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‘Prince Futty Jung’, 1842 (colour litho)

IMAGE number
NAM5929333
Image title
‘Prince Futty Jung’, 1842 (colour litho)
Auto-translated text View Original Source
Artist
Eyre, Vincent (fl.c.1841) (after)
Location
National Army Museum, London
Medium
lithograph, coloured
Date
1842 AD (C19th AD)
Image description

‘Prince Futty Jung [sic]’, 1842. Coloured lithograph after Lieutenant Vincent Eyre, Bengal Artillery, 1842 (c). Prince Fateh Jang was the eldest son and successor to Emir Shah Shujah who was reinstalled by the British as ruler of Afghanistan in 1839. After the November 1841 uprising against the British and the overthrow of his father by Akbar Khan, the prince was proclaimed emir, but in reality his power was non-existent. Akbar, who confiscated much of the prince’s wealth, held the real power in Kabul. The prince did however manage to escape the fate of his murdered father, sneaking out of the Bala Hissar fort dressed in rags and eventually making his way to Sir George Pollock’s force at Gandamak in September 1842. He gladly vacated the throne and accompanied Pollock’s army back to India. From ‘Portraits of the Kabul Prisoners’, a set of pre-publication coloured lithographs later published by John Murray in 1843. The artist’s original drawings were made during his captivity in Afghanistan after the Retreat from Kabul during the 1st Afghan War (1838-1842).

Photo credit
© National Army Museum / Bridgeman Images
Image keywords
prisoner of war / prisoner / civilian dress / clothing

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Largest available format 5259 × 3316 px 18 MB
Dimension [pixels] Dimension in 300dpi [mm] File size [MB] Online Purchase
Large 5259 × 3316 px 445 × 281 mm 18.2 MB
Medium 1024 × 646 px 87 × 55 mm 830 KB

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