FOR THE PEOPLE FOR EDVCATION FOR SCIENCE LIBRARY OF THE AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY I linund ^ PROCEEDINGS OP THE ASIATIC SOCIETY OF BENGAL EDITED BY The Honof\ai\y Seci\etai\y, ^ JANUARY TO DECEMBER, 1901. CALCUTTA : PRINTED AT THE BAPTIST MISSION PRESS, AND PDBLISHED BY THE ASIATIC SOCIETY, 57, PARK STREET. 1902. ?ya /^? a CONTENTS Proceedings for January, 1901 Ditto ,, February „ (including Annual Report) Ditto „ March and April, 1901 Ditto ,, May and June „ Ditto „ July „ Ditto „ August „ Ditto „ November „ Ditto ,, December ,, List of Members of the Asiatic Society on the 31st Decern ber, 1900 ( Appendix to the Proceedings for February, 1901) ... Abstract Statement of Receipts and Disbursements of tlie Asiatic Society for the year 1900 (^ Appendix to the Proceedings for February, 1901) List of all Societies, Institutions, &c., to which the publica- tions of the Asiatic Society have been sent during the year, or from which publications have been received ... I 'ages. 1-14 15-50 51-54 55-58 59-62 63-68 69-7-2 73-77 i-xvi xvu-xxv XXVl-XXXll PROCEEDINGS OF THE ASIATIC SOCIETY OF BENGAL, For January, 1901. The Monthly General Meeting of the Society was held on Wednes- day, the 2nd January, 1901, at 9 p.m. L. DE NicfviLLE, Esq., F.E.S., C.M.Z.S., in the chair. The following members were present : — Mr. J. Bathgate, Dr. T. Bloch, Mr. F. Finn, The Revd. E. Francotte, S.J., Mr. T. H. Holland, Mr. H. E. Kempthorne, Mr. W. A. Lee, Kumar Rameshvvar Malliah, Mr. J. Nicoll, Mr. 1. G. Schwaiger, Mahamahopadhyaya Haraprasad Shastri. The minutes of the last meeting were read and confirmed. Nineieen presentatious were announced. * Pandit Raraavatar Pande, B.A., I.C.S., Dr. U. C. Mookerjee, M.B., CM.; Lieut.-Col. G. F. A. Harris, I.M.S., Mr. C. A. Radice, I.C.S., Mr. K. J. Badshah, B.A., I.C.S., Mr. Duncan Campbell and Babu Kaittik Chandra Mittra, M.A., B.L., were ballotted for and elected Ordinary Members. The Revd. Thomas Fonlkes and Raja Pearymohau Mukerjee expressed a wish to withdraw from the Society. The Chairman announced that up to date no essays had been received in competition for the Elliott Prize for Scientific Research for 1900. The General Secretary reported that the Society had received for the information of intending observeis, two coj^ies of an official hand 1o-J^''fi 2 Library. [Jan., book describing the cliraatalogical conditions, etc., of the tract of moon's shadow across the Malay Archipelago during the Solar Eclipse of May 17-18, 3901. Mr. F. Finn exhibited a living specimen of a Guinea-fowl showing a feathered tassel on the throat. Mahamahopadhyaya Haraprasad Shastri exhibited Photographs of certain ancient writings on Palra-leaves. The following paper was read : — 1. A7i additional note on the identification of Vesali. — By Dk. W. HOEY. The following additions have been made to the Library from 7th December, 1899 to 5th December, 19(X). Transactions, Proceedings and Journals, presented by the respective Societies and Editors. Adelaide. Roy. Geogr. Soc, Address, 1900. Amsterdam. K. Akad. Wetensch., Jaarb., 1898 ; Proc, Vol. I ; Ver- haiidl., le Sectie, Dl. VI, Nos. 6-7 ; 2^ Sectie, Dl. VI, N"os. 3-8 ; Versl., Afd. Natuurk., Dl. VII. Angers. Soc. d'Etudes Scient., Bull, T. XXVIII. Baltimore. Johns Hopkins Univ., Circulars, Vol. XIX, No. 143; Register, 1898-99. Batavia. Genootsch. Kunst en Wetensch., Notulen, Dl. XXXVII, Nos. 3-5 ; Tijdschr. Ind. T. L en Vk., Dl. XLI, Nos. 5-6., XLII, 1-4, 6 ; Verb., Bd. LI, Nos. 2-4. Bellary. Astrol. Mag., Vol. IV, Nos. 1-7. Berlin. Eutom. Zeitschr., Bd. XXV, Nos. 1., XXVI, 2., XXVIII, 1., XXXV, 1-2., XXXVI, 1., XXXVIII, 3., XXXIX, 1-2., XL, 1-4.. XLIV, 1-4; Kongl. Bibliothek, Handschriften-Verzeichnisse, T., XXII, XXXIII, Pts. 1-2 ; K. Preuss. Akad. Wissensch., Sitzb., Nos. 39-53, lb99., 1-38, 1900 ; Labor, et Mus., Nos. 1-2, 7-8, 1900 ; Sem. f. Orient. Sprachen, Mittheil., Bd. Ill; Zeitschr. fiir Ethuol., Nos. 2-3, 1899., 1-3, 1900. 1901.] Library. 3 Bombay. Anthropl. Soc, Journ., Vol. V, Nos. 1-2 ; Bombay Br. Roy. Asiai-, Soc, Journ., Vol. XX, No. 55., Extra No. of 1900 ; lud Antiquary, Vols. XXVIII, Pts. 359, No. 2., XXIX, 360-71. Bordeaux. Soc. Linn., Actes, T. LIII. Boston, Amer. Phil. Assoc, Trans, and Proc, Vol. XXX ; Soc. Nat. Hist., Proc, T. XXIX, Nos. 1-8. Braunschweig. Ver. fiir Naturw., Jahresb., 1897-98., 1898-99. Brisbane. Agii. Journ., Vols. V, Nos. 5-6., VI, 1-6., VII, 1-5., Supp. to No. 1 ; Depart. Agri., Rep., 1898-99 ; Roy. Soc, Proc, Vol. XV. Brussels. Acad. Roy. Sci., Annuaire, 1898-99; Bull., 3™^ Ser., T. XXXIV-XXXVI ; Tables Generales, T. I-XXX ; Mem., T. LIII ; Tables Generales, 1872-97 ; Mem. Cour., T. XLVIIT, Pt. 2., LV, LVII ; Mem. Cour. et des Savants etrangers, T. LV-LVI ; Mus. du Congo, Ann., Bot., Ser. I, T. I, Nos. 3, 6., H, I, 2 (2nd part) ; Zool., Ser. I, T. I, No. 5 ; Soc Entom., Ann., T. XLIII ; Soc Roy. Malac, Ann., T. XXXI, No. 2., XXXIII. Budapest. Acad. Hongr. Sci., Rep., 1898 ; Aquila, Bd. VI, Nos. 1-3 ; Magr. Tud. Akad., Ert. a nyelv-es szept. Kdrebol, K. XVII, Nos. 1-2 ; Math, und Naturw. Berichte aus Ungarn, Bd. XV ; Nyelvtud. Kozlemenyek, K. XXVIII, Nos. 3-4., XXIX, 1-2. Buenos Aires. Mus. Nac, Comunic, T. I, Nos. 5-6. Buffalo. Soc Nat. Sci., Bull., T. VI, Nos. 2-4. Caen. Soc Linn,, Bull, 5*^ Ser., T. I, Nos. 2-4., T. II ; Mem., T. XIX. Calcutta. Agri. Ledger, Nos. 9-12, 1899., 1-18, 1900; Agri. Horti. Soc. Itid., Proc. and Journ., October 1899 to September 1900 ; Geol. Sur. Ind., Genl. Rep., 1899-1900 ; Mem., Vols. XXIX, XXX, Pts. 1-2 ; Paleeontologia ludica, Ser. IX, Vols. II, Pts. 2., XV, HI, 1-2 ; Ind. and Eastern Engr., New Series, Vols. V, Nos. 6., VT, 1-6., VII, 1-5 ; Ind. Engineering, Vols. XXVI, Nos. 24-27., XXVII, 1-26., XXVIII, 1-23 ; Ind. Gardening and Planting, Vol. VI, Nos. 15-17 ; Ind. Lancet, Vols. XIV, Nos. 12., XV, 1-12., XVI, 1-2, 7-8, 11 ; Ind. Meteor. Mem., Vols. VI, Pts. 6-7., XI, 1-2., XII, 1 ; Indian Weather Rev., Ann. Sum., 1899 ; Mahabodhi Soc, Journ., Vols. VIII, Nos. 8-12., IX; 1-7 ; Monthly Weather Rev., June 1899 to July 1900 ; Photo. Soc Ind., Journ., Vols. XII, Nos. 2., XIII, Nos. 1-5, 7-12. Cambridge. Univ. Lib., Report, 1899. Cape Town. S. Afr. Mus., Ann., Vols. T, Pts. 3., II, 1-2, 4; S. Afr. Phil. Soc. Trans., Vol. XI, Pt. 1. Chicago. Field Columbian Mus., Publication, Nos. 39-42. Christiania, Vid. Selsk., Forhandl., Nos. 1-5, 1898., 2-4, 1899 ; Over- sigt, 1899; Skrifter, Nos. 2-3, 5, 1898., 4-5, 1899, 4 Library. [Jan., Cincinnati, Oliio. Lloyd Lib., Bull., No. 1, 1900. Copenhagen. Nonl. Oldk. og. Hist., Aarb., Bd. XV, No. 2 ; Soc. Roy. Antiqu. du Nord., Mem., 1899. Dresden. Entom. Zeitschr., Bd., XII, Nos. 2., XIII, 1 ; K. Ethn. Mus., Pub., Bd. XII ; K. Zool. u. Anthr.-Etbn. Mus., AbLandl. u. Ber. Bd. vii-yiii, Dublin. Roy. Dublin Soc, Econ. Proc, Vol. I, Pt. 1 ; Sci Ptoc, Vol. IX, Pt. 1 ; Sci. Trans., 2nd Ser., Vol. VII, Pts. 2-7 ; Index, Proc, Vols. I-VIII and Trans., Vols. I-VI ; Roy. Irish Acad., Proc, .3rd Ser., Vol. V, Nos. 3-5. Ediuburn<«)al Heni.ster. Bd. I-LX; Beihefte, Bd. I-VIIL, IX, Nos. 1-5. Chicago. Journ. Geol., Vols. VII, Nos. 8., VITI, 1-6. Geneva Archiv. Sci. Phys. et Nat., T. VIII, Nos. 11-12., IX, 1-6., X. 7-10. Gottingen. Kgl. Ge.sellscli. Wi.ssen Ser., Vols. V, Nos. 20., VI, 21-23 ; Journ. Bot., Vols. XXXVI, Nos. 432., XXXVIll, 440-444., XXXVIII, 454- 454 ; Jonvn. Conch., Vol. IX, Nos. 8-11 ; Mess. Math., Vols. XXIX Nos. 1-12., XXX, 1-3; Numism. Cbron., Pfcs. 2, 1899., 1-4, 3900; Namism. Cir., Vol. VIII, Nos. 85-96; Phil. Mag., Vols, XLXI, Nos. 283., XLVIIl, 291-295., XLIX, 296-301., L, 302- 304; Quart. Journ. Math., Vol. XXXI, Nos. 121-124., XXXII, 125 ; Quart. Journ. Mior. Soi., Vols. XLI, Pts. 3., XLII, 3-4., XLIII, J-3 ; Notes and Queries, 9^^ Ser., Vols. IV, Nos. 82-105., V, 106-42; Smith Rhopalocera Exotica, Pts. 50-53. New Haven. Amer. Journ. Sci., 4^^ Sei-., Vols. VI, Nos. 36., VIII, 44-48., IX, 49-55., X, 56-57. Paris. Ann. de Chira. et de Phys , December 1898., August — December 1899., January— September 1900; Acad. Sci. C. R., T. CXXVII, Nos. 19--Z2., CXXIX, 1-9, lJ-16, 18-26., CXXX, 1-26., CXXXl, 1-9; Joui-n. des Savants, November 1898., July — December 1899., January-June 1900 ; Rev. Crin., T. XLVI, Nos. 46-49., XLVIIl, 27-51., XLIX, 1—26 , L, 27-34; Rev. Ling., T. XXXII, Nos. 3-4; Rev. Scient., 4e Ser., T. X., Nos. 21-24,, Xil, 3-27., XIII, 1-26., XIV, 1-10. Vienna. Orient. Journ., Vol. XIII, Nos. 2-3. ■pOOKS PUF.CHASED. Beal, Sa.muel. Life of Hiuen-Tsiang. Bettany, G. T. World's Inhabitants. BiCKMORE, Albert S. Travels in the East Indian Archipelago. BiJHLER, Geokge. Crundriss dei- Indo-Arischen Philologie und Alter- tumskunde. Band I, 1. Heft, A., II, 1. Heft, B., Ill, 9. Heft. Campijell, a. Santali-English Dictionary. Part 2. Davids, Caroline A. F. Rhys. Buddhist Manual of P.sychological Ethics. HuLME, F. Edwaeu. Natural History Lore and Legend. 14 Library. [Jax\., 1901.] HnNTEB, Sir William Wilson. Indian Empire. New and Revised Edi- tion. Indian Army List. April to October 1900. KiRBY, W. F., AND Wttsman, P. J. Hiibner E.xotisclio Si-hmetteilinge. Parts 35-37. Malleson, Col. G. B. History of tlie French in India. New Edition. Minerva. Jahrbuch der Gelehrten Welt. 1899-1900. Gates, Eugene W. Manual of the ^anie Birds of India. Parts 1-2. Raffles, Sir Thomas Stamford. Life and Jouinals. Vols. I-II. Ryley, J. HoRTON. Ralph Fitch. England's Pioneer to India and Burma. Ripley, W. Z. Races of Europe, and Supplement. Seton-Karr, Walter Scott. Grant of Rothiemurchus : a memoir of the services of Sir John Peter Grant. Sharpe, Emily Mary Bowdler. Monograph of the Genus Teracolus. Parts 1-7. Wealth of India. Vols. V, Parts 7-12., VI, 1-12., VII, 1-6. Wellby, M. S. Through unknown Tibet. PROCEEDINGS OF TUB ASIATIC SOCIETY OF BENGAL, Foi\ February, 1901. The Anuual Meeting of the Society was held on Wednesday, the 6th February, 1901, at 9 p.m. His Honor Siu John Woodburn, M.A., K.C.S.I., President, in the chair. The following members were present : — Major A. Alcock, I. M.S., The Hon. Mr. E. N. Baker, Mr. J. Bathgate, Dr. T. Bloch, Rai Chunilal Bose Baliadur, Babu Nagendra- nath Bose, Mr. B. Chaudlmri, Mr. J. Eliot, P.R.S., Mr. A. U. Fanshawe, Mr. C. L. Giiesbach, CLE., Surgeon- General R. Harvey, Mr. E. B. Havell, Col. T. H. Hendley, C.I.E., Mr. S. C. Hill, Mr. T. H. Holland, Mr. D. Hooper, Dr. A. von Kiafft, Mr. G. W. Kiichler, Mr. W. A. Lee, Mr. L. de Niceville, Mr. J. D. Mmmo, Mr. F. E. Pargiter, Mr. A. Pedler, F.R.S., Captain L. Rogers, I. M.S., Mr. C. Saunder, Mr. I. G. Schwaiger, Mr. M. J. Seth, Mahamahopadhyaya Haraprasad Shastri, Pandit Yogeshchandra Shastri. Visitors: — Babu Bhubanmohan Chatterjee, Babu Nandalall Chat- terjee, Mr. E. C. Cotes. The President in an opening address expressed on behalf of the Society the feeling of soitow with which they had learned of the death of Her Majesty the Queen. His Honor briefly reviewed the work of the past year, and then called upon tlie General Secretary to read the Annual Report. 16 Annual Report. [Feb. Annual Report for 1900. The Council of the Society have the honor to submit tlie following Report on the state of the Society's affairs during the year ending Hist December, 1900. As regai-ds the work accomplished daring the year, time only will permit of judgment ; but with regard to the two essential conditions in the life of evei-y association, namely, member- ship and finances, the Society is to be congtatuLited on a state of affairs more satisfactory than has been the privilege of Council to leport for very many years. Member List. Our number of Ordinary Members now stands at 311, which is higlier than in any year since 1887. 44 Ordinary Members have been elected, but we have at the same time lost 34, namely, 9 by withdrawal, 6 by deatli, 4 by removal under Kule 9, 14 by removal under Rule 38 and 2 by removal under Rule 40. At the close of the year there were fdso 7 gentlemen's names before the Society as candidates for membership. According to the operation of Rule 5 it sometimes takes nearly two full months between the date of application and the election of a member, which is sometimes an inconvenient amount of delay. As the main loss has been due to the removal of names of members wlio have been in arrears for some years, tlie actual change of membership is more satisfactory than appears in the tabular comparison of the hist with the previous six years. The following table gives the statistics for the last six yeai'S : — Paying. Non-Paying. Ykab. C ® •p d 1 "5 6 < Special Non-Sabs- cribinfj. 3 o Grand Total. 1895 108 122 12 242 23 31 55 297 1896 105 119 11 235 23 35 59 294) 1897 106 115 9 230 22 35 58 288 1898 122 108 11 241 23 35 59 300 1899 120 119 13 252 21 27 49 301 1900 116 124 18 258 22 30 53 311 1901.] Annmil Rei'ort. 17 The names of the Ordinary Members whose death we regret are, Dr. John Anderson, F.R.S., Babu Aghore Chandra Bhaduii, H.R.H. The Duke of Edinburgh, Babu Rajani Kanta Gupta and Babu Guru Prasad Sen. We liave to lament also the death of a very distinguished Honorary Member, Professor The Right Hon. P. Max Miiller. Tiie lists of Special Honorary Centenary Members, Corresponding Members and Associate Members continue unaltered from last 3'ear, their numbers standing at 4, 1 and 12 respectively. During the year two members, Sayid Ali Bilgrani, A.R S M., LL.B., F.G.S., and Mr. J. W. A. Grieve compounded for their future subscriptions. Indian Museum. Mr. R. D. Oldham ceased to be a Trustee under section 3, clause 5, of the Indian Museum Act IV of 1887 and was succeeded by Mr. T. H. Holland, The other Trustees who lepresent the Society aie Mr. A, Pedler, F.R S., Dr. Mahendralal Sircm-, CLE., Mr. G. W. Kiichler, M.A., and The Most Revd. Archbishop P. Goethals, S.J. Finance. The Accounts of the Society are shown in Statement No. 1 in the appendix under the usual heads. Statement No. 8 contains the Balance Sheet of the Society and of the different Funds administered through it. The Budget Estimate for 1900 was taken at the following figures :— Receipts Rs. 16,730-0-0 ; Expenditure 16,078-0-0. The actual results were found to be: — Receipts Rs. 20,530-5-3; Expenditux-e Rs. 12,790-7-10. The receipts thus show an excess of Rs. 3,800-5-3, while the expenditure shows a saving of Rs. 3,287-8-3 on the Budget Estimate. In addition to this an unusually large sum, Rs. 1,700, has been added to the Reserve Fund on account of the exceptional number of entrance fees paid during the year. There is an increase in Receipts under the heads of Subscriptions, Sale of Publications and Government Alloicances. Subscriptions were estimated at Rs. 7,000 while the actuals were Rs. 8,852-1 6, the excess being due to some of the arrear subscriptions from member's having been realized. Owing partly to the sale of the Society's Journal, Part I, Extra No. 2 of 1899 (Dr. M. A. Stein's Memoir on Maps illustrating the Ancient Geography of Kashmir) Sale of Publications shows an increaf^e of Rs. 237-15-6. During the year, two years' contribution by ihtt 18 Annual Report. [Feb. Assam Goverimu'iit towards our Anfhropological publications were received, and tlieie is thus an increase of Rs. 2,000. On the Expenditure side tlie items of Lujhting, Mnnicipal Taxes, Meetings, Books, Journal Part II and Printing Circulars, show an excess. Owing to the settlement of some old outstanding gas-bills Lighting shows an increase of Rs. 15. Mimicipal Taxes weve estimated at Rs. 846, while the actuals have been Rs. 884-4. This was due to the increased valu- ation of the Society's premises and the increased assessment. Charges for Meetings show a slight excess of Rs. 6-13 due to advertisement charges for tlie Simla IMeeting. Owing to the adjustment of certain old bills from Messrs. R. Friedlander & Sohn, for supplying publications to the Society the account for new Boohs shows a slight increase of Rs. 35-2-2. Journal, Part II, has exceeded the butlget by Rs. 172-7. This is due to the payment of printing charges for certain numbers of 1899. During the last year a number of circulars were printed in con- nection witli the proposed reorganization of the Society and thus there is an excess of expenditure of Rs. 36-6 under the head Printing Circulars. There were three extraordinary items of expenditure dui'ing 1900, under the heads of Furniture, Royal Society's Catalogue and Catalogue of Coins not provided for in the Budget. Rs. 265-10 was spent in cleaning and renovating certain pictures belonging to the Society, and the cost of a platform for the Society's Meetings. The expenditure on the Royal Society's Catalogue has been Rs. 382-13. The balance of Rs. 3^32-8 for cataloguing the Society's coins by the late Mr. C. J. Rodgers was paid to Mrs. Rodgers. Out of Rs. 1,000 budgetted for the Society's Library Catalogue, Rs. 100 has been paid to Mr. H. B, Perie, the com- piler, on account. Owing to extra work involved, it may be necessary to enhance the compiler's remuneration to possibly R.s. 1,300, and the balance, Rs. 1,200, has consequently been budgetted for as an extra- ordinary expenditure. Besides, Rs. 6,000 has been budgetted for Repairs to the Society's premises under the same head. To meet this expendi- ture permission has been given to draw Rs. 10,000 from the Reserve Fund ; but the savings of the past year will to a great extent meet this call witliout trespassing ou the Reserve Fund. The Budget Estimate of probable ordinary Receipts and Expenditure for 1901 has been fixed as follows: — Receipts Rs. 17,430; Expenditure Rs. 16,126-4. Ou the receipt side Government Allowances have been increased by Rs. 1,000, being contribution due from the Assam Govern- ment for our Anthropological publications. The item Miscellaneous receipts is based upon the actuals of the last year. On the expenditure side, the estimate under the head of Salaries 1901.] Annual Report. 