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India

Page 83

by John Keay

Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) 604

  Baji Rao I, Maratha peshwa, 367, 368

  Baji Rao II, Maratha peshwa, 408–9, 412–3

  Bakhtiyar, Muhammad – see Muhammad BAKSAL, Bangladeshi party, 565

  Baksar (Buxar), battle of (1764), 391–2, 404, 437

  Balaji Baji Rao, Maratha peshwa, 403, 404

  Balaji Vishvanath, Maratha peshwa, 363–4, 366, 367

  Balban, Ghiyas-ud-Din, Delhi sultan, 242, 248–9

  Balfour, Arthur, British prime minister, 462

  ‘Balhara’, The, Muslim rendering of Vallabha, a title of the Rashtrakuta kings (q.v.)

  Bali, Indonesia, 172, 277

  Balkh, Afghanistan, 206

  Ballala II, 13th c Hoysala king, 252

  Ballala III, 14th c Hoysala king, 258

  Baluchistan, 118, 181, 518, 543, 567, 592

  Bamiyan, Afghanistan, 114

  Bana, biographer of Harsha, 161–4, 167

  Banda Bahadur, 18th c Sikh leader, 361, 364

  Bandung Conference (1955), 533

  Banerji, R.D., archaeologist, 9

  Bangalore, Karnataka, 400

  Bangladesh, 7, 193, 330, 465, 508, 511, 528, 553–60, 561, 564–5, 582, 587, 589–90

  Bangladesh National Party (BNP), 590

  Barani, Ziau-ud-Din, 14th c Muslim chronicler, 249, 257, 258–9, 260, 263–5, 266–7, 268, 271

  Bareilly, Uttar Pradesh, 137

  Baroda, Gujarat, 368

  Bartuh, 13th c Hindu leader, 242

  Basham, A.L., historian, 151

  ‘Basic Democracy’ (Pakistan), 545–6, 554

  Bassein, Maharashtra, 306, 348, 405, 408

  Bayana, near Agra, 294, 295

  Bayly, Christopher, historian, 453–4

  Bayram Khan, Akbar’s guardian, 310, 311

  Baz Bahadur, 16th c sultan of Malwa, 311–2, 313

  Beas River, 73, 423

  Belur, Karnataka, 251

  Benares see Varanasi

  Bengal xxiv, 43, 50, 65, 137, 140, 143, 165, 176, 192–4, 220, 239, 243–5, 248, 263, 270, 275, 287–8, 300, 318, 341, 362, 371, 375–6, 381–2, 385, 386–93, 448–9, 456, 463–6, 491–2, 499, 504, 505, 506, 508–9, 517–8, 528 see also Bangladesh

  Bentinck, Lord William, British governor-general, 417, 429–31

  Berar, Maharashtra, 348, 354

  Bernier, François, 17th c French traveller, 321–2, 326–7, 336

  Besant, Annie, freedom fighter, 473–4

  Betwa River, xxv, 90

  Bhadralok, the Bengali Hindu intelligentsia, 473, 504

  Bhagavad Gita, ethical and devotional Sanskrit text, 42, 148

  Bhagwant Das, Kacchwaha rajput, 313

  Bhaja, cave site in Maharashtra, 125

  Bhakti, Hindu devotional movement, 148, 194, 219–10, 287–8, 316

  Bhandarkar, D.R., archaeologist, 7–8

  Bharat, Bharatas, Vedic lineage whence alternative for ‘India’ derives, 35, 56, 61

  Bharata-varsha (‘Kingdom of the Bharatas’) see Bharat

  Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) (‘Indian People’s Party), 454, 576, 589, 597–601, 604

  Bharatpur, Rajasthan, 416

  Bharhut Stupa, 68, 102

  Bhasa, Sanskrit playwright, 103

  Bhashani Maulana, Bangladeshi politician, 555

  Bhaskara-varman, 7th c ruler of Assam, 163

  Bhatia, Panjab, 207

  Bhatvadi, battle of (1624), 331

  Bhilsa, Madhya Pradesh, 254

  Bhima, hero, 39, 42

  Bhimpal, Pratihara rajput, 208

  Bhindranwale, Sant Jarnail Singh, Sikh activist, 578–9

  Bhoj of Dhar, 11th c ‘philosopher king’ 226–30

  Bhoja of Kanauj, 9th c Pratihara king, 199, 202

  Bhonsles of Nagpur, Maratha family, 368, 387–8, 402, 410

  Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh, 426, 583–5

  Bhutan, 244

  Bhutto, Benazir, Pakistan prime minister, 569, 592, 594, 595, 596, 600

  Bhutto, Shahnawaz, 512

  Bhutto, Zulfiqar Ali, prime minister of Pakistan, 544, 546–8, 549, 553–60, 562–3, 565–9, 593

