of Messrs W. H. Allen 6^ Coh Publications. 43 



G. P. SANDERSON, Officer in Charge of the Government 

 Elephant Keddahs. 

 Thirteen Years among the Wild Beasts of India; their Haunts 

 and Habits, from Personal Observation. With an account of the 

 Modes of Capturing and Taming Wild Elephants. With 21 full-page 

 Illustrations, Reproduced for this Edition direct from the original 

 drawings, and 3 Maps. Fifth Edition. Fcap. 4to, 12s. 

 " We find it difficult to hasten through this interesting book ; on almost every page 

 some incident or some happy descriptive passage t«mpt8 the reader to linger. The 

 author relates his exploits with ability and with singular modesty. His adventures 

 with man-eaters will afford lively entertainment to the reader, and indeed there is no 

 portion of the volume which he is likely to wish shorter. The illustrations add to the 

 attractions of the book." — Pall Mall Gazette. 



"This is the best and most practical book on the wild game of Southern and 

 Eastern India that we have read, and displays an extensive acquaintance with natural 

 history. To the traveller proposing to visit India, whether he be a sportsman, a 

 naturalist, or an antiquarian, the book will be invaluable: full of incident and sparkling 

 with anecdote." — Bailey's Magazine. 



ROBERT SEWELL, Madras Civil Service. 

 Analytical History of India. From the Earliest Times to the Aboli- 

 tion of the East India Company in 1858. Post 8vo, 8s. 

 " Much labour has been expended on this work." — Athenaeum. 



EDWARD THORNTON. 

 A Gazetteer of the Territories under the Government of the Vice- 

 roy of India. New Edition, Edited and Revised by Sir Roper 

 Lethbridge, C. I. E. , late Press Commissioner in India, and Arthur N. 

 Wollaston, H.M. Indian (Home) Civil Service, Translator of the 

 " Anwar-i-Suhaili." In one volume, 8vo, 1,000 pages, 28s. 



Hunter's "Imperial Gazetteer" has been prepared, which is not only much 

 more ample than its predecessor, but is further to be greatly enlarged in the New 

 Edition now in course of production. In these circumstances it has been thought 

 incumbent, when issuing a New Edition of Thornton's " Gazetteer " corrected up to 

 date, to modify in some measure the plan of the work by omitting much of the 

 detail and giving only such leading facts and figures as will suffice for ordinary pur- 

 poses of reference, a plan which has the additional advantage of reducing the work to 

 one moderate-sized volume. 



It is obvious that the value of the New Edition must depend in a large measure 

 upon the care and judgment which have been exercised in the preparation of the 

 letterpress. The task was, in the first instance, undertaken by Mr Roper Lethbridge, 

 whose literary attainments and acquaintance with India seemed to qualify him to a 

 marked degree for an undertaking demanding considerable knowledge and experience. 

 But in order further to render the work as complete and perfect as possible, the 

 publishers deemed it prudent to subject the pages to the scrutiny of a second Editor, 

 in the person of Mr Arthur Wollaston, whose lengthened service in the Indian Branch 

 of the Civil Service of this country, coupled with his wide acquaintance with Oriental 

 History, gives to his criticism an unusual degree of weight and importance. The 

 joint names which appear on the title-page will, it is hoped, serve as a guarantee t-o 

 the public that the '• Gazetteer" is in the main accurate and trustworthy, free alike 

 from sins of omission and commission. It will be found to contain the names of many 

 hundreds of places not included in any former edition, while the areas and popula- 

 tions have been revised by the data given in the Census Report of 1881. 



*»* The chief objects in view in compiling this Gazetteer are: — 



1st. To fix the relative position of the various cities, towns, and villages with as 

 much precision as possible, and to exhibit with the greatest practicable brevity all 

 that is known respecting them ; and 



2ndly. To note the various countries, provinces, or territorial divisions, and to 

 describe the physical characteristics of each, together with their statistical, social, 

 and political circumstances. 



Any Bookseller at Home and Abroad, 



