The Works of William Robertson ...: History of IndiaCadell and Davies, 1817 |
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... received , naturally increases the solicitude with which I wait for its decision concerning this which I now publish . WHEN I first turned my thoughts to this sub- ject , I was so fully aware of the disadvantage under which I laboured ...
... received , naturally increases the solicitude with which I wait for its decision concerning this which I now publish . WHEN I first turned my thoughts to this sub- ject , I was so fully aware of the disadvantage under which I laboured ...
Página vi
... received , naturally increases the solicitude with which I wait for its decision concerning this which I now publish . I WHEN I first turned my thoughts to this sub- ject , I was so fully aware of the disadvantage under which I laboured ...
... received , naturally increases the solicitude with which I wait for its decision concerning this which I now publish . I WHEN I first turned my thoughts to this sub- ject , I was so fully aware of the disadvantage under which I laboured ...
Página 9
... received more full and accurate intelligence . THE first establishment of any foreign power in India which can be ascertained by evidence meriting any degree of credit , is that of the Per- sians ; and even of this we have only a very ...
... received more full and accurate intelligence . THE first establishment of any foreign power in India which can be ascertained by evidence meriting any degree of credit , is that of the Per- sians ; and even of this we have only a very ...
Página 11
... received more full and accurate intelligence . THE first establishment of any foreign power in India which can be ascertained by evidence meriting any degree of credit , is that of the Per- sians ; and even of this we have only a very ...
... received more full and accurate intelligence . THE first establishment of any foreign power in India which can be ascertained by evidence meriting any degree of credit , is that of the Per- sians ; and even of this we have only a very ...
Página 47
... received an additional supply of them by another mode of conveyance . From the earliest times , there seems to have been some communi- cation between Mesopotamia , and other pro- vinces on the banks of the Euphrates , and those parts of ...
... received an additional supply of them by another mode of conveyance . From the earliest times , there seems to have been some communi- cation between Mesopotamia , and other pro- vinces on the banks of the Euphrates , and those parts of ...
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Palavras e frases frequentes
accuracy acquired æra Alexander Alexandria ancient appear Arabian Gulf Arrian arts Asia attention authors Bactria Brahmins Cape Cape Comorin caravans carried Caspian Caspian sea China circumstances cities coast commerce commodities concerning conquests considerable Constantinople conveyed Coromandel coast course D'Anville degree Disquisition dominion earth East Egypt empire established Europe Europeans extensive formed Ganges geography Greek Herodotus Hindoos Hist hundred idea Indostan Indus inhabitants intercourse with India island Jogue kingdom knowledge known labour land Mahomedans Malabar Malabar coast manner Megasthenes ment mentioned merchants mode modern monarchs nations natives nature navigation Nearchus NOTE observed ocean opinion opulence Pagodas Persian Persian Gulf places Pliny ports Portuguese possession productions progress provinces Ptolemy religion rendered respect river Romans S E C sailed Sanskreet Scylax SECT silk Strabo Syria thousand tion trade with India various Venetians visited voyage writers
Passagens conhecidas
Página 177 - From that time, like everything else which falls into the hands of the Mussulman, it has been going to ruin, and the discovery of the passage to India by the Cape of Good Hope gave the deathblow to its commercial greatness.
Página 351 - ... the affairs of this empire in equity and firm security for the space of fifty-two years, preserving every tribe of men in ease and happiness; whether they were followers of Jesus, or of Moses, of David, or...
Página 352 - In your temples, to His name the voice is raised in prayer ; in a house of images, where the bell is shaken, still He is the object of adoration. To vilify the religion or customs of other men, is to set at naught the pleasure of the Almighty.
Página 357 - Veeshnoo-Sarma, in a Series of connected Fables, interspersed with moral, prudential, and political Maxims; translated from an ancient Manuscript in the Sanskreet Language, with explanatory Notes, by Charles Wilkins.
Página 225 - Thy tears, my child, ill suit the occasion ; we shall all meet again ; be firm ; see the direct road before thee, and follow it. When the big tear lurks beneath thy beautiful eyelashes, let thy resolution check its first efforts to disengage itself. In thy passage over this earth, where the paths are now high, now low, and the true path seldom distinguished, the traces of thy feet must needs be unequal ; but virtue will press thee right onward a.
Página x - From the raft or canoe, which first served to carry a savage over the river that obstructed him in the chase, to the construction of a vessel capable of conveying a numerous crew with safety to a distant coast, the progress in improvement is immense.
Página 250 - Fasts, mortifications, and penances, all rigid, and many of them excruciating to an extreme degree, were the means employed to appease the wrath of their gods, and the Mexicans never approached their altars without sprinkling them with blood drawn from their own bodies.
Página 188 - Nor is it between the four different tribes alone that such insuperable barriers are fixed ; the members of each cast adhere invariably to the profession of their forefathers. From generation to generation, the same families have followed, and will always continue to follow, one uniform line of life.
Página 2 - India by sea ; and if, from deference to* the sentiments of some respectable authors, their claim were to be admitted, we know with certainty, that the commercial effort which they made in the reign of Solomon was merely a transient one, and that they quickly returned to their former state of unsocial seclusion from the rest of mankind.
Página 356 - Greek ; and those not in technical and metaphorical terms, which the mutuation of refined arts and improved manners might have occasionally introduced, but in the groundwork of language, in monosyllables, in the names of numbers, and the appellations of such things as would be first discriminated on the immediate dawn of civilization.