19 has beeu increased by Rs. 363-7 owingf to certain increments sanctioned to the office staff. Municipal Taxes and Meetings have also been slightly increased. A sum of Rs. 15 has been allotted for 7i'e merica, and should prove of interest both to the botanist and to the entomologist. Incidentally a list of the butterflies of the family Lvcxnidx is given which in the larval or pupal stages or both are attended by ants, 27 species of butteiflies in all. Descriptions are also eiven for the first time of the transformations of many of the butterflies. Similar lists are given of a few butterflies and their food-plants from the Western Himalayas and Kashmir. In the fifteenth paper the editor of this part of the Journ:il gives a note tin the synonvmy of the avian genus Htopactes, Swaiison, which name, being pre-oceupied, will have to fall before tyiotrogon, Bunapaite, when used for biids. The sixteenth paper of 177 pages by Major A. Alcock entitled 1901. J Annual Report. 31 " Materials for a Cavciuological Fauna of India, No. 6. The Brachyura Catometopa, or Grapsoidea.^' The paper, like its predecessors, not only contains descriptions of all the families, fjenera, and species of Indian Gatometopa, but is also a systematic nionofrrapli of the genera of the entire group. The Gatometopa ai^e here divided into nine families, all of which are newly chaiaderized, and amonfj them the Falicidie, the systematic position of which has long puzzled carcinologists, are included. 1,36 species are described, 31 of which are new to science : they fall into 55 genera, of which 8 ai-e new. The large number of new species is probably explained by the fact that the paper covers the large collections of the E.I ]\f. Survey Sliip "Investigator" — collections made for the most part in depths that lie outside the reach of ordinary collectors. Bv the publication of this paper the total number of species of Brachyurous Crustacea recorded for the Indian region is raised to GOO, exolnsivn of the freshwater Telplmsidx. The seventeenth paper by Captain L. llogers, M.D , I.M.S., is a very important one, and is entitled " Th-. relationship of the water- supply, water-logging, and the distribution of Anopheles Mosquitoa respectively, to the prevalence of Malaiia north of Calcutta" Thia paper is illustrated by a map, which unfortunately is not ready, but will be issued with a subsequent number of the Journal. The conclu- sions Dr. Rogers ai'rives at are that the quality of the water drunk by the people has chiefly to do with the prevalence of malaria in tliem, and that in India at any rate mosquitos by their bites or stings are not the prime cause of malaria, though they may play a part by taking the malarial parasite back from their human hosts to the water drunk by the people, but that a good water-supply is an important prophylactic measure in lessening the prevalence of malaria. Dr. P. C. Ray contributes the eighteenth paper, " Further Re- searches on Mercurous Nitrite and its Derivatives," and " On Mercurous Iodide and a new Method of its Preparation." A woodcut is given of the apparatus used for the first of these experiments. The nineteenth and last paper is by Mr. J, S. Gamble and Major D. Prain, and describes a new genus and species of plant of the Western Himalayas of the order Orobanchacew, the genus being named Gleadovia after the first finder of it, Mr. F. Gleadow. Journal, Part III. The number of papers read in the Anthropological Section durino* the year was three, and they were on — " The Coorgs and Yeruvas, an ethnological coutiast " by Mr. T. H. Holland, ' The Vslama Caste in J3erar ' by Captain Wolseley Haig, and ' Ancient Stone implements in 32 Avnval Rrporf. [Fkr. the Santal Parganas ' b}' Rev. P. 0. Boddint^. The fii-Bt was read at the January meeting', and the two others at that in November. In the first paper Mi-. Holland gives details of measurements made on the two largest tribes in the province of Coorg, and compares them with previously publislied results for other tribes in South India. The Yeruvas, like the Kurunibas, Irulas, Pani^-ans and otlier aboriginal tribes, arc thick-lipped, wavj-liaired, black-skinnod, platyrhine and shoit of stature. The Cooi'gs, on the contrary, stand out atnongst the people of South India by i*eason of tlieir compai'atively fair skin, great .stature (168'5 cm.), mesorhiiie (721. ) nose, siib-brachycepbalic cranium (79 9) and in many physical charaetei's gcnorall}- presented Ijy races of the so-called higher types. The much disputiMl question of Coorg caste is discussed, and, assnining the Brahiuans of S'nith India to represent the highest caste, tliat is, to lay claim to the purest Aiyaii I'elation.ship, the Author recommends the Coorgs to follow Mr. Richter's advice and despise all notions of caste. In the second paper Captain Haig describes a caste, which is numerous in the nortli-ea.stern distinets of the Madras Presidency and in the Nizam's Dominions, and has spread into Berar, and which, though agricultural now, claims a war-like ancestry, Mr. Bodding narrates in his paper how he chanced to discover the existence of ancient stone implements among the Santals under the name of ' thunderbolls.' They liolieve that such .stones fall irom the sky with liglitning and attribute great medicinal virtues to thom. He descril)es with the aid of plates the stones which lie has succeeded in collecting and explains their supposed virtues. His discovery is inter- esting in that it furnishes a ready clue towards finding similar articles elsewhere, by enquiring simply about ' thunder-bolts.' The publication in the Anthropological or Third part of tlie Journal for the year 1900 will be that of one paper, Col. AVaddell's ' Wild Tribes of the Biahma-putra Valley.' It was read at the November meeting in 1899, but there has been a most regrettable delay in issuing it, for, when the paper was being printed, the Author was ordered away to join the expedition to China during the middle of the year and has been absent ever since, and the publication has been greatly impeded. It is hoped, howevei-, that he will be able to finish it soon. The paper gives a description of the tribes, their divisions, manners, (Histonis and leligious ideas, and also copious anthropometrical informa- tion ; and it will be ('inl)ellislied with a lai'ge number of photographic illustrations. The didicully which has attended this paper has delayed otlier papers, but they will be issued eai-ly during the present year. 19Ul.] Annual Report. 33 Coins. During the last year the Society lias been presented witli 30 new coins. Of these, 15 are small pieces of lead, with hardly any mark on them, so that one is led to question their nature as coins. The Society possesses already a large number of similar pieces. One gold coin is a so-called pafZ«uj/an/.a (because it is shaped like a lotus). It has been attributed to the Kadamba kings of the North-Western Dekhan and Northern Mysore, of about the hih or 6th century A.D., but the shape of some Nagari characters occurring on it leads one to put it down to a considerably later period. Fiom Southern India also came 8 small gold coins, so-called fanar>is, presented to us by Lieut. -Col. Bain. It is difficult to say to which dynasty or period they belong, and very little is known about them. Lastly, we have received 6 Muhammadan coins, viz., 1 each of Alauddin Khiljl and Ghiyasuddin Tughlaq and 2 of Muhammad ibu Tughlaq, all Delhi Emperors of the 13th and 14th centuries A.D., and one rupee each of the Mughal Emperors Muhammad Shah and Shah Alam, the former being fiom the Surat Mint. Bibliotheca ludica. Twenty fasciculi have been published during the course of the year at a cost of Rs. 8,780-4-9. Of this sum the printing charges amount to Rs. 6,380-12-9 and the editing charges to Rs. 3, .399-8-0, the average cost of publishing each fasciculus being Rs. 439. Of these twenty fasciculi, one is in the Tibetan and nineteen in the Sanskrit Series ; none is in the Ai'abic- Persian series. The folloAving is a descrip- tive catalogue of the Avorks which have been either commenced or finished during the year. "Works that have cuiii-: jo a close. Tibetan Series. Slier Phyin is a literal translation of the Qatasahasrika Praiiia- paramita in Tibetan. Prajiiaparamita is the great work of the Maha- yana School. Nagarjjuna the great preacher of Mahayana, who flourished in the second century of the Christian Era is said to liave brought the Prajnaparamita from the nether regions. It has several recensions of various extent. One is called the Svalpaksara, a recension in a few words very recentl}- discovered in Nepfd. The second is in seven hundred <;lokas known as Sapta^atika Prajiiaparamita. I^he tliird is Astasahasrika Prajnaparamita in 8,000 ylokas. This has aheady been l)ublished in this series. The fourth is Paficaviin9atisahasrika Prajiia- paramita in 25,000 ylokas. The fifth and the largest is the ^ataaahasrika 34 Annual Report. [Feb. Piajnapararaita, and of this the work published is a Tibelau Irauslation. 'J lie work has beau edited by Babu Pratapacandra Ghosa, a gentleman whose connexion with the Society began in tlie eai'ly sixties. He has successfully brought tlie difficult and arduous work he had undertaken to a successful close, and the credit of editing and publishing the largest work in Tibetan belongs to him. This is perhaps the first time that a Tibetan work on Buddhism has been published in its entirety. Sanskrit series. Tattvacintamani, the great work of the Amalgamated Nyaya- vaifefiika School, Avhich is the property and glory of Eastern India and which has been exercising an immense influence on the brahmanic mind for the last seven or eight centuries, has been practically completed during the year. The last fasciculus containing indices has been printed but not yet published. It is in four parts called Khandas, each ]iai*t treating of one pramana or method of proof. The pramanas, according to this school, arc four, namely, perception, inference, analogy and testimony ; and there are parts treating of eacli of (hese. The second part, that on inference, has a subdivision entitled I^varanumana, i.e., inference of the existence of a Creator. The work has been edited by Pandita Kamakliynatha Tarkavagi^a, the Professor of Hindu Philosophy in the Sanskrit College, Calcutta, on whom an appreciative Government has recently conferred the title of Maharaaho- padhyaya. The work has taken about 18 years to complete. woeks that have been commenced. Sanskrit Series. The ^atapatha Brahmana was published about forty years ago by Professor Weber of Berlin, but it was without a commentary and Avithnut that system of elaborate indices without which Vedic works are of little value to scholars. It was for this reason that the Council of tlie Asiatic Society of Bengal accorded their permission to the publica- tion of the work with Sayanficfiryya's commentary and indices to Acaryya Satyavrata Samaciaml who had already practically completed his edition of the Aitareya Brahinaua with a commentary and indices. The work has been taken in hand and two fasciculi have already appeared. The fiokavartika in vei'se and the Tantravartika in prose complete the great work of Kuniarila on the Mimarpsa School of Hindu Philo- sophy, ■which concerns itscdf with laying down principles and rules for tlie interpi'ctation of the Vedas. This great Avork was written in the seventh century and was the first great polemical work which, by refuting other systemp, established one system of Hindu faith, farjkara 1901.] Annual Eeport. 35 came after Kumaiila and Udayana after liira. An English {translation of the ^lokavartika lias been unrlertaken by Babu Gaijganatlia Jhau, Librarian of the Maharaja's Library, Darbhanga, a young graduate of the Allahabad University of great promise. One fasciculus appeared during the year under review. The mannei's and customs of the Hindus will for a long time remain an interesting subject of study for scholars and the great repositories of these are the Smrti works, especially the compilations. They exhibit the rituals in a variety of forms in different countries and at different times. Gadadhara, who flourished in the fourteenth century, made a Smrti compilation which, lias peculiar interest from the fact that Orissa had not then succumbed to Muhammadan influence. Pandita Sadafjiva Mi^ra of Puri was tlierefore pei^mitted to living out an edition of Gadadhara's compilation known as Gadadharapaddhati. He has published one fasciculus during the year. Piijgala is I'eputed to be the originator of the science of Prosody among the Hindus. His Siitras in Sanskrit were published long ago by the Society and his work in Prakrt appeared from vai'ious places. The edition of the Prakrt work attributed to him, however, did not satisfy the needs of scholars. Tliei-efore Babu Candraraohana Ghosa, who had already distinijuished himself by his excellent work on the Chandas entitled Chandah-sara-samgraha, Avas permitted to bring out an edition of Prakrtapaiij'jfala with several commentaries and with indices and mathematical calculations. He has already published three fasciculi. Obituary. The Right Hon. Prof. P. Max Miiller. The Right Hon. Professor Dr. F. Max Miiller, whose death occurred at Oxford in October, 1900, has been an Honorary Member of our Society since 1860. He was born at Dessau in Anhalt, Germany, on the 6th December 1823. His father Wilhelm Miiller, a teacher and librarian at the Gymnasium, has made himself famous by his lyric poems, some of which are still much admired and often sung in Ger- many. By his mother Miiller was descended from Basedow, the famous philanthropist and friend of Goethe. Miiller was educated at Leipsic, where he also began his University course. Here it was Hermann Brockhaus, the editor of the Katliasaritsagara and the Diwan of Hafiz, wlio turned his mind towards the study of Oriental languages. He coutimied these studies at Berlin under Bopp and Riickert, and also went through a philosophical course under Schelling. Already at the age of twenty, he made himself known by a German translation of the Hitopadcya. After taking hia degree of Ph.D. at Loipsic, he went to 36 Annual Ueport. [Fe&. Paris, tlicu the ceutre of Oriental learning', where he studied under the famous Sanskrit scholar Eugene Burnouf, and the great Chinese ischo- lar Stanislas Julien. At that time to a younpf Sanskrit scholar a visit to England was indispensible. A very small portion only of Sanskrit texts was then available in print, but the libraries at London and Oxford contained vast treasures of Sanskrit manusciipta. It was for this reason that, in 1846, Miiller decided to go to England. Here he was introduced to liunseu, then the Prussian ambassador at London, and himself an enthusiatic admirer of Oriental thought and literature. This event became decisive for his future career. It was through the mediation of Bunseii that the Court of Directors of the East India Com- j)any undertook to publish the edition of the Rg-Veda with the com- mentary of Sayana, Avhich Miiller planned at that time, and for which it would have been impossible to find a private publisher. Thiough Bunsen also Miiller Avas introduced to influential circles of English society and induced to settle finally in England. Here, at Oxford, he was appointed Professor of Modern Languages at the Taylorian Institute and elected a fellow of All Souls College. When in 1860 H. H. Wilson died Miiller w-as not, however, on account of his liberal views in theo- logical and religious matters, elected as liis successor to the Boden Professorship, although by his eminent work done in the field of Sans- krit studies he would have seemed to possess a strong claim to that post, and it Avas only in J868 that he was appointed Professor of Comparative Philoloo"y. When, after the Franco-German war, the German Govern- ment reorganized the University at Strassburg, efforts were made to bring Miiller back to his fatherland, and a professorship at the new University was offered to him. He did not accept it, however, partly in order to have more leisure for his literary work, and partly because England had become a second home to hira from which he did not wish to separate ; but he consented to deliver a coui^se of lectiires on Com- i^arative Philology at the new University, and he granted a sum of money, the interest of which was to be given yearly as a prize for an essay on Vedic literature, the subject of which Avas to be determined by the University of Strassburg. His distinguished career in England is too Avell known to be further detailed. Here intimate friendship connected him with many eminent men of his time. He had mastered the English language so thoroughly that he Avas able, Avithin a fcAv years after his arrival in England, to under- take for the first time an English trnnslation of Kant's Kritik der rcinen Yeiuunft, a very difficult task, as Avill be understood by every one Avho has tried to find his Avay through the Avritings of the great philosopher 1901.] Annual T^ppnrf. 