Flintlock
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I did not pick on an random author or a random guy, I picked up the person person responsible for the education system in India, McCauley and the other backbone of the whole of indology studies. These people have the highest "contributions" in those fields.
It matters and matters a f*cking lot, because we are still using that bloody system, whose sole purpose has been to destroy the indian culture and education system.
So you disagree with their interpretation of Indian history? What exactly is it that you dislike about the current system?
Excuse me! where did I praise the mughals? Show me one statement from me. The only praise might be, they were better than the bl*ody british, if that seems as a praise to you, then I cant help you.
They were a lot worse than the British infact. The only reason they seem better is perhaps some form of mass Stockholm syndrome.
My sole point was the mughals were a spent force! So bringing them into the equation is not correct.
Perhaps, but I have made another point that the Mughals were principally responsible in crushing traditional indian society.
define "modernity"- you are in for a rude shock.
Civil society, rule of law, citizenship, academic temper....
I picked on the foremost among them and it was not a random selection. I do not have the time or patience to dissect every one of them.
Karl Marx was German btw. And I don't see why you ignore the dozens of British explorers who took pains to string together the story of india. There is nothing wrong in recognizing their contributions.
another "what if" scenario and blo*dy hell what is "modernity", and when did the british leave a united india? If you think, Bismark or some west person was greatest unifier, think again, it was Patel along with Menon, who combined 565 INDEPENDENT states into India, with zero violence in 562 states. and this was done with instances of being with a revolver in a point blank range.
Patel did an extraordinary job, I won't that. They don't call him the Iron Man for nothing.
Those 565 princely states were all British protectorates. I don't see how any of them were Independent at all. After Mountbatten was on India's side, I don't see how any princely state could have possibly remained separate from India.
For a better understanding, try to imagine a similar effort 500 year ago. It would have been impossible because the people didn't see themselves as a whole.
another "what if", I am pretty bored of this game. Either let us go the whole hog of playing ALL "what if" scenarios or do not play at all. Dont use tidbits of information.
fine...
You are playing "what ifs", so I will take the liberty, which would have come
even if the british did not come, remember immediately after the mumbai train, how the princely kings actively participated in making them.
what if the train never came?
After this statement, McCauley will be proud to see his dreams of shattering Indian identity and consciousness coming to such a fruition.
Oh please....ignoring the cultural and intellectual contributions of the british is just plain conceit.
yet the mughal emperor called himself, the "hindustan ka baadshah", the england/dutch came intially to the south of the country, where no Indus flows , and call themselves "east India company". why so?
What does a title have to do with anything?
It is what the ordinary people think that matters. Foreigners knew the land as India, that too more as a continent, as the "lands of India", on the same note as "lands of Europe".
How come even a scandinavian country like portugal knew about India right from 1600 when they tried for alternate routes when constantinople was conquered by turkey? At that time, there was no India right?
Again, they knew india not as a country, but a different world altogether.
did you find ANY pedestal from me?
Considering them better than the British is putting them on a pedestal. They were much, much worse in so many different ways.
So you agree that the british acted just as a medium who did not know that it was passing this knowledge.
The British knew of course. How can one remain ignorant of the changes taking place in ones colony.
But you may call it inadvertent, or perhaps natural, inevitable.
If partition had not happened, I wouldnt bet on it.
You wouldn't bet on what? that india would have had a parliament if there was no partition?
Now SA couldnt see, so it couldnt happen. May I know why? Till the british came into scene, they worked completely under the peshwa and he was always regarded as the "emperor" for them.
Look. Lots of things are needed to form a modern nation state. A solid penal code, justice system, public institutions, roadways, railways. The Marathas weren't doing any of that as far as I can see.
Much easier than 565 kingdoms left by the british.
7-8 disparate kingdoms at war with each other are much much more difficult to unite than 500 subservient princely states who have little choice but to obey.
give me the timeline you are referring to? pre british rule or during british rule. I agree with your statement for during british rule, but I express reservations pre.
I'm talking about the Period just after the Mughals consolidated their empire, all the way till the British left and even a few years into Independence.
After the 1857 crushing, where cities were wiped out and every tree for miles had people hanging, I agree with you.
That, and now, think of the same story repeated, again and again, over a thousand years.
never could even one of them peacefully rule, all the history of them will be moving from crushing from one revolt to another, only after they started giving the space to rajputs and others as minor rulers, could they take a breath.
True, but you can understand the horrible effect such a malevolent rule has on the population.
Talent gets wiped out. Artisans, craftsmen, warriors, leaders are periodically put to the sword, so that the voices of opposition get wiped out.
Did you know that even upto 1900, Bihar was referred to as the most troublesome province? Central province, frankly I lack knowledge, but wasnt the intiative for the whole INC and stuff originate in Bengal, I wonder what was Bankim chandra was sucking to when he wrote anand math?
The rise of Hindu Nationalism with Bankim Chandra's narrative are indeed very important events. These along with reform movements, Rammohunroy, Vivekananda, etc. played a huge role in getting the dignity back that had been wiped out.
This is where I principally differ from you, you use the "formation" ,"creation" of identity - which I would at the extreme call "reawakening", though I would not prefer even this extreme.
Even, I would prefer reawakening actually, only, a reawakening after a long, long period of time.