cover image: Modern Review  November  1920

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20.500.12592/bsnn7q

Modern Review November 1920

1920

And in this Maurya achievement of imperial nationalism is to be found the nucleus of the code of duties by which Vira-s-ena the commander of the Soonga fortress on ihe banks of the Narmada was guided towards the end of the second century B. C. as well as' of the military manuals that were in use among the officers of the Vardhana general. Skanda-goopta in the seventh 'century A. D. The curric [...] One of the reasons was the delay on the part of the Peishwa in furnishing the necessary funds for the detachment. [...] It is !possible that before the 10th of May the teishwa might have been apprised of the fall of Seringapatam ; and his own preparations together with the orders of Pureshram Bhow may have been intended to favor the seige of ore or of some other part of the late Tippoo Sultan's dominions with the view of securing the dominions seized in defiance of the eonscut of the Company and of the Nizain." [...] He was a Hindu of the old type and was nurtured on the traditions of the Ramayana and the Mahbharata Twenty years served to strengthen his conviction that the 'ways of the Europeans were unfair and wily.' But he was not quite prepared to believe that the GovernoGeneral would unblushingly violate his most solemn promise and withhold the cession of the conqueed territory. [...] He could not have approved of or carried out the crooked policy of the (;overnor-GeneraL What wonder if the commissioners appointed for the settlement of the Mysore territory nes of the their field of work into the dontno Peishwa bordering on Mysore ? The very of the rising of the southern lh the Mysore Commission wereaignetrdas while.
government politics public policy
Pages
118
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.120016
Segment Pages Author Actions
Indian Labour Recruiting for Fiji—an Imminent Danger
467-468 C.F. Andrews view
The War-Office of Hindu Empires
468-474 Benoy Sarkar view
How the Marquess Wellesley Ensnared the Peishwa
474-480 unknown view
Mano Mohan Ghose:Some Personal Reminiscences
481-486 Babu Bose view
God Forbid
486-488 unknown view
A Plea For Religious Liberty
488-492 W.E. Garman view
Aesthetic and Religious tradition in indian city Devolopment
492-494 Radha Mukerjee view
Recent Developments in European Thougiit
494-500 unknown view
National Reconstruction
500-505 unknown view
Political Power For Women
505-507 unknown view
How Indian History is Taught to English School Boys
507-510 unknown view
The East African Atmosphere
510-513 C.F. Andrews view
Reviews asnd Notices of Books
513-520 Musha view
Gleanings
520-528 unknown view
Indian Periodicals
529-537 unknown view
Foreign Periodicals
537-547 unknown view
Notes
548-570 unknown view