37 of Konigsbevf;!;, Although he never visited India, he had many friends and admii'ers among the natives of this coantiy. By the simple pandit as well as by the nobleman he was looked upon with equal veneration as a friend and lover of India, who was alwaj's eager to impress upon Western minds what its ancient philosophy and Hteratui^e can still teach us. The second edition of the Rg-Veda received a gi';int-in-aid from Indian princes, and the King of Siani enabled Miiller to add to his Sacred Books of the East a second series devoted entirely to iMiglish translations of Buddhist scriptures. In India and all over the civilized world his name stands foremost in all matters connected with the stndv of languages and religions. ]\riiller's literary and scientific work has been principnlly devoted to three branches : Sansloit, especially Vedic literature, Comparative Philology, and the histoiy of Religion. In the first of tliese thi-ee lu'anches, the great edition of the R^-Veda with the commentary of Sayana, which has been already alluded to, is by far his most eminent work, and although less known to the general public than his litei'arv essays, it has gained for him an everlasting place in the history of philological research. At the time when Max Miiller began liis Oriental studies, the importance of the Veda had just dawned upon the mind of the then living generation of Sanskrit scholars. Tiie eaxdy pioneers of Sanskrit studies had entirely contented themselves with the classical litei-atui-c and almost totally neglected this earliest literary document of the Indo- European race. Even Colebrooke foiTnd its meanings too obscure, and its language too difficult, to expect that it would repay a careful studv. and in his Essay on the Veda, published in 1805, he warned others against wasting any time on it. But in the forties of the last centurv matters had ali^eady changed. Friedrich Rosen had Jjegnn to publish a .small portion of the Rg-Veda, which, however, had come to an early end by his sudden death in the prime of life. In Paris the o-reat Eugene Burnouf, although his own publications dealt with the Avesiu and Buddhistic literature, pointed out the great importance of the Veda. It was in Paris, too, that Rudolf Roth collected the materials for Vedic lexicography, which he incorporated later on into the great Petersburo- dictionary, jointly edited by him and Bohtlingk, and upon which he based his important book on the literature and history of the Veda. At that time the treasures of Vedic literature were still lyino- buried in manuscripts, and the first task accordingly was to publish the Vedic texts. Thus Benfey in Gottingen brought out an edition of tiie Sama- Veda, while Albrecht Weber in Berlin undertook to edit the voluminous Cakha of the Wliite Yajur-Veda according to the recension of the V^ja^ gg Annual Report. [Feb. saneyi school, a Avork full of difficult discussions on intricate points of Vedic ritual. Tlie oldest and most important Vedic book, the Rg-Veda, was entrusted to Max Miiller. It has already been related how he found nu opportunity of publishing such a voluminous work. As he himself tells us, during the time he was engaged with this task, from 1850 up to 1875, he had to prepare for the press in each year 35 formes in lavj^e quarto size of a text full of intricate matter, requiring a thornu<.'h mas- tery of the language as well as of all other points connected with its interpretation. His edition of the Rg-Veda, which was published a second time some yeajs ago, is universally acknowledged to be a stand- ard work of its kind; and at present, wheie the interpretation of the often obscure hymns of the Vedic Rsis tends to vindicate to the com- mentaiy of Sayana a greater value than originally had been given to it he will be thanked for having spared no trouble in completing the often tedious task of preparing an edition of the entire commentary, instead of giving only abstracts, as had been done in similar cases. Miiller's next valuable publication in the same branch is his History of Ancient Sanskrit Literature. In this book he attempts to lay open the subsequent strata of the vast bulk of Vedic writings. He begins with the latest of tlieni, the Siitras, or ritualistic manuals, and shows how this class of literature presupposes an older one, the Bralimanas, devoted to speculations on the various sections of the sacrifice, and on the meaning of the spells used in connexion with it. The Brahnianas, again, had before them collections of mantras or spells, which must go back to a remoter time, and these collections of mantras often exhibit a misunderstood and conventional use of hymns, which Lad been composed in a previous time, the period to which the ohlest parts of Vedic literature go back. He thus distinguishes between four consecutive periods, which, in the order they followed one another, he calls the c7i(j)/(?fis-period or the period in which the Vedic hymns were composed, the vmntra--pev'iod or the period in which they were put together into collections intended for sacrificial purposes, the In ycais of age, iiaving previously been engaged in teaching and liferarv work. Notwifc'.istanding, a long and serious interruption, due to l^eing disaldod in a railway accident, his brilliant geological work secured for him an admission to tha Royal Society in J877 at. an unusuall}' early ao-e, soon after ho had been sele ted for the chair of Greology at tlie I'nyal School of Mines in succession to Sir Andrew Ramsay. In i8h.'», lie presided over the Geological Section of the British Association, and in 1886 was elected President of the Geological Society of London, serving at the same time on the Council of the Royal Society. In 1891, tlie Geological Society ieco_'nised his scientific work by conferi'ing on liini the highest honour at their disposal, namely, the Wollaston medal. Tn 1895, Prof Jiidd was appointed Dean of the Royal College of Science as successor to the late RiLfht Hon. Prof. Huxley, and in I he same year was created a Companion of the Order of the Bath, Commencing work on the Geological Survey of Euirland by mapping the Mesozoic rocks of Lincolnshire and Rutland, Professor Judd passed on to the secondary. rocks of Scotland, where contact witii a laige number of igneous rocks led him to take up the then compara- tively new study of microscopic petrography, and to apply the new methods to a systematic study of the volcanoes of Hungai-y and the Jilediterranean islands. To his extensive papers on these subjects the rapid development of microscopic petrology was largely due. During recent years Prof. Ju'ld has turned his attention to mineralogy, studying especially the nature of etch-figures and the internal structure-planes of crystals. Some of his papers on these subjects had beeii based on Indian material, and to him we aie indebted for a study of amblystegite from the Nilijiris, tourmaline and coiundum from Mysore and Rewah, and, finally, an exhaustive memoir on the ruby and its associates in the crystalline limestones of Bunha. Not the least atnongst the deiits which India owes to Professor Judd will be found in the work of a large number of pupils in different parts of the country, with whom this our triiiutc to the value of his work will be specially popular. The General Secretary reported the presentation from the Bombay Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, of a gold coin found in the Bijapur District. 1901.] Proposal to alter the stattis of the Society. 47 The General Secretary announced that Mahamahopadliyaya Hara- prasad Shastri, Joint Pliilological Secretary had been appointed to officiate as Philological Secretary during the absence of Dr. Bloch. The proposal to alter the status of the Society of which intimation had already been given by circular to all members was bi^ought up for final disposal. The votes of >oG^c;>o-«> The Monthly General Meeting of the Society was held on Wednes' day, the 5tli June, 190], at 9-15 p.m. The Hon. Mr. C. W. Bolton, C.S.I., I.C.S , in the chair. The following members w^ere present : — Major A. Alcock, I.M.S., Mr. J. Bathgate, Dr. T. Bloch, Rai Chunilal Bose Bahadur, Major C. R. M. Green, I. M.S., Mr. D. Hooper, Mr. T. H. D. La Touche, Kumar Rameshwar Malliah, Mr. L. de Niceville, Mr. J. 1). Nimmo, Mr. F. E. Pargiter, Mr. E. Thornton. Visitors : — Mr. J. Macfarlane, Mr. T. L. Walker. The minutes of rhe last meeting were read and confirmed. The Council reported that no meeting was held in May as a quorum of members was not present. Fifty-seven presentations were annonnced. Babu Nundolal Dey, Lala Lajpat Rai, Mr. E. P. Chapman, I.C.S. , Mr. H. H. Mann, Lieut-Col. G. M. Porter, R.E., Mr. A. F. M. Abdur Rahman, Babu Ramani Mohan Mullick, Mr. "W. Parsons, Dt. Thos. H. Aquino, Major D. G. Crawfurd, I.M.S., Mr. J. H. Buikill, Mr. E. H, Walsh, I.C.S., and Mr. F. J. Ede, were ballotted for and elected Ordinary Members. Syed Mahomed Latif Khan Bahadur and Mr. E. B. Havell expressed a wish to withdraw from the Society. (.1 56 List of Committees. [May & Junk, The General Secretary read the names of the following gentlemen who had been appointed to serve on the various Committees for the present year. Finance and Visiting Committee. Dr. T. Bloch, Mr. L. de Niceville, Mr. J. D. Nimmo, Mr. F. E. Pargiter, Mr. A. Pedler, Mr. H. H. Risley, Mahamahopadhyaya Hara- prasad Shastri. Library Committee. Dr. T. Bloch, Mr. S. C. Hill, Mr. D. Hooper, Mr. C. W. McMinn, The Hon. D\: Asutosh Mukerjee, Mr. L. de Niceville, Maliamaho- padhj-aya Harapi-asad Shastri, Mr. E. Thornton. Philological Committee. Maulavie Ahmad, Dr. T. Bloch, Babu Pratapchandra Ghoslia, Shams-ul-UlaTiia Mahomed Shaikh Gilani, Mr. J. G. Lorimer, The Hon. Dr. Asutosh Mukerjee, Mr. F. E. Paigiter, Major D. C. Phillott, I.S.C., Pamlit Satyavrata Saniasrami, Mahamahopadhyaya Haraprasad Sliastri, Maharaahopadhyaj^a Chandrakanta Tarkalankai'a, Dr. G. Thibaut, Babu Nagendranath Vasu, Mr A. Yenis, Lt.-Col. L. A. Waddell, 1 M.S. Coins Committee. Lf.-Col. D. S. E Bain, I.M.S., Dr. T. Bloch, Tl.e Hon. Mr. J. A. Bourdillon, Babu Panchanan Mukerjee, Mr. F. E. Pargiter, Mr. E. Thurston. The Secretary repoited the presentation of J gold, 34 silvei', and 1 copper coins from the Honorary Secretary, Bombay Branch, Royal Asiatic Society, found in the Ahmedabad District. The Chairman announced that Dr. T. Bloch, having returned from toui', had taken over charge of tlie dutie.s of Philological Secretary from Mahamahopadhyaya Haraprasad Shastri. The Secretaiy reported that the subject for the Elliott Prize for the present year is Mathematics. The Council reported : — 1. That the Government of India had sanctioned the continuance for a further period of five years with effect from 1st April, 1901, of the 1901.] D. Fvain — Novici^ Indies^, No. XVIII. 57 Annual grant of Rs. 3, '200 in aid of tlie operation in search of Sanskrit, MSB. in Bengal. 2. That Mr. C. Michie officiated as Treasurer of the Society during the temporary absence of Mr. W. K. Dods. The following papers were rend : — 1. The Sacred caves of Cachar. — By Francis J. Ede. Communi- cated by the Philological Secretary. 2. Novi'cise Indicse, No. XVIII. — The Asiatic species of Dalbergia. — By Major D, Prain, I. M.S. (Abstract.) The writer, Avho has for the past four years been engaged in liis spare time in studying the species of Dalbergia of S.-E. Asia with a view to publishing a monograph of the genus has been able to study the material contained in the following herbaria (1) Calcutta, (2) Kew, (3) British Museum, (4) Heib. Wallich, (5) Herb. Linnrens, (6) Her- barium of M. Drake del Castillo, Paris, (7) Herb. Peradeniya, Ceylon, all of which he has visited. The following collections of Dalbergia have a^so been sent to hira for study in Calcutta, (8) Herb. Berlin, lent by Prof. Engler, (9) Herb. Leiden, lent by tlie late Prof. Saringar, (10) Herb. De Candolle, Geneva, lent by M. de Candolle, (11) Herb. Boissier, Geneva, lent by M. Barbey, (12) Herb. Beccari, Florence, lent by Sig. Beccari, (13) Heib. Buitenzorg, lent by Dr. Ti-eub., (14) Herb. Paris, lent by M. Bureau, (15) Herb. Saharanpur, lent by Mr. Dutliie (16) Herb. Hongkonsr, lent by Mr. Ford. Specimens of the only Dalbe>gi(i in Herb. Brisbane have also been sent by Mr. Bailey. Circumstances rendering it necessary to forego, for the moment, t!ie publication of the projected monograph the writer has drawn up a hand list of the 74 known Asiatic Species of Dalbergia with a tolerably complete bibliography and a full record of their distribution as indicated l)y specimens in the sixteen herbaria whose collections have been studied. In all except the very common and salient species reference is made to the field-numbers on the various specimens in oi'der that the list may be of use not only to members of our Society and to those who may study tlie specimens in the herbaria the writer has examined, but also to those who may work in other herbaria not yet visited by the writer in which duplicates bearing these numbers are preserved. 3. Marriage customs of the Khonds. — By J. E. Fkiend-Pere ira, B.A. Communicated by the Anthropological Secretary. 58 Sir G. King — Flora of the Malayan Peninsula. [May & Jdne, 1901.] 