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Art. XXV.—Supplement to a paper “On the Duty which Mohammedans in British India owe, on the Principles of their own Law, to the Government of the Country.”

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 March 2011

Extract

When the paper was read at a meeting of the Royal Asiatic Society, some exceptions were taken to it by Lord Stanley of Alderley. A report of these has been added to the report of the paper in the pages of the Society's Journal, and may possibly give occasion for doubt on a subject which I think of much importance to Mohammedans in British India and even of some to the Government itself. I therefore propose to answer the exceptions in detail and at some length. But it seems necessary, for the better understanding of them, that I should first state briefly the principles on which the argument of the paper was founded.

Type
Original Communications
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Asiatic Society 1881

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References

page 580 note 1 This term is expressly applied to Christians in works on Mohammedan Law, as for instance in the Futawa Alumgeeree, vol. ii. p. 273–4.

page 582 note 1 Kifayah, , vol. i. p. 397.Google Scholar

page 582 note 2 Ibid. p. 398.

page 582 note 3 Hidayah, , vol. i. p. 402Google Scholar; Futawa Alumgeeree, vol. i. pp. 202, 207.Google Scholar