The Relief of Chitral

audiobook

The Relief of Chitral

by G. J. (George John) Younghusband, Sir Francis Edward Younghusband

EN·~4 hours·10 chapters

Chapters

10 total

THE RELIEF OF CHITRAL

1:06

PREFACE

1:27

CHAPTER I THE CAUSES OF THE WAR

31:41

CHAPTER II CAPTAIN ROSS AND LIEUTENANT EDWARDES

47:59

CHAPTER III GENERAL LOW'S ADVANCE

13:41

CHAPTER IV ACTIONS AT THE MALAKAND AND PANJKORA

36:22

CHAPTER V THE RELIEF OF CHITRAL

15:34

CHAPTER VI THE DEFENCE OF CHITRAL

51:32

CHAPTER VII COLONEL KELLY'S MARCH

1:06:13

Transcriber's Notes

0:29

Description

In the spring of 1895, news reached Britain of a desperate siege in the remote Himalayan kingdom of Chitral, where a British political agent was trapped deep in the mountains. The region, perched on the edge of the Hindu Kush, was a key gateway between India and Central Asia, making the crisis a matter of imperial prestige as well as human survival. The book opens by laying out the tangled politics that led to the conflict, painting a picture of rugged hillmen, shifting alliances, and the looming rivalry between great powers.

The narrative is drawn from the eyes of two brothers who served as correspondents for The Times, blending official dispatches with personal letters and vivid field sketches. Their accounts follow the daring march of Colonel Kelly’s relief column and the parallel advance of Sir Robert Low’s forces, enriched by photographs taken by the army’s own photographers. Listeners will gain a clear sense of the logistical challenges, the harsh mountain terrain, and the courage of the soldiers and locals who faced it.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~4 hours (255K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Moti Ben-Ari and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2014-12-09

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the authors

G. J. (George John) Younghusband

G. J. (George John) Younghusband

1859–1944

A British Indian Army officer who turned his experience into vivid military history and travel writing, he wrote about frontier campaigns, imperial politics, and places from India to the Philippines. His books mix firsthand knowledge with the brisk, observant style of someone who had seen the events up close.

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Sir Francis Edward Younghusband

Sir Francis Edward Younghusband

1863–1942

An officer, explorer, and restless traveler, this remarkable Victorian figure crossed Central Asia, led the 1904 British mission to Tibet, and later turned to spiritual writing and interfaith work. His life moves from imperial adventure to a search for meaning, making him a fascinating voice from a changing age.

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