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Tales of Crimes Past: A Casebook of Crime in Colonial India / by Sunil Nair

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: UK Hachette Book Publishing India pvt, 2022Description: 226p.; 21cmISBN:
  • 9789393701268
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 364.954  NAI
Contents:
Introduction 1. In Bad Taste: The Baroda Poisoning Case 2. Royal Folly: The Malabar Hill Murder 3. Murder, They Wrote: The Fullam–Clark Affair 4. Plague Take You: The Pakur Murder Case 5. Blood on the Tracks: A Murder on the GIP Railway 6. In Durance Vile: Death in a Bombay Brothel 7. Death in the Hills: An Unsolved Murder in Burma 8. Sultana: The Life and Legend of India’s Favourite Daku 9. Deceive and Choke: The Cult of the Strangler 10. A Never-Ending Headache: Dacoity in the Raj 11. Unpalatable Crimes: The Menace of the Professional Poisoner 12. Crooks on the Line: The Railway Thieves Acknowledgements Endnotes
Summary: An Anglo-Indian Couple Plotting Murder. A British Resident Nursing Conspiracy Theories. Professional Poisoners Leaving a Trail of Death. The criminal fraternity in colonial India was a diverse, bustling lot. No man's life was worth much outside the security of his home or village, and lawlessness knew no bounds. In the unsettled state of the country during the Raj, dacoits, thugs, swindlers and mysterious stranglers plagued the roads, preying on the rich and poor alike. Policing, as we know it, and the 'rule of law', as we understand it, were in their infancy and chaos reigned supreme as the British scrambled to round up these notorious criminals. A diabolical double murder in Agra, an unsolved killing in the hills of Burma, a poisoning attempt that cost a maharaja his gaddi, and the first-ever instance of cold-blooded murder by plague bacilli! Sunil Nair presents the choiciest, most obscure and gripping tales that provide an insight into the crime and criminals in the days of the Raj. These stories take us back to an age when foot-slogging police work - and a little bit of luck - were often all that could be counted on to bring a criminal to book!
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Books Books Central Library 364.954 NAI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 001368

Introduction
1. In Bad Taste: The Baroda Poisoning Case
2. Royal Folly: The Malabar Hill Murder
3. Murder, They Wrote: The Fullam–Clark Affair
4. Plague Take You: The Pakur Murder Case
5. Blood on the Tracks: A Murder on the GIP Railway
6. In Durance Vile: Death in a Bombay Brothel
7. Death in the Hills: An Unsolved Murder in Burma
8. Sultana: The Life and Legend of India’s Favourite Daku
9. Deceive and Choke: The Cult of the Strangler
10. A Never-Ending Headache: Dacoity in the Raj
11. Unpalatable Crimes: The Menace of the Professional Poisoner
12. Crooks on the Line: The Railway Thieves
Acknowledgements
Endnotes

An Anglo-Indian Couple Plotting Murder. A British Resident Nursing Conspiracy Theories. Professional Poisoners Leaving a Trail of Death. The criminal fraternity in colonial India was a diverse, bustling lot. No man's life was worth much outside the security of his home or village, and lawlessness knew no bounds. In the unsettled state of the country during the Raj, dacoits, thugs, swindlers and mysterious stranglers plagued the roads, preying on the rich and poor alike. Policing, as we know it, and the 'rule of law', as we understand it, were in their infancy and chaos reigned supreme as the British scrambled to round up these notorious criminals. A diabolical double murder in Agra, an unsolved killing in the hills of Burma, a poisoning attempt that cost a maharaja his gaddi, and the first-ever instance of cold-blooded murder by plague bacilli! Sunil Nair presents the choiciest, most obscure and gripping tales that provide an insight into the crime and criminals in the days of the Raj. These stories take us back to an age when foot-slogging police work - and a little bit of luck - were often all that could be counted on to bring a criminal to book!

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