4. Materials for a Flora of the Malayan Penhisitla, Ko. 12. — By Sir George King, K.C.I.E., LL.D., F.R.S., &c., late Superintendent of the Royal Botanic Garden, Calcutta. (Abstract.) The paper contain.s desciiption.s of all the species of the Natural Order Myrtacex known to be indigenous to the Malay Peninsula, to the Straits Settlements and to the Andaman and Nicobar Islands ; nnd it has been prepared after examining the rich collections contained in the Herbaria of the Royal Botanic Gardens of Kew and Calcutta and of the Government Gardens at Singapoi-e and Penang. The .species described in it amount to 122 and these are distributed among.st 11 genera. Tliis proportion closely resembles that obtaining for the same family in Sir Joseph Hooker's Flora of British India, in which there are des- cribed 157 species belonging to practically the same genera, for Psendo- Engenia (the additional genus given here) has been carved out of Eugenia since Hooker's Flora was completed. In both Floras the largest genus is Eugenia, of wliich there are 131 species given in Hooker's work as against 96 in the present paper. Of these 96 no fewer than 50 are here described for the first time. And, as the Malay i^eniusula and the adjacent islands fall within, the limits of British India (as understood by Hooker, the Engenise of British India now stand at 181. Besides the 50 new species of Eugenia, there are des- cribed in the paper 4 new species of the beautiful littoral genus Barringtonia — plants which, in addition to possessing handsome flowers, are remarkable for their curious fruits. Novelties are also described under the genera Tristania, Pseudo- Eugenia and Planchonia. The total known number of species of Myrtacese is very great, being estimated at about 2,800. These are distributed chiefly over the warm parts of Asia, Australasia, Africa and America, only one (the common Myrtle) being indigenous in Europe. The Myrtacese are most abundant in South America, and they make a large proportionate part of the vegetation of Australia in which island very large and important forests consist for the most part of species of Encalyptns. PROCEEDINGS OF THE ASIATIC SOCIETY OF BENGAL. Foi\ July, 1901. ^>oO^Oo-«> The Monthly General Meeting of the Society was held on Wednes- day, the 3rd July, 1901, at 9-15 p.m. Major A. Alcock, M.B., LL.D., F.R.S., Vice-President, in the chair. The following members were present : — ' Mr. J. Bathgate, Dr. T. Bloch, Rai Chunilal Bose Bahadur, Mr. J. H. Burkill, Dr. A. Caddy, Mr. W. K. Dods, Major C. R. M. Green, I.M.S., Lt.-Col. G. F. A. Harris, I.M.S., Mr. D. Hooper, Mr. T. H. D. La Touche, Mr. W. A. Lee, Mr. W. H. Miles, Mr. L. de Niceville, Lt.-Col. G. M. Porter, R.E., Captain L. Rogers, I.M.S., Mr. D. R. Wallace. FmYors.— Mr. J. E. Gabbett, Tlie Hon. Mr. Justice Taylor, and Mr. Gordon Wallace. The minutes of the last meeting were read and. confirmed. Twenty presentations were announced. The Chairman announced that in accordance with Rule 38 of the Society's Rules, the name of Thakur Garuradhawaya Prasad Singh had been posted up as defaulting member since the last meeting and will be removed from the Member List. The Chairman announced that the Subscribers to the King and Cunningham Memorial Fund had presented reduced replicas of the 60 T. H. D. La Tonche— Calcareous Tufa [July, Medallion Portraits of Sir George King and Dr. D. D. Cunningham to the Society. The Secretary laid on the table the following letter from Mr. William Irvine, I.C.S., (retired), relative to a paper entitled "Notes on the Rangaii caste in Barar " by Captain Wolseley Haig, I.S.C., published in the Society's Journal, Part III, No. 1 of 3901. On p. 3 of his "Notes on the Rarigari caste in Barar " (J.A.S.B., Vol. LXX, Part III, 1901), Captain Haig says "some members of the " caste still make pilgrimages to the temple of Hinglaj Mata, otherwise " called Hinglaj Devi, and Hinglaj Bhavani in Gujarat. The temple, " they say, is situated ' on the far side of Gujarat.' " I would suggest that the place intended is Hinglaz in Makran, which is shown on the map in Sir Thomas H. Holdich's " The Indian Borderland " (London, Methuen & Co., 1901). On p. 206 Sir T. Holdich say " the most ancient and honourable ziarat of Hinglaz is hidden away " in the clefts of the mountains (a ziarat so ancient that both Hindus " and Mahomedans claim it, without recognizing its almost prehistoric "Persian origin)." This Hinglaz ( = Hinglaj) may be described as on the " far side of Gujarat ; " it being over two hundred miles west of the most western part of Gujarat. Major A. Alcock, F.R.S., exhibited models of snakes and of a deep-sea fish Odontostotnus atratus whicb had swallowed a cuttle fish of considerably greater diameter than itself. The following paper was I'ead : — The grnivth of Calcareous Tufa in the Rivers of the Shan States, Upper Burma. — By T. H. D. La. Touche, B.A. (Abstract.) The formation of beds of calcareous tufa in countries where lime- stone is the prevailing rock is a well-known natural phenomenon. Rain water containing a small proportion of carbonic acid derived from the atmosphere, flowing through crevices in the rock, is enabled to dissolve a certain amount of it, and on reaching tlie open-air tliis is deposited as the water evaporates. In many of the rivers of the Shan States in Upper Burma, where the hills are largely composed of limestone, large masses of calcareous tufa are deposited, forming regular dams aci'oss the river often 20 feet or more in height. These are built up wherever the water is in violent motion, as at the heads of rapids, where it seems improbable that the 1901.] in the Rivers of Upper Burma. 61 particles of carbonate of lime could be retained, if the pi'ocess of deposi- tion were merely mechanical. The growing surface of the deposit is always covered with a growth of bright green algaj and it is well- known that chloi'ophyll bearing algae have the power, under the influence of light, of directly assimilating the carbon contained in carbonic acid. It seems probable therefore that these aigas which naturally grow most rapidly in position where there is a considerable rush of water, bringing an abundance of their natural food, assist in the deposition of the carbonate of lime by destroying the carbonic acid which holds it in solution ; while the felted mass of fibrous alga3 affords a means of retaining the minute particles of calcite and allowing them to grow together into the granular crystalline deposit of which the dams are built up. PROCEEDINGS OF THE ASIATIC SOCIETY OF BENGAL. j^or^ y^UGUST, 1901. ^^^O^?O0-«a The Monthly General Meeting of the Society was held on Wednes- day, the 7th August, 1901, at 9-15 p.m. The Hon. Mr. C. W. Bolton, C.S.T., Vice-President, in the chair. The following members were present ; — Major A. Alcoek, I.M.S., Mr. J. Bathgate, Dr. T. Bloch, Rai Chuni- lal Bose Bahadur, Mr. J. H. Burkill, Mr. W. K. Dods, The Revd. E. Fiancotte, S.J., Mr. E. A. Grait, Major C. R. M. Grreen, I.M.S., Mr. D. Hooper, The Revd. E. Lafont, S.J., Mr. T. H. D. La Touche, Mr. J. Mac- farlane, Mr. C. Michie, Mr. J. D. Niramo, Mr. R. D. Oldham, Mr. P. E. Pargiter, Lt.-Col. G. M. Porter, R.E., Captain L. Rogers, I.M.S., and Mr. E. Thornton. Visitors : — Mr. J. R. Blackwood, Major W. J. Buchanan, I.M.S., Mr. ClifEurd D. Matthews, Mr. Norman McLeod, Lieut.-Col. E. H. Molesworth, I.S.O., Mr. J. M. G. Prophit, Babu Hiralal Sinha, Dr. T. L. Walker, and Mr. H. J. Weston. The minutes of the last meeting were read and confirmed. Fifty-one presentations were announced. Miss Margaret Adams, Babu Chandra Narayan Singha, Mr. J. Macfarlane, Dr. T. L.Walker, and Mr. E. Molony, LC.S., were ballotted for and elected Ordinary Members, Maulavie Abdul Aziz Khan and Captain W. P. O'Connor, R.A., expressed a wish to withdraw from the Society. -hll^^ 64 Nelly Evans — Some Observations on the [August, The General Secretary reported the death of His Grace the Most Revd. Archbishop P. Goethals, S.J. Major Alcock reported that as the duties of the Honorary General Secretary which he had accepted temporarily had devolved on him per- manently he was compelled by Rule 4 to resign his office of Vice- President. The Chairman reported for confirmation by the General Meeting that the Hon. Mr. C. W. Bolton, C.S.I., had been elected Vice-President in the room of Major Alcock. Mr. T. H. D. La Touche exhibited some Paloeozoic Fossils from Upper Bui'ma. The Philological Secretary exhibited some rai'e Persian MSS. newly acquired by the Society, The following papers were i-ead : — 1. Wolf Hybrids in Oilgit. — By Captain Manners Smith, V.C, CLE. Communicated by Major Alcock. 2. The Khojas of Eastern TurJcistan. — By H. Bevekidge, I.C.S. (retired) . 3. Ati inscription of TTddyota Kesari Deva front Khandagiri, Orissa.—By T. Bloch, Ph.D. 4. The inscription on the Qadan Basul at Cttttack. — By T. Block, Ph.D. 6. Folk-lore from Pargana Sipah in the District of Saran. — By Saratchandra Mitba. Communicated by the Anthropological Secretary. Major Alcock read the following paper, by Miss Nelly Evans, upon the habits of the common grey mosquito of Calcutta. The paper is interesting as giving detailed evidence, with regard to the female of this species of mosquito, (1) that it may live, in its adult or imago stage, for nearly five weeks, (2) that during its adult life it may feed as many as five times, and (3) that it does not feed indiscriminately, but has a preference for the blood of the house-sparrow, refusing that of Java-sparrows, larks, rails, and white rats. All these facts, but the last one in particular, favour the possibility of the insect being a carrier of a definite blood-infection, and support the conclusions of Ross based upon experiments with this species of mosquito. 1901-] Life-history of Cule:s. patigans. 65 6. Some Observations on the Life-history of Culex fatigans, the Common Grey Mosquito of Lower Bengal. — By Nellt Evans. This investigation was canned out during February and March, in the Indian Museum, Calcutta. Culex fatigans will live for about a month if fed on fruit only, but the female does not lay eggs unless she has a meal of blood. A few in- dividuals were kept without food of any kind and some of these lived as long as ten days. Culex fatigans feeds readily on the common house-sparrow, but it was found that the insect would not bite Java- sparrows or larks or rails or white rats, all of which were tried. The common liouse-sparrow was therefore used to supply the necessary meal of blood. The female mosquito lays its eggs from four to six days after feed- ing, and the time seems to depend on the amount of blood taken. It was noticed that if the insect gorged itself the eggs were laid on the fifth day or sooner, whereas if less blood was taken, the time between feeding and laying the egg-boat was longer, sometimes as long as ten or fourteen days ; and if very little was taken a second meal of blood was required before the eggs were laid. The female mosquito feeds again on the sparrow the night after laying her eggs, and will lay a second batch of eggs at the end of five days, so that if she is always able to obtain a meal of blood, she will lay a batch of eggs about every five or six days or roughly once a week. Of fourteen female mosquitos kept to ascertain the duration of life, and number of repasts of blood, and number of egg-boats laid, two lived for twenty-eight and twenty-nine days respectively and each fed five times on the sparrow and laid five egg-boats ; one died after twenty days, after feeding three times and laying three egg-boats, and one died after eighteen days having fed three times and laid two egg-boats. All the others were either lost or were killed accidentally, some after having laid two or three batches of eggs and having lived thirty and thirty-three days. In those that lived as long as thirty and thirty-three days the time between feeding and laying the eggs was more than five days and in one case was as long as fourteen days. In all these experi- ments a male was kept with the female during feeding as well as before and after. Another experiment was tried to see if the female will lay eggs if fed apart from the male. Ross states in his West African Report that the female will not lay eggs unless fed in the presence of the male, that is, that fertilisation takes place after feeding. If the meal of blood is required for the nutrition of the eggs it would seem more reasonable to suppose that the insect's instinct would be to seek the gg Nelly Evans — Some Observations on the [Auggst, animal food after fertilisation, not before. To decide this point ten females were pat alone in the net with the sparrows, all having pre- viously been with males. Of these ten, only four fed, and these four were removed to another cage. They were watched from day to day, and it was noticed that the blood gradually disappeared from the abdo- men, which in all but one assumed the white opaque appearance gen- erally characteristic of mosquitos which are going to lay eggs. In the exception, the abdomen looked transparent and empty. Six days passed and no eggs were laid, and on the seventh day, no mosquitos could be found at all and there were no egg- boats. No dead mosquitos were found either. So that the experiment failed. Later on, the same expei'iment was tried with two mosquitos one of which was lost, while the other laid eggs on the fifth day. The eggs are generally laid at night, and the followitig night the larvae hatch out. Some mosquitos were i-eared from the egg in the laboratory : the larval stage lasted at least twenty days, and the pupal stage four days. The larvae and pupae were very small and the mosquito was only a third or fourth the size of those reared natur- ally out of doors, while some of the larvae reared in the Museum had not changed to pupae as late as forty-seven days after the eggs were laid. It was found that dessication of the egg-boat for one day was generally sufficient to prevent the larvae from hatching out though one or two larvae did hatch out of an egg-boat which had been dried for six days. The egg-boat has been described so often that it is unnecessary to go through its description again. Thei-e is, however, one part of the individual egg which has never been described and that is the structure forming part of the lid. This is best seen in the egg obtained by dis- section of the gravid female mosquito, but only after it has reached a fair size, that is two or three days after the insect has fed. The eggs so obtained will be seen to be capped at the larger end by a transpar- ent dome-shaped structure which is a continuation of the shell of the egg, but not of its whole thickness. It is a very delicate structure and gets damaged very easily. The whole cap is easily broken off and for this reason is rarely seen in eggs after they have been laid, as the caps get broken off in removing them from the water. Tiie function of this cap is probably to act as a float, and to keep that end of the Qgg in contact with the water. Inside and at the base of this dome- shaped cap and in contact with the end of the egg is another peculiar structure. This is a cup-shaped cell, with a hole or depression in the centre, which fits on to a projection at the end of the egg shell, and radiating filaments at the circumference which turn up into the float 1901.] Life-hislory of Cclex fatigans. 67 cap and lie in contact with the sides of it. When the float cap breaks, the cup-shaped cell comes away and becomes flattened out and then looks like a star. Tlie end of the egg shell itself which forms the lid is orna- mented with what appears to be radiating knobs, larger at the centre than at the circumference. The lid of the egg can be well seen in an empty egg-boat. The egg-boat when empty presents a very diSerent appearance from that when it is full. To the naked eye the latter looks compact and neat, whereas the former has an untidy and rough appearance ; it is also lighter in colour than the otlier. Under a magnifying glass the eggs of the empty boat are seen to be opened at the large end which rests on the water, and the lids of the eggs forming the sides and ends of tlie boat can be plainly seen as they lie open at right angles to the length of the egg and the ornamentation of the lid is well shown. If the unhatched egg-boat is taken from the water and left on a slide till it has become dry, and then removed, a pattern is seen on the slide formed by the star-shaped bodies which have become detached from the ends of the eggs and are stuck to the glass. PROCEEDINGS OP THE ASIATIC SOCIETY OF BENGAL. FOI^ NOVEMBEF^ 1901. The Monthly General Meeting of the Society was held on Wednes- day, the 6th November, 1901, at 9 p.m. The Hon, Mr. C. W. Bolton, C.S.I., Vice-President, in the chair. The following members were present : — Major A. Alcock, I.M.S., Mr. C. G. H. Allen, Major W. J. Bucha- nan, I.M.S., Mr. I. H. Barkill, Mr. H. D. Carey, Mr. W. K. Dods, The Revd. E. Fraucotte, S.J., Lt.