"[The British Colonel, historian, and scholar, William Kirkpatrick who discovered more than 2000 letters (written in Farsi in Tipu’s own handwriting) at the Srirangapattana fort after Tipu’s death makes a devastating assessment of Tipu’s character and personality:] The importance of these letters…consist[s]…in the vivid illustration which they afford of the genius, talents, and disposition of their extraordinary author, who is here successively and repeatedly delineated, in colors from his own pencil, as the cruel and relentless enemy; the intolerant bigot or furious fanatic; the oppressive and unjust ruler; the harsh and rigid master ; the sanguinary tyrant; the perfidious negotiator; tile frivolous and capricious innovator; the mean and minute economist; the peddling trader; and even the retail shop-keeper…the various murders and acts of treachery, which we see him directing to be carried into execution, were not criminal, but…just, and even meritorious, in his eyes. They might… in a great degree, proceed from a disposition naturally cruel and sanguinary: but, perhaps, an intolerant religious zeal and bigotry were not less active motives to them…the Sultan does not appear to have possessed a sufficient stretch of thought upon any subject…to enable him to discuss it, either with logical force or precision. A consecutive train of argument was a thing of which he nowhere seems to have had an idea… Arrogance and vanity were, undoubtedly, among the most prominent features of the Sultan’s mind."
Tipu Sultan

January 1, 1970