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Frederic Growse

Frederic Salmon Growse CIE (1836 – 19 May 1893) was a British civil servant of the Indian Civil Service (ICS), Hindi scholar, archaeologist and collector, who served in Mainpuri, Mathura, Bulandshahr and Fatehpur during British rule in India.

Frederic Growse
Born
Frederic Salmon Growse

1836
Suffolk, England
Died19 May 1893 (aged 56–57)
Haslemere, Surrey, England
OccupationDistrict magistrate and collector for Indian Civil Service
Years active1860–1890
Known for
Notable work

He studied Indian literature and languages, and founded the Catholic Church of the Sacred Heart and the Government Museum, both at Mathura. Between 1876 and 1883, he published in series, the first English translation of the Ramayana of Tulsidas. He also wrote Mathurá: A district memoir (1880) and a description of the district of Bulandshahr (1884) and of its new architecture (1886).

Described as "never a persona grata to his superiors", he was nonetheless gazetted CIE in 1879.[1] At Bulandshahr between 1878 and 1884 he caused a number of buildings to be constructed using local designs and craftsmen. In 1882, he donated a collection of Indian pottery to the British Museum.

Early life and education edit

Frederic Growse (also spelled Frederick)[2] was born in 1836 in Bildeston, Suffolk, England, the third and youngest son of Robert[3][4][5] and Mary Growse.[6] He matriculated from Oriel College in 1855 and then gained a scholarship at Queen's College, Oxford, from where he received a master's degree after being in the first class of moderations and second class of classics. He was a contemporary of Charles Crosthwaite.[1][3] In 1859, he passed the ICS examination.[1][3] At an unknown date he converted to Catholicism and was described as a "zealous observer of its precepts" but "without any bigotry".[7]

Career edit

 
Catholic Church of the Sacred Heart, Mathura[8]
 
Collector's House, Bulandshahr, 19th century[9]

Having joined the Indian Civil Service in 1860,[1] Growse went to India in either 1860[7] or 1864.[10] He was posted to the North-Western Provinces, one of the regions of British India, where at first he studied Indian literature and languages.[1] In 1868, he was a district assistant in Mainpuri (western UP)[11] and in the 1870s he was appointed district collector at Mathura,[12] the birth place of Krishna.[13] There he built the Catholic Church of the Sacred Heart, paying for a third of its cost.[1][7] Its design was based on John Ruskin's principles of architecture, and it was built using local craftsmanship,[13] but was unfinished at the time of his transfer out of the district.[8] He also founded the Government Museum there in 1874.[12]

He was subsequently district magistrate and collector at Bulandshahr where he lived at Collector's House from 1876 to 1884.[9] By that time he was a fellow of Calcutta University.[14] In 1878 he commissioned Mainpuri craftsmen to produce reredos for a Catholic church in Suffolk.[15] At the time, the wife of Robert Moss King, district collector of Meerut, visited Growse in Bulandshahr and noted some detail of the reredos production in her memoirs.[16][a]

At Bulandshahr between 1878 and 1884 he caused a number of buildings to be constructed using native designs and craftsmen which he saw as more in keeping with his "Gothic principles" than the utilitarian colonial buildings preferred by the Public Works Department (PWD).[10] According to Gavin Stamp, Growse so irritated the PWD that they had him moved to another district.[10][18] In May 1884, at a meeting of the Royal Society of Arts, Purdon Clarke, keeper of Indian art at the South Kensington museum, was one of the first to commend the work of Growse in Bulandshahr, crediting particularly his efforts on the Bulandshahr Chowk.[19] He encouraged and assisted in the construction of the Bathing Ghat, Garden Gate and the Town Hall.[19][20] He was one of a few self-professed historians who held the view that Indian architecture was produced through patronage, and achieved by trust rather than written contracts.[21] His work was praised by John Lockwood Kipling in The Journal of Indian Art (1884).[22]

Growse was district magistrate and collector at Fatehpur, Uttar Pradesh, from 1885 to 1886 where he produced a supplement to the Fatehpur Gazetteer paying particular attention to architecture and archaeology which had been largely ignored by the author of the original gazetteer in 1884 who Growse thought had probably not visited any of the places about which he had written, relying instead on native informants who were not equipped to comment on such matters.[23]

