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The Indian Antiquary

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and later the British India Press, but illustrations were produced in London by the firm of Griggs who were known for the accuracy of their work. A high standard of reproduction was essential so that scholars could work on the epigraphic material without needing to see the originals. Illustrations in
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to enable the sharing of knowledge between scholars based in Europe and in India and was notable for the high quality of its epigraphic illustrations which enabled scholars to make accurate translations of texts that in many cases remain the definitive versions to this day. It was also pioneering in
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The journal was a private venture, although no contributor or editor was ever paid for their work and the editors often had to support the publication out of their own pockets. Burgess was the first editor and he continued in that role until the end of 1884 when failing eyesight forced him to hand
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The late nineteenth century was marked by a great increase in the number of local historical societies in India and a similar increase in the number of Indians who could speak and write English, to the extent that by the 1920s the entire journal could have been filled with work by Indian
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over the first fifty years of publication, but having the illustrations produced abroad was not without its disadvantages. On one occasion during World War I, enemy action meant that expensive plates had to be sent from London three times before they reached Bombay safely.
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Indian Epigraphy: A Guide to the Study of Inscriptions in Sanskrit, Prakrit, and the other Indo-Aryan Languages: A Guide to the Study of Inscriptions in Sanskrit, Prakrit, and the other Indo-Aryan Languages
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was the premier source of European scholarship on Indian epigraphy until the twentieth century and the official Indian government journal of epigraphy, the
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as a journal of original research relating to India. It was designed to enable the sharing of knowledge between scholars based in Europe and in India.
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The Indian Antiquary: A journal of oriental research in archaeology, history, literature, language, philosophy, religion, folklore, &c, &c
723: 301:(subtitle varies) was a journal of original research relating to India, published between 1872 and 1933. It was founded by the archaeologist 822: 206: 460:
folktales was the first attempt to classify the events on which folk tales were based and the pioneering work on north Indian folklore of
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ceased publication in 1933 with volume 62, number 783 (Dec. 1933), two years after Richard Temple's death in 1931 when it was edited by
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The journal had an archaeological and historical focus, and in the late nineteenth century that naturally meant that
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contributors. Volumes for 1925 to 1932 were published under the authority of the Council of the
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led was in recording folklore and folktales. Its publication of
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Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland
