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The book that still retains its crown.

A rare and valuable work of history on the life of the second Mughal emperor, Humayun.

Humayun Badshah.
Authored by S.K. Banerji.

It is year 1925 and the metropolis of London is a melting pot of migrants, workers and talents. As the political and cultural heart of imperial Britain, the burgeoning metropolis throbs with life drawing in people from countries and continents within an expansive radius of thirty five million square kilometers making it the capital of the largest multiracial empire the world has ever seen.

North of the historic city of London, at Finsbury Circus, the School of Oriental Studies is a nucleus of this immensity. Under the supervision of its first director, Edward Denison Ross, a linguist specializing in the languages of the Far East, the institution now located at Bloomsbury and recognized as a leading center of eastern history and culture in Europe, busily expands human knowledge as a part of its mandate to empower officials to better understand and govern the empire’s provinces, particularly in the east.

Inside the rambling building, a student of Ross huddles over tons of ancient manuscripts and works of historians both contemporary and old. His eyes scan billions of words while his mind concentrates on framing the picture of a medieval regent who lived and died nearly three centuries before him, in another time, another empire – that inpsite of not possessing the vastness of the one he lives in, had been a formidable one of its age and exhibited unquestionable signs of greatness.

The thesis that eventually emerges from his labors some two years after not only wins him the respect of his peers, particularly that of Ross, and a doctorate in Philosophy from the university of London but later as he dons the role of a Reader in Indian History at the university of Lucknow, becomes the bedrock from which emerges a literary work that since its publication has remained a treasured document on Gurkani history and perhaps the only academic work that unfalteringly takes one deeper into the life of its second emperor: Naseer-ud-din-baig-Muhammad-Humayun.

The Humayun Badshah (in Arabic and Padshah in Persian) by Dr. S.K Banerji is in the true sense an academic masterpiece and the product of an age when research and exploration of eastern history and culture was at its pinnacle enthusiastically pursued by both eastern and western scholars striving to extract the truth from layers of hardened obscurity. Published in 1938 during the last nine years of British India, it is a literary work that transcends literature itself and in present times finds its rightful place as an indispensable part of world heritage.

Brimming with historical facts, explanations and the opinions of its knowledgeable author who spent thirteen lengthy years in expanding his thesis by incorporating even more researched material from medieval manuscripts as well as modern interpretations to unveil the early reign of Humayun in minute detail, it abounds in insights that’s rarely found in modern day history books – as the writer consulting, questioning and weighing in balance contradictory views on the regent presents logical explanations to arrive at plausible conclusions.

Dr. S.K Banerji was a  scholar who questioned facts and a teacher with a profound interest in imparting knowledge. Likewise the pages of his literary work reflect the patience and approach of an academician out to guide modern generations in getting properly acquainted with a regent whose character and reign has often been a subject of debate.

Beginning right from the birth of Humayun to his defeat and expulsion from  the throne of Hindustan for a period of fifteen years, the Humayun Badshah unravels with sensitivity the different stages of the emperor’s life.

It doesn’t lightly touch events and occurrences but explores microscopically the emperor’s relationship with his parents and siblings, his conflicts with neighboring kingdoms, his dilemmas as a regent, his flaws and miscalculated decisions, his crushing defeats and triumphant victories (accompanied with illustrated diagrams of battlefields), and the noble virtues that set him way apart from his descendants – even going to the length of providing readers with the names and background information of every person who directly or indirectly affected Humayun’s fate.

For an academic understanding of the second Gurkani emperor, the Humayun Badshah is a book that inspite its antiquity has not as yet lost its crown.

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Siddhartha Mukherjee
Siddhartha Mukherjeehttps://farbound.net
I believe in the wisdom of self-reliance, the moral philosophy of liberalism, and in individualism. When not researching and writing editorial content or creating digital products, I spend my time with my dogs and live a life of solitude.

6 COMMENTS

  1. I enjoyed reading your review of the book “Humayun Badshah” by S K Banerji, who was my father. I had seen both the volmes of the book one published by Oxford University press and the other by Maxwell Press in Lucknow (I think). Iwas too young (15 years)when he died in 1951 in Varanashi,So i never got to learn more about his schloarly efforts. Your comments puts a new perspective to my thinking about my father. I live in US and was a professor of Civil Environmental Engineering at the University of Missouri. But like Sandeep, who is my nephew I have renewed interest in History so I will procure the Volume 1 of the book by my father, I think the second volume is not available. In school in India whenever they talked about the Mogulperiod, Akbar was the most promonent King and Humayun was not much discussed. So I will learnmore about HumayuN.
    Thank you for your comments

    • With the visual medium, television and movies, now so common people hardly read much. But books hold enormous information and cannot be done away with. On Farbound.Net books compiled by scholars, historians and experts form a major part of the stories highlighted.

      My intent is to not only reveal aspects of history through Farbound.Net stories but also acquaint readers with authors and their works. This is why in almost all stories on the site, somewhere or the other, one comes across the names of authors and books written by them.

      Also, no matter how lengthy my own stories are, they still can’t hold the information provided in a book.

      As time permits and I am able to research I plan to highlight more aspects of history including authors and books. Many stories are still in the pipeline.

      Dr. S.K. Banerji’s Humayun Badshah is a rare gem. In my research, I consulted many authors, colonial historians, and contemporary, but none revealed Humayun as did Dr. Banerji.

      Through his words, we see Humayun as a human being. Which is actually very rare. Dr. Banerji not only reveals the follies of this regent but also his life and all those who influenced his decision and fate.

      It is true Akbar is talked about more in schools. But much of Akbar’s policies were those of Humayun and Babur. Most prominent among them was tolerance in religion.

      Had it not been for Babur and Humayun, Akbar’s empire in what we know as India today would not even have existed.

  2. dear Mr. Mukherjee
    I had no idea the book was still in print!
    Dr. Sukumar banerji was my grandfather . he passed away before i was born so i never really knew him, just the stories my grandmother told me of his absolute and lifelong absorption in his work.
    he was i believe engaged on some aspects of akbar’s life when he passed away of a heart attack in 1946. sadly, none of the unfinished work survived a disastrous flood of the gomti in 1951.
    i do have a hardbound copy of humayun badshah that was losing its battle with silverfish. luckily , i made xerox copy before it crumbled entirely.
    my father, my brother & i inherited Dr banerji’s love of history & i heard the story of humayuns wanderings in the suri interregnum from my father as a child.
    i loved your review. thank you!
    what a fascinating website farbound.net is! I have saved the link & will explore it at length.
    with much gratitude,
    sandeep banerji

    • Thank you so much! When the days are bleak and on a cold wintery morning one wakes up to find a lovely comment such as this, it is indeed a wonderful feeling. In my view S.K. Banerji’s Humayun Badshah is the best-researched work on the Mughal emperor Humayun. It is unfortunate that so little people know of it. But I do believe the book is very much available in print. When I last checked Amazon, it was there. It would have been my honour to have met and known your grandfather in person, unfortunately, I was born in 1973.

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