-Col. G. F. A. Harris, I.M.S., Mr. W. A. Lee, Mr. J. Macfarlane, Mr. H. H. Mann, Mr. Norman McLeod, Mr. L. de Niceville, Mr. E. B. H. Panton, Captain L. Rogers, I. M.S., Mahamahopadhaya Haraprasad Shastri, and Babu Chunder Narain Singh. The minutes of the last meeting were read and confirmed. Thirty presentations were announced. Kumar Narendra Nath Mitra, Babu Govinda Das, Babu Upendra Nath Sen, Mr. Norman McLeod, Mr. E. B. H. Panton, I.C.S., and Major W. J. Buchanan, I. M.S., were elected Ordinary Members during the recess in accordance with Rule 7. Mr J. J. Cotton, and Shams-ul-Ulama Mahomed Zakaullah have expressed a wi.sh to withdraw from the Society. The Secretary reported the death of Dr. A. von Krafft, an Oi-dinary Member of the Society. The Chairman announced that in accordance with Rule 38 of the Society's Rules, the names of Dr. Sarat Chandra Laharry, Mr. R. Mitra, 70 General Meeting for November, 1901. [Nov., Mr. D. Sunder, and Pandit Mahendra Nath Vidyanidhi had been posted up as defaulting members since the last meeting and will be removed from the Member List. The General Secretary reported the presentation of the following coins : — From the Government of N.-W.P., one silver and one copper coin. From the Madras Government Museum, two silver and two copper coins. From tlie Bombay Branch of tlie Royal Asiatic Society, one gold coin. Mr. I. H. Burkill exhibited some seedlings of Eugenia jambolana from seeds wliicli had passed through the intestine of a Flying-fox. The following papers were read : — 1. On Variation in the Flower of Ranunculus arvensis : A study of Flower Stjmmetnj. — By I. H. Burkill. 2. A sJwrt notice of a Persian MS. on Gaur. — By H. Beveridge, J.C.S. (retired). (Abstract.) This paper draws attention to a Persian MS. in the India Office Library, containing an account of the buildings and inscriptions at Raj- mahal, Gaur, and Panduah. It is the result of local investigations made by Shyam Prasad in November and December, 1810, when he visited Gaur in attendance on Major Francklin. The report was drawn up for Major Francklin and appears to be the source of the information given in Francklin's Journal, of which good use has been made by Mrs. Ravenshaw and Mr. Grote, in Raven.shaw's Gaur. The really new part in Shyam Prasad's report, according to Mr. Beveridge, seems to be his first chapter which gives an account of Rajmabal. Mr. Beveridge re- commends the publication of the report. 3. A short note on the date of the death of Nur Qufb ^Alam. — By H. Beveridge, I.C.S. (retired). (Abstract.) Mr. Beveridge was the first to point out that according to a history written some 20 years ago by llahi Bakhsh, a school master of Maldah, the death of Nur Qutb 'Alam, the famous saint of Panduah, occurred on the 7th Zilgada 818 = A.D. 141G, 8th January. This date fits best 1901.] General Meeting for November, 1901. 71 with what history tells about that saint. For he is said to have been a fellow-student with the Bengal King Ghiyasuddiii Azam Shah, who was still alive in 814, but must have died soon afterwards. It is accordingly interesting to find the same date recorded in a MS., in the Biitish Museum, called the Mirat-nl-Asrar. The only difference, as Mr. Beveridge points out, is that in the latter place the day is the 10th, instead of the 7th Zilgada. 4. New species of Indian Uymeno'ptera. — Bxj MAJOR C. Gr. Nurse. Communicated by the Natural History Secretary. 5. A List of the Butterflies of Hongkong in Southern China and the Food-plants of the larvae. — By Lionel de Nec^ville, F.E.S., C.M.Z.S., &c. 6. Notes on two coins of the Stmga Dynasty. — By Colonel C. E. Shkpherd. Communicated by the Philological Secretary. (Abstract.) The coins dealt with in this paper belong to a well-known class of Ancient Indian Copper Coins, which are generally attributed to the so- called Sunga Kings, who ruled in northern India from B.C. 176-G6. The two specimens described by Col. Shepherd exhibit two new names, viz., Dhruva Mitra and Rudra Gupta, but nothing beside their ames is known with resfard to those two Kinsfs. PROCEEDINGS OP THK ASIATIC SOCIETY OF BENGAL, Foi\ Decembei^ 1901. The Monthly General Meeting of the Society was. held on Wednes= day, the 4th December 1901, at 9 P.M. The Hon. Mr. C. W. Bolton, C.S.I., Vice-President, in the chair. The following members were present : — Major A. Alcock, I.M.S., Rai Chuni Lai Bose Bahadur, Mr. I. H. Burkill, Mr. B. Chaudhuri, Mr. W. K. Dods, Mr. F. Finn, Major C. R. M. Green, I.M.S., Lieut.-Col. G. F. A. Harris, I.M.S., Mr. D. Hooper, Mr. J. Macfarlane, Mr. H. H. Mann, Mr. Norman McLeod, Mr.R. D. Mehta, Mr. W. H. Miles, Mr. J. D. Nimmo, Mr. F. E. Pargiter, Mr. A, P. Pennell, Captain L. Rogers, I.M.S., Mahamahopadhyaya Haraprasad Shastri, Mr. E. P. Stebbing, Dr. G. Watt. Visitors :— Mr. E. J. Butler, Mr. A. E. Goodwin, Mr. H. St. John Jackson, Babu Parmeshwar Lall, Mr. Toynbee. The minutes of the last meeting were read and confirmed. Forty-eight presentations were announced. Mr. D. Brainerd Spooner, Dr. W. C. Hossack, and Mr. E. Denison Ross, were ballotted for and elected ordinary members. The chairman announced : — 1. That Mr. C. A. Radice, Babu Rajchandra Chandra, Kumar Birendra Chandra Singh and Mr. Thos. H. Aquino, elected members of the Society on the 2nd January, 6th March and 5th June 1901, respect- ively, not having piiid their entrance fees, their elections have become null and void under Rule 9. 74 General Meeting for December, ]90\. [DECEMBER, 2. That Mahamahopadhyaya Haraprasad Shastri has taken charge of the duties of the Philological Secretary during Dr. Bloch's absence, on tour. 3. That Mr. J. Macfai^ane has taken charge of the duties of the General Secretary in the place of Major A. Alcock, P.R.S., resigned. The General Secretary reported the death of Surgeon-General R. Harvey and Mr. L. de Niceville, ordinary members of the Society. Major Alcock, F.R.S., exhibited the skull of an Indian porcupine, showing abnormal dentition. The following papers were read : — 1. Further Notes on the Manipuris. — By T. C. HoDSON. Communi- cated by the Anthropological Secretary. 2. Description of some new Species of Orchideee from North- West and Central India. — By J. F. Duthie, B.A., F.L.S., Director, Botanical Department, North India. 3. Studies in the Chemistry and Physiology of Tea Leaf. Part I. The Enzymes of the Tea Leaf. — By Harold H, Mann, B.Sc. 4. Three documents relating to the History of Ladakh. Tibetan Text, Translation and Notes, Part III. — By the late Dr. Karl Marx, Mora- vian Missionary at Leh-Ladakh, Communicated by the Philological Secretary. (Abstract). This is the third paper under this heading, the first being publish- ed in 1891 and the second in J 894. The second paper brought the History of Ladakh down to the Dogra conquest in 1822 and the settle- ment of the country under Wazir Zorawar Sinj^h. The present paper gives the history of the attempts made both by the Tibetans and the Ladakhis to make Ladakh independent. Though at first successful, their combined army had at last to give way before the superior force of the KasQmirians. The paper ends with the final settlement of the country under Gulab Simh, Raja of Kas9mire. 5. On the authenticity of the two newly discovered Manuscripts of the Valldlacarita by Ananda Bhatfa, and their importance in tracing the History of the Caste System in Bengal. Part L — By Mahamahopadhyata Haraprasad Shastri. ( Abstract). Ballala Carita means the Biography of Ballal Sen, the greatest King of the Sen Dynasty in Bengal, in the 12th century. Two com- 1901.] General Meeting for December, \ 90]. 75 plete MSS. have been obtained written in difPerent parts of Burdwan, one in 1707 A.D., the year of Aurangzebe's death, and the other in 1198 of the Bengali era. The book was composed in 1432 by Anaiida Bhatta, a descendant of Aiianta Bhatta, whom Ballal Sen settled in East Bengal by a grant of land. It was written at tlie court of Buddhimanta Khan, the Raja of Navadvipa, a great admirer of Caitanya, who flourished about this time. Ananda Bhatta's book is based on three previous works by three writers, contemporaries of Ballala Sen, viz., (1) the Vyasa Puiana by Siinha Giri, a f^^iva monk from Vadarika9rama in the Himalayas, who converted Ballal into the Qaiva faith ; (2) Ballala Carita by Carana Datta, one of the great poets under the same dynasty ; (3) Jayamar)- gala Gatha by Kalidasa Nandi, mentioned in Batu Dasa's Anthology, compiled in 1205 A.D. The information given in Ananda Bhatta's ■work asjrees, to a great extent, with the results of modern historical researches, and so it can be accepted as an authentic record of Ballala's reign. The present paper ends with the prooFs of the authenticity of the work, and in the next paper will be given the caste precedents in Bengal as settled by Ballala, 6. A Note on the existence of the Magi, the Median Priesthood in India, at the present day. — By Mahamahopadhyata Haraprasad Shastri. (Abstract). At the end of the enumeration of the subdivisions of the Brahmana caste in India in the 16th chapter of the Ballala Carita there occurs a curious verse which translated into English would run thus: — " The Magas, i.e., Magi, too, are Brahmanas, who issuing from the disc of the Sun and shining like the blazing Sun, dropped in the ^akadvipa" ? There are throughout India Brahmanas known as Qaka-dvipi or ^akala-dvipi, who like the Magi generally devote themselves to Astro- logy, Divination, Propitiation of Planetary Deities, and similar subjects. When engaged in their proper work they are respected as Brahmanas, but when not so engaged they are not so regarded. It is not difficult, therefore, to identify these paka-dvipi Brahmanas as the Magi of old, and we have the high authority of Simha Giri. the Guru of Ballala, in our support. Now the question is, when did the Magi come into India, and who they were ? They are said to have been Zoroastrian priests, but this statement is to be taken with reservation. In the Gathas of the Avesta 7f; General Meeting for December, 1901. [DECEMBER, tliere is no mention of any Priesthood. In the Yaslinas they are called the Athravans. In the Vendidad, for the first time we find divination, foretellincr and other things of similar nature, so repugnant to the founder of the religion, first introduced into the religion of Zoroaster, And this is said to be through the influence of the Magi, who had their home in Western Iran and were strongly imbued with the civili- zation of Chaldea and Assyria in which astronomy and astrology play an important part. Some say the Magi were originally Chaldean priests. They were very powerful during the ascendancy of the Medes ; under the Persians, too, they retained their influence to such an extent that Herodotus considered them to form the sixth tribe in the empire, with a sacerdotal capital, independent of the control of the Emperor, like Rome of medifeval Europe. They lost much of tlieir influence during the Greek and Parthian rule of Persia, but under the Sassanides they rose to great power and were oro-anised as a second estate in the realm and were very powerful till the Monarchy and tlie Church were both swept away in 632 by the Saracen conquest. During this long interval from 600 B.C. to 632 A.D. the Persians twice came into intimate connection with India, once in the 5th Century B. C. and once in the 5th Century A. D. Their intimate connection, by conquest, with India in the 5th Cen- tury B. C. is attested by various documents discovered by Cunningham and others, and lately by Dr. Stein, in Central Asia, written in their official character, the Kharostti, written from right to left — the Urdu of those days. The story of their intimate relation with Western India in the 5th Century A. D. will be found in the works of Todd and others. Their Priesthood must have come into India with them during these two periods, and remained behind after the loss of their political power. Their knowledge of Astrology, etc., entitled them to great respect, and they remained as a part and parcel of the Brahmana caste, though in a qualified way. Caka-dvipa is generally translated by the word Scythia, i.e., lands unknown to the Hindus, as Scythia was the land unknown to tlie Greeks. It included every region beyond the ken of the Hindus then and included Iran and Turaua alike. So there is no difficulty in finding Persians styled as ^aka-Dvipi by Indians. I have got .a suggestion to make here. Some of these Brahmaras call tliemselves faka-dvip'i, the others fakala-dvipi. It appears to me that those who came earlier are known as ^aka-dvipi, and those 1901.] General Meeting fur Doceviher, 1901 77 who came later, i.e., after the Indo-ScytluHiis had established their Capital at Qakala in the Punjab, f akala-dvipis. In this connection, I should like to mention that Vedic Astro- nomy concerned itself with the determination of time for sacrifices and so it was purely mathematical, but latterly Hindu Astronomy is said to have three branches : Astronomy, Astioloyy, and Hoioscopy. Mv theory is that Astronomy, as we had in the Vedic tiines, was a home develop- ment; Astrology we got from the Magi, whose descendants aie still the Astrologers in India, and Horoscopy lias been pronounced by Kei-n as a Greek art, and I have shown elsewhere that one of the oldest liooks on Horoscopy is a translation from Greek into Sanskrit. INDEX TO PROCEEDINGS, ASIATIC SOCIETY OF BENGAL FOR 1901. Page. Abdul Aziz Khan (Maulvie) ... 63 Abdur Rahman (A. F. M.) ... 65 Adams (Margaret) ... ... 63 Agencies ... ... ... 20 Ahmad (Maulvie) ... ... 56 Ahraedabad District, coins found in the ... 52, 56 Alcock (Major A.) 45, 53, 60, 64, 74 Anderson (John), obituary notice of ... 40 Annual Meeting ... ... 15 „ Report ... ... 16 Anthropological Secretary, elec- tion of ... ... ... 45 Aquino (Dr. Thos. H.) 55, 73 ^ Badshah (K. J.) 1 Bain (Lieut.-Col. D. S. E.) ... 56 Barar, notes on the Rangari caste in ... ... ... 60 Barclay Memorial Medal ... 44 Bathgate (J.)... ... ... 45 Beveridge (H.) ... 64, 70 Bibliotheca Indica ... ... 33 Bijapur District, coins found in the 46 Bloch (Dr. T.) 45, 47, 56, 64, 74 Bolton (The Hon. Mr. C. W.) 45, 64 Bombay Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, coins presented by ... ... 46, 52, 53, 56, 70 Bosanquet (O. V.) ... ... 52 Bourdillon (The Hon. Mr. J. A.) 56 Page. Buchanan (Major W. J.) ... 69 Burkill (I. H.) ... 55, 70 Campbell (Duncan) ... ... 1 Campbell (W. E.N.) 61 Caste, Rangari, in Barar ... 60 Chakravarti (Manmathanath) ... 61 Chandra (Raj Chandra) 61, 73 Chapman (E. P.) ... ... 55 Chaube (Pandit Behari Lai) ... 63 Coin Cabinet ... ... 33 Coins Committee, election of ... 66 „ presentation of ... 46, 52, 53, 56, 70 Cotton (J. J.) ... ... 69 Council Members, election of ... 45 Crawfurd (Major D. G.) ... 55 Gulex fatigans, life-history of ... 65 Cunningham (Dr. D. D.) present- ation of medallion portrait of 60 Das (Govinda) ... ... 69 Death of Members 53, 64, 69, 74 Defaulters, names of members as ... ... 53, 59, 69 Dey (Nundo Lai) ... 54, 65 Dods(W.) 63 Dods(W. K.) 46, 67 Drake-Brockman (Captain H. E.) 45 Duthie (J. F.) ... ... 74 Ede (F. J.) ... ... 65, 67 Election of Members 1,45,51, 53, 55, 63, 69, 73 80 Index. Page. Elliott ['rize for Scientitic Rc- scarcli ... ... 1, 44, Eugenia jambolana Evans (Nelly)... E.xchangc of Publication.s Fergusson (J. C.) Finance „ and Visiting Committee, election of Finn (F.) ... ... 2, Foulkes (Revd. Thomas) Friend-Pereira (J. E.)... Ghosha (Pratapchaudra) Goethals (His Grace The Most Revd. Dr. P.) Green (E. Ernest) Griesbach (C. L.) Guha (Abhaya Sankar) Guinea-fowl, specimen of a Habibur Rahman Khan(Maulvie) Haig (Captain W.) Harris (Lieut.-Col. G. F. A.) ... Harvey (Surgeon-Genl. R.) Havell(E. B.) Hendley (Col. T. H.) ... Hill(S. C.) 45, Hodson (T. C.) ... 54, HoeyCDr. W.) Holland (T. H.) ... 45, Honorary Members, election oF Hooper (D.) ... Hossack (Dr. W. C.) ... Indian Museum Irvine (W.) Joint-Philological Secretary, election of ... Journal, Part I, report on ... j> j> -'-'■> )j i> ,. Ill, „ „ ... Judd (Prof. J. W.) ... 46, King (Sir George) ... 58, Krairt (Dr. A. von) ... Laharry (Dr. Sarat Chandra) ... La Touchc (T. H. D.) 45, 60, Library Committee, election of... 66 70 65 24 51 17 56 45 1 57 56 64 44 45 53 2 61 60 1 74 66 46 56 74 2 53 51 66 73 17 60 45 26 29 31 51 60 69 69 64 56 Page. Library. i'e])ort on ... ... 20 Lorimer (J. G.) ... ... 56 Macfarlanc (J.) „. 63, 74 Madras Government Centi-al Mu- seum, coins presented by 52, 70 Mahomed Abdulla (Maulvie) ... 52 Mahomed Gilani (Shaikh) ... 66 Mahomed Latif Khan Bahadur (Maulvie) ... ... ... 66 Mahomed Zakaullah ( Maulvie) ... 69 Mann(H. H.) ... 55, 74 Marx (Dr. Karl), the late ... 74 McLeod (Norman) ... ... 69 McMahon (Captain A. H.) ... 52 McMiun (C. W.) ... ... 56 Members, death of 53, 64, 69, 74 „ election of 1, 45, 51, 53, 65, 63, 69, 73 list of ... ... 