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Director-General of Statistics to the Government of India; one of the Council of the Royal Asiatic Society; M. R.G.S.; and Honorary Member of various Learned Societies.

Vol. I. 24 Parganás and Sundarbans.-II. Nadiyá and Jessor.-III. Midnapur, Húglí and Hourah.-IV. Bardwán, Birbhum and Bánkurá.-V. Dacca, Bákarganj, Faridpur and Maimansinh.-VI. Chittagong Hill Tracts, Chittagong, Noakhálí, Tipperah, and Hill Tipperah State.-VII. Meldah, Rangpur and Dinajpur.-VIII. Rájsháhí and Bográ.—IX. Murshidábád and Pábná.-X. Dárjíling, Jalpáigurí and Kuch Behar State.-XI. Patná and Sáran.-XII. Gayá and Sháhábád.-XIII. Tirhut and Champáran.-XIV. Bhagalpur and Santál Parganás.-XV. Monghyr and Purniah.-XVI. Hazáribágh and Lohárdagá.-XVII. Singbhúm, Chutiá Nágpur Tributary States and Mánbhúm.-XVIII. Cuttack and Balasor.-XIX. Purí, and Orissa Tributary States.-XX. Fisheries, Botany, and General Index.

Post 8vo., cloth, pp. 344. Price 10s. 6d.

ENGLISH RULE AND NATIVE OPINION IN INDIA,

FROM NOTES TAKEN IN THE YEARS 1870-1874.

BY JAS. ROUTLEDGE.

"Throughout the book he shows himself to be a well-informed and sagacious observer, wide reaching in his intellectual and moral sympathies, and deeply in earnest. In regard to its weightier contents, this is by far the best book we have had since Dr. Hunter's Life of Lord Mayo,' and it should be read, in view of the critical events imminent in the East and on our Indian Borders, by every English Statesman, and public writer, and party politician."-Athenæum.

Now Ready. Second Edition, imp. 8vo. pp. xxx. and 481. Price 10s. 6d.

A MEMOIR

ON THE INDIAN

SURVEYS.

BY CLEMENTS R. MARKHAM, C.B., F.R.S., ETC., ETC.

Published by Order of H. M. Secretary of State for India in Council.
ILLUSTRATED WITH MAPS.

In addition to the Sections contained in the first edition of this work, which was published in 1871, a sub-section has been added for the MARINE SURvey DepartmeNT, and also separate Sections for the ROUTE SURVEYS beyond the Frontier of British India by Native Explorers, for the REVENUE SURVEYS, for TIDAL OBSERVATIONS, for the STATISTICAL SURVEY OF INDIA, and for a discussion of the Orthography of Indian Proper Names. An Index has also been added.

Now ready. Second Edition. In One Volume, post 8vo. cloth. Price 7s. 6d.

MODERN

INDIA

AND THE

INDIANS.

Being a Series of Impressions, Notes, and Essays.

BY MONIER WILLIAMS, D.C.L.,

Hon. LL.D. of the University of Calcutta ; Hon. Member of the Bombay Asiatic Society; Boden Professor of

Sanskrit in the University of Oxford.

"In some interesting remarks on the races, creeds, and languages in the Peninsula, Professor Monier Williams points out that among the 210 million inhabitants, all the principal races (the Caucasian-both Aryan and Semitic-the Mongolian and the Negro), all the principal languages (Aryan, Semitic, and Turanian), and the principal creeds (Brahmaism, Buddhism, Mahomedanism, and Christianity) are represented. In its climate, in its physical features, in its animal and plant life, in its races, its languages, its creeds, and its history, India affords a wide field for the student, and yet how few wend their way there! Where a richer field for the botanist, the zoologist, or the geologist? Yet the savant shuns the task, and leaves the glorious scenery, the wild deserts, noble rivers, and grand mountains to be monopolised by the sportsman, who alone of all English people unofficially connected with the country is attracted in any number to the East.

"We close the book with feelings of regret that there is not more of it. An enlightened, observant man, travelling among an enlightened, observant people, Professor Monier Williams has brought before the public in a pleasant form more of the manners and customs of the Queen's Indian subjects than we ever remember to have seen in any work. He not only deserves the thanks of every Englishman for this able contribution to the study of Modern India-a subject with which we should be specially familiar-but he deserves the thanks of every Indian, Parsee or Hindoo, Buddhist and Moslem, for his clear exposition of their manners, their creeds, and their necessities."-Times.

