OF TRÜBNER & CO., 57 AND 59, LUDGATE HILL, LONDON, E.C. Adi Granth (The); OR, THE HOLY SCRIPTURES OF THE SIKHS, trans- Aitareya Brahmanam of the Rig Veda. 2 vols. See under HAUG. 148. Alif Lailat wa Laîlat.-THE ARABIAN NIGHTS. 4 vols. 4to. pp. 495, 493, 442, 434. Cairo, A.H. 1279 (1862). £3 38. Amberley.-AN ANALYSIS OF RELIGIOUS BELIEF. By VISCOUNT AMBERLEY. 2 vols. 8vo. cl., pp. xvi. 496 and 512. 1876. 30s. per volume. Andrews.-A DICTIONARY OF THE HAWAIIAN LANGUAGE, to which is Vol I., No. 1. January-July, 1871, 8vo. pp. 120-clix, sewed. Illustrated Vol. I., No. 2. October, 1871. 8vo. pp. 121-264, sewed. 4s. Vol. I., No. 3. January, 1872. 8vo. pp. 265-427, sewed. 16 full-page Plates. 4s. July and Oct, 1872. 8vo. pp. 137-312. 9 plates and a map. 68. Vol. V., No. 2. 1000 April, 1873. 8vo. pp. 136. With 8 plates and two maps. 4s. With 8 plates. 5s. 2 Linguistic Publications of Trübner & Co., Anthropological Institute—continued. 58. Vol. VI., No. 1. July, 1876. 8vo. pp. 100, sewed. With 5 plates. 5s. With 11 plates. 5s. January, 1877. 8vo. pp. 146, sewed. With 7 plates. 5s. With three plates. 58. With one plate. 5s. With three plates. 5s. With nine plates. 5s. With one plate. 5s. With three plates. 5s. Vol. VI., No. 3. Vol. VI., No. 4. Vol. VII., No. 1. Vol. VII., No. 2. Vol., VII., No. 3. Vol. VII., No. 4. Vol. VIII, No. 1. Vol. VIII., No. 2. Apastambíya Dharma Sutram.-APHORISMS OF THE SACRED LAWs of THE HINDUS, by Apastamba. Edited, with a Translation and Notes, by G. Bühler. By order of the Government of Bombay. 2 parts. 8vo. cloth, 1868-71. £1 4s. 6d. Arabic and Persian Books (A Catalogue of). Printed in the East. Constantly for sale by Trübner and Co., 57 and 59, Ludgate Hill, London. 16mo. pp. 46, sewed. 18. Archæological Survey of India.-See under BURGESS and CUNNINGHAM. Asher.-ON THE STUDY OF Modern Languages IN GENERAL, and of the English Language in particular. An Essay. By DAVID ASHER, Ph.D. 12mo. pp. viii. and 80, cloth. 28. Asiatic Society.-JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL ASIATIC SOCIETY OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND, from the Commencement to 1863. First Series, complete in 20 Vols. 8vo., with many Plates. Price £10; or, in Single Numbers, as follows:-Nos. 1 to 14, 6s. each; No. 15, 2 Parts, 48. each; No. 16, 2 Parts, 4s. each; No. 17, 2 Parts, 4s. each, No. 18, 6s. These 18 Numbers form Vols. I. to IX.-Vol. X., Part 1, op.; Part 2, 5s.; Part 3, 58.—Vol. XI., Part 1, 68.; Part 2 not published.—Vol. XII., 2 Parts, 6s. each Vol. XIII., 2 Parts, 6s. each.-Vol. XIV., Part 1, 58.; Part 2 not published.-Vol. XV., Part 1, 6s.; Part 2, with 3 Maps, £2 2s.-Vol. XVI., 2 Parts, 68. each.-Vol. XVII., 2 Parts, 6s. each.-Vol. XVIII., 2 Parts, 6s. each.-Vol. XIX., Parts to 4, 168.-Vol. XX., Parts 1 and 2, 4s. each. Part 3, 78. 6d. Asiatic Society.-JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL ASIATIC SOCIETY OF Great BRITAIN AND IRELAND. New Series. Vol. I. In Two Parts. pp. iv. and 490, sewed. 1861-5. 16s. CONTENTS-1. Vajra-chhediká, the "Kin Kong King," or Diamond Sútra. Translated from the Chinese by the Rev. S. Beal, Chaplain, R.N.-II. The Páramitá-hridaya Sútra, or, in Chinese, Mo-ho-pô-ye-po-lo-mih-to-sin-king," i.e. "The Great Páramitá Heart Sútra." Translated 57 and 59, Ludgate Hill, London, E.C. 3 from the Chinese by the Rev. S. Beal, Chaplain, R.N.-III. On the Preservation of National Literature in the East. By Colonel F. J. Goldsmid.-IV. On the Agricultural, Commercial, Financial, and Military Statistics of Ceylon. By E. R. Power, Esq.-V. Contributions to a Knowledge of the Vedic Theogony and Mythology. By J. Muir, D.C.L., LL.D.