العربية
  • Free & Easy Returns
  • Best Deals
العربية
loader
Wishlist
wishlist
Cart
cart

Confession Of A Thug

Was:
AED 36.00
Now:
AED 33.00 Inclusive of VAT
Saving:
AED 3.00 8% Off
Free Delivery
Only 5 left in stock
Free Delivery
Only 5 left in stock
noon-express
Get it Tomorrow
Order in 4 h 9 m
VIP ENBD Credit Card

VIP card

Earn 5% cashback with the Mashreq noon Credit Card. Apply now

Delivery 
by noon
Delivery by noon
High Rated
Seller
High Rated Seller
Cash on 
Delivery
Cash on Delivery
Secure
Transaction
Secure Transaction
/welcome-new-user
1
1 Added to cart
Add To Cart
Noon Locker
Free delivery on Lockers & Pickup Points
Learn more
free_returns
Enjoy hassle free returns with this offer.
Item as Described
Item as Described
70%
Partner Since

Partner Since

7+ Years
Overview
Specifications
ISBN 139788171675838
ISBN 108171675832
AuthorPhilip Meadows Taylor
LanguageEnglish
Book DescriptionConfessions of a Thug is a tale of crime and retribution. Set in 1832 in India, the story lays bare the practice of the Thugs, or deceivers as they were called who lived in boats and used to murder those passengers whom they were able to entice into their company on their voyages up and down the rivers
About the AuthorColonel Philip Meadows Taylor CSI (September 25, 1808 May 13, 1876 in Menton), an administrator and novelist, was born in Liverpool, England.At the age of fifteen he was sent out to India to become a clerk to a Bombay merchant. The merchant was in financial difficulties, though. In 1824, Taylor gladly accepted a commission in the service of the Nizam of Hyderabad, to which service he remained devotedly attached throughout his long career. He was speedily transferred from military duty to a civil appointment, and in this capacity he acquired a knowledge of the languages and the people of southern India which has seldom been equalled. He studied the laws, geology, and the antiquities of the country, being one of the foremost early experts on megaliths.[1] He was alternately judge, engineer, artist, and man of letters. While on furlough in England in 1840, he published the first of his Indian novels, Confessions of a Thug, in which he reproduced the scenes which he had heard about the Thuggee cult, described by the chief actors in them. This book was followed by a series of tales, Tippoo Sultaun (1840), Tara (1863), Ralph Darnell (1865), Seeta (1872), and A Noble Queen (1878), all illustrating periods of Indian history and society, and giving a prominent place to the native character, for which and the native institutions and traditions he had a great regard and respect. Seeta in particular was remarkable for its sympathetic and romantic portrayal of the marriage between a British civil servant and a Hindu widow just before the Indian Mutiny. Taylor himself had married Mary Palmer, the Eurasian granddaughter of William Palmer, the East India Company's Resident at Hyderabad (who had married "one of the Princesses of the Royal House of Delhi").[2] Returning to India he acted from 1840 to 1853 as correspondent for The Times. He also wrote a Student's Manual of the History of India (1870).
Publication Date2018 October
Number of Pages616

Confession Of A Thug

Added to cartatc
Cart Total AED 33.00
Loading