| Henry Bower - English language - 1852 - 116 pages
...and cultivated and reared in Hindusthan. numerous tribe or nation. The traditions that evidence the early settlement of the Hindus in this quarter, ascribe...they were a colony of priests, not in the restricted sense in which we use the term, but in that in which it still applies in India, to an Agrabara, a village... | |
| Fitzedward Hall - 1864 - 388 pages
...and could not have been the site of any numerous tribe or nation. The traditions that evidence the early settlement of the Hindus in this quarter, ascribe...they were a colony of priests, not in the restricted sense in which we use the term, but in that in which it still applies in India, to an Agrahara, a village... | |
| John Garrett - Hinduism - 1871 - 814 pages
...numerous tribe or nation. The traditions that evidence the early settlement of the Hindus in this qnarter, ascribe to the settlers more of a philosophical and...they were a colony of priests, not in the restricted sense in which we use the term, but in that in which it still applies in India, to an Agrahara, a village... | |
| John Garrett (director of public instruction in Mysore.) - 1871 - 814 pages
...numerous tribe or nation. The traditions that evidence the early settlement of the Hindus in this qnarter, ascribe to the settlers more of a philosophical and...they were a colony of priests, not in the restricted sense in which we use the term, but in that in which it still applies in India, to an Agrnhara, a village... | |
| John Garrett - Hinduism - 1871 - 980 pages
...and could not have been the site of any numerous tribe or nation. The traditions that evidence the early settlement of the Hindus in this quarter, ascribe...and combine, with the very narrow bounds of the holy laud ; to render it possible, that the earliest emigrants were the members, not of a political, so... | |
| John Garrett - Hinduism - 1871 - 978 pages
...and could no£ have been the site of any numerous Jribe or nation. The traditions that evidence the early settlement of the Hindus in this quarter, ascribe...the settlers more of a philosophical and religious, thau of a secular character, and combine, with the very narrow bounds of the holy land ; to render... | |
| |