000 | 01906nam a2200217Ia 4500 | ||
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003 | RRU | ||
005 | 20220103142436.0 | ||
008 | 210901s2008 ||||||||| ||||||| 0|eng|d | ||
020 | _a9780753824023 | ||
040 |
_aRRU _beng |
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041 | _aeng | ||
082 |
_a823.809358 _bSPI |
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245 | 4 |
_aThe Indian Mutiny _cJulian Spilsbury |
|
250 | _a2008 | ||
260 |
_bA Phoenix Paperback _c2008 _aLondon |
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300 |
_a373 p.,16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color), maps ; 24 cm _b;12.7 x 3.18 x 19.69 cm |
||
520 | _aAn epic true story of treachery, revenge and courage The Indian Mutiny is a real page-turner, an epic story with surprising modern parallels. Fomer army officer-turned-TV scriptwriter, Julian Spilsbury is the ideal author to take us back to the desperate summer of 1857 when thousands of Indian soldiers mutinied. They murdered their officers, hunted down the women and children and burned and slaughtered their way to Delhi. The tiny British garrison at Lucknow held out against all odds; the one at Cawnpore surrendered only to be betrayed and massacred. Modern Indian accounts call this 'the first war of liberation', but as Julian Spilsbury reveals, 80 per cent of the so-called 'British' forces were from the sub-continent. Sikhs, Gurkhas and Afghans fought alongside small numbers of British soldiers. Together, they faced terrible odds and won. In the process they created a new army that would play a vital role in the Allied forces in both World Wars. Julian Spilsbury weaves the story together from some of the most vivid eyewitness accounts ever written. From the women and children hiding from blood-crazed mobs, to the epic battles that decided the campaign, to the grisly revenge exacted by the British forces, this is a gripping recreation of the greatest crisis of Empire. | ||
650 | _aOther Books | ||
700 |
_9245 _aSpilsbury, Julian |
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942 |
_2ddc _cBK |
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999 |
_c29 _d29 |