A Pepys Of Mogul India1653-1708: Being An Abridged Edition Of The “Storia Do Mogor” Of Niccolao Manucci - HARDCOVER
A Pepys Of Mogul India1653-1708: Being An Abridged Edition Of The “Storia Do Mogor” Of Niccolao Manucci - HARDCOVER
Couldn't load pickup availability
About the Book:-Niccolao Manucci, the hero of our narrative, ran away from Venice in 1653, being then fourteen. He hid on board a vessel bound for Smyrna, and was fortunate enough to find a protector in a certain Viscount Bellomont, an English nobleman, then on his way to Persia and India. He followed Bellomont through Asia Minor to Persia, and from Persia to India, meeting with many adventures by sea and land. The sudden death of his master near Hodal, in 1656, left Manucci friendless in a strange land. He seems to have been a youth of considerable resource, however, and fortune favoured him, for he soon found employment as an artillery man in the service of Prince Dara Shukoh, eldest son of the Emperor Shahjahan. Till Dara's death, in 1659, Manucci followed his varying fortunes in peace and war, and, refusing to transfer his services to Aurangzeb, he gradually adopted the profession of medicine. The ‘Storia do Mogor’, as a whole, is very lengthy, and somewhat diffuse; and a great deal of it is interesting only to the student and the scholar. About the Author:-William Irvine (1840 – 1911) was an administrator of the Indian Civil Service and historian, known for works on the Moghul Empire. He was in British India from 1863 to 1889. Leaving a private school before he was 15, he served a short apprenticeship to business, and after spending some years as a clerk in the admiralty passed for the Indian Civil Service. He landed in Calcutta late in 1863, and was posted to the North-Western Provinces. He served there as a Magistrate and Collector until he retired and left India in 1889. He was employed for eight years in revising the rent and revenue settlement records of the Ghazipur district. The Title 'A Pepys Of Mogul India1653-1708:
Share