He donated a collection of Indian pottery to the British Museum in 1882.[24]

Writing edit

In 1868 at Mainpuri, Growse produced an article on the Prithviraj Raso, a poem about the 12th-century Hindu Emperor, Prithviraj Chauhan.[11][25]

In 1874, six years after the first local text on the subject was published,[1] the government press at Allahabad published his enlarged version in a book titled Mathura: A District memoir with illustrations by the Autotype Fine Art Company.[1][26] In it he included early Buddhist archeology, and chapters on Hindu sects and the origin of place names.[1]

In Mathura, he became intrigued by the popularity among its ordinary people of the Ramayana of Tulsidas.[27] In 1876 he published his translation into English[14][26] of the original text by Tulsidas. Growse published a revised version in 1880 as a four-volume second edition and published a full version in 1883.[28] It was the first illustrated version of the complete English translation of the Ramcharitmanas,[28] which he completed in Bulandshahr.[14] He writes in the introduction that the epic Sanskrit Ramayana of Valmiki had been translated into several languages including English, but the more popular Hindi version, a retelling of Rama's life, titled Ramcharitmanas by Tulsidas, previously had not been translated into English.[14]

In 1884 he published Bulandshahr; or, Sketches of an Indian district; social, historical and architectural.[1] His obituary in the journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland describes this work as "chiefly interesting as showing how he was able to transfer his sympathies from a Hindu to a Musulman population, when the requirements of a bureaucratic regime compelled his removal".[1]

Later life edit

Due to ill-health, Growse retired to England in 1890,[3][7] where he lived at Thursley Hall, Haslemere, and was active in the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology and Natural History.[29] He updated and revised their volume of materials on the history of the Suffolk parish of Bildeston in 1891 which was published in 1892.[30]

Death and legacy edit

 
Growse memorial St Mary's Church Bildeston

Growse died from tuberculosis at Haslemere, Surrey, on 19 May 1893.[1] Probate was granted to Lydia Catherine Growse on an estate of £5,224.[31] Growseganj Gate, one of Bulandshahr's four gates is named for him.[32][33]

In 2014, a seminar was given at the Nehru Memorial Museum & Library titled "Familiarity with the Familiar: Frederick Salmon Growse's Fragmentary Visions of the Architecture of Bulandshahr, 1878–1886".[34]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Elizabeth Augusta Moss King accompanied her husband to India, and on their second tour wrote diaries published in two volumes in 1884.[17]

Selected publications edit

Articles edit

  • "Bulandshahr Antiquities", Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, Vol. 48 (1879), No. 4, pp. 270–276.
  • “The Art of 'Tar-Kashi' or Wire- Inlay”. Journal of Indian Art and Industry, no. 22, (1888): 51- 56.

