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Nayak : Bengali daily of Calcutta, edited by Panchcowri Banerji. It was one of the two most popular dailies; the other was Sandhyā, edited by Brahmabāndhav Upādhyāya.

4 result/s found for Nayak

... remained brave as a lion and, even on the gallows offered homage to his motherland. Around the end of the 18th century the greater part of South India was ruled by the Nawab of Arcot. The Nayak rule in Madurai which controlled the entire West Tamil Nadu after two centuries came to an abrupt end in 1736 when Chanda Sahib of Arcot seized the Madurai throne from the last queen of Madurai in an ...

... the nick of time for the Police to claim another two months' holiday in Pondicherry. However, I think their fangs have been drawn. I may possibly send you the facts of the case for publication in the Nayak or any other paper, but I am not yet certain. I shall write to you about sadhana etc. another time. Kali Page 176 [2] [August 1912 or after] Dear M P.S. has sent to his ...

[exact]

... nick of time for the police to claim another two months' holiday in Pondi-cherry. However, I think their fangs have been drawn. I may possibly send you the facts of the case for publication in the Nayak or any other paper, but I am not yet certain. I shall write to you about Sadhana etc. another time. Kali ¹ It can be seen from the above letter that there had been a search in the Rue ...

[exact]

... after the mid-16th century, the Vijayanagara Nayaks, or governors, became the independent rulers of large tracts of southern India. Of the prominent Nayaks were the Nayaks of Madurai (1549-1736), ruling from Madurai and Tiruchirapalli. The Tanjore Naickers opted for a conventional system of administration, while the other Vijayanagara offshoots, namely the Nayaks of Gingee, and other territories under the ...