History revisited
-
How an Indian journalist ended up playing a role in the history of three countries
-
As a fighter and a peace broker, an Indian played a memorable role in Indonesia’s freedom struggle
-
History revisited: How India responded to Iran’s pitch for a confederation with Pakistan in 1958
-
The British writer who found inspiration in India and the Great Game
-
The warrior women who fought – and won – against the East India Company
-
The secret, political mission behind a woman pioneer’s exploration of the Himalayas
-
What the misidentification of a mosque in the heart of Delhi says about our approach to heritage
-
Risk of injury, lost employment, violation of academic freedom – the problem with policing campuses
-
Hyderabad Liberation Day to be celebrated on September 17, says Union government
-
‘It is my duty to arrest you’: Gerald Wilson, a Bombay police officer who took Gandhi into custody
-
Give dogs a cup of tea every day: Travel advice from a ‘celebrated’ 19th-century writer
-
‘Mrs Moore’ and a portrait of the Hyderabad Nizam’s powerful minister
-
Long voyages, life in faraway lands: The women of the East India Company
-
The tragic tale of General Edroos, who fought a losing battle for the princely state of Hyderabad
-
‘Jallianwala Bagh will be immortal in the world’: Publications the British deemed seditious
-
The tale of ‘Daku’ Sultana and his unlikely friendship with a British police officer
-
How Nazis and the ‘Little Führer of Bombay’ spread their web in war-time India
-
How an early version of UK’s national flag helped Bombay merchants grow their business
-
In Thailand, the practice of using Talipot hand fans has survived thousands of years
-
Indian Railway’s plan to protect women passengers in the 19th century didn’t work out as it expected
-
How Punjab came to dominate the British Indian army
-
London too played a role when the British discussed India’s constitutional future with Gandhi
-
Feeling an affinity with Alexander the Great, Akbar commissioned a special manuscript on his life
-
How Alexander the Great became Iskandar Zulkarnain, the legendary ancestor of Malay kings
-
As the last Boeing 747 rolls out of the factory, a history of how it became the ‘queen of the skies’
-
Fact vs fiction: Pakistan must accept the uncomfortable truths about the 1971 war
-
Daggers drawn: How contracts in Western India were guaranteed in blood 300 years ago
-
How Persian literature imagined Alexander the Great’s romantic relationships around the world
-
In ancient Athens, the ultrarich often paid more tax than they were due – and then boasted about it
-
How the world discovered chocolate
-
Cries for help: Letters to the British India Office in the 19th century
-
Hyderabad Liberation: An Urdu journalist’s murder in 1948 warns India about the perils of autocracy
-
19th century letters reveal the mood in Britain when inflation reached the highest levels in history
-
In Elizabethan England, a law that made it illegal to let anybody starve led to economic gains
-
Two plaques in Srirangapatna claim to mark the spot where Tipu Sultan died. Which one is accurate?
-
A succession of bad wheat harvests caused a bread crisis in Britain in 1795
-
Images: Where were these miniatures of Sikh rulers painted?
