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The Ruling Caste: Imperial Lives in the Victorian Raj Hardcover – February 7, 2006

4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars 92 ratings

A sparkling, provocative history of the English in South Asia during Queen Victoria's reign
Between 1837 and 1901, less than 100,000 Britons at any one time managed an empire of 300 million people spread over the vast area that now includes India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Burma. How was this possible, and what were these people like? The British administration in India took pride in its efficiency and broad-mindedness, its devotion to duty and its sense of imperial grandeur, but it has become fashionable to deprecate it for its arrogance and ignorance. In this balanced, witty, and multi-faceted history, David Gilmour goes far to explain the paradoxes of the "Anglo-Indians," showing us what they hoped to achieve and what sort of society they thought they were helping to build.
The Ruling Caste principally concerns the officers of the legendary India Civil Service--each of whom to perform as magistrate, settlement officer, sanitation inspector, public-health officer, and more for the million or so people in his charge. Gilmour extends his study to every level of the administration and to the officers' women and children, so often ignored in previous works. The Ruling Caste is the best book yet on the real trials and triumphs of an imperial ruling class; on the dangerous temptations that an empire's power encourages; on relations between governor and governed, between European and Asian. No one interested in politics and social history can afford to miss this book.

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4.3 out of 5 stars
92 global ratings

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Customers find the book valuable and well-researched. It provides an evocative account of British civil servants who were hard-working and interested in providing good administration. The content includes structural analysis and anecdotal accounts of specific individuals.

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7 customers mention "Value for money"7 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the book's value and quality. They find it well-researched and a good account of how civil servants were hard-working and interested in providing good administration. The author makes a good case that the Civilians in the service were hard-working and nice.

"...contemporary celebrity worship, so we may compare the enduring, worthwhile qualities of the best of those who served the Raj, with the ephemeral..." Read more

"At the outset let me say that The Ruling Caste is a valuable book for those serious about learning some of the ins and outs of the system and..." Read more

"...people behind the Raj, the people who governed the Raj, this book is essential reading...." Read more

"...as to the veridicity of the stories but can say that the book seems well researched and covers its subject thoroughly...." Read more

4 customers mention "Content"4 positive0 negative

Customers find the book contains a lot of information and provides an evocative account of British civil service under the Raj. They appreciate the thorough coverage of the subject, with anecdotal accounts of specific individuals. The book provides interesting perspectives on the Raj and the Indian Civil Service under the Raj.

""The Ruling Caste" by David Gilmour gives an excellent and evocative account of how British civilian officials lived their lives in the Raj..." Read more

"...Nevertheless I have some quibbles. While the book contains a tremendous amount of information, one all too often feels that the author isn't trying..." Read more

"...but can say that the book seems well researched and covers its subject thoroughly...." Read more

"...It provides a mixture of structural analysis and anecdotal accounts of specific individuals...." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on September 22, 2006
    "The Ruling Caste" by David Gilmour gives an excellent and evocative account of how British civilian officials lived their lives in the Raj (ie not the military, business people or missionaries). He covers how they were trained, their working routines, how they found wives, entertainment, sports and much else.

    Many books on the history of British India focus on the big picture and the comings and goings of the senior officials in the Government and Military. Gilmour's book describes how the majority of officials lived and worked at the grassroots level of villages and districts: what exactly they did each day, how a magistrate did his job and so on.

    Kipling's stories describe many of the same types of people, but of course they are fictionalised accounts which may be overly sympathetic or exaggerated in other ways. However, contemporaries in India frequently commented on their generally accurate portrayals.

    Colonialism is often criticised because of our understandable repugnance of one country imposing its rule over the population of another. In principle this is fair, but criticism by historians is often taken to the extreme of refusing to accept that anything good ever came out of colonialism. This is especially unfair to the British, who did not behave with the rapacity and cruelty of other colonial powers of the day.

    Gilmour's book and others like it redress the balance somewhat by describing lives of duty, sacrifice and affection for the people they ruled. Others became internationally respected for their work as historians, linguists and protectors of Indian cultural heritage. Another paid for the construction of a canal out of his own pocket - one of many similar, if less spectacular, examples of personal largesse.

    Reading this book one cannot escape the feeling that there was a certain nobility and decency about the work of many officials of the Indian Civil Service, especially those working in Districts where they were in intimate contact with villagers.

    District Officers were mostly young men in their twenties in charge of a District of up to a million people, with perhaps only a few other British officials - or even none at all. The opportunities for corruption, oppression or debauchery are obvious, but by and large these young men were incorruptible and behaved with great honour.

    These decent lives deserve to be better known and Gilmour's book does them justice. Today, mere "celebrity" is often applauded as heroism and talent, so it is good to read about true heroes and genuinely talented people who did not court publicity but just went about their unsung work in India, often for a lifetime.

    Of course they were not all hard-working saints and Gilmour gives sufficient examples to make this clear. India had its share of "bad bargains", eccentrics and mavericks and Gilmour describes their exploits with sympathy and dry humour. Some of these tales are gems.

    Readers interested in how the Raj was run and the people who ran it will love this book.

    I also recommend it as an antidote to contemporary celebrity worship, so we may compare the enduring, worthwhile qualities of the best of those who served the Raj, with the ephemeral appeal of many celebrities, whose fleeting reputations depend on media attention to create and sustain them.
    25 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on December 15, 2010
    At the outset let me say that The Ruling Caste is a valuable book for those serious about learning some of the ins and outs of the system and personalities that ruled India in the Victorian era: academics and the merely interested. Author Gilmour has consulted a tremendous number of sources both official and personal and the sheer volume of his research adds considerable value to his study. In addition the book is extremely readable. Though it may not necessarily be a page turner for the average reader, Gilmour's facility with language combined with thorough research reminds me of--dare I say--many of the books by Bill Bryson. (That's praise.)

