Ascent of John Company

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18th century South Asia
A01=G.S. Cheema
Ali Jah
Author_G.S. Cheema
Bengal political upheaval
British imperialism studies
Calcutta Council
Category=GTM
Category=NHF
Category=NHW
colonial administration India
Company Bahadur
corruption in colonial governance
Diwani Adalat
early British colonial expansion India
East India Company history
Eleventh Hour
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
General Clavering
Gold Mohurs
Haji Mustapha
Harry Verelst
History of India
History of South Asia
India 18th century
Indian History
Indian rulers
Jagat Seths
Manohar
Military
Mir Jafar
Mir Qasim
Naib Nazim
Ram Kishan
Seir Mutaqherin
Sepoy Battalions
Shah Alam II
Shitab Rai
Shuja Ud Daulah
Sir Elijah Impey
Sir Matthew Mite
Siraj Ud Daulah
South Asian History
Ud Daulah
Young Man
Young Nawab

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032652603
  • Weight: 300g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Jun 2024
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The Ascent of John Company is the story of the founding of the British empire in India. The process of founding empires is rarely, if ever, edifying. It is invariably a sordid story of brutality and violence, tempered to some extent by blatant lies, corruption, skullduggery and intrigue. Robert Clive and Warren Hastings, the two names that come most readily to mind when one thinks of the founders, were no heroes in their times. Still less were Vansittart, Verelst, or Coote ‘Bahadur’. We have a governor who was overthrown and imprisoned by his own Councillors, and a general who had to be bribed to take the field!

Many of them were accused of atrocious crimes, of murder and extortion. Bribe taking, peculation and corruption were the least of their ‘high misdemeanours’ and the most egregious were ruined by the judicial processes to which they were subjected on their return. The word nabob, which was applied to them by their own countrymen was anything but complimentary.

The romanticization of the empire came much later; it was a phenomenon of the later Victorian period, but in spite of the fact that the empire has long since faded away, nostalgia for the Raj still lingers among some circles. For such people this volume will be a useful corrective; the past always seems better than the contentious present. Even for others, who may not see the past through rose tinted glasses, this book will help to place things in perspective. To paraphrase Dickens, ‘this is the best of times, and the worst of times’ – and it has always been so.

G.S. Cheema is a former civil servant and writes mainly on historical subjects. His first book, on the later Mughals, The Forgotten Mughals, came out in 2002. This was followed by Our History, Their History (2012), and A Memoir of the Mughal Empire (2014), the last being a translation of Jean Law de Lauriston's Memoire sur quelques Affaires de l'Empire Mogol. He lives in Chandigarh.

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