537:. Mazgaon, Bombay: B. Miller, British India Press, pp. 3-4. 691: 679:, British Library catalogue search, 10 January 2017. 590: 169: 770:William Crooke; Pandit Ram Gharib Chaube (2002). 401:, was published as a quarterly supplement to the 809: 762: 667:, British Library catalogue search, 29 May 2014. 655:South Asia Archive, 2014. Retrieved 30 May 2014. 545: 543: 737: 735: 733: 369:was published between 1938 and 1947, and the 692:Salomon, Richard (1998) (10 December 1998). 722:: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list ( 540: 730: 440:Over one thousand plates were included in 425:were used by scholars such as Bhandarkar, 352:(1933, not). The first incarnation of the 329:was founded in 1872 by the archaeologist 585: 379:were described as the "second series".) 776:. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO. p. 38. 640:Open Library. Retrieved 9 January 2017. 598:Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 810: 768:"Introduction" by Sadhana Naithani in 687: 685: 524: 522: 520: 518: 559: 557: 512:, Vol. 2, No. 2, April 1922, p. 148. 823:Publications disestablished in 1971 682: 579: 534:Fifty years of The Indian Antiquary 515: 477: 13: 576:Suncat. Retrieved 10 January 2017. 554: 14: 909: 793: 658: 340:over to John Faithfull Fleet and 818:Publications established in 1872 168: 40:Cover page of a 1931 edition of 34: 744: 670: 497:, Part 1, 5 January 1872, p. 1. 350:Royal Anthropological Institute 759:, 2011. Retrieved 30 May 2014. 757:Archaeological Survey of India 643: 628: 500: 1: 773:Folktales from Northern India 471: 622:UK public library membership 7: 16:Academic journal from India 10: 914: 506:"The Indian Antiquary" in 468:was printed in its pages. 382: 321: 883:English-language journals 279: 262: 190: 178: 124: 105: 97: 92: 84: 48: 33: 466:Pandit Ram Gharib Chaube 418:Bombay Education Society 312:The New Indian Antiquary 306:its recording of Indian 113:Bombay Education Society 838:Historiography of India 700:Oxford University Press 572:11 January 2017 at the 509:The Antiquaries Journal 452:Another area where the 405:between 1892 and 1920. 853:Asian history journals 607:10.1093/ref:odnb/36453 529:Temple, Richard Carnac 310:. It was succeeded by 125:Standard abbreviations 878:Anthropology journals 342:Richard Carnac Temple 843:Archaeology of India 833:Archaeology journals 828:Numismatics journals 801:The Indian Antiquary 651:New Indian Antiquary 636:The Indian Antiquary 495:The Indian Antiquary 442:The Indian Antiquary 435:John Faithfull Fleet 366:New Indian Antiquary 327:The Indian Antiquary 42:The Indian Antiquary 27:The Indian Antiquary 893:Philosophy journals 489:30 May 2014 at the 117:British India Press 93:Publication details 30: 873:Philology journals 868:Languages of India 427:Bhagvanlal Indraji 358:C. E. A. W. Oldham 314:(1938–47) and the 24: 888:Indology journals 858:Folklore journals 783:978-1-57607-698-9 709:978-0-19-535666-3 620:(Subscription or 446:Epigraphia Indica 416:, Bombay, by the 398:Epigraphia Indica 294: 293: 905: 788: 787: 766: 760: 748: 742: 739: 728: 727: 721: 713: 689: 680: 677:Indian Antiquary 674: 668: 665:Indian Antiquary 662: 656: 647: 641: 632: 626: 625: 617: 615: 613: 594: 583: 577: 565:Indian antiquary 561: 552: 547: 538: 526: 513: 504: 498: 481: 372:Indian Antiquary 316:Indian Antiquary 285: 274: 267: 258: 174: 172: 171: 38: 31: 28: 23: 21:Academic journal 913: 912: 908: 907: 906: 904: 903: 902: 808: 807: 796: 791: 784: 767: 763: 749: 745: 740: 731: 715: 714: 710: 702:. p. 219. 