Lord Clive: The Foundation of British Rule in IndiaT. Fisher Unwin, 1899 - 318 страница |
Из књиге
Резултати 1-5 од 34
Страница xiii
... hand , defends almost every incident of his career , including the fictitious treaty with Omichand . Of the two more recent memoirs , that by the 4 late Colonel Malleson , while doing ample justice to Clive's PREFACE xiii.
... hand , defends almost every incident of his career , including the fictitious treaty with Omichand . Of the two more recent memoirs , that by the 4 late Colonel Malleson , while doing ample justice to Clive's PREFACE xiii.
Страница 7
... hand , taking what seems to be a more just view of the facts , and of the manners and customs of the time , denies that any of these early disputes can be traced to a perverse or quarrelsome temper . Clive appears in all to have been ...
... hand , taking what seems to be a more just view of the facts , and of the manners and customs of the time , denies that any of these early disputes can be traced to a perverse or quarrelsome temper . Clive appears in all to have been ...
Страница 19
... hands of the Mahrattas , was ransomed by Dupleix , and he and Mirzapha Jung joining forces , attacked the Nawáb , Anwárud dín Khán , at Ambúr on the 3d August 1749 , and won a decisive victory . In this battle Dupleix furnished a LORD ...
... hands of the Mahrattas , was ransomed by Dupleix , and he and Mirzapha Jung joining forces , attacked the Nawáb , Anwárud dín Khán , at Ambúr on the 3d August 1749 , and won a decisive victory . In this battle Dupleix furnished a LORD ...
Страница 36
... ment fled in confusion , and , according to Orme , would have fled as far as Madras but that Clive , meeting them , forced them , sword in hand and not C without violence , to return . ' During the siege 36 BUILDERS OF GREATER BRITAIN.
... ment fled in confusion , and , according to Orme , would have fled as far as Madras but that Clive , meeting them , forced them , sword in hand and not C without violence , to return . ' During the siege 36 BUILDERS OF GREATER BRITAIN.
Страница 43
... hand in the event of his services being required in the Dekhan . Clive , accompanied by his wife , left England early in 1755 , and reached Bombay at the end of October , to find that Colonel Scott was dead , and that , in con- sequence ...
... hand in the event of his services being required in the Dekhan . Clive , accompanied by his wife , left England early in 1755 , and reached Bombay at the end of October , to find that Colonel Scott was dead , and that , in con- sequence ...
Друга издања - Прикажи све
Чести термини и фразе
administration Admiral advantage appointed Arcot army arrival attack battle betel nut British Calcutta carried cent Chandernagore charges civil and military Clive's views Colonel command Company's servants conduct consequence Council Court of Directors Court of Proprietors defence Diwáni Dupleix Dutch duty East India Company enemies English established Europeans favour force Fort St David fortune French friends gentlemen George Grenville Governor of Bengal Hastings honour House of Commons India House inland trade interest Kásim Katwa Khán lakhs letter Lord Clive Madras Mahratta Maskelyne means ment Mir Jafar Murshidabad mutiny native Nawab Názim ud Daulah never nut and tobacco occasion officers Omichand opinion orders Oudh Patna Plassey Pondicherry possessions proceedings proposed Rájá regard resolution return to England revenues rupees Select Committee sent Sepoys situation St David Stringer Lawrence Sullivan taken tion took treaty Trichinopoly troops Vansittart Verelst Warren Hastings Watson whole
Популарни одломци
Страница 316 - That Robert Lord Clive did at the same time render " great and meritorious services to his country.
Страница 139 - The servants of the Company obtained — not for their employers, but for themselves — a monopoly of almost the whole internal trade. They forced the natives to buy dear and sell cheap.
Страница 211 - I can call my own except my paternal fortune of £$OO per annum, and which has been in the family for ages past. But upon this I am content to live, and perhaps I shall find more real content of mind and happiness therein than in the trembling affluence of an unsettled fortune.
Страница 115 - I observe, in some measure engaged the public attention ; but much more may yet in time be done, if the Company will exert themselves in the manner the importance of their present possessions and future prospects deserves. I have represented to them in the strongest terms the expediency of sending out and keeping up constantly such a force as will enable them to embrace the first opportunity of further aggrandizing themselves ; and I dare pronounce, from a thorough knowledge of this country government...
Страница 295 - I have not anything left which I can call my own except my paternal fortune of £,500 per annum, and which has been in the family for ages past.
Страница 295 - My defence will be heard at that bar ; but before I sit down, I have one request to make to the House, — that, when they come to decide upon my honour, they will not forget their own.
Страница ii - Volumes. 1. SIR WALTER RALEGH ; the British Dominion of the West. By MARTIN AS HUME. 2. SIR THOMAS MAITLAND; the Mastery of the Mediterranean. By WALTER FREWEN LORD. 3. JOHN CABOT AND HIS SONS ; the Discovery of North America. By C. RAYMOND BEAZLEY, MA 4. EDWARD GIBBON WAKEFIELD ; the Colonisation of South Australia and New Zealand. By R. GARNETT, CB, LL.D. 5. LORD CLIVE ; the Foundation of British Rule In India. By SIR AJ ARBUTHNOT, KCSI, CIE 6.
Страница 198 - Commons for leave to bring in a bill " for the better regulation of the affairs of the East India Company and of their servants in India, and for the due administration of justice in Bengal.
Страница 75 - I feel the greatest anxiety at the little intelligence I receive from Mfr Jafar, and if he is not treacherous, his sangfroid or want of strength will, I fear, overset the expedition. I am trying a last effort by means of a Brahmin to prevail upon him to march out and join us.
Страница 295 - But to be called, after sixteen years have elapsed, to account for my conduct in this manner, and after an uninterrupted enjoyment of my property, to be questioned and considered as obtaining it unwarrantably, is hard indeed ! and a treatment I should not think the British Senate capable of.