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Stuart : a dynasty whose senior branch inherited the Scottish crown in 1371 & the English crown in 1603. To it belonged James I & II, Charles I & II, Mary, & Anne.

29 result/s found for Stuart

... about were placed flat rectangular or circular terracotta pieces, known hitherto as 'terracotta cakes'." All these structures definitely indicate Aryanism. Yet they cannot be related to the Rigveda. Stuart Piggott 61 correctly says about the Rigvedic Age: "There is no evidence that any temples were built, and the altar is nothing more elaborate than a pile of turf." Parpola 62 himself notes in one... outside the Indus valley, at Rangpur IIA (2000-1500 B.C.) and at Lothal (c. 2200 B.C.), but also in the valley at Mohenjo-daro (c. 2500 B.C.). 75 The situation is quite negative for the Rigveda. Stuart Piggott 76 has the clear-cut assertion: "the Rigveda knows nothing of rice." San-kalia 77 has a statement of double information: "this grain was unknown to the Rigveda as well as to the Avesta"... of the translation by Gayna Walls (Batsford, London, 1989). 274. The Histories, pp. 264-65. 275."The Royal Hordes of the Nomad Peoples of the Steppes", The Dawn of Civilization, ed. by Stuart Piggott (Thames and Hudson, London, 1961), p. 328, col. 2. 276. Loc. cit.. p. 440. col. 2. Page 317 Obviously, the Sakas, no matter if any group of them was termed Haumavarga ...

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... descriptive of "being as such", whatever it may mean precisely, we must distinguish the conception of them as empirical generalisations of a very high order. This view was most clearly expressed by John Stuart Mill in his System of Logic (1843).   We shall now discuss specifically the Law of Contradiction. Aristotle produced seven "proofs" to demonstrate the indispensability of the Law of Contradiction... not to be and who explained the concept of becoming as implying the falsehood of the principle that everything is what it is. Before Aristotle this principle had been defended by Parmenides. John Stuart Mill's approach is avowedly empirical. He regarded the principle of contradiction as "one of our first empirical generalisations from experience and originally founded on our distinction between ...

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... and Fleure, H.J., Times and Places (Oxford, 1956). Phillips, D.D., "The Royal Hordes of the Nomad Peoples of the Steppes", in The Dawn of Civilization, ed. Stuart Piggott (Thames & Hudson, London, 1961). Piggott, Stuart, Prehistoric India (Penguin, Harmondsworth, 1961). ed., The Dawn of Civilization (Thames & Hudson, London, 1961). Possehl, G.L. ed.. Ancient Cities of the Indus ...

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... work in the Harappā Culture as one element in the midst of several at the root of it. And, looking more deeply, more logically we can perceive a basis for such a belief. 8. Prehistoric India by Stuart Piggott (A Pelican Book, Harmonds-worth, 1961), p. 157. 9."Cracking the Indus Script", p. 99, col. 1. Page 181 Not only must the unknown "why" of the horseless depictions keep... novel supposition. Even the absence of horse-bones should not draw us to it. For, indeed an eye-opener is the background against which we have to view the Harappā Culture of the third millennium B.C. Stuart Piggott 10 has observed: "one clay figurine from Periano Ghundai [in North Balūchistān] seems to represent a horse, and is interesting in connection with the find of horses' teeth in RG [Rānā Ghundāī] ...

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... Cultural History from the Vayu Purāna (Poona, 1946) "Gupta Inscriptions and the Purānic Tradition", Bulletin of the Deccan College Research Institute (Poona), II, Nos. 1-2 Piggott, Stuart, Prehistoric India (Pelican, Harmondswirth, 1960) Pirenne, Jacqueline, "Un problème-clef pour la chronologie de 1'Orient: la date du 'Périple de la mer Érythrée'", Journal Asiatique... (Parsua), 333 Peterson, 346 Petrie, Sir Flinders, 238, 239 Phanes, 483 Phegelas (Bhagalā), 63 Phegus, 155 Phraates, 50 Phraates 11, 459 Phraotes.201, 230 Piggott, Stuart, 392 Pihowa on the Saraswatī, 85 Pillai, Swami Kannu, 52 Ping-wang, 365 Piodasses and Prydrs, 321-4, 359 Pipphalivana, 205 Pirenne, Jacqueline, 420, 421 Pishtapuraka-Mahendragiri ...

