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A cricketing century -
England v India: 1911 - 2011
2nd November 2011
As
England and India once more end their battle on
the cricket field, this time in India, a University
of Leicester historian has unearthed new facts on
the first-ever Indian cricket tour to
Britain in 1911. Dr Prashant Kidambis research
has been featured in a widely acclaimed essay in
the 148th edition of Wisden Cricketers' Almanack,
telling the long-forgotten story of this extraordinary
tour a century ago and placing it within the wider
context of changing Indo-British relations. During
the course of his Leverhulme Research Fellowship
funded research project entitled 'Sport and the
Imperial Bond', Dr Kidambi uncovered several previously
unknown aspects of the tour.
It is usually assumed that
the tour was principally the initiative of Maharaja
Bhupindar Singh of Patiala and that he was its
principal sponsor. In fact Dr Kidambi's research
revealed that a number of other individuals -
especially Parsi businessmen based in Bombay -
played a critical role in the organisation of
the tour. Indeed, Bhupindar Singh only joined
the tour after most of the arrangements were in
place and once the team got to England the prince
took very little interest in the cricket after
the first few matches had been played. Equally
interesting was the discovery that the imperial
establishment kept him under close surveillance
throughout the tour, worried about the way the
newly enthroned prince would conduct himself in
London during the coronation festivities of King
George V.
Another fascinating fact
that came to light during the course of Dr Kidambis
research was that one of the Muslim cricketers
in the team - Shafaquat Hussain - was one-eyed.
He is thus part of a very select group of cricketers
the best known being the late Nawab Mansur
Ali Khan (Tiger) Pataudi - who have
played the game at the highest level with only
one good eye.
Dr
Kidambi commented: The 1911 tour was a fascinating
venture made up of an improbable cast of characters.
The team's flamboyant captain, Maharaja Bhupindar
Singh, was the newly enthroned ruler of one of
the biggest Indian princely states and had an
apparently insatiable appetite for the high life.
Its star bowler Palwankar Baloo - 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.
Through an analysis
of this key sporting event, my essay in Wisden
highlighted the significance of a distinctive
moment in the early twentieth century, when ideas
of imperial belonging and nationalist self-expression
simultaneously co-existed in uneasy tension.
Furthermore, it pointed
to the ways in which cricketing ties between the
two countries were forged by trans-national networks
of individuals and institutions.
Dr. Kidambi also added: Leicester
has an interesting place in the history of this
tour. It was at Leicester that the Indians, after
suffering a series of defeats, won the first game
of the tour, defeating the local county team by
seven wickets.
Wisden was founded in 1864
by the English cricketer John Wisden (1826-84)
and is regarded as the world's most famous sports
reference book. Its annual publication has continued
uninterrupted to the present day, making it the
longest running sports annual in history.
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