Fr. 51.50

Empires of Complaints - Mughal Law and the Making of British India, 17651793

English · Paperback / Softback

Will be released 30.04.2025

Description

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Robert Travers explores the Mughal and Persianate context for colonial state-formation in eighteenth century Bengal. By examining the interactions between colonial authorities and Indian petitioners, he shows how the British reinterpreted and reconstituted Mughal law to suit their new Indian empire.

List of contents










Introduction; 1. Petitioning, taxation and law in eighteenth century Bengal: the context for empire; 2. Recasting Mughal law: company justice after 1772; 3. Zamindari succession disputes and Persianate Hindu law; 4. 'At the Durbar' in Calcutta: Banians, revenue farming, and the politics of landed debt; 5. A jagirdar's lament: an Indo-Persian historian's appeal to the British empire; 6. Conclusion: the making and remaking of a colonial judicial state (c.1780-1793); Select bibliography.

About the author

Robert Travers is Associate Professor of History at Cornell University.

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