Imperial
Academy of Sciences.
Cambridge History of India - v3 - Turks and Afghans
1, 1910, vol.
11, 1921.
Abū Turāb Wali, Mir. Ta'rikh-i-Gujarāt. Edited by Sir E. Denison Ross, C. I. E.
Bibliotheca Indica Series of the Asiatic Society of Bengal. Calcutta, 1908.
Khāfi Khān. Muntakhab-ul Lubāb, part 111. Edited by Lt. Colonel Sir Wolseley
Haig, K. C. I. E. , etc. Bibliotheca Indica Series of the Asiatic Society of
Bengal. Calcutta, 1923.
2. MODERN WORKS
For The Imperial Gazetteer of India, see Bibliography to Chapter 1.
For Lane-Poole, The Mohammadan Dynasties, and Thomas, The Chroni-
cles of the Pathan Kings of Delhi, see Bibliography to Chapter II.
For Danvers, The Portuguese in India, see Bibliography to Chapter XI.
## p. 652 (#702) ############################################
652
BIBLIOGRAPHY TO CHAPTERS XV, XVI, XVII
CHAPTERS XV, XVI, XVII
THE KINGDOM OF THE DECCAN, A. D. 1347-1436; THE DE-
CLINE AND FALL OF THE KINGDOM OF THE DECCAN,
A. D. 1436–1490 ; THE FIVE KINGDOMS OF THE DECCAN,
A. D. 1527—1599
1. ORIGINAL SOURCES
For Firishta, Gulshan-i-Ibrāhīmi, and Nizām-ud-din Ahmad, Tabaqāt-i-
Akbari, see Bibliography to Chapter 1.
For Shaikh Abu-'l-Fazl, Āin-i-Akbari and translations, see Bibliography to
Chapter XII.
For Khāfi Kbān, Muntakhab-ul-Lubāb, part in, and 'Abdullāh Muham-
mad b.
'Umar al-Makki, Zafar-ul-Wālih bi Muzaffar wa Ālih, see Bibliography to Chap-
ters will and XIV.
Abu-'l-Fazl, Shaikh. Akbarnāma. Text, in three vols. Bibliotheca Indica Series
of the Asiatic Society of Bengal.
Translation of the same by H. Beveridge. Bibliotheca Indica Series of the
Asiatic Society of Bengal. Calcutta, 1897-1921.
Abu-'l-Qāsim, Mir, Mir 'Alam. Hadiqat-ul-'Alam. Lithographed at Haidarābād,
Deccan, A. n, 1309.
'Ali Samnāni, Sayyid. Burhān-i-Ma'āsir, mss. and translations, viz.
(a) The History of the Bahmani Dynasty, by Major J. S. King. Luzac
and Co. 1900.
(b) The History of the Nizām Shāhi Kings of Ahmadnagar, by Li.
Colonel Sir Wolseley Haig, K. C. I. E. , etc. Indian Antiquary, 1920–1923.
Ibrāhim Zubairi, Mirzā. Basātin-us-Salātin. Lithographed at Haidarābād, Deccan.
Ta'rikh-i Muhammad Qutb-Shāhi.
2. Modern Works
For The Imperial Gazetteer of India, see Bibliography to Chapter 1.
For Whitehead, The Rise of Portuguese Power in India, and Danvers, The
Portuguese in India, see Bibliography to Chapter XI.
Cousens, Henry. Bījāpur Architecture. Archaeological Survey of India. 1916.
Duff, Captain James Grant. History of the Mahrattas. Reprinted at Bombay,
1878.
Haig, Major T. W. Historic Landmarks of the Deccan. Allahabad, 1907.
Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal. 1904.
## p. 653 (#703) ############################################
BIBLIOGRAPHY TO CHAPTER XVIII
653
CHAPTER XVIII
HINDU STATES IN SOUTHERN INDIA
For Elliot and Dowson, The History of India as told by Its own Historians,
see Bibliography to Chapter I.
For King, The History of the Bahmani Dynasty, see Bibliography to Chapters
XV, XVI, and xvII.
