Wheeler M. Thackston is retired Professor of the Practice in Persian and Other Near Eastern Languages at Harvard University.
Of all the great monarchs to have ruled over India—a land whose
history is richer and more turbulent than that of almost any
other—the one who most retains our modern-day attention is Akbar,
Mughal emperor from 1556 to 1605…[The History of Akbar] includes
accounts of his court and his governance, as well as of the wars,
alliances and intrigues of his time…Thackston’s translation is the
first complete rendition into English of Abu’l-Fazl’s Persian text
since Henry Beveridge, a British orientalist and imperial civil
servant, completed his version in 1921…Thackston’s English is
modern and…[his] translation…is impressively meticulous.
*Wall Street Journal*
At a time when Hindutva historians are eager to distort the history
of Muslim invasions in order to deepen religious cleavages and
consolidate vote banks, [Abu’l-Fazl's] elaboration of Akbar’s
legacy as a tolerant Muslim ruler of a non-Muslim majority is an
important reminder of how Indian society has evolved.
*India at LSE blog*
The [Murty Classical Library of India] aims to make Indian
literature accessible to a wide audience, so that ever larger
circles of individuals can discover the history, philosophy, and
drama of India. As the volume of this library that I read, The
History of Akbar (Volume 1) proved, the Murty Library has succeeded
in its goal of sharing valuable knowledge and providing interesting
insights on India…This particular volume provides valuable insight
into both the history and historiography of the Mughals.
*The Diplomat*
We can only welcome an undertaking like the Murty Classical Library
of India, which intends to inject fresh blood directly into the
circulatory system of the English language. Any intelligent reader
cannot fail to be favorably impressed in the presence of the
variegated offerings of the series’ first titles…The Murty
Classical Library offers a surprising array of texts that are in
any case capable of broadening the all-too-restricted horizons of
the average Western reader.
*New York Review of Books*
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