982 resultados para India--History
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This article focuses on the studies and discourses of mostly British scholars of the early colonial period belonging to two schools of thought. It shows how the studies of both schools – European orientalism and utilitarianism – were intricately connected to the political development of the emerging British paramountcy over the South Asian sub-continent, as both were looking for means of establishing and/or strengthening colonial rule. Nevertheless, the debate was not just a continuation of discussions in Europe. Whereas the ideas of the European Enlightenment had some influence, the transformation of the Mughal Empire and especially the idea of a decline of Muslim rule offered ample opportunities for understanding the early history of India either as some sort of “Golden Age,” as the orientalists and their indigenous supporters did, or as something static and degenerate, as the utilitarians did, and from which the population of sub-continent had to be saved by colonial rule and colonial values. Fearing the spread of the ideas of the French Revolution, the first group of British scholars sought to persuade the native elites of South Asia to take the lessons of their past for the future development of their homeland. Just as the classicists back in Europe, these scholars were convinced that large-scale explanations of the past could also teach political and moral lessons for the present although it was important to deal with the distant past in an empirical manner. The utilitarians on the other hand believed that India had to be saved from its own depravity through the English language and Western values, which amounted to nothing less than the modern transformation of the true Classical Age.
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suppl.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Printed in Great Britain.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Translated by the Rev. J. J. Moore.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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I. B.C. 2000 to 320. - II. B.C. 320 to A.D. 1000.
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I. From the earliest times to the sixth century B. C., by R. C. Dutt.--II. From the sixth century B. C. to the Mohammedan conquest, including the invasion of Alexander the Great, by V. A. Smith.--III. Medi_a_eval India from the Mohammedan conquest to the reign of Akbar the Great, by S. Lane-Poole.--IV. [From the reign of Akbar the Great to the fall of the Moghul empire, by S. Lane-Poole.œ--V. The Mohammedan period as described by its own historians, by Sir H. M. Elliot.--VI. From the first European settlements to the founding of the English East India company, by Sir W. W. Hunter.--VII. [The European struggle for Indian supremacy in the seventeenth century, by Sir W. W. Hunter.]--VIII. From the close of the seventeenth century to the present time, by Sir A. C. Lyall.--IX. Historic accounts of India by foreign travellers, classic, oriental, and occidental, by A. V. W. Jackson.
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Added t.-p., engraved.