Books edit

  • Mathurá: A district memoir. Allahabad: North-western Provinces and Oudh Government Press, 1874.
  • The Rámáyana of Tulsi Dás, Book 1. Childhood. Allahabad: North-western Provinces and Oudh Government Press, 1876.
  • The Rámáyana of Tulsi Dás, Book 1. Childhood. Allahabad: North-western Provinces and Oudh Government Press, 1880.
  • The Rámáyana of Tulsi Dás. Part III-VI. Allahabad: North-western Provinces and Oudh Government Press, 1880.
  • The Rámáyana of Tulsi Dás. Allahabad: North-western Provinces and Oudh Government Press, 1883.
  • Bulandshahr; or, Sketches of an Indian district; social, historical and architectural. Benares: Medical Hall Press, 1884.
  • Indian Architecture of To-day as Exemplified in New Buildings in the Bulandshahr District Part I. North-Western Provinces and Oudh Government Press, 1885. Part II. Benares: Medical Hall Press, 1886.
  • A Supplement to the Fatehpur Gazetteer. Allahabad: Government Press, 1887.
  • Materials for a History of the Parish of Bildeston, in the County of Suffolk. With pedigrees and genealogical notices ... Compiled in the year 1859, revised and brought up to date in 1891, by F. S. Growse. London: Mitchell & Hughes, 1892.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Notes of the Quarter (April, May, June, 1893) III Obituary Notices", Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, Vol. 25, Issue 3, July 1893, pp. 650–652. doi:10.1017/S0035869X0014359X
  2. ^ Surrey, England, Electoral Registers, 1832-1962. England and Wales Register (1939)
  3. ^ a b c d . 13 February 2017. Archived from the original on 24 January 2021. Retrieved 13 April 2021.
  4. ^ Luzac's Oriental List and Book Review. Luzac & Company. 1894. p. 118.
  5. ^ Gupta, Rupa; Gupta, Gautam (2021). "9. Frederic Salmon Growse". Forgotten Civilizations: The Rediscovery of India's Lost History. Gurugram: Hachette India. p. 124. ISBN 978-93-91028-47-3.
  6. ^ Frederic Salmon Growse England Births and Christenings, 1538–1975. Family Search. Retrieved 15 April 2021. (subscription required)
  7. ^ a b c d "Obituary", The Imperial and Asiatic Quarterly Review and Oriental and Colonial Record, New Series, Vol. VI, Nos. 11 & 12 (1893). pp. 223–225.
  8. ^ a b Growse, Frederic Salmon (1883). Mathurá: A district memoir. Allahabad: North-western provinces and Oudh government Press. pp. 160–162.
  9. ^ a b . dcl.dash.umn.edu. Archived from the original on 16 April 2021. Retrieved 15 April 2021.
  10. ^ a b c Stamp, Gavin. "British Architecture in India 1857–1947", Journal of the Royal Society of Arts, Vol. 129, No. 5298 (May 1981), pp. 357–379. (subscription required)
  11. ^ a b Talbot, Cynthia (2016). The Last Hindu Emperor: Prithviraj Cauhan and the Indian Past, 1200–2000. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 210. ISBN 978-1-107-11856-0.
  12. ^ a b Government Museum, Mathura - Vrindavan. Retrieved 15 April 2021.
  13. ^ a b Morris, Jan (2005). Stones of Empire: The Buildings of the Raj. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 165. ISBN 0-19-280596-7.
  14. ^ a b c d Growse, F. S. (1883). "Inside cover and introduction". The Ramayana of Tulsidas. Allahabad. pp. i–xx.
