The -O-Zine Women. in. Herstory. Sarojini Naidu. (18791949). Sarojini Naidus met Shree GopalKrishna Gokhale and Gandhi as a young adult and was directly influenced by them http://the-o-zine.com/summer_2004/women.htm
Extractions: Sarojini Naidu Sarojini Naidus met Shree Gopal Krishna Gokhale and Gandhi as a young adult and was directly influenced by them. She began whole-heartedly working for India's freedom movement. Her poems poured enthusiasm and hope in the hearts of the masses as they became united in the struggle for freedom. Naidu also travelled across India and campaigned for the rights of women. She was responsible for establishing self-esteem in Indian women. In 1925, Sarojini became the first Indian woman president of the National Congresshaving been preceded eight years earlier by the English feminist Annie Besant. She travelled far and wide, to places like South Africa and North America, lecturing on the Congress movement. She accompanied Gandhi to London for the inconclusive second session of the Round Table Conference for Indian-British cooperation (1931). Back in India her anti-British activities brought her a number of prison sentences (1930, 1932, and 1942-43). When India finally became free in 1947, she was appointed Governor of the United Provinces (now Uttar Pradesh), to become the first Indian woman governor, a post she retained till her death.
Female Agency And Symbolism Sarojini Naidu (18791949). English education. widely admired poet. IndianNational Congress leader. president of Rashtriya Stree Sangha (Congress http://www.colorado.edu/history/chester/empireoutline18.htm
Extractions: Female Agency and Symbolism, Complicity and Resistance (October 23, 2003) two overarching categories of womens roles in empire: action, symbolism Action Labor Activism Political influence Family life Symbolism Wives and mothers Ideologies of Empire Nationalism Women and Imperialism struggling against imperial wrongs participating (passively) in imperialism promoting imperialism Flora Shaw colonial writer for The Times of London (1890 to 1900) wife of Sir Frederick Lugard (High Commissioner of Northern Nigeria, Colonial Office official, Governor of Hong Kong) shaped political/imperial opinion Cecil Rhodes and the Jameson Raid: The recollection of the lady was somewhat defective coined the name Nigeria 1901: married Lugard imperial work related to Nigeria, Hong Kong, Ireland Sarojini Naidu English education widely admired poet Indian National Congress leader president of Rashtriya Stree Sangha (Congress womens party) non-cooperation leader: I am here not as a woman but as a General 1947: first woman governor of an Indian state, Uttar Pradesh Return to Hist 4053 Homepage
Top Menu Bar Photoessays Courtesy Gandhi Smriti Darshan Samiti Sarojini Naidu. Tagore called her Nightingale of India. Sarojini Naidu (18791949)became the first woman president of the Indian National Congress. http://www.outlookindia.com/photoessays.asp?serial=14&foldername=19991115&filena
South Asian Literature/Grinnell College Libraries/new List/2001 Naidu, Sarojini, 18791949. Sarojini Naidu Selected Poetry and Prose PR9499.3.N253 A6 1993 Nasrin, Taslima. (Tasalima Nasarina). The Game in Reverse http://web.grinnell.edu/individuals/stuhrr/SouthAsia.html
NaNa Naidu, Sarojini (18791949) Hindu poetess, patriot, author. Born February 13,1879 in Hyderabad, India, she was the first female president of the Indian http://www.philately.com/philately/bionana.htm
Extractions: NABA SAGHA, Moro see MORO NABA SAGHA NABER, John ( - ) American sportsman, swimmer - Mongolia 928 NABUCO de ARAUJO, Joaquin (1849-1910) Brazilian author, lawyer, journalist, philosopher, diplomat - Brazil C77 NABUKADNEZZAR I see NEBUCHADNEZZAR I NACHIMOV, Pavel Stepanovich see NAKHIMOV, Pavel Stepanovich NACHTIGAL, Gustav (1834-1885) German physician, explorer, author - Chad C49 Germany 433 Togo 1209; 1221 NACI, Nuci ( - ) Albanian educator - Albania 506-7 NA DADAOU, Ida ( - ) Nigerian entertainer - Niger 734 NADAR see TOURNACHON, Gaspard Felix - NADI, Nedo ( - ) Italian sportsman, fencer - Yemen ARAB REPUBLIC (M)804 NADIG, Marie Therese ( - ) Sportswoman - Ras al Khaima (M)967 NADIM, Abdallah an- (1845-1896) Egyptian politician, poet, author, journalist - Egypt 883 NADIM, Ahmed see NEDIM, Ahmed NAEINI, Mohammad Hossein ( - )Iran 2258 NAGAKAWA ( - ) Japanese courtezan - Senegal C85 NAGAKO KUNI (1903- ) Empress, wife of HIROHITO, poetess, painter - Ajman (m)777A Liberia C190 Manama (M)549-50; 554 Umm al Qiwain (Mich.)445-6 NAGASHIMA, Shigeo ( - ) Japanese sportsman, baseball - Ras al Khaima (Mich.)716
Index_1900_1999 Sarojini Naidu (18791949) She was sent to Cambridge because at 14 she loveda man outside her caste. There, she devoted more time to poetry than her http://www.columbia.edu/itc/mealac/pritchett/00routes/1900_1999/index_1900_1999.
