Jan., 1920.| Proceedings of the Asiat. Soc. of Bengal. iii 
‘* Ancient Coins and Measures of Ceylon ”’ (1877). 
** Hibbert Lectures’’ (1881). Six in number, of which the 
first and most important considers the proper place of Bud- 
dhism in the development of religious thought, and the third 
gives a sound and erudite exposition of the seve a of Karma. 
**Sacred Books of the East,’ Buddhist Suttas 
Dhalosus: of the Buddha ” (1899 and 1910). 
‘** Buddhist India” (1902). 
‘* Karly Buddhism ”’ (1908), e 
Few writers have He ees so much to the knowledge 
of Buddhism as he. The writer of this monograph had 
honour of ioming in personal touch with him when he ca 
to India in 1904 to pursue his investigations and researches a ns 
Kapilavastu. 
Prof. Sylvain Levi. 
Prof. Sylvain Levi, a iy oe Tapes air scholar, was an 
inhabitant of Alsace. His family c o Paris after the occu- 
pation cf that country by the atieiae The Professor 
early distinguished himself by his exhaustive work entitled 
of the Vedic sacrifices in Cees In 1897 he came to India 
Buddhist and Hindu manuscripts, and wrote his history of 
he manuscripts collected, he has edited and tran- 
stated. the Mahayana Sitralankara, a work on the Yogacara 
system of Philosophy of the Buddhist by is ioe the — 
of Vasubyandu, in the 5th Century A. e is now engage 
in deciphering the vast mass of manuscripts and other mater 
ials unearthed in the deserts of Ya an and Gobi 
Central Asia. His Chinese studies have resulted in throwing 
light on many obscure points of the history of India and her 
literature. 
Sir Mare Aurel Stein. 
INDIA. 
1892. Rajatarangini, ed. of Sanskrit text. 
1900. Rajatarangini, annotated transl., 2 Vols. 
1905. Archeological Survey Progress Report. 
CENTRAL ASIA. 
First Expedition. 
1903. Sand-buried ae ms = 1 Vol. 
1907. Ancient Khotan, 
1908. Mountain eT nee Geogr. Soc.). 