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Important Works Relating to India, continued.

PREVENTION

OF FAMINE IN INDIA.

One Volume, demy 8vo. cloth, with Map. Price 12s.

A DESCRIPTIVE AND HISTORICAL ACCOUNT OF THE

GODAVERY DISTRICT IN THE PRESIDENCY OF MADRAS.

BY HENRY MORRIS,

Formerly of the Madras Civil Service, Author of "A History of India for the Use of Schools in India," and other Works. This Monograph is one of a series of descriptive memoirs of all the districts in the Madras Presidency, which is being prepared under the direction of the Government. It is, however, in one respect unique. It is the history of a district which owes its prosperity to the benefits derived from judicious irrigation; and it is therefore of special interest at the present time. The attention of the people of England has been attracted to this subject by the terrible famine which has recently desolated Southern India. The immediate effects of this sad visitation are happily passing away, but the recollection of it cannot easily be effaced, and remedies against similar calamities are being diligently sought. The Godavery district is a proof of the incalculable advantages of irrigation, which, when carefully planned and energetically carried out, is an effectual remedy against famine wherever it can be applied with any hope of success.

EARLY

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RECORDS

OF BRITISH

INDIA.

A History of the Rise of the British Empire in India, as told by the Government Records.

BY J. TALBOYS WHEELER,

Author of "The History of India from the Earliest Ages," etc., etc.

Now Ready. In Octavo, cloth, pp. 580 and Map. Price 145.

GAZETTEER OF THE BOMBAY PRESIDENCY.

Prepared under the Orders of Government.

GUJARAT, SURAT, AND BROACH.
VOL. II. (The First Vol. has not yet appeared.)

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Now Complete in Three Volumes (Vol. I. pp. 688, Vol. II. pp. 532, Vol. III. pp. 590,)
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Price 30s.

GAZETTEER OF THE PROVINCE OF OUDH.

Published by Authority.

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Four Volumes with Maps, Medium Octavo, cloth. Price £2 45.

Statistical, Descriptive, and Historical Account of the NorthWestern Provinces of India.

Edited under Orders of the Government of India,

By EDWIN T. ATKINSON, B.A., Bengal Civil Service.

Vol, I. Bundelkund, pp. 640; Vol. II. Meerut Division, Part 1, pp. 640;
Vol. III. Meerut Division, Part 2, pp. 750; Vol, IV. Agra Division, Part 1, pp. 868.
ALLAHABAD. LONDON: TRÜBNER & CO., 57 AND 59, LUDGATE HILL.

INDIA AND AFGHANISTAN.

For LIST OF BOOKS of Interest at the present moment relating to India and Neighbouring Countries, see the SUPPLEMENT to the NOVEMBER NUMBER of Trübner and Co.'s Monthly List, 16 pages, Post Free on application.

"A particularly interesting List."—Bookseller.

ORIENTAL NUMISMATICS.

THE INTERNATIONAL NUMISMATA ORIENTALIA.

Already Published. Royal 4to. sewed, pp. 84, with a Plate and Map of the India of Manu. Price 9s. 6d.
PART I. ANCIENT

INDIAN

BY E. THOMAS, F.R.S., etc.

WEIGHTS.

Royal 4to. sewed, pp. 44, with 6 Plates. Price 9s.

PART II. COINS OF THE URTUKI TURKUMANS.
BY STANLEY LANE POOLE, Corpus Christi College, Oxford.

Royal 4to. sewed, pp. viii. and 56, with Three Autotype Plates. Price 10s. 6d.

PART III. THE COINAGE OF LYDIA AND PERSIA,

FROM THE EARLIEST TIMES TO THE FALL OF THE DYNASTY OF THE ACHÆMENIDÆ. By BARCLAY V. HEAD, Assistant-Keeper of Coins, British Museum.

PART IV.

Royal 4to. sewed, pp. iv. and 22, and I Plate. Price 5s.

THE COINS OF THE TULUNI DYNASTY.

BY EDWARD THOMAS ROGERS.