Aiyangar, S. Krishnaswami. Ancient India.
-Souih India and her Muhammadan Invaders. Oxford University Press.
1921.
-A Little Known Chapter of Vijayanagar History.
Krishnadevaraya of Vijayanagar.
-Sources of Vijayanagar History. Madras, 1919.
Briggs, Colonel J. A History of the Rise of Muhammadan Power. (Translation
of the Gulshan-i-Ibrāhīmi of Firishta. )
Fleet, J. F. Dynasties of the Kanarese Districts in the Bombay Presidency,
Ins, riptions relating to the period published in
(1) The Epigraphia Indica.
(2) The Epigraphia Carnatica.
(3) Nellore Inscriptions by Messrs Butterworth and Venugopal Chetti,
Longworth Damas, M. The Book of Duarte Barbosa. Hakluyt Society.
Major, R. H. India in the Fifteenth Century. Hakluyt Society.
Mysore Archaeological Reports, 1910–1921.
Rice, B. L. Mysore and Coorg from Inscriptions.
Sastri, Rai Bahadur H. Krishna. The Hoysalas in the Chola Country. A. S. R.
1909-10.
- The Dynasties of Vijayanagar, etc. A. S. R. 1907-8, 1908-9, 1911-12.
Sewell, R. A Forgotten Empire. London, 1900.
## p. 654 (#704) ############################################
654
BIBLIOGRAPHY TO CHAPTER XIX
CHAPTER XIX
SIND AND MULTĀN
1. ORIGINAL SOURCES
For Firishta, Gulshan-i-Ibrāhīmi, and Nizām-ud-din Ahmad, Tabaqāt-j-
Akbari, see Bibliography to Chapter 1.
For Shaikh Abu-'l-Fazl, Āin. i-Akbari, and Akbarnāma, and translations,
see Bibliographies to Chapters XII, XV, xvi and xvII.
2. MODERN WORKS
For Elliot and Dowson, The History of India as told by Its own Historians ;
and M. R. Haig, The Indus Delta Country, see Bibliography to Chapter 1 ;
Raverty, The Mihrān of Sind and Its Tributaries.
## p. 655 (#705) ############################################
BIBLIOGRAPHY TO CHAPTER XX
655
CHAPTER XX
THE NATIVE STATES OF NORTHERN INDIA
FROM A. D. 1000 TO 1526
1. ORIGINAL SOURCES
For Abu-'l-Fazal Baihaqi, Ta'rikh-i-Baihaqi; Al-'Uibi; Ta'rikh-i-Yamini ;
Budauni, Muntakhab-ui-Tawărikh ; Hamd Ullah Mustaufi Qazvini, Ta'rikh-i-
Guzida ; Minhāj-ud-din, Tabaqāt-i-Nāsirī, and translation by Raverty; Firishta,
Gulshan-i-Ibrāhīmi ; Nizām-ud-din Ahmad, Tabaqāt-i-Akbari ; see Bibliographies
to Chapters 1 and 11.
For Shaikh Abu-'l-Fazl, Āin-i-Akbarī, and translations by Blochmann and
Jarrett, see Bibliography to Chapter XII.
2. MODREN WORKS
For Elliot and Dowson, The History of India as told by Its own Historians, see
Bibliography to Chapter 1.
Chalterton, Eyre, D. D. , Bishop of Nagpur The Story of Gondwāna. Sir Isaac
Pitman and Sons, Lid. London, 1916.
Duff, C. Mabel. Chronology of India. Constable, 1899.
Indian Antiquary and Journals of the Asiatic Society of Bengal and the Royal
Asiatic Society, passim.
Sarda, Har Bilas. Hammira of Ranthambhor, the last Great Chauhan Monarch.
Ajmer, 1921.
Smith V. A. The Early History of India. 3rd edition, Oxford, 1914.
Tod, Li-Col. James. Annals and Antiquities of Rajasthan, edited by William
Crooke, C. I. E. Oxford, 1920.
