| Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Materials specified | Status | Notes | Barcode | |
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BOOKs
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National Law School | General Stacks | 954.0359 ZUB (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | PB | Available | Recommended by Mr. Kunal Ambasta | 40402 |
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| 954.035092 RAG Duty, Destiny, and Glory : | 954.035092 SLA Indian lives Kamaladevi chattopadhyay: The art of freedom/ | 954.0350922 RAO Spies, Lies and Allies : The Extraordinary Lives of Chatto and Roy / | 954.0359 ZUB Dethroned : the downfall of India's princely states / | 954.04 AND The Indian ideology / | 954.04 CHA India after independence 1947 - 2000 | 954.04 DUB Historical Anthropology / |
Prologue: the last durbar -
The 'iron man' and the civil servant -
The bonfire of vices -
Allies and agitators -
A basket-full of states -
Dangerous liaisons -
'A dagger into the very heart of India' -
Endgames of empire -
A pawn in a chess game -
The vale of tears -
The killing fields -
'The beauty of dawn' -
The wrath of shiva -
Trouble on the frontier -
Lost among the cobwebs
Epilogue: 'no more boodle' -
Notes -
Select bibliography -
Acknowledgements -
Index.
The dramatic true story of the betrayal of hundreds of Indian princely states by both the departing British and the new Congress government. In July 1947, India's last Viceroy, Lord Louis Mountbatten, stood before New Delhi's Chamber of Princes to deliver the most important speech of his career. He had just three weeks to convince over 550 sovereign princely states-some tiny, some the size of Britain-to become part of a free India. Once Britain's most faithful allies, the princes could choose between joining India or Pakistan, or declaring independence. This is a saga of intrigue, brinkmanship and broken promises, wrought by Mountbatten and two of independent India's founding fathers: the country's most senior civil servant, V.P. Menon, and Congress strongman Vallabhbhai Patel. What India's architects described as a 'bloodless revolution' was anything but, as violence engulfed Kashmir and Indian troops crushed Hyderabad's dreams of independence. Most princes accepted the inevitable, exchanging their power for guarantees of privileges and titles in perpetuity. But these dynasties were still led to extinction-not by the sword, but by political expediency-leaving them with little more than fading memories of a glorified past
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