-VI. A Tabular List of Original Works and Translations, published by the late Dutch Government of Ceylon at their Printing Press at Colombo. Compiled by Mr. Mat. P. J. Ondaatje, of Colombo.-VII Assyrian and Hebrew Chronology compared, with a view of showing the extent to which the Hebrew Chronology of Ussher must be modified, in conformity with the Assyrian Canon. By J. W. Bosanquet, Esq.-VIII. On the existing Dictionaries of the Malay Language. By Dr. H. N. van der Tuuk.-IX. Bilingual Readings: Cuneiform and Phoenician. Notes on some Tablets in the British Museum, containing Bilingual Legends (Assyrian and Phoenician). By Major-General Sir H. Rawlinson, K.C.B., Director R.A.S.-X. Translations of Three Copper-plate Inscriptions of the Fourth Century A.D., and Notices of the Châlukya and Gurijara Dynasties By Professor J. Dowson, Staff College, Sandhurst.-XI. Yama and the Doctrine of a Future Life, according to the Rig-Yajur-, and Atharva-Vedas. By J. Muir, Esq., D.C.L., LL.D.-XII. On the Jyotisha Observation of the Place of the Colures, and the Date derivable from it. By William D. Whitney, Esq., Professor of Sanskrit in Yale College, New Haven, U.S.-Note on the preceding Article. By Sir Edward Colebrooke, Bart., M.P., President R.A.S.-XIII. Progress of the Vedic Religion towards Abstract Conceptions of the Deity. By J. Muir, Esq., D.C.L., LL.D.-XIV. Brief Notes on the Age and Authenticity of the Work of Aryabhata, Varâhamihira, Brahmagupta, Bhattotpala, and Bhâskarâchârya. By Dr. Bhâu Dâji, Honorary Member R.A.S.-XV. Outlines of a Grammar of the Malagasy Language. By H. N. Van der Tuuk.-XVI. On the Identity of Xandrames and Krananda. By Edward Thomas, Esq. Vol. II. In Two Parts. pp. 522, sewed. 1866-7. 168. CONTENTS.-I. Contributions to a Knowledge of Vedic Theogony and Mythology. No. 2. By J. Muir, Esq.-II. Miscellaneous Hymns from the Rig- and Atharva-Vedas. By J. Muir, Esq.-III. Five hundred questions on the Social Condition of the Natives of Bengal. By the Rev. J. Long.-IV. Short account of the Malay Manuscripts belonging to the Royal Asiatic Society. By Dr. H. N. van der Tuuk.-V. Translation of the Amitâbha Sûtra from the Chinese. By the Rev. S. Beal, Chaplain Royal Navy.-VI. The initial coinage of Bengal. By Edward Thomas, Esq.-VII. Specimens of an Assyrian Dictionary. By Edwin Norris, Esq.-VIII. On the Relations of the Priests to the other classes of Indian Society in the Vedic age By J. Muir, Esq.-IX. On the Interpretation of the Veda. By the same.-X. An attempt to Translate from the Chinese a work known as the Confessional Services of the great compassionate Kwan Yin, possessing 1000 hands and 1000 eyes. By the Rev. S. Beal, Chaplain Royal Navy. -XI. The Hymns of the Gaupâyanas and the Legend of King Asamâti. By Professor Max Müller, M.A., Honorary Member Royal Asiatic Society.-XII. Specimen Chapters of an Assyrian Grammar. By the Rev. E. Hincks, D. D., Honorary Member Royal Asiatic Society. Vol. III. In Two Parts. pp. 516, sewed. With Photograph. 1868. 22s. CONTENTS.-I. Contributions towards a Glossary of the Assyrian Language. By H. F. Talbot. -II. Remarks on the Indo-Chinese Alphabets. By Dr. A. Bastian.-III. The poetry of Mohamed Rabadan, Arragonese. By the Hon. H. E. J. Stanley.-IV. Catalogue of the Oriental Manuscripts in the Library of King's College, Cambridge. By Edward Henry Palmer, B.A Scholar of St. John's College, Cambridge; Member of the Royal Asiatic Society; Membre de la Société Asiatique de Paris.-V. Description of the Amravati l'ope in Guntur. By J. Fergusson, Esq., F.R.S.