Collection
Main Collection
Item
Rajput Ceremonial Interactions as a Mirror of a Dying Indian State System, 1820–1947
Item type
Author
Haynes, Edward S.
Title
Rajput Ceremonial Interactions as a Mirror of a Dying Indian State System, 1820–1947
Location
Cambridge (UK)
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Publication
Modern Asian studies
Volume
24
Issue
3
Page Numbers
459–492
Date
1990
Collection
Main Collection
Description
As the British Empire extended its power across the Indian subcontinent, the military and political pressures which it could bring to bear had proved to be its most significant assets. However, both to establish and to maintain an English political paramountcy which could guarantee economic dominance came over time to be revealed as two separate tasks, demanding very distinct skills. To maintain and secure this newfound power in India, the British were forced to come to know more about India. They had to grasp the ‘rules’ of India's preexisting political ‘game’ and, more frequently, to confront their need to rewrite these rules into a form which they could comprehend, in which they could compete, and where their dominance could be virtually assured.This process suggests the ‘gathering in of the threads of legitimacy’ towhich D. A. Low has to eloquently drawn our attention.
Key
WRRHNVSR
Language
English