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<title>A History of British India-by Sir William Wilson</title>
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<dc:date>2026-04-03T12:57:57Z</dc:date>
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<title>A History of British India-by Sir William Wilson Vol.I, 1899</title>
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<description>A History of British India-by Sir William Wilson Vol.I, 1899
Wilson, William
n this book I endeavour to complete a task which&#13;
has occupied a large part of my life. Thirty-four&#13;
years ago my attention was drawn .to the historical&#13;
materials in the record rooms of Bengal, and the&#13;
inquiries then commenced have been continued&#13;
from the archives of England, Portugal and&#13;
Holland. I found that what had passed for Indian&#13;
history dealt but little with the staple work done&#13;
by the founders of British rule in the East, or with&#13;
its effects on the native races. The vision of our&#13;
Indian Empire as a marvel of destiny, scarcely&#13;
wrought by human hands, faded away. Nor did thfe’&#13;
vacuum theory, of the inrush of the British power&#13;
into an Asiatic void, correspond more closely with the facts.&#13;
Yet if we bring down England’s work in India&#13;
from the regions of wonder and hypothesis to the&#13;
realm of reality, and if the Jonah’s gourd growth&#13;
of a night must give place for a time to the story&#13;
t)f the Industrious Apprentice, enough of greatness&#13;
remains. The popular presentment of the East&#13;
India Company as a sovereign ruler, with vast provinces and tributary kingdoms under its command,&#13;
obscures the most characteristic achievement&#13;
of our nation in Asia. That achievement was no&#13;
eudden triumph, but an indomitable endurance&#13;
during a century and a half of frustration and&#13;
defeat^ As the English were to wield a power in&#13;
the Ejkst greater than that of any other European&#13;
people, so was their training for the task to be harder&#13;
and more prolonged. We have been too much accustomed*to regajd&#13;
our Indian Empire as an isolated fact in the world’s&#13;
history. This view does injustice to the Continental&#13;
nations, and in some degree explains the slight&#13;
esteem in which they hold our narratives of Anglo-&#13;
Asiatic rule. In one sense, indeed, England is&#13;
the residuary legatee of an inheritance painfully&#13;
amassed by Europe in Asia during the past four&#13;
centuries, In that long labour, now one Christian&#13;
nation, then another, came to the front. But their&#13;
progress as a whole was continuous. It formed the&#13;
sequel to the immemorial conflict between the East&#13;
and the West, which dyed red the waves of Salamis&#13;
and brought Zenobia a captive to Eome. During&#13;
each successive period, the struggle reflected the&#13;
spirit of the times : military and territorial in the&#13;
ancient world; military and religious in the middle&#13;
ages; military and mercantile in the new Europe&#13;
which then awoke; developing into the military*&#13;
commercial, and political combinations of the complex&#13;
modern world.
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<dc:date>1899-03-11T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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