  15. ^ Head, Raymond (1988). "Indian Crafts and Western Design from the Seventeenth Century to the Present". RSA Journal. 136 (5378): 121–122. ISSN 0958-0433. JSTOR 41374508.
  16. ^ King, Augusta Moss (1884). The diary of a civilian's wife in India, 1887-1882. p. 122.
  17. ^ "Robert Moss King 1832-1903". www.natgould.org. Retrieved 13 March 2023.
  18. ^ Mayer, Roberta A.; Forest, Lockwood De (2010). Lockwood de Forest: Furnishing the Gilded Age with a Passion for India. Newark: Associated University Presse. p. 83. ISBN 978-0-87413-973-0.
  19. ^ a b Tillotson, G. H. R. (Giles Henry Rupert) (1989). The tradition of Indian architecture : continuity, controversy, and change since 1850. New Haven : Yale University Press. pp. 84–99. ISBN 978-0-300-04636-6.
  20. ^ "Bulandshahr". The Saturday Review of Politics, Literature, Science, Art, and Finance. 59 (1, 536). Saturday Review, Limited: 457–458. 4 April 1885.
  21. ^ Glover, William (2012). "1. Making Indian modern architects". In Rajagopalan, Mrinalini; Desai, Madhuri Shrikant (eds.). Colonial Frames, Nationalist Histories: Imperial Legacies, Architecture and Modernity. Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. pp. 31–34. ISBN 978-0-7546-7880-9.
  22. ^ Swallow, Deborah (2008). "5. Colonial architecture, international exhibitions and official patronage of the Indian artisan: A case of a gateway from Gwalior in the Victoria and Albert museum". In Barringer, Tim; Flynn, Tom (eds.). Colonialism and the Object: Empire, Material Culture and the Museum. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-10687-4.
  23. ^ "Preface" in F. S. Growse. (1887) A Supplement to the Fatehpur Gazetteer. Allahabad: Government Press. pp. 1–3 (p. 1).
  24. ^ "Frederic Salmon Growse". www.britishmuseum.org. Retrieved 13 April 2021.
  25. ^ Talbot, Cynthia, ed. (2015), "Validating Pṛthvīrāj Rāso in colonial India, 1820s–1870s", The Last Hindu Emperor: Prithviraj Chauhan and the Indian Past, 1200–2000, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 183–218, doi:10.1017/CBO9781316339893.007, ISBN 978-1-107-11856-0, retrieved 19 April 2021
  26. ^ a b Bayly, Christopher Alan (1999). Empire and Information: Intelligence Gathering and Social Communication in India, 1780–1870. Cambridge University Press. p. 356. ISBN 0-521-57085-9.
  27. ^ Burger, Maya; Pozza, Nicola (2010). India in Translation Through Hindi Literature: A Plurality of Voices. Vol. 2. Bern: Peter Lang. pp. 164–180. ISBN 978-3-0343-0564-8.
  28. ^ a b . www.booksofasia.com. Archived from the original on 19 April 2021. Retrieved 19 April 2021.
  29. ^ "List of Members, 1892", Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology and Natural History, Vol. VIII (1894), Part I, pp. iii–ix (p. v.)
  30. ^ "Parish: Bildeston otherwise Bilston". p.7
  31. ^ 1893 Probate Calendar. p. 256.
  32. ^ "Census of India 2011: Bulandshahr village and town directory". Series 10, PART XII-A.
  33. ^ Nevill, H. R. (1922). District Gazetteers Of The United Provinces Of Agra And Oudh Bulandshar Vol-V. Lucknow: Government Branch Press. pp. 204–208.
  34. ^ 49th Annual Report 2014-2015. Nehru Memorial Museum and Library, New Delhi, 2015. p. 28.

