MALAYAN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 77 



Bennet, George— 



Wanderings in New South Wales, Batavia, Redir Coast, 

 Singapore, and China in 1832-4 — 2 vols. %vo. — 1834. 



Borie, Father— 



An Account of the Aborigines of the Malay Peninsula and 

 of the Malayan and other Tribes at present inhabiting it — Trans- 

 lated from two letters of the French Missionary, Father Borie, 

 at present stationed at Ayer Salah, Malacca — Straits Times 

 Office. [No date of publication ; original dates 1st November, 

 1857, and 26th April, 1863.] 



Braddell,T- 



Abstract of the Sijara Malay u, or Malayan Annals — Trans- 

 lated by T. Braddell (from Vol. V. of the Journal of the 

 Indian Archipelago, commencing at p. 125 et seq.) 



Calendar of State Papers- 

 Colonial Series, East Indies, China, and Japan, 1513-1616. 



Chinaman Abroad, The— 



An Account of the Malayan Archipelago — 8vo. — London, 

 1850. (3/6.) 



Collingwood, Cuthbert, m.a., m.b.— 



Rambles of a Natwralist on ike Shores and Waters of the 

 China Sea. Being Observations in Natural History during a 

 Voyage to China, Formosa, Borneo, Singapore, Sfc, made in Her 

 Majesty's Vessels in 1866-1867 — John Murray, London, 1868. 



Colonial Office List, The— 



Historical and Statistical Information respecting the Colo- 

 nial Dependencies of Great Britain, an Account of th-e Services 

 of the Officers of the several Colonial Governments, a Transcript 

 of the Colonial Regulations, and other Information, with Maps ; 

 compiled from Official Records, by the permission of the Secretary 

 of State for lite Colonies — by Edward Fairfield, of the Colo- 

 nial Office — ( annual ) — Harrisox, 59, Pall Mall, London. 



Crawfurd, John— 



A Descriptive Dictionary of the Indian Islands and 

 Adjacent Countries — by John Craweerd, e. r. s. — Bradbury 

 & Evans, 11, Bouverie Street, London, 1856. 



A rnost useful woik of leference legardiug all matterr— political, geographi- 

 cal, or scientific— connected with the Malayan Countries. It includes the" vr hole 

 of Malaya from Sumatra to the Philippines and New Guinea. It must, however, be 

 stated that the author had, in common with others in the Straits in 1824 when ho 

 was a Resident, less acquaintance with the Malay Peninsula than with any of tht 

 other districts which he describe.?. 



