History reading list
- Dalley, Jan
The Black Hole : money, myth and empire. London: Penguin, 2007
Originally published in 2006 to mark "the 250th anniversary of the event which is felt to have initiated the beginnings of British rule on the Indian Subcontinent: the Black Hole of Calcutta... In 1756 the Nawab of Bengal besieged the British East India Company's fort at Calcutta. During the evening following the fort's surrender, contemporary sources claimed that 146 men and women were forced into a tiny military cell known colloquially at the Black Hole... only 23 survivors emerged from it the following morning. In the first chapter of her book Dalley synthesises the work of various academics in addition to the many inconsistencies in such contemporary accounts and correctly concludes that the event, as ... summarised ... was largely the spin of prominent individuals ... who reported it in such a way as to further their own ambitions... Dalley then proceeds to place the events leading up to the siege in their proper context ... The way the Black Hole was portrayed had a significant impact on the mindset of the British nation. Furthermore, by overthrowing an Indian ruler, in response to the so called Black Hole, a new precedent was set for British activity in India. In her final chapter Dalley addresses this by focusing on the more interesting issue of the impact this event had in the national myth-bank of the British. ... [This book] is a very good brief and up to date introduction to the British in India up to the mid eighteenth century in addition to the foundation of the British Raj." The full review by Richard Scott Morel, Archivist Pre-1858 India Office Records, is on pp. 49-50 of FIBIS Journal 16 (Autumn 2006)
- Dalrymple, William
White mughals : love and betrayal in eighteenth-century India. London: HarperCollins, 2002
This award-winning book unfolds the romantic story of Major James Achilles Kirkpatrick (1764-1805), the British Resident at the Court of the Nizam of Hyderabad, and the high-born Khair un-Nissa. Their marriage by Muslim rite in 1800 caused a scandal and secret investigations by the British, but, as the author clearly documents, James was not unusual in his appreciation of local culture and arts, nor in his adoption of local customs and an Indian wife. What was changing were British attitudes to assimilation, and long before the death of the children of James and Khair, the term 'gone native' had become one of contempt. The book provides a wealth of detail concerning the political manoeuvring of the British EIC, their relationship with the French and key figures in the princely state, as well as the architecture of the city of Hyderabad.