000 01758cam a2200217 i 4500
008 190110t20172017enkab b 001 0beng d
020 _a9781911271116
041 _aeng
080 _a920
_bKEA
100 1 _aKeay, John
245 1 4 _aThe tartan turban :
_bin search of Alexander Gardner
260 _aLondon
_bKashi House
_c2017
300 _axxvi, 324 p.
_billustrations (chiefly color), maps ;
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 297-304) and index.
520 _aImagine spending thirteen years fighting and travelling in disguise in the deserts of Inner Asia, then another thirteen years as an officer in the army of the Sikhs, the last of India's great native empires. How would you convince a disbelieving Western audience? Suppose, too, that while 'long separated from the world' you had acquired a reputation for conduct utterly unacceptable in civilised society. How would you justify it? However much you protested, many would reckon you a scoundrel and liar. Lively reminiscences - such as saving the city of Lahore in 1841 by singlehandedly killing 300 invaders - and numerous scars would not impress them, nor would the eccentricities of old age. The most you could hope for would be an impartial, if remote, vindication. Gardner's story, like Marco Polo's, changed people's understanding of the world. The urge to contest or authenticate his account contributed to the scientific and political penetration of a vast chunk of Asia. Readers will see the whole region, from the Caspian to Tibet, in a new light and gain a fresh perspective on its last years under native rule.
650 0 _aSoldiers of fortune
_vBiography.
650 7 _aSoldiers of fortune.
650 7 _aTravel.
690 _aGeneral
942 _cBK
999 _c58760
_d58760