32 "WOXtSS FVBX<ISHSI> BT SIKTITH, EXBEB. ANH CO. 



THE CALCUTTA REVIEW. 



PUBLISHED QUARTERLY, AND RECEIVED REGULARLY BY 



THE OVERLAND MAIL.) 



Nos. I. to XII., Price 6s. each. 



Containing, among other valuable papers, articles on the follovvino- 

 subjects: — in Biography, Lord Tcignmouth, Lord William Bentinck, 

 Sir W. H. Macnaghten, Sir Philip Francis, Rammohun Roy, &c. ; in 

 Contemporary History, the War in China, the Ameers of Sindh, 

 the Recent History of the Punjab, the Administration of Lord Ellen- 

 borough, the Kingdom of Oude, the Recent Operations in the Kolapore 

 country, &c. ; in Philology, Sanskrit Literature, the Urdu Language 

 and Literature, &c.; in Eastern Ethnography, the Kulin Brahmins, 

 the Khonds, the Sikhs, &c. ; in Social History, Manners and 

 Customs, &c., the English in India, Society Past and Present, the 

 Social Morality of the English in India, Romance and Reality of 

 Indian Life, Englishwomen in Hindustan, Married Life in India, &c.; 

 in Education, Addiscombe, Haileybury, the College of Fort William, 

 Indigenous Education in Bengal and Behar, Early Educational efforts 

 of Government, &c. ; in Topography, Statistics, &c., the Punjab, 

 Kashmir, the Himalayas, Rohilcund, the Cape of Good Hope, the 

 Right and Left Banks of the River Hooghly, &c. ; in Science, the 

 Algebra of the Hindus, the Astronomy of the Hindus, the Great 

 Trigonometrical Survey, Indian Railways, &c. ; in Missionary 

 History, Economy, &c., the Earliest Protestant Mission, the Jesuits 

 in India, Literary Fruits of Missionary Labours, Missionary efforts of 

 Indian Chaplains, the Mahomedan Controversy, &c. ; with a large 

 number of articles relating to various other Oriental subjects. 



These articles, written by gentlemen long resident in India, connected 

 ■with the Civil and Military services, the Missionary establishments, the 

 Bar, the Church, Commerce, the Press, &c., contain, in a condensed 

 form, an immense mass of information relating to the subjects of which 

 they treat — information which has hitherto been scattered over an 

 extensive surface, and therefore, beyond the reach of the majority of 

 readers, whilst, at the same time, a large body of original intelligence 

 of the most authentic character has been added to these various 

 compendia of existing information. The Review, which is the organ 

 of no party, and no sect, and supported by men of all shades of opinion, 

 aims at the collection and production in a popular form of all that is 

 important in the history, the politics, the topography, the statistics, the 

 philology, the manners and customs, the political and domestic economy, 

 &c. &c., of the countries and people of the East. The form of publica- 

 tion, and the general design, is similar to that of the leading European 

 reviews, excepting that it is in no wise a party publication, and is 

 devoted exclusively to Oriental subjects. I 



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