prince

Victor Duleep Singh

About: 

Victor Duleep Singh was the eldest son of the Maharaja Duleep Singh and Princess Bamba. He studied at Eton College, and then Trinity College, Cambridge. In 1887, he joined the Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst, having gained special dispensation to join the Army from his godmother, Queen Victoria. He held various positions in the Army but resigned from the Royal Dragoons in 1898.

In January 1898, Victor married Lady Anne Blanche Alice of Coventry. She was the sister of his friend, George, and daughter of the Earl of Coventry.

During the First World War, Victor was ordered to remain in Paris and died in France shortly before the war ended.

Date of birth: 
10 Jul 1866
Secondary works: 

Bance, Peter, The Duleep Singhs: The Photograph Album of Queen Victoria's Maharajah (Stroud: Sutton, 2004)

Bance, Peter, Sovereign, Squire and Rebel: Maharajah Duleep Singh and the Heirs of a Lost Kingdom (London: Coronet House, 2009)

Singh, Ganda, Correspondence of Maharajah Duleep Singh (Patiala: Punjabi University, 1977)

Visram, Rozina, Asians in Britain: 400 Years of History (London: Pluto, 2002)

Archive source: 

Mss Eur E377/2, letters 1880-97, Asian and African Studies Reading Room, British Library, St Pancras

Other names: 

Victor Albert Jay Duleep Singh

Location

Eton College Windsor, SL4 6DW
United Kingdom
51° 28' 47.982" N, 0° 36' 21.5856" W
Date of death: 
07 Jun 1918
Location: 

Eton College, Windsor

Trinity College, Cambridge

Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst

Tags for Making Britain: 

Frederick Duleep Singh

About: 

Frederick Duleep Singh was the son of the deposed and exiled Maharaja Duleep Singh of the Punjab. Born in Kensington and bought up at the family home in Elveden, Suffolk, Frederick (or Freddy) was educated at Eton School and then studied history at Magdalene College, Cambridge. Like his father, he enjoyed shooting and country estates. In 1906, he rented Blo Norton Hall in Norfolk, and lived there for the rest of his life (twenty years). In the summer of 1906, Virginia Woolf had stayed at Blo Norton Hall and it provided the setting for her short story, 'The Journal of Miss Joan Martyn'. Frederick Duleep Singh became an amateur archaeologist and historian, specializing in East Anglia and its gentry. He contributed to a number of local periodicals and built up a collection of English artefacts in his home. In 1921, he bought Ancient House in Thetford and gave it to the town as a museum. His collections were donated to Thetford Museum, the Museum of Inverness and Norfolk Record Office.

Frederick joined the Suffolk yeomanry as Second Leutenant in 1893 and was promoted through the ranks. In 1901, he was transferred to the Norfolk yeomanry as Major. In 1909, he resigned from the yeomanry, but at the outbreak of war in 1914 he rejoined. He served in France with training units from 1917 to 1919, but saw no action.

Frederick Duleep Singh did not visit India and was a conservative, Christian loyalist. He was a member of a number of societies, including the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings, the Norfolk and Norwich Archaeological Society (President in 1925–6), the Norfolk Archaeological Trust, the London Society of East Anglians (President), the Royal Norfolk Agricultural Association,  and the Diss Choral Society, and belonged to White's and the Carlton Club in London.

Published works: 

Pedigrees of the Families of Jay and Osborne (n.p., c.1927)

Portraits in Norfolk Houses, ed. by Edmund Farrer and with a preface by Princess Bamba Duleep Singh (Norwich: Jarrold & Sons, 1928)

Date of birth: 
23 Jan 1868
Connections: 
Contributions to periodicals: 

The Times (16, 19, 28 August 1926; 15 November 1926)

Norfolk and Suffolk Journal (20 August 1926)

The Journal (28 August 1926)

The Burlington Magazine

The Connoisseur

Secondary works: 

Alexander, Michael and Anand, Sushila, Queen Victoria's Maharajah: Duleep Singh 1838-93 (London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1980)

Bance, Peter, The Duleep Singhs: The Photograph Album of Queen Victoria's Maharajah (Stroud: Sutton, 2004)

Visram, Rozina, Asians in Britain: 400 Years of History (London: Pluto Press, 2002)

Visram, Rozina, ‘Duleep Singh, Prince Frederick Victor (1868–1926)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 2009) [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/57412]

Archive source: 

