ABSTRACT

Rudrangshu Mukherjee places the ‘soldier-peasant’ at the forefront of the Revolt. Violence has rarely been described with so much realism and subtlety. The imaginative use of primary source materials adds clarity to accounts such as the massacre in Satichaura Ghat  and the trial of Mangal Pandey. The layers of complexity that defined the relationship between the rulers and the subjugated are also exposed.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction: In Pursuit of a Revolt

chapter |14 pages

The Sipahi and the Sepoy Mutinies

chapter |14 pages

Responses to 1857 in the Centenary Year

part |58 pages

Mangal Pandey

chapter One|5 pages

29 March 1857

chapter Two|9 pages

Life of a Sepoy

chapter Three|7 pages

The Greased Cartridge

chapter Four|6 pages

Chapati, Rumours and Prophecy

chapter Five|6 pages

The Trial

chapter Six|7 pages

Epilogue