Madras Government Museum Bulletin, Anthropology Some Marriage Customs In Southern India; Deformity And Mutilation; Uralis, Sholagas, And Irulas; Fire-Walking In Ganjam; Corporal Punishment in Vernacular Schools Volume 4th, No. 3
Madras Government Museum Bulletin, Anthropology Some Marriage Customs In Southern India; Deformity And Mutilation; Uralis, Sholagas, And Irulas; Fire-Walking In Ganjam; Corporal Punishment in Vernacular Schools Volume 4th, No. 3 | Libri antichi e moderni | Edgar Thurston
Madras Government Museum Bulletin, Anthropology Some Marriage Customs In Southern India; Deformity And Mutilation; Uralis, Sholagas, And Irulas; Fire-Walking In Ganjam; Corporal Punishment in Vernacular Schools Volume 4th, No. 3
Madras Government Museum Bulletin, Anthropology Some Marriage Customs In Southern India; Deformity And Mutilation; Uralis, Sholagas, And Irulas; Fire-Walking In Ganjam; Corporal Punishment in Vernacular Schools Volume 4th, No. 3 | Libri antichi e moderni | Edgar Thurston
Metodi di Pagamento
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- Bonifico Bancario
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Dettagli
- Anno di pubblicazione
- 2020
- ISBN
- 9788121240390
- Autore
- Edgar Thurston
- Pagine
- 112
- Volumi
- Volume 4th, No. 3
- Editori
- Gyan Publishing House
- Soggetto
- History
- Descrizione
- Paperback
- Lingue
- Inglese
- Legatura
- Brossura
- Print on demand
- True
Descrizione
About the Book:-Volume Nine (originally numbered vol. 4, no. 3) notices: some marriage customs in southern India; deformity and mutilation; Uralis, Sholagas, and Irulas; fire walking in Ganjam; and, corporal punishments in vernacular schools. In the following account of various forms of marriage ceremonial in Southern India the author has attempted to bring together the mass of valuable information relating thereto, which, for the most part, lies buried in manuals, gazetteers, census reports, etc., in the hope that it may be of some slight use to those who have made a special study of marriage in many lands. At the outset he may appropriately quote the account of the Brahman marriage ceremony as given in the Census report, 1891, to show how the Brahman ritual has been grafted on the non-Brahman community. The book is the product of extensive study of this topic. This volume has six plates, and was first published in 1903.
Edizione: 1903