Deepak Kumar
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Unequal contenders, uneven ground
Medical encounters in British India, 1820–1920
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Indian medical traditions were fairly strong and epistemologically not dissimilar to those of the Europeans when they arrived. Even among the British officials, there were some who wanted the government to attempt a fusion of 'both exotic principles and local practices, European theory and Indian experience'. Raja Serfoji, the last Maratha ruler of Tanjore, having surrendered real power to the British Resident, spent his time in the pursuit of knowledge. Apart from cultivating the higher sections of the Indian society, efforts to win popular support from Western medicine started in 1800. Among the Indian practitioners of Western medicine, a few sincerely wanted to take advantage of the indigenous system and practices. The government of India responded diplomatically by constituting a Drug Manufacture Committee to enquire into the utility of indigenous medicine.

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