XXX Annual Report. (February, 1906. 
in addition to an account of the various monasteries in Tibet and 
the rise of different sects of Buddhism in that country, throw con- 
h 
acquaintance with Pali and Tibetan. His paper on Anurudha 
ra, who was born at Kanchi and whose chief work was done 
authority on Indian Logic flourished, and this conclusion agrees 
substantially with that of Mahamahopadhyaya Haraprasad Sastri, 
who placed him |in the 5th century and varies slightly from the 
result obtained by the Japanese scholar Takakusu, who, in a power- 
ful article on Vasubandhu, contributed to the Royal Asiatic 
by Erskine. It must be conceded, however, that the history of 
the Mahomedan period deserves greater attention at the hands of 
our members 
In the department of the physical and natural sciences, we 
rs. 
Peninsula by Sir George King and Mr. Gamble. Dr. Annandale’s 
Zoological contributions include papers on Indian snakes describ- 
ing the additions made to the collection in the Indian Museum, 