Further reading edit

  • Mallick, Bhaswar (2018). Agency of Labor Resistance in Nineteenth Century India: Significance of Bulandshahr and F.S. Growse's Account (Thesis). University of Cincinnati.
  • Tarapor, Mahrukh (1980). "John Lockwood Kipling and British Art Education in India". Victorian Studies. 24 (1): 53–81. ISSN 0042-5222. JSTOR 3826879.

External links edit

  • Frederic Salmon Growse: The Man that built Bulandshahr in the 19th Century
  • "John Growse grave monument details at St Mary Magdalene Church burial ground, Bildeston, Suffolk,England". www.gravestonephotos.com.

frederic, growse, frederic, salmon, growse, 1836, 1893, british, civil, servant, indian, civil, service, hindi, scholar, archaeologist, collector, served, mainpuri, mathura, bulandshahr, fatehpur, during, british, rule, india, bornfrederic, salmon, growse1836s. Frederic Salmon Growse CIE 1836 19 May 1893 was a British civil servant of the Indian Civil Service ICS Hindi scholar archaeologist and collector who served in Mainpuri Mathura Bulandshahr and Fatehpur during British rule in India Frederic GrowseBornFrederic Salmon Growse1836Suffolk EnglandDied19 May 1893 aged 56 57 Haslemere Surrey EnglandOccupationDistrict magistrate and collector for Indian Civil ServiceYears active1860 1890Known forFounding the Government Museum Mathura Encouraging local Indian handicrafts Buildings Catholic Church of the Sacred Heart Mathura Garden Gate Bathing Ghat and Town Hall BulandshahrNotable workEnglish translation of the Ramayana of Tulsidas Bulandshahr or Sketches of an Indian district social historical and architectural 1884 He studied Indian literature and languages and founded the Catholic Church of the Sacred Heart and the Government Museum both at Mathura Between 1876 and 1883 he published in series the first English translation of the Ramayana of Tulsidas He also wrote Mathura A district memoir 1880 and a description of the district of Bulandshahr 1884 and of its new architecture 1886 Described as never a persona grata to his superiors he was nonetheless gazetted CIE in 1879 1 At Bulandshahr between 1878 and 1884 he caused a number of buildings to be constructed using local designs and craftsmen In 1882 he donated a collection of Indian pottery to the British Museum Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 3 Writing 4 Later life 5 Death and legacy 6 See also 7 Notes 8 Selected publications 8 1 Articles 8 2 Books 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life and education editFrederic Growse also spelled Frederick 2 was born in 1836 in Bildeston Suffolk England the third and youngest son of Robert 3 4 5 and Mary Growse 6 He matriculated from Oriel College in 1855 and then gained a scholarship at Queen s College Oxford from where he received a master s degree after being in the first class of moderations and second class of classics He was a contemporary of Charles Crosthwaite 1 3 In 1859 he passed the ICS examination 1 3 At an unknown date he converted to Catholicism and was described as a zealous observer of its precepts but without any bigotry 7 Career edit nbsp Catholic Church of the Sacred Heart Mathura 8 nbsp Collector s House Bulandshahr 19th century 9 Having joined the Indian Civil Service in 1860 1 Growse went to India in either 1860 7 or 1864 10 He was posted to the North Western Provinces one of the regions of British India where at first he studied Indian literature and languages 1 In 1868 he was a district assistant in Mainpuri western UP 11 and in the 1870s he was appointed district collector at Mathura 12 the birth place of Krishna 13 There he built the Catholic Church of the Sacred Heart paying for a third of its cost 1 7 Its design was based on John Ruskin s principles of architecture and it was built using local craftsmanship 13 but was unfinished at the time of his transfer out of the district 8 He also founded the Government Museum there in 1874 12 He was subsequently district magistrate and collector at Bulandshahr where he lived at Collector s House from 1876 to 1884 9 By that time he was a fellow of Calcutta University 14 In 1878 he commissioned Mainpuri craftsmen to produce reredos for a Catholic church in Suffolk 15 At the time the wife of Robert Moss King district collector of Meerut visited Growse in Bulandshahr and noted some detail of the reredos production in her memoirs 16 a At Bulandshahr between 1878 and 1884 he caused a number of buildings to be constructed using native designs and craftsmen which he saw as more in keeping with his Gothic principles than the utilitarian colonial buildings preferred by the Public Works Department PWD 10 According to Gavin Stamp Growse so irritated the PWD that they had him moved to another district 10 18 In May 1884 at a meeting of the Royal Society of Arts Purdon Clarke keeper of Indian art at the South Kensington museum was one of the first to commend the work of Growse in Bulandshahr crediting particularly his efforts on the Bulandshahr Chowk 19 He encouraged and assisted in the construction of the Bathing Ghat Garden Gate and the Town Hall 19 20 He was one of a few self professed historians who held the view that Indian architecture was produced through