A few mud huts, with their naked inhabitants, was all he found, upon being disgorged, with some two hundred others, in the rain, to join a congregation of nearly a hundred others, who had arrived on the day before, and who were awaiting the return of canoes from Cruces. — from Graham's Magazine, Vol. XXXV, No. 6, December 1849 by Various
Jopu a cast of Newars
105 Jackal , the wild beast, 68 Jagajit, a chief of the Pangre family, 296 , 299 Jagannath, an idol’s temple, 209 Jagat Chandra, a chief of Kumau, 294 Jagat Gar, a fortress, 303 Jagat Prakas, chief of Sirmaur, 303 Jahari lordship, 270 , 276 , 280 Jainti, a drug, 86 Jajarkot, lordship and town, 270 , 276 , 280 , 283 , 284 , 286 Janaka Rajas, ancient chiefs of Mithila, 45 , 161 Janaka Pur, their capital, 45 , 161 Jar or Jariya tribe, 25 , 28 , 270 , 291 , 297 Jarapani, a mart, 277 Jat, a tribe, 297 , 312 Jatamangsi, a drug, 97 Jausi, a tribe of illegitimate Brahmans, 17 , 178 , 275 , 277 , 279 , 281 , 282 Jausi, a tribe of Newars, 33 Jayadeva, see Jaydeva Jaya Kirti, chief of Garhawal, 295 Jaya Krishna, a turbulent Brahman, 294 Jaya Singhapur, a town, 310 Jaydeva or Jayadeva, a Brahman of note, 291 , 294 Jaygir, land held by feodal tenure for the performance of service, 107 155 , 156 , 164 , 169 , 212 , 298 , 299 , 301 , 303 , see Feodal Jaysalmer, a lordship in the Rajput country, 302 Jajurbedi Brahmans, a sect, 17 Jeea, see Cannabis Jethabura, a chief officer of government, 107 Jhausi, a town on the Ganges, 291 Jhogo, see Bos grunniens Jhola, a bridge made of rattan ropes, 27 Jhula, a drug, see Lichen Jimri, see Rapti river Jopu, a cast of Newars, 34 Joyar, a territory and passage among the snowy mountains, 293 , 298 Jumnemundru, a tree, see Leontice Juniperus, called Dhupi, a tree, 96 Juniperus, called Thumuriya Dhupi, a tree, 96 Jury, or Pangchayit, 102 , 114 Jyotish, see Astrology Jwalamukhi, a town, temple, and burning rock, 312 Kahalur , a lordship, 307 , 312 , 316 Kaigo, a pulse, see Pisum Kailasa mountain, 90 , 288 Kajy, an officer, see Karyi Kakun, a grain, see Panicum italicum Kalagong lordship, 280 Kalamakwani family, 263 Kalap gram, a cave famous in legend, 302 page 355 p. 355 Kali river, there are two of this name, see Gandaki, and 282 Kaliya, see Secretary Kalsi, a town, 303 , 306 Kamalgar, a fortress, 316 Kamal Lochan his maps, 4 Kami, a tribe, 20 Kamm, an inferior officer of government, see Desali Kamiya Brahmans 17 Kamrup, the district of Ranggapur and the adjacent part of Asam, 7 , 119 , 156 Kanak Nidhi Tiwari, his account and map of the Khas country, 4 , 291 Kanet, a tribe, 305 Kangkali, a deity, 48 Kangkari, a fruit, 229 Kangra, a lordship, temple, and town, 304 , 305 , 309 -312, 313 Kanguni, a grain, see Panicum italicum Kankayi river, 124 , 159 Kanungo, register in a Subah’s office, 155 Karanali, Salasu, Sarayu, or Sonabhadra river, 5 , 91 , 289 Karara river, 197 Karki, tribe, 18 , 28 Karmi, cast, 20 , 36 Karna Prakas, chief of Sirmaur, 304 , 305 Karphul tree, see Myrica Karuvirpur, a principality and town, 12 , 129 , 291 , 292 , 293 , 298 Karyi, Kazi, or, according to Kirkpatrick, Kajy, in Yumila called Bist, 102 , 107 , 108 , 147 , 259 287 Kasachiet, a town, 209 Kasai, a cast of Newars, 37 Kasipur, a territory, 293 Kaski, a lordship, 27 , 238 , 239 , 242 Kasmir, a country, 212 Kasuliya, a cast of Newars, 37 Katauch Rajputs, 310 Katha, a measure of land, 216 Kath Bhotiya, a dynasty of princes from Thibet, called also Burmahs or Varmas, 59 , 189 , 190 , 191 , 209 Kath Mahal, duties on timber, 153 , 155 163 Kathmandu ) modern name of the capital of Nepal, and a Kathmaro ) principality, 209 , 210 , 211 , 212 Kausiki river, see Kosi Kawa karpola mountain, part of Himaliya, 124 Kazi, see Karyi Kedarnath, a temple, 302 Kengothal, one of the twelve lordships, 306 Kerao, a grain, see Pisum Kerung, or Kheero, a town and district of Thibet, 195 , 272 Khachi, a lordship, 171 , 173 , 238 , 239 , 263 , 265 Khaira, a tree, see Mimosa Khanal, a family of Brahmans, 103 Khari, space between two rivers, 150 Kharka, tribe, 18 , — from An Account of The Kingdom of Nepal
And of the Territories Annexed to this Dominion by the House of Gorkha by Francis Hamilton
Journals and Cabinets of Natural
And allow me to suggest, whether, under the auspices of our learned societies, some men of science might not be employed and supported in exploring the country, with the prospect of greatly enlarging the science of our country, and of enriching our Journals and Cabinets of Natural History. — from American Journal of Science, Vol. 1. by Various
"THE JOURNALS" —a collection of noteworthy expressions of Medical Opinion on recent questions relating to Drugs and their Uses, as culled from the latest American and foreign journals. — from Merck's 1899 Manual of the Materia Medica by Merck & Co.
He didn’t tell her that he had been going to stay with his friend John, and could on no account think of billeting two inmates upon him, of whom one was a young lady; for he knew that would make her uncomfortable, and would cause her to regard herself as being an inconvenience to him. — from Martin Chuzzlewit by Charles Dickens
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