cover image: The Journal of the Bihar and Orissa Research Society. September 1918

Premium

20.500.12592/64rdnp

The Journal of the Bihar and Orissa Research Society. September 1918

1918

They are attached to the top of the headress on each side in the same place that they rise and stand on the bead of a buffalo; rising out of a mat of coarse skins and bark which hang over the top of the bead-dress somewhat in the form that the large and profuse locks of hair hang and fall over the head of a buffalo bull. [...] artw rye ra*Tir444 ir -eivianftrea It is the knower-of-the-Vedic Science who deserves the leadership of the army (Senapatya) sovereignity likewise the chiefship of the executive and the overlordship of the whole people." The legalist here as I pointed out in the Weekly Notes is very probably referring to the orthodox hero the Sencipali Pushya-Mitra who defeated the Greeks obtained soverei [...] The sudden departure from those traditions in the time of Pushya-Mitra is explicable only when we take into account the political weakness of the degenerate Mauryas which encouraged the Bactrian to encamp at gikala and scheme a conquest of the Ärytivarta 1 and the great fact of the absence of the old ruling houses of prestige one of which could naturally be looked upon to rise equal to the occas [...] (To be continued.) See for instance the description of Ayodhyil of Bella—mekhali (the Al wood palisade) and the deep moat (1.6.127-3) which echoes the description of Pitalputra and the abuse on the Buddha (11.109 34)." M.—Importance of the Janibigha Inscription of the year 83 of the Lakshmans.-Sena era. [...] But then who was the king who ran away from Nadiah ? The author of the Tabakiit-i-Nasiri heard the account some 45 years later than the evelit and a confusion between the year (80th) of the era and the reign-period of the then reigning sovereign is possible.
anthropology archaeology
Pages
138
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.120007
Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-iv unknown view
I.—The Head-dress of Banjara Women
247-i W. Crooke view
II.—Revised Notes on the Brahmin Empire
257-265 K. P. Jayaswal view
III.—Importance of the Janibigha Inscription of the year 83 of the Lakshmana-Sena era
266-272 K. P. Jayaswal view
IV.—The Janibigha Inscription
273-i H. Panday view
V.—Daud Khan Quraishi Governor of Bihar and Founder of the Town of Daudnagar
281-297 Zamiruddin Ahmad view
VI.—The Rock Paintings of Singanpur
298-xvi C. W. Anderson view
VII.—Death and Funeral Customs of the Birhors
307-321 Sarat Roy view
VIII.—Ho Folk-lore (III)
322-343 B. Haldar view
I.—Dates of Skanda-Gupta and His Successor
344-350 H. Panday view
II.—Further Note on the Use of the Swallow-worts in the Rituals of the Hindus
351-356 Sarat Mitra view
III.—The Bogra Inscription
357-357 unknown view
I.—Proceedings of the Council Meeting of the Bihar and Orissa Research Society held on 27th July 1918 at 4 p.m. at the Society’s Office
358-360 unknown view
Backmatter
i-ii unknown view

Related Topics

All