Extractions: BACKWARD ==Even more than most centuries, this one feels impossibly crowded and too near for perspective. I'll simply note a few particularly evocative people and events; for more material, see * Sources of Indian Tradition Columbia Univ. *; and the * modern maps ==Annie Besant (1847-1933), converted to Theosophy by Madame Blavatsky, comes to live in India to pursue her mystical studies (on * forms of yoga *; see also her * book on yoga *), and thinks of herself as an Indian ( see her * autobiography *). She works energetically for Indian Home Rule (* The Case for India *), is interned during World War I for her activism, and serves a term as President of the Indian National Congress in 1917 (* aicc *) after her release. She dies in Madras (* victorian web womens history ==Sister Nivedita sri sarada math ==Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941): The towering presence of Bengali literature (* Columbia Univ. *), composer of the Indian national anthem (* wikipedia *), founder of the unique educational institution of Shantiniketan (now * Visva-Bharati Nandini Gupta *), winner of the *
Lit_colonial =Sarojini Naidu (18791949), The Golden Threshold (c.1905); her poetry, availablefor download from Project Gutenberg site; also from Univ. of Virginia http://www.columbia.edu/itc/mealac/pritchett/00litlinks/lit_colonial.html
Extractions: THE COLONIAL PERIOD =ROBERT CLIVE (1725-1774): "The Battle of Plassey: Robert Clive to the East India Company," from Clive's memoirs: [ site ]. More Clive lettes: [ site ]. A letter by one of his soldiers: "Excerpts from a Sergeant's Diary recounting Robert Clive's capture of Arcot, September-October 1751": [ site ]. Macaulay's long essay about him: [ on this site =HIR RANJHA by Waris Shah (c.1719-1790), trans. by Charles Frederick Usborne (1874-1919): in PDF form: [ site =MAHANIRVANA TANTRA (1700s), trans. by "Arthur Avalon" (Sir John Woodroffe), 1913: [ site =Mirza Muhammad Hasan (d.1763), Mir'at-i Ahmadi (Mirror of Ahmad) (1761), a history of Ahmadabad, Gujarat: [ site =Budh Singh Khatri (fl. c.1764/5), Risalah-i Nanak Shah (Treatise on Nanak Shah) (1783), a history of Sikhism: [ site =Ghulam Husain Khan, Siyar ul-mutakhirin (Behavior of the Recent Ones) (1781), on Mughal history after Aurangzeb's death: [ site ='Abd ul-Karim Kashmiri (d.1784), Biyan-i vaqi' (Account of Events) (1784), a memoir of the author's travels and observations, including Nadir Shah's invasion: [ site =Murtaza Husain 'Usmani Bilgrami (d.1795)
Sarojini Naidu - Author - Muzi Library - Muzi.com Classic Literature. The Golden Threshold Folk Songs, Songs For Music and Poems(Poem) Archive*. About Author. Sarojini Naidu (18791949). Muzi.com, http://www.shuwu.com/au/english/101310.shtml
Documento Senza Titolo Mohandas Karamchand GANDHI, India (18691948); Sarojini Naidu, India (1879-1949);Nikola MUSHANOV, Bulgaria (1872-1951); Kaarlo Juho STÅHLBERG, http://www.seniores.it/Biblioteca_libertà/f_guerrieri.htm
Extractions: I GUERRIERI DELLA LIBERTA' Henri DRUEY, Switzerland (1799-1855) Harriet Taylor MILL, UK (1808-1858) Alexis de TOCQUEVILLE, France (1805-1859) Camillo Benso, Count of CAVOUR, Italy (1810-1861) Jonas FURRER, Switzerland (1805-1861) Abraham LINCOLN, USA (1809-1865) Giuseppe MAZZINI, Italy (1805-1872) Johan Rudolf THORBECKE, Netherlands (1798-1872) John Stuart MILL, UK (1808-1873) Henri-Guillaume DUFOUR, Switzerland (1787-1875) Ljuben KARAVELOV, Bulgaria (1834-1879) Johann conrad KERN, Switzerland (1808-1888) John BRIGHT, UK (1811-1889) Johan SVERDRUP, Norway (1816-1892) Lajos KOSSUTH, Hungary (1802-1894) William E. GLADSTONE, UK (1809-1898) Yukichi FUKUZAWA, Japan (1835-1901) Elizabeth CADY STANTON, USA (1815-1902) Susan BROWNELL ANTHONY , USA (1820-1906) Richard John SEDDON, New Zealand (1845-1906) Henri DUNANT, Switzerland (1828-1910) Friedrich NAUMANN, Germany (1860-1919) Walter RATHENAU, Germany (1867-1922) Thomas Woodrow WILSON, USA (1856-1924) SUN Yat-sen, China (1866-1925) Piero GOBETTI, Italy (1901-1926) Janis CAKSTE, Latvia (1859-1927) Aletta Henriette JACOBS, Netherlands (1854-1929)