Norfolk Record Office

Suffolk Record Office

Ancient House Museum, Thetford

WO 138/9, WO 374/21069, War Office files, National Archives, Kew

L/PRS/18/D/105, L/PRS/10/167, Mss Eur 377/3, Asian and African Studies Reading Room, British Library, St Pancras

Letter to Isildore Spielmann, V&ALibrary, London

Involved in events: 
City of birth: 
Kensington, London
Country of birth: 
England
Other names: 

Freddy Duleep Singh

Location

Blo Norton, IP22 2JF
United Kingdom
52° 22' 28.3296" N, 0° 57' 21.5388" E
Date of death: 
15 Aug 1926
Location of death: 
Blo Norton, Norfolk
Location: 

Blo Norton Hall, Norfolk

Indian Institute

About: 

In 1875, the Boden Professor of Sanskrit at the University of Oxford, Monier Monier-Williams, put to Congregation the proposal to found an Indian Institute in Oxford. This Institute would provide a centre for study for Indian Civil Service (ICS) probationers and Indian students with a comprehensive collection of books and newspapers, and house a museum of Indian objects. In 1875 and 1876, Monier-Williams travelled to India to secure support, items and money for the Indian Institute. Benjamin Jowett was particularly supportive of the Indian Institute. Though there had been plans to house the Institute as part of Balliol College, it was deemed prudent to make it a University institution. With debates over where to house the Institute, it was initially housed in rooms on Broad Street, opposite to Balliol College, until the foundation stone was laid by the Prince of Wales on 2 May 1883. The site for the Institute was on the corner of Broad Street and Holywell Street, next to Hertford College on Catte Street. An opening ceremony took place on 14 October 1884. Subscriptions for the Institute had come from Queen Victoria, the Prince of Wales and a number of Indian Princes.

The building work took a further thirteen years to complete and the Institute was opened in 1896 by Lord George Hamilton, Secretary of State for India. The museum component of the Institute was perhaps the most difficult to incorporate into the vision of the building, with a number of stuffed animals that decayed and were destroyed. The Ashmolean Museum took the various fine art objects in the collection, and then the library came under the control of the Bodleian in 1927. The Institute was beset by financial difficulties and a lack of continuity in its librarians in its early years. The academic programme became stagnated, with a strong focus on the ICS and a decline in interest in Sanskrit. Indian students began to see it as an ICS enclave. In 1909, Lord Curzon, Chancellor of the University, observed how the Institute was in decline and disuse; by the 1930s, the decline was more apparent despite the efforts of Lord Lothian, Secratary of the Rhodes Trust, to revive the Institute. Lord Lothian suggested that Edward Thompson use the Indian Institute as a base to revitalize Indian studies at Oxford and initiate prizes and fellowships for Indians, but Thompson believed the Indian Institute was beyond redemption. Although the library was popular and extremely well-stocked, there were not enough students enrolled in Indian studies to give the Institute a sense of purpose.

ICS probationers ceased to go to Oxford from 1939. ICS courses ended just before India's independence of 1947. In 1965, the University Council proposed to house their administrative offices in the building and move the Indian Institute's holdings to the Bodleian. These proposals caused a great deal of controversy and vocal opposition from those within the University and from India. However, eventually, the Indian Institute Library was rehoused in the roof of the New Bodleian Library in 1968. The University took over the building of the Indian Institute to house their administrative offices, but then decided to house them elsewhere. The building was then used to house the Modern History Faculty and its library. It has since become the Centre for Twenty-First Century Studies.

Published works: 

A Record of the Establishment of the Indian Institute in the University of Oxford: Being an Account of the Circumstances which led to its Foundation (Oxford: Compiled for the Subscribers to the Indian Institute Fund, 1897)

Secondary works: 

Symonds, Richard, Oxford and Empire: The Last Lost Cause? (New York: St Martins Press, 1986)

Date began: 
02 May 1883
Connections: 

Benjamin Jowett, Shyamaji Krishnavarma (Monier-Williams' assistant at the time of the foundation of the Institute), Max Müller (Monier-Williams' rival and opposer to the Institute), Sir Bhagvat Sinhjee, Thakur of Gondal (helped finance the renewal of the lease in 1892), Edward Thompson (Bengali lecturer at Oxford in the 1930s who believed the Institute was too rundown to save).

Archive source: 

The Oxford Chronicle and Berks and Bucks Gazette, 5 May 1883

The Times

Indian Institute Archives, Bodleian Library, Oxford

Monier Monier Williams, 'Notes of a long life's journey', unpublished memoir, Indian Institute Library, Oxford

Pictures, Oxfordshire County Council

Evison, Gillian, 'The Orientalist, his Institute and the Empire: the rise and subsequent decline of Oxford University's Indian Institute', unpublished paper, December 2004.

