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- Sport and the Imperial bond
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Previous research grants and projects
- Insular Manuscripts
- History and Security Sector Reform
- The Carceral Archipelago
- Flood and Flow
- Charnwood Roots
- Healthy Citizens
- Disputed Bodies
- Fear Across Borders
- Rough Skin
- The Impact of Diasporas on the Making of Britain
- Consuming Authenticities
- Crusading in the Fifteenth Century
- The Habitable City
- Motor Cities
- A Scholarly Edition of Richard Baxters Reliquiae Baxterianae
- Pauper letters and petitions for poor relief in Germany and Great Britain
- Health care in public and private
- British Abolitionists and Protestant Millennialism
- Heresy and Orthodoxy in the works of Bede
- Integrated Histories of the Andaman Islands
- Internationalism Ideology and the debate over US entry into World War II
- Un Americans
- Sickness poverty and medical relief in England
- Anglo American Liberation Theology from the Puritans to the Abolitionists
- Death and community in rural settlements
- Sport and the Imperial bond
- New world plants in Italy
History at Leicester
Sport and the Imperial bond
Leverhulme Trust Research Fellowship (£43,708)
July 2009 - April 2011
Dr Prashant Kidambi
In recent years, historians have shown how sport became deeply intertwined with imperial and national identities within the British Empire. This research project explored the history of the first ‘Indian’ cricket tour to Britain in 1911, an extraordinary venture peopled by an intriguing and improbable cast of characters. The team’s flamboyant captain, Maharaja Bhupinder Singh of Patiala, was the newly enthroned ruler of one of the biggest Indian princely states and eager to use the visit to burnish his credentials as a loyal ally of the British imperial state. Their star bowler, on the other hand, was from an ‘untouchable’ caste, the lowest rung of the Hindu social hierarchy. The rest of the team was drawn from different parts of the subcontinent and belonged to different religious communities: Hindu, Muslim, Sikh and Parsi. The project, funded by the Leverhulme Trust, sought to retrieve the story of this intriguing tour and situate it within the wider context of changing Indo-British relations.