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... say?" said the shadow, "Perhaps from my own Page 991 thoughts, perhaps from a too powerful enemy." After the discovery of the recent conspiracy to murder Cromwell and restore Charles Stuart, the country was full of Royalist fugitives, hiding by day, travelling by night, in the hope of reaching a port whence they could sail for Ostende or Calais. For the inquisitions of the Republican... d his nuptials?" "I promise you that," said the unknown. "It does not suit you that Alicia should marry another. It does not suit me that there should be a strong successor to Cromwell. Charles Stuart is my good friend, and I wish that he should rule England. Therefore, Patrick, it is a bargain." "Who the devil are you?" cried the young man again, marvelling. As if to answer the moon peeped ...

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... about were placed flat rectangular or circular terracotta pieces, known hitherto as 'terracotta cakes'." All these structures definitely indicate Aryanism. Yet they cannot be related to the Rigveda . Stuart Piggott 13 correctly says about the Rigvedic Age: "There is no evidence that any temples were built, and the altar is nothing more elaborate than a pile of turf." Parpola 14 himself notes in one ...

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... Mackay at a depth of 18.4 feet in the DK area, must indicate an earlier importation, and so too may the animal-headed pin discovered in the same part of the site." We may supplement the information with Stuart Piggott's news: "...at Mohenjodāro a... clay model was found at a low level, 5. The Birth of Indian Civilization: India and Pakistan before 500 B.C. (A Pelican Original, Harmondsworth, 1968) ...

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... be a subject of the interview book herself! Being the quiet, private, unassuming person that she is she froze ! She literally could not speak. Without knowing this, but sensing something, my friend Stuart inexplicably and suddenly appeared in the room and began telling Aster of the importance and need to relate her personal experiences and how vital it was to share her life’s experiences of the Ashram ...

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... quotations from Sri Aurobindo rather than from yourself.   If Kant is difficult, Sri Aurobindo may be difficult too. I take the normal philosophical student as one who is able to understand John Stuart Mill or Radhakrishnan easily, but 'The Life Divine' is rather difficult to follow even for such a student unless he has a" grounding not merely of the Upani-shads and the Gita but of some of the easier ...

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... Paśupati, 42 Pataliputra, 103, 105 Pazur-Inshushinak, 88 Peake, H., 58 Periano Ghundai, 59-60 Persia, 74 Phillips, E.D., 74 Phoenicians, 16 Piggott, Stuart, 6, 54, 58, 59, 60, 68, 74 Pipru, 110, 111 Piśācha, 85, 116-17 Pischel, 103 Plato, 107 Potter, Simeon, 91 Pottery, 63-4, 68-9 Prakrit, 33 Pre-Harappān ...

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... and died soon after. But Milton was hence-forth dependent totally on other men's eyes. Did his blind-ness daunt him? He continued with his pamphleteering. And a little before the restoration of the Stuart Monarchy he published his treatise, The Likeliest Means to Remove Hirelings Out of the Church, and, almost when Charles II came over, he brought out the anti-monarchical tract, The Ready and Easy ...

... everybody knows that in the figure of his Satan we have a strong dash of Milton the rebel against Charles I, the vehement defender of regicide who remained the unrepentant Republican even when the Stuart Monarchy was restored and who might have been the first to get hanged as Cromwell's bellicose foreign secretary and all-Europe champion. There is also the blending of himself with some of the attitudes ...

... over materialism by * Cf. also Morley's letter to Minto of 6 January 1909: "After all, if we press to the bottom of things, I conjecture that the active man in this chapter of business must be Stuart or Plowden or somebody of the Police, and that breed needs searching scrutiny step by step in these matters. Lawyers are not always to be trusted; still less are Police authorities." [Quoted in Syed ...

... of the flawless poetic form. Baudelaire is the intensest initiator of this Symbolism as well as of the em-bryos, so to speak, of the other types. Viele-Griffin, Laforgue, Page 211 Stuart Merrill, Francis Jammes, Paul Fort carry it on in their own individual manners. Such symbolism takes up somewhat feverishly the happy hold of Wordsworth on common things and Whitman's exultant embrace ...

Amal Kiran   >   Books   >   Other-Works   >   Talks on Poetry
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... brief reactions which only modified without actually Page 134 preventing the overt realisation of new ideas. We can see for instance that the Sullan restoration of Roman oligarchy, the Stuart restoration in England or the brief return of monarchy in France with the Bourbons were no real restorations, but a momentary damming of the tide attended with insufficient concessions and forced ...

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... West there is the liberal conception of man competing with the Marxist conception. The liberal conception of man was developed by such classical writers as Locke, Adam Smith, Bentham, and John Stuart Mill and is enshrined in the liberal democracies of the West and is incorporated in the thinking of influential philosophers like Karl Popper. The defenders of Western democracies such as Karl ...

