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Empress
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294NOTESIntroduction 1. Journal entry, 21 June 1872 in Letters of Queen Victoria, 2nd ser., ii, 218–19; Colonel Ponsonby to Earl Granville, 26 January 1873, ibid., 238–9; Duke of Argyll to Ponsonby, 1 February 1873, ibid., 242. For the visit of the Burmese envoys, see: L. E. Bagshawe (ed.), The Kinwun Min- Gyi’s London diary (Bangkok: Orchid Press, 2006). 2. Carnarvon to Ponsonby, 24 February 1876, RA VIC/MAIN/F/16/22; Ponsonby to Queen Victoria, 17 March 1876, ibid., fols 65–6; Disraeli to Queen Victoria, 23 March 1876, RA VIC/MAIN/F/16/78; Revd Mr Farrer, ‘Translation’ (c. 23 March 1876), RA VIC/MAIN/F/16/83. 3. L. J. Trotter, History of India under Queen Victoria, 1836–86 (London: W. H. Allen, 1886); Edwin Arnold, Victoria. Queen and Empress. The Sixty Years (London: Longmans, 1896), 70–7; W. W. Hunter, The India of the Queen, and Other Essays (London: Longmans, Green and Co., 1903), ed. Lady Hunter, ch. 1; Romesh Dutt, The Economic History of India in the Victorian Age (London: Kegan Paul & Co., 1906); S. Satyamurty, Modern India (Down to the Death of the Queen Empress) (Madras, n.p., 1909); Richard Temple, Sixty Years of the Queen’s Reign: An Epoch of Empire Making (London: Geo. Routledge, 1897), ch. 2. 4. P. E. Roberts, History of British India: Under the Company and the Crown (1921); Herbert A. Stark, India under Company and Crown: Being an Account of its Progress and Present(1922); A. B. Keith, A Constitutional History of India, 1600–1935 (1936); Joachim von Kürenberg, Die Kaiserin von Indien: lebensgeschicte der Königin Victoria von England(Hamburg: Robert Möglich: 1947). 5. Mary Ann Steegles, Statues of the Raj (London: British Association for Cemeteries in South Asia, 2000), 178–214; Jan Morris (with Simon Winchester), Stones of Empire: The Buildings of the Raj (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003 edn), 182–5; Maria Misra, ‘From Nehruvian Neglect to Bollywood Heroes: The Memory of the Raj in Post- war India’ in Dominik Geppert and Frank- Lorenz Muller (eds), Sites of Imperial Memory: Commemorating Colonial Rule in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2016), 187–206. 6. Steegles, Statues of the Raj, 178, 207; Philippa Vaughan (ed.), The Victoria Memorial Hall: Conceptions, Collections, Conservation (Mumbai: Marg, 1997).
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294NOTESIntroduction 1. Journal entry, 21 June 1872 in Letters of Queen Victoria, 2nd ser., ii, 218–19; Colonel Ponsonby to Earl Granville, 26 January 1873, ibid., 238–9; Duke of Argyll to Ponsonby, 1 February 1873, ibid., 242. For the visit of the Burmese envoys, see: L. E. Bagshawe (ed.), The Kinwun Min- Gyi’s London diary (Bangkok: Orchid Press, 2006). 2. Carnarvon to Ponsonby, 24 February 1876, RA VIC/MAIN/F/16/22; Ponsonby to Queen Victoria, 17 March 1876, ibid., fols 65–6; Disraeli to Queen Victoria, 23 March 1876, RA VIC/MAIN/F/16/78; Revd Mr Farrer, ‘Translation’ (c. 23 March 1876), RA VIC/MAIN/F/16/83. 3. L. J. Trotter, History of India under Queen Victoria, 1836–86 (London: W. H. Allen, 1886); Edwin Arnold, Victoria. Queen and Empress. The Sixty Years (London: Longmans, 1896), 70–7; W. W. Hunter, The India of the Queen, and Other Essays (London: Longmans, Green and Co., 1903), ed. Lady Hunter, ch. 1; Romesh Dutt, The Economic History of India in the Victorian Age (London: Kegan Paul & Co., 1906); S. Satyamurty, Modern India (Down to the Death of the Queen Empress) (Madras, n.p., 1909); Richard Temple, Sixty Years of the Queen’s Reign: An Epoch of Empire Making (London: Geo. Routledge, 1897), ch. 2. 4. P. E. Roberts, History of British India: Under the Company and the Crown (1921); Herbert A. Stark, India under Company and Crown: Being an Account of its Progress and Present(1922); A. B. Keith, A Constitutional History of India, 1600–1935 (1936); Joachim von Kürenberg, Die Kaiserin von Indien: lebensgeschicte der Königin Victoria von England(Hamburg: Robert Möglich: 1947). 5. Mary Ann Steegles, Statues of the Raj (London: British Association for Cemeteries in South Asia, 2000), 178–214; Jan Morris (with Simon Winchester), Stones of Empire: The Buildings of the Raj (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003 edn), 182–5; Maria Misra, ‘From Nehruvian Neglect to Bollywood Heroes: The Memory of the Raj in Post- war India’ in Dominik Geppert and Frank- Lorenz Muller (eds), Sites of Imperial Memory: Commemorating Colonial Rule in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2016), 187–206. 6. Steegles, Statues of the Raj, 178, 207; Philippa Vaughan (ed.), The Victoria Memorial Hall: Conceptions, Collections, Conservation (Mumbai: Marg, 1997).
© Yale University Press, New Haven
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