Calendar of Persian Correspondence:
Vol III, 1770-1772

AUTHOR- Muzaffar Alam and Sanjay Subrahmanyam

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INFORMATION

  • AUTHOR : Muzaffar Alam and Sanjay Subrahmanyam
  • ISBN : 978-93-80607-66-5
  • Year : 2013
  • Extent : vols. I-V, 2666 pp.
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Calendar of Persian Correspondence

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INFORMATION

  • AUTHOR –
  • ISBN – 978-93-80607-54-2
  • Year – 2013
  • Extent: 400 + 40 coloured illustrations
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The year 1911 saw the publication of the first volume of the Calendar of Persian Correspondence, arguably the most significant publication of the period of the Imperial Record Department that had been founded in 1891, under G.W. Forrest. One of Forrest’s eventual successors was C.R. Wilson, who conceived a ‘brilliant scheme, that of calendaring the entire series of Persian records…’. These records were a part of the very large corpus of ‘ancient papers’ of the East India Company that had long been held in ‘various secretariat offices at Calcutta’. They included some 26,000 bound volumes, as well as 1.5 million unbound documents, making up a total of roughly 18 million folios of Company-related papers in various languages. The Calendar was to present to the public a summary version of merely a part of these, namely the Persian-language ‘letters which passed between some of the [East India] Company’s Servants and Indian Rulers and Notables’, commencing in 1759. Though initially concerned mainly with the ‘Affairs in Bengal’, the series-of which the first five volumes, covering the years 1759 to 1780, had appeared by 1930-eventually came to take into account other parts of India as well.

The Introducers
Muzaffar Alam is George V. Bobrinskoy Professor in South Asian Languages and Civilizations at the University of Chicago
Sanjay Subrahmanyam is Professor and Doshi Chair Of Indian History at the University of California, Los Angeles.

Volume I, 1759-1767
Being Letters, referring mainly to Affairs in Bengal, which passed between some of the Company’s Servants and Indian Rulers and Notables
ISBN: 978-93-80607-64-1, lvi+542 pp, Hb, 1895
Volume II, 1767-1769
Being Letters which passed between some of the Company’s Servants and Indian Rulers and Notables
ISBN: 978-93-80607-65-8, lvi+526 pp, Hb, 1895
Volume III, 1770-1772
Being Letters which passed between some of the Company’s Servants and Indian Rulers and Notables
ISBN: 978-93-80607-66-5, lvi+344 pp, Hb, 1395
Volume IV, 1772-1775
Being Letters which passed between some of the Company’s Servants and Indian Rulers and Notables
ISBN: 978-93-80607-67-2, lvi+414 pp, Hb, 1595
Volume V, 1776-1780
Being Letters which passed between some of the Company’s Servants and Indian Rulers and Notables
ISBN: 978-93-80607-68-9, lvi+560 pp, Hb, 1950

The year 1911 saw the publication of the first volume of the Calendar of Persian Correspondence, arguably the most significant publication of the period of the Imperial Record Department that had been founded in 1891, under G.W. Forrest. One of Forrest’s eventual successors was C.R. Wilson, who conceived a ‘brilliant scheme, that of calendaring the entire series of Persian records…’. These records were a part of the very large corpus of ‘ancient papers’ of the East India Company that had long been held in ‘various secretariat offices at Calcutta’. They included some 26,000 bound volumes, as well as 1.5 million unbound documents, making up a total of roughly 18 million folios of Company-related papers in various languages. The Calendar was to present to the public a summary version of merely a part of these, namely the Persian-language ‘letters which passed between some of the [East India] Company’s Servants and Indian Rulers and Notables’, commencing in 1759. Though initially concerned mainly with the ‘Affairs in Bengal’, the series-of which the first five volumes, covering the years 1759 to 1780, had appeared by 1930-eventually came to take into account other parts of India as well.

The Introducers
Muzaffar Alam is George V. Bobrinskoy Professor in South Asian Languages and Civilizations at the University of Chicago
Sanjay Subrahmanyam is Professor and Doshi Chair Of Indian History at the University of California, Los Angeles.