-
Real-life Bridgerton stories: 18th-century ‘Lady Whistledowns’ who stoked controversy
-
Throughout history, Russian rulers have used the medieval Kyivan Rus state to justify expansionism
-
A historian clears up some mistruths and half-truths about the history of Ukraine and Russia
-
The curious case of Inspector Derojinsky: A White Russian in the colonial Bombay Police
-
In images: The anger in India against the Raj-appointed Simon Commission
-
Emmeline da Cunha: Remembering Goa’s first female doctor who had a brief but intense medical career
-
Roshani Begum: A dancer from Tipu Sultan’s court who rebelled against the British
-
‘We became fearless’: How Godavari Parulekar helped Adivasi women fight their oppressors
-
Brexit fish wars: Britain has been fighting over territorial waters for centuries
-
An examination guide from 1868 shows what it took to join the Bombay Native Infantry
-
When Madras Army soldiers protested about the loss of extra pay
-
The oldest surviving Zoroastrian scriptures were found not in Iran or India, but in China
-
An unusual annotation in Bengal records from 1777 recalls the famous life of Catherine Grand
-
Long before Britney Spears, conservatorships were used to deprive Native Americans of their wealth
-
Oriental cults? Factional rivalries? The mystery of the ‘Hindu murders’ in 20th century US
-
Attempts to access the Mountbattens’ diaries that cover India’s Partition are being stonewalled
-
Pilgrimage to India: When Martin Luther King Jr followed in Gandhi’s footsteps
-
Early feminist, pioneering novelist: Recalling colonial-era Marathi Christian reformer Baba Padmanji
-
Union vs Centre: Why DMK wants to use the ‘correct’ term for the government of India
-
Why the Portuguese administrators in India tried to stop the handover of Bombay to the British
-
How the opening of the Suez Canal transformed Mumbai – and its sex trade
-
Makhan Singh: The Punjabi radical who fought for freedom in not one but two countries
-
Three times when the Mughal military juggernaut ran up against the immutable force of nature
-
When the East India Company sent a ship called New Year’s Gift to India
-
What today’s politicians could learn from the relationship between Gandhi and his critic VSS Sastri
-
When the music of Beethoven mingled with the music of Gandhi’s spinning wheel
-
Muhammad Najib Khan, a Sufi soldier and manuscript collector in 18th-century southern India
-
Why early feminists in India were accused of being puppets of the British
-
‘World was made for women also’: How a US doctor set up India’s first literary society for women
-
How a suicide in Calcutta in 1800s sparked a debate on applying English laws in India
-
Richard Nixon and British colonialists both viewed Indian women through misogyny-tinted glasses
-
On Vidyasagar’s 200th birth anniversary, how do we recall the mass of contradictions that made him?
-
On Vidyasagar’s 200th birth anniversary, a look at how he bypassed religion to forge social reform
-
William Hunter: The Scottish historian who chronicled the horrors of Bengal and Orissa famines
-
Gyan Chaupar to Snakes and Ladders: How a game about a karmic journey became a plaything for kids
-
Who was Anthony Firinghee? Remembering the Portuguese-origin singer who is part of Bengali folklore
-
How the translation of a Bengali play led to a British priest being convicted for libel in 1861
-
How a Socialist member of the Tata family got elected to the British Parliament in the 1920s
-
For those delegitimising Tippoo Saëb, an important lesson from his emissaries’ trip to 1788 France
-
How Tipu Sultan and Haidar Ali inspired America’s founding fathers in their quest for freedom
-
My search for ‘Black Peggy’, a Bengal native who was seduced with a false promise of marriage
-
The story of how Mount Everest was measured and got its name
-
The Indian exodus from Burma during WW II bears eerie similarity to migrant flight during lockdown
-
1918 Bombay Fever: How voluntary groups sprang up in the face of state ‘neglect’
-
Creating a legend: How Vasudev Balwant Phadke came to be known as a modern-day avatar of Shivaji
-
On his second visit to the USA, in 1916, Rabindranath Tagore was an assassination target
-
India Superpower 2020: Tracing the brief history of a spectacularly incorrect prediction
-
By understanding Hitler’s rise to power, we can avoid repeating history
-
From Narendra Modi’s website: ‘When student power rattled the unhealthy status quo!’
-
Climate change fuelled the rise and demise of the powerful Neo-Assyrian Empire
-
The heartless way in which the British dealt with the widows of Indian soldiers
-
When a desperate British government called on Indian Army officers to take up civilian jobs
-
400 years ago, England’s first ambassador to India returned home with ‘eye-opening experiences’
-
How crystal chandeliers gifted to the Shah of Persia travelled from England to Bombay to Tehran
-
Why a Deccan ruler in 16th century commissioned a beautiful garden and then promptly razed it
-
The little-remembered philosopher who translated the Mahatma’s ideas of nonviolence for the US
-
On the anniversary of Vivekananda’s Chicago speeches, time to remember what he said – and didn’t
-
How a Russian musician ended up building Calcutta’s first drama theatre in the 18th century
-
The strange tale of how Joe Biden helped Neil Kinnock lay the ground for UK’s New Labour
-
Mumbai Coastal Road: Rather than land, city must reclaim its spirit of public-mindedness
-
'Jai Shri Ram' might be a new slogan – but the use of Ram as a political symbol is 800 years old
-
Did England’s King Alfred the Great send two envoys to Christian shrines in India in 9th century?
-
In photos: A potted history of the pencil