English Literature Sarojini Naidu (18791949). The Golden Threshold. E. Nesbit (1858-1924). The Storyof the Amulet The Phoenix and the Carpet Five Children and It http://www.4english.cn/works/contents/English Literature/n.html
OPF He met Sarojini Naidu (18791949) and left a lasting impression on her becauseof his liberal ideas and as ambassador of Hindu-Muslim Unity. http://www.opf.org.pk/almanac/Q/quaid.htm
Extractions: OPF ALMANAC Covering upto December 1996 Q Editor's Note Sources A B C D E F ... M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah On December 25, 1876, the first of seven children was born toMithi Bai and Poonja Jinnah Bhai who lived in a rented apartment on Newham Road in Karachi. The parents named the boy Muhammad Ali. The father belonged to a merchant community which had migrated from South India and settled in Karachi. The boy received his early education at Sindh Madrasa tul Islam with brief interludes at Anjuman-i-Islam High School, Bombay and Church Mission School at Karachi. It is usually stated by some of his biographers that Poonja sent his son to England after matriculation for higher studies whereas in actuality, he was supposed to have done business apprenticeship so that his father could have a helping hand to boost his business. Muhammad Ali tried his hand at business first but then soon after his arrival in England in 1893, he was enrolled in Lincolns Inn.
Study Guide: South Asia Reading Series, Fall 1998 Even poets like Toru Dutt (18561877) and Sarojini Naidu (1879-1949) who werewell known for their English verse were represented in ways that did not http://www.sdsmt.edu/online-courses/is/hum375/sasiaguide.html
Extractions: ia. desire to create "a class of interpreters between us and the millions whom we govern; a class of persons, Indian in blood and colour, but English in tastes, in opinions, in morals, and in intellect" (359). However, Macaulay did not anticipate that this class of interpreters would, put the master's tools to subversive use. For decades Indian writers have used the colonizer's language, English, to produce an Indian reality that is very different from anything Macaulay might have envisioned. In other words, the literature produced by Indo-Anglian writers depicts a many-sided India that is completely opposite to the exotic visions of Raj writers like Paul Scott and John Masters. Women Writing in India which traces Indian women's writing back to the 6th century B. C. The impulse behind many of these translations reflects a desire to rediscover women writers who have often been ignored or slighted in the past. , while Anglicists such as Macaulay and John Stuart Mill claimed that Indian culture had always been primitive and crude. The outcome of these two ideologies was reflected in the literary endeavors of Indian nationalists who responded to Anglicist attacks on Indian culture by reviving the image of the high caste Aryan woman. Uma Chakravorti writes that the 19th-century Indian intelligentsia "could regard itself as a product of an 'exhausted' culture but, through the work of the Orientalists, could simultaneously feel optimistic that despite the present circumstances they were representatives of a culture which had been 'organically disrupted by historical circumstance but was capable of revitalisation'" (32).
