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European Adventurers of Northern India 1785 To 1849

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This is a record of the adventurers, buccaneers, buffoons and entrepeneurs who cut a swathe through the heart of the Raj, before and during the golden age of British-ruled India. Some are soldiers - like General Jean-Baptiste Ventura - others merchants, doctors like Martin Honigberger and Josiah Halan, antiquarians like Charles Masson, and native Indian rulers like the great Sikh Ranjit Singh. Some seventy names throng the pages of this enthralling - and sometimes frankly eccentric - book. But not all the adventurers represented here are heroes; one, Col. Alexander Gardiner, is exposed by the authors as a complete cad - who posed as a 'very perfect gentle knight' but who, as an exhaustive study of the records showed, was in reality a 'Prize liar who passed off other men's adventures as his own' and was not above 'Undertaking unsavoury duties with which other men entirely refused to have anything to do'. A gamey read, full of the richness of India.

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European Adventurers of Northern India 1785 To 1849, C. Grey

Langue
Année de publication
2009
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Titre
European Adventurers of Northern India 1785 To 1849
Langue
Anglais
Auteurs
C. Grey
Publié
2009
Format
souple
ISBN10
1847349846
ISBN13
9781847349842
Séries
Description
This is a record of the adventurers, buccaneers, buffoons and entrepeneurs who cut a swathe through the heart of the Raj, before and during the golden age of British-ruled India. Some are soldiers - like General Jean-Baptiste Ventura - others merchants, doctors like Martin Honigberger and Josiah Halan, antiquarians like Charles Masson, and native Indian rulers like the great Sikh Ranjit Singh. Some seventy names throng the pages of this enthralling - and sometimes frankly eccentric - book. But not all the adventurers represented here are heroes; one, Col. Alexander Gardiner, is exposed by the authors as a complete cad - who posed as a 'very perfect gentle knight' but who, as an exhaustive study of the records showed, was in reality a 'Prize liar who passed off other men's adventures as his own' and was not above 'Undertaking unsavoury duties with which other men entirely refused to have anything to do'. A gamey read, full of the richness of India.