- Source: The New Cambridge History of India
The New Cambridge History of India is a major multi-volume work of historical scholarship published by Cambridge University Press. It replaced The Cambridge History of India published between 1922 and 1937.
The new history is being published as a series of individual works by single authors and, unlike the original, does not form a connected narrative. Also unlike the original, it only covers the period since the fourteenth century. The whole has been planned over four parts:
Pt. I The Mughals and their Contemporaries.
Pt. II Indian States and the Transition to Colonialism.
Pt. III The Indian Empire and the beginnings of Modern Society.
Pt. IV The Evolution of Contemporary South Asia.
Titles
= The Mughals and their Contemporaries
=Pearson, M. N. (1987). The Portuguese in India. p. 198.
Stein, Burton (1989). Vijayanagara. p. 167.
Beach, Milo Cleveland (1992). Mughal and Rajput Painting. p. 336.
Asher, Catherine B. (1992). Architecture of Mughal India. p. 386.
Richards, John F. (1995). The Mughal Empire. p. 337.
Michell, George (1995). Architecture and Art of Southern India: Vijayanagara and the Successor States 1350–1750. p. 316.
Michell, George; Zebrowski, Mark (1999). Architecture and Art of the Deccan Sultanate. p. 328.
Eaton, Richard M. (2005). A Social History of the Deccan, 1300–1761 Eight Indian Lives. p. 236.
= Indian States and the Transition to Colonialism
=Bayly, Christopher Alan (1988). Indian society and the making of the British Empire. p. 225.
Marshall, P. J. (1987). Bengal: The British Bridgehead. Eastern India 1740–1828. p. 204.
Grewal, J. S. (1990). The Sikhs of the Punjab. p. 293.
Gordon, Stewart (1993). The Marathas 1600–1818. p. 211.
Prakash, Om (1998). European commercial enterprise in pre-colonial India. p. 383.
= The Indian Empire and the Beginnings of Modern Society
=Jones, Kenneth W. (1989). Socio-religious reform movements in British India. p. 246.
Bose, Sugata (1993). Peasant Labour and Colonial Capital: Rural Bengal since 1770. p. 212.
Tomlinson, B. R. (1993). The Economy of Modern India, 1860–1970. p. 249.
Second edition:Tomlinson, B. R. (2013). The Economy of Modern India: From 1860 to the Twenty-First Century.
Metcalf, Thomas R. (1995). Ideologies of the Raj. p. 252.
Arnold, David (2000). Science, Technology and Medicine in Colonial India. p. 248.
Ramusack, Barbara N. (2004). The Indian Princes and Their States. p. 299.
= The Evolution of Contemporary South Asia
=Brass, Paul (1994). The Politics of India since Independence.
Forbes, Geraldine (1996). Women in Modern India. p. 302.
Bayly, Susan (1999). Caste, Society and Politics in India from the Eighteenth Century to the Modern Age. p. 426.
Ludden, David (1999). An Agrarian History of South Asia. p. 261.
See also
Murty Classical Library of India
The History of India, as Told by Its Own Historians
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Raj Britania Raya
- Daftar Kaisar Mughal
- Princely state
- Shah Jahan
- Dharmasastra
- Malhar Rao Holkar
- Sejarah
- Mastani
- Peradaban Lembah Indus
- Jembatan Shahi
- The New Cambridge History of India
- The Cambridge History of India
- History of India
- Iron and steel industry in India
- History of the British Raj
- Economic history of India
- Golden Age of India
- Kiratpur Sahib
- British Raj
- The Cambridge Shorter History of India