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Lucknow

162 bytes added, 06:20, 8 December 2022
Historical books online
|stateprovince= [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uttar_Pradesh Uttar Pradesh]
|country= [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/India India]
|transport= [[Oudh and Rohilkhand Railway]]’(O&RR)<br>[[Great_Indian_Peninsula_Railway_-_Lines_owned_and_worked#GIPR_Midland_Branches|‘Great Indian Peninsula Rly’(GIPR]]<br>‘[[Rohilkund and Kumaon Railway]]’ (R&KR)<br>[[Cawnpore-Burhwal Railway| ‘B&NWR Cawnpore-Burhwal Railway’]]''See page'' '''[[Lucknow Railways and Stations]]''' ''for details''
}}
 
{{Places of Interest|title=Lucknow|name=Lucknow |link=http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?msa=0&msid=211401480495186034184.0004b92ce01c865bf35dc&ie=UTF8&ll=26.826522,80.956535&spn=0.116422,0.150547&t=m&z=13&vpsrc=1}}
*All Saints Garrison Church - (see External links section below for photos).
*Christ Church Cathedral
*St Mary's at the Residency - [httpshttp://searchfibis.fibisourarchives.org/frontisonline/bin/aps_browse_sources.php?mode=browse_components&id=197&s_id=152 Photos of the cemetery] on the FIBIS database
*St. Peter's the Railwaymen's Church, Charbagh, Lucknow. Built as the railwaymen's church of the Protestant Anglican communities of Charbagh and Alambagh in Lucknow, and opened in 1915. Prior to that, the congregation assembled somewhere in the present day Loco Workshop. <ref>[http://coloniallucknow.blogspot.com/2016/04/st-peters-railwaymens-church-charbagh.html St. Peter's the Railwaymen's Church, Charbagh, Lucknow] by Nikhil Katyal April 3, 2016. "Colonial Lucknow"</ref>
[http://www.flickr.com/photos/28742607@N02/sets/72157629547211574/with/7138398699/ Memorials of Colonial Lucknow] photographs by Vineet Wal on flickr.com
====FIBIS database====
*[http://fibis.ourarchives.online/bin/aps_browse_sources.php?mode=browse_picture&id=198&s_id=181 Memorial] to [[Henry Lawrence]] in the Christ Church Cathedral
*[http://fibis.ourarchives.online/bin/aps_browse_sources.php?mode=browse_picture&id=197&s_id=181 Memorial] to [[James Outram]] in the Christ Church Cathedral
*Thomas Henry Kavanagh was a civilian who won the [[Victoria Cross]] for his action during the Siege. One of those inside the Residency, he disguised himself as a sepoy in order to escape undetected to the [[Alambagh]] and guide Campbell's forces into Lucknow for the Second Relief. Kavanagh's memorial in the All Saints Garrison Church can be view on the [http://fibis.ourarchives.online/bin/aps_browse_sources.php?mode=browse_components&id=384 FIBIS database].
*[https://archive.org/details/cu31924023977360 ''Lucknow (the capital of Oudh): an illustrated guide to places of interest, with history and map''] by Lieut.-Colonel H A Newell Fourth Edition c 1920s? (One earlier edition was published in 1916) Archive.org
** [https://archive.org/stream/cu31924023977360#page/n84/mode/1up Map of Lucknow: Left hand side], [https://archive.org/stream/cu31924023977360#page/n85/mode/1up Right hand side]
*[https://archive.org/details/historiclucknow0000hays/page/n5/mode/2up ''Historic Lucknow''] by Sidney Hay, Illustrated by Enver Ahmed. 1994 reprint edition, first published 1939. Archive.org.
*[https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.97230/page/n1049 "Lucknow"] digital page 1050 (page 53 of the Provincial Section/United Provinces section) ''Thacker's Indian Directory Including Burma 1940-41'' Archive.org
*[https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.108461/page/n7 ''Observations on the Mussulmauns of India : descriptive of their manners, customs, habits and religious opinion made during a twelve years' residence in the immediate society''] by Mrs. Meer Hassan Ali. Edited with notes and an introduction by W. Crooke 1917. The authors background is unclear, other than that she was an English lady of high social rank, who married in England c 1816, and lived most of the time in Lucknow, see the [https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.108461/page/n11 Introduction]. Page ix. Originally published 1832. [https://archive.org/details/observationsonm02aligoog/page/n3 Volume I], [https://archive.org/details/observationsonm01aligoog/page/n4 Volume II]. Archive.org.
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