of Messrs W. H. Allen &= Co.'s Publications. 41 



HOWARD HENSMAN, Special Correspondent of the "Pioneer" 

 {Allahahmi) and the "Daily News " (London). 

 The Afghan War, 1879-80. Being a complete Narrative of the Capture 

 of Cabul, the Siege of Sherpur, the Battle of Ahmed Khel, the March 

 to Candahar, and the defeat of Ayub Khan. With Maps. Demy 8vo, 



"Sir Fredoriok Koberts says of the letters here published in a collected form that 

 nothing could be more accurate or graphic' As to accuracy no one can be a more 

 competeiit judge than Sir Prederiok, and his testimony stamps the book before us as 

 constituting especially trustworthy material for history. Of much that he relates Mr 

 uensman was an eye-witness ; of the rest he was informed by eye-witnesses immedi- 

 ately after the oocurrance of the events recorded. We are assured by Sir Frederick 

 KoDerts that Mr Hensman's accuracy is complete in all respects. Mr Hensman enjoyed 

 singnlar advantages during the first part of the war, for he was the only special corre- 

 spondent who accompanied the force which marched out of All Kheyl in September 

 ISitl. One of the most interesting portions of the book is that which describes the 

 march of Sir Frederick Roberts from Oabu! to Oandahar. Indeed, the book is in 

 every respect interesting and well written, and reflects the greatest credit on the 

 B,nthor."—Alhena'iim. 



Sir H. HUNTER. 

 A Statistical Account of Bengal. 20 vols. Demy 8vo, £(>. 



1. Twenty-four Parganas and Sundar- 7. Meldah, Eangpur, Dinajpur, 



bans. 8. Kajshahf and Bogra. 



2. N adiya and Jessor. 9. Murshidabad and Pabna. 



3. Midnapur, Hugli, and Hourah. 10. Darjiling, Jalpaigurf, and Kutch 



4. Bardwan. Birbhum, and Bankhura. Behar State. 



5. Dacca, Bakar^anj, Faridpur, and 11. Patna and Saran. 



Maimansinh. ]2, Gaya and Shahabad. 



C. Chittagoog Hill Tracts, Chiltagong, 13. Tirhut and Ohamparan. 



Noakhali, Tipperah, and Hill 14. Bhagalpurand Santal Parganas. 



Tipperah State. 15. Monghyr and Purniah. 



Bengal MS. Records, a selected list of Letters in the Board of Revenue, 

 Calcutta, 17S2-1807, with an Historical Dissertation and Analytical 

 Index. 4 vols. Demy Svo, 30s. 

 " This is one of the small class of original works that compel a reconsideration of 

 views which have been long accepted and which have passed into the current history 

 of the period to which they refer. Sir William Wilson Hunter's exhaustive examination 

 of the actual state of the various landed classes of Bengal during the last century 

 renders impossible the further acceptance of these hitherto almost indisputable d.icta 

 of Indian history. The chief materials for that examination have been the contem- 

 porary MS. records preserved in the Board of Revenue, Calcutta, of which Sir William 

 Hunter gives a list of 14,136 letters dealing with the period from 1782 to 1807. Nothing 

 could be more impartial than the spirit in which he deals with the great questions 

 involved. He makes the actual facts, as recorded by these letters, written at the 

 time, speak for themselves. But those who desire to learn how that system grew out 

 of the pre-existing land rights and land usages of the province will find a clear and 

 authoritative explanation. If these four volumes stood alone they would place their 

 author in the first rank of scientific historians ; that is, of the extremely limited 

 class of historians who write from original MSS. and records. But they do not stand 

 alone. They are the natural continuation of the author's researches, nearly a genera- 

 tion ago, among the District Archives of Bengal, which produced his ' Annals of 

 Rural Bengal' in 1868 and his ' Orissa' in 1872. They are also the first-fruits of that 

 comprehensive history of India on which he has been engaged for the last twenty years, 

 for which he has collected in each province of India an accumulation of tested local 

 materials such as has never before been brought together in the hands, and by the 

 labours, of any worker in the same stupendous field, and which, when completed, will 

 be the fitting crown of his lifelong services to India. These volumes are indeed an 

 important instalment towards the projected inagnwin opus; and in this connection 

 it is of good augury to observe that they maintain their author's reputation for that 

 fulness and minuteness of knowledge, that grasp of principles and philosophic insight, 

 and that fertility and charm of literary expression which give Sir William Hunter his 

 unique place among the writers of his day on India." — The Times. 



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