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Common terms and phrasesacquired Alexander Alexandria America ancient appear Arabian gulf Arrian arts Asia attention authority Bactria Brahmins cape Comorin caravans carried Caspian Caspian sea charter China church cities civil coast colony commerce commodities concerning conquests considerable Constantinople continued conveyed Coromandel coast d'Anville deemed degree discovery dominion east Egypt empire England English errour established Europe Europeans extended favourable formed Greek Herodotus Hindoos Hist hundred ideas Indostan Indus industry inhabitants intercourse island king kingdom knowledge land mahomedans manner Massachusets Megasthenes ment mentioned merchants mode modern monarch nations natives nature navigation Note object observed opinion opulence Persian Persian gulf persons ports Portuguese possession productions progress provinces Ptolemy reign religion rendered respect river Romans sailed Sanskreet Scylax Sect seems settled settlements ships silk situation spirit Strabo Syria Taprobane thousand tion torn trade with India Venetians vessels viii Virginia visited voyage Popular passagesPage 271 - From that time, like everything else which falls into the hands of the Mussulman, it has been going to ruin, and the discovery of the passage to India by the Cape of Good Hope gave the deathblow to its commercial greatness. Page 71 - English woollen and other manufactures and commodities ; and in making England a staple, not only of the commodities of those plantations, but also of the commodities of other countries and places, for the supplying of them... Page 298 - This Pagoda is situated about a mile from the western extremity of the island of Seringham, formed by the division of the great river Caveri into two channels. " It is composed of seven square enclosures, one within the other, the walls of which are twenty-five feet high, and four thick. Page 334 - THIS is the idea which Abul Fazel, who examined the opinions of the Brahmins with the greatest attention and candour, gives of their theology. " They all," says he, " believe in the unity of the Godhead ; and although they hold images in high veneration, it is only because they represent celestial beings, and prevent the thoughts of , those who worship them from... Page 52 - If your majesty places any faith in those books, by distinction called divine, you will there be instructed that God is the God of all mankind, not the God of mahomedans alone. Page 55 - Instruction,' in a series of connected fables, interspersed with moral, prudential, and political maxims. Page 313 - Wise men, who have abandoned all thought of the fruit which is produced from their actions, are freed from the chains of birth, and go to the regions of eternal happiness k. Page iii - THE HISTORY OF AMERICA. BOOKS IX. AND X. CONTAINING THE HISTORY OF VIRGINIA, TO THE YEAR 1688; AND THE HISTORY OF NEW ENGLAND, TO THE YEAR 1652. Page 55 - Greek ; and those not in technical and metaphorical terms, which the mutation of refined arts and improved manners might have occasionally introduced, but in the groundwork of language, in monosyllables, in the names of numbers, and the appellations of such things as would be first discriminated on the immediate dawn of civilization. Page 27 - Anciennes Relations des Indes, et de la Chine, de deux Voyageurs Mahometans, qui y allèrent dans le Neuvième Siècle, traduites de l'Arabe, avec des Remarques sur les principaux Endroits de ces Relations. References to this bookFrom Google ScholarEquity, utility and transaction costs: On the origin of judicial ...Estrella Trincado Bibliographic information |