


Chapter 4: Irish Nationalist Press Reports.

Chapter 3: A Lukewarm Offer, As Reported by the British Envoy in Tehran.Chapter 2: Colonial Responses to the Demand for Reinforcements.Chapter 1: The Opinion of Marx and Engels.Chapter 20: Songs of the Mutiny by ‘Loyalist Irish’.Chapter 19: The Metropolitan Police Enquiry into ‘Popular Opinion’.Chapter 18: The Plunder of Delhi and Lucknow.Chapter 17: The Letters and Writings of Thomas de Quincey.Chapter 16: James Minchin's Sonnets, 1858.Chapter 15: The Letters of Bryan Waller Procter.Chapter 14: The Diary and Letters of Thomas B.Chapter 13: British Poems on the Uprising.Chapter 11: The Day of ‘National Humiliation’.Chapter 10: An Indian Mutiny Sermon, London.Chapter 9: The Letters of a British Soldier in India.Chapter 8: The Execution of the 26th Native Infantry.Chapter 7: The Execution of the 51st Regiment.Chapter 6: ‘Indiscriminate’ Execution: Renaud's March and General Neill.Chapter 4: Petition from the British Inhabitants of Calcutta.Chapter 3: A British Press Report from India, June 1857.Chapter 2: A British Artisan's View from Calcutta.The Uprising: British Experiences and Reactions.Chapter 17: Folk Songs and the Oral Tradition.Chapter 16: Rebels in Nepal and the Death of Nana Sahib.Chapter 15: The ‘Confession’ and ‘Trial’ of Tatya Tope.Chapter 13: Ishri Pershad's Explanation for and Advice on the Uprising.Chapter 12: The Delhi Poem of Kazan Singh.Chapter 10: Address from the ‘Native Community of Bengal’.Chapter 9: A Petition for Clemency from a Transported Mutineer.Chapter 8: Petitions Expressing Loyalty.Chapter 7: Bengali Press Reports on the Uprising.Chapter 6: A Subaltern-rebel Document: ‘Advice of the Royal Army’.Chapter 5: An Indian Rebel Manifesto: The ‘Azamgarh Proclamation’.Chapter 3: Liaquat Ali Khan: The Celebrity Maulvi.Chapter 2: Events in Delhi: The Arrival of Rebels and Life Under Siege.Chapter 1: Events in Meerut: Depositions Taken by Major G.W.The Uprising: Indian Experiences and Reactions.Chapter 7: The Circulation of Chapattis.Chapter 5: An Indian Critic of Company Rule.Chapter 2: The Vellore Mutiny from the Sepoys' Point of View.Chapter 1: ‘Thuggee’ and the Margins of the Colonial State in Early Nineteenth-century India.We appreciate your support of the preservation process and thank you for being an important part of keeping this knowledge alive and relevant. Scholars believe and we concur that this work is important enough to be preserved reproduced and made generally available to the public. Within the United States you may freely copy and distribute this work as no entity (individual or corporate) has a copyright on the body of the work.As a reproduction of a historical artifact this work may contain missing or blurred pages poor pictures errant marks etc. This work is in the public domain in the United States of America and possibly other nations. Therefore you will see the original copyright references library stamps (as most of these works have been housed in our most important libraries around the world) and other notations in the work. This work was reproduced from the original artifact and remains as true to the original work as possible. This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. Andesite Press The History Of The Indian Mutiny by Charles Ball
