Littérature scientifique sur le sujet « Madras (India : Presidency). Legislature »

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Articles de revues sur le sujet "Madras (India : Presidency). Legislature"

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Dutta, Manas. "Exploring the Dynamics of Social Composition and Recruitment Procedures of Madras Army, 1807–61." History and Sociology of South Asia 11, no. 1 (2016): 19–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2230807516666121.

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In recent years, there has been a proliferation of research on the history of the colonial armies in South Asia in general and the Madras Presidency in particular. This has been further accentuated with the emergence of the new military history that explicates the social composition and the diverse recruitment procedures of the Madras Army, hitherto unexplored under the East India Company around the first half of the nineteenth century in India. In fact, the very concept of raising an army battalion in the subcontinent underwent change to meet the potential challenges of the other European aut
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Chakraborty, Arnab. "Negotiating medical services in the Madras Presidency: the subordinate perspectives (1882–1935)." Medical History 65, no. 3 (2021): 247–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/mdh.2021.15.

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AbstractThe historiography of western medicine in colonial India has predominantly been analysed from the perspectives of the elite services – the Indian Medical Service (IMS) and their recruits. Unfortunately, perceiving colonial medical practices through the lens of the IMS has remained inadequate to provide a nuanced understanding of the role played by Indians in the semi-urban and rural areas of colonial India. This article examines the contributions of local administration and the role played by the recruits of the Subordinate Medical Service. This article uses the Madras Presidency as it
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Hausman, Gary J. "Dimensions of Authenticity in Siddha Medical and Clinical Research." Asian Medicine 17, no. 1 (2022): 115–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15734218-12341509.

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Abstract The article discusses three methods of combining biomedicine with traditional medicine in pre-Independence Madras State in India, with comparative examples drawn from ethnographic studies in South India in the 1990s. In the mid to late 1920s, two officers of modern medicine from the Madras presidency were delegated to be trained in the Calcutta School of Tropical Medicine to investigate the properties of the indigenous drugs of India using laboratory and physiological techniques. In the 1930s, Srinivasamurti, the first principal of the Government School of Indian Medicine in Madras, t
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Kabeer, K. A., J. H. Benjamin, and V. Nair. "Notes on the distribution of some South Indian grasses." Indian Journal of Forestry 32, no. 2 (2009): 273–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.54207/bsmps1000-2009-50394m.

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The paper deals with 15 grass species that have been wrongly reported in various earlier publications as occurring in Tamil Nadu. This lapse is due to wrong identifications and wrong interpretation of the word ‘Madras’ appearing on old collections and in literature. Various early collectors and authors used this word to mean different geographical areas, viz. (i) Madras Presidency of British period comprising most of Southern India (ii) Madras State of India after independence comprising present day Tamil Nadu, parts of Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Kerala (iii) the present day Tamil Nadu (old
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Raman, Anantanarayanan. "William Gilchrist's (1836) observations on mosquitoes in the Madras Presidency, India." Oriental Insects 47, no. 4 (2013): 187–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00305316.2013.871815.

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Elangovan, I. "Early Settlements of the Europeans and Establishment of English Domination in Madras Presidency." Shanlax International Journal of Arts, Science and Humanities 9, S1-May (2022): 20–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.34293/sijash.v9is1-may.5936.

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The fall of the Vijayanagar kingdom was reverberated the whole of South India in a state of political chaos and consequent economic distress. From 1757 the British had used their control over South India to promote their own interests. But it would be wrong to think that the basic character of their rule remained the same throughout. It passed through several stages in its long history of nearly 200 years. The nature of British rule and imperialism, as also it policies and impact, changed with changing pattern of Britain’s own social, economic and political development. To begin with ever befo
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Branfoot, Crispin. "Architectural knowledge and the ‘Dravidian’ temple in colonial Madras Presidency." Architectural Research Quarterly 26, no. 1 (2022): 75–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1359135522000343.

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In around 1912 Gabriel Jouveau-Dubreuil, a young science teacher from French colonial Pondicherry in South India, visited the nearby town of Cuddalore in order to inspect the construction of a new Hindu temple. Since arriving in South India in 1909 he had been travelling to many temples and archaeological sites in order to understand the history of South Indian art. The modern temple that he visited in a suburb of Cuddalore at Tiruppappuliyur was not in fact new but a wholesale renovation of a nine-hundred-year-old shrine on a site sacred to Tamil Shaivas. This was just one of the many temples
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Good, Anthony. "The Car and the Palanquin: Rival Accounts of the 1895 Riot in Kalugumalai, South India." Modern Asian Studies 33, no. 1 (1999): 23–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0026749x99003200.

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The 1895 riot at Kalugumalai in the Tirunelveli District of Madras Presidency, South India, pitted the local Nadar community, then newly-converted to Roman Catholicism, against the main Hindu castes of Kalugumalai, particularly those associated with its Hindu temple and the Ettaiyapuram zamindari estate within which the town lay. It was the violent climax to a long-running dispute over the Nadars' right to take processions through the main streets, and one of the bloodiest episodes in a conflict which posed a severe threat to public order throughout South India in the late nineteenth century.
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J., Mohana, and Anbalagan G. "Synthesis, growth, vibrational, thermal and birefringence property of NLO active organic crystal: Quinolinium fumarate." Journal of Indian Chemical Society Vol. 96, Jan 2019 (2019): 90–92. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5652995.

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Department of Physics, Presidency College, Chennai-600 005, India Department of Nuclear Physics, University of Madras, Guindy Campus, Chennai-600 025, India <em>E-mail</em>: anbu24663@yahoo.co.in <em>Manuscript received online 20 August 2018, accepted 09 October 2018</em> The slow evaporation method is used to grow quinolinium fumarate (QF) at room temperature. The crystal comes under orthorhombic crystallographic system with Pca2<sub>1</sub> space group. The FT-IR study confirmed the vibrational groups in the crystal. The thermal measurement is used to analyze the thermal firmness of the crys
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Mahammadh, Vempalli Raj. "Plague Mortality and Control Policies in Colonial South India, 1900–47." South Asia Research 40, no. 3 (2020): 323–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0262728020944293.