    Nevertheless I have some quibbles. While the book contains a tremendous amount of information, one all too often feels that the author isn't trying to make any important points. Yes, life in India was difficult, separation from home was keenly felt, there were some awesome achievements by stellar personalities, the responsibilities were tremendous, and when it was all over and people went "Home" they too often found themselves misfits and griped that nobody really cared about what they had done. None of these points is terribly new or revealing. Moreover, when the author chooses to tread on tricky ground--tackling the question of whether or not the Anglo-Indians in the Indian Civil Service were racists--he tends to drop the ball. I was disappointed to read that because low opinions about some of the people they ruled were not based on physical characteristics, but rather reflected a belief that British civilization was of a higher order than Indian civilization, those who held such views should not be considered racist. In fact, it doesn't make those people heroes, either. Ethnocentric stereotypes, whether based on physical characteristics or cultural traits, are just plain wrong and deserve condemnation, not a gloss. Finally, putting characters such as Arthur Travers Crawford in a section about "black sheep" trivializes the serious effects of their wrongdoing on others whose lives they affected.

    In sum, this isn't necessarily a book for all specialists. If the non-specialists can deal with some of the weak points, it's a tome worth a read.
  • Reviewed in the United States on January 3, 2015
    If would enjoy reading a balanced presentation of the history of the Raj that is based upon the memoirs and letters of the time, then this book is for you. Gilmour writes a thorough yet colorful review of how the British ruled India effectively while revealing the powers behind the thrones, the sexual predilections of the British, the hardships of life in an alien land, and the challenges of returning home to an irrelevant status. I have lived in Hyderabad for 18 months and enjoyed the fruits of his research about the Nizam. Very different picture than what is told here.
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on April 2, 2016
    For those interested in the people behind the Raj, the people who governed the Raj, this book is essential reading. Whether you believe the Raj to have been an abomination or a blessing, reading this book will give you a sympathetic view of the emotional drivers and the motivations of the vast majority of the Civilians who made up he Indian Civil Service.
    One person found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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  • Amit Kumaar
    5.0 out of 5 stars A British Era in ur hands
    Reviewed in India on June 30, 2021
    Yet to read a proud collection in my library in the British India section well researched and well written work of the author read introduction and acknowledgements found intriguing
  • E. Harvey
    5.0 out of 5 stars Another side of the Raj
    Reviewed in Canada on February 13, 2020
    This book is a very readable and attractive account of the daily lives of the members of the Indian Civil Service over the last hundred years or so of the British Imperial presence in India. The astonishing small number (about 1000 members at any one time) of the British civilian government administration of India was a marvel in its time, and this book outlines the conditions of the work, the day-to-day activities, the rules and ideals that distinguished the behaviour of the governing class. The author looks at the hardships and rewards of their lives and those of their families both in India and afterwards, living out their days in English suburbs still haunted by India. Out of tune with the modern 'evils of imperialism' trend, it is nevertheless a useful corrective in its detailed assembling of facts and numbers. The author concludes with the inscription on the memorial plaque in Westminster Abbey: 'They served India well.' A book well worth reading for its judgement and balance.
  • N. Singer
    5.0 out of 5 stars Marvellous insight into how the British ran India.
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 30, 2015
    Marvellous picture of how British India was run. Detailed, fabulously well researched, thorough and endlessly enjoyable. Whatever one's views on the role of the British in India - and of colonialism generally - this book paints a vivid picture of an exceptional administrative service, a 'Ruling Caste', made up largely of very dedicated and hard-working men, that was in many ways benign and well intentioned and which helped make India the global player it is today.
  • recluse
    3.0 out of 5 stars 報われない仕事
    Reviewed in Japan on June 24, 2009
    日本語でもいくつか類書はでています。これは本家本元の作品です。3億人とも言われるインドの行政を実質的に担ったindian civil service(ICS)の官僚たちがこの作品の主人公です。それもどちらかというと19世紀が中心となっています。ICS自体はもちろんインド独立まで存在したのですが、独立運動の高まりと共に明確にその終わりが意識されだした時代は避けられています。彼らのリクルート、背景、教育、仕事、キャリア、異端者、収入、余暇の過ごし方、夫婦生活、家族関係そして引退が細かくたどられています。数多くのICS官僚の未発表のprivate papersが参照されています。著者は明確にいわゆるカルスタ流の角度からこの素材にアプローチすることを否定しており、あくまでも当時の現実の中でのICS官僚の姿をたどるという禁欲的な姿勢に達しています。決して宗教や部族間対立を引き起こすことなく、インフラと法制度を整備し、教育を推進したICSの功績をたたえる著者のアプローチはたしかに厚顔といえるものですが、これはイギリス人の本音なのでしょう。ただ途中でそのディテールに閉口してしまう部分も見受けられます。ICS官僚の引退後の生活の部分はこれまで余り取り上げられることなく、非常に参考になりました。引退後の彼らの英国での生活は、世界における存在感の喪失と英国の現実との接点の喪失という退屈で報われないものです。そういう意味では最後に挙げられているエリザベス女王のmemorial tabletは象徴的なものです。
  • a sidhu
    5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
    Reviewed in India on October 26, 2014
    Excellent book