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... novel supposition. Even the absence of horse-bones should not draw us to it. For, indeed an eye-opener is the background against which we have to view the Harappa Culture of the third millennium B.C. Stuart Piggott has observed: "one clay figurine from Periano Ghundai [in Page 253 North Baluchistan] seems to represent a horse, and is interesting in connection with the find of horses' ...

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... sandstone torso from Harappā was Harappān. We can thus confidently say with Sir John Marshall that the Indus artist had anticipated the Greek artist by 2,000 years." In addition we may note the comment of Stuart Piggott: 2 "the treatment of the heavy lines of the abdomen... is astonishingly similar to some work of Kushan date [c. 40-220 A.D. by the present chronology]." All this shows that ancient ...

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... 277. 22. The Wonder that was India (The Grove Press Inc., New York, 1961), P . 21. 23. Indian Archaeology Today, p. 61. Page 53 which most scholars have noted. To quote Stuart Piggott: "The dead hand of conservatism, in design rather than technique, lies heavy on all the Harappā products. Complex technical processes were known, well understood, and admirably organized for ...

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... Ghundai, 182, 249, 253 pernēmi, 291, 347 Persepolis, 206 Persepolis Treasury, 319 PGW, see Painted Grey Ware Phillips, E.D., 317 Piggott, Stuart, 181 fn., 182, 189, 192, 233, 237, 249, 251, 253, 261 Pipru, 207, 329, 331-3, 370 Pirak, 205, 208, 226-9, 231, 236 Pit Grave (Yamna) culture, 247, 323, 324 Polyaenus ...

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... presence of "prehistoric dams, now called Gebr-bands", which, he 13 claims, "are still to be found on many water-courses in the western parts of the region under consideration". And he criticises Stuart Piggott for wrong thinking about what were broken up by Indra. He insists that these were "dams (not embankments as Piggott would have it)" and then he points at "Gebr-bands". When we turn to Piggott ...

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... in the Ukraine at 22. Op. cit., p. 317. 23. Ibid. 24.Op. cit., p. 158. 25. Op. cit., p. 324. 26."The Nomad Peoples of the Steppes". The Dawn of Civilization, edited by Stuart Piggott (Thames & Hudson , London, 2nd Impression ,1961), p. 318, col. 1. Page 74 This map identifies a belt of ancient Aryanism which would go back in time to c. 4000 B ...

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... Mackay at a depth of 18.4 feet in the DK area, must indicate an earlier importation, and so too may the animal-headed pin discovered in the same part of the site." We may supplement the information with Stuart Piggott's news: "...at Mohenjodaro a... clay model was found at a low level, which... seems to represent a form of shaft-hole axe..." 7 Hence the late finds are shown up as absolutely inconclusive ...

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... address, Professor D.P. Chattopadhyaya mentioned about some great souls who influenced immensely their disciples or general public. These inter alia include Nachiketa, Aristotle, Sant Gyaneswar, John Stuart Mill and Gandhiji. Professor D.P.Chattopadhyaya requested Professor Kireetjoshi to speak a few words about the structure of the National Seminar on Philosophy of Value-Oriented Education. ...

... fixed, in the struggle with the monarchy, upon this question of taxation as the first vital point in a conflict for the power of the purse. Once that was settled in the Parliament by the defeat of the Stuarts, the transformation of the monarchical sovereignty into the sovereignty of the people or, more accurately, the shifting of the organic control from the throne to the aristocracy, thence to the bourgeoisie ...

Sri Aurobindo   >   Books   >   CWSA   >   The Human Cycle

... one single, undivided, perfectly efficient and perfectly directed mind and body. 3 It is from this point of view that we shall most intelligently understand the attempt of the Tudors and the Stuarts to impose both monarchical authority and religious uniformity on the people and seize the real sense of the religious wars in France, the Catholic monarchical rule in Spain with its atrocious method ...

Sri Aurobindo   >   Books   >   CWSA   >   The Human Cycle

... vice and the disorganisation of the home which was the result of a similar state of society in ancient Rome, in Italy of the Renascence, in France under the Bourbons and in England under the later Stuarts. The old spiritual tendencies were also rather latent than dead, the mighty pristine ideals still existed in theory,—they are outlined with extraordinary grandeur by Kalidasa,—nor had they yet been ...

... We know some instances of poet-kings in history, Nero & Ludwig of Bavaria were extreme instances; but we have a far more interesting because typical series in the history of the British isles. The Stuarts were a race of born poets whom the irony of their fate insisted upon placing one after the other upon a throne; with the single exception of Charles II (James VI was a pedant, which Page 197 ...