cover image: The Indian Historical Quarterly  March  1940

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The Indian Historical Quarterly March 1940

1940

While ahnost all the royal famne ilies of the South in one way or the other were subject to political vicissitudes the ancient Slopes of Tuluvanadu alone managed to preserve intact the culture and tradition of a people who played a very significant part in the history of the country. [...] RGVEDA SAMHITA (Or the earliest literary Monument of the Aryan race and the most sacred scripture of the Hindus) with the commentary of Venkata Madhava (older than Sayana) critically edited for the first time by Dr. [...] But he had won over Raghunath Rao and the Peshwa was prevailed upon to remain satisfied with the cession of Bancapore and the restoration of the possessions of the chieftains of Guti and Savanur along with the payment of twenty-eight lakhs as tribute.' But Hyder knew it quite well that the Maratha menace would reappear very soon and he knew how formidable his Maratha opponent was. [...] Hyder Ali's Relations with the Marathas interest to enter into a scheme of alliance with any of them and the least of all with the British as the Madras governor wrote to Verelst we must fix Hyder as a friend or Overthrow him as an enemy; the former notwithstanding all our advances we have hitherto found impracticable.' The Peshwa had in the meantime succeeded in persuading the Nizam to join in [...] It is said that the Peshwa asked the Nizam to send Rucunuddaula and Sher Jung ahead and insisted upon the settlement of some preliminaries and demanded that a distance of to miles most be maintained between the two camps.' Hyder was sufficiently intimidated at the prospect of the corbination and to hear the nests that messengers were coming and going between the two camps.
history
Pages
232
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.120027
Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-viii Narendra Law view
Hyder Ali’s Relations with the Marathas (1766-67)
1-8 N.K. Sinha view
Post-Vyasaraya Polemics
9-19 B.N. Sarma view
Durlabhram a Prominent Bengal Officer of the Mid-eighteenth Century
20-39 Kali Datta view
Parijata-dhvaja of the Maratha King Sambhagi
40-47 P.K. Gode view
The Foundation of Muslim Rule in India (1206-1290 A.D.)
48-57 Aziz Ahmad view
Vasudeva Sarvabhauma
58-69 Dinesh Bhattacharyya view
The Wife in the Vedic Ritual
70-98 J.B Chaudhuri view
Benares Plate of Govindacandra King of Kanauj: [Vikrama-] Samvat 1171
99-104 R.K. Ghoshal view
Teliagarhi
105-117 Sarit Majumdar view
Siva and His Emblems on Early Indian Coins and Seals
118-142 Jitendra Banerjea view
Gunaratna’s Tarkarahasyadipika and Dharmakirtti’s Pramanavarttika
143-144 Vidhushekhara Bhattacharya view
The Quilon lnscription of Jayasimha Vira Kerala Varma
145-165 K.R. Pisharoti, A.G. Warriar view
Sher Shah’s Parganahs and their Administrative Officials
166-169 H.N. Sinha view
A Note on the Sabdanirnaya
169-171 T.R. Chintamani view
The Silver and Copper Coinage of Pre-Moghul India
172-178 G.L. Schanzlin view
A Side-light on the History of Bengal
179-182 D.C. Ganguly view
The Vatsagulma Copper-plate Grant of Vakataka Vindhyasakti.— Regnal Year 37
182-186 Dinesh Sircar view
Reviews
187-206 unknown view
Select Contents of Oriental Journals
207-218 unknown view
Backmatter
i-ii unknown view

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