816
INDEX.
trade with different countries, 681-687;growth of Suez Canal trade, 687 ; SirK. Temple’s Minute on the balanceof Indian trade, 688 ; coasting tradeand shipping of India , 689 ; frontiertrade, 690-691 ; trans-frontier tradewith Afghanistan , Central Asia , Nepal ,Tibet , Burma , and Siam, 690-693 ;internal trade of India , 694; tradingcastes in Southern and Northern India ,694-695 ; local trade of India , villagemoney-lenders, travelling brokers, re-ligious fairs, etc., 695, 696; internaltrade the chief safeguard against famine,696, 697 ; normal action of internaltrade, 697; Provincial statistics ofinternal trade, 698-699; trade ofPatna town, 698 ; the village mart ofDongargaon, 698; rural fair at Kara-gola, 699.
Common origin of European and Indian religions, 117.
Common shrines of various faiths, 252,253 ; Muhammadan and Hindu wor-ship at St. Thomas’ shrine in Madras ,288.
Communication, Means of.— See Meansof Communication.
Comorin, cape at the southernmost ex-tremity of India , 35 ; ancient templeon, 119.
Comparative Dictionary of the BihdriLanguage, by Messrs. Hcernle andGrierson, quoted, 394 and footnote;395 (footnote 1); 399 (footnote); 402(footnote).
Comparative Grammar of the Dravidian Language , by Bishop Caldwell, quoted,104, 105, and footnotes ; 220 (footnote
2) ; 290 (footnote 4); 385 (footnotes 2and 3); 386 (footnote); 388 (footnote
3) > 39° (footnote) ; 398 (footnote 2);432 (footnote).
Comparative Grammar of the GaudianLanguages , by Professor Hcernle,quoted, 394 and footnote ; 395 (foot-note 1).
Comparative Grammar of the ModernAryan Languages of India , by Mr. John Beames , quoted, 144 (footnote);394 ; 395 (footnote 2).
Compensation for disturbance on evictionin Bengal, 524.
Complexity of the Hindu caste system,241-243.
Concordat of 1857 between the Pope andthe King of Portugal , 307 ; of 1886,
308,309-
Condore, Battle of (1760), 446.
Conflans , Marquis de, defeated (1760),446.
Congress, The Indian National, 5°4«
Company and under the Crown, theSecretary of State’s Council, 507.
Coorg, annexed by Lord W. Bentinck
(1834), 476.
Coorg, forests of, 72, 73 ; diminution ofpopulation in, 86.
Coote, Sir Eyre, defeat of Lally at Wande-wash (1761), 447 ; in the first Mysore war (1780), 462.
Copper and copper-mining, 73; 709;728, 729.
Cornwallis , Marquess (1786-1793), 462-464; his revenue reforms and thePermanent Settlement of Bengal, 462,463 ; second Mysore war, 463 ; secondadministration of Lord Cornwallis (1805); and his death after a fewweeks in India , 469.
Corporate holdings of cultivated land inNorth - Western Provinces and thePunjab , 533.
Cosmas Indicopleustes ’ history of theChristian Church in Ceylon and alongthe Malabar seaboard (547 A.D.), 286 ;noted presence of Scythians and Huns in India , 230.
Cosquin, M. Emmanuel, Revue des Ques-tions Historiques , liv. 56, quoted, 196(footnote 4) ; 197 (footnote 3).
Cotton cultivation and manufacture, 585;the American war, its effects on Indian cotton-growing, 586; cotton districtsin India , area under cultivation, andout-turn, 586, 588 ; cotton - cleaning,588 ; imports of Manchester goods,669 ; exports of raw cotton, 673, 674 ;exports of manufactured cotton, 680;decline of cotton-weaving owing toManchester competition, but still adomestic industry in India , 701-703;steam cotton-mills in different Pro-vinces, 712-715 ; sound basis of Indian cotton manufacture, 715-716; exportsof Bombay manufactured cotton toChina and Africa, 717 ; future pro-spect of Indian cotton manufactures,
717.
Cotton import duties, Abolition of, 55 2 '553-
Court, General, one of Ranjit Singh sEuropean officers, dismissed, 481.
Conrten’s Association, or ‘ The AssadaMerchants’ (1635-50), 428, 432, 433.
Covelong (or Coblom), old settlement ofthe Ostend East India Company on theMadras coast, 437.
Covilham, earliest recorded Portuguese traveller to Cochin (1487 a.d. ), 418;Jesuit missionary in Southern India,killed in 1500, 295.
Cowell, Professor, holds Rajputs not tobe Scythians , 227.
Criminal Tribes Act, 112.