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Miniatures Adventure => Colonial Adventures => Topic started by: OB on June 29, 2020, 11:26:21 AM

Title: A Mutiny Tidbit
Post by: OB on June 29, 2020, 11:26:21 AM
I've been spending a bit of time researching the Indian Mutiny. 

I think that we really don't know half as much as we should about the conflict.  It cries out a scholar to do what Ampal Singh Sidhu did for the Sikh Wars. Anyhow poking about on Jstor is helping me find out a bit more.  Eventually, I hope to be able to write a few articles for my blog.

Here's something that I recently came across might be of interest.  The Wahabis who joined Bakht Khan at the siege of Delhi were conventionally armed.  That is to say they used the same muskets as the Sepoys.  Bakht Khan himself had decades of service in the Company Artillery and was from a family with royal connections.
Title: Re: A Mutiny Tidbit
Post by: jambo1 on June 30, 2020, 06:46:54 AM
Nice little find, a project I am just starting out on so all information is great for me at the moment! :)
Title: Re: A Mutiny Tidbit
Post by: OB on June 30, 2020, 11:18:57 AM
Gad it was useful Jambo. 

WH Russell's Indian Mutiny Diary is well worth getting and very affordable last time I looked.  He covered the second half as it were for the Times of London and accompanied the British Army.
Title: Re: A Mutiny Tidbit
Post by: Rogerc on July 05, 2020, 04:30:53 PM
Fascinating history, look forward to what you dig up.
Title: Re: A Mutiny Tidbit
Post by: OB on July 06, 2020, 11:44:02 AM
Thanks Roger.  I think its going to be slow going.

Throughout the fighting daily newspapers were published in India and in Urdu naturally enough.  I'm sure there is much to learn there.  Presumably Indian scholars have already mined them as a source.

Currently I'm reading Malleson who wrote in 1897.  He had been in India and had seen it all coming.