The Queen of JhansiLakshmibai, the Queen of Jhansi, a legendary Indian heroine, led her troops against the British in the uprising of 1857, which is now widely described as the first Indian War of Independence. The image of the young warrior queen who died on the battlefield but not in the minds of her people captured the imagination of novelist Mahasweta Devi, who undertook extensive research that encompassed family reminiscence, oral literature, local histories, and more traditional sources. From these she wove a very personal history of a heroine--an unusual woman, widowed at an early age, who grew from a free-spirited child into an independent young leader. Devi's resulting work traces the history of the growing resistance to the British, while building a detailed picture of Lakshmibai as a complex, spirited, full-blooded woman who wears her long tresses unbound at the same time as she prefers a male attire on horseback; who is a cool-headed and far-sighted leader of men, full of warm concern for her soldiers; as well as a mother who worries about her infant son's well-being. Simultaneously a history, a biography, and an imaginative work of fiction, this book is a valuable contribution to the reclamation of history and historiography by feminist writers. |
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Naroshankar Motiwale's brother's son , Viswasrao Lakshman , became the ruler of Jhansi after his uncle's death . During his reign , a man came to him and intro- duced himself as the dead hero Sadashivrao , who had fall- en in the Third ...
Gangadhar Rao became attuned to learning the duties of a king towards his kingdom . At the same time , he turned his attentions towards his personal life . At the joint efforts of Gangadhar Rao and the English Resident , peace ...
This later became the British encamp- ment . Morar Cantonment took the name of a small neighbouring river . At the eastern edge of Gwalior was a ditch , Sonerekha , always full of water , which went from Kotah - ki - Sarai to Phulbag .