Dominic Sandbrook:
"Despite
all the patriotic American nonsense about the "greatest generation",
(Antony) Beevor shows that there were remarkably few heroes.
There were rarely "more than a handful of men prepared to take risks
and attack," he says; most men just wanted to get home in one piece and
"somebody else to play the role of hero".
Surveys showed that if a few broke ranks and fled, the rest would
follow; in most engagements, as many as half never fired a shot."
So who is more successful? Those who sacrifice or those who survive?
Most
Maratha chieftains who fled from the battlefield and allowed
somebody else to play the role of hero on the evening of January 14 1761 at
Panipat did well for themselves and their future generations.
As I read Maratha history as a schoolboy, I often thought the one party Maratha's thrashed almost every single time- like
Obelix treating
Romans in
Asterix comics- was Nizam.
Later as I read
Vasudevshastri Khare's (वासुदेवशास्त्री खरे) biography of
Nana Fadnavis, "
nana phadanvees yanche charitra" (नाना फडनवीस यांचे चरित्र), first published
July 1892, I realised that, as always, reality was very complex.
The Economic Times/PTI, October 16 2012:
"When you think of
India's all-time richest people, what are the names that cross your mind?
No, it's not the
Tatas, Birlas or Ambanis, it's
Osman Ali Khan, the last Nizam (or ruler) of
Hyderabad. According to a new inflation-adjusted list of the world's richest people of all time, the Nizam, who ruled Hyderabad between 1886-1967, was ranked sixth with
$ 236 billion."
Andy Bull writes of the
MCC's cricket tour to
India, Pakistan and Ceylon in 1951 and 52.in
The Guardian November 14 2012:
"The first three Tests were drawn, but England won the fourth, at
Kanpur....After that win, the team paid a visit to the
Nizam of Hyderabad, then
the richest man in the world. Ridgway has a picture of the team with the
Nizam, sitting on a sofa alongside Carr and the two Howards, with the
professionals arrayed behind them. "He had so many wives we called him
His Exhausted Highness," Howard wrote. "Everything I said to him, he
replied, 'I see.' It became a great saying at home. 'I see, said the
Nizam.'""
the
Nizam of Hyderabad,
" His Exhausted Highness" but worth
$ 236 billion
Photo courtesy:
Popperfoto/Getty Images and Guardian
After reading this, I am recycling my earlier post dated Feb 19 2008.
Historian
WILLIAM DALRYMPLE has written at length about the Nizam’s legacy. (
The Guardian and
Outlook February 18, 2008).
I couldn’t help chuckle.
Here was the regime about which I have rarely read anything good.
Historian
Setu Madhavrao Pagdi’s (सेतु माधवराव पगडी) first hand account of the last days of the Nizam regime from his autobiography-
Jeevansetu (जीवनसेतु) 1969- describes how rotten it was.
I have also attended speeches delivered by the late
Narhar Kurundkar (नरहर कुरुंदकर)- a staunch
Gandhian and one of the most liberal thinkers
Maharashtra produced- at
'Vasant Vyakhyan Mala' (वसंत व्याख्यान माला),
Miraj (मिरज) wherein he described how bad and cruel Nizam regime in 20th century was.
On
March 11, 1795, Marathas vanquished Nizam in the battle of Kharda. For a change all Maratha chieftains fought together.
Nizam’s army had played havoc before the battle. Among other things, they had slaughtered cows in the temple complex at
Ambejogai (आंबेजोगाई).
[Please note during 1770-1791, a few
chieftains of
Maratha army indulged in looting of
Hindu shrines including
mutts of Shankaracharya and Ramanujacharya. Source-
Marhati Lavani by M V Dhond 1956 ('मर्हाटी लावणी' म वा धोंड)]
Historian
T S Shejwalkar त्र्यंबक शंकर शेजवलकर gave a radio-speech on this battle
'Khardyachi Ladhai' (खर्ड्याची लढाई).
Shejwalkar rued how Marathas wasted the opportunity to eliminate Nizam. He argued how this blunder of Marathas costed
Indian union dearly in
1947.
Even today, Nizam and his legacy continue to grab attention and resources.
His
Chowmahalla palace complex is being restored to its former glory while Maratha’s
Shaniwar Wada (शनिवार वाडा) continues to languish, remains ghostly.
Princess Esra at the Chowmahalla palace complex (pic courtesy:
Outlook Magazine)