History of India from the Earliest Times to the Present Day: For the Use of Students and Colleges, Volumen1W. H. Allen, 1893 |
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... ORISSA Gaur BENGAL Mahanadi B. Jaganna ASSAM TIPPERA CARACON FEGU BIJAPUR Bijnagar PEGU History of India from the Earliest Times to the Present Day Henry George Keene TEN Z Z SLAM CAMBO UMATRA SIAM 24612 . e 15 Front Cover.
... ORISSA Gaur BENGAL Mahanadi B. Jaganna ASSAM TIPPERA CARACON FEGU BIJAPUR Bijnagar PEGU History of India from the Earliest Times to the Present Day Henry George Keene TEN Z Z SLAM CAMBO UMATRA SIAM 24612 . e 15 Front Cover.
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... Bengal on the one hand , the Arabian Sea on the other . Of the detritus that these rivers bring down have been formed vast alluvial tracts as wide as an European kingdom . The mighty hills which are their cradle are known as Himála ...
... Bengal on the one hand , the Arabian Sea on the other . Of the detritus that these rivers bring down have been formed vast alluvial tracts as wide as an European kingdom . The mighty hills which are their cradle are known as Himála ...
Página 3
... Bengal , and the area subtended by the great peaks and ranges , the rainfall is sometimes as much as 500 inches in the year - twenty or thirty times as much as falls at the other extremity . At the end of the rainy season the pressure ...
... Bengal , and the area subtended by the great peaks and ranges , the rainfall is sometimes as much as 500 inches in the year - twenty or thirty times as much as falls at the other extremity . At the end of the rainy season the pressure ...
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... Bengal , in the channel of the Hughli , or Lower Ganges . Still farther east the rivers Sanpu and Dihong unite and cleave the hills at Dibrugarh , whence they descend into the mighty stream of the Barhamputar , take up the Meghna on the ...
... Bengal , in the channel of the Hughli , or Lower Ganges . Still farther east the rivers Sanpu and Dihong unite and cleave the hills at Dibrugarh , whence they descend into the mighty stream of the Barhamputar , take up the Meghna on the ...
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... Bengal and with less certainty of rainfall , produces races which , from Audh to the Narbada , have always been robust and laborious , almost - but not quite as much so as in the drier regions of the far west . In all the three regions ...
... Bengal and with less certainty of rainfall , produces races which , from Audh to the Narbada , have always been robust and laborious , almost - but not quite as much so as in the drier regions of the far west . In all the three regions ...
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History of India from the Earliest Times to the Present Day: For ..., Volumen2 Henry George Keene Sin vista previa disponible - 2016 |
Términos y frases comunes
administration Afghán Agra Akbar Alá-ud-din already army attack Audh Aurangzeb Bábar became Bengal Berár Bihár Boigne Bombay Brahmans British brother Buddhist 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 Government Governor Governor-General Gujarát guns Gwalior Haidar Hastings Hindu Hindustan Holkar hostile India infantry Islám Jahán Jaswant Ráo Játs Jumna Kábul Kanauj Khán Khilji krors Lahore land later Lord Madras Mahmud Mahratta Málwa marched miles military minister Minto Mirza Mughal Muhamad Muslim Mysore Nána Narbada native Nawab Nizám officers Orissa palace Pathán peace Perron Persian Peshwa Pondicherry Poona possession prince province Punjab Rája Rajputs Rána reign revenue river Rohillas ruler Samru sent sepoys Shah Shujá Sikhs soldiers success Sultan taken territory tion Tipu took treaty troops Turkmán Vazir Warren Hastings Wellesley
Pasajes populares
Página 266 - 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 440 - The social degeneration went on almost to the end of the century. We are informed by Baillie Fraser on the authority of Colonel J. Skinner, CB, who had trailed a pike in the service of Mahadaji Sindia from about 1790 to 1803, that Hindustan was actually becoming depopulated. " So reduced," he said, "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 each other, and so great...
Página 440 - War. A native cited by Dow speaks of "every species of domestic confusion. Villainy," he adds, "was practised in all its forms ; law and religion were trodden under foot ; the bonds of private friendship and connection, as well as of society and Government, were broken; every individual, as if in a forest of wild beasts, could rely upon nothing but the strength of his own arm.
Página v - Times. *' In this admirably clear and comprehensive account of the rise and consolidation of our great Indian Empire, Mr Keene has endeavoured to give, without prolixity, ' a statement of the relevant facts at present available, both in regard to the origin of the more important Indian races and in regard to their progress before they came under the unifying processes of modern administration.
Página 440 - 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 268 - 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 125 - Shah's son) reign was consumed in intrigues and fruitless quarrels : and on his death in November 1554, his son was murdered and a scene of confusion ensued. "The native Muslims fell into such a state of quarrelsome imbecility that the chief command fell into the hands of a Hindu chandler named Hemu.
Página 124 - 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 125 - ... beyond revealing in detail the nature of the situation that enabled Humayun to recover his lost patrimony. But, the Afghan episode has a value for us as containing in a nut-shell, as it were, the same lesson that is more elaborately illustrated in the history of the Mughal Empire. As Keene has said, "It is the misfortune of absolute monarchy that the best rulers can never ensure a worthy successor.