Oxfordshire History Page: http://www.headington.org.uk/oxon/broad/buildings/east/old_indian_institute/index.htm

Location

OX1 3BD
United Kingdom
Tags for Making Britain: 

Kumar Shri Duleepsinhji

About: 

Duleepsinhji, the nephew of the cricketer Ranjitsinhji, was also a cricketer who played for England. He was born into the Princely State of Kathiawar. He arrived in Britain in 1921 and was educated at Cheltenham College and Cambridge. Duleepsinhji played for the Cheltenham XI from 1921 to 1923. He played cricket for Cambridge from 1925 to 1927 (gaining a Blue), and for Sussex from 1926 to 1931. He was captain of Sussex in 1931 and 1932. He played for England in twelve test matches and scored a century on his debut against Australia. However, in 1929, Duleepsinhji was not selected to play against South Africa after the first test, an omission that he believed was because some South African politicians did not want to see their team to concede runs to a man of colour. His career was beset by illness and he was forced to retire in 1931.

Duleepsinhji joined the Indian Foreign Service in 1949 and served as India High Commissioner in Australia and New Zealand.

Date of birth: 
13 Jun 1905
Connections: 
Contributions to periodicals: 

Interview in Daily Express, 2 December 1933

Reviews: 

Wisden

Secondary works: 

Bose, Mihir, A History of Indian Cricket (London: Deutsch, 1990)

Guha, Ramachandra, A Corner of a Foreign Field: The Indian History of a British Sport (London: Picador, 2002)

Kincaid, Charles, The Land of Ranji and Duleep (Edinburgh: Blackwood and Sons, 1931)

Williams, Jack, Cricket and Race (Oxford: Berg, 2001)

City of birth: 
Kathiawar
Country of birth: 
India
Other names: 

Duleep

Location

Cheltenham College
Bath Road
Cheltenham, GL53 7LD
United Kingdom
51° 53' 34.6776" N, 2° 4' 34.6512" W
Date of death: 
05 Dec 1959
Location of death: 
Mumbai, India
Date of 1st arrival in Britain: 
01 Jan 1921
Precise 1st arrival date unknown: 
Y
Tags for Making Britain: 

Sayaji Rao

About: 

Sayaji Rao was the son of Kashi Rao, a village headman, who belonged to the Maratha family which had created the state of Baroda in Gujarat during the eighteenth century. He took the name Sayaji Rao III when he was installed on the gadi or throne of Baroda in May 1875. Sayaji Rao was invested with governing powers in December 1881, shortly before his nineteenth birthday.

In order to relieve health problems reputedly brought on by overwork and variously described as neurasthenia or nervous prostration, sleeplessness, and gout, he made his first trip to England in 1887. Various Indian figures worked for the Maharaja. Dadabhai Naoroji was his Minister in 1874, and Aravinda Ghose worked in the Baroda service after his return from England in 1893. He sponsored B. R. Ambedkar's education in Bombay and the USA.

Sayaji Rao' second wife, Chimnabai II, was the first president of the All-India Women's Conference in 1927. She co-wrote The Position of Women in Indian Life (1911) with S. M. Mitra. Sayaji Rao had three children from his first marriage and three children from his second. His daughter from his second marriage married the Prince of Cooch Behar and was well-known in 'society' circles in London in the 1920s and 1930s. Sayaji Rao was known to openly support the Indian National Congress, but was awarded a GCIE in 1919.

After 1919 Sayaji Rao travelled and lived in Europe and Britain for several months each year. After spending most of the 1930s travelling to seek relief for health problems at various European spas, Sayaji Rao III returned to India in November 1938. He died in Bombay on 6 February 1939.

Published works: 

Notes on the Famine Tour by His Highness the Maharaja Gaekwar (London: s.n., 1901)

Speeches and Addresses (Cambridge: Privately printed at the University Press, 1927)

(with Alban Gregory Widgery) Speeches & Addresses ... 1877-1927. With a Portrait, Etc. (London: Macmillan & Co., 1928)

(with Anthony Xavier Soares) Speeches and Addresses ... Selected and Edited by Anthony X. Soares (London: Oxford University Press, 1933)

(with Cyril Ernest Newham and Kenneth Saunders) Speeches & Addresses of His Highness Sayaji Rao III, Maharaja of Baroda, Etc., Vols. 3 & 4

Date of birth: 
11 Mar 1863
Connections: 

B. R. Ambedkar, Fanindranath Bose (sculptor), Sunity Devee (Maharani of Cooch Behar - mother-in-law of his daughter), Romesh Chunder Dutt, Aravinda Ackroyd Ghose, S. M. Mitra (wrote with his wife), Dadabhai Naoroji.

