Our Indian Protectorate: An Introduction to the Study of the Relations Between the British Government and Its Indian FeudatoriesLongmans, Green and Company, 1893 - 426 sider |
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Our Indian Protectorate: An Introduction to the Study of the Relations ... Charles Lewis Tupper Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1893 |
Our Indian Protectorate: An Introduction to the Study of the Relations ... Charles Lewis Tupper Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2017 |
Our Indian Protectorate: An Introduction to the Study of the Relations ... Charles Lewis Tupper Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2015 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
administration adoption Alfred Lyall amongst annexation army authority Bengal Bráhmans British Government British Indian British territory caste century chief chiefship Cis-Sutlej civilisation claims common conquest courts criminal cultivation Deccan Delhi emperor dewán districts doctrine of lapse dominion duty established European feudalism feudatory force foreign frontier Government of India Governor-General in Council governors grant hereditary Hindu imperial Indian Government Indian political law international law jágír jágírdárs jenmi jurisdiction justice Karauli King land legislation Lord Dalhousie Lord Wellesley Lyall Maharaja Marhatta ment military Moghal empire Muhammadan Mysore nations native government Nawáb Nizam officers Oudh paramount power Pathán Peshwa petty plunder possession practice princes principle protection protectorate provinces Punjab Hills raja Rájpút Rájpútána Ranjit Singh recognised regulated relations revenue Roman rulers Sattára share Sikh Sindhia society sovereign sovereignty subadár subjects succession supremacy Sutlej tenure theory tion treaty tribal tribes troops village Western whole zamindárs
Populære avsnitt
Side 102 - We hereby announce to the Native Princes of India that all Treaties and Engagements made with them by or under the authority of the Honourable East India Company, are by us accepted, and will be scrupulously maintained ; and We look for the like observance on their part.
Side 107 - The Crown of England stands forth the unquestioned ruler and paramount Power in all India, and is, for the first time, brought face to face with its feudatories. There is a reality in the suzerainty of the Sovereign of England which has never existed before, and which is not only felt but eagerly acknowledged by the chiefs.
Side 108 - I speajs these patches of native government served as breakwaters to the storm which would otherwise have swept over us in one great wave.
Side 111 - Her Majesty being desirous that the Governments of the several Princes and Chiefs of India, who now govern their own territories, should be perpetuated, and that the representation and dignity of their Houses should be continued...
Side 109 - It was long ago said by Sir John Malcolm that if we made all India into zillahs it was not in the nature of things that our Empire should last fifty years ; but that if we could keep up a number of Native States without political power, but as royal instruments, we should exist in India as long as our naval superiority in Europe was maintained.
Side 204 - Norman conquest it may be described as a complete organisation of society through the medium of land tenure, in which from the king down to the lowest landowner all are bound together by obligation of service and defence, the lord to protect his vassal, the vassal to do service to his lord, the defence and service being based on and regulated by the nature and extent of the land held by the one of the other.
Side 75 - His Excellency engages that he will establish in his reserved dominions such a system of administration (to be carried into effect by his own officers) as shall be conducive to the prosperity of his subjects, and be calculated to secure the lives and property of the inhabitants; and his Excellency will always advise with, and act in conformity to the counsel of the officers of the said Honourable Company.
Side 277 - ... from the miseries of war, sometimes of a strong fortress, but more generally of the most unfrequented hills and woods, where they prolong a miserable existence, until the departure of the enemy ; and if this should be protracted beyond the time for which they have provided food, a large portion necessarily dies of hunger.
Side 107 - Canning had made clear that they "will not debar the Government of India from stepping in to set right such serious abuses in a Native Government as may threaten any part of the country with anarchy or disturbance, nor from assuming temporary charge of a Native State when there will be sufficient reason to do so...
Side 102 - We desire no extension of Our present territorial possessions; and while We will permit no aggression upon Our dominions or Our rights to be attempted with impunity, We shall sanction no encroachment on those of others. We shall respect the rights, dignity, and honour of Native Princes as Our own...