History of India from the Earliest Times to the End of the Nineteenth Century: For the Use of Students and Colleges, Volumen1J. Grant, 1906 - 359 páginas |
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Página v
... tion and the tracing of that evolution forms the subject of the first chapters . In the residue will be found the brief relation of that unprecedented series of events under which a remote commercial people have begun to weld those ...
... tion and the tracing of that evolution forms the subject of the first chapters . In the residue will be found the brief relation of that unprecedented series of events under which a remote commercial people have begun to weld those ...
Página vii
... absolutely necessary to contrast one syllable with another , especially where an ( a ) was used , an acute accent appears over the long syllable , but the multiplica- tion of accents has been avoided . * Where strange PREFACE vii.
... absolutely necessary to contrast one syllable with another , especially where an ( a ) was used , an acute accent appears over the long syllable , but the multiplica- tion of accents has been avoided . * Where strange PREFACE vii.
Página viii
For the Use of Students and Colleges Henry George Keene. tion of accents has been avoided . * Where strange consonants are involved no attempt has been made to imitate the sound . What can be more unsightly in an English book than Qanda ...
For the Use of Students and Colleges Henry George Keene. tion of accents has been avoided . * Where strange consonants are involved no attempt has been made to imitate the sound . What can be more unsightly in an English book than Qanda ...
Página x
... tion of Tipu . PAGK 164 203 232 CHAPTER X WARS OF WELLESLEY Section 1 Condition of Hindustan in 1799-1802 . - Section 2 : Condi- tion of Mahratta Empire at the same date . - Section 3 : The Con- quests of Lord Wellesley CHAPTER XI THE ...
... tion of Tipu . PAGK 164 203 232 CHAPTER X WARS OF WELLESLEY Section 1 Condition of Hindustan in 1799-1802 . - Section 2 : Condi- tion of Mahratta Empire at the same date . - Section 3 : The Con- quests of Lord Wellesley CHAPTER XI THE ...
Página 2
... tion of the Amir of Kábul . The higher crests are covered by glaciers and eternal snow , which terminate at a line higher on the Indian side than that which they attain to the northward , looking down on the plateau of Thibet or the ...
... tion of the Amir of Kábul . The higher crests are covered by glaciers and eternal snow , which terminate at a line higher on the Indian side than that which they attain to the northward , looking down on the plateau of Thibet or the ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
History of India from the Earliest Times to the End of the ..., Volumen1 H. g. 1825-1915 Keene Sin vista previa disponible - 2015 |
History of India - From the Earliest Times to the End of the Nineteenth ... H. G. Keene Sin vista previa disponible - 2007 |
Términos y frases comunes
administration Afghán Agra Akbar Alá-ud-din army attack Audh Aurangzeb Bábar became Bengal Berár Bihár Boigne Bombay Brahmans British brother Bundelkhand Calcutta called camp capital Carnatic cavalry century chief Clive Colonel command conquest Cornwallis court death Deccan defeated Delhi Duáb dynasty Emperor empire enemy European favour force French Golkonda governor governor-general Gujarát guns Gwalior Haidar Haidarabad Hastings Hindu Hindustan Holkar hostile India infantry Islám Jaswant Ráo Játs Jumna Kábul Kanauj Kásim Khán Khilji krors Lahore land Lord Madras Mahmud Mahratta Málwa marched ment miles military minister Minto Mirza Mughal Muhamad Muslim Mysore Nána Narbada native Nawáb Nizám officers Orissa palace Pathán peace Perron Persian Peshwa plunder Pondicherry Poona possession prince province Punjab Rája Rajputs reign revenue river Rohillas ruler sent sepoys Sháh Sháh-Jahán Shujá Sikhs soldiers success Sultan taken territory tion Tipu took treaty troops Turkmán Vazir Warren Hastings Wellesley
Pasajes populares
Página 220 - To found a great empire for the sole purpose of raising up a people of customers may at first sight appear a project fit only for a nation of shopkeepers.
Página 221 - ... possessions and revenues, amidst unexampled dangers, have been secured and preserved, — then a question may be unaccountably mixed with your consideration much beyond the consequence of the present prosecution, involving perhaps the merit of the impeachment itself which gave it birth, — a question which the Commons, as prosecutors of Mr Hastings, should, in common prudence, have avoided...
Página 366 - They are the most deceitful, mischievous race of people that I have ever seen or read of. I have not yet met with a Hindu who had one good quality ; and honest Mussulmans do not exist.
Página 366 - Government, were broken ; every individual, as if in a forest of wild beasts, could rely upon nothing but the strength of his own arm." To a similar purpose is the testimony of another witness cited by Colonel Tod, the historian of Rajputana : — " The people of Hindustan at this period thought only of present safety and gratification. Misery was disregarded by those who escaped it, and man, centred only in himself, felt not for his kind. This selfishness, destructive of public and of private virtue,...
Página 366 - So reduced was the actual number of human beings, and so utterly cowed their spirit, that the few villages that did continue to exist at great intervals, had scarcely any communication with one another ; and so great was the increase of beasts of prey, and so great the terror they inspired, that the little communication that remained was often actually cut off by a single tiger known to haunt the road.
Página 221 - But if it be true that he was directed to make the safety and prosperity of Bengal the first object of his attention, and that, under his administration, it has been safe and prosperous, — if it be true...
Página 101 - Road," which the modern rulers of India have laid down on the line of his own highway. It is the misfortune of absolute monarchy that the best rulers can never ensure a worthy successor. Sher Shah's sovereignty was assumed by his son Salim, or Islam, Shah, a young man apparently not ill-prepared for the post, but labouring under the usual trials of a prince born for power which he has done nothing to acquire. The old contentiousness of the Pathdn nobility sprang up when the strong restraining hand...
Página 100 - His brief career was devoted to the establishment of the unity which he had long ago perceived to be the great need of his country. Though a devout Muslim, he never oppressed his Hindu subjects. His progresses were the cause of good to his people instead of being — as is too often the case in India — the occasions of devastation.... It is a welcome task to take note of such things as a break in the long annals of rapine and slaughter, and we can do so without hesitation ; for the acts of Sher...
Página 100 - January, 1542, being about sixty years of age; and the rest of his brief career was devoted to the establishment of the unity which he had long ago perceived to be the great need of his country. Though a devout Muslim he never oppressed his Hindu subjects. His progresses were the cause of good to the people instead of being — as is too often the case in India — the occasions of devastation. He laboured ceaselessly for the protection of the public : " it behoves great men," he said, "to be always...
Página 42 - The realm," says a chronicler, " was filled with friends and cleared of foes ; his bounty was continuous, and so was his slaughter.