patronage and achieved by trust rather than written contracts 21 His work was praised by John Lockwood Kipling in The Journal of Indian Art 1884 22 Growse was district magistrate and collector at Fatehpur Uttar Pradesh from 1885 to 1886 where he produced a supplement to the Fatehpur Gazetteer paying particular attention to architecture and archaeology which had been largely ignored by the author of the original gazetteer in 1884 who Growse thought had probably not visited any of the places about which he had written relying instead on native informants who were not equipped to comment on such matters 23 He donated a collection of Indian pottery to the British Museum in 1882 24 Writing editIn 1868 at Mainpuri Growse produced an article on the Prithviraj Raso a poem about the 12th century Hindu Emperor Prithviraj Chauhan 11 25 In 1874 six years after the first local text on the subject was published 1 the government press at Allahabad published his enlarged version in a book titled Mathura A District memoir with illustrations by the Autotype Fine Art Company 1 26 In it he included early Buddhist archeology and chapters on Hindu sects and the origin of place names 1 In Mathura he became intrigued by the popularity among its ordinary people of the Ramayana of Tulsidas 27 In 1876 he published his translation into English 14 26 of the original text by Tulsidas Growse published a revised version in 1880 as a four volume second edition and published a full version in 1883 28 It was the first illustrated version of the complete English translation of the Ramcharitmanas 28 which he completed in Bulandshahr 14 He writes in the introduction that the epic Sanskrit Ramayana of Valmiki had been translated into several languages including English but the more popular Hindi version a retelling of Rama s life titled Ramcharitmanas by Tulsidas previously had not been translated into English 14 In 1884 he published Bulandshahr or Sketches of an Indian district social historical and architectural 1 His obituary in the journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland describes this work as chiefly interesting as showing how he was able to transfer his sympathies from a Hindu to a Musulman population when the requirements of a bureaucratic regime compelled his removal 1 Later life editDue to ill health Growse retired to England in 1890 3 7 where he lived at Thursley Hall Haslemere and was active in the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology and Natural History 29 He updated and revised their volume of materials on the history of the Suffolk parish of Bildeston in 1891 which was published in 1892 30 Death and legacy edit nbsp Growse memorial St Mary s Church Bildeston Growse died from tuberculosis at Haslemere Surrey on 19 May 1893 1 Probate was granted to Lydia Catherine Growse on an estate of 5 224 31 Growseganj Gate one of Bulandshahr s four gates is named for him 32 33 In 2014 a seminar was given at the Nehru Memorial Museum amp Library titled Familiarity with the Familiar Frederick Salmon Growse s Fragmentary Visions of the Architecture of Bulandshahr 1878 1886 34 See also editJohn BeamesNotes edit Elizabeth Augusta Moss King accompanied her husband to India and on their second tour wrote diaries published in two volumes in 1884 17 Selected publications editArticles edit Bulandshahr Antiquities Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal Vol 48 1879 No 4 pp 270 276 The Art of Tar Kashi or Wire Inlay Journal of Indian Art and Industry no 22 1888 51 56 Books edit Mathura A district memoir Allahabad North western Provinces and Oudh Government Press 1874 The Ramayana of Tulsi Das Book 1 Childhood Allahabad North western Provinces and Oudh Government Press 1876 The Ramayana of Tulsi Das Book 1 Childhood Allahabad North western Provinces and Oudh Government Press 1880 The Ramayana of Tulsi Das Part III VI Allahabad North western Provinces and Oudh Government Press 1880 The Ramayana of Tulsi Das Allahabad North western Provinces and Oudh Government Press 1883 Bulandshahr or Sketches of an Indian district social historical and architectural Benares Medical Hall Press 1884 Indian Architecture of To day as Exemplified in New Buildings in the Bulandshahr District Part I North Western Provinces and Oudh Government Press 1885 Part II Benares Medical Hall Press 1886 A Supplement to the Fatehpur Gazetteer Allahabad Government Press 1887 Materials for a History of the Parish of Bildeston in the County of Suffolk With pedigrees and genealogical notices Compiled in the year 1859 revised and brought up to date in 1891 by F S Growse London Mitchell amp Hughes 1892 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l Notes of the Quarter April May June 1893 III Obituary Notices Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland Vol 25 Issue 3 July 1893 pp 650 652 doi 10 1017 S0035869X0014359X Surrey England Electoral Registers 1832 1962 England and Wales Register 1939 a b c d Growse Frederic Salmon Persons of Indian Studies by Prof Dr Klaus Karttunen 13 February 2017 Archived from the original on 24 January 2021 Retrieved 13 April 2021 Luzac s Oriental List and Book Review Luzac amp Company 1894 p 118 Gupta