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Uprising of 1857 (Hardcover): Rosie Llewellyn-Jones Uprising of 1857 (Hardcover)
Rosie Llewellyn-Jones; Contributions by Shahid Amin, Zahid R. Chaudhary, Susan Gole, Mahmood Farooqui, …
R1,737 Discovery Miles 17 370 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Using rare archival material from the Alkazi Collection, together with supplementary visuals, these essays re-evaluate the official reading of the Uprising. Linked accounts negotiate Mutiny landscapes and architecture: the internal dynamic of the rebellion decoded through topography and monuments. Along with rebels, British troops and their determined generals, and various professional and amateur photographers, the dramatic vista of the Uprising in these essays is also inhabited by a range of significant characters central to the action, including the warrior queen Lakshmi Bai, the exiled last Mughal emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar and the poet Mirza Ghalib. Published in association with the Alkazi Collection of Photography.

Archaeology and the Public Purpose - Writings on and by M.N. Deshpande (Hardcover): Nayanjot Lahiri Archaeology and the Public Purpose - Writings on and by M.N. Deshpande (Hardcover)
Nayanjot Lahiri
R2,049 Discovery Miles 20 490 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This book interleaves the history of post- Independence archaeology in India with the life and times of Madhukar Narhar Deshpande (1920-2008), a leading Indian archaeologist who went on to become the director-general of the Archaeological Survey of India. Spanning nearly a century, this is a tale told through a main character-Deshpande himself-some of whose writings have been included in the volume. We explore the circumstances which brought men like Deshpande to this career path; what it was like to grow up in a family devoted to India's freedom; the watershed moment that created a large cohort that was trained by Mortimer Wheeler, the doyen of British archaeology; the unknown conservation stories around the Gol Gumbad in Bijapur and the Qutb Minar in Delhi; the forgotten story of how the fabric of a historic Hindu shrine, the Badrinath temple, was saved; the chemistry shared by the prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, and the archaeologist, Deshpande, at the Ajanta and Ellora cave shrines, and; the political and administrative challenges faced by director generals of archaeology. The book is a must read for anyone interested in India's past in general and the history of Indian archaeology in particular.

Searching for Ashoka - Questing for a Buddhist King from India to Thailand (Hardcover): Nayanjot Lahiri Searching for Ashoka - Questing for a Buddhist King from India to Thailand (Hardcover)
Nayanjot Lahiri
R2,769 Discovery Miles 27 690 Ships in 10 - 15 working days
Searching for Ashoka - Questing for a Buddhist King from India to Thailand: Nayanjot Lahiri Searching for Ashoka - Questing for a Buddhist King from India to Thailand
Nayanjot Lahiri
R1,048 Discovery Miles 10 480 Ships in 10 - 15 working days
Buddhism in Asia - Revival and Reinvention (Paperback): Nayanjot Lahiri, Upinder Singh Buddhism in Asia - Revival and Reinvention (Paperback)
Nayanjot Lahiri, Upinder Singh
R939 Discovery Miles 9 390 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The birth of Buddhism goes back to the sixth century BCE and, over the centuries, there has been considerable variety as well as considerable change in its doctrines, practices and propagation across the different parts of Asia. This volume showcases the expansion in the religion's contours and popularity in Asia in modern times. Focusing on India, Sri Lanka and China, the essays in the book highlight the cross-fertilization between Buddhism and contemporary discourses which makes the phenomenon of Buddhist revival in Asia unambiguously modern. They also show how this resurgence assumed a great variety of forms depending on the specificities of the historical and cultural context, including Buddhism's encounter with other religious traditions. Continuities with the past are not absent, and revivalist movements have been characterized and propelled by a strong sense of history and yet this, in effect, involved crafting new interpretations of a distant past, and the introduction of new ideas and practices. The term reinvention seems to capture this aspect of dynamic change better than revival. At the same time, as this volume reveals, the choice of terms is not as important as tracing the trajectories of the phenomenon and the awareness that its impact extended far beyond the religious domain into many spheres, including those of cultural practice, national identity and international relations. This is a historically rich and readable volume which will interest general readers as well as students and scholars of history and of Buddhism.

Finding Forgotten Cities (Paperback): Nayanjot Lahiri Finding Forgotten Cities (Paperback)
Nayanjot Lahiri
R627 R471 Discovery Miles 4 710 Save R156 (25%) Out of stock

Just a century ago, scholars believed that civilization in the Indus Valley began three thousand years ago during the Vedic Age. But in the autumn of 1924, John Marshall made an announcement that rocked the understanding of the ancient world and pushed back the boundaries of Indian history by two thousand years more: the discovery of the civilization at Harappa, located in present-day Sindh and Punjab, Pakistan. A sophisticated culture dating back to 2600 BC, this ancient city was notable for its well-planned streets and for having the oldest known urban sanitation system. Based on previously unknown archival materials, "Finding Forgotten Cities" not only details an archaeological discovery on the same scale as Troy, but introduces us to the colorful cast of characters who made it possible and overcame the challenges and travails of this colossal excavation. Nayanjot Lahiri's fascinating history includes tales of self-taught archaeologists like Charles Masson, the collector who first described an ancient Indus Valley culture, as well as Alexander Cunningham, the archaeological pioneer who first excavated Harappa with diggers Daya Ram Sahni, Rakhaldas Banerji, and Madho Sarup Vats in the 1850s. And at the center of Lahiri's story is John Marshall, a Cambridge classicist brought by Lord Curzon to India to lead the Archaeological Survey of India and the man who finally pieced together the truth about this long-forgotten civilization. Spanning nearly a century, "Finding Forgotten Cities" presents a powerful narrative history of one of the key sites of the ancient world that offers interesting insight into the origins of modern civilization.

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