A Memoir of India and Afghanistan. With Observations on the Present Exciting and Critical State and Future Prospects of Those Countries. Comprising Remarks on the Massacre of the British Army in Cabul, British Policy in India, a Detailed Descriptive Cha
Elibron Classics. Replica of 1842 edition by J. Dobson, Philadelphia.
Josiah Harlan. A Memoir of India and Afghanistan. With Observations on the Present Exciting and Critical State and Future Prospects of Those Countries. Comprising Remarks on the Massacre of the British Army in Cabul, British Policy in India, a Detailed Descriptive Character of Dost Mahomed and His Court, etc.
1114566485
A Memoir of India and Afghanistan. With Observations on the Present Exciting and Critical State and Future Prospects of Those Countries. Comprising Remarks on the Massacre of the British Army in Cabul, British Policy in India, a Detailed Descriptive Cha
Elibron Classics. Replica of 1842 edition by J. Dobson, Philadelphia.
Josiah Harlan. A Memoir of India and Afghanistan. With Observations on the Present Exciting and Critical State and Future Prospects of Those Countries. Comprising Remarks on the Massacre of the British Army in Cabul, British Policy in India, a Detailed Descriptive Character of Dost Mahomed and His Court, etc.
9.99 In Stock
A Memoir of India and Afghanistan. With Observations on the Present Exciting and Critical State and Future Prospects of Those Countries. Comprising Remarks on the Massacre of the British Army in Cabul, British Policy in India, a Detailed Descriptive Cha

A Memoir of India and Afghanistan. With Observations on the Present Exciting and Critical State and Future Prospects of Those Countries. Comprising Remarks on the Massacre of the British Army in Cabul, British Policy in India, a Detailed Descriptive Cha

by Josiah Harlan
A Memoir of India and Afghanistan. With Observations on the Present Exciting and Critical State and Future Prospects of Those Countries. Comprising Remarks on the Massacre of the British Army in Cabul, British Policy in India, a Detailed Descriptive Cha

A Memoir of India and Afghanistan. With Observations on the Present Exciting and Critical State and Future Prospects of Those Countries. Comprising Remarks on the Massacre of the British Army in Cabul, British Policy in India, a Detailed Descriptive Cha

by Josiah Harlan

eBook

$9.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

Elibron Classics. Replica of 1842 edition by J. Dobson, Philadelphia.
Josiah Harlan. A Memoir of India and Afghanistan. With Observations on the Present Exciting and Critical State and Future Prospects of Those Countries. Comprising Remarks on the Massacre of the British Army in Cabul, British Policy in India, a Detailed Descriptive Character of Dost Mahomed and His Court, etc.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940016400112
Publisher: Adegi Graphics LLC
Publication date: 02/14/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 227
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Josiah Harlan(1799 - 1871), adventurer and medical practitioner who served the British, the Sikhs and the Afghans, was born in Philadelphia, U.S.A., in 1799. At the age of 24, he arrived at Calcutta and was employed as an assistant surgeon by the East India Company and attached to the British army then operating in Burma (1824). After the war, Harlan proceeded towards the Punjab to try his luck there. At Ludhiana, he met Shah Shuja', the deposed king of Kabul, then a pensionary of the English, who engaged him as his secret agent and despatched him to Kabul to stir up a revolt in Afghanistan. He did not meet with much success in Kabul and came to Lahore to take up service under Maharaja Ranjit Singh on an oath of fealty in the name of Christ. He also promised, in writing, to serve the Maharaja honestly all his life and fight against his enemies. He also volunteered to keep supplying news about the British as well as about the Afghans. Maharaja Ranjit Singh appointed him governor, on a salary ofRs 1,000 per month, of the provinces ofJasrota and Nurpur, two districts then newly annexed to Lahore. In 1832, he became governor of Gujrat.
In 1835, during the Peshawar campaign, Harlan and Faqir 'Aziz udDin were Sikh envoys sent to Dost Muhammad's camp for negotiations, a duty they performed at great personal risk. Dost Muhammad had both of them interned with the intention of bargaining for Peshawar. But their lives were saved by Sultan Muhammad Khan, Dost Muhammad's disgruntled brother. Harlan, however, could not retain Maharaja Ranjit Singh's favour for long. According to Sohan Lal Sun, the court historian, Harlan was summoned to attend on Maharaja Ranjit Singh when he had an attack of paralysis of the tongue. Harlan, it is said, mentioned a fee of a lakh of rupees which was readily agreed to, but when Harlan insisted on money being paid beforehand, the Maharaja was beside himself with rage and gave orders that he be stripped and put across the Sutlej, which was done. In order "to avenge myself and cause him [Ranjit Singh] to tremble in the midst of his magnificence," Harlan entered, towards the end of 1836, the service of Dost Muhammad who gave him command of his regular troops. It is said that it was at Harlan's instigation that Dost Muhammad had declared war against Ranjit Singh culminating in the battle ofJamrud in April 1837. Although the celebrated General Hari Singh Nalva was killed in this battle, the Afghans had to retreat without any gain. In 183
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews