Transactions of the Second Session of the International Congress of Orientalists: Held in London in September, 1874Robert K. Douglas Trübner, 1876 - 456 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 33
Page
... Hindu Doctrine of Expiation . By Professor Stenzler . On the Interpretation of the Veda . By Professor Haug . 205 · 213 Who Wrote the Raghuvamsa , and When ? By Shankar Pandurang Pandit 227 PAGE Remarks on the Priority of the Ancient ...
... Hindu Doctrine of Expiation . By Professor Stenzler . On the Interpretation of the Veda . By Professor Haug . 205 · 213 Who Wrote the Raghuvamsa , and When ? By Shankar Pandurang Pandit 227 PAGE Remarks on the Priority of the Ancient ...
Page 55
... Hindu population of Southern India must see how remarkably it partakes of the same type , modi- fied on the coast and in the open country by commixture with other races , and traceable more or less as far as the Himalayas . Among ...
... Hindu population of Southern India must see how remarkably it partakes of the same type , modi- fied on the coast and in the open country by commixture with other races , and traceable more or less as far as the Himalayas . Among ...
Page 187
... Hindu and the Greek , working on the same pro- blems , each in his own way , yet both in the end arriving at much ... Hindus are the pupils of the Greeks . This is the same feeling which impelled Dugald Stewart , when he saw the striking ...
... Hindu and the Greek , working on the same pro- blems , each in his own way , yet both in the end arriving at much ... Hindus are the pupils of the Greeks . This is the same feeling which impelled Dugald Stewart , when he saw the striking ...
Page 188
... Hindus , in their first intercourse with English scholars , placed before them the treasures of their native literature with all the natural pride of a nation that considered itself the oldest , the wisest , the most enlight- ened ...
... Hindus , in their first intercourse with English scholars , placed before them the treasures of their native literature with all the natural pride of a nation that considered itself the oldest , the wisest , the most enlight- ened ...
Page 189
... Hindus of a growing feeling , not very different from that which Tacitus described , when he said of the Germans : " Who would go to Germany , a country without natural beauty , with a wretched climate , miserable to culti- vate or to ...
... Hindus of a growing feeling , not very different from that which Tacitus described , when he said of the Germans : " Who would go to Germany , a country without natural beauty , with a wretched climate , miserable to culti- vate or to ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Accadian ancient antiquity archæology Aryan Assyrian Bengal Bhikshus Bodhisatwa Bouddhisme Brahmans Buddha Buddhist called cave century character Chinese chinois cloth College Commentary compared Congress Crown 8vo Cuneiform d'une Demy 8vo dialects DICTIONARY dynasty East Edited Egypt Egyptian Elamite English ethnology Etruscan existence expression F. J. FURNIVALL fait Finnish Gautamiputra Glossary GRAMMAR Greek Hebrew Hindu Hungarian hymns India inscriptions Kâlidâsa King Kumârasambhava language late linguistic literature LL.D Max Müller means Median mesure Missionary monuments Nirvâna Oppert Oriental Orientalists origin Ostiak papyrus passage peuples Ph.D phonetic poems Prakrit present Prof Professor proverbs race Ragh Raghuvamsa Ramses religion Royal Asiatic Society Sâma Sanskrit scholars Section Semitic sewed suffix Sukot Susian Sûtra Tarom tchi texts tion town translation Turanian Veda Vedic verb viii Vogul vowels words
Popular passages
Page 39 - English power, until we are prepared to read of its final overthrow. 23. THE ANGLO-SAXON CHRONICLE, ACCORDING TO THE SEVERAL ORIGINAL AUTHORITIES. Vol. I., Original Texts. Vol. II., Translation. Edited and translated by BENJAMIN THORPE, Esq., Member of the Royal Academy of Sciences at Munich, and of the Society of Netherlandish Literature at Leyden.
Page 33 - NEWMAN. — A HANDBOOK OF MODERN ARABIC, consisting of a Practical Grammar, with numerous Examples, Dialogues, and Newspaper Extracts, in European Type.
Page 10 - The Man of Law's, Shipman's, and Prioress's Tales, with Chaucer's own Tale of Sir Thopas, in 6 parallel Texts from the MSS above named, and 10 coloured drawings of Tellers of Tales, after the originals in the Ellesmere MS.
Page 32 - Vol. I. Mythical and Legendary Accounts of the Origin of Caste, with an Inquiry into its existence in the Vedic Age.
Page 5 - Professor in the University of Oxford. With an Introduction on the proper use of the ordinary English Alphabet in transcribing Foreign Languages. The Vocabulary compiled by JOHN BELLOWS. Crown 8vo. Limp morocco, pp. xxxi. and 368.
Page 8 - By the Rev. Canon Callaway, MD Vol. I., 8vo, pp. xiv. and 378, cloth. 1868. 16s. , CALLAWAY.— THE RELIGIOUS SYSTEM OF THE AMAZULU. Part I. — Unkulunkulu ; or, The Tradition of Creation as existing among the Amazulu and other Tribes of South Africa, in their own words, with a Translation into English, and Notes. By the Rev. Canon...
Page 41 - Whitney and Edgren. — A COMPENDIOUS GERMAN AND ENGLISH DICTIONARY, with Notation of Correspondences and Brief Etymologies. By Professor WD WHITNEY, assisted by AH EDGREN.
Page 455 - ALQUAMA, and IMROCLQUAIS ; chiefly according to the MSS. of Paris, Gotha, and Leyden, and the Collection of their Fragments, with a List of the various Readings of the Text. Edited by W. Ahlwardt, Professor of Oriental Languages at the University of Greifswald.
Page 6 - 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 9 - Chalmers. — THE ORIGIN OF THE CHINESE; an Attempt to Trace the connection of the Chinese with Western Nations in their Religion, Superstitions, Arts, Language, and Traditions.