Holocaust in The Raj - The Great Famine of India (1876-78)

The Raj is considered the jewel in the crown of British colonial achievement. Startlingly, this rose-tinted view is not shared by the Indian subcontinent.

 

The national archives of India tell of a very different history under British control; a history which is well documented in its public records and similarly well covered by the nation's historians.

 

When the Great Famine swept across India, the population perished in their millions. But to what extent were the British accountable for one of the greatest losses of life in history? Few famines, however, are the sole making of an unreasonable Mother Nature. Did the British administration then, do anything to exacerbate the catastrophe or did they, as alleged, do all in their power to save life?

 

No event in Britain's colonial venture more completely answers the debate over our nation's ulterior motives of Empire than the Great Famine in India. The Famine of 1876-78 has faded from the pages of British history but not from the memory of the nation devastated by it.

 

Was the British Empire then, different from other Colonial powers or equally flawed?

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Holocaust in The Raj - The Great Famine of India (1876-78)

The Raj is considered the jewel in the crown of British colonial achievement. Startlingly, this rose-tinted view is not shared by the Indian subcontinent.

 

The national archives of India tell of a very different history under British control; a history which is well documented in its public records and similarly well covered by the nation's historians.

 

When the Great Famine swept across India, the population perished in their millions. But to what extent were the British accountable for one of the greatest losses of life in history? Few famines, however, are the sole making of an unreasonable Mother Nature. Did the British administration then, do anything to exacerbate the catastrophe or did they, as alleged, do all in their power to save life?

 

No event in Britain's colonial venture more completely answers the debate over our nation's ulterior motives of Empire than the Great Famine in India. The Famine of 1876-78 has faded from the pages of British history but not from the memory of the nation devastated by it.

 

Was the British Empire then, different from other Colonial powers or equally flawed?

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Holocaust in The Raj - The Great Famine of India (1876-78)

Holocaust in The Raj - The Great Famine of India (1876-78)

by Mark Colenutt
Holocaust in The Raj - The Great Famine of India (1876-78)

Holocaust in The Raj - The Great Famine of India (1876-78)

by Mark Colenutt

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Overview

The Raj is considered the jewel in the crown of British colonial achievement. Startlingly, this rose-tinted view is not shared by the Indian subcontinent.

 

The national archives of India tell of a very different history under British control; a history which is well documented in its public records and similarly well covered by the nation's historians.

 

When the Great Famine swept across India, the population perished in their millions. But to what extent were the British accountable for one of the greatest losses of life in history? Few famines, however, are the sole making of an unreasonable Mother Nature. Did the British administration then, do anything to exacerbate the catastrophe or did they, as alleged, do all in their power to save life?

 

No event in Britain's colonial venture more completely answers the debate over our nation's ulterior motives of Empire than the Great Famine in India. The Famine of 1876-78 has faded from the pages of British history but not from the memory of the nation devastated by it.

 

Was the British Empire then, different from other Colonial powers or equally flawed?


Product Details

BN ID: 2940164593100
Publisher: Mark Colenutt
Publication date: 04/16/2021
Series: British Raj Series
Sold by: Draft2Digital
Format: eBook
File size: 3 MB
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