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PART VI. ON THE ANCIENT COINS AND MEASURES OF CEYLON.

WITH A DISCUSSION OF THE CEYLON DATE OF THE BUDDHA'S DEATH.

By T. W. RHYS DAVIDS, Barrister-at-Law, late of the Ceylon Civil Service.

Now Ready. Vol. I. Royal 4to. half-bound, cloth sides, gilt top. Price £3 13s. 6d.

THE INTERNATIONAL NUMISMATA ORIENTALIA,

ILLUSTRATED WITH 20 PLATES AND A MAP.

"More than fifty years ago William Marsden, an indefatigable collector and an archæologist of no mean ability, published his 'Numismata Orientalia,' a description of his fine cabinet of Oriental coins, now incorporated in the British Museum Collection. Compiled with much care and learning, and produced in a sumptuous form, the work continued until quite recent times to be the one considerable contribution of English scholarship to the knowledge of this important branch of Eastern archæology; and a distinguished Indian antiquary, conceiving the idea of a great cyclopædia of Oriental numismatics, wisely judged he could not do better than christen it after Marsden's 'Numismata Orientalia.' Mr. Edward Thomas's project was to do for the coin collections of all Europe what Marsden did for his own cabinet. The first part appeared in 1875. It was a learned treatise by the editor on Indian Weights,' and was set forth both in a luxury of type and margin which put the original 'Marsden almost to shame. A second part, dealing with the singular issues of the Turkoman Emirs, who were among the most formidable enemies of the Crusaders, was produced by Mr. S. L. Poole in 1876. Within the last few months no less than three new parts of the Numismata Orientalia' have appeared. The first is by Mr. B. V. Head, the Assistant-Keeper of Coins in the British Museum. In it the writer reviews with his usual care and lucidity the coinage of Lydia and Persia, from the earliest times to the fall of the Achæmenidæ, tracing with singular perspicuity the origin of the weight and money systems, showing their source in the minæ recorded on the lion and duck weights of Assyria, explaining the complicated system employed by Croesus in his ambition to found an imperial coinage for all Asia, and finally showing the reduction of this system to simplicity in the royal currency of Persia. The fourth part is by Mr. E. T. Rogers, now Minister of Public Instruction at Cairo, and treats of the Tulûni dynasty in Egypt. But the most important of the three new parts is Mr. Percy Gardner's treatise on 'The Parthian Coinage.' Complete and yet concise, clear in arrangement, and scholarlike in each detail, this essay should serve as a model for the rest of the series. In his introduction Mr. Gardner contrives to throw interest into a subject which in most hands would seem dull, and in the purely technical part of the book he excludes every unnecessary word, and reduces the description of the coins to a tabular form, easy of reference and eminently clear in its order. If the future parts of the Numismata Orientalia' are executed after the pattern of Mr. Gardner's Parthian Coinage,' the value to archeologists of the whole work will be inestimable."—Times.

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Two Parts, 4to. pp. xiii. and 879. Price £111s. 6d. (Originally published at £2 165.)

دیوان أبي الطيب المتنبي

وفي اثناء متنه

شرح الا سلم العلامة الواحدي واربعة فهارس

تأليف العبد المقير

الشيخ المعلم وفى المدرسة الكلية البرلينية فريدرخ ديتريصي

Mutanabbii Carmina cum Commentario Wahidi

Ex Libris Manu Scriptis, qui Vindobonae, Gothae, Lugduni Batavorum, atque Berolini Asservantur
Primum Edidit Indicibus Instruxit Varias Lectiones Adnotavit.

FR. DIETERICI.

BEROLINI, 1861. LONDON: TRÜBNER & CO., 57 AND 59, LUDGATE HILL.

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Now Ready, In One Volume, Royal Quarto, pp. 582, handsomely bound in cloth. Price £3 135. 6d.

THE

JAIMINIYA-NYAYA-MÁLÁ-VISTARA OF MADHAVÁCHARYA.

Edited for the Sanskrit Text Society by the late

THEODOR GOLDSTÜCKER and Completed by E. b. Cowell.

With Various Readings; an Alphabetical Index of Words; and an Index to the Passages quoted in the Commentaries to the Taittiriya Samhita and Brahmaṇa.