16 ,, of Council, election of 45 „ withdrawal of 1, 53, 55, 63, 69 Michie(C.) ... ... ... 57 Mitra (Karttik Chandra) ... 1 Mitra (Kumar Narendra Nath) 69 Mitra (R.) ... ... ... 69 Mitra (Sarat Chandra) 52, 64 Molony (E.) ... ... ... 63 Monthly General Meetings 1, 45, 61, 53, 55, 59. 63, 69, 72 Mookcr.iee (The Hon. Dr. Asutosh) 56 56 1 i 35 64 Mookerjee (Panchanan) Mookerjee (Raja Peary mohan)... Mookerjee (Dr. U. C.) ... Miiller (The Right Hon. Prof. F. Max), obituary notice of Mullick (Pramatha Nath) 53, Mullick ( Raman i Mohan) Mullick (Shamlal) Natural History Secretary, elec- tion of Nevill(H. R.) Niceville (L. de) 45, 54, 56, 71, Nimmo (J. D.) ... 45, Noetling (F.) 45 51 74 56 46 Index. 81 Faqe. North-West Provinces and Ondli. coins presented by ... •'jS, Nurse (Major C. G.) ... Obituaries O'Connor (W. F.) Odoniostomus atrafi(f< ... Paindsay (V. E.) Palm-leaves, ancient writings on PalcEOZoic Fossils from Upper Burma Pande (Pandit Ramavatar) Panton (E. B. H.) Papers read :— 2, 52. 54, 67, 60, 04, 70, Pargiter (F. E.) ... 46. Parsons (W.) Pedler (A.) ... Persian Manuscripts ... PhiUott (Major D.C.)... Philological Committee, election of „ Secretary, election of Porcupine, Indian Porter (Lieut.-Col. G. M.) Prain (Major D.) Premises of the Society, repair of the Presentations 1, 46, 61, 65, 69, 63, President, election of ... Publications... Radice (C. A.) Rai (Lala Lajpat) Rangari caste in Barar, notes on the Ratnagherry District, coins found in the Reader (G. F.) 46, 69, 1. 70 71 63 60 63 64 1 69 74 56 66 66 64 66 46 74 66 67 23 73 46 26 73 65 60 63 Page Reorganization of the Society, proposed ... 22, 47 Risley (H. H.) ... 46, 56 Ross (B. Denison) .,. ... 73 Saraasrami (Pandit Satyavrata) 66 Sanskrit Manuscripts in Bengal 67 Secretaries and Treasurer ... 24, 45 Sen (Upendra Nath) ... ... 09 Shastri (Pandit Haraprasad) 2, 46, 47, 66, 74, 76 Shepherd (Col. C. E.) ... ... 71 Singha (Kumar Birendra Chan- dra) ... ... 51, 73 Singha (Chandra Naray an) ... 63 Singha (Thakur Garuradhawarya Prasad) ... ... ... 59 Sircar (Dr. Mahendralal) ... 46 Smith (Captain Manners) ... 64 Snakes, models of ... ... 60 Solar Eclipse of May 17-18,1901, 2 Spooner (D. Brainerd) ... 73 Stebbing (E. P.) ... ..." 6I Sunder (D.) ... ,.. _ _ 79 Tarkalankara (Pandit Chandra- kanta) ... .. ... ^g Thibaut (Dr. G.) ... *" 50 Thornton (E.) ... .._ 5^; Thurston (E.) ... ... ^(j Vasu (Nagendra Nath) ... 56 Vice-Presidents, election of ... 46 Venis (A.) ... ... .,. 5g Vidyanidhi (Mahendra Nath) ... 70 Vogel(Dr J. Ph.) \ 51 Waddell (Lieut.-Col. L. A.) ... 66 Walker (Dr. T. L.) ... .*.' 63 Walsh (E.H.) ... .7. .56 Withdrawal of Members 1, 63,66,63, 69 Woodburn (H.H. Sir John) ... 45 Writings on Palm-leaves ... 2 LIST OF MEMBERS OP THE ASIATIC SOCIIJITY OF Bl'lNGAL, On the 31ST December, 1900, LIST OF OFFICERS AND MEMBERS OF COUNCIL OF THE ASIATIC SOCIETY OF BENGAL FOR THE YEAR 1900. President : His Honor Sir Jolin Woodbiirii, M.A., K.C.SJ. Vice-Presidents : H. H. Risley, Esq., B.A., O.T.E., I.C.S. Colonel T. H. IleiKlley, C.I.E., I.M.S. Major A. Aloock, M.B., C.M.Z.S., I.M.S. Secretary and Treasurer. Honorary General Secretary: T. H. Hollantl, Esq., F.G.S., A.R.C.S. Treasurer: \V. K. Dods, Esq. Additional Secretaries. Philological Secretary: T. Blocli, Esq., PL.D. Natural History Secretary : L. de Niceville, Esq., F.E.S., C.M.Z.S. Antbropolofifical Secretary : F. E. Pari^iter, Esq., B.A., LC.S. Joint Philological Secretary : MaliainaliopadliyayaHarn- prasad Sliastri, M.A. Other Members of Coimcil. J. D. Nimnio, Esq. Dr. Mahendralal Sircar, M.D., D.L., CLE. C. L. Griesbacli, Esq., F.G.S., CLE. M. H. Oung, Esq. A. Pedler, Esq., F.R.S. G. W Kiicl.ler, Esq., M.A. S. C. Hill, Esq., B.A., B.Sc. J. Bathgate, Esq. F. Finn, Esq., B.A., F.Z.S. LIST OF ORDINARY MEMBERS. R, «= Resideufc. N. R. •= Non-Residenfe. A. = Absent. N. S. = Non-Sabscribing. L. M. = Life Member. F. M. = Foreign Member. N. n.— Members who have changed their residence since the list was drawn up are requested to give intimation of such a change to the Honorary General Secretary, in order that the necessary alteration may be made in the subsequent edition. " Errors or omissions in the following list should also be communicated to the Honorary General Secretary. Members who are about to leave India and do not intend to return are parti- cularlv requested to notify to the Honorary General Secretary whether it is their desire' to continue Members of the Society ; otherwise, in accordance with Rule 40 of the Rules, their names wull be removed from the list at the expiration of three years from the time of their leaving India. Date of Election. i 1899 Feb. 1. N.R. | Abdul Aziz Khan, Maxilvie, b.a. Tirora. 1894. Sept. 27. N.R. | Abditl Wali, Maulvie. Sailkopa, Jessore District. 189.5 May 1. N.R. j Abdus Salam, Maulvie, m.a. Mottghyr. 1888 Feb. 1. F.M. j Adamson, Lieut.-Col. Charles Henry Ellison, M.S.C. ! Europe. 1888 April 4). R. Ahraud, S!iams-nl-ulama Maulvie, ArabicProfessor, Pre.sidency College. Calcutta. 1888 Feb. 1. R. Alcock, Major Alfred William, m.b., c.m.z.s., f.g.s., I. M.S., Superiutendent, Indian Museum. Calcutta. 1885 Mar. 4. L.M. Ali Bilgrami, Sayid, e.a., .\.-r.S.m.,f.g.s. Hyderabad. 1899 Jan. 4 iST.R. AH Hu.ssain Khan, Nawab. Bopal. 1900 Aug. 1. R. Allen, C. G. H., i.c s. Calcutta. 1874 June 3. R. Ameer Ali, The Hon'ble Mr. Juatice, m.a., g.i.b., ' Barrister-at-Law, Judge, High Court. Calcutta. Anderson, Captain A. R. S., B.A., M.B., I. M.S. Port Blair. Anderson, J. A. Calcutta. Arnold, Henry Kercliever Walter. Europe. Arnold, Thomas Walker, B.A., m.r.a.s. Lahore. Ashan-ullah, Nawab, Klian Bahadur. Dacca. Baden-Powell, Baden Henry, m.a., c.i.e. Europe. Bailey, The Revd. Thomas Grahamc, M.A., b.d. Wazirabad. 4. I N.R. \ Baillie, D. C, i.C.i. Ghazipur. 3. iN.R. ! Bain, Lieut.-Col., D. S. E,, i.M.e. Mercura. 1893 Aug. 31. N.R. 1884 Sept. 3. 1892 Jan. 6. 1890 July 2. 1872 April 3. R. A. N.R. N.R. 1870 Feb. 2. j L.M. 1898 Nov. 2. 'N.II. 1891 Mar, 1898 Aug. Date of Election. 1891 April 1. 1900 Aug. 29. 1889 May 1. 1896 Mar. 4. 1869 Dec. 1. 1885 Nov. 4. 1877Jau, 17. ]898 Mar. 2. 1894 Sept. 27. 1898 May 4. 1895 July 3. 1876 Nov. 15. 1900 April 4. 1898 Nov. 2. 1659 Aug. 3. 1897 Feb. 3. 1893 Feb. 1. 1885 Mar. 4. 1895 July 3. 1890 July 2. 1900 Sept. 19. 1897 June 2. 1895 Mar. 6. 1880 Nov. 3. 1900 Jan. 19. 1895 April 3. 18G0 Mar. 7. 1900 Aug. 1. 1887 May 4. 1896 Jan. 8. 1900 May 2. 1898 Sept. 30. 1896 Jan. 8. 1895 July 3. 1895 July 3. 18£6 Nov. 4. 1890 June 4. 1898 Nov. 2. N.R. R. R. N.R. L.M. R. N.R. N.R. R. R. L.M. F.M. N.R. F.M. L.M. R. F.M. R. N.R. R. N.R. R. A. N.R. R. R. L.M. R. R. N.R N.R. R. R. A. N.R. A. N.R. R. Baker, Edward Charles Stuart. North Cachar. Baker, The Hon. Mr. E. N., c.s.i., i.c.s. Calcutta. Bauerji, The Hon. Mr. Justice Guru Das, ai.A., D.L., Judge, High Court. Calcutta. Banerji, Satisli Chandra, M.A. Allahabad. Barker, R. A., ji.d. Europe. Barman, Damudar Das. Calcutta. Barman, H. H. The Maharaja Radha Kishor Dev. Tipper ah. Barnes, Herbert Charles, i c.s. Shillovg. Basu, Nagendra Natha. Calcutta. Bathgate, J. Calcutta. Beatson-Bell, Nicholas Dodd, ];.A., i.C.s. Europe. Beveridge, Henry, i.c.s., (retired). Europe. Bingley, Captain A. H., i.s.c. Hongkong. Black, Robert Clreenhill. Europe. Blanford, William Thomas, ll.d., A.r.S.m., f.g.s., F.R.G.S., F.Z.S., F.K.s. Europe. Bloch, Theodor, j>h.d. Calcutta. Bodding, The Revd. P. 0. Europe. Bolton, The Hon. Mr. Charles Walter, c.s.i., i.c.s. Calcutta. Bonham-Carter, Norman, i.c.s. Mymensingh. Boniierjee, Womes Chu.nder, BaiTister-at-Law, Middle Temple. Calcutta. Bosanquet, 0. V., i.c.s. Indore. Bose, Annada Prasad, ma. Calcutta Bose, Jagadis Chandra, M.A., D.sc , Bengal Education Service. Europe. Bose, Pramatlia Nath, b.sc, f g.s. Geological Survey of India. Camp Baipur, C.l. Bose, Rai Chuni Lai, Bahadur, M.B., F.C.S. Calcutta. Bourdillon, James Austin, C.S.I., I. C.s. Calcutta. Brandis, Sir Dietrich, k.c.i.e., PH.D., f.l.S., f.K.S. Europe. Brown, Major E. Harold, M.D., i.M.s. Calcutta. Biiral, Nobin Chaud, Solicitor. Calcutta. Burn, Richard, I c.S. Allahahad. Butcher, Flora, m.d. Palwal. Cable, Ernest. Calcutta. Caddy, Dr. Arnold. Calcutta. Carey, Hirzel Denis de Musscnden, I.C.S. Europe. Carlylc, Robert Warrand, c.i E., I.C.S. Balasore. Cave-Bi-ovvne, J. A., i.cs. Europe. Chakravarti, Man Mohan, m.a., c.l... Deputy Magistrate. Midnapur. Chatterjea, Kishori Mohan, Judge, Court of Small Causes. Calcutta, Date of Election. 1894 Aug. 1. N.R. Cliatterjee, M. N. Patiala. 1892 Aug. 3. N.li. Ciiaube, Behary Lall. Banhipnr. 1893 Sept. 28. U. Chaudhuri, Hanawari Lala, b.sc. Edin. Calctd.'a. 1899 Jan. 4. A. Clemow, Dr. Frank Gerard, M.D., Ediii. D P.H., Camb, Europe. 1880 Aug. 26. F.M. Clerk, Colonel Malcolm G. Europe. 1881 Mav 4. N.R. Cockburn, John, Opium Department. Gaivnpore, 18S9 Nov. 6. R. Colville, William Brown. Calcutta. 1890 Dec. 3. A. Connan, William, C.E. Europe. 1898 Jane 1. F.M. Cordier, Dr. Palmyr. Europe. 1899 Feb. 1. N.R. Cotton, Julian James, b.a., i.c.s. Madras. 1876 Mar. 1 . F.M. Crawfurd, James, B.A., l.c.s. Europe. 1887 Aug. 25. R. Ci-iper, William Risdon, F.c.s,, p.i.c, A R..S.M. Calcutta. 1877 June 6. A. Croft, Sir Alfred W., M.A., k.c.i.e. Europe. 1895 July 3. A. CummiTig, John Ghest, i.c.s. Europe. 1898 Aug. 26. N.R. Cuppage, Captain W. A., i.s.c. Dibrugarh. 1873 Dec. 3. F.M. Dames, Mansel Longwortli, i.cs. Europe. 1896 Mar. 4. R. Das-Gupta, Jogendra Natli, B.A., Barrister-at-La\v. Calcutta. 1865 June 7. N.R. Das, Raja Jay Krishna, Bahadur, o.s.i Morndahad. 1879 April 7. N.R. Das, Ram Saran, M.A., Secy., Oudh Commercial Bank, Limited. Fyzabad, Oudh. 1900 July 4. N.R. Das, Sjaiii Sunder, b.a. Benares. 1896 Dec. 2. A. Davis, Arthur William, I.C.S. Europe. 1895 Sept. 19. NR. De, Kiran Chandra, B.A., l.c.S. Faridpur. 1895 Dec. 4. N.R Delmerick, Charles Swift. Budann. 1893 Mar. 1. A. Deussen, Dr. Paul. Europe. 1900 May 2. N.R. Dev, Kumar Satindia, Rai Mahesaya. Bansheria. 1899 Aug. 30, N.R. Dev, Raj Kumar Satcliidanand, Bahadur. Deogarh, Samhalpur. 1896 Jan. 8. N.R. Dewhnrst, R. Paget., i.c.s. Naini Tal. 1899 Aug. 30. R. Dods, W. Calcutta. 1898 Jan. 5. R. Dods, W. K. Calcutta. 1886 June 2. R. Doyle, Patrick, c.E., f.r.a.s., f.r.s.e., f.g.s. Cal- cutta. J 892 Sept. 22. R. Drury, Major Francis James, M.B., i.m.s. Calcutta. 1889 Jan. 2. N.R. Dudgeon, Gerald Cecil, Holta Tea Co., Ld., Palam- 1879 Feb. 5. N.R. pur. Duthie, J. F., b.a., f.l.s. Sahnranptir. 1892 Jan. 6. N.R. Dutt, Gerindra Nath. Hafwa. 1877 Aug. 30. II. Dutt, Kedar Nafh. Calcutta. 1892 Ang. 25. R. Dntt, Rai Narsingh Chunder, Bahadur. Howrah. 1890 Sept. 25. A. Dutt, Romesh Cliundei', C.i.e., i.c.s. (retired), Barrister-at-Law, Middle Temple. Europe. 1900 April 4. R Dyson, Major Herbert Jekyl, f.r.c.s , r.M.S. Calcutta. Date of Election. I'JOOJuiv 4. 1871 Dec-. 2. 1900 April 4. 1900 Mar. 7. 1900 Aug. 29. 1899 Ja.i. 4. 1894 Dec. 5. 1898 Sept. 30 1892 May 4. 1900 Dec. 5. 1 893 Jan. Jl. 1899Aiur.30. 1859 Au^^ 1889 Jan. 1889 Uiii: 1H69 Feb. 1897 Dee. 1861 Feb. 1899 Aug. 2. 1890 Aug. 6. 1896 Nov. 4. 1897 July 7. 1898 Aug. 3. 1876 Nov. 15. 1«85 Dee. 2, 1900 Dec. 5. J 1^98 June 1. 1898 April 6. 1898 Jan. 5. 1892 Jan. 6. 1899Ap.il 5. 1900 April 4. 1884 Mar. 1898 Feb. 1897 Feb. N.R. N.R. R. R. N.R. A. R. R. A. NR. R. R. L.M. R. R. R. A. N.S. R. R. F.M. N.R. N.R. F.M. R. L.M. R. R. N.R. N.R. N.R. R. L.M. R. R. Earle, A., i.c.s. Darj'eelmg. Eliot, John, M.A., C.I.E., F.R.t?. Simla. Evaus, The Hon. Sir Griffith, k.c.i.e. Calcutta. Fansbawe, Arthur Uptou, c.S.i., i.c.s. Calcutta. Fansliawe, The Hon. Mr H. C, c.s.r., I c.s. Delhi. Ferrar, Lieutenant, M. Ll., i.s.C. Europe. Finn, Frank, B.A., F.Z.S., Deputy Superintendent, Indian Museum. Calcutta. Firminger, The Revd. Walter K., M.A. Barrackpiir. Forrest, Gr. W., b.a. Europe. Gabriel, E. V., i.cs. Begu Serai. Gait, Edward Albert, i.c.s. Hoicrah. Garth, Dr. H. C. Calcutta. Gastrell, General Jame.s Eardley. Europe. Glio.se, Jogendra Chandra, m.a., b.l. Calcutta. Ghosha, Bhupendra Sri, b.a., b.l. Calcutta. Ghosha, Pratapa Chandra, B.A. Calcutta. Godfrey, Captain Stuart, l.s.c. Europe. Godwin-Austen, Lieut.-Colonel H. H., f.r.s., f.z.s,, F.K.G.S. Eti7-ope. Goenka, Roorniall. Calcutta. Goethals, The Most Revd. Paul, d.d., s.j.. Arch- bishop. Calcutta. Grant, A. J., i.c s. Europe. Grant, Captain J. W., I. M.S. Siroliee. Green, Major Charles Robert Mortimer, f.u. c.s. I. M.S. Muzaffarpur. Grierson, George Abraham, Pft.D , C.I.E., r.c.S. Europe. Griesbaeh, C. L., c.i.e., f.g.s., Director, Geological Survey of India. Calcutta. Grieve, J. W. A. Kalimpong. Gupta, Bepin Behari. Calcutta, Gupta, Krishna Govinda, i.c.s., Barri.ster-at-Law. Calcutta. Gurdon, Captain P. R. T., i.s.C. Cauhati. Haig, Captain Wolseley, l.s.c. Berar. Hare, Major E. C, l.M.s. Gauhall. Hai've}', Sui'geon-General Robert, .m.l»., ll.i-., F.R.C.P., C D., D.s.o. Calcutta. Hassan Ali Qadr, Sir Syud, Nawab Bahadur, K.C.I E. Murshedalad. Havell, Ernest Binfield. Calcutta. Hayden.H.H., B.A., v.e., f.g.s , Geological Survey of India. Calcutta. vn Pate oi Klection. 1875 Mar. 3. 1892 Aug. 3. 1872 Dec. 5. 1878 Mar. 6. 1891 July 1. 1898 Feb. 1884 Mar. 1873 Jan. 2. 1890 Dec. 3. 1866 Mar. 7. 1899 April 5. 1882 Mar. 1. 1867 Dec 4. 1881 Mar. 2. 1896 Aug. 27. 1900 Jan. 17. 1896 July 1. 1891 Feb. 4. 1893 July 1. 1899 Aug. 30. J 887 May 4. 1889 Mar. 6. 1900 Sep. 19 1889 Nov. 6. 1900 May 2. 1889 Feb. 6. 1899 Dec. 6. 1869 July 7. 1870 April 7. 1896 Mar. 4. 189'^ Jan. 11. 1891 Feb. 4. 1896 Feb. 5. 1893 Aug. 31. 1900 Oct. 31. R. I Hendley, Col. Thomas Holbein, C.I.K., i.M.8 . Inspector General of Civil Hospitals, Bengal. Calcutta. R. , Hill, Samuel Charles, b.a., r.sc. Calcutta. A. Hoernle, Augustus Frederick Rudolf, rn.D., c.i.E. E^irope. A. Hoey, W., ph.d., i.c.s., (retired). Europe. R. Holland, Thomas Henry, P.G.S., A.?,.c.s., Geologicol Survey of India. Calcutta. R. Hooper, David, F.c.s. Calcutta. N.R. Hooper, The Hon. Mr. John, b.a., i.c.s. AUahahad. N.-W.P. L.M. I Houstoun, G. L., f.g.s. Europe. N.R. Hyde, The Revd. Henry Barry, m.a. }[a'lra!^: F.M. Irvine, William, i.c.s., (retired). Europe. R. I Kempthorne, H. E. Calcutta. N.R. ' Kennedy, Pringle, M.A. Moznferpur. A. i King, S'ir George, m.b., k.c.i.e., ll.d., f.l.s., i.m.s., j (retired). Europe. F.M. ■ King, Lucas White, B.A., ll.b., c.s.i., i.c.s. Europe. A. ' Konstam, Edwin Max, [.cs. Europe. R. ' Krafft, Albrecht von, PH.D., Geological Survey of India. Calcutta. R. Kiichler, George William, m.a. Calcutta. N.R. Kuppei*, Raja Lala Bunbehari. Burdwan. R. j Laharry, Sarat Chandra, bit. P. Calcutta. N.R. I Lai, Dr. Mannu, Bancla. L.M. ' Lanman, Charles R. Europe. N.R. LaTouche, Thomas Henry Digges, M.A., Geological Survey of In din. Maymyo. N.R. Law, The Hon. Sir Edward P. G., K C.m.g. Calcutta. ■ R. Lee, W. A., f.r.m.s. Calctitta. R. I Leistikow, F. R. Calcutta. R. Little, Charles, m.a., Bengal Education Service. [ Calcutta. N.R. i Lorimer, J. G., i.c.s. Malakhaud. F.M. ! Lyall, Sir Charles James, m.a., k. c.s.i., c.i.e., i.l.p., I I.c.s., (retired). Europe. L.M.I Lyman, B. Smith. Europe. N.R. MacBlaine, Frederick, i.c.s, Purueah. L.M. j Maclagan, E. D., m.a., i.c.s. Multan. R. I Macpherson, Duncan James, m.a., c.i.e., i.c.s. j Calcutta. N.R. Macpherson, William Charles, i.c.s. Bankipore. N.R. j Mahatha, Purraeshwar Narain. Mozufferpur. R. 1 Mahomed, AbduUa, m.a. Calcutta. VIU Date of Klectioii. 1895 Aug. 29. 1 R. 1886 Jan. 6. I N.R. 1898 Nov. 1889 Jan. 1893 July 1889 Mar. 1893 War. 1892 April 6. 1900 May 2. N.R. R. F.M. A. A. A. N.R. 1899 Feb. 1. N.R 1899 Mar. 1. 1886 Mar. 8. 1895 July 3. 1900 Mar. 7. 1900 Jan. 19. 1884 Nov. 5. 1884 Sept. 3. 1870 July 6. 1898 ApiilO. Ib74 May 6. 1896 July ]. 1897 Jan. 6. 1899 Mi.r. 1. 1895 Mar. 6. 1897 Nov. 3. 1895 July 3. 1898 May 4. Ib98 Sept.30. 1879 :May 7. 1894 Aug. 30. 1900 Mi.y 2. 1899 Sept. 29. 1886 May 5. 1892 Dec. 7. 1896 April 1. 1885 June 3. 1881 Nov. 2. 1900 Dec. 5. lS89Aug.29. 1892 Oct. 27. 