Secondary works: 

Bhagavan, M. B., 'Higher Education and the "Modern": Negotiating Colonialism and Nationalism in Princely Mysore and Baroda', (PhD Thesis, University of Texas, 1999)

Bottomore, S., '"Have You Seen the Gaekwar Bob?": Filming the 1911 Delhi Durbar', Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television 17 (1997), pp. 309-45

Copland, I., 'The Baroda Crisis of 1873–77', Modern Asian Studies 2 (1968), pp. 97-123

Copland, I., 'Sayaji Rao Gaekwar and "Sedition"', in Peter Robb and David Taylor (eds) Rule, Protest, Identity: Aspects of Modern South Asia (London: Curzon Press, 1978), pp. 28-48

Gaekwad, Fatesinhrao, Maharaja of Baroda, Sayajirao of Baroda: The Prince and the Man (London: Sangam, 1989)

Gense, James H., Banaji, D. R., and Maharaja of Baroda Sayaji Rao Gaekwar III, The Gaikwads of Baroda. English Documents. Edited by J. H. Gense ... D. R. Banaji. Vol. 2-10 (Bombay: D. B. Taraporevala Sons & Co., 1937)

Hardiman, D., 'Baroda: The Structure of a Progressive State', in Robin Jeffrey (ed.) People, Princes and Paramount Power: Society and Politics in the Indian Princely States (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1978), pp. 107-35

Nuckolls, C. W., 'The Durbar Incident', Modern Asian Studies 24 (1990), pp. 529-59

Ramusack, Barbara N., 'Gaikwar [Gaekwar], Sayaji Rao [Sayaji Rao III], Maharaja of Baroda (1863–1939)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 2004) [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/30613]

Rice, Percival Stanley Pitcairn, and Maharaja of Baroda Sayaji Rao Gaekwar III, Life of Sayaji Rao III Maharaja of Baroda, 2 vol. (London: Oxford University Press, 1931)

Sergeant, Philip Walsingham, and Maharaja of Baroda Sayaji Rao Gaekwar III, The Ruler of Baroda. An Account of the Life and Work of the Maharaja Gaekwar (Sayajirao iii) (London: John Murray, 1928)

The Times (7 Feb 1939)

Weeden, Edward St Clair, and Maharaja of Baroda Sayaji Rao Gaekwar III, A Year with the Gaekwar of Baroda ... With 25 Illustrations from Photographs, Etc (London: Hutchinson & Co., 1912)

Widgery, Alban Gregory, and Maharaja of Baroda Sayaji Rao Gaekwar III, Goods and Bads. Outlines of a Philosophy of Life: Being the Substance of a Series of Talks and Discussions with H. H. The Maharajah Gaekwar of Baroda (Baroda, 1920)  

Archive source: 

MSS, Gujarat State Archives, Southern Circle, Vadodara, Gujarat, India

Wodehouse MSS, Bodleian Library, Oxford

Hardinge MSS, Cambridge University Library, Cambridge

City of birth: 
Bombay
Country of birth: 
India
Current name city of birth: 
Mumbai
Other names: 

Sayaji Rao, Maharaja of Baroda III

Sayaji Rao Gaekwad

Date of death: 
06 Feb 1939
Location of death: 
Bombay, India
Date of 1st arrival in Britain: 
01 Jan 1887
Precise 1st arrival date unknown: 
Y
Dates of time spent in Britain: 

1887, early 1930s.

Tags for Making Britain: 

Iftikhar Ali Khan

About: 

Iftikhar Ali Khan, the Nawab of Pataudi, is the only Test cricketer to have played for both England and India. Born into the princely family of Pataudi, in the Punjab (approximately 53 miles away from Delhi), he arrived in Britain in 1926 to further his education. He joined Balliol College, Oxford, in 1927 and won hockey and cricketing blues for the University. In a notorious incident playing in the 1931 match against Cambridge, A. Ratcliffe of Cambridge set a new record for the University Match with 201 runs. Pataudi declared that he would beat that record and did exactly that in the next innings, scoring 238 not out. This record stood until 2005.