-VI. Remarks on Prof. Brockhaus' edition of the Kathâsarit-sâgara, Lambaka IX. XVIII. By Dr. H. Kern, Professor of Sanskrit in the University of Leyden.-VII. The source of Colebrooke's Essay "On the Duties of a Faithful Hindu Widow." By Fitzedward Hall, Esq., M.A., D.C.L. Oxon. Supplement: Further detail of proofs that Colebrooke's Essay, “On the Duties of a Faithful Hindu Widow," was not indebted to the Vivâdabhangârnava. By Fitzedward Hall, Esq.-VIII. The Sixth Hymn of the First Book of the Rig Veda. By Professor Max Müller, M.A. Hon. M.R.A.S.-IX. Sassanian Inscriptions. By E. Thomas, Esq.-X. Account of an Embassy from Morocco to Spain in 1690 and 1691. By the Hon. H. E. J. Stanley.XI. The Poetry of Mohamed Rabadan, of Arragon. By the Hon. H. E. J. Stanley.-XII. Materials for the History of India for the Six Hundred Years of Mohammadan rule, previous to the Foundation of the British Indian Empire. By Major W. Nassau Lees, LL.D., Ph.D.--XIII. A Few Words concerning the Hill people inhabiting the Forests of the Cochin State. By Captain G. E. Fryer, Madras Staff Corps, M.R.A.S.-XIV. Notes on the Bhojpurf Dialect of Hindí, spoken in Western Behar. By John Beames, Esq., B.C.S., Magistrate of Chumparun, Vol. IV. In Two Parts. pp. 521, sewed. 1869-70. 16s. CONTENTS.-I. Contribution towards a Glossary of the Assyrian Language. By H. F. Talbot. Part II-II. On Indian Chronology. By J. Fergusson, Esq., F.R.S.-III. The Poetry of Mohamed Rabadan of Arragon. By the Hon. H. E. J. Stanley.-IV. On the Magar Language of Nepal. By John Beames, Esq., B.C.S.-V. Contributions to the Knowledge of Parsee Literature. By Edward Sachau, Ph.D.-VI. Illustrations of the Lamaist Systein in Tibet, drawn from Chinese Sources. By Wm. Frederick Mayers, Esq., of H.B.M. Consular Service, China.VII. Khuddaka Pátha, a Páli Text, with a Translation and Notes. By R. C. Childers, late of the Ceylon Civil Service.-VIII. An Endeavour to elucidate Rashiduddin's Geographical Notices of India. By Col. H. Yule, C. B.- IX. Sassanian Inscriptions explained by the Pahlavi of the Pârsis. By E. W. West, Esq.-X. Some Account of the Senbyú Pagoda at Mengún, near the Burmese Capital, in a Memorandum by Capt. E. H. Sladan, Political Agent at Mandalé; with Remarks on the Subject by Col. Henry Yule, C.B. XI. The Brhat-Sanhitâ; or, Complete System of Natural Astrology of Varâha-Mihira. Translated from Sanskrit into English by Dr. H. Kern.-XII. The Mohammedan Law of Evidence, and its influence on the Administration of 4 Linguistic Publications of Trubner & Co., Justice in India. By N. B. E. Baillie, Esq.-XIII. The Mohammedan Law of Evidence in con- Vol. V. In Two Parts. pp. 463, sewed. With 10 full-page and folding Plates. CONTENTS.-I. Two Játakas. The original Páli Text, with an English Translation. By V. Vol. VI., Part 1, pp. 212, sewed, with two plates and a map. 1872. 88. CONTENTS.-The Ishmaelites, and the Arabic Tribes who Conquered their Country. By A. Vol. VI., Part II., pp. 213 to 400 and lxxxiv., sewed. Illustrated with a Map, - CONTENTS. On Hiouen-Thsang's Journey from Patna to Ballabhi. By James Fergusson, Vol. VII., Part I., pp. 170 and 24, sewed. With a plate. 1874. 8s. CONTENTS.-The Upasampadá-Kammavácá, being the Buddhist Manual of the Form and 1 57 and 59, Ludgate Hill, London, E.C. 5 Vol. VII., Part II., pp. 191 to 394, sewed. With seven plates and a map. 1875. 88. CONTENTS.-Sigiri, the Lion Rock, near Pulastipura, Ceylon; and the Thirty-ninth Chapter of the Mahâvamsa. By T. W. Rhys Davids.-The Northern Frontagers of China. Part I. The Origines of the Mongols. By H. H. Howorth.-Inedited Arabic Coins. By Stanley Lane Poole.-Notice on the Dînârs of the Abbasside Dynasty. By Edward Thomas Rogers.