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<p>General Thomson wrote this book from memory solely to refute allegations made that the garrison at Cawnpore lacked courage to deal with the Sepoy Mutiny which first broke out there. The author was one of the four to have escaped the massacre committed by the Nana and the Indian sepoys and lived to tell the tale. Seeing the discontentment brewing among the native sepoys in December 1856 Thomson’s regiment was called from Cuttack to Cawnpore. The Company included more than a thousand Europeans. On 5 June 1857 on account of a rumour that Indian troops were to be massacred it influenced the sepoys to rebel against the East India Company. Amidst the chaos Nana Sahib the Peshwa Emperor arrived in Cawnpore stating at first that he intended to support the British. However he joined the rebels. The British were unprepared but despite it held on valiantly for a long time almost three weeks in a makeshift fort before they surrendered. Most of them died due to bombardment cholera dysentery and small-pox. About the Author Capt. Mowbray Thomson was an officer in the British East India Company. He was one of the handful of survivors in the Cawnpore siege with a remarkable tale to tell.</p>