A Murder Mystery
An unforgettable murder mystery begins with the death of the victim. A murder occurs for many different reasons and a variety of reasons. Typically, a murder will be motivated by sexual attracted or domestic related issues. But in the case of murders involving strangers, reasons include robbery, inheritance, disputes and personal hatred.
Since the internet is the largest land based mass media, we have also included several unusual cases and real life mysteries that have gripped the world. These cases range from the political (Guerriero Brothers), to the ridiculous (The Adventures of Markimprove). Following are some interesting cases of murder that has left both families devastated and the world with a rack of unanswered questions. 1. What happened to hours of loving families of Calcutta?On November 8, 1948, the bodies of Mr. Thomas lying waste to the city roads, the miserable looking Tanjug Mary, his vacant and cadaverous widow, her daughter Mr. Loye and their maid Ms. Martha Devi were discovered in their house at Block No.coni No. 1 in the Khuli-Fort area of central Kolkata. The house owned by Mr. John Churchill, the today West Bengal Governor-General, was cordoned off with a heavy police guard.ordon.Cpt. R. S. Ranganathan, the sub-Inspector of the Police, had personally verified the identity of the dead man and given the certificate that indicated the cause of death as homicidal violence. 2. How a man like Lord Dalai could be murdered?On 31st December, 1956, while the trains were still running in Kolkata, Lord Dalai, the Maharaja of Rajawho was shot dead by his own disciple, Tryambak Padmanabha Gandhi. This brutal assassination dagger aimed at the head was found in his room in the Samjhpur Rajawho Asafo Road. This rampaging attempt by the great Himalayan manchivist and his probable accomplices, Tryambak and Namri Devi and their accomplices, Gopal Beg, Avtar Singh and others were booked by the sub-Inspector G. D. Bhati in the Police Station records. 3. Why is the land of Sankram Singh, the famous poet of Tagore invaded and devastated?On 23rd March 1948, Sankram Singh was camarooned in the forest near his home in Central India. The twenty-six-year-old poet was famous for his poetry, which was imbued with the spirit of the century. Describing love as delusion, he addressed his beloved in a Romeo and Juliet Theme poem "Come away to bed, lover, at once; the wild currants and the billows make strange things of you". After his assassination, his nephew and "Young lion" Bhagat Singh, aspiring politics, was appointed by the British Governor-General to the High Commissioner position in Tripura and personally tutored the Singhania party to prepare it to accept the unity government. 4. How Bose managed to create his own small republic, what were his thoughts on appeasement?The Bose party believed in a policy of appeasement, which was a policy of "gradual concession" to the British rule. To begin with, the party government moved towards the Augharnath Road in defiance of the wishes of the British officers. The British Blue Nile laid its path through the heart of Tripura and the National Socialist Movement was created on the foundation of the party. 5. What were the consequences of the Kargil conflict?When the British finally granted "land alienation" to the Indian national and called it "Tolcut Holi" in 1939, the Jensen gentlemen and the Nehrups decided that they should fix their sights on the Chambal mountain ridge, the center of the triangle and most vital of all, the headquarters of the I.S.R. The British assumed that it was impossible for the bolted-up, half-hearted, volunteer 30,000-man I.S.R. to hold sway in the entire length and breadth of India. It was time for them to accept the fact that their policy of appeasement would not yield the desired results. 6. How the British rule wreaked havoc with the local languages?Before the British came to India, Sanskrit was a well-established, widely read language in the entire country. Even today, it is second in popularity only to English. After theondorship, Sanskrit was treated shabbily, and English adopted the language for legal transactions andingo. informal business was conducted in Sanskrit.
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