Madras Journal of Literature and Science, Volume 1Vepery mission Press., 1834 |
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Page 2
... churches of the christians of St. Thomas in the countries of Travancore and Cochin , have always formed one of the most inter- esting objects of enquiry to the general scholar as well as to the ecclesiastical student . Their venerable ...
... churches of the christians of St. Thomas in the countries of Travancore and Cochin , have always formed one of the most inter- esting objects of enquiry to the general scholar as well as to the ecclesiastical student . Their venerable ...
Page 3
... Church of Malabar . The strong and universal tradition of antiquity assigns India as a part of the province of the Apostle St. Thomas . * The fact that he preached the Gospel on these shores where we are now assembled , and that this ...
... Church of Malabar . The strong and universal tradition of antiquity assigns India as a part of the province of the Apostle St. Thomas . * The fact that he preached the Gospel on these shores where we are now assembled , and that this ...
Page 4
... church of Maliapoor , from the death of the Apostle , lan- guished till the year 1606 , when Paul V. erected it into a see . The whole coast of Coromandel from Negapatam northward , the kingdom of Orissa , Bengal , and Pegu , were ...
... church of Maliapoor , from the death of the Apostle , lan- guished till the year 1606 , when Paul V. erected it into a see . The whole coast of Coromandel from Negapatam northward , the kingdom of Orissa , Bengal , and Pegu , were ...
Page 6
... churches , nor use the ministry of their priests . Some time after the foundation of Quilon , from which com- mences the common epoch of Malabar ; -i e . about A. D. 822 - two Syrian ecclesiastics arrived on that coast from Babylon ...
... churches , nor use the ministry of their priests . Some time after the foundation of Quilon , from which com- mences the common epoch of Malabar ; -i e . about A. D. 822 - two Syrian ecclesiastics arrived on that coast from Babylon ...
Page 10
... church that traces its descent without question from the III century , and with great show of reason from the very age of the Apostles , is in itself venerable . That they have preserved them- selves with very slender means of ...
... church that traces its descent without question from the III century , and with great show of reason from the very age of the Apostles , is in itself venerable . That they have preserved them- selves with very slender means of ...
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agrestic slaves Ahmednuggur amongst ancient appear Archbishop Archdeacon attended Barometer basalt Bheema bishop Brahmun bramins bride bridegroom caste celebrated ceremony character christians church classes cloth coast Cochin common consequence considered diocese district employed father feet female festival gang ghutkas Government hill fort hills Hindoos Holgahs honor India inhabitants island Kolies labour land Lieut Madras Literary Society MADRAS Standard Malabar mandwah Mar Abraham Mar Simeon marriage means Menezes month moon Naiks Nairs named luggun native necessary Nestorian Nestorius night Nukshutturs observed occasion Pagodas party Patriarch Peninsula persons Peshwah plants plunder Poona Poorundur Portuguese possession potass present priest provinces quantity Ramoossies received remarkable reside river robbery Royal Asiatic Society Rukwalldar rupees Saltpetre Satara shells Syrians temples tion Travancore tree tribe village Vishnoo yeog
Popular passages
Page 41 - Society be and are hereby given to the President and officers of the Society for their services during the past year.
Page 344 - Eucharist, there is, really, and substantially, the body and blood, together with the soul and divinity, of our Lord Jesus Christ, and that there is a conversion of the whole substance of the bread into his body, and of the whole substance of the wine into his blood, which conversion the Catholic Church calls Transubstantiation.
Page 351 - ... praise nor censure; the third scholar receives a gentle stripe; the fourth two; and every succeeding scholar that comes an additional one. This custom, as well as the punishments in native schools, seems of a severe kind. The Idle scholar is flogged, and often suspended...
Page 344 - And that in the most holy sacrament of the eucharist, there is truly, really, and substantially the body and blood together with the soul and divinity of our Lord Jesus Christ...
Page 355 - I am sorry to state, that this is ascribable to the gradual but general impoverishment of the country. The means of the manufacturing classes have been of late years greatly diminished by the introduction of our own European manufactures in lieu of the Indian cotton fabrics.
Page 351 - Saraswatte, or the Goddess of Learning, written upon the palm of his hand as a sign of honour ; and on the hand of the second a cypher is written, to show that he is worthy neither of praise nor censure ; the third scholar receives a gentle stripe ; the...
Page 110 - This cause, so often the source of death and terror to the inhabitants of the globe, which visits in succession every zone, and fills the earth with monuments of ruin and disorder, is nevertheless a conservative principle in the highest degree, and, above all others, essential to the stability of the system.
Page 345 - I do acknowledge the holy Catholic and apostolic Roman Church to be the mother and mistress of all Churches; and I do promise and swear true obedience to the Bishop of Rome, the successor of St Peter, the prince of the apostles, and vicar of Jesus Christ.
Page 350 - Mussulman scholars only 243, and the whole of these are males, with the exception of only 60 girls who are all Hindoos exclusively. 4. The English language is taught in one school only ; the Tamul in four ; the Persian in 21 ; the Mahratta in '23 ; the Teloogoo in 226, and the Carnataca in 235. Besides these there are 23 places of instruction attended by Brahmins exclusively, in which some of the Hindoo sciences, such as theology, astronomy, logic, and law, are still imperfectly taught in the Sanscrit...
Page 352 - ... as among European nations. When he becomes pretty dexterous in writing with his finger in sand, he has then the privilege of writing either with an iron style on cadjan leaves, or with a reed on paper, and sometimes on the leaves of the Aristolochia Indica, or with a kind of pencil on the Hulligi or Kadala, which answers the purpose of slates. The two latter in these districts are the most common. One of these is a common oblong board, about a foot in width and three feet in length...