A Concise History of Modern IndiaA Concise History of Modern India by Barbara D. Metcalf and Thomas R. Metcalf, has become a classic in the field since it was first published in 2001. As a fresh interpretation of Indian history from the Mughals to the present, it has informed students across the world. In the third edition of the book, a final chapter charts the dramatic developments of the last twenty years, from 1990 through the Congress electoral victory of 2009, to the rise of the Indian high-tech industry in a country still troubled by poverty and political unrest. The narrative focuses on the fundamentally political theme of the imaginative and institutional structures that have successively sustained and transformed India, first under British colonial rule and then, after 1947, as an independent country. Woven into the larger political narrative is an account of India's social and economic development and its rich cultural life. |
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النتائج 6-10 من 96
الصفحة 15
... depicts him laying out the kind of formal garden he so loved, at once an aspect of his range of skills and metaphor for the order he aspired to bring to individual and corporate life (plate 1.3). Gulbadan's memoirs, further, offer a ...
... depicts him laying out the kind of formal garden he so loved, at once an aspect of his range of skills and metaphor for the order he aspired to bring to individual and corporate life (plate 1.3). Gulbadan's memoirs, further, offer a ...
الصفحة 16
II ., - yi/LJIA Plate 1.3 Bahur Supervising the Garden ofFidelity, by Bishan Das, from the Baburnama. indigenous lineages, above all those of the Rajputs, who were. 16 A Concise History of Modern India.
II ., - yi/LJIA Plate 1.3 Bahur Supervising the Garden ofFidelity, by Bishan Das, from the Baburnama. indigenous lineages, above all those of the Rajputs, who were. 16 A Concise History of Modern India.
الصفحة 18
... the planned city of Shahjahanabad (whose 'Red Fort' is represented in plate 1.1), and, most famed of all, the tomb dedicated to his cherished wife, the Taj Mahal (plate 1.4), all associated with paradisiacal symbols.
... the planned city of Shahjahanabad (whose 'Red Fort' is represented in plate 1.1), and, most famed of all, the tomb dedicated to his cherished wife, the Taj Mahal (plate 1.4), all associated with paradisiacal symbols.
الصفحة 19
Plate 1.4 Taj Mahal, Agra, from the Great Gateway (1648). power with expressions of cosmologically or divinely sanctioned rule. A further key to Akbar's successes were the administrative reforms that created an enduring framework for ...
Plate 1.4 Taj Mahal, Agra, from the Great Gateway (1648). power with expressions of cosmologically or divinely sanctioned rule. A further key to Akbar's successes were the administrative reforms that created an enduring framework for ...
الصفحة 21
Temples, like other buildings constructed in the shared imperial architectural style, among them the Rajput—built Hindu temple in plate 1. 5, were visible manifestations of Mughal power. Similarly, Aurangzeb's accusation of the Sikh ...
Temples, like other buildings constructed in the shared imperial architectural style, among them the Rajput—built Hindu temple in plate 1. 5, were visible manifestations of Mughal power. Similarly, Aurangzeb's accusation of the Sikh ...
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المحتوى
1 | |
The emergence of regional states and the East India | 29 |
The East India Company Raj 17721850 | 56 |
Revolt the modern state and colonized subjects 184 81885 | 92 |
Civil society colonial constraints 18851919 | 123 |
The crisis of the colonial order 19191939 | 167 |
Triumph and tragedy | 203 |
Democracy and development 19501989 23 1 | 231 |
Prosperity poverty power 26 5 | 265 |
Biographical notes | 295 |
Bibliographic essay 3 01 | 305 |
I 3 | 313 |
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