English Classics 3000 Prehistoric Peoples Naidu, Sarojini (18791949) The Golden Threshold Nasmyth,James (1808-1890) Engineer, An Autobiography Nation http://book.nku.cn/book/english/n.html
Virkar Photo Gallery Sarojini Naidu (18791949) A perceptive study of Sarojini Naidu known for her senceof humour , she referred to Gandhi as Mickey Mouse maintainedthat the http://harmonyindia.org/hportal/VirtualPageView.jsp?page_id=584
Biography Search South African labour leader and opponent of apartheid, born in Durban Naidu,Sarojini, (18791949). Feminist and poet, born in Hyderabad, S India. http://www.biography.com/find/results.jsp?alpha=13&subpg=0
Peace Heroines & Heroes Sarojini Naidu (India, 18791949) Friend of Gandhi in civil disobedience, Indianindependence, ethnic toleration. Scott NEARING http://www.omnicenter.org/warpeacecollection/heroinesheros.htm
Extractions: Dan Cole's ongoing Peace Bibliography about nonviolence: Cole.Dan@nmnh.si.edu "I refuse to celebrate them [those who saw combat in WWII, praised in Brokaw's The Greatest Generation ] as 'the greatest generation' because in doing so we are celebrating courage and sacrifice in the cause of war. And we are miseducating the young to believe that military heroism is the noblest form of heroism, when it should be remembered only as the tragic accompaniment of horrendous policies driven by power and profit. Indeed, the current infatuation with World War II prepares us...for more war, more military adventures, more attempts to emulate the military heroes of the past." "Why do we use the term "greatest generation" for participants in war? Why not for those who have opposed war...?" Howard Zinn, "The Greatest Generation?" The Progressive (October 2001) 12-13.
The National Archives National Register Of Archives Browse The Naidu, Sarojini (18791949) Indian Poet and Reformer (1). Nairac, Rosamund (b1938) Ceramic and tableware designer (1). Nairne, Alexander (1863-1936) Regius http://www.nra.nationalarchives.gov.uk/nra/browser/person/page/person_NA.htm
Extractions: Contact us Help A to Z index Site search Sorry, your browser can't show the date here. dqmcodebase = "/script/"; //script folder location You are here: Home Search the archives National Register of Archives Jump to: A B C D ... Z Select an alphabetical group from the list below to continue browsing. Then to: NA NE NI NO ... NY result(s) were found.
Project Gutenberg: INDEX OF AUTHORS Naidu, Sarojini, 18791949 Nakashima, Tadashi, 1920- Narayanan, AR Nasmyth, James,1808-1890 Nation, Carrie Amelia, 1846-1911 http://worldebooklibrary.com/ProjectGuternberg.htm
Extractions: World eBook Library Consortia Collection About Project Gutenberg Project Gutenberg is the Internet's oldest producer of FREE electronic books containing over 10,000 (eBooks or eTexts). What books will I find in Project Gutenberg? Project Gutenberg is the brainchild of Michael Hart , who in 1971 decided that it would be a really good idea if lots of famous and important texts were freely available to everyone in the world. Since then, he has been joined by hundreds of volunteers who share his vision. Now, more than thirty years later, Project Gutenberg has the following figures (as of November 8th 2002): 203 New eBooks released during October 2002, 1975 New eBooks produced in 2002 (they were 1240 in 2001) for a total of 6267 Total Project Gutenberg eBooks. 119 eBooks have been posted so far by Project Gutenberg of Australia Click here for the full PG story and here for the latest
DigitalBookIndex: Index Of Authors (e-Books, EBooks) Naidu, Sarojini, 18791949 Nakashima, Tadashi, 1920- Okakura, Kakuzo, 1862-1913 Patanjali Sun Tzu Suzuki, Daisetz Teitaro, 1870-1966 http://www.digitalbookindex.org/_help/helpauthors05a.asp
AUTHORS Naidu, Sarojini, 18791949 Nasmyth, James, 1808-1890 Nation, Carrie Amelia,1846-1911 Naunton, Robert, Sir, 1563-1635 Nelson, Alice Ruth Moore Dunbar, http://thebestebookcollection.biz/authors.htm