  Bhuvaneshwar, Orissa, 213, 220

  Bidar, Karnataka, 283, 284, 302

  Bihar, 40, 41, 43, 49, 61–70, 134, 193, 239, 243–4, 263, 296, 391–2, 449, 465, 471, 550, 587

  Bihari refugees, 508–9, 558

  Bijapur, Karnataka, 216, 302–3, 307, 331, 332, 337–9, 351, 355

  Bimbisara, king of Magada, 65, 66, 67–8

  Bin Laden, Usama, 595

  Bindusara, Maurya emperor, 80, 89, 90, 91

  Birla family, industrialists, 531

  ‘Black Hole of Calcutta’, 389–90

  Boigne, Count Benoît de, general, 408

  Bombay (Mumbai), 126, 348, 370–1, 372, 381, 393, 405, 456, 461, 586, 594, 599

  Borobudur, Java, 177–8

  Bose, Rashbehari, nationalist revolutionary, 468

  Bose, Subash Chandra, Congress radical & ‘Azad Hind’ leader, 493, 494–5, 504, 518

  Brahma, deity, 33

  Brahmadeya, land or revenue grant made to brahmans, 159, 219

  Brahmanabad, Sind, 185, 186

  Brahmanas, Sanskrit texts dealing with sacrificial ritual, 2, 26, 30, 40, 43

  Brahamans, members of the priestly/scholarly caste, 28, 31, 32, 38, 47, 52–4, 86, 97, 99, 105, 120, 124, 146–7, 148–9, 152, 159–60, 166, 219, 344, 364, 454

  Brahmaputra River, 341

  Brahmo Samaj, Hindu reformist movement, 457

  Braudel, F., historian xxiv

  Brhadratha, last Maurya emperor, 104

  Briggs, John, scholar, 231–2, 236

  British perceptions of India, xxviii, 22, 426–32

  Broach, Gujarat, 90, 126, 130, 187

  Buchan, John, writer, 471

  Buddh Gaya, Bihar, 65, 146, 169

  Buddha (Siddhartha Gautama), 39, 47, 62–7, 102, 117, 125, 145, 150–1, 194

  Buddhism, 47, 62–70, 87, 89, 97, 99, 105, 120, 124, 146–7, 148–9, 152, 158, 166, 182, 193–4, 223, 534

  Budha-Gupta, 5th c Gupta king, 144

  Bukka, 14th c founder of Vijayanagar kingdom, 281, 282

  Bulandshahr, Uttar Pradesh, 239

  Burdwan, Bengal, 450

  Burhanpur, Maharashtra, 332, 348

  Burma, 123, 194, 416, 451

  Burt, Captain, antiquarian, 214

  Bussy, Charles de, French commander, 357–81, 393

  Cakravartin, Buddhist ideal of universal emperor or cosmic ‘wheel-turner’, 70, 139, 140, 159, 170

  Calanus, renunciate, 76–7

  Calcutta (Kolkota), 370, 371, 372, 374, 381, 388–9, 392–3, 482, 505, 508–9, 517

  Calicut, Kerala, 277, 306, 481

  Cambay, Gujarat, 257, 298, 348

  Cambodia, 176–7

  Candala, Harijan community, 54, 145

  Cannanore, Kerala, 481

  Cape Comorin (Kanya Kumari), Kerala, 122

  Carnatic Wars, 377–81

  Caste, 28, 34, 52–5, 120, 145, 189, 279, 419, 432, 586–7

  Catherine of Braganza, 371

  Central Treaty Organisation (CENTO), 533

  Ceraman Perumal, Tamil saint, 219

  Chach, 7th c ruler of Sind, 182–3

  Chahamanas, rajput lineage, 206, 233–8

  Chaitanya, Bengali religious leader, 287–8

  Chalukyas, 7–8th c Deccan dynasty, 168–70, 172–6, 181, 190–1, 305

  Chalukyas, Later Western, 11–12th c Deccan dynasty, 216, 220, 223, 227, 251, see also Eastern Chalukyas Chambal River, xxv, 192

