
A History of British India
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Narrated by:
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Hayden J. Bellenoit
About this listen
No era is more pertinent to understanding how present-day India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh evolved than the nearly 200 years of British rule. This colonial period was a time of deep change and transformation - for India and for the world. These 24 engrossing lectures offer you new perspectives on the history of European imperialism, on world economic history, on the features of British colonialism, and on the rich cultures of the Indian subcontinent.
Over the course of this remarkable saga you'll explore:
- How the English East India Company, a commercial trading entity, established a presence in India and took the reins of power in one of the strangest political transformations in world history
- How the monumental Mughal Empire, builders of the Taj Mahal and longstanding Muslim rulers in India, gradually came apart in the face of British conquest
- How Britain extended its rule across the subcontinent, built a huge economic machine in India, and ultimately exacted a heavy price from the Indian people
- How India finally achieved independence in 1947, through one of humanity's most noteworthy examples of resourceful and philosophically sophisticated leadership
You'll trace the economic motives that brought the British and other Westerners to India, like how the emergence of the English as a stereotypically tea-drinking society was directly related to the Indian colonial economy. You will also take stock of the incredibly lavish lifestyles of India's maharajahs and how the British leveraged alliances with them. And you'll grasp the fundamental moral contradiction of the Raj, the conflict between Britain's economic interests and the human needs of the empire's Indian subjects, and more. In A History of British India, you'll relive a crucial era in international relations, one with deep and lasting implications for our contemporary world.
PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying reference material will be available in your Library section along with the audio.
©2017 The Great Courses (P)2017 The Teaching Company, LLCGreat!
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a great, in-depth audible book
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An insight into a fascinating history
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Schoolboy Error
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First, Hayden is actually very balanced here and does not pick on or "sneer" at the British. He states facts. Like the British removed systems that Mughals had in place to avoid famines. That's not criticising. That's just a (sad) fact. Another is a refusal to accept they got it wrong and the Mughals had that right, cost the lives of millions more.
Hayden also details what the British did well. The fact that the British come off as arrogant looters is not his fault, but the fault of the British. Recommended listening for anyone interested in this part of history.
Interesting and depressing in same measure
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He strangely left out the extent of aid given to the EIC by Indians and why the ruler was so hated (favoured tool of punishment for many things even to those close to him was rape, male or female and that he’d alienated many of the ruling elites/Financiers)
Was some points of clear anti-British influence throughout.
Is always easy to pick and chose info on a subject so big.
It’s worth listening to - but don’t expect an unbiased series here.
Worth listening to but some bias
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Excellent. Well balanced and informative.
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Decent but biased
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But his manner grates: history is a matter of facts, and it is possible for a history to sit there in judgement of those facts, knowing that they can sound wise after the event. Take partition - it's fine to say it had bad direct results. But what alternatives where there? Hayden himself admits that what Jinnah wanted and what Gandhi and Nehru wanted were not compatible. It's fine to say that neither side wanted partition, but the problem of Indian nationalism is that in giving power to the people, minority communities such as Muslims feared a tyranny of the majority. Gandi's movement opened a can of worms. There is no easy answer! So just tell us what happened.
More broadly, Hayden seems to think he can sneer at anything done by the British. But why? Was it a bad thing to build railways or to stop Sati? Of course not. Does he demonstrate that British India was clearly worse than Mughal India or post 1947 India? Not really. They are just different periods. For large sections of the course Hayden seems to be railing against modernisation and the Industrial Revolution. Though he does so exclusively from the point of view of an Indian nationalist, when in fact artisans in the UK also lost their jobs. Factory work isn't as much fun as making your own cloth, but that's the price of modernity. Hayden B doesn't need to give us his sneering opinion, just tell us what happened! We can make our own minds up.
interesting history, but Hayden be less smug
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Patchy history of British India
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