LONDON: TRÜBNER & CO., 57 and 59, LUDGATE HILL.

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THE APHORISMS OF SANDILYA.

WITH THE COMMENTARY OF SWAPNES'WARA:

OR,

THE HINDU DOCTRINE

OF FAITH.

Translated by E. B. COWELL, M.A.,

Fellow of Corpus Christi College and Professor of Sanskrit in the University of Cambridge; and Honorary LL.D. of the University of Edinburgh.

LONDON:

TRÜBNER & CO., 57 and 59, LUDGATE HILL.

Just Published. 8vo. pp. 27. Price Is. 6d.

Contributions to the Explanation of Jyotisha-Vedânga.

By G. THIBAUT, Ph.D.

Now Ready. Text. Vol. I. 8vo. cloth, pp. 526. Price £1 8s.

THE JATAK A.

TOGETHER WITH ITS COMMENTARY; BEING TALES OF THE ANTERIOR BIRTHS OF GOTAMA BUDDHA.

For the first time Edited in the Original Pali,
BY V. FAUSBÖLL.

IN FIVE VOLUMES.

The first volume has now appeared, and it is expected that the second will appear before the end of the year. remaining three volumes will follow as rapidly as will be consistent with the minute care which such a work demands.

The

The Jataka throws a strong light on the Ancient History of India, during the Buddhistic period, as its tales contain a great many characteristic traits picturing the Social Life at that time, of which we have scarcely any account in Sanskrit Literature. It must be reckoned with the General Literature of the World, as it contains a mass of Tales, Fables, and Fairy Legends, of which not a few appear again in the West, in Persia, Arabia, Greece, in the European Literature of the Middle Ages and the modern popular reading.

The Jataka is the only book in existence where we find the Doctrine of the Transmigration of Souls treated of and exemplified in full (on about 800 large palm leaves), and will as such for all time be a source to which to turn for complete information on this subject. Being written in the comparatively unknown Pali tongue, it will greatly advance the knowledge of this rich and polished language.

LONDON: TRÜBNER & CO., 57 AND 59, LUDGATE HILL.

Now Ready. Vol. I. Part I. Royal 8vo. pp. 200. Price 8s. 6d.

THE VYAKARANA-MAHABHASHYA OF PATANJALI.

Edited by F. KIELHORN, Ph.D.,

Professor of Oriental Languages, Deccan College.

The Second Part of Vol. I. to the end of Adhyâya I., together with the various Readings of Vol. I., is in the Press. LONDON: TRÜBNER & CO., 57 AND 59, LUDGATE hill.

Just Out. 8vo. pp. 44. Price 2s. 6d.
VUTTODAYA.

(EXPOSITION OF Metre)..

By SANGHARAKKHITA THERA.

A Pali Text, Edited, with Translation and Notes, by MAJOR G. E. FRYER.
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No. 384. Bhamati, a Gloss on Sankara Acharya's Comm. on the Brahma Sutras.
No. 385 and 389. Sama Veda Sanhita. Vol. V. Fasc. 3 and 4. 2s. each.
No. 390. Agni Purana, a system of Hindu Mythology. Edited by Raj. Mitra.
New Series.-No. 314 and 387. The Ain i Akbari. By Abul Fazl i Mubarak i Allami.

Persian.) Fasc. 17 and 22.

Each Fasc 4s.

Edited by Maulawi Abd-ur

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Edited by H. Blochmann. (In

No. 391 and 400. Chaturvarga-Chintamani, by Hemadri. Vol. II. Part I. Fasc. 13, and Vol. II. Part II.
Fasc. I. Each Fasc. 25.

No. 398. Sama Veda Sañhita, with a commentary of Sayana Acharya. Vol. V. Fasc. 5. 25.

No. 399. The Agni Purana. A System of Hindu Mythology and Tradition. Ed. by Raj. Mitra. Fasc. 12. 2s. Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, 1877.

Part I. Nos. 2, 3, and 4.
Part II. No. 3.
1877. Part II. No. 4.

1877.

3s. 8d. each number.

1878. Part II. Nos. 1 & 2.

1878. Part I. No. 1. 8vo. With Plates.

Proceedings of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, 1877. Nos. vii. viii. ix. Is. Id. each number.

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