An Indian Affair

An Indian Affair
Title An Indian Affair PDF eBook
Author Archie Baron
Publisher Boxtree
Pages 254
Release 2001
Genre History
ISBN 9780752261607

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A fresh perspective on Britain`s relationship with India, this work suggest that far from being an imperialist objective, it seems the footholds on which india was established as a colony happened by accident rather than by design. This book examines India both before the Raj and throughout. It attempts to show that the British were actually more influenced by India and their traditions than the other way around.

The Arrogant Artist

The Arrogant Artist
Title The Arrogant Artist PDF eBook
Author John Creasey
Publisher House of Stratus
Pages 177
Release 2015-05-01
Genre Fiction
ISBN 0755145321

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A quandary for John Mannering (aka ‘The Baron’). A young brash artist is found half-dead, with a noose around his neck, on the same day he had attempted to get Mannering to finance his career. The artist's terrified girlfriend desperately seeks help. Has the man tried to kill himself, or is it a case of attempted murder?

The Baron's Cloak

The Baron's Cloak
Title The Baron's Cloak PDF eBook
Author Willard Sunderland
Publisher Cornell University Press
Pages 529
Release 2014-05-08
Genre History
ISBN 0801471060

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Baron Roman Fedorovich von Ungern-Sternberg (1885–1921) was a Baltic German aristocrat and tsarist military officer who fought against the Bolsheviks in Eastern Siberia during the Russian Civil War. From there he established himself as the de facto warlord of Outer Mongolia, the base for a fantastical plan to restore the Russian and Chinese empires, which then ended with his capture and execution by the Red Army as the war drew to a close. In The Baron’s Cloak, Willard Sunderland tells the epic story of the Russian Empire’s final decades through the arc of the Baron’s life, which spanned the vast reaches of Eurasia. Tracking Ungern’s movements, he transits through the Empire’s multinational borderlands, where the country bumped up against three other doomed empires, the Habsburg, Ottoman, and Qing, and where the violence unleashed by war, revolution, and imperial collapse was particularly vicious. In compulsively readable prose that draws on wide-ranging research in multiple languages, Sunderland re-creates Ungern’s far-flung life and uses it to tell a compelling and original tale of imperial success and failure in a momentous time. Sunderland visited the many sites that shaped Ungern’s experience, from Austria and Estonia to Mongolia and China, and these travels help give the book its arresting geographical feel. In the early chapters, where direct evidence of Ungern’s activities is sparse, he evokes peoples and places as Ungern would have experienced them, carefully tracing the accumulation of influences that ultimately came together to propel the better documented, more notorious phase of his career. Recurring throughout Sunderland’s magisterial account is a specific artifact: the Baron’s cloak, an essential part of the cross-cultural uniform Ungern chose for himself by the time of his Mongolian campaign: an orangey-gold Mongolian kaftan embroidered in the Khalkha fashion yet outfitted with tsarist-style epaulettes on the shoulders. Like his cloak, Ungern was an imperial product. He lived across the Russian Empire, combined its contrasting cultures, fought its wars, and was molded by its greatest institutions and most volatile frontiers. By the time of his trial and execution mere months before the decree that created the USSR, he had become a profoundly contradictory figure, reflecting both the empire’s potential as a multinational society and its ultimately irresolvable limitations.

The Memoirs of the Baron Du Tan

The Memoirs of the Baron Du Tan
Title The Memoirs of the Baron Du Tan PDF eBook
Author Madame de Gomez
Publisher
Pages 290
Release 1744
Genre Calabria (Italy)
ISBN

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The Silver Baron's Wife

The Silver Baron's Wife
Title The Silver Baron's Wife PDF eBook
Author Donna Baier Stein
Publisher
Pages 224
Release 2016-09-15
Genre Fiction
ISBN 9780997101065

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The Silver Baron's Wife traces the rags-to-riches-to-rags life of Colorado's Baby Doe Tabor (Lizzie). This fascinating heroine worked in the silver mines and had two scandalous marriages, one to a philandering opium addict and one to a Senator and silver baron worth $24 million in the late 19th century. A divorcee shunned by Denver society, Lizzie raised two daughters in a villa where 100 peacocks roamed the lawns, entertained Sarah Bernhardt when the actress performed at Tabor's Opera House, and after her second husband's death, moved to a one-room shack at the Matchless Mine in Leadville. She lived the last 35 years of her life there, writing down thousands of her dreams and noting visitations of spirits on her calendar. Hers is the tale of a fiercely independent woman who bucked all social expectations by working where 19thcentury women didn't work, becoming the key figure in one of the West's most scandalous love triangles, and, after a devastating stock market crash destroyed Tabor's vast fortune, living in eccentric isolation at the Matchless Mine. An earlier version of this novel won the PEN/New England Discovery Award in Fiction."

The Baron's Head

The Baron's Head
Title The Baron's Head PDF eBook
Author Frances Vyvian
Publisher
Pages 268
Release 1884
Genre
ISBN

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The Baron's Sons

The Baron's Sons
Title The Baron's Sons PDF eBook
Author Mór Jókai
Publisher
Pages 364
Release 1901
Genre Hungary
ISBN

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