Pataudi made the England squad for the infamous Bodyline series tour of Australia in 1932-3. On his Ashes and Test debut, he scored a century, but was dropped after the second test. He only played three tests for England, with a recall in one of the Ashes tests in 1934. Pataudi returned to India and had a chance to captain India in 1936, but withdrew from the series against England. In 1946, he did captain India against England, but he was 36 years old by then.

In 1931, Iftikhar was formally installed as ruler, Nawab, of Pataudi. After Indian independence in 1947, he gave up the principality and worked for the Indian Foreign Office. He died in 1952, while playing polo, in Delhi, leaving his wife, Sajida Sultan, the daughter of the Nawab of Bhopal, three daughters, and an eleven-year old son, Mansur, who would become one of India's greatest cricketing captains.

Date of birth: 
16 Mar 1910
Connections: 

Nawab of Bhopal (father-in-law), Hamidullah Khan, Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi (son, captain of India's cricket team 1962-70).

Reviews: 

Wisden

Secondary works: 

Bose, Mihir, A History of Indian Cricket (London: Deutsch, 1990)

Bose, Mihir, ‘Khan, Muhammad Iftikhar Ali, nawab of Pataudi (1910–1952)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 2004) [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/58835]

Elliot, Ivo (ed.), Balliol College Register (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1953)

Archive source: 

News and sports footage, British Film Institute, London

V/24/832, Indian Students' Department Report, 1928-9 & 1929-30, Asian and African Studies Reading Room, British Library, St Pancras

College photos, Balliol College Archives, Oxford

City of birth: 
Pataudi, Punjab
Country of birth: 
India
Other names: 

Nawab of Pataudi

Muhammad Iftikhar Ali Khan

Pataudi senior

Location

Balliol College Oxford, OX1 3BJ
United Kingdom
51° 43' 26.2992" N, 1° 16' 30.414" W
Date of death: 
05 Jan 1952
Location of death: 
Delhi, India
Date of 1st arrival in Britain: 
01 Jan 1926
Precise 1st arrival date unknown: 
Y
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Sarath Kumar Ghosh

About: 

Sarath Kumar Ghosh was a writer and novelist who had been educated in Cambridge. He was the nephew of the Raja of 'Ghoshpara' according to publicity put out by his American publishers, J. B. Pond Lyceum Bureau.

Published works: 

1001 Indian Nights (London: Heinemann, 1904)

The Prince of Destiny: The New Krishna (London: Rebman, 1909)

The Verdict of the Gods (New York: Dodd Mead, 1905)

The Wonders of the Jungle (New York: D. C. Heath, 1915)

Example: 

Publisher's Preface to Prince of Destiny (1909)

Date of birth: 
01 Jan 1883
Contributions to periodicals: 

Cornhill Magazine

'The Romance of the Kohinoor', Harper's Magazine (March 1902)

'A Thousand Years After', Harper's Magazine (July 1903)

'The Chohan Bride', Harper's Magazine (April 1901)


Precise DOB unknown: 
Y
Reviews: 

The Manchester Guardian (17 November 1909)

The New York Times

Extract: 

When the author of this romance finished his education in Great Britain and began his literary career, his style and action were so pure as to cause an eminent English critic to say that many distinguished English novelists might well envy him his command of English prose. Nay a leading London review averred, 'We cannot be persuaded to believe that Sarath Kumar Ghosh is anything but an Englishman in masquerade'. In view of that the publishers of this romance deemed it expedient to present the author's portrait in the British edition in a dress representative of India, in order to convince readers that he is truly Indian.

Secondary works: 

Mukherjee, Meenakshi, The Perishable Empire: Essays on Indian Writing in English (Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2000)

Tickell, Alex, 'Writing the Nation's Destiny: Indian Fiction in English before 1910', Third World Quarterly, 26.3 (2005), pp. 525-541

Archive source: 

Correspondence regarding Ghosh's offer to write the official book on the Prince of Wales' tour of India, 1902-1903, L/PJ/6/610, Asian and African Reading Room, British Library, St Pancras

Other names: 

Sarath Kumar Ghose

Prince Sarath Ghosh

Location

28 Elgin Avenue
London, W9 2NR
United Kingdom
51° 31' 28.7256" N, 0° 11' 59.7156" W
Location: 

Cambridge

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Kumar Shri Ranjitsinhji

About: 

Kumar Shri Ranjitsinhji was a cricketer for England and a Prince of Nawanagar State in India, known as 'Ranji' to his cricketing fans. As a child, he was chosen as heir to a distant relative, Vibhaji, the Jam Sahib of Navanagar, but then discarded. He studied at the Rajkumar College in Rajkot and then in 1888, at sixteen, Ranjitsinhji went to Britain. He joined Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1889. It was not until 1893, having played in the meantime for local clubs on 'Parker's Piece', that Ranji gained a place in the Cambridge University cricket team. He was the first Indian to win a cricket Blue. In 1895, Ranji began to play regularly for Sussex. Having faced opposition to his inclusion into the University side, there was now a growing public debate as to whether Ranji should be allowed to play for the England national side. In 1896, Ranji made his debut for England against Australia at Old Trafford. In 1897, Ranjitsinhji produced a book on the evolution of cricket in England called The Jubilee Book of Cricket. In the winter of 1897-8, Ranji toured Australia with the England team.

In 1904, Ranji returned to India as he was no longer playing for England and could not financially support himself in Britain. However, he continued to return to England at regular intervals and play for Sussex. In 1906, the new Jam Sahib of Navanagar, the son of Vibhaji, died and with no other formal heir, Ranjitsinhji assumed the throne. When war broke out in 1914, Ranji helped the imperial effort, by converting his house in Staines into a hospital for wounded soldiers, by donating troops from Navanagar and going to the Western Front himself. Ranji also had a lakeside castle at Ballynahinch, on the west coast of Ireland. In August 1915, he lost his right eye in a shooting accident in Yorkshire, and played his last game for Sussex in 1920. As an Indian Prince, Ranjitsinhji took up many political responsibilities: he represented India twice at the League of Nations, and was a delegate to the Round Table Conference sessions in 1930. He died in 1933 in one of his palaces in Jamnagar.

Published works: 

The Jubilee Book of Cricket (Edinburgh: Thomas Nelson, 1897)

With Stoddart's Team in Australia (London: Constable & Co., 1898)

Date of birth: 
10 Aug 1872
Connections: 

Duleepsinhji (nephew who also played cricket for England), C. B. Fry (friend and Sussex team mate), Lord Hawke (fellow cricketer), Madge Holmes (neighbours initially in Sidney Street, Cambridge: Ranji corresponds with Madge, 1891-1905).

Contributions to periodicals: 

Interview in The Strand Magazine, 12 (1896), pp. 251-8

Cricket

Windsor Magazine

Wisden

Secondary works: 

Graeme, Margaret, Ranji's A'Comin! (London: Horsham, Price & Co., 1903)

Guha, Ramachandra, A Corner of a Foreign Field: The Indian History of a British Sport (London: Picador, 2002)

Raiji, Vasant, Ranji; The Legend and the Man (Bombay: 1963)

Rodrigues, Mario, Batting for Empire: A Political Biography of Ranjitsinhji (Delhi: Penguin, 2003)

Ross, Alan, Ranji: Prince of Cricketers (London: Collins, 1983)

Sen, Satadru, Migrant Races: Empire, Identity and K. S. Ranjitsinghji (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2004)

Wild, Roland, The Biography of Colonel His Highness Shri Sir Ranjitsinhji (London: Rich & Cowan, 1934)

Wilde, Simon, Ranji: A Genius Rich and Strange (London: Kingswood, 1990)

Wilde, Simon, ‘Ranjitsinhji Vibhaji, Maharaja Jam Sahib of Navanagar [Ranjitsinhji or Ranji] (1872–1933)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 2004) [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/35190]

Archive source: 

Letters to Madge Holmes, Wren Library, Trinity College, Cambridge

Correspondence with Lord Hardinge, Cambridge University Library

Crown Representative Records, Asian and African Studies Reading Room, British Library, St Pancras

School Records, Rajkot, India

Film footage, British Film Institute, London

City of birth: 
Kathiawar peninsula
Country of birth: 
India
Other names: 

Ranji

Locations

Staines, TW18 4NX
United Kingdom
51° 25' 23.8008" N, 0° 30' 45.9648" W
Sussex Cricket Club BN3 3AN‎
United Kingdom
50° 49' 38.2008" N, 0° 11' 10.878" W
Trinity College Cambridge, CB2 1TQ
United Kingdom
52° 10' 21.3528" N, 0° 6' 40.3992" E
Date of death: 
02 Apr 1933
Location of death: 
Jamnagar, India
Date of 1st arrival in Britain: 
01 Jan 1888
Precise 1st arrival date unknown: 
Y
Dates of time spent in Britain: 

1888-1904, 1908, 1912, 1915, 1920

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