1885 Feb. 4. N.R. L.M. N.R. R. R. A. R. R. R. A. N.R. N.R. R. N.R. R. N.R. R. A. I R. R. R. R. R. R. N.R. R. H. L.M. F.M. N.R. Mahomed G-ilanljShams-ul-Ulama Shaikh. Calcutta. Mahomed Latif Khan, Sayid, Khan Bahadur. Giijranioala. Maitra, Akshaya Kumar, B.A., b.l. Hajshahi. Maliah, Kumar Rameswar. Hoivrali. Mangos, C. D. Europe. Mann, John, M.A. Europe. Mari'iott, Charles Richardson, i.c.s. Europe. Maynard, Major F. P., l.M.s. Europe. McArdle, Captain Andrew Augustine Frayne, n.A., M.B., l.M.s, Bombay. McMahon, Captain A. H., C.S.I., c.i.e., i.s.c. ^[ala• khand. McMinn, C. "W., B.A., l.C.s., (retired). Camilla. Mehta, Rustomjee Dhunjeebhoy, c.i.e. Calcutta. ]\relitus, Paul Gregory, c.l.F., i.c.s. Shillong. Meyer, William Stevenson, i.c.s. Calcutta. Michie, Charles. Calcutta. Middlemiss, C. S., B.A., Geological Survey of India. Europe. Miles, William Harry. Calcutta. Miller, Albert Bermingham., B.A.,Barrister-at-Law, Ofiicial Trustee. Calcutta. Milne, Captain C. J., l.M.s. Calcutta. Minchin, F. J. V. Europe. Miara, Rai Lakshmi Sanker, Bahadur. Benares. Misra, Tulsi Ram. Barielly. Mitra, J, C, m.a., b.l. Calcutta. Mitra, Rajeswar. Nagpur. Mitia, Saroda Churan, M.A., b.l. Calcutta. Monahan, Francis John, i.c.s. Shillong. ]\Iookerjee, R. N. Calcutta. Moore, The Revd. Herbert Octavius, M.A. Calcutta. Muir, J. W., M. A., I. c. s., (retired). Europe. ]\lukerjee, Sib Narayan. tfttarpara. jMukerji, Phani Bhushan, B.sc. Calcutta. Mukharji, Jotindra Nath, b.a. Calcutta. Mukhopadhyaya, The Hon. Dr. Asutosh, m.a., p.l., F.U.A.S., F.R.s.E. Calcutta. Mukhopadhyaya, Panchanana. Calcutta. Mullick, Sham Lall. Calcutta. NaemTvoollahjMaulvie, Deputy Magistrate. Etawah. Niceville, Lionel de, f.e.s., c.m.z.s. Calcutta. Nicoll, John. Calcutta. Nimmo, John Duncan. Calcutta. Norvill, Dr. Frederic H. Europe. Nyayai-atna, Mahamahopadhyaya Mahesa Chandra, C.I.E. Benares. iX Date of Election. 1899 jTu. 7. 1900 Dec. 5. 1900 Aug. 29. 1880 Dec. 1. 1883 Aug. 30. 1887 July 6. 1880 Aug. 4. 1880 Jan. 7. 1899 Aug. 2. 1873 Aug. 6. 1888 June 6. 1881 Aug, 25. J877 Aug. 1. 1889 Nor. 6. 1896 Jan. 8. 1889 Mar. G. 1889 Mar. 6. 1896 Sept. 25. 1880 April 7. 1895 Aug. 29. 1900 April 4. 1898 Aixg. 3. 1890 Mar. 5. 1887 May 4. 1900 Sept. 19. 1884 Mar. 5. 1900 April 4. 1900 Aug. 29. 1896 Dec. 2. 1895 Mar. 6. 1889 June 5. 1885 Mar. 4. 1896 Aug.27. 1899 June 7. 1898 Mar. 2. 1897 Nov. 3. 1900 Dec. 5. 1893 Jan. 11. N.R. N.R. N.R. A. F.M. N.R. L.M. R. N.R. R. L.M. R. N.R. N.R. F.M. R. N.R. N.R. N.R. N.R. R. N.R. R, R. R. R. R. N.R. N.R. A. N.R. R. N.R. N.R. N.R. R. R. L.M, "O'Brien, P. H., i.c.s. Purneah. O'Connor, Captain W. F., r.a. Kaslimir. O'Dwyer, Miclmel Francis, B.A., i.c.s. Alwar. Oldham, R. D., A.re.s.M., f.g.s., Geological Survey of India. Europe. Oliver, Edw. Emmei'son, m.i.o.e. Europe. Oung, Moung Hla. Bangoon. Pandia, Pandit Molianlall Vislmulali, F.T.S., Muttra. Pargiter, Frederick Eden, n.A., l.o.s. Calcutta. Peako, C. W., m.a,, Bengal Education Service. Banld]uir. Pedler, Alexander, f.r.s., Director of Public In- struction, Bengal. Calcutta. Pennell, Aubray Percival, B.A., l.C.s. Europe. Percival, Hugh Melvile, m.a., Bengal Education Service. Calcutta. Peters, Lieut.-Colonel 0. T., M.B., r.M.s. Bombay. Phillott, Capt. D. C, i.s.c. Kohat. Place, George William, b.a., ll.b., i.c.s. Europe. Pi*ain, Major David, M.A., M B., LL.D., l.M.s., Royal Botanic Garden. Sibpur. Prasad, Hanuman, Raes and Zemindar. Chunar-.-l Pringle, A. T. Madras. Rai, Bipina Chandra, B.L. Jessore. Rai, JatindraNath Chaudliery,'M.A., b.l. Taki. Raleigli, The Hon. Mr. T. Calcutta. Ram, Sita, M.A. Caivnpore. Ray, Prafulla Chandra, D.gc, Bengal Education Service. Calcutta. Ray, Prasanna Kumar, d.sc. (Lond. and Edin.), Bengal Education Service. Calcutta. Reader, G. F. Calcutta, Risley, Herbert Hope, b.a., c.i.e., i.c.s. Calcutta. Rogers, Captain Leonard, m.d., B.sC, m.k.C.p., F.if.c.s, I. M.S. Calcutta. Rose, H. A., I.c.s. Lahore. Row, B. Suryanaran, b.a. Bellary. Rowe, Frederick James, m.a. Europe. Roy, Maharaja Girjanath. Dinagepur. Rustorajee, Harjeebhoy Manickjee. Calcutta. Samman, Herbert Frederick, i.c.s. Barisal. Sarkar, Chandra Kumar. Benares. ' Sarkar, Jadu Nath. Banlcipur. Saunders, C. Calcutta. Schwaiger, Imre George. Calcutta. Scindia, His Highness the Maharaja., Gwali&r. Dkt« of Election. 1899 uiiT. 1. 1900 Dec. 5. 1885 April 1. 1897 Dec. 1. 1900 Mar. 7. 18B5 Feb. 4. 1894 June 6. 1891 June 3. 1900 May 2. 1899 May 3. 1887 April 6. 1893 Mar. 1. 1880 June 2. 1895 Aug. 29 1892 Mar. 2. 1889 Aug. 29. 1892 Aug. 3. 1895 Aug. 29 1889 Nov. 6. 1894 Feb. 7. 1894 July 4. 1899 June 7. 1867 April 3. 1897 Jan. 6. 1872 Aug. 5. 1874 June 3. 1899 Nov. 1. 1898 April 6. 1891 Aug. 27. 1895 July 6. 1899 Aug. 3() 1900 Aug. 29 1898 June 1. 1899 Mar. 1. 1868 June 3. 1898 April 6. R N.R. R. R. 11. K. N.R A R. N.R. A. N.R. N.R. R. LM N.R. N.R. NR. N.R. N.R. N.R. N.R. R. R, N.R. F.M. N.R. R. N.R. N.R R. N.R. N.R. R. R. R. Scot^, Lienfeimnt Bernnrd, i.s.c. Bnrraclcpore. Sen, Birendia Chaiidr:i, i c.S. Bogra. Sen. Yadu Nath. Calcutta. Setb, M. J. Calcutta. .Shastiee, Pandit Yogesha Chandra Calcutta. Sliastri, Mahamahopadhaja Haraprasad, m.a. Calcutta. Sliibli Noniani, Shams-ul-Ulama Maulvie Mubam- mad, Professor of Arabic in the Muhammadan Oriental College. Al'Kjnrh. Shilliiigford, Fredeiick Alexander. Europe. Slirager, Adolphc Calcutta. Silberrad, Clias. A., i.c.s. Lulitptcr, Bundelkhand. Simpson, Dr. W. J. Europe. Singh, Maharaja Kumara Sirdar Bharat, i.e. 8. Ghazlpur. Singh, Thakur Garuradhawaya Prasad, Raja of Beswan. Besivan Fort, Aligarh. Singli, Lachmi Narayan, M.A., B.L. Calcutta. Singh, The Hon. Raja Ooday Pratab. Binga. Singh, H. H. The Maharaja Prabhu Naraiii, Baha- dur. Benaies. Singh, H. H. The Hon. Mahai-aja Pratap Nai'aiu. Ajodliya, Oudh. Singli, Ram Din. Bankipnr. Singh, H. H. The Hon. Maharaja Rameshwara, Bahadur. Darbhanga. Sineh, H. H. Raja VishwaNath, Bahadur, Chief of Chhalarpur. Siiiha, Kunwar Kushal Pal, m.a. Na)-ki P.O , Agra District. Sinha, Purnenda Narayan. Banlnptir. Sircar, Dr. Mahendra Lai, M.D., CLE., D.L. Calcutta. Sircar, Anirita Lai, F.C.s. Calcutta. Skrefsrud, The Revd. Laurentius Olavi. Bampur Eat. Smith, Vincent Arthur, i.c.s. Europe. Srivastavya, Lala Shyam Snnder Lai. Pertabgarh. Stark, Herbert, b.a. Calcutta. Stein, M. A., PH.D. Knshmir. Sfeinbei'g, Alfred Frederick, i.C.S. Bampur Boalia, Stt'plien, St. John, b.a., ll.b. Calcutta. Stephenson, Captain John, I.^f.s. Edxvardesahad. Sunder, Donald. Fatna. Tocher, A. Calcutta. Tagore, The Hon. Maharaja Sir Jotendra Mobun, Bahadur, k.cs.i. CalctUta. Tagore, Maharaja Pi'odyat Coomar. CahxUta. XI Date of Election. 1897 d7c. 1. 1893 Aug. 31. 1878 June 5. 1875 June 2. 1898 Nov. 2. 1847 June 2. 1891 Aug. 27. 1871 April 5. 1861 June 5. 1893 May 3. 1898 Feb. 2. 1900 Aug. 29. 1890 Feb. 5. 1896 May 6. 1894 Sept. 27. 1895 July 5. 1900 Jan. 19. 1889 Nov. 6. 1900 April 4, 1865 May 3. 1874 July 1. 1899 Sept. 29. 1896 Feb. 5. 1891 May 6. 1899 Aug. 30. 1892 Jan. 6. N.R. N.R. N.R. N.R. R. L.M. N.R. A. L.M. N.R. R. N.R. N.R. N.R. L.M. N.R. R. N.R. N.R. A. R. R. N.R. N.R. R. R. 1900 Dec. 5. N R. 1894 Sept. 27. R. 1894Aug.30. N.R. 1898 July 6. ' R. 1897 Jan. 6. \ N.R. Talbot, W. A. Belgaum. Tate, G. P., Survey of India. Honglcong. Temple, Lieut -Col. Richard Carnac, CLE., I.3.C. Port Blair. Thibaut, Dr. G., Muir Central College. Allahabad. Thornton, Kdward, a.r.i.b A. Calcutta. Thuillier, Lieut -Genl. Sir Henry Edward Lander, KT., C.S.I., F.R.S., R.A. Europe. Thur.ston, Edgar. Madras. Trefftz, Oscnr. Europe. Tremlett, James Dyer, M.A., i.C.s., (retired). Europe. Vandja, Raja Ram Chandi'a. Mayurhhanga, District Balasore. Vasu, Atnrita Lai. Calcutta. Vaugham, Major J. C, i.M s. Burdivan. Venis, Arthur, M.A., Principal, Sanskrit College. Beuares Vidyanidhi, Mahendra Nath. Krishnagar. Vost, Major William, i.M.s. Jaunpur. Wfiddell, Major Lawrence Austine, m.b., ll.d., I.M.s. Honqkong. Wallace, David Robb. Calcutta. Walsh, Major John Henry TuU, I.M.S. Murshidabad. Walton, Captain Herbert James, M.B., P.B.C.3., i.M.8. Bombiiy. Water house, Major- General James, i.s.c, (retired). Europe. Watt, Dr. George, C.I.E. Calcutta. Welldoii, The Most Revd. James Edward Cowell, D.n., Lord Bisliop of Calcutta; Metropolitan of India and Ceylon. Calcutta. Williams, Captain diaries E., I.M.S. Tounggyi, S. Shan Slates, Burma. Wilson, Charles Robert, M.A., Bengal Education Service. Banlcipur. Wood, E. Seymour, f.g s. Calcutta. Woodburn, the Hon. Sir John, M.A., K.c.s.l., i.C.s. Calcutta. Woodman, H. C, i.c.s. Jalpaiguri. Woodroffe, John George, Bar.-at-Law. Calcutta Wright, Henry Nelson, b.a., i C.s. Allahabad. Wyness, James, c e. Calcutta. Zaka-uUah, Shame-ul-Ulama Muhammad. Dehli. 3U1 SPECIAL HONORARY CENTENARY MEMBERS. Date of Eltction. J884 Jail. 15. 1884 Jan. 15. 1884 Jan. 15. 1884 Jan. 15. 1848 Feb. 2. J86ON0V. 7. 1875 Nov. 3. 1879 June 4. 1879 June 4. 1879 June 4. 1879 June 4. 1881 Dec. 7. 1883 Feb. 7. 3883 Feb. 7. 1894 Mar. 7. 1894 Mar. 7. 1894 Mar. 7. 1895 June 5. 1895 Juuo 5. 1895 June 5. 1896 Feb. 5. 1896 Feb. 5. 1896 Feb. 5. 1896 Feb. 5. 1899 Feb. 1. 1899 Dec. 6. 1899 Dec. 6. 1899 Dec. 6. 1899 Dec. 6. Dr. Ernst Haeckel, Professor in the University of Jeua. Charles Meldrum, Esq., C.M.G., M.A., ll.d., I'.r.a.s., f.r.S. 2Iaurithis. Professor A. H. Sayce, Professor of Con^p. Philology. O-rfortl. Professor Emile Senart, Member of the Institute of France. Paris. HONORARY MEMBERS. Sir Joseph Daltou Hooker, g.G.s.i., c.b., m.d., d.c.l., LL.D., F.L.S., F.G.S., F.R.G.S., F.R.S. Berkshire. Dr. Albrecht Weber, Berlin. Dr. Otto von Bohtliugk. Leipzig. Professor Edward Bayles Cowell, d.c.l. Cambridge. Dr. Albert Giiuther, 31. A., M.D., PH.D., P.L.S., v.P.z.s., F.R.S. Surrey. Dr. Jules Janssen. Paris. Professor P. Regnaud. Lyons. Lord Kelvin, G.c.v.o., D.C.L , ll.d , F R.S.E., F.R.S. Glasgoio. William Thomas Blanford, Esq., ll.d., a.r.s.m., f.g.S., F.H.G.S., F.Z.S., F.R.S. London. Alfred Russell Wallace, Esq., ll.d., d.c.l., f.l.s., f.z.s., F.u.s. Dorset. Sir Greorge Gabriel Stokes, Bart, M.A., d.c.l., ll.d., d.sc., F.C.P.S., F.R.S.E., F.U.S. Cambridge. Mahamahapodhyaya Chandra Kanta Tarkalankara. Calcutta. Professor Theodor Noeldeke. Strassbiirg. Lord Rayleigh, m.a., d.c.l., d.sc, ll.d., ph.d., f.r.a.s., F.R.S. Witham, Essex. Lt.-Genl. Sir Richard Strachey, R.E., G.c.s.i., ll.d.. f.r.g.s., F.G s., F.L.S., F.R.S. London. Charles H. Tawney, Esq., m.a., C.i.e. London. Lord Lister, f.r.o.s., d.c.l., m.d., ll.d., d.sc, f.r.s. London. Sir Michael Foster, k.c.c, m.a., m.d., d.c.l., ll.d., d.sc, F.L.S., F.CS., F.R.S. Cambridge. Professor F. Kielhorn, ru.D., c.i.e. GUltingcn. Professor Charles Rockwell Laumann. Massachusetts, U.S.A. Dr. Augustus Frederick Rudolf Hoernle, PH.D., c.i.e. Oxford. Professor Edwin Ray Lanke.ster, M.A., ll.d., F.R.S. London Sir George King, K.ci.E., M.D., ll.d., f.l.s., f.r.s. London. Professor Edward Burnett Tylor, d.c.l., ll.d., f.r.s Oxford. ProfeBsor Edward Suess, ph.d., For. Mem. B.s. Vienna. XIU CORRESPONDING MEMBER. Date of Election. 1866 May 7. Schlagintweit, Dr. Emil. Z'weibriicken. ASSOCIATE MEMBERS. I . v 1874 April 1. j Lafont, The Revd. Father, E., ci.E., s,j. OalctUla. 1875 Dec. 1. ' Bate, The Revd. J. D.,, m.m.a.s.. Kent. 1875 Dec. 1. j Abdul Hai, Maulvie. Calcutta. 1882 June 7. | Giles, Herbert. Europe. , ' 1884 Aug. 6. Moore, F., F.L.s. Surrey. "■ 1885 Dec. 2. I Fiihrer, Dr. A. Europe. 1886 Dec. 1. Das, Rai Bahadur Sarat Chandra, c.i.E. Calcutta. 1892 April 6. Samasratui, Satya Vrata. Calcutta, 1892 Dec. 7. Briihl, P. J. Sihpur.^ 1899 Aprils. Saiijal, Rai Bahadur Ram Brahma. Calcutta. 1899 April o. Bhandari, Visiiu Prasad Raj. Nepal. 1899 Nov. 1. Fraucotte, The Revd. Father E., s.j. Calcutta. LIST OF MEMBERS WHO HAVE BEEN ABSENT FROM INDIA THREE YEARS AND UPWARDS.* * Rule 40. — After the lapse of 3 years from the date of a member leaving India, if no intimation of his Avishes shall in the interval have been received by the Society, his name shall be removed from the List of Members. The following members will' be removed from the next Member List of the Society, under the operation of the above Rule: — Henry Kerch ever Walter Arnold, Esq. J. A. Cave-Brown, Esq., i.C s. Sir Alfred W. Croft, m.a., k.c.i.e. Romesh Chunder Dutt, Esq , c.i.E., T.c.s. (retired). Frederick Alexander Sliillingford, Esq. Dr. W. J. Simpson. XIV LOSS OF MEMBERS DURING 1900. By Retieement. Maulvie Abdul Karim, b.a. Brajendra Nath De, Esq., M.A., I.C.S. The Revd. Tliomas Foulkes, F.L.S., F.R.O.S. R. Gi-eeyen, Esq., i.C.s. Francis Henry Harding, Esq , B.A., l.C.s. Jo.seph Kennedy, Esq., i.C.s. Maliamahopadhyaya Nilmani Mukerjea. Raja Peary Mohan Mukerjea, M.A., C.s.l. Lieut. -Col. R. H. Whitwell, i.M.s. By Death. Ordinary Memben. Dr. John Anderson, M.D., f.r.s. Babu Aghore Chandra Bliaduri. H.R.H. The Duke of Edinburgh. Babu llajani Kanta Gupta. Babu Guru Prasad Sen. Honorary Memhers, Professor The Right Hon. F. Max Miiller. By Removal. Under Ettle 9. R. C. Hamilton, Esq., i.c.s. J. Lane Long, Esq. Captain W. F. O'Connor, k.a. (Re-elected). George Charles Wolfe, Esq. XV Under TtuU 38. Maulvie Azlz-ud-din Ahmad. Babu Krishna Gopal Bhnkta. Rai Nali Naksha Bose Bahadur. Babu Radhika Raman Chntterjee. Rai Khirod Chandra Chaudhuri. Babu Gopal Bjtllabh Das, m.a. Raja Baikunta Nath De. Maulvie Kliuda Baksli Klian Bahadur. Varada Charana Mitra, Esq., i.c.s, Babu Mahendra Nath Ray, M.A., B.L. Babu Suresh Chunder Saraajpati. Rajkumar Sarvadhikari Rai Bahadur, Babu Nareudra Nath Sen. Raja Bhupendra Sinha Bahadur. Under Bule 40. Henry DeCourcy Agrnew, Esq. Dr. C. F. Oldham, p.b.g.s. 7X .r.c-' [appendix. ABSTRACT STATEMENTS OF RECEIPTS AND DISBURSEMENTS OF THE Asiatic Society of Bengal FOR THE YEAR 1900. xvni 1900, STATEMENT Asiatic Society Dr. To ESTABLISIIMFNT. Salaries Commission Pension Repairs Stationery Lightine: Taxes Postage Freight Meeting Anditor's fee MiscellaneoTis Books ... Binding Fnrniture Catalogne Catalogue of Coinf? Rs. As. P. 3,436 9 0 41 G 10 1) 52 0 0 To CONTTNOENOIF.-;. 69 113 3 0 5 r> 75 0 0 884 4 0 445 2 0 32 8 15 56 13 0 100 0 0 295 5 11 To Library and Collections. 1,535 495 265 100 362 To PCBIICATIONS. 346 14 0 2,272 7 0 1,275 8 0 652 1 0 Joiirnal, Part I .. Journal, Part II ... Journal, Part III Proceedings To Printing charges of Circulars, Receipt-forms, Ac. ., Personal Account (Writes-off and Miscellaneous) To Extraordinary Expenditure. Royal Society's Scientific Catalogue ... ... 382 13 0 Balance Rs, As. P. 3,905 3 9 2,071 9 11 2,758 8 2 1,546 14 0 236 6 0 1,309 10 4 382 13 0 1,59,276 6 0 Total Rs. 1,74,487 7 2 No. 1. of Benictl. 1900. Cr. Rb. As. p. Kb. As. P. By Balance from last Report ... ... ... 1,52,452 11 11 By Oash Receipts, Eublicatious sold for cish .,, ... ... 30-4 0 0 Interest ou Investments ... ... ... -j.SSO 0 0 Rent of Rooms on the Society's ground floor ... 1,200 0 0 Allowance from Government of Bengal for tlie Publication of Anthropological and Cognate Sub- jects ... ... ... ... 2,000 0 0 Ditto from Government of Assam ... ... 2,000 0 0 Miscellaneous ... ... ... ... 110 4 3 Bt Personal Account. Admission fees Subscriptions Sales on credit MiBcellaneous r. 1,104 0 0 8,836 0 0 561 0 0 389 7 0 11,144 4 8 10,890 7 U Toul R». ... 1,74,487 7 2 \V. K. DoDS, Examined and found correct. Honorary Secretary and Treasurer, Meugens, King & Simson, Asiatic Society of Beinjul. Auditore. STATEMENT 1900. Oriental Pivblication Fund in Account Dr. To Cash Expenditure. ■ Rs, As. P. Kb. As. P. Printing charges ... .. ... 5,380 12 9 Editing charges ... ... ... ... 3,399 8 0 Salaries ... ... ... ... 1,280 9 9 Freight ... ... ... ... 16 14. 0 Stationery ... ... ... ... 70 0 6 Postage .. ... ... 236 5 3 Commission on collection ... ... ... 29 3 3 Contingencies ... ... ... ... 20 9 6 10,433 15 0 To Personal Account (VVrites-off and Miscellaneous) ... 209 10 0 . Balance ... ... 10,561 12 11 Total Rs. ... 21,205 5 11 STATEMENT Sanskrit Manuscript Fund in Account Dr. To Cash Expenditure, Salaries Travelling charges Purchase of manuscripts Printing Postage Stationery- Contingencies To Personal Account (Writes-off and Miscelianuoas) Balance Total U.S. Rs. As. P. Rs. As. P. 1,056 0 0 253 13 G 607 8 0 4 U 0 0 7 0 3 4 0 198 7 3 o 224 5 g 2 0 0 6,952 2 2 9,078 7 11 XXI No. 2. ivith the Asiatic Society of Bengal. 1900. Cr. Rs. As. P. Rs. As. P. By Balauce from last Report .. ... ...^ 10,564 13 .1 By Ca,sh 15ECEIPTS. Government allowance ... ■••. ... 9,000 0 0 Pablications sold for casli ... ... ••• 609 14 4 Advances recovered ... ... •-• 51 11 6 9,661 9 10 By Personal Account. Sales on credit ... ... ... ... 978 9 0 Miscellaneous ... ... ... ... 0 6 0 978 15 0 Total Ks. ... 21,205 5 11 W. K. DoDS, Examined and found correct. Honorary Secretary and Treasurer, Meugens, King & Simson, Asiatic Society of Bengal. Auditors. No. 3. ivith the Asiatic Society of Bengal. Gr, Rs. As. P. Rs. As. P. By Balance from last Report ... ... ... 5,872 7 11 By Cash Receipts. Government allowance ... ... ... 3,200 0 0 Publications sold for cash ... ... ... 