A Fatal Friendship: The Nawabs, the British, and the City of LucknowOxford University Press, 1985 - 284 pages The city of Lucknow, once described as "the last example of the old pomp and refinement of Hindustan", still remains one of the most interesting cities of north India. This lively urban history presents a panorama of the political, cultural, and architectural life of Lucknow during its heyday: from the ascendancy of the first nawab in the early 18th century to the deposition of the last nawab in 1856. Focusing on the architecture itself and the particular psychologies that lay behind the building facades, the author draws some intriguing conclusions about nawabi Lucknow and the colonial mind in its relation to Indian urban life. |
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Page 5
... hills of note , both on the south bank , although the terrain within the city was uneven . The first settlers , who were Brahmins , chose one of these hills on which to build a shrine which remained until Aurangzeb's day , when it was ...
... hills of note , both on the south bank , although the terrain within the city was uneven . The first settlers , who were Brahmins , chose one of these hills on which to build a shrine which remained until Aurangzeb's day , when it was ...
Page 98
... Hill . Hill was accused of murdering an Indian in 1791 and sent to Calcutta to be tried by the Sup- reme Court , set up there under the Company's auspices . Neither are there any reports of British subjects being held in a Company jail ...
... Hill . Hill was accused of murdering an Indian in 1791 and sent to Calcutta to be tried by the Sup- reme Court , set up there under the Company's auspices . Neither are there any reports of British subjects being held in a Company jail ...
Page 258
... Hill's book Claude Martin ( Calcutta 1912 ) , which says : ' It is now evident that the Farhad Baksh was once far larger and very different from what it is at the present moment . Of the " exterior wall resting on pillars placed nearly ...
... Hill's book Claude Martin ( Calcutta 1912 ) , which says : ' It is now evident that the Farhad Baksh was once far larger and very different from what it is at the present moment . Of the " exterior wall resting on pillars placed nearly ...
Contents
At the top of La Martiniere | 6 |
The Europeans of Lucknow | 17 |
European Dreams and Indian Fantasies | 41 |
Copyright | |
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Agha Antoine Polier appear arches architect architecture Asaf-ud-daula Bagh Barahdari Barowen Bengal Pol brick British Resident built bungalows Calcutta Cantonment Captain Cawnpore century Chattar Manzil Chauk Claude Martin Company's Constantia country house courtyard Daulat Khana death decoration Dilkusha domes employed engineer English erected Euro European buildings Europeans in Lucknow Faizabad Farhad Baksh floor Foreign Pol ganj gardens gateway Ghazi-ud-din Haider Gomti Governor ground Hakim Mehndi Hindu Husainabad Ibid idea Imambara India Pol Iron Bridge kerbala Khan's later lived London Luck Macchi Bhavan marble Mariaon ment minister mosque Mughal Muslim Nasir-ud-din Haider native nawab nawabi buildings number given Observatory officers Oude Oudh Ozias Humphry palace complex Paton pavilions pean plans Polier Qaisarbagh repairs Residency complex Resident's river road roof rooms Saadat Ali Khan Saadat Khan servants Shuja-ud-daula Sleeman storey streets stucco style Superintendent tion towers town troops Valentia visitors Wajid Ali Shah walls William Sleeman wrote zenana