690: 683: 675: 671: 663: 659: 648: 644: 633: 629: 619: 611: 609: 587:Enthoven, R. E. 584: 580: 574:Wayback Machine 562: 555: 548: 541: 527: 516: 505: 501: 491:Wayback Machine 482: 478: 474: 412:was printed at 385: 324: 280: 275: 270: 263: 234: 193: 192: 148: 127: 126: 120: 44: 26: 22: 17: 12: 11: 5: 911: 901: 900: 895: 890: 885: 880: 875: 870: 865: 860: 855: 850: 845: 840: 835: 830: 825: 820: 806: 805: 803:at archive.org 795: 794:External links 792: 790: 789: 782: 761: 743: 729: 708: 681: 669: 657: 642: 627: 578: 553: 539: 514: 499: 475: 473: 470: 462:William Crooke 384: 381: 323: 320: 292: 291: 286: 277: 276: 268: 260: 259: 188: 187: 185:Indian Antiqu. 182: 176: 175: 122: 121: 111: 109: 103: 102: 99: 95: 94: 90: 89: 86: 82: 81: 52: 46: 45: 39: 20: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 910: 899: 896: 894: 891: 889: 886: 884: 881: 879: 876: 874: 871: 869: 866: 864: 861: 859: 856: 854: 851: 849: 846: 844: 841: 839: 836: 834: 831: 829: 826: 824: 821: 819: 816: 815: 813: 804: 802: 798: 797: 785: 779: 775: 774: 765: 758: 754: 753: 747: 741:Temple, p. 6. 738: 736: 734: 725: 719: 711: 705: 701: 697: 696: 688: 686: 678: 673: 666: 661: 654: 652: 646: 639: 637: 631: 623: 608: 604: 600: 599: 593: 588: 582: 575: 571: 568: 566: 560: 558: 551: 550:Temple, p. 7. 546: 544: 536: 535: 530: 525: 523: 521: 519: 511: 510: 503: 496: 492: 488: 485: 480: 476: 469: 467: 463: 459: 455: 450: 447: 443: 438: 436: 432: 428: 424: 419: 415: 411: 406: 404: 400: 399: 394: 390: 380: 378: 374: 373: 368: 367: 361: 359: 355: 351: 345: 343: 337: 335: 332: 331:James Burgess 328: 319: 317: 313: 309: 304: 303:James Burgess 300: 299: 290: 287: 283: 278: 273: 269: 266: 261: 257: 253: 249: 245: 241: 237: 232: 228: 224: 220: 216: 212: 208: 204: 200: 196: 189: 186: 183: 181: 177: 167: 163: 159: 155: 151: 146: 142: 138: 134: 130: 123: 119: (India) 118: 114: 110: 108: 104: 100: 96: 91: 87: 83: 80: 76: 72: 68: 64: 63:Asian history 60: 56: 53: 51: 47: 43: 37: 32: 29: 19: 800: 772: 764: 751: 746: 698:. New York: 694: 676: 672: 664: 660: 650: 645: 635: 630: 610:. Retrieved 596: 581: 564: 532: 507: 502: 494: 479: 453: 451: 445: 441: 439: 431:Georg Bühler 422: 409: 407: 402: 396: 392: 386: 376: 371: 370: 365: 364: 362: 353: 346: 338: 326: 325: 315: 311: 297: 296: 295: 251: 239: 222: 210: 202: 184: 157: 136: 75:Anthropology 41: 25: 18: 318:(1964–71). 59:Archaeology 55:Numismatics 812:Categories 624:required.) 612:10 January 484:Prospectus 472:References 162:MathSciNet 50:Discipline 863:Ethnology 848:Epigraphy 718:cite book 531:. (1922) 454:Antiquary 423:Antiquary 410:Antiquary 403:Antiquary 393:Antiquary 389:epigraphy 377:Antiquary 354:Antiquary 289:891010482 284: no. 272:0019-4395 107:Publisher 101:1872–1971 71:Philology 589:(2004). 570:Archived 487:Archived 444:and the 308:folklore 191:Indexing 141:Bluebook 85:Language 79:Indology 67:Folklore 752:History 414:Mazgaon 383:Content 322:History 250:)  221:)  209:)  156:)  135:)  98:History 88:English 780:  706:  618: 458:Punjab 256:Scopus 252:· 240:· 238:  223:· 211:· 203:· 201:  158:· 137:· 254: 242: 225: 215:JSTOR 213: 205: 195:CODEN 180:ISO 4 160: 139: 129:ISO 4 778:ISBN 724:link 704:ISBN 614:2017 464:and 421:the 408:The 363:The 282:OCLC 265:ISSN 236:MIAR 227:LCCN 207:alt2 603:doi 493:in 334:CIE 248:alt 244:NLM 231:alt 219:alt 199:alt 166:alt 154:alt 150:NLM 145:alt 133:alt 814:: 755:, 732:^ 720:}} 716:{{ 684:^ 595:. 556:^ 542:^ 517:^ 433:, 429:, 344:. 115:, 77:, 73:, 69:, 65:, 61:, 57:, 786:. 726:) 712:. 653:. 638:. 616:. 605:: 567:. 246:( 233:) 229:( 217:( 197:( 173:) 164:( 152:( 147:) 143:( 131:(

Index


Discipline
Numismatics
Archaeology
Asian history
Folklore
Philology
Anthropology
Indology
Publisher
Bombay Education Society
British India Press
ISO 4
alt
Bluebook
alt
NLM
alt
MathSciNet
alt
ISO 4
CODEN
alt
alt2
JSTOR
alt
LCCN
alt
MIAR
NLM

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