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The Indian empire : its peoples, history, and products / William Wilson Hunter
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British administration, and Coorgannexed, 474-476; Sir Charles Metcalfe O835-36), the grant of liberty to thepress, 476; Lord Auckland (1836-42), our early dealings with Kabul ,and the disastrous Afghan campaignand annihilation of our army, 477, 478;Earl of Ellenborough (1842-44), theKabul army of retribution, the Gatesof Somnath travesty, annexation ofSind, and Gwalior outbreak, 479, 480;Lord Hardinge (1844-48), the firstSikh war and annexation of theCis-Sutlej tract, 480, 482; Earl ofDalhousie (1848-56), 482-487; hisadministrative reforms and publicworks, 482; second Sikh war, andannexation and pacification of thePunjab , 483-484; second Burmese war and annexation of Pegu, 484;Lord Dalhousie s dealings withthe Native States, the doctrine of* Lapse in the case of Satara , Jhansi ,and Nagpur States, 485, 486 ; Berarhanded over by the Nizam of Haidara-bad, as a territorial guarantee for arrearsof subsidies and for the payment of theHaidarabad contingent, 486 ; annexa-tion of Oudh and Lord Dalhousie sgrounds for the measure, 486, 487 ;Earl Canning (1856-62), 488-496;the Sepoy Mutiny and its causes, 488,489; the outbreak at Meerut and Delhi ,and spread of the Mutiny, 490,491 ; loyalty of the Sikhs, 491 ; thesiege of Cawnpur and massacre of thesurvivors, 491 ; Lucknow , 492 ; siegeand capture of Delhi , 492 ; reduc-tion of Oudh by Lord Clyde, and ofCentral India by Sir Hugh Rose ,493 ; India transferred to the Crown,the Queens Proclamation and generalamnesty, 495; Lord Canning s fin-ancial and legal reforms, 496 ; LordElgin (1862-63), his death at Dharm-sala, 496; Lord Lawrence (1864-69),the Bhutan war and Orissa famine,496; Lord Mayo (1869-72), theAmbala darbdr; internal and finan-cial reforms, and abolition of inlandcustoms lines, his assassination, 496-497 ; Lord Northbrook (1872-76), theBengal famine of 1874, dethronementof the Gaekwar of Baroda , and visit ofthe Prince of Wales to India , 497 ;Lord Lytton (1876-80), Proclamationof the Queen as Empress of India,famine of 1877-78 ; the second Afghan campaign, 498, 499; Lord Ripon (1880-84); end of the second Afghan campaign, rendition of Mysore to itshereditary Hindu dynasty, internaladministration reforms, Local Govern-

ment Acts, amendment of criminalprocedure, reconstitution of the Agri-cultural Department, revenue reforms,the Education Commission, abolitionof customs duties, Bengal TenancyBill, 499-501 ; Earl of Dufferin (1884),501 ; annexation of Upper Burma(1886), 501 ; Russian attack on theAfghans at Penjdeh (1885), 502 ; theQueens Jubilee (1887), 503; Marquessof Lansdowne (1888-93), 5°3 > progressof self-government, 503 ; the Indian National Congress , 504 ; Lord CrossAct (1892), 504; Manipur (1891),504; Russian aggression on thePamirs (1891-92), 505 ; Burmese pro-gress, 506; the fall of the rupee,5°6-

History of British India , by J. Mill,quoted, 372 (footnote) ; 428 (foot-note).

History of India , by the Hon. Mount- stuart Elphinstone , quoted, 323 (foot-note) ; 346 (footnote); 358 (footnote);360 (footnotes); 364 (footnote).

History of India as told by its oxvnHistorians , by Sir Henry Elliot ,quoted, 324; 340 (footnote) ; 346

(footnotes); 351 (footnote); 358 (foot-note) ; 360 (footnote); 364 (footnote);371 (footnote).

History of the Settlements and Trade ofthe Europeans in the East and WestIndies , by Abbe Raynal , quoted, 438(footnote).

History of the French in India , byColonel Malleson , 445 (footnote).

History of the Mardthas , by James Grant Duff , quoted, chap. xii. pp. 375-382,footnotes, passim.

History of the Mardthas , by E. ScottWaring, quoted, 375 (footnote).

Hiuen Tsiang, Chinese Buddhist pilgrim,34 ; 142, 145 ; 200 and footnote; 201,202 ; 225, 226 ; 229.

Hodgson, Brian Houghton, his works onthe Himalayas , 42 ; his Aborigines ofIndia , quoted, 398 (footnote 1).

Hodson, Major, shot the princes at Delhi

(1857), 493-

Hoernle, Rudolph, Comparative Grammarof the Gaudian Languages, quoted,144 (footnote 4), 394, 395 (footnote 1);and Grierson, Comparative Graimnarof the Bihdri Language , quoted, 394(footnote 2); 395 (footnote 1); hisviews on non-Aryan elements in NorthIndian languages, 399 and footnote.

Hog, wild, The, 759.

Holkar , family name of the chief of theMaratha State of Indore ; rise of thefamily to power, 380; war with theBritish , 381.