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Crises recorded in plain hand: the British at the crossroads in Bengal, 1756-57. History in raw commanding detail.Samuel Charles Hill’s Indian Records Series brings together a selection of public and private papers dealing with the affairs of the British in Bengal during the reign of Siraj-Uddaula, presented here as a primary source anthology assembled from East India Company papers and colonial administration records. This historical document collection unveils the language of policy and dispute - correspondence, reports and official memoranda - that illuminate commerce, diplomacy and the use of force across eighteenth century Bengal and throughout the Siraj ud Daulah era. As a living window into early modern South Asia, the material has immediate appeal to readers seeking the drama of India under British rule while also supplying a rigorous historical studies reference for scholars. Its editor’s notes and historical introduction offer critical orientation without smothering the originals; Hill’s methodical presentation ensures the documents speak for themselves, letting readers weigh motive and consequence from original papers. For students and researchers the volume is an authoritative supplement to courses on early modern South Asia and British colonial history, and an immediate academic research resource for essays, theses and archival projects.Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike. The modern presentation enhances legibility and accessibility without erasing provenance, and casual readers will find vivid immediacy in the documents. Classic-literature collectors and archivists will prize the faithfulness to provenance and archival detail, and will value an edition that treats documentary prose with the same curatorial care as canonical texts. Useful as a classroom companion, a source for independent study or a historical studies reference in a research library, this restored record of eighteenth century Bengal rewards close reading, scholarly citation and sustained reflection.