The Sacred City of the Hindus: An Account of Benares in Ancient and Modern TimesTrübner & Company, 1868 - 388 pages |
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Page ix
... Persian Sculptors ? — Ancient remains found chiefly in the northern quarter of the city.- Mohammedan lust for Hindu edifices . - Shifting tendency of the modern city . - Origin of the appellation " Benares . " CHAPTER III . Puranic form ...
... Persian Sculptors ? — Ancient remains found chiefly in the northern quarter of the city.- Mohammedan lust for Hindu edifices . - Shifting tendency of the modern city . - Origin of the appellation " Benares . " CHAPTER III . Puranic form ...
Page xxxiii
... , 68 . Mâyâ is Hurdwar . I am not sure whether or not Kânt ! is the same as Kânchi . The rest are well known . These places are , all , To the early Arab and Persian travellers Gangetic India was INTRODUCTION . xxxiii.
... , 68 . Mâyâ is Hurdwar . I am not sure whether or not Kânt ! is the same as Kânchi . The rest are well known . These places are , all , To the early Arab and Persian travellers Gangetic India was INTRODUCTION . xxxiii.
Page xxxiv
... Persian travellers Gangetic India was an unexplored tract . Albirűnî , who wrote about A.D. 1000 , had , however , heard of the holy fame of Benares , which he compares , not inaptly , to Mecca . ' Mahműd of Ghaznî is said , on doubtful ...
... Persian travellers Gangetic India was an unexplored tract . Albirűnî , who wrote about A.D. 1000 , had , however , heard of the holy fame of Benares , which he compares , not inaptly , to Mecca . ' Mahműd of Ghaznî is said , on doubtful ...
Page 7
... Persia , or Cyrus had added lustre to the Persian mon- archy , or Nebuchadnezzar had captured Jerusalem , and the inhabitants of Judća had been carried into captivity , she had already risen to greatness , if not to glory . Nay , she ...
... Persia , or Cyrus had added lustre to the Persian mon- archy , or Nebuchadnezzar had captured Jerusalem , and the inhabitants of Judća had been carried into captivity , she had already risen to greatness , if not to glory . Nay , she ...
Page 19
... Persian Sculptors ? - Ancient remains found chiefly in the northern quarter of the city . - Mohammedan lust for Hindu edifices . -Shifting tendency of the modern city . - Origin of the appellation " Benares . " THE great antiquity of ...
... Persian Sculptors ? - Ancient remains found chiefly in the northern quarter of the city . - Mohammedan lust for Hindu edifices . -Shifting tendency of the modern city . - Origin of the appellation " Benares . " THE great antiquity of ...
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Common terms and phrases
ANCIENT REMAINS antiquity architraves Asiatic Society Aśoka Bakaríyá Kund Bará Barna bass-relief bathe Benares Bengal Bisheswar Brahmans Buddha Buddhist building carved Ceylon chaityas Cheit Singh Chinese Christian cloister cloth College Crown 8vo deities Demy 8vo DICTIONARY Durgá edifice Edited enclosure English erected excavations existence F. J. FURNIVALL feet festival figure five formerly four Ganges Ghát goddess Government GRAMMAR ground height Hensleigh Wedgwood Hindu Hinduism Hiouen Thsang honour hundred idols inches India inscription Kâsis king Language LL.D Mahadeva Mahalla Melá miles Mohammedan monastery mosque native neighbourhood niches original ornamented pilgrims pillars plates portion Post 8vo present Professor Ráj Ghát Raja Rám Rámnagar religion religious river road Royal Asiatic Society ruins sacred Sanskrit Sárnáth sculptured sewed shrine side Siva spot stone Stupa T. W. RHYS DAVIDS tank temple terrace Text tower Translated Vihára viii wall Warren Hastings worship
Popular passages
Page 30 - THE HISTORY OF ESARHADDON (Son of Sennacherib), King of Assyria, BC 681-668. Translated from the Cuneiform Inscriptions upon Cylinders and Tablets in the British Museum Collection. Together with Original Texts, a Grammatical Analysis of each word, Explanations of the Ideographs by Extracts from the Bi-Lingual Syllabaries, and List of Eponyms, &c.
Page 16 - THE LIFE OR LEGEND OF GAUDAMA, THE BUDDHA OF THE BURMESE. With Annotations. The Ways to Neibban, and Notice on the Phongyies or Burmese Monks. BY THE RIGHT REV.
Page 48 - Bishop Percy's Folio Manuscripts, about 1650 AD By John W. Hales, MA, Fellow and late Assistant Tutor of Christ's College, Cambridge, and Frederick J. Furnivall, MA, of Trinity Hall, Cambridge. 4to, large paper, half bound, Roxburghe style, pp. 64. 1867. 10s. 6d.
Page 60 - PRAKRITA-PRAKASA; or, The Prakrit Grammar of Vararuchi, with the Commentary (Manorama) of Bhamaha ; the first complete Edition of the Original Text, with various Readings from a collection of Six MSS. in the Bodleian Library at Oxford, and the Libraries of the Royal Asiatic Society and the East India House ; with Copious Notes, an English Translation, and Index of Prakrit Words, to which is prefixed an Easy Introduction to Prakrit Grammar. By Edward Byles Cowell, of Magdalen Hall, Oxford, Professor...
Page 4 - Hundreds of devotees came thither every month to die: for it was believed that a peculiarly happy fate awaited the man who should pass from the sacred city into the sacred river.
Page 203 - I resolved," these are the words of Hastings himself, "to draw from his guilt the means of relief to the Company's distresses, — to make him pay largely for his pardon, or to exact a severe vengeance for past delinquency.
Page 17 - Cunningham. — THE BHILSA TOPES ; or, Buddhist Monuments of Central India: comprising a brief Historical Sketch of the Rise, Progress, and Decline of Buddhism ; with an Account of the Opening and Examination of the various Groups of Topes around Bhilsa.
Page 44 - THE ROMANCE OF WILLIAM OF PALERNE (otherwise known as the Romance of William and the Werwolf). Translated from the French at the command of Sir Humphrey de Bohun, about AD 1350, to which is added a fragment of the Alliterative Romance of Alisaunder, translated from the Latin by the same author, about AD 1340 ; the former re-edited from the unique MR.
Page 4 - Commerce had as many pilgrims as religion. All along the shores of the venerable stream lay great fleets of vessels laden with rich merchandise. From the looms of Benares went forth the most delicate silks that adorned the balls of St. James's and of Versailles, and in the bazaars the muslins of Bengal and the sabres of Oude were mingled with the jewels of Golconda and the shawls of Cashmere.
Page 3 - Asia. It was commonly believed that half a million of human beings was crowded into that labyrinth of lofty alleys, rich with shrines, and minarets, and balconies, and carved oriels, to which the sacred apes clung by hundreds. The traveller could scarcely make his way through the press of holy mendicants, and not less holy bulls. The broad and...