Showing 1–8 of 11 resultsSorted by latest
Translations of Regional Submissions Dagmar Wujastyk & Christèle Barois (eds.) |2022 The Report of the Committee on Indigenous Systems of Medicine, Madras (1923), commissioned by the Madras government in 1921, was the first major health report to be published in India. This volume provides the first English translation of the vernacular… | |
Sources for their Origin and History Dániel Balogh (ed.) |2020 This volume is a comprehensive compilation of primary textual sources pertaining to the history of Hunnic peoples in the vast area encompassing Central and South Asia. Sources in nearly a dozen languages have been carefully selected by scholars with a… | |
A Hunnic People in South Asia Hans T. Bakker |2020 This first fascicle of the Companion Series to Hunnic Peoples in Central and South Asia focuses on the history of Hunnic People in South Asia, where they are known as Hūṇa in Sanskrit literature or Alkhan according to their own… | |
A Rich Centre of Early Śaivism Natasja Bosma |2018 This book deals with the early development of Śaivism in ancient Dakṣiṇa Kosala. The following research questions were formulated: what circumstances fostered the rise and development of Śaivism in this area, and did the Skandapurāṇa, an important and contemporaneous religious… | |
De dagboeken en foto’s van Jan Kornelis de Cock in India en Sri Lanka, 1909-1910, met een inleiding door Bhaswati Bhattacharya Bhaswati Bhattacharya, Alied de Cock, Hanneke ’t Hart & Dory Heilijgers (red.) |2014 Wat De Cock en zijn reis uniek maken is het feit dat hij waarschijnlijk een van de eerste Nederlandse reizigers was die gebruik maakte van de bloeiende Britse toerisme industrie naar en in India en Sri Lanka. |