Fanny Parkes

Fanny Parkes or Parks (née Frances Susanna Archer) (1794–1875) was a travel writer from Wales, known for her extensive journals about colonial India, where she lived for 24 years. These are recorded in her memoirs Wanderings of a Pilgrim in Search of the Picturesque.[2]. In 1970, extracts from her memoirs, Begums Thugs and White Mughals, became available for the first time since their original publication in 1850.[3]. The first biography, by Barbara Eaton, Fanny Parks: Intrepid Memsahib, appeared in 2018.[4]

Fanny Parkes
Born(1794-12-08)8 December 1794[1]
Conwy, Wales
Died1875
City of Westminster, London
OccupationAuthor

Early life and family

Fanny Parkes was born Frances Susanna Archer in Conwy, Wales, the daughter of Ann and Captain William Archer, 16th Lancers. On 25 March 1822 she married Charles Crawford Parks (17 November 1797 – 22 August 1856), a writer for the East India Companies.[5]

Travel writing

Fanny lived in India between 1822 and 1846, with a break in England and Cape Town 1839–1844.[6]

Parkes began living in Calcutta in 1822, before moving to Allahabad ten years later due to her husband's posting. Parks wrote two volumes on her time travelling through India on horseback and befriending people around her, while learning Persian, Hindustani and Urdu. Her detailed memoirs, written in a lively style, reveal independence of mind. Parkes allows an affectionate pre-colonial perspective of northern India and its peoples and customs, recording changes in Britain's governing of India, the economic impact of such policies, and domestic problems in Indian society. People she encountered included wealthy socialites and famine-stricken residents of Kanauj, seen on a trip over mountains from Landour to Simla. Parks' narrative reflects admiration and respect for the richness of Indian culture. It includes a glossary of terms and a collection of translated Indian proverbs.

Some of Parkes's writings cover topics that were controversial at the time. One of the extreme examples was the murder of a woman in sati by those who felt that male heirs were more entitled to her possessions. Parks condemned the event and went on to criticize the laws governing married women in England. Parks also protested about a plan to sell the Taj Mahal, which she compared to Westminster Abbey. Clashing with the lack of respect for Indian culture commonly found in Europe, she described natural beauty in Delhi and Benares, and fascinating dress and cuisine. In one of her last entries, she described feeling disenchanted with Europe after leaving India.

The memoirs were published as Wanderings of a Pilgrim in Search of the Pictureseque during four and twenty years in the East with Revelations of Life in the Zenana (Pelham Richardson, 1850). William Dalrymple rediscovered and edited this travelogue as Begums, Thugs & Englishmen. The Journals of Fanny Parkes (Penguin Publishers). Iris Portal referred to Parks as a "kindred spirit" because of her curious writing style and the fact that her book expresses an open-minded approach to Indian customs.

In 1851 she invested money, organised and wrote the catalogue of the "Grand moving diorama of Hindostan, from Fort William, Bengal, to Gangoutri in the Himalaya", which was displayed at the "Asiatic Gallery, Baker Street Bazar, Portman Square. It was so popular that it was also shown in Hull in 1853.[7][8][9]

Bibliography

  • F. Parks, Wanderings of a pilgrim in search of the picturesque, during four-and-twenty years in the East with revelations of life in the zenana, 2 vols (London: Pelham Richardson, 1850)
  • Begums, Thugs & Englishmen, the journals of Fanny Parkes (London: Sickle Moon Books, 2002)
  • Barbara Eaton: Fanny Parks: Intrepid Memsahib, A Biography of Fanny Parks (1794–1875). An Independent Traveller in 19th Century India (UK: KDP Paperback and Kindle ebook ISBN 9781980329336)

References

  1. Goldsworthy, Joanna (2014). "Fanny Parks Cast Study". East India Company At Home. Retrieved 19 July 2016.
  2. Parks, Fanny (1850). Wanderings of a Pilgrim in Search of the Picturesque in which she acknowledged authorship only by a signature in Urdu script. London: P. Richardson. pp. 2 Vols.
  3. Margaret MacMillan (2015). History's People. House of Anansi. ISBN 978-1-4870-0005-9.
  4. Eaton (2018). Fanny Parks: Intrepid Memsahib, Biography of Fanny Parks (1794-1875) An Independent Traveller in 19th Century India. KDP Paperback & Kindle. p. 280. ISBN 978-1980329336.
  5. Eaton (2018). Fanny Parks: Intrepid Memsahib, Biography of Fanny Parks (1794-1875) An Independent Traveller in 19th Century India. KDP Paperback & Kindle. p. 280. ISBN 978-1980329336.
  6. Eaton (2018). Fanny Parks: Intrepid Memsahib, Biography of Fanny Parks (1794-1875) An Independent Traveller in 19th Century India. KDP Paperback & Kindle. p. 280. ISBN 978-1980329336.
  7. Grand moving diorama of Hindostan, from Fort William, Bengal, to Gangoutri in the Himalaya. Asiatic Gallery, Baker Street. 1851. Retrieved 11 May 2018.
  8. Finn, Margot; Smith, Kate (2017). East India Company at Home, 1757–1857. UCL Press. ISBN 978-1787350281.
  9. Parks, Fanny (1851). Grand Moving Diorama of Hindustan, Displaying the Scenery of the Hoogly, the Bhagirathi,and the Ganges, from Fort William, Bengal to Gangoutri, in the Himalaya. London: The Asiatic Gallery, Baker Street Bazar. p. 77.
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