## p. 656 (#706) ############################################
656
BIBLIOGRAPHY TO CHAPTER XXI
CHAPTER XXI
BURMA A. D. 1287–1531
The main narrative, both for the Burmese homeland round Āva, and for
Toungoo, to which they were driven, is the Hmannan Yazawin, the standard
Burmese chronicle compiled in 1829 from earlier chronicles and from inscripitions.
As only 207 out of its 1358 pages have been translated (Luce and Tin, "The Glass
Palace Chronicle. Oxford University Press, 1923), my references are throughout
to the original.
The Shāns were illiterate and had no records. The best books on them are
Cochrane, ‘The Shāns,' and the Gazetteer of Upper Burma and the Shān States.
The only surviving Talaing records are their mss. chronicles of which the
chief are Razadarit Ayedawpon, Thatonhnwemun Yazawin, and Sayadaw Athwa :
pagoda records, of which the chief, Slapat Rajawan Datow Smin Ron, is translated
and in print ; and the Paklat Talaing chronicles, printed in Siam. The best study
of the race is Halliday, 'The Talaings. '
All the above are court chronicles (see Harvey, 'History of Burma,' pp. xvii-
xx, 103), and for social conditions we have nothing but inſerence. There are a
number of inscriptions, all Burmese ; they have been printed, but inaccurately
(see Harvey, 'History of Burma,' pp. xvi, 380), and only in vernacular ; I therefore
refer only to Tun Nyein's small volume of selected translations. None of the
inscriptions translated in Epigraphia Birmanica are as late as the period covered by
this chapter.
Chinese records, which throw a scanty but invaluable light on the period, are
found in Huber's great articles in the Bulletin de l'Ecole Francaise d'Extreme
Orient, and in Parker's printed work which, save for • Burma, relations to China,'
is buried in the political files of the Rangoon Secretariat ; much of these files are,
however, incorporated in the articles on the various Shān states in the alphabetical
portion of the Gazetteer of the Shān States and Upper Burma.
indicates a vernacular work.
Anderson. English Intercourse with Siam in the Seventeenth Century. Publ.
Kegan Paul. London, 1890.
Badger. The Travel, of Ludovico di Varthema. Publ. Hakluyt Society. London,
1863.
Chau Ju-kua. By Hirth and Rockhill. Publ.
Imperial Academy of Sciences.
St Petersburg, 1912.
Cochrane, The Shāns. Publ. Superintendent Government Printing. Rangoon,
1915.
Coulo. Da Asia. Publ. His Majesty's Press. Lisbon, 1778-88.
Duroiselle. The Ari of Burma and Tantric Buddhism. In Annual Report of the
Archæological Survey of India, 1915-16.
Faria y Sousa. The Portuguese in Asia. Trans. Stevens. Publ. London, 1695.
Forchammer. The Jardine Prize ; an Essay on the Sources and Development of
Burmese law. Publ. Superintendent Government Printing. Rangoon, 1885.
Notes on the Early History and Geography of British Burma. Publ. Super-
intendent Government Printing. Rangoon, 1884.
## p. 657 (#707) ############################################
BIBLIOGRAPHY TO CHAPTER XXI
657
Furnivall. Matriarchy in Burma. In Journal of the Burma Research Society,
1912. Publ. Rangoon.
Gazetteer of Upper Burma and the Shān States. Publ. Superintendent Govern-
ment Printing. Rangoon, 1900.
Gerson da Cunha. Memoir on the History of the Tooth. Relic of Ceylon. In
Journal of the Bombay Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1875.
Halliday. The Talaings Publ. Superintendent Government Printing. Rangoon,
1917.
Slapat Rajawan Datow Smin Ron. In Journal of the Burma Research Society,
1923. Publ. Rangoon.
Harvey. History of Burma. Publ. Longmans. London, 1925.
*Hmannan Yazawin. Publ. Upper Burma Press. Mandalay, 1908.
Huber. Une Ambassade chinoise en Birmanie en 1406. In Bulletin de l'Ecole
Francaise d'Extrême Orient, 1904. Publ. Hanoi and Paris.
