबर १८४१ मध्ये बंड उसळून दाराशी संकट येऊन उभं राहिलं, तेव्हा कार्यक्षमतेनं त्याचा लष्करी प्रतिकार करणारा संपूर्ण काबूलमधला एकमेव माणूस फक्त शहाशुजा होता. ‘अकार्यक्षम ब्रिटिश आश्रयदात्यांच्या सेनेवर अवाजवी भिस्त टाकणं, ही त्याची सर्वांत मोठी चूक ठरली.’ शुजाचं खूपसं आयुष्य जसं अपयशाच्या छायेत व्यतीत झालं; त्याच पद्धतीनं त्याच्या वादळी आयुष्याची अखेर झाली.
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Kohinoor
This riveting story of the Kohinoor, the world�s most coveted gem, unearths fascinating new information as it moves from the Mughal court to Persia to Afghanistan, from Maharaja Ranjit Singh�s Durbar in Punjab to the Crown of the Queen of England. Shrouded in legend and superstition, the Kohinoor continues to arouse passion and controversy, as India, Pakistan and Afghanistan all claim the diamond and demand that Britain return it. A thrilling historical adventure, full of violence, drama and intrigue.
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White Mughals
James Achilles Kirkpatrick landed on the shores of eighteenth-century India as an ambitious soldier of the East India Company. Although eager to make his name in the subjection of a nation, it was he who was conquered