Ranji
Maharajah of Connemara
Anne Chambers
“The
scene at Ballynahinch station, when the Prince was about to take
his departure, conjured visions of scenes from the ‘Arabian
Nights’. His Highness’ native Indian servants and
some 30 hefty Connemara men employed by the Prince, lined up at
the station. When his Highness entered the station he was lustily
cheered.”
- Galway Observer, 1926
“…His
Highness the Maharajah entered attired in the garb of a sportsman,
the springing step and elasticity of movement proclaiming his
distinguished career in the athletic world…”
- Connacht Tribune, 1924
Indian
Prince Ranjitsinhji was the most celebrated cricket-player of
his generation. In 1924, the inhabitants of Connemara, on the
west coast of Ireland, were amazed when this exotic stranger fell
in love with Ballynahinch Castle and decided to move in.
For
the first time, biographer Anne Chambers reveals the reasons behind
Ranji’s strange decision to move to one of the remotest
parts of Ireland during a time of violent political unrest.
Using
rare documents from Government and personal archives, private
photographs and personal stories from people who knew or worked
for ‘The Ranji’, as they called him, she brings this
intriguing story to light.
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