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Focused on colonial South India, this article presents and assesses detailed archival records of public health measures in response to plague outbreaks between 1900 and 1947. Starting in 1897 in the Madras Presidency, the colonial government strictly implemented anti-plague measures and introduced various health schemes and medical policies for plague prevention. However, despite partly vigorous government efforts, plague outbreaks could not be fully controlled. In the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, the plague remains among South Asia’s most feared epidemics, with an outbreak in Surat i
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Thèses sur le sujet "Madras (India : Presidency). Legislature"

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Ellis, Catriona Priscilla. "Children and childhood in the Madras Presidency, 1919-1943." Thesis, University of Edinburgh, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/23429.

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This thesis interrogates the emergence of a universal modern idea of childhood in the Madras Presidency between 1920 and 1942. It considers the construction and uses of ‘childhood’ as a conceptual category and the ways in which this informed intervention in the lives of children, particularly in the spheres of education and juvenile justice. Against a background of calls for national self-determination, the thesis considers elite debates about childhood as specifically ‘Indian’, examining the ways in which ‘the child’ emerged in late colonial South India as an object to be reformed and as a ‘h
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Livres sur le sujet "Madras (India : Presidency). Legislature"

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Reddy, K. Venugopal. Class, colonialism, and nationalism: Madras Presidency, 1928-1939. Mittal Publications, 2002.

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S, Krishnaswamy. The role of Madras Legislature in the freedom struggle, 1861-1947. Indian Council of Historical Research, 1989.

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Rea, Alexander. Monumental remains of the Dutch East India Company in the Presidency of Madras. Asian Educational Services, 1998.

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Kumar, Dharma. Land and caste in South India: Agricultural labour in the Madras Presidency during the nineteenth century. Manohar Publishers and Distributors, 1992.

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M, Naidu Ch. Nationalism in South India: Its economic and social background, 1885-1918 : a study of the Madras Government's policies in the economic and social aspects and their impact on nationalism in the former Madras Presidency. Mittal Publications, 1988.

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Raffin, Anne. Republican Citizenship in French Colonial Pondicherry, 1870-1914. Amsterdam University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789463723558.

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This work of historical sociology revisits and analyses the earlier part of the Third Republic (1870-1914), when France granted citizenship rights to Indians in Pondicherry. It explores the nature of this colonial citizenship and enables comparisons with British India, especially the Madras Presidency, as well as the rest of the French empire, as a means of demonstrating how unique the practice of granting such rights was. The difficulties of implementing a new political culture based on the language of rights and participatory political institutions were not so much rooted in a lack of assimi
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Thurston, Edgar. Madras Presidency with Mysore, Coorg and the Associated States. University of Cambridge ESOL Examinations, 2011.

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Hunter, William Wilson. The Imperial Gazetteer Of India Madras Presidency To Multai. Alpha Edition, 2020.

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Washbrook, D. A. Emergence of Provincial Politics: The Madras Presidency, 1870-1920. Cambridge University Press, 2009.

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Washbrook, D. A. Emergence of Provincial Politics: The Madras Presidency, 1870-1920. Cambridge University Press, 2011.

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Chapitres de livres sur le sujet "Madras (India : Presidency). Legislature"

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Furber, Holden, and Rosane Rocher. "Madras Presidency in the Mid-Eighteenth Century." In Private Fortunes and Company Profits in the India Trade in the 18th Century. Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003555513-13.

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Gandhi, Malli, and Kompalli H. S. S. Sundar. "Education of Children: Madras Presidency Experience." In Denotified Tribes of India. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003017622-21.

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Sehgal, Manu. "‘Stranger to Relate yet Wonderfully True’." In Creating an Early Colonial Order. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190124502.003.0002.

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Building on the preceding chapter’s effort to study war and territorial conquest from the vantage point of peninsular India, this chapter focuses on the Madras presidency at war against the sultans of Mysore (1780–4). In stark contrast to the muted resistance offered by the civilian government of Bombay, when confronted with a vastly expanded military challenge, the Madras civilian power completely imploded. The belligerent Governor George Macartney struggled to wrest control against encroachments over his civilian authority from military commanders, an overweening Bengal administration and th
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Trinidad, Jamie. "Decolonization: French India." In International Development Law: Thematic Series. Oxford University PressNew York, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198835097.003.0053.

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Abstract France’s territories in India consisted of five main settlements, sometimes referred to as ‘établissements’ or ‘comptoirs’ (Pondicherry, Karikal, Yanaon, Chandernagore and Mahé); a number of ‘loges’ (parcels of land that were the sites of French factories or trading posts); and the four small, uninhabited Iskitippah Islands, which had formed by → accretion in the 19th century in the boundary river between Yanaon and the Madras Presidency. The territories passed from French to Indian control in a series of events between 1947 and 1954. The events in question have received less attentio
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Gandhi, Malli, and Kompalli H. S. S. Sundar. "Perceptions and Approaches to ‘Criminals’ and Non-Criminals in Madras Presidency: Colonial Bureaucracy, Missionaries and Settlement Managers." In Denotified Tribes of India. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003017622-14.

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"S. Satthianadhan, Extracts from History of Education in the Madras Presidency (Madras: Srinivasa Varadachari & Co., 1894), 36–38, 73–76, 109–112, 165–168, CXIII–CXXI." In Colonial Education and India 1781–1945, edited by Pramod K. Nayar. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351211963-9.

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