CIV 



Index . 



u 



» 



if 



Char]a, 179, 184. 



Chatgaon, Conquest of, 1666 A.D., 



405. 

 „ Doings of the Pirates of, 



422. 



New Government of, 



416. 

 Old, described, 420. 

 in Magh hands, 421, 



Chatta Mukund Das, Description of, 



583. 

 Chando-ratnakara, a treatise on 



metres, 130. 



Chando-ratnakara-nimabySarrajiia- 

 ratnlkara Santiplda, 130. 



Cheetas, Ibn Kushajim on, 49. 



Cherrag Falcon, Note on the, 179. 



Chilam, 553. 



Chilang,553. 



Chilomenes sp., 520, 522, 



CLinghis Khan, Invasion of Tibet 

 by, 109. 



Chins, A fish-trap used by, 441. 



Chital Chargh, 114, 180. 



Choikyi-hod, I^ma, his improve- 

 ment on the square-shaped Mon- 

 golian characters, 111. 



Choi-kyi-brfcson-ljgras, the Tibetan 

 author, 547. 



Christian Cemetery in Haiderabad, 



An Old, 595. 

 Chronology of Indian Authors, by 



Nilmani Chakravarti, 



205. 



„ of Mughal Emnerors, 57. 

 Chufcki Cotton, 518. 

 Chuz, 40, 187. 

 Chyngiemgo, Ixxiv. 

 Cissa chinensis, 398. 



)» 



sinensis^ 398. 



»9 



n 



f9 



Clay tablets from Malayan Peninsula, 

 Notes on, 459. 



Code-langnage amongst the Per- 

 sians, Note on, 619. 

 Coins of Ala-ud-din of Khwarizm 



64, 65. 

 „ Bahmani Kings, 53. 

 „ Nizam Shahi Dynasty, 51. 

 „ Shah Jahan III, 64. 

 „ Siddha Raja Jaya Simha 



Chanlukya of Anhilvada, 

 51. 



„ „ the Later Mughal Emperors 



of Delhi, 591. 

 Connor, Captain P. P. :— On Recur- 

 rent Elephantiasis, xcvi. 



Coolies in Upper Assam, On the Diet 

 of, 103, 



Coracias garrula, preyed on by Mer- 

 lins, 396. 



IS 



99 



( Coracias t'ndica, preyed on by Mer- 

 lins, 396. 

 Corby, Indian, 115, 



Corchorus aciitanguluSy 625, 



„ caps^ilariSj On three varie- 

 ties of, which are eaten, 

 633, 

 marxia, 633. 

 olitorhis, 625, 637, 638. 

 Coriander, Nutritive matter in, 105. 

 Corvus cora^Vt Habits of, 115. 



„ spleyideiis, 398. 

 Cotton in Behar, Pollination of, 517. 

 Cruciferaj, A new genus of the, 559. 

 Cunningham, J. A., and Satis Chan- 

 dra Mnkerji ; — The Electrical state 

 of Nascent Gases, 193. 



D 



DaemonoropSf in a fish-trap, 441, 



Dana S'rila, Pandit, 250. 



Das, S. C, Rai Bahadar :— Onthe "In- 

 troduction of written language 

 into Mongolia in the Thirteenth 

 Century," 109. 



Delhi, Coins of the later Mughal 

 Emperors of, 591. 



Desmodium pulcherrimum, 625. 



Devendrabhadra, the Indian sage, 

 575. 



Devendx-abodhi, the Tibetan teacher, 

 542. 



Dgah-wahi-rdo-rje, the Tibetan in- 

 terpreter monk, 242. 



Dge-wahi-blos-gro3, the Tibetan in- 

 terpreter monk, 542. 



Dge-wahi-bses-gnen-tog-^in-dpon-po, 

 Tibefcnn translator, 124. 



Dhanabhadra Kirti, 128. 



Dhanya Kataka, the Great Caitya 

 temple of, 221. 



Dharma Dhata Mandala, the Mys- 

 tic Spiritual Circle, 225, 

 Dharmaklrti, Works of, 98. 

 Dharmapala, Work by, 123. 

 Dliarmottara, author of many works 



on Logic, 247, 250. 

 "Works of, 100. 

 Annotator of Pramtina 



I) 



3> 



)> 



n 



Yiniscaya, 546. 

 Dhodhar or raven, 135. 



Diet of the Tea Garden coolies in 



Upper Assam, 103. 

 Dignaga, Mediaeval painting of, xcv. 

 „ Nyava Pravesa of, 609. 

 „ Works of, 96. 

 Dignaga's *' Wheel of Eeasons," 627. 

 Diijnaga, the Tarka Pungava (chief 

 logician), 222. 