3 0 0 3,203 0 0 By Personal Ach:ount. Sales on credit ... ... ... ... ... 3 0 0 "ToFal'RsT ." 9,o7S ' 7 Tl W. K. DoDS, ExanniiiBd and found correct. ' — Honorary Secretary and Treasurer, ■ - Mkughns, King & Simson Asiatic Society ~6fBeh§al. '•" ' 'Auditors^' XXll 1900. STATEMENT Personal To Balance from last Report Dr. To Cash Expendituee. Advances for purchase of Sanskrit Manuscripts, Ac. To Asiatic Society ,, Oriental Publication Fund „ Sanskrit Manuscript Fund Rs. Ab. p. 10,8'JO 7 0 978 15 0 3 0 0 Ra. As. P. 4,124 7 4 lOU 1 0 11,872 (i 0 Total Rs. 16,186 14 4 STATEMENT Invest Dr. To Balance from last Report ,, Cash Total Rs. Value. Cost. Rs. As. V. Rs. As. P. 1,69,3(0 0 0 1,60,143 0 10 6,000 0 0 5,587 7 6 1,65,300 0 0 1,65,730 8 4 Funds. I'EBMiNBNT. Tempohibt. Total Value. Cost. Value. Cost Cost. A Biatic" Society ... TruBt Fund Rs. 1,44,500 1,300 Ab 0 0 p. 0 0 o' Rs. 1,44,121 1,295 As. 0 12 P 0 9 9 R8. 19,500 Ab. 0 0 P. 0 0 Es. 20,313 ... As. 11 P. 7 Rs. 1,64,434 1,295 As. 11 12 P. 7 1,46,800 0 1,46,416 12 19,500 2'\313 U 7 1,65,730 ! S \ * No. 4. Account. 1900, Cv. By Cash Receipts „ Asiatic Society ,, Oriental Publication Fund ,, Sanskrit Manuscript Fund Rs. As. P. 1.309 10 I 209 10 0 2 0 0 Rs. As. P. 12.425 13 .1 1,521 i -t By Balance. Due to the Society, Dae by tlie Society. ' Members Snbscriber.s ... Employes Miseellaneons Rs. 3,061 5 30 60 As. 8 0 0 10 3 P. 3 0 0 11 2 Rs. 221 91 350 251 As. 13 8 0 0 P. 6 1 0 0 11 5 3,157 917 6 Total Rs. 2,2.39 12 9 16,186 14 4 W. K. DoDS, Honorary Secretary and Treasurer, Asiatic Society of Bengal. No. 5. vient. Examined and found correct. Mgugexs, King & Simson, Auditors, Cv. By Balance * Value. Cost. Rs. As. P. Rs. As. P. 1,65,300 0 0 1,65,730 8 4 Total Rs. W. K. DoDs, Honorary Secretary and Treasurer, Asiatic Society of Bengal. ... 1,65,300 0 0 1,65,730 8 4 Examined and found correct. Meugexs, King & Simson, Auditors, 1900. STATEMENT Trust Dr. To Pension ,, Bnlaiice Total Rs. Rs. As. P. 44, 0 0 1,347 11 10 1,391 11 10 STATEMENT Cash To Biilance from last Report To Asiatic Society ,, Oriental Publication Fnnd „ Sanskrit Manuscript Fund ,, Personal Account ... ,, Trust Fund Dr. Receipts. Total Rs. Rs. As. P. 5,968 12 7 11,144 4 3 9,601 9 10 3,203 0 0 12,425 13 3 45 8 0 42,448 15 11 To Cash ... „ Investments „ Personal Account. STATEMENT Balance Dr. Rs. As. P. 10,167 11 10 1,65,730 8 4 2,239 12 9 Total Bs. 1,78,138 0 11 itt No. 6. Fund. By Balance from last Report ,, Interest on Investnaeuts Cf. Total Ka. WOO. Rs. As. P. 1,34.8 3 10 45 8 0 1,391 11 10 W. K. DoDS, Honorary Secretary and Treasurer, Asiatic Society of Bengal. Examined and found correct. Meugens, King & Simson, Auditors, No. 7. Account. Cr. Expenditure. By Asiatic Society ,, Oriental Publication Fund ,, Sanskrit Manuscript Fund ,, Personal Account ... ,, Investments ,, Trust Fund Balance Total Rs. Rs. A.S. P. 13,901 6 10 10,433 15 0 2, 1 24 5 9 19i» 1 0 5,587 7 6 44 0 0 10,167 11 10 42,448 15 11 W. K. D0D8, Honorary Secretary and Treasurer, Asiatic Society of Bengal. Examined and found correct. Meugkns, King & Simson, Auditors. No. 8. Sheet. Cr. By Asiatic Society „ Oriental Publication Fund „ Sanskrit Manuscript Fund ,, Trust Fund W. K. D0D9, Honorary Secretary a»id Treasurer, Asiatic Society of Bengal. Total Rs. Rs. As. P. 1,59,276 6 0 10,5f>l 12 11 6,952 2 2 1,347 U 10 1,78,138 0 11 Examined and found coirect. Meugens, King & Simson, Auditon Lid of all Societies, Institutions, ^x., to which the Publications of the Asiatic Society have been sent during the year, or from which publications have been received. * Societies, Ac, which have received the Asiatic Society's publicatious, and have seut their publications in return. t Societies, &c., which have received the Asiatic Society's publications, but have sent none in return. § Societies, &c., whoso publications have been received, but to wliich none have been sent in return. * Adelaide: — Royal Geoi,a'apI ileal Society of Australasia. * Allahabad : — Editor, Pioneer. * Amsterdam : — E-oyal Zoological Society. * : — Koniuklijke Akademie van Wetenschappen. * Angers : — Societe d' Etudes Scientifiques d' Augers. * Baltimore : — Johns Hopkins University. * Batavia: — Society of Arts and Sciences. * : — Kon. Natuurkundige Yereeniging in Nederlandsch-Indie. § Bellary : — Editor, Astrological Magazine. * Benares : — Nagari Pracharini Sabha. * Berlin : — Entomologischer Verein. * : — Berliner Gesellschaft fiir Anthropologic, Ethnologie uud Urgeschichte. * : — Gesellschaft Naturforschende Freunde zu Berlin. * . : — Royal Academy of Sciences. * . : — Seminars fiir Orientalisclie Sprachen. § . : — Laboriitorium et Museum. § : — Kbniglichen Bibliothek. t Berne: — Societe Suisse d' Entomologie. * Bombay : — Bombay Anthropological Society. * : — Bombay Bi'anch, Royal Asiatic Society. * : — Editor, Indian Antiquary. * : — Natural History Society. § : — Government Observatoi'y. ^ • : — Marine Survey of India. f Bonn: — University of Bonn. * Bordeaux: — L' Academic Nationalc des Sciences, Bellcs-Lettres et Arts. * . — Societe Linneenne. — American Philological AssociatioTi. — Natural History Society. — American Oriental Society. § Boston * * Brisbane : — Royal Society of Queensland. § Brisbane : — Queeiislatul irnseuiu. § : — Depnrtineiit of Agriculture. t Brookville : — Society of Natural History, * Brunswick : — Verein fiir Natnrwissenschaft. * Brussels: — L' Academic Iloyalo des Sciences. t : — Musee Royal d' Histnire Natui'elle de Belgique. — Societe Enlomologique de Belgiqne. — La Societe Royale Malacologique de Belgique. — Societe Royale des Sciences de Lie^^e, — Musee du Congo. t Budapest: — Hungarian Central Bureau for Ornithological Observa- tions. * : — Royal Hungarian Academy of Sciences. § : — Editor, Aquila. * Buenos Ayres : — National Museum. f : — Academia National de Ciencias de la Republica Argentina. § Buffalo, N.y. :— Society of Natural Sciences. * Caen : — Societe Linn^enne de Normandie. * Calcutta: — Agri-Horticultural Society of India. — Geological Survey of [lulia. — Editor, Englishiiian. — Editor, Indian and Eastern Engineer. — Editor, Indian Daily News. — Editoi', Indian Engineering. — Editor, Indian Mirror. — Editor, Indian Lancet. — Indian Meteorological Department, — Indian Museum. — Maha-bodhi Society. — Photographic Society of India. — Royal Botanic Gardens. — Survey of India. — Tuttobodhini Shova. — Sanskrit College. — Imperial Library. — Botanical Survey of India. — St. Xavier's College Observatory. — University Library. — Editor, Indian Gardening and Planting. Mahomedan Literary Society. * Cambridge : — University Library. * Cape Town : — South African Museum. t * Cfipe Town : — South African Philosopliical Sooiefy. * Cassel : — Die Verein fiir Nahirlcunde. t Cliorbonrg : — Societe Nntionale des Sciences Naturelles. * Cliicago, III. : — Field Colnmbian Museum. § : — Academy of Sciences. * Cliristiana: — University Library. § Cincinnati : — Lloyd Library of Botany, Pharmacy and Miiterin Medica. t Clinton, "Wiss. : — Editor, Ameriean Antiquarian and Oriental Journal. * Colombo : — Ceylon Branch, Royal Asiatic Society. * Copenhagen : — La Societe Royale des Antiquaries du Nord. t Cuttack: — Cuttack Library. * Danzig: — Naturforschende Gesellschaft. * Dehra Dun : — Great Trigonometrical Survey. * Dresden: — Entomologischer Verein '^ Iris." * : — Koniglich Zoologisches und Anlbropologieeh-Ethnogra- phisches Museum. * Dnblin : — Royal Dublin Society, * — : — Royal Irish Academy. * Edinburgh : — Royal Society. § . : — Royal Physical Society. y : Scottish Geographical Society. * Florence : — Societa Italiana d' Antropologia e Etnologia. ■\ : — Societa Africana d'ltalia. * Frankfurt : — Senckenbergische Naturforschende Gesellschaft. * : — Naturwissenchaftlicher Verein des Reg.-Bez. Frankfurt. * Geneva : — Societe de Physique et d' Histoire Naturelle. * Genoa: — Museo Civico di Storia Naturale. * Giessen : — Oberhessische Gesellschaft fur Natur und Heilkunde. * Graz : — Naturwissenschftlicher Vei*ein fiir Styria. § Greenwich : — Royal Observatory. * Hac^ue : — Koninklijk Instituut voor de Taal- Land-en Volkenkunde van Nederlandsch-Indie. * : — Netherlands Entomological Society. ♦ : — The State Archives. § Halifax : — Nova Scotian Institute of Science, t Halle : — Deutsche Morgenliindische Gesellschaft. * _ : — Kaiserliche Leopoldiniscli-Carlinische Akademie. * Hamburgh : — Naturhistoriches Museum. * : — Naturwissenchaftlicher Verein. * ITamilton (Canada) : — Hamilton Association. * iij,vre : — Societe de Geogrnphie Commorciale du Havre. XXIX * ITelsingfors : — Societas pro Flora et Faunna Femiica. * : — Society Finno Ougrienne. * : — Societe des Sciences de Fiultinde, * Honolulu : — Betnice Paualii Bishop Museum. § Indianapolis, Ind. : — Greological Survey. § Ithaca: — Cornell University. t Kiew : — Societe des Naturalistes. * Konigsberg : — Die Pliysikalische-Oekonomische Gesellsehaft. lia Plata : — Museo de La Plata Republica Argentina. Lahoi'e : — Editor, Civil and Military Gazette. : — Agricultural Society. Lawrence, Kansns : — Kansas University. § Leipzig: — Deutsche Morgenlandische Gesellsehaft. § : — Die K. Sachsische Gesellchaf t der Wissen.schaften. Leyden : — Royal Herbarium. Liege :— Societe Geologique de Belgique. Liverpool : — Literary and Pliiloaophical Society. London : — Antliropological Institute. —Editor, Academy. — Editor, Athenseinn. — British Museum. — Geological Society. — Institution of Civil Engineers. — Institution of Electrical Engineers. — Institution of Mechanical Engineers. — Editor, Nature. Linnean Society. — Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland. — Royal Astronomical Society. — Royal Geographical Society, — Royal Institution of Great Britain. — Royal Microscopical Society. — Royal Society. — Royal Statistical Society. — Zoological Society. — British Association for the Advancement of Science. — Editor, Periodical. — Geographischen Gesellsehaft und des Naturhistorisehen Museums. § Lucknow : — Government Horticultural Gardens. t Lyons: — La Societe d' Agriculture, d' Histoire Naturelle et des Arts Utiles. § Liibeck t Lyons: — Museum d' Histoire Naturelle. * : — La Societe cV Anthropologie. * Madison, Wiss. : — Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arks and Letters, t Madras : — Literary Society. * . : — Government Central Museum. § : — Editor, Indian Journal of Eihication. § : — Government Observatory. * Manchester : — Literary and Philosophical Society. * Massachusetts : — Tufts College. * Melbourne: — Royal Society of Victoria. * Mexico : — Sociedad Cientifica " Antonio Alzate." § :— Instituto Geologico. § Missouri : — Botanical Garden. § Montevideo: — Mnseo Nacional de Montevideo. * Moscow : — Societe Imperiale des N'aturalistes. * Munich: — K. Bayerische Akndemie der Wissenschaften. § : — Ornithologischen Vereins. § Nagpur:— Experimental Farm. * Nantes : — Societe des Sciences Naturelles de L' ouest de la France, t Naples : — Societa Africana d' Italia. * New Haven : — Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences. § :— Yale University. § : — Yale Forest School. * Newport (R. I.) : — Natural History Society. * New York : — American Museum of Natural Histoi'y. * Niirnberg: — Naturhistorische Gesellscliaft. * Ottawa: — Geological and Natural History Survey of the Dominion of Canada. § : — Royal Society of Canada. t Oxford : — Bodleian Library. f : — Indian Institute. § Para, Brazil : — Museu Paraense. * Paris : — Societe de Geographie. * -—Societe d' Antliropologie. — Asiatic Society. — Societe Philomathique de Paris. — Musee Guimet. — National Libraiy. — Societe Zoologique. — Societe Academique Indo-Chinoise. — Museum d' Histoire Naturelle. * Pennsylvania: — University of Pennsylvania. XXXl Philadelphia : — Academy of Natural Sciences. : — Araeiican Academy of Political and Social Science. ■ ■ : — American Philosophical Society. : — Franklin Institute. : — Editor, Journal of Comparative Medicine and Surgery. t * Pisa : — Societe Toscana di Scieuze Naturali. § Prague : — K. K. Sternwarte. § Rio de Janeiro : — Observatorio do Rio de Janeiro. § Rome: — Societa degli Spettroscopisti Italiani. § : — R. Accademia dei Lincei. § Roorkee : — Editor, Indian Forester. * St. Petersburgh : — Comite Geologique. — Imperial Library. — Russian Geographical Society. — Academie Imperiale des Sciences. — Horti Petropolitani. — Die Russisch-Kaiserliche Mineralogische Gesellschaft zu St. Petersburg. § Saharanpur : — Government Botanical Gardens. * Siin Francisco : — Californian Academy of Arts and Sciences. § Schaffhausen: — Swiss Entomological Society. * Shanghai: — China Branch, Royal Asiatic Society. * Simla: — United Service Institution of India. * Springfield, 111 : — Illinois State Laboratory of Natural History. § : — Newberry Library. * Stettin : — Entomological Society. * Stockholm : — Entomologische Tidskrift. * : — Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. * : — Royal Academy of belles letters, history and Antiquities. § : — Musee des Antiquites Nationales. * Stuttgart : — Der Verein f iir vaterlandische Naturkuude in Wiirttem- berg. * Sydney : — Royal Society of New South Wales. t : — Anthropological Society of Australia. * : — Linnean Society of New South Wales. § : — Editor, Science of Man. § Taipiug : — Government of Perak. * Toronto: — Canadian Institute. * Tokyo: — Imperial University of Japan. § Trencsen : — Naturwissenschaftlichen Vereines. t Trieste : — Societe Adriatica de Scienze Naturale. t : — Museo Civico di Storia Naturale, iiTii Tiing: — Zoological Museum. Turiu : — Reale Accademia delle Scienze. Ulwar: — Ulwar Library. Upsala : — University of Upsala. ■ : — Koagl. Humanistiska Vetenskafa-Samfundefc. Valparaiso : — Deutscber Wissenschaf tlicher Vereiri. Vienna : — Anthropologische Gesellschaft. : — K. K. Akademie der Wissenschaf ten. -K. K. Geologisclie Reichsanstalt. : — K. K. Natuihistoriclie Hofmuseum. -Ornithologiscbe Verein in Wien. -K. K. Zoologiscb-Botaniscbe Gesellsoliaft. § Wasbingtou : — Biological Society of Wasbiugton. * . ; — Commissioners of tbe Department of Agriculture. * : — Smitbsonian Institution. * : — United States Geological Survey. § : — United States National Museum. § : — Academy of Sciences. § : — American Historical Association. Wellington : — New Zealand Institute. . : — Polynesian Society. Yokohama : — Asiatic Society. _ : — Deutsche Gesellscbaft fiir Ostasiens. Zagreb : — Archaeological Society. Zurich : — Naturforscbeude Gesellscbaft. Natur und Volkerkund* PROCEEDINGS ASIATIC SOCIETY OF BENGAL. 3DITED BY The Honorary Secretary. No. I, JANUARY, 1901. " The bounds of its investigation will be the geographicallimits of Asia : and within these limits its inaniries will be extended to whatever is performed by man or produced by nature." " It will flourish, if Naturalists, Chemists, Antiquaries, Philologers, and men of Science in different parts of Asia, will commit their observations to writing, and send them to the Asiatic Society at Calcutta. It will languish, if such communications shall be long intermitted ; and it will die away, if they shall entirely cease." — Sir William Jones. Annual Subscription four rupees. Price per number eight annas. Postage in India (additional) one anna. Price in England one shilling. 1^^" The nublications of the Society consist — of the Proceedings, one nma- ber of which is issued, as soon as possible, after every monthly meeting, and of the Journal, the annual volume of which is divided into three Parts : Part I being devoted to History, Philology, &c., Part II to Natural Science, and Part III to Anthropology, &c. ; each part is separately paged and provided with a special index, and one number of each part is published quarterly. Single numbers for sale at the rates given on the last page of cover. *^* It is requested that communications for the " Journal" or " Proceedings" rnay he sent under cover to the Honorary Secretaries, Asiatic Soc, to whom all orders for these works are to he addressed in India ; or, to the Society's Agents. Messrs. Luzac and Co., 46, Great Russell Street, London, W. C, and Mr. Otto Har- rassowitz, Leipzig, Germany. N. B. — In order to ensure papers being read at any Monthly Meeting of the Society, they should be in the hands of the Secretaries at least a week before the Meeting. CALCUTTA : PRINTBT) AT THE BAPTIST MISSION PRESS. AND PUBLISHED BT THE ASIATIC SOCIETY, .57, PARK STREET. 1901. Issued 21st February, 1901.