| English literature - 1825 - 798 pages
...the Jumnn, there wns a military defect in the situation, to which it must be supposed the Maharajah had never adverted. About twenty miles south of Gwalior....two routes by which carriages, and perhaps cavalry, canyass that chain ; one along the little Sinde, and another not far from the Chumbal. By my seizing,... | |
| John Malcolm - India - 1826 - 626 pages
...hills, covered with the tangled wood peculiar to India, extends from the little Scind to the Chumbul, which rivers form the flank boundaries of the Gwalior...cavalry, can pass that chain; one along the little Scind, and another not far from the Chumbul. By my seizing with the centre a position which would bar... | |
| George Robert Gleig - British - 1835 - 344 pages
...hills, covered with the tangled wood peculiar to India, extends from the little Scind to the Chumbul, which rivers form the flank boundaries of the Gwalior...dependencies. There are but two routes by which carriages, perhaps cavalry, can pass that chain, one along the little Scind, and another not far from the Chumbul.... | |
| William Cooke Taylor - China - 1842 - 524 pages
...hills, covered with the tangled wood peculiar to India, extends from the little Scind to the Chumbul, which rivers form the flank boundaries of the Gwalior...cavalry, can pass that chain ; one along the little Scind, and another not far from the Chumbul. By my seizing, with the centre, a position which would... | |
| Henry Beveridge - India - 1862 - 796 pages
...ChumAD 1817. bul, which rivers form the flank boundaries of the Gwalior district and itdependencies. There are but two routes by which carriages and perhaps...cavalry can pass that chain, one along the Little Sindh and another not far fr°m the Chumbul. By my seizing, with the centre, a position which wodl... | |
| James Grant - India - 1876 - 602 pages
...abrupt hills, covered with tangled wood peculiar to India, extends from the Little Sindh to the Chumbui, which rivers form the flank boundaries of the Gwalior district and its dependencies. There are two long routes by which carriages, and perhaps cavalry, can pass that chain, one along the Little... | |
| Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons - Great Britain - 1832 - 510 pages
...hills, covered with the tangled wood peculiar to India, extends from the little Sind to the Chumbul, which rivers form the flank boundaries of the Gwalior...cavalry, can pass that chain ; one along the little Sind, and another not far from the Chumbul. By my seizing with the centre division a position which... | |
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