  Champa, Bengal, 65

  Cham-pa, Indian kingdom in Vietnam, 124, 177

  Champaner, Gujarat, 286, 298

  Chand, rajput bard, 233, 234

  Chanda Sahib, 18th c claimant to Arcot, 379

  Chandelas, rajput rulers of Bundelkhand, 199, 206, 209, 213–4, 227, 234

  Chanderi, Uttar Pradesh, 296

  Chandernagore, Bengal, 377, 381, 390

  Chandigarh, Panjab/Haryana, 577–
8

  Chandra-Gupta I, Gupta emperor, 134–6

  Chandra-Gupta II, Gupta emperor, 134, 141–3, 145

  Chandragupta, Maurya emperor, 69, 79–80, 81, 82–6, 130, 134

  Charles II of England/Scotland, 348

  Charsadda, Panjab, 51

  Chashtana, 2nd c Shaka satrap, 131

  Chatterjee, Bankim Chandra, writer, 457, 467

  Chaul, Maharashtra, 277

  Chausa, battle of (1529), 299

  Chauth, Maratha claim to 25% of revenue, 357, 366

  Chedi, district & dynasty in central India, 50, 227

  Chelmsford, Lord, British Viceroy, 473

  Chenab River, 72, 73

  Chennai, xxviii, see Madras

  Cheras, people & dynasty of Kerala, 170, 173, 181, 199, 215, 218, 220

  Chidambaram, Tamil Nadu, 223–5, 258

  Chilas, Jammu & Kashmir, 115

  Child, John, East India Company merchant, 371–2

  Child, Sir Josiah, East India Company governor, 371–2

  Chillianwala, battle of (1849) 424

  China, 104, 110, 113–7, 123, 134, 146, 161, 167, 176, 177, 221, 223, 421, 533–6, 558, 563

  Chishti, Shaikh Salim, Sufi saint, 315

  Chishti, Shaikh Muin-ud-Din, Sufi saint, 235, 315

  Chitor, Rajasthan, 256, 279, 287, 300, 313–5

  Chittagong, Bangladesh, 557

  Chola dynasty of Tanjore, xix, xxviii, 119, 121, 170, 201, 214–23, 225, 252

  Christians, Indian, 122, 429, 432, Missions, 428–9, 438, 445

  Chunar, Uttar Pradesh, 298, 299, 392

  Churchill, Winston, British Prime Minister, 488, 489, 493

  Clive, Robert, Colonel & Governor of Bengal, 375, 379–82, 383, 386, 393, 486

  Cochin, Kerala, 306, 348

  Coinage and currency, 52, 61, 101, 105, 106–7, 111, 131, 135, 139, 144, 269, 275, 301, 317, 333, 342, 361, 373, 433, 538

  Colbert, Jean-Baptiste, French finance minister, 322, 377

  Commonwealth, British, 524, 538

  Communist Party (CPI & CPM), 481, 518, 530–1, 550–1, 552, 557, 575

  Compagnie des Indes, 350, 373, 376, 377, 393–4

  Congress Party, 453, 454, 455, 456–61, 464, 465, 466–7, 470, 477, 480–3, 491, 493–5, 500–2, 513–4, 520, 527, 529, 549–52, 575–6, 604

  Constitutional Reform & Representation (1880–1947), 455, 459, 468, 469, 480, 489–90, 490–1

