Kaye's and Malleson's History of the Indian Mutiny of 1857–8
6 Volume Set
Part of Cambridge Library Collection - Naval and Military History
- Authors:
- John Kaye
- George Bruce Malleson
- Editor: George Bruce Malleson
- Date Published: December 2010
- availability: Temporarily unavailable - available from TBC
- format: Multiple copy pack
- isbn: 9781108023290
Multiple copy pack
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This six-volume History of the Indian Mutiny was first produced in 1890 by Colonel George Malleson (1825–1898), who combined Sir John Kaye's History of the Sepoy War in India with his own later work. Kaye (1814–1876) was a prolific writer of biography and history who started the Calcutta Review in 1844. His use of first-hand evidence, collected from personal and professional contacts, supports (perhaps predictably) his assertion that the rebellion is a story of British 'national character', and the narrative is illustrated with biographical and personal anecdotes. Malleson's contributions however are derived from his controversial 'Red Pamphlet' (1857) and other writings, in which he is unafraid to criticise or praise British troops and administration as the occasion demands.
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×Product details
- Date Published: December 2010
- format: Multiple copy pack
- isbn: 9781108023290
- length: 2832 pages
- dimensions: 281 x 216 x 81 mm
- weight: 3.87kg
- contains: 1 b/w illus. 13 maps
- availability: Temporarily unavailable - available from TBC
Table of Contents
Volume 1: Editor's preface
Author's preface
Book I. Introductory:
1. Administration of Lord Dalhousie
2. The question of adoption
3. Oudh
4. Destruction of the territorial nobility of India
Book II. The Sipahi Army:
1. India was won by the sword
2. Mutiny of the Madras Officers, 1809
3. The effect of the Afghan War on the Sipahis
4. The Patna Conspiracy
5. Moral deterioration of the Sipahi
Book III. The Outbreak of the Mutiny:
1. Lord Dalhousie leaves India
2. The administration of Oudh
3. Retrospect of 1856
4. The rising storm
5. The military hierarchy in India considered
6. Sentence executed on Manghal Pandi
7. Return of confidence at Calcutta and elsewhere
Appendix. Volume 2: Editor's preface
Author's preface
List and short description of places mentioned in this volume
Book IV. The Rising in the North-West:
1. The Dehli history
2. The outbreak at Mirath
3. The seizure of Dehli
4. Calcutta in May
5. Last days of General Anson
6. The march upon Dehli
Book V. Progress of Rebellion in Upper India:
1. Banaras and Allahabad
2. Kanhpur
3. The march to Kanhpur
4. Re-occupation of Kanhpur
Book VI. The Panjab and Dehli:
1. First conflicts in the Panjab
2. Peshawab and Rawalpindi
3. Progress of events in the Panjab
4. Dehli - first weeks of the siege
5. Progress of the siege
6. The last succours from the Panjab
Appendix. Volume 3: Preface
List and short description of places mentioned in this, and not described in the preceding volume
Book VII. Feebleness in Bengal and Strength in Bihar:
1. Panic and panic-mongers in Calcutta
2. Patna and Arah
3. Bihar, Bengal, and Banaras
Book VIII. The North-Western Provinces, Central India, and Rajputana:
1. Agra and Gwallar
2. Jhansi and Bundelkhand
3. Durand and Holkar
4. George Lawrence and Rajputana
5. Agra and Sassiah
6. The North-West Provinces
Book IX. Oudh:
1. Oudh and Henry Lawrence
2. The Leaguer of Lakhnao
3. Neill, Havelock, and Outram
Appendix. Volume 4: Preface
List and short description of places mentioned in this volume
Book X. The Reconquest of the North-West (September-December, 1857):
1. The storming of Dehli
2. The Agra surprise and the Duab
Book XI. The Reconquest of Oudh:
1. Preparations and action in Bengal
2. The second relief of Lakhnao (November, 1857)
3. The Gwallar contingent and General Windham at Kanhpur
4. Sir Colin Campbell retrieves Windham's disaster
5. Further operations in the Duab
6. Movements preliminary to the reconquest of Oudh
7. The advance into Eastern Oudh
8. Outram at the Alambagh
9. The storming of Lakhnao
Book XII. Progress of Events in Orisa, Bihar, Oudh, Eastern Bengal, Rohilkhand, and Rajputana:
1. Eastern Bengal, Eastern Bihar, and the South-Western Province
2. Kunwar Singh and Lord Mark Kerr
3. Kunwar Singh and his successors at bay in Western Bihar
4. The progress in Oudh and Rohilkhand
5. George St. Patrick Lawrence in Rajputana
Appendix. Volume 5: Preface
List and short description of places mentioned in this volume
Book XIII. Bombay, Central India, and the Dakhan:
1. Lord Elphinstone, Mr. Seton-Karr, and Mr. Forjett
2. Central India and Durand
3. The Sagar and Narbada territories, and Nagpur
4. The dominions of the Nizam
Book XIV. Central India, Kirwi, Gwallar, and the Southern Maratha Country:
1. Sir Hugh Rose in central India
2. Kirwi and Bandah
3. Sir Hugh Rose at Gwallar
4. The southern Maratha country and Le Grand Jacob
Book XV. The pacification of Oudh and of the North-West. Repression of outbreaks in the Panjab:
1. Lord Canning's Oudh proclamation
2. The pacification of Oudh
3. The Punjab and the North-West
Book XVI. Tantia Topi and the Queen's Proclamation:
1. The pursuit of Tantia Topi
2. The trial of the King of Dehli and the Queen's proclamation
Book XVII. The Causes of the Mutiny
Appendix. Volume 6: Preface
Book XVIII. The Civil Districts
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