Fin de la Dynastie de Pagān. Ibid. 1909.
Mackenzie. Climate in Burmese History. In Journal of the Burma Research
Society, 1913
Publ. Rangoon.
Major. India in the Fifteenth Century. Publ. Hakluyt Society. London, 1857.
Mayers. Chinese Explorations of the Indian Ocean during the Fifteenth Century.
In China Review, Vol. iii. Publ. Hong Kong.
*Paklat Talaing Chronicle. Thudammawatiyazawuntha Thihayazadiyazawuntha.
Printed at Paklat in Siam. 1910.
Pallegoix. Description du Royaume Thai ou Siam. Publ. Mission de Siam. Paris,
1854.
Parker. Burma with special reference to her relations to China. Publ. Rangoon
Gazette Press. Rangoon, 1893.
* Précis' of Chinese records. Printed in the political files of the Rangoon
Secretariat.
Pemberton. Report on the Eastern Frontier of British India. Publ. by Govern-
ment. Calcutta, 1835.
*Razadarit Ayedawpon Ms.
Report of the Superintendent Archaeological Survey, Burma. Publ. annually by
the Superintendent Government Printing. Rangoon.
Rockhill. Notes on the Trade of China with the Coast of the Indian Ocean during
the Fifteenth Century. In T'oung Pao, 1914, 1915. Publ. Leyden.
*Sayadaw Athwa. Burmese trans of his Talaing History of Pegū, used by Phayre,
now in the British Museum. MS No, OR. 3462-4.
*Shwemawdaw Thamaing. Publ. Hanthawaddy Press. Rangoon, 1917.
Taw Sein Ko. The Kalyāni Inscriptions. In Indian Antiquary, 1893 and 1894.
Temple. The Thirty-Seven Nats, a phase of Spirit-Worship prevailing in Burma.
Publ. Griggs. London, 1906.
*Thatonhnwemun Yazawin ms.
Tun Nyein. Inscriptions of Pagân, Pyinya, and Āva. Translation with notes. Publ.
Superintendent Government Printing Rangoon, 1899.
Whiteway. The rise of the Portuguese Power in India, 1497—1550. Publ. Con-
stable. London, 1899.
C. H. I. III.
42
## p. 658 (#708) ############################################
658
BIBLIOGRAPHY TO CHAPTER XXTİ
CHAPTER XXII
CEYLON A. D. 1215-1527.
The Mahāvaṁsa (Mv. ) which includes the ChūlavarsaPali.
Katikāvat-sangarā compiled by D. B. Jayatilaka. Sinhalese.
Dambadeni-asna. Sinhalese. ms.
Rājaratnākara. Sinhalese.
Rājāvaliya. Sinhalese.
Nikāyasa ugraha. Sinhalese.
Attanagaluvaṁsa. Pali and Sinahlese.
Pūjāvaliya. Sinhalese.
Daladāsirita. Sinhalese.
Bodhivama, Sinhalese version.
Madras Epigraphy : Report for 1907.
Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1913.
Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, Ceylon Branch, 1904 and 1912
The Lankātilaka Inscription. Sinhalese.
Saddharma-ratnākara. Sinhalese.
Spolia Zeylanica. June 1912.
Ruvanmal-nighaņķu. Sinhalese.
Kitsirimevan Kälaņi inscription.
Vāgiri-devāle inscription.
## p. 659 (#709) ############################################
BIBLIOGRAPHY TO CHAPTER XXIII
659
CHAPTER XXIII
THE MONUMENTS OF MUSLIM INDIA
1. ARCHITECTURE
GENERAL
Choisy, A. Histoire de l'Architecture. 2 vols. Paris, 1899.
Fergusson, J. History of Architecture in all countries. 5 vo's. 1893.
Fletcher, B. F. A History of Architecture on the Comparative Method. 6th edition.
London, 1921.
Porter, A. K. Mediaeval Architecture.
Abū Turāb Wali, Mir. Ta'rikh-i-Gujarāt. Edited by Sir E. Denison Ross, C. I. E.
