Set of 3 Books
a) Frederic Dawtrey Drewitt , Bombay in the Days of George IV: Memoirs of Sir Edward West, Chief Justice of the King's Court During Its Conflict with the East India Company, With Hitherto Unpublished Documents, London, New York, Toronto: Longmans, Green and Co., 1935, second edition
xviii + 342 pages including a photogravure of a portrait frontispiece, 3 black and white plates, 3 double-page facsimile letters; blue cloth with gilt text and dust wrapper. Ex-Library copy.
8.75 x 6 x 1.75 in (22.5 x 15 x 4.5 cm)
b) Sir William Wilson Hunter, Bombay 1885 to 1890: A Study in Indian Administration, London: Henry Frowde, Amen Corner - Bombay: B. M. Malabari, Indian Spectator Office, [1890]
vii + 504 pages; original hardbound cloth binding with title embossed in gold on cover and spine. Ex-Library copy.
9 x 6.25 x 1.5 in (22.8 x 16 x 3.5 cm)
This book provides an explanation of the Presidency government's structure, internal structure, and relationships to the Provincial administrative body and the Supreme Government of India. The system of Provincial government is discussed in the book, covering its internal structure, external relationships, including interactions with Native States, and attitude towards the people of the British Districts, particularly in terms of education and land management. The functions of the government and capitalism, the decentralisation of Indian finance, as well as the legal and law enforcement systems, are all topics covered in the book. The interaction between the government and the people, which was a key issue in Indian Provincial administration, is discussed in the book's conclusion.
Scottish historian Sir William Wilson Hunter (1840–1909) served in the Indian Civil Service and was also a statistician, compiler, and member of the KCSI. His most famous work, The Imperial Gazetteer of India, was first published in nine volumes in 1881, subsequently in fourteen, and finally in twenty-six volumes after his passing. He began working on it in 1869. He received his education at the Universities of Glasgow (BA 1860), Paris, and Bonn, where he also studied Sanskrit and earned an LL.D., before taking the Indian Civil Service final test and coming out on top in 1862. Hunter released his history of Orissa in 1872. Hindu and Muslim pilgrimages were deemed "the most powerful of all the causes which conduce to the development and propagation of Cholera epidemics" at the third International Sanitary Conference, which took place in Constantinople in 1866.
c) Anonymous, A History of the Cathedral Church of Saint Thomas at Bombay, Bombay: The Times Press, 1919
33 pages including 8 black and white plates; hardbound with text on the frontboard. Ex-Library copy.
7.25 x 5 x 0.25 in (18.4 x 12.5 x 0.5 cm)
(Set of three)
NON-EXPORTABLE
This lot will be shipped in "as is" condition. For further details, please refer to the images of individual lots as reference for the condition of each book.