The Bankruptcy of India: An Enquiry Into the Administration of India Under the Crown. Including a Chapter on the Silver QuestionS. Sonnenschein, Lowerey & Company, 1886 - 215페이지 |
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20 페이지
... Madras an exactly opposite course was taken with reference to the people to be settled with , and the arrangement for payment of land taxation was made with the ryots themselves . The amount demanded was , in the first instance , equal ...
... Madras an exactly opposite course was taken with reference to the people to be settled with , and the arrangement for payment of land taxation was made with the ryots themselves . The amount demanded was , in the first instance , equal ...
21 페이지
... Madras was ever attempted there . " To its demoralising and depressing effects the province of Madras still bears testimony , as there is but too much reason to know . Better arrangements were made in Bombay and other parts of India ...
... Madras was ever attempted there . " To its demoralising and depressing effects the province of Madras still bears testimony , as there is but too much reason to know . Better arrangements were made in Bombay and other parts of India ...
33 페이지
... Madras , and the three Presidency armies , are still maintained . But the civil administration is carried on by the Governors of Bombay and Madras , the Lieutenant - Governors , and the Chief Commissioners . Under them there are 870 ...
... Madras , and the three Presidency armies , are still maintained . But the civil administration is carried on by the Governors of Bombay and Madras , the Lieutenant - Governors , and the Chief Commissioners . Under them there are 870 ...
35 페이지
... Madras and Bombay , the ordering of the Indian contingent to Malta , and other more recent events have had the effect of keeping India before the minds of the English people . The movement of the Indian troops at the crisis of the ...
... Madras and Bombay , the ordering of the Indian contingent to Malta , and other more recent events have had the effect of keeping India before the minds of the English people . The movement of the Indian troops at the crisis of the ...
44 페이지
... Madras say 18,000,000 36,000,000 Bombay 19,114,113 40,000,000 Oudh Total 7,991,040 13,000,000 • 158,618,264 £ 277,000,000 Here is an entire agricultural produce of £ 277,000,000 for 158,618,264 acres , or at the rate of 1 14s . an acre ...
... Madras say 18,000,000 36,000,000 Bombay 19,114,113 40,000,000 Oudh Total 7,991,040 13,000,000 • 158,618,264 £ 277,000,000 Here is an entire agricultural produce of £ 277,000,000 for 158,618,264 acres , or at the rate of 1 14s . an acre ...
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administration agricultural agriculturists already amount Anglo-Indian army average Bengal Bombay borrowing British British India bullion bullocks calculations capital cattle cent classes cost crops cultivation currency dangerous debt Deccan districts drain of produce Drought East India economical effect England English Englishmen European expenditure export and import fact famine favourable figures Finance Minister foreign gold Government grain gross Guzerat home charges Hyderabad impoverishment improve increased interest irrigation John Morley Kathiawar labour land revenue less Lord Lord Cornwallis Lord Dalhousie Lord Salisbury Madras Mahratta matter ment millions Morley Mysore nearly North-West Provinces official opium Oudh period poorer population poverty present profit prosperity Punjab railways remitted rent rupee ryots scarcity seers serious silver Sir Erskine Perry Sir James Caird Sir John Strachey soil starvation surplus taken taxation terrible tion trade truth twenty village wealth whilst whole William Sleeman
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12 페이지 - This union of the village communities, each one forming a separate little state in itself, has, I conceive, contributed more than any other cause to the preservation of the people of India, through all the revolutions and changes which they have suffered, and is in a high degree conducive to their happiness, and to the enjoyment of a great portion of freedom and independence.
11 페이지 - English are all masters in turn, but the village communities remain the same. In times of trouble they arm and fortify themselves : a hostile army passes through the country : the village communities collect their cattle within their walls and let the enemy pass unprovoked.
173 페이지 - There is no great harm in saying that the land belongs to ' the State ' when the State is only another name for the people, but it is very different when the State is represented by a small minority of foreigners, who disburse nearly one-third of the revenues received from the land on the remuneration of their own servants, and who have no abidingplace on the soil and no stake in the fortunes of the country.
172 페이지 - Two-fifths of the people of British India enjoy a prosperity unknown under native rule ; other two-fifths earn a fair but diminishing subsistence ; but the remaining fifth, or forty millions, go through life on insufficient food.
11 페이지 - The sons will take the places of their fathers ; the same site for the village, the same position for the houses, the same lands will be re-occupied by the descendants of those who were driven out when the village was depopulated ; and it is not a trifling matter that will drive them ont, for they will often maintain their post through times of disturbance and convulsion, and acquire strength sufficient to resist pillage and oppression with success.
11 페이지 - ... within their walls, and let the enemy pass unprovoked. If plunder and devastation be directed against themselves, and the force employed be irresistible, they flee to friendly villages at a distance ; but when the storm has passed over, they return and resume their occupations. If a country remain for a series of years the scene of continued pillage and massacre, so that the village cannot be inhabited, the scattered villagers nevertheless return whenever the power of peaceable possession revives...
27 페이지 - I am persuaded that, if it were to be put to the vote among the people of Oude, ninety-nine in a hundred would rather remain as they are, without any feeling of security in life or property, than have our system introduced in its present complicated state...
162 페이지 - The available good land in India is nearly all occupied. There are extensive areas of good waste land, covered with jungle, in various parts of the country, which might be reclaimed and rendered suitable for cultivation, but for that object capital must be employed, and the people have little to spare. The produce of the country on an average of years is barely sufficient to maintain the present population and make a saving for occasional famine. The greatest export of rice and corn in one year is...
163 페이지 - In ten years, at the present rate of growth, there will be twenty million more people to feed ; in twenty years upwards of forty millions. This must be met by an increase of produce, arising from better management of the cultivated area, and enlargement of its extent by migration to unpeopled districts, and by emigration to other countries. We are dealing with a country already full of people, whose habits and religion promote increase without restraint, and whose law directs the sub-division of...
4 페이지 - Englishmen in India,"* he says, " have less opportunity than might be expected of forming opinions of the native character. Even in England, few know much of the people beyond their own class, and what they do know, they learn from, newspapers and publications of a description which does not exist in India. In that country also, religion and manners put bars to our intimacy with the natives, and limit the number of transactions as well as the free communication of opinions. We know nothing of the...