OUTRAM IN INDIA: The Morality of Empire
by
Book Details
About the Book
During the Indian rebellion of 1857, the siege of Lucknow was raised by Generals James Outram and Henry Havelock. Outram was hailed as a national hero, and his statue was erected on the Victoria Embankment in London. Yet throughout his long and eventful career in the Indian army he was frequently at odds with his superiors. Promotion and preferment came slowly, and he was not a wealthy man when he died.
Always the outsider, his ideas were ahead of his time: he believed that the way forward in India was to work with the local people, and not rule over them. His actions frequently brought him into conflict with established British practice, and in the process raised fundamental questions about the morality of empire, as practised by the English East India Company.
As a soldier Outram distinguished himself in action. He was a fearless yet thoughtful leader who was revered and idolised by his men and whose tactics frequently surprised his enemies.
This book sets out the dramatic events which took place during Outram's career in India, from 1820 to 1860, and attempts to place his life in the context of the times in which he lived. It shows how the British presence in India changed that country irrevocably, for good and bad.
About the Author
This is Roy Digby Thomas' third book. The first two, "Digby: The Gunpowder Plotter's Legacy" and "George Digby: Hero and Villain," recounted the lives of two significant figures in England in the 17th Century.
His latest book, "Outram in India: The Morality of Empire" deals with the life of James Outram in the 19th Century. It is based on three years of research into British rule in India, and Outram's role there. But it is more than just a straightforward biography. Like the two previous books, it portrays an outsider's struggle against the Establishment, and what happens when an individual's conscience and morality clashes with the accepted way of doing things.
In the last fifty years new information has come to light which enables a reappraisal both of the morality of the English East India Company's rule in India, and Outram's role as a servant of the Company. This has led to a fresh approach on a subject which, since the independence of India after the Second World War, has not receieved enough attention.