-The Northern Frontagers of China. Part II. The Origines of the Manchus. By H. H. Howorth-Notes on the Old Mongolian Capital of Shangtu. By S. W. Bushell, B.Sc., M.D.-Oriental Proverbs in their Relations to Folklore, History, Sociology; with Suggestions for their Collec. tion, Interpretation, Publication. By the Rev. J. Long.-Two Old Simhalese Inscriptions. The Sahasa Malla Inscription, date 1200 A.D., and the Ruwanwali Dagaba Inscription, date 1191 A.D. Text, Translation, and Notes. By T. W. Rhys Davids.-Notes on a Bactrian Pali Inscription and the Samvat Era. By Prof. J. Dowson.-Note on a Jade Drinking Vessel of the Emperor Jahángír. By Edward Thomas, F.R.S. Vol. VIII., Part I., pp. 156, sewed, with three plates and a plan. 1876. 88. CONTENTS. Catalogue of Buddhist Sanskrit Manuscripts in the Possession of the Royal Asiatic Society (Hodgson Collection). By Professors E. B. Cowell and J. Eggeling.-On the Ruins of Sigiri in Ceylon. By T. H. Blakesley, Esq., Public Works Department, Ceylon.-The Pâtimokkha, being the Buddhist Office of the Confession of Priests. The Pali Text, with a Translation, and Notes. By J. F. Dickson, M.A., sometime Student of Christ Church, Oxford, now of the Ceylon Civil Service.-Notes on the Sinhalese Language. No. 2. Proofs of the Sanskritic Origin of Sinhalese. By R. C. Childers, late of the Ceylon Civil Service. Vol. VIII., Part II., pp. 157-308, sewed. 1876. 8s. CONTENTS.-An Account of the Island of Bali. By R. Friederich.-The Pali Text of the Mahâparinibbâna Sutta and Commentary, with a Translation. By R. C. Childers, late of the Ceylon Civil Service.-The Northern Frontagers of China. Part III. The Kara Khitai. By H. H. Howorth.-Inedited Arabic Coins. II. By Stanley Lane Poole.-On the Form of Government under the Native Sovereigns of Ceylon. By A. de Silva Ekanayaka, Mudaliyar of the Department of Public Instruction, Ceylon. Vol. IX., Part I., pp. 156, sewed, with a plate. 1877. 8s. CONTENTS.-Bactrian Coins and Indian Dates. By E. Thomas, F.R.S.-The Tenses of the Assyrian Verb. By the Rev. A. H. Sayce, M.A.-An Account of the Island of Bali. By R. Friederich (continued from Vol. VIII. N.s. p. 218).-On Ruins in Makran. By Major Mockler. -Inedited Arabic Coins. III. By Stanley Lane Poole,-Further Note on a Bactrian Pali Inscription and the Samvat Era. By Prof. J. Dowson.-Notes on Persian Beluchistan. From the Persian of Mirza Mehdy Khán. By A. H. Schindler. Vol IX., Part II., pp. 292, sewed, with three plates. 1877. 10s. 6d. Vol. X., Part I., pp. 156, sewed, with two plates and a map. 1878. 88. Vol. X., Part II., pp. 146, sewed. 1878. 6s. CONTENTS.-Note on Pliny's Geography of the East Coast of Arabia. By Major-General S. B. Miles, Bombay Staff Corps. The Maldive Islands; with a Vocabulary taken from François Pyrard de Laval, 1602-1607. By A. Gray, late of the Ceylon Civil Service.-On Tibeto-Burman Languages. By Captain C. J. F. S. Forbes, of the Burmese Civil Service Commission. - Burmese Transliteration. By H. L. St. Barbe, Esq., Resident at Mandelay.-On the Connexion of the Mons of Pegu with the Koles of Central India. By Captain C. J. F. S. Forbes, of the Burmese Civil Commission.-Studies on the Comparative Grammar of the Semitic Languages, with Special Reference to Assyrian. By Paul Haupt. The Oldest Semitic Verb-Form.-Arab Metrology. II. El Djabarty. By M. H. Sauvaire.-The Migrations and Early History of the White Huns; principally from Chinese Sources. By Thomas W. Kingsmill. Vol. X., Part III., pp. 204, sewed. 1878. 88. CONTENTS.-On the Hill Canton of Sálár,-the most Easterly Settlement of the Turk Race. |