Useful Tables, Forming an Appendix to the Journal of the Asiatic Society: Part the First, Coins, Weights, and Measures of British India |
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Page 6
... officers as bullion ; the deficiency from standard weight being made good by the payer . Copper Coins . . The copper coins of Bengal and Bombay are now equalized in weight , and are as follows : The half - anna piece , Troy grains . 200 ...
... officers as bullion ; the deficiency from standard weight being made good by the payer . Copper Coins . . The copper coins of Bengal and Bombay are now equalized in weight , and are as follows : The half - anna piece , Troy grains . 200 ...
Page 21
... officers , than to any fraudu- lent intention of the government . The Nuwab Vizir of Oudh had mints also at Lukhnow , Benares , and Furukhabad in these the same process was going forward , until ar- rested by the successive acquisitions ...
... officers , than to any fraudu- lent intention of the government . The Nuwab Vizir of Oudh had mints also at Lukhnow , Benares , and Furukhabad in these the same process was going forward , until ar- rested by the successive acquisitions ...
Page 22
... officers of the mint ; and when Sagar mint was established in 1825 , it was ordered to coin new Furukhabad rupees of 180 grains weight , the same as the standard of Madras , or containing 165 grains pure . The Benares mint alone ...
... officers of the mint ; and when Sagar mint was established in 1825 , it was ordered to coin new Furukhabad rupees of 180 grains weight , the same as the standard of Madras , or containing 165 grains pure . The Benares mint alone ...
Page 23
... officer had access . When first established , the mints were no doubt in most cases made the source of fraudulent profit to the government , by the issue of a de- based coin , which was supported at an enhanced nominal value , through ...
... officer had access . When first established , the mints were no doubt in most cases made the source of fraudulent profit to the government , by the issue of a de- based coin , which was supported at an enhanced nominal value , through ...
Page 25
... officer at Gurrah Mundlah , and coined about 17 lakhs of balasahy rupees per annum . Its operation continued under Mr. Maddock , who , to coun- teract the forgery going on at Gurrah , inserted the word " Sagur " in small English ...
... officer at Gurrah Mundlah , and coined about 17 lakhs of balasahy rupees per annum . Its operation continued under Mr. Maddock , who , to coun- teract the forgery going on at Gurrah , inserted the word " Sagur " in small English ...
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Common terms and phrases
Agra Akber April Arcot Assay avoirdupois Bahoo bazar Beega Benares Bengal Bombay British brother bullion Burmese Calcutta cent Ceylon Chaitra China Chinese chitaks Christian Chron coinage coins commencement Company Company's cycle Delhi deposed deva ditto Dutch dwts dynasty Emperor English epoch factory February Furukhabad rupee gold mohur Government Governor grains Gujerat Hejira Hindu India Indore inscription intercalary Jaya July June Kali Kali yuga Khan king Kota lunar luni-solar Madras Mahmud Malwa March mashas maund mints Mogul mohur month moon Muhammed Muhammedan muns Nagpoor native pagoda Patna Persia princes Prome pysa Rája reckoning reign rupee Saka Samvat seers Sept Shâh Shah Aulum Sholan sicca rupee Sidereal Zodiac silver Sinh Sinha solar standard Surat Tibet Tibetan tolas troy ud-din Vadiyar weight YUDHISTHIRA བ བ བ
Popular passages
Page 8 - JEWISH ERA. The Jews usually employed the Era of the Seleucides, until the fifteenth century, when a new mode of computing was adopted by them. Some insist strongly on the antiquity of their present era; but it is .generally believed not to be more ancient than the century above named. They date from the creation, which they consider to have been 3760 years and 3 months before the commencement of our era.
Page 163 - The United Company of Merchants trading to the East Indies.
Page 10 - PERIOD is a term of years produced by the multiplication of the lunar cycle 19, solar cycle 28, and Roman indiction 15. It consists of 7980 years, and began 4713 years before our era. It has been employed in computing time, to avoid the puzzling ambiguity attendant on reckoning any period antecedent to our era, an advantage which it has in common with the mundane eras used at different times. By subtracting 4713 from the Julian Period, our year is found. If before Christ, subtract the Julian Period...
Page 6 - Christians have adopted a slight alteration, which will be shortly explained, "the simplicity of this form has brought it into very general use, and it is customary for astronomers and chronologists, in treating of ancient times, to date back in the same order from its eommenceinent.
Page 7 - ... equal to 5503. This computation continued to the year 284 AD which was called 5786. In the next year, (285 AD,) which should have been 5787, ten years were discarded, and the date became 5777. This is still used by the Abyssinians.
Page 16 - ... 12 y, hog. By substituting these words for the letters in the cycle, under the head of China, the Japanese names are found. Thus, the first year of a cycle is called kino-je ne, the 35th, tsutsno-je in, and so on.
Page 159 - And knowing that a distinction of titles is in many respects necessary, we do order, that when the apprentices have served their times, they be...
Page 14 - As all those nations follow the same system, we shall detail it here more particularly. They have two series of words, one of ten, and the other of twelve words ; a combination of the first words in both orders is the name of the first year ; the next in each...
Page 10 - THE JULIAN PERIOD is a term of years produced by the multiplication of the lunar cycle 19, solar cycle 28, and Roman indiction 15. It consists of 7980 years, and began 4713 years before our era. It has been employed in computing time, to avoid the puzzling ambiguity attendant on reckoning any period antecedent to our era, an advantage which it lias in common witli the mundane eras used at different times.
Page 15 - THE JAPANESE have a cycle of 60 years, like that of the Chinese, formed by a combination of words of two series. The series of ten is formed of the names of the elements, of which the Japanese reckon five, doubled by the addition of the masculine and feminine endings, je and to.