Rupa Gupta Gautam 2021 9 Frederic Salmon Growse Forgotten Civilizations The Rediscovery of India s Lost History Gurugram Hachette India p 124 ISBN 978 93 91028 47 3 Frederic Salmon Growse England Births and Christenings 1538 1975 Family Search Retrieved 15 April 2021 subscription required a b c d Obituary The Imperial and Asiatic Quarterly Review and Oriental and Colonial Record New Series Vol VI Nos 11 amp 12 1893 pp 223 225 a b Growse Frederic Salmon 1883 Mathura A district memoir Allahabad North western provinces and Oudh government Press pp 160 162 a b Indian Architecture of To day as Exemplified in the New Buildings of Bulandshahr District Part II Highlights from the Digital Content Library dcl dash umn edu Archived from the original on 16 April 2021 Retrieved 15 April 2021 a b c Stamp Gavin British Architecture in India 1857 1947 Journal of the Royal Society of Arts Vol 129 No 5298 May 1981 pp 357 379 subscription required a b Talbot Cynthia 2016 The Last Hindu Emperor Prithviraj Cauhan and the Indian Past 1200 2000 Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 210 ISBN 978 1 107 11856 0 a b Government Museum Mathura Vrindavan Retrieved 15 April 2021 a b Morris Jan 2005 Stones of Empire The Buildings of the Raj Oxford Oxford University Press p 165 ISBN 0 19 280596 7 a b c d Growse F S 1883 Inside cover and introduction The Ramayana of Tulsidas Allahabad pp i xx Head Raymond 1988 Indian Crafts and Western Design from the Seventeenth Century to the Present RSA Journal 136 5378 121 122 ISSN 0958 0433 JSTOR 41374508 King Augusta Moss 1884 The diary of a civilian s wife in India 1887 1882 p 122 Robert Moss King 1832 1903 www natgould org Retrieved 13 March 2023 Mayer Roberta A Forest Lockwood De 2010 Lockwood de Forest Furnishing the Gilded Age with a Passion for India Newark Associated University Presse p 83 ISBN 978 0 87413 973 0 a b Tillotson G H R Giles Henry Rupert 1989 The tradition of Indian architecture continuity controversy and change since 1850 New Haven Yale University Press pp 84 99 ISBN 978 0 300 04636 6 Bulandshahr The Saturday Review of Politics Literature Science Art and Finance 59 1 536 Saturday Review Limited 457 458 4 April 1885 Glover William 2012 1 Making Indian modern architects In Rajagopalan Mrinalini Desai Madhuri Shrikant eds Colonial Frames Nationalist Histories Imperial Legacies Architecture and Modernity Farnham Surrey Ashgate Publishing Ltd pp 31 34 ISBN 978 0 7546 7880 9 Swallow Deborah 2008 5 Colonial architecture international exhibitions and official patronage of the Indian artisan A case of a gateway from Gwalior in the Victoria and Albert museum In Barringer Tim Flynn Tom eds Colonialism and the Object Empire Material Culture and the Museum Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 10687 4 Preface in F S Growse 1887 A Supplement to the Fatehpur Gazetteer Allahabad Government Press pp 1 3 p 1 Frederic Salmon Growse www britishmuseum org Retrieved 13 April 2021 Talbot Cynthia ed 2015 Validating Pṛthviraj Raso in colonial India 1820s 1870s The Last Hindu Emperor Prithviraj Chauhan and the Indian Past 1200 2000 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 183 218 doi 10 1017 CBO9781316339893 007 ISBN 978 1 107 11856 0 retrieved 19 April 2021 a b Bayly Christopher Alan 1999 Empire and Information Intelligence Gathering and Social Communication in India 1780 1870 Cambridge University Press p 356 ISBN 0 521 57085 9 Burger Maya Pozza Nicola 2010 India in Translation Through Hindi Literature A Plurality of Voices Vol 2 Bern Peter Lang pp 164 180 ISBN 978 3 0343 0564 8 a b The Ramayana of Tulsi Das Tulsi Das Frederic Salmon Growse translator www booksofasia com Archived from the original on 19 April 2021 Retrieved 19 April 2021 List of Members 1892 Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology and Natural History Vol VIII 1894 Part I pp iii ix p v Parish Bildeston otherwise Bilston p 7 1893 Probate Calendar p 256 Census of India 2011 Bulandshahr village and town directory Series 10 PART XII A Nevill H R 1922 District Gazetteers Of The United Provinces Of Agra And Oudh Bulandshar Vol V Lucknow Government Branch Press pp 204 208 49th Annual Report 2014 2015 Nehru Memorial Museum and Library New Delhi 2015 p 28 Further reading editMallick Bhaswar 2018 Agency of Labor Resistance in Nineteenth Century India Significance of Bulandshahr and F S Growse s Account Thesis University of Cincinnati Tarapor Mahrukh 1980 John Lockwood Kipling and British Art Education in India Victorian Studies 24 1 53 81 ISSN 0042 5222 JSTOR 3826879 External links editFrederic Salmon Growse The Man that built Bulandshahr in the 19th Century John Growse grave monument details at St Mary Magdalene Church burial ground Bildeston Suffolk England www gravestonephotos com nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Frederic Growse nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Author Frederic Salmon Growse nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Frederic Growse Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Frederic Growse amp oldid 1216492407, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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