cover image: The Calcutta Review  an Illustrated Monthly  (Third Series)  September 1937

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The Calcutta Review an Illustrated Monthly (Third Series) September 1937

1937

the introduction of an improved system of education varied and diversified in character the creation of fresh opportunities for \\oil: and the opening of new avenues of employment to absorb the costructive energies of the youths of the country. [...] SI$CE the discovery of the names of some Vedic gods in an inscri*423 fobiicrat Boghas-Koei 1 and written in the Mitanni language Which.lieettit affinity with some later form of Sanskritic language an interest has arisen in the circle of the indologists and anthropologists regarding the probable origin of the Nlitanni people who dwelt on the region of the source of the Euphrates and their con [...] Later L. Messerschmidt identified the language of the other clay tablets with the Arzawa letters.: The clay-tablets were made in the time stretching (tom the end of 15th to the end of 13th century B. C. Still later Bronzy worked on the clay materials and identified the language as an Indo-European one and this identification was regarded as correct by various IndoGermanists. [...] But Feist criticises this finding of the IndGer'manists as he says a that inspite of the surprising identity of the nominal and verbal flexion and in the form of the pronoun between Hettite Language and Indo-European language it cannot be put in any of the known family of the same group. [...] Luvisch Hattish Balaisch.' Of these " Ilarrish " is a near relative of the language of the Mitt ; the " Hattish " (according to Forrer Proto-Hattish) was the language of the people of Hatti but it was not the court language ; the " Luvish " stood nearer to this language and according to Forrer it was also of Indo-European origin.
history
Pages
131
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.120137
Segment Pages Author Actions
University Education and Our Destiny
245-250 Syamaprasad Mookerjee view
Hindu Sensatism and Ideationalism in Sorokin’s Social and Cultural Dynamics
251-265 Benoy Sarkar view
Ancient Near East and India: Cultural Relations
266-276 Bhupendranath Datta view
The Vernacular Medium
277-286 A.P. Das Gupta view
The Training of Teachers in India Defects and Disparity
287-294 G.S. Krishnayya view
The Affective Basis and Continuous Character of Sensory Qualities
295-304 S.K. Bose view
Managing Agents in the Role of the Industrial Financier
305-327 Saroj Basu view
Calcutta Corporation and Permanent Services
328-334 Naresh Roy view
Keats’s Ode to Maia a Fragment
335-346 Nripendranath Chatterjee view
At Home and Abroad
347-350 unknown view
News and Views
351-353 unknown view
Miscellany
354-359 Benoy Sarkar view
Reviews and Notices of Books
360-368 unknown view
Ourselves
369-374 J. Chakravorti view
Business Note
375-375 unknown view

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