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Anglo-Indian Studies

1913

" The main part of the book is concerned with practical information on the careers that are open to women in the West together with carefully considered advice and suggestions as to the ways of adapting them to the needs of the East."—Spectator. [...] The Coferences summoned during the past fifty years to discuss the laws of peace and war are the develoment of the principles set forth in the seventeenth century of this era by the great Dutchman Grotius whose De.lure Belli ae Pads is generally accepted as the foundation of the Western science of international law. [...] As a modern example of this kind of treaty I may mention the present alliance between the Maharaja of Nepal and the Government of India which depends largely on the good offices redered by the Nepal State during the troubled times of the Indian Mutiny. [...] India furnishes an outlet for British trade—trade described by Lord Cromer as the financial asset which counterbalances the burthen of governing the country ;* a training-ground for the British army ; a field of employment for a large class of her alumni ; above all her size her history situation and all the circumstances of the case appeal to the imagination and in the * "Ancient and Modern [...] " In the case of ever Native State the British Government as the Paramount Power—(1) exercises exclusive conol over the foreign relations of the State ; (2) assumes a general but limited responsibility for the internal peace of the State ; (3) assumes a special rsponsibility for the safety and welfare of British subjects resident in the State ; and (4) requires subordinate co-operation in th
history
Pages
560
Published in
United States
SARF Document ID
sarf.142107
Segment Pages Author Actions
Preface
i-xxxv S.M. Mitra view
Chapter I. Christian and Hindu War Ethics
1-27 unknown view
Chapter II. The Indian Princes
28-48 unknown view
Chapter III. The Sikh Anand Marriage Act
49-82 unknown view
Chapter IV. Commercial Grievances
83-109 unknown view
Chapter V. Industrial Development
110-135 unknown view
Chapter VI. Cochin Port for Ocean Liners
136-160 unknown view
Chapter VII. The Indian Press
161-207 unknown view
Chapter VIII. The Hindu Drama
208-228 unknown view
Chapter IX. Christianity in Hinduism
229-261 unknown view
Chapter X. British Statesmanship and Indian Psychology
262-295 unknown view
Chapter XI. Moslem-Hindu Entente Cordiale
296-319 unknown view
Chapter XII. Hindu Medicine
320-342 unknown view
Chapter XIII. The Indian Unrest
343-383 unknown view
Chapter XIV. English and Indian Statesmen
384-463 unknown view
Chapter XV. Hindu Mind-Training
464-489 unknown view
Chapter XVI. The Balkan War and India
490-504 unknown view
Index
505-525 unknown view

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