| Tobias Smollett - English literature - 1805 - 582 pages
...Mussulman subjects of Great Britain, that the private laws which they severally held sacred, and a violation of which they would have thought the most grievous oppression, should not be superseded by a new system, of which they could have no knowledge, and which they must have considered... | |
| British prose literature - 1821 - 360 pages
...Mussulman subjects Of Great Britain, that the private laws which they severally held sacred, and a violation of which they would have thought the most grievous oppression, should not be superseded by a new system, of which they could have no knowledge, and which they must have considered... | |
| William Hook Morley - 1850 - 1080 pages
...civil life ; nor could any thing be wiser than, by a legislative act, to assure the Hindu and Muselman subjects of Great Britain that the private laws which they severally hold sacred, and a violation of which they would have thought the most grievous oppression, should not be superseded... | |
| Lyttleton Forbes Winslow - Forensic psychiatry - 1863 - 788 pages
...Musselman subjects of Great Britain, that the private laws which they severally held sacred, and a violation of which they would have thought the most grievous oppression, should not be superseded by a new system, of which they could have no knowledge, and which they must have considered... | |
| Jagannát'ha Tercapanchánana - Contracts - 1864 - 510 pages
...life ; nor could any " thing be wiser than, by a legislative act, to assure the " Hindu and Mu-selman subjects of Great Britain, that the " private laws which they severally hold sacred, and a " violation of which they would have thought the most '• grievous oppression, should not be superseded... | |
| Shama Churun Sircar - Hindu law - 1867 - 1246 pages
...opinions, seems to have acquiesced iu the judgment pronounced upon it by Sir William Jones. Mussulman subjects of Great Britain, that the private laws, which they severally hold sacred, and a violation of which they would have thought the most grievous oppression, should not be superseded... | |
| Henry Thomas Colebrooke, Sir Thomas Edward Colebrooke - Indo-Aryan philology - 1873 - 574 pages
...life ; nor could anything be wiser " than, by a legislative act, to assure the Hindu and Musul"man subjects of Great Britain, that the private laws which " they severally hold sacred, and a violation of which thev "would have thought the most grievous oppression, should "not be superseded... | |
| Henry Thomas Colebrooke - Hinduism - 1873 - 578 pages
...life ; nor could anything be wiser " than, by a legislative act, to assure the Hindu and Musul" man subjects of Great Britain, that the private laws which " they severally hold sacred, aud a violation of which they "would have thought the most grievous oppression, should "not be superseded... | |
| Shama Churun Sircar - Hindu law - 1878 - 1064 pages
...civil life ; nor could any thing be wiser than, by a legislative act, to assure the Hindu and Mussulman subjects of Great Britain, that the private laws, which they severally hold sacred, and a violation of which they would have thought the most grievous oppression, should not be superseded... | |
| Shama Churun Sircar - Hindu law - 1878 - 1068 pages
...Mussulman subjects of Great Britain, that the private laws, which they severally hold sacred, and a violation of which they would have thought the most grievous oppression, should not be superseded by a new system, of which they could have no knowledge, and which they must have considered... | |
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