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India's History, India's Raj: Essays in Historical Understanding highlights the myriad facets in the story of how Indians themselves participated in the construction not only of the Indian Raj but of Indian history. Due to distortions, omissions, or ideological bias, much of this story remains unbalanced or simply misunderstood. Never before in history has the whole 'continent' of geographic India, surrounded by mountain ranges to the north and oceans to the south, been unified under a single political system. That is-until modern times. However long each monarch reigned, neither lasted their…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
India's History, India's Raj: Essays in Historical Understanding highlights the myriad facets in the story of how Indians themselves participated in the construction not only of the Indian Raj but of Indian history. Due to distortions, omissions, or ideological bias, much of this story remains unbalanced or simply misunderstood. Never before in history has the whole 'continent' of geographic India, surrounded by mountain ranges to the north and oceans to the south, been unified under a single political system. That is-until modern times. However long each monarch reigned, neither lasted their entire length of the political system over which they ruled. Maurya Empire began with Chandragupta and lasted beyond Ashoka; and Mughal rule began with Babur and Humayun and lasted beyond Aurangzeb. Yet, some micro-systems, such as villages, defied this trend and continued to flourish. How and why was this so? Within the pages of this volume are essays that, in one way or another, and from one perspective or another, seek to address this central question. Whatever the size or durability of a given political system, and however much rulers from outside India might have had a hand in its development, each political system was mainly the product of Indian manpower, Indian money, and Indian methods.
Autorenporträt
Robert Eric Frykenberg is Emeritus Professor of History and South Asian Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison. His publications include Guntur District, 1788-1848: A History of Local Influence and Central Authority in South India (1965); India: Today's World in Focus (1968); and Christianity in India: Beginnings to the Present (2008, repr, 2010). Frykenberg has edited Land Control and Social Structure in Indian History (1969; revd. edn. in paperback 2020); Land Tenure and Peasant in South Asia (1977; revd. edn. in paperback 2020); Delhi Through the Ages: Essays on Urban History, Culture, and Society (1986; revd. edn. in paperback 1993); Christians and Missionaries in India: Cross-Cultural Communication Since 1500, With Special Reference to Caste, Conversion, and Colonialism (2003); and co-edited with Judith M. Brown, Christians, Cultural Interactions and India's Religious Traditions (2002).