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Sir Asuthosh Mookerjee Silver Jubilee Volumes - Arts and Letters

1921

The ministers of state and the dewans appropriated the greatest part of these valuable lands to tunkaws for the Jageer of the Niunsebdars so that the amount collected in the Khalsah was so inconsiderable as to be inadequate to the demands of the Nizamut troops ; which deficiency was supplied from the treasury of Delhi and by tunkas on other soobahs." * I now come to the story as it is presen [...] The Soobahs of Kandahar and Bedakshan absolutely shook off the yoke and were both irrecoverably lost." Thus we are in effect told that the expedition to the Dekhan was the Moscow expedition of " his angelic Majesty the monarch of the land and of the sea the reviver of religion the ornament of the throne the conqueror of the world the victorious Emperor "--- Alumgeer. [...] " He shall make the usages of the country and the rights of the subject his study and shall be accountable for the revenues to commissaries of the royal exchequer after a deduction of the necessary expenses of the province and what shall be received by the agents of Jagueerdars. [...] We observe the account you give of the office and power of the King's Dewan in former times was the collecting of all the revenues and after defraying the expenses of the army and allowing a sufficient fund for the support of the Nizamut to remit the remainder to Delhi. [...] The first of those says Cantor is the infinite of the metaphysician the second is the infinite which is the subject-matter of the Infinitesmal Calculus and the third the real infinite which is the basis ol the mathematical theory of numbers.
history
Pages
623
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.143846
Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-vii unknown view
A Narrative of Bengal Transactions
1-16 J.N. Gupta view
The Romantic Element in the Modern Philosophy of Mathematics
17-32 Sisir Mitra view
Characteristics of Ancient Indian Trade
33-48 J.C. Coyaji view
The Survival of Old Hindu Institutions in Maharastra
49-68 Surendra Sen view
Megiddo: a Study in Military History
69-ii E.F. Oaten view
Origin of Language
77-86 Sasadhar Ray view
Some Features of Banking in India
87-112 Ramachandra Basavabbu view
Pico Della Mirandola an Italian Neo-Platonist
113-122 Mohini Bhattacharjee view
Customs and Transit Duties in the Madras Presidency During Early British Rule
123-144 Jitendra Niyogi view
Politics in Islam
145-244 S. Bukhsh view
History of Indian Commerce 1765-1813
245-262 Jogis Sinha view
The Guild in Modern India: its Constitution and Expansion
263-268 Radhakamal Mookerjee view
Kant’s Ethical Theory
269-294 Hiralal Halder view
Land Transport in Mediaeval India
295-330 Bijoy Sarkar view
Sankara and Prof. James Ward
331-338 W.S. Urquhart view
Knowledge and Power
339-350 J.W. Patavel view
The Doctrine of Maya and the Results of Modern Science
351-362 Hari Bhattacharyya view
A Plea for an Individualisation of Punishment
363-376 Sitaram Banerjee view
On the Nature of Immediate Experience in the Light of Contemporary Epistemological Discussions
377-394 S.S. Sengupta view
The Chat Sing Tragedy
395-414 Nirmal Chatterjee view
Coleridge as a Thinker
415-462 H. Stephen view
The New Yellow Peril
463-486 B. Mukherjee view
Contemporary English Poetry
487-504 P. Seshadri view
Education and Reconstruction in England
505-512 W.C. Wordsworth view
The Philosophy of Anarchy and the Idea of Time
513-544 H. Stephen view
The Data of Regional Economics
545-570 Radhakamal Mookherjee view
Imperial Federation
571-614 R.N. Gilchrist view

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