Malabar Manual

Malabar Manual
Author: William Logan
Publisher: Asian Educational Services
Total Pages: 442
Release: 2000
Genre: Malabar (India : District)
ISBN: 9788120604469

On Malabar, India.

MALABAR MANUAL by William Logan

MALABAR MANUAL by William Logan
Author:
Publisher: VICTORIA INSTITUTIONS, Aaradhana, DEVERKOVIL 673508 India www.victoriainstitutions.com
Total Pages: 2104
Release:
Genre: Social Science
ISBN:

Commentary William Logan's Malabar is popularly known as ‘Malabar Manual’. It is a huge book of more than 500,000 words. It might not be possible for a casual reader to imbibe all the minute bits of information from this book. However, in this commentary of mine, I have tried to insert a lot of such bits and pieces of information, by directly quoting the lines from ‘Malabar’. On these quoted lines, I have built up a lot of arguments, and also added a lot of explanations and interpretations. I do think that it is much easy to go through my Commentary than to read the whole of William Logan's book 'Malabar'. However, the book, Malabar, contains much more items, than what this Commentary can aspire to contain. This book, Malabar, will give very detailed information on how a small group of native-Englishmen built up a great nation, by joining up extremely minute bits of barbarian and semi-barbarian geopolitical areas in the South Asian Subcontinent.

A Commentary on the Malabar Manual Written by William Logan VOL 1

A Commentary on the Malabar Manual Written by William Logan VOL 1
Author: V. E. D. from VICTORIA INSTITUTIONS
Publisher:
Total Pages: 338
Release: 2018-01-03
Genre:
ISBN: 9781976838293

William Logan's Malabar is popularly known as 'Malabar Manual'. It is a huge book of more than 500,000 words. It might not be possible for a casual reader to imbibe all the minute bits of information from this book. However, in this commentary of mine, I have tried to insert a lot of such bits and pieces of information, by directly quoting the lines from 'Malabar'. On these quoted lines, I have built up a lot of arguments, and also added a lot of explanations and interpretations. I do think that it is much easy to go through my Commentary than to read the whole of William Logan's book 'Malabar'. However, the book, Malabar, contains much more items, than what this Commentary can aspire to contain. This book, Malabar, will give very detailed information on how a small group of native-Englishmen built up a great nation, by joining up extremely minute bits of barbarian and semi-barbarian geopolitical areas in the South Asian Subcontinent. First of all, I would like to place on record what my interest in this book is. I do not have any great interest in the minor details of Malabar or Travancore. Nor about the various castes and their aspirations, claims and counterclaims. My interest is basically connected to my interest in the English colonial rule in the South Asian Subcontinent and elsewhere. I would quite categorically mention that it is 'English colonialism' and not British Colonialism (which has a slight connection to Irish, Gaelic and Welsh (Celtic language) populations).Even though I am not sure about this, I think the book Malabar was made as part of the Madras Presidency government's endeavour to create a district manual for each of the districts of Madras Presidency. William Logan was a District Collector of the Malabar district of Madras Presidency. Logan has claimed the authorship of this book. There are locations where other persons are attributed as the authors of those specific locations. Also, there is this statement: The tidy fact is that the whole book has been tampered with or doctored by many others who were the natives of this subcontinent. Their mood and mental inclinations are found in various locations of the book. The only exception might be the location where Logan himself has dealt with the history writing. More or less connected to the part where the written records from the English Factory at Tellicherry are dealt with.His claim, asserted or hinted at, of being the author of the text wherein he is mentioned as the author is in many parts possibly a lie. The book Malabar ostensibly written by William Logan does not seem to have been written by him. It is true that there is a very specific location where it is evident that it is Logan who has written the text. However, in the vast locations of the textual matter, there are locations where it can be felt that he is not the author at all.

Agrarian Relations in Late Medieval Malabar

Agrarian Relations in Late Medieval Malabar
Author: M. T. Narayanan
Publisher: Northern Book Centre
Total Pages: 244
Release: 2003
Genre: Agriculture
ISBN: 9788172111359

To understand how colonialism redraws the equations of the colonized societies, a thorough analysis of the latter in the immediate preceeded period is required. There are few attempts on that line elsewhere in india, but Malabar remained excluded. The present study is an attempt to analyse theoretically and empirically the agrarian relations in Malabar during the late medieval period.

A Commentary on the Malabar Manual Written by William Logan Vol 2

A Commentary on the Malabar Manual Written by William Logan Vol 2
Author: V. E. D. from VICTORIA INSTITUTIONS
Publisher:
Total Pages: 376
Release: 2018-01-03
Genre:
ISBN: 9781976840319

William Logan's Malabar is popularly known as 'Malabar Manual'. It is a huge book of more than 500,000 words. It might not be possible for a casual reader to imbibe all the minute bits of information from this book. However, in this commentary of mine, I have tried to insert a lot of such bits and pieces of information, by directly quoting the lines from 'Malabar'. On these quoted lines, I have built up a lot of arguments, and also added a lot of explanations and interpretations. I do think that it is much easy to go through my Commentary than to read the whole of William Logan's book 'Malabar'. However, the book, Malabar, contains much more items, than what this Commentary can aspire to contain. This book, Malabar, will give very detailed information on how a small group of native-Englishmen built up a great nation, by joining up extremely minute bits of barbarian and semi-barbarian geopolitical areas in the South Asian Subcontinent. William Logan has claimed the authorship of this book. There are locations where other persons are attributed as the authors of those specific locations.The tidy fact is that the whole book has been tampered with or doctored by many others who were the natives of this subcontinent. Their mood and mental inclinations are found in various locations of the book. The only exception might be the location where Logan himself has dealt with the history writing. More or less connected to the part where the written records from the English Factory at Tellicherry are dealt with.His claim, asserted or hinted at, of being the author of the text wherein he is mentioned as the author is in many parts possibly a lie.The book Malabar ostensibly written by William Logan does not seem to have been written by him. It is true that there is a very specific location where it is evident that it is Logan who has written the text. However, in the vast locations of the textual matter, there are locations where it can be felt that he is not the author at all. There are many other issues with this book.

History of the Indigenous Indians

History of the Indigenous Indians
Author: Ṭi. Ecc. Pi Centāraśśēri
Publisher: APH Publishing
Total Pages: 182
Release: 1998
Genre: History
ISBN: 9788170249597

Presents the thesis that Indo-Aryans have been pushed to the status of shudras as a conflict between Buddhism and Brahmanism.

TRAVANCORE STATE MANUAL by V Nagam Aiya

TRAVANCORE STATE MANUAL by V Nagam Aiya
Author: VED from VICTORIA INSTITUTIONS
Publisher: VICTORIA INSTITUTIONS, Aaradhana, DEVERKOVIL 673508 India www.victoriainstitutions.com
Total Pages: 2127
Release:
Genre: History
ISBN:

TRAVANCORE STATE MANUAL was written in the closing years of the 1800s. It is a fascinating book in that the perspective of historical events that took place in the region known as the Indian Peninsula is markedly different from what is being taught in current day schools and colleges. There is need to bring this book out in a very readable form. That is what has been attempted here. VED from VICTORIA INSTITUTIONS has written a commentary , which aims to elucidate the various differences in perspective, and also tries to focus on varying issues which are nowadays, hidden away from public knowledge. What ultimately comes out as background of unvarying strength is the fact that the English rule, especially that by the English EAST INDIA COMPANY was really of benign qualities, towards the common man of this area. This book contains the story of an independent kingdom at the southern most end of the South Asian Peninsula, which lost its independence in 1947, in the wake of a fool coming to power in England.