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Miscellaneous Essays Relating To Indian Subjects

by Brian Houghton Hodgson
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Current price ₹588.00
Original price ₹840.00
Original price ₹840.00
Original price ₹840.00
(-30%)
₹588.00
Current price ₹588.00

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Book cover type: Paperback
  • ISBN13: 9788121297110
  • Binding: Paperback
  • Subject: N/A
  • Publisher: Gyan Publishing House
  • Publisher Imprint: Gyan Publishing House
  • Publication Date:
  • Pages: 420
  • Original Price: INR 840.0
  • Language: English
  • Edition: N/A
  • Item Weight: 656 grams
  • BISAC Subject(s): N/A

This book, written by the onetime British Resident in Nepal, is a collection of essays that he wrote on the linguistics and ethnology of the people residing in hills and foothills of east India, Nepal, and the bordering area of Tibet, and sent as contributing articles to many of the learned journals of that time. The book is in two volumes, and offers observations on the language and linguistic properties, as well as the location, customs, general description of the Kocch, Bodo, and Dhimal tribes (found in Assam). This volume has other articles of the language, linguistics, and comparative glossaries of the dialects found in Nepal; the Kiranti language; the Vayu language; the Bahing dialect etc. The volume ends with notices on the Vayu or Hayu, and the Kiranti tribes. The second volume has 14 sections, wherein the reader will find chapters on tribes of eastern and north-eastern India, the Indo-China borderers, the Mongolian affinities, Tibetans, central India, Nepal, Law and Police, the native method of making paper, etc. This book is a reprint of the 1880 edition.

Brian Houghton Hodgson was a pioneer naturalist and ethnologist working in India and Nepal where he was a British Resident. He described numerous species of birds and mammals from the Himalayas, and several birds were named after him by others such as Edward Blyth. He was a scholar of Newar Buddhism and wrote extensively on a range of topics relating to linguistics and religion. He was an opponent of the British proposal to introduce English as the official medium of instruction in Indian schools. At the age of seventeen (1818), he travelled to India as a writer in the British East India Company. His talent for languages such as Sanskrit and especially Persian was to prove useful for his career. He was posted as Assistant Commissioner in the Kumaon region during 1819–20 reporting to George William Traill. The Kumaon region had been annexed from Nepal and in 1820 he was made assistant to the resident in Nepal, but he took up a position of acting deputy secretary in the Persian department of the Foreign office in Calcutta. Ill health made him prefer to go back into the hills of Nepal.

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