Bibliotheca Indica Series of the Asiatic Society of Bengal. Calcutta, 1908.
Khāfi Khān. Muntakhab-ul Lubāb, part 111. Edited by Lt. Colonel Sir Wolseley
Haig, K. C. I. E. , etc. Bibliotheca Indica Series of the Asiatic Society of
Bengal. Calcutta, 1923.
2. MODERN WORKS
For The Imperial Gazetteer of India, see Bibliography to Chapter 1.
For Lane-Poole, The Mohammadan Dynasties, and Thomas, The Chroni-
cles of the Pathan Kings of Delhi, see Bibliography to Chapter II.
For Danvers, The Portuguese in India, see Bibliography to Chapter XI.
## p. 652 (#702) ############################################
652
BIBLIOGRAPHY TO CHAPTERS XV, XVI, XVII
CHAPTERS XV, XVI, XVII
THE KINGDOM OF THE DECCAN, A. D. 1347-1436; THE DE-
CLINE AND FALL OF THE KINGDOM OF THE DECCAN,
A. D. 1436–1490 ; THE FIVE KINGDOMS OF THE DECCAN,
A. D. 1527—1599
1. ORIGINAL SOURCES
For Firishta, Gulshan-i-Ibrāhīmi, and Nizām-ud-din Ahmad, Tabaqāt-i-
Akbari, see Bibliography to Chapter 1.
For Shaikh Abu-'l-Fazl, Āin-i-Akbari and translations, see Bibliography to
Chapter XII.
For Khāfi Kbān, Muntakhab-ul-Lubāb, part in, and 'Abdullāh Muham-
mad b.
'Umar al-Makki, Zafar-ul-Wālih bi Muzaffar wa Ālih, see Bibliography to Chap-
ters will and XIV.
Abu-'l-Fazl, Shaikh. Akbarnāma. Text, in three vols. Bibliotheca Indica Series
of the Asiatic Society of Bengal.
Translation of the same by H. Beveridge. Bibliotheca Indica Series of the
Asiatic Society of Bengal. Calcutta, 1897-1921.
Abu-'l-Qāsim, Mir, Mir 'Alam. Hadiqat-ul-'Alam. Lithographed at Haidarābād,
Deccan, A. n, 1309.
'Ali Samnāni, Sayyid. Burhān-i-Ma'āsir, mss. and translations, viz.
(a) The History of the Bahmani Dynasty, by Major J. S. King. Luzac
and Co. 1900.
(b) The History of the Nizām Shāhi Kings of Ahmadnagar, by Li.
Colonel Sir Wolseley Haig, K. C. I. E. , etc. Indian Antiquary, 1920–1923.
Ibrāhim Zubairi, Mirzā. Basātin-us-Salātin. Lithographed at Haidarābād, Deccan.
Ta'rikh-i Muhammad Qutb-Shāhi.
2. Modern Works
For The Imperial Gazetteer of India, see Bibliography to Chapter 1.
For Whitehead, The Rise of Portuguese Power in India, and Danvers, The
Portuguese in India, see Bibliography to Chapter XI.
Cousens, Henry. Bījāpur Architecture. Archaeological Survey of India. 1916.
Duff, Captain James Grant. History of the Mahrattas. Reprinted at Bombay,
1878.
Haig, Major T. W. Historic Landmarks of the Deccan. Allahabad, 1907.
Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal. 1904.
## p. 653 (#703) ############################################
BIBLIOGRAPHY TO CHAPTER XVIII
653
CHAPTER XVIII
HINDU STATES IN SOUTHERN INDIA
For Elliot and Dowson, The History of India as told by Its own Historians,
see Bibliography to Chapter I.
For King, The History of the Bahmani Dynasty, see Bibliography to Chapters
XV, XVI, and xvII.
Aiyangar, S. Krishnaswami. Ancient India.
-Souih India and her Muhammadan Invaders. Oxford University Press.
1921.
-A Little Known Chapter of Vijayanagar History.
Krishnadevaraya of Vijayanagar.
-Sources of Vijayanagar History. Madras, 1919.
Briