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A Traveller's History of India

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-->Michael Wood's excellent BBC documentary The Story of India whets the appetite for further information on a rich and fascinating country. For someone coming to Indian history for the first time, I would recomend A Traveller's History of India by Sinharaaja Tammita-Delgoda. Despite being aimed at a prospective visitor to India, it is more detailed history than travelogue. Also, although the British colonial period is covered, it represents just a chapter in the book which starts the historical journey at 1500 BC and ends with a discussion of the present unrest in both India and Pakistan.

Though outbreaks of strife and power struggles punctuate India's past, the country went through long periods of stability and blossoming creativity. One character who paid a part in this was the enigmatic Mughal leader Akbar (1542–1605). Although he never learned to read or write, his son Jahangir (who unfortunately turned against him in later years) reports:

Although he was illiterate, so much became clear to him through constant intercourse with the learned and the wise in his conversations. He counted his wakefulness at night as so much added to his life.

Akbar's greatest achievement was in creating an inclusive empire, one in which all religions were tolerated and encouraged. Many places of worship had both Muslim and Hindu elements. Akbar also loved the arts and the Hindi epic Ramcharitmanas was written dring his reign.

Unfortunately, after Akbar's death, many of the interwining strands started to unravel. It is hard to imagine his cultural vision of society being achieved today.

Sigur Rós

If you didn't see it last night (and you have the good fortune to live in the UK), you can pop over to the BBC IPlayer to watch last night's excellent Culture Show. The whole programme was devoted to the band Sigur Rós. I've never found them enormously accessible, but it transpires that they're a band whose music ought to be seen as well as heard.

We're now determined to see Heima somewhere...

So that's what lambing is

I was going to make a few jokes about the 'lambing season' but then I realised that the picture is of an ear. I really thought someone was suffering from a highly disfiguring bout of karma.

Two Poems on the Shipping Forecast...

...can be found over on Malcolm Redfellow's site (with a tip of the cap to Slugger).

Here, a third, is my favourite: read the rest of this post »

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