  Constitutions, Indian, 525–7, 564, 573–4

  Pakistani, 526, 538–46, 554, 564, 568

  Bangladeshi, 562–5

  Coorg, Mysore, 416

  Copland, Ian, historian, 493

  Cornwallis, Lord, British Governor-General, 399–400, 430

  Cotton & Textiles, 13, 85, 119, 245–7, 276, 323, 350, 372–3, 448, 450, 452

  Court, Colonel, Napoleonic officer, 422

  Crafts & Industry, xxvi, 10, 13, 55, 127, 145, 272, 323, 451, 466, 530–2, 538

  Cranganore, Kerala, 122

  Cripps, Sir Stafford, British politician, 497, 498

  Cuddalore, Tamil Nadu, 393

  Cults, 14, 31–2, 53, 96, 147–8, 194

  Cunningham, Alexander, archaeological surveyor, 136

  Curzon, Lord, Viceroy, xviii, 459, 461–4, 468

  Cyrus, Achaemenid king, 58

  Dacca (Dhaka), Bangladesh, 340, 341, 371, 464, 466, 528, 541–3, 555, 559

  Dahar (Dahir), 8th c ruler of Sind, 183–5

  Daksinapatha, ‘the southern route’ – hence ‘Deccan’, 43, 90, 119, 169

  Dalai Lama, 534

  Dales, George F., archaeologist, 23

  Dalhousie, Lord, Governor-General, 424, 432–5

  Damaji Gaikwad, Maratha leader, 368

  Danda, ‘force’, ‘coercion’, 149

  Dandi, Gujarat, 487

  Dani, Dr Ahmad Hassan, archaeologist, 114–7

  Dantidurga, 8th c founder of the Rashtrakuta dynasty, 190–1, 200

  Dara Shikoh, Mughal prince, son of Shah Jahan, 338, 339, 340, 345

  Darius I, Achaemenid king, 57–8, 60

  Dasa, pre-Arya peoples of India, 21, 23, 24, 28, 29, 35, 53–4

  Dasaratha, Maurya emperor, 104

  Dasyu, interchangeable with dasa (q.v.)

  Datia, Madhya Pradesh, 443

  Daulat Khan, governor of Panjab under Lodi sultanate, 292, 316

  Daulat Rao Scindia, Maratha leader, 408

  Daulatabad see Devagiri

  Day, Francis, East India Company merchant, 332

  Debal, Sind, 183–4, 234

  Dehra Dun, Uttar Pradesh, 415

  Delhi, 42, 131, 136, 142–3, 206, 233, 239, 240, 247–8, 259–61, 262–6, 292, 301, 309, 310, 335, 340, 366, 374–5, 385–6, 403, 410, 439–40, 447, 465, 489, 503, 509, 517, 574, 580–1

  Delhi Sultanate, 213, 240–50, 262–276

  Demetrius II, Bactrian Greek king, 107

  Desai Morarji Indian prime Minister, 575–6

  Deshmukhs, landed nobles of Maharashtra, 338, 355

  Deva Raya I, 15th c king of Vijayanagar, 282

  Deva Raya II, 15th c king of Vijayanagar, 282, 303

  Devagiri (Daulatabad), Maharashtra, 252–5, 257, 269, 270, 281, 283

  Devapala, 9th c Pala king, 193, 195

  Devnimori, Gujarat, 141

  Dhaka see Dacca

  Dhalip Singh, last Maharaja of Panjab, 423, 424

  Dhamma see Dharma

  Dhanga, 10–11th c Chandela king, 213

  Dhar, Madhya Pradesh, 226–30, 285

  Dharma, ‘religion’, ‘duty’, ‘order’, 46, 94–100, 131, 147, 149, 171, 225

  Dharmapala, 8th c Pala king, 192–3, 195

  Dhingra, Madanlal, patriot & assassin, 468

  Dholpur, Rajasthan, 294

  Dhruva, 8th c Rashtrakuta king, 192, 197, 199, 201

  Dhruvadevi, Gupta queen, 141

  Digvijaya, ‘conquest of the four quarters’ of the globe, 160, 171, 182, 191, 192, 199, 215, 217, 235, 258, 409, 576–7

  Dilawar Khan Ghori, 15th c founder of Malwa sultanate, 284–5

  Disraeli, Benjamin, British prime minister, 447

  Diu, Gujarat, 306

  Divodasa, ancient king of Varanasi, 33, 35

  Diwan, finance minister of a Muslim ruler, or the office of same, 382, 387, 392

  Doab, region between rivers Jamuna & Ganga in Uttar Pradesh, xxiv, 26, 41–2, 44, 256, 268, 294, 413

  Dorasamudra see Halebid

  Dost Muhammad, 19th c Amir of Kabul, 418, 420

  Dow, Alexander, historian, 232

  Draupadi, heroine, 39, 46

  Dravida Munnetra Kazhaghan (DMK) Tamil political party, 529, 550, 575

  Dravidian languages, xxvii, 6, 28, 118–9, 527–30

  Dryden, John, playwright, 326

  Duby, Georges, historian, 218

  Duff, James Grant, administrator & historian, 367, 403, 426

  Dufferin, Lord, Viceroy, 455, 458–95

  Dupleix, Joseph, Governor of Pondicherry, 379, 393

  Durand Line (Pak-Afghan frontier), 598

  Dyer, Brigadier-General Reginald, soldier & butcher, 475–7

  East India Company, Dutch, (Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie) 323, 348, 373

