
Author: Rosie Llewellyn - Jones
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Year: 2011
Language: English
Pages: 196
ISBN/UPC (if available): 978-0-19-564953-6
Description
Curious stories of people who inhabited this exotic and vanished world will appeal to readers interested in human stories and history, bedsides scholars who will find new insights into the life of Nawabi Lucknow.
Old Lucknow was a place of pleasure, of beautiful gardens, extraordinary buildings, menageries maintained by the nawabs, music and dancing, exquisite food, fireworks and lavish parties, and a good share of rogues and villains. The wealthy nawabs were only part of the glittering scene that simultaneously enchanted and shocked visitors, not to mention the inhabitants. The book attempts to explore the more curious byways that lead off the main streets, to undiscovered corners of the city's past.
Using records not used before and information provided by the descendants of those who lived in Nawabi Lucknow, the author examines Nawabi entertainment, the true story of the notorious 'barber of Lucknow', the sad history of the European graveyards, and the adventures of Indian men and women in eighteenth and nineteenth century England.
Containing a number of previously unpublished illustration, these curious stories of people who inhabited this exotic and vanished world will appeal to readers interested in human stories and history, besides scholars who will find new insights into the life of Nawabi Lucknow.