Phoolan Devi, who was gunned down on July 25th, aged 38, on her own doorstep in New Delhi's high-security area in broad daylight, has an assured place in contemporary Indian history. She was an opposition MP but, before that, she had been the legendary "Bandit Queen".
This honorific generated a lot of glamour - and led to the Channel 4-backed feature film Bandit Queen (1994) - but it gained momentum not because of any Robin Hood-like acts during her years as a dreaded dacoit and killer but because of her metamorphosis, during the last seven years of her life, from notorious outlaw into law-maker.
In the latter incarnation she did not make much contribution to parliamentary debate, but fought valiantly, more outside the House than inside, for the poor and the downtrodden, the class into which she was born. She was even more ferocious in seeking gender equality and justice in a male-dominated society in which the oppression and exploitation of women is egregious.
Her passion wasn't based on hearsay - she had been subjected to unspeakable physical and sexual abuse. It was that which had driven her to the Chambal ravines in central India, citadel of murderers, robbers, marauders and gangsters.
She was born into an utterly impoverished, low-caste family of boatmen, the second of four siblings. At 11 she was married off to a much older man - and a sadist. Within a year she was back in the parental hovel, but not for long.
A gang of upper-caste robbers abducted her and took her to their Chambal hideout. Thus began her career in crime. In 1980 she was gang-raped by the desperados belonging to the upper-caste Dhakurs. She is said to have taken her revenge in 1981, by slaughtering 22 Dhakur gangsters, including her one-time gang leader and lover. There was sensation and shock across India and a massive, fruitless hunt for Phoolan Devi.
In 1983, she surrendered to the authorities, reportedly in return for a promise that she would stay behind bars for only eight years. But she was released only in 1994. It is a measure of the notorious judicial delays in India that although she was charged with 49 heinous crimes, she was never convicted.
Although she freely admitted her membership of the bandit gang, she always denied killing anyone.
However, relatives of her alleged victims kept demanding that she be put on trial. But politically the times in India had changed. The lower castes had suddenly become important in India's electoral calculus. Phoolan Devi's caste became her passport to politics.
In 1996 she was first elected to parliament with a big majority on the ticket of Samajwadi (Socialist Party). But parliament was dissolved two years later and she lost her seat in the ensuing election; she was elected again in 1999.
By this time she had become a cult figure with a large following, especially among the lower castes and the former untouchables. By this time she had remarried; he was a small-time politician, Umed Singh. More importantly, she had also started going to beauty parlours and wearing designer clothes, thus joining the great Indian middle class even while leading the fight of the poor and the disadvantaged for empowerment.
There were many biographies, including India's Bandit Queen: The True Story of Phoolan Devi (1991) by Mala Sen. This formed the basis of the Channel 4 production, which was one of several films made about her. It was only released in India after several cuts. The Indian authorities did not want to show gory scenes of rape and murder.
Thus, ironically, the films and the books gave Phoolan Devi tremendous publicity and glamour - and a great deal of money by Indian standards.
Yet the circumstances of her death and the reaction it has produced indicate that Phoolan Devi might now be more powerful than at any time during her life.
Large-scale and at times violent demonstrations erupted in her state, Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous, and a key political area.
The leaders of her party have openly accused the Nationalist Hindu Party (BJP) of conspiracy to kill her. They say that UP's BJP government deliberately scaled down her security, something done also in the case of other opposition leaders. The government denied the charges.
For the republic's president, K.R. Narayanan, Phoolan Devi was the symbol of the struggle of the poorest of the poor and of the feminist crusade at its finest.
Inder Malhotra Phoolan Devi: born 1963; died, July 2001