  East India Company, English, 323, 332, 350, 361, 364, 370–82, 383–5, 404–8, 414, 419, 427–31, 446, 448, 486

  East Pakistan, 538, 539, 541–3, 546, 548, 553–60; see also Bangladesh

  Eastern Chalukyas, 7–11th c dynasty, 170, 191, 216

  Economy, 259–60, 269, 320–4, 384, 448–51, 482, 530–2, 538, 544–5, 551, 562–3, 591–2, 602–4

  Egypt, 121

  Elections (1937) 491, 493, (1946) 500

  Indian, 525–6, 530, 550, 551–2, 573, 575, 576, 598, 601–2, 604

  Pakistani, 537, 541, 542, 545–6, 552–5, 567

  Elephanta Island, Maharashtra, 169

  Elephants, 27, 58, 65, 70, 73, 84, 109, 168, 185, 189–90, 220, 237, 271, 284, 310

  Ellora, Maharashtra, xx, xxviii, 125, 191, 200–1

  Elp
hinstone, Mountstuart, administrator & historian, 26–7, 404, 412, 420, 426

  ‘Emergency’, The, constitutional suspension of 1975–7, 528, 564, 572–4

  Emigration, 451–3, 508–9, 521, 546, 578–9, 591

  Epic of Gilgamesh, 3

  Eran, Madhya Pradesh, 148

  Ershad Mohammad, Bangladeshi prime minister, 544, 566, 590

  Eucratides, Bactrian Greek king, 107

  Euthydemus, Bactrian Greek king, 106

  Fa Hian (Fa Hsien), 5th c Chinese visitor, 145–7, 152, 158, 160, 176

  Famine, 86, 268, 454, 459, 504

  Farman, Mughal imperial directive, 366, 369–77

  Farrukhsiyar, Mughal emperor, 364–6, 369–70, 375

  Fatehpur Sikri, Uttar Pradesh, 308, 315–6, 319

  Fazl-ul-Huq, E. Pakistani politician, 541

  Federation, aborted constitutional proposal, 488–95, 499

  Fergusson, James, architectural historian, 262, 336

  Ferishta, Muslim historian, 204, 206, 207, 210, 231–2, 236–7, 240, 241, 249, 258, 260, 281, 282, 286, 289, 297, 299, 307, 337

  Feroz Shah I Khalji (Jalal-ud-Din), 13th c Delhi sultan, 249–50, 254–5

  Feroz Shah II Tughluq, 14th c Delhi sultan, 136, 242, 271–4

  Ferozepur, Panjab, 537

  Ferozepur, battle of (1845), 423

  Feudalism, 132, 159–60, 226, 232, 305

  Firdausi, poet, 210

  Flood, The, 1–5

  Fort Derawar, Harappan site, 9

  Funan, Indic kingdom in Vietnam, 124, 128, 176

  Gama, Vasco da, 306

  Gana-Sangha (early republic) 47–8, 49, 51, 64, 67

  Gandak River, 43

  Gandhara, people, region & artistic genre of the north-west, 50, 58–62, 71, 84, 103, 117, 121, 143

  Gandhi, Indira, prime minister, 477, 517, 529, 549–52, 557–60, 562–4, 578–81, 593

  Gandhi, M.K., ‘Mahatma’, 100, 247, 449, 452, 453, 455, 471–2, 475, 477, 479–83, 484, 486, 492, 497, 498, 514, 521, 524–5

  Gandhi, Rajiv, prime minister, 580–1, 588–9, 598, 602, 603–4

  Gandhi, Sanjay, younger son of Indira, 573–6, 578–9

  Ganesh, Sultan Raja of Bengal, 287

  Ganga dynasty of Mysore, 169, 191, 192, 199

  Ganga dynasty of Orissa, 220, 271, 278

  Ganga River, xxiv, 26, 36, 40, 43, 44, 61, 70, 73–5, 106, 135, 164, 192, 201, 208, 220–1

  Gangaikondacholapuram, Tamil Nadu, 221

  Garhgaon, Assam, 341

  Garhwal, Uttar Pradesh, 330

  Gauda, Bengal, 162, 163

  Gaur, Bengal, 244, 279

  Gautamiputra Satakarni, 1st–2nd C AD Shatavahana ruler, 131

  ‘Ghadr’, ‘Mutiny’ movement of c1914, 472–3

 

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