Lucknow: Memories of a CityViolette Graff Oxford University Press, 1997 - 299 pages Lucknow, the city of nawabi grandeur, has served as the backdrop for a number of historical and social studies, but not as a theme of exploration in itself. This book focuses on Lucknow and covers 250 years of its eventful history. It deals with the position Lucknow held in the panorama of Mughal politics; its rise to grandeur during the days of the nawabs; the trials and tribulations of its populace during the Mutiny and the conflicts which emerged as part of Lucknow's transformation into a colonial city. Its rise to political pre-eminence after Independence, the large-scale influx of refugees and migrants, the changing fortunes of the erstwhile aristocracy and the elite are analysed in this volume with remarkable candour. This volume is for connoisseurs of Indian culture as well as scholars interested in the urban history of South Asia. |
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Page 20
... authority , sometimes through linkages with imperial court politics . In the emerging political situation , service and loyalty to the imperial authority ceased to count , for it was not the Emperor but the provincial governor and ...
... authority , sometimes through linkages with imperial court politics . In the emerging political situation , service and loyalty to the imperial authority ceased to count , for it was not the Emperor but the provincial governor and ...
Page 89
... authority of their views by taking Bilgrami's name in order to bestow on themselves a mujtahid's cachet . ( In this canny read- ing of the story , removing Bilgrami was an attempt to deny the Begums the ability to increase the authority ...
... authority of their views by taking Bilgrami's name in order to bestow on themselves a mujtahid's cachet . ( In this canny read- ing of the story , removing Bilgrami was an attempt to deny the Begums the ability to increase the authority ...
Page 178
... authority , especially in the all- important realm of language usage ( Azad , 1980 : 339 ) . In other words , the success of colonial discourse may be attributed to a gratuitous , inadvertent tapping into the cultural rivalry between ...
... authority , especially in the all- important realm of language usage ( Azad , 1980 : 339 ) . In other words , the success of colonial discourse may be attributed to a gratuitous , inadvertent tapping into the cultural rivalry between ...
Contents
The Awadh Regime the Mughals and the Countryside | 16 |
Awadh and the English East India Company | 32 |
Lucknow City of Dreams | 49 |
Copyright | |
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Abdul Halim administration Agra Ahmad Alam Aligarh Allahabad Asaf-ud-Daula Awadh Awadh rulers Ayodhya Azad Badshah Bagh Begum Bengal British buildings Calcutta capital centre Chief Minister Claude Martin colonial Company's Congress courtesans cultural Delhi developed diaries East India Company elite English established European Faizabad French Gentil ghazal girls Gomti governor Harcourt Haydar Hazratganj Hindu Imam Imambara imperial Islamic Janata Karbala kotha Lakhnavi Lakhnaviyyat landholders living Llewellyn-Jones London Lucknow Mahal Mahmudabad military Modave Mohurram Mughal Emperor Mughal empire Muhammad Muslim League Nawab nineteenth century North India organised Oudh Oxford University Press palace party patronage patrons poets Polier political province Raja Rebellion religious Residency revenue role Sa'adat Khan Sabha Safdarjang Sayyid Karamat Husain sectarian Sharar Shi'ite Shia Shia-Sunni Shias and Sunnis Shuja-ud-Daula siege siege of Lucknow Singh social Syed taluqdars tawaif tion tradition Uttar Pradesh Victorian Wajid Ali Shah women