Journal, Volumen171848 |
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alluvium appear ascend Asiatic Society Asoka Avantipura B. H. HODGSON bank Bhotias Brahman Buddha Buddhist Byáns called capital Caret Chinese coal Cósi crossed Darjeeling descend diameter distance district Ditto east eggs elevation feet Ganges Gángri Gartokh Gnari ground height hills Hindu Hwán Thsáng inches India Indus inscription Káli Kashmir Kashmírian Khan king Kunti lake Lhassa mansion Márttand miles Mooltan mountains nest oblique rods observations Pándrethán pass Páyach pediment peristyle pillars plain probably Pruang Ptolemy Raja Raja Naga range ravine relics ridge river road rocks roof salt sandstone Sanskrit side snow snowy Soane species specimen stars stone stream Stupa Sutlej Tabary temperature temple Thence Thermometer Tibet tion town trees upper valley village walls الله ان او ایشان ایشانرا این بن بود بودند پس تا تعالى تعالی چون خدای را زمین عاد على عليه السلام قوم که کی گفت ما من هود
Pasajes populares
Página 268 - It overlooks the finest view in Kashmir, and perhaps in the known world, Beneath it lies the paradise of the East, with its sacred streams and cedarn glens, its brown orchards and green fields, surrounded on all sides by vast snowy mountains, whose lofty peaks seem to smile upon the beautiful valley below.
Página 273 - The only object," the General goes on to remark, " of erecting temples in the midst of water must have been to place them more immediately under the protection of the Nagas, or human-bodied and snake-tailed gods, who were zealously worshipped for ages throughout Kashmir.
Página 241 - Hindu temple is generally a sort of architectural pasty, a huge collection of ornamental fritters, huddled together with or without keeping; while the "Jain" temple is usually a vast forest of pillars, made to look as unlike one another as possible, by some paltry differences in their petty details. On the other hand, the Kashmirian fanes are distinguished by the graceful elegance of their outlines, by the massive boldness of their parts, and by the happy propriety of their decorations.
Página 650 - Amid the dense forests of the central region of Nepal, to the westward of the great valley, dwell, in scanty numbers and nearly in a state of nature, two broken tribes, having no apparent affinity with the civilized races of that country, and seeming like the fragments of an earlier population.
Página 124 - The Heimskringla ; or, Chronicle of the Kings of Norway. Translated from the Icelandic of Snorro Sturleson.
Página 326 - Another striking resemblance between the Kashmirian architecture and that of the various Grecian orders is its stereotyped style, which during the long flourishing period of several centuries remained unchanged. In this respect it is so widely different from the ever-varying forms. and plastic vagaries of the Hindu architecture that it is impossible to conceive their evolution from a common origin.
Página 238 - BURNET'S HISTORY OF HIS OWN TIME, from the Restoration of Charles II. to the Treaty of Peace at Utrecht. "With Historical and Biographical Notes and copious Index. Imp. 8vo, with Portrait, cloth extra, 13*. 6d.
Página 398 - The brute was hardly dead, much distended by the prey, and the mother was standing beside it. A very touching group was this : the parent with her hands clasped in agony, unable to withdraw her eyes from the cursed reptile, which still clung to life with that tenacity for which its tribe are so conspicuous...
Página 244 - I am fully justified in saying, from my own experience, that such a complete and disruptive overturn could only have been produced by gunpowder. I have myself blown up a Fort, besides several buildings both of stone and of brick ; and I have observed that the result has always been the entire sundering of all parts, one from another, and the capsizing or bouleversement of many of them. Neither of these effects can be produced by an earthquake. It seems also that Trebeck and Moorcroft would most likely...
Página 244 - Zeinul-Ab-ud-din, is formed of two fluted pillars of a Hindu peristyle. These instances prove that at least three different temples in the capital alone must have been overthrown either by Sikandar or by one of his predecessors. But as the demolition of idol temples is not attributed to any one of the earlier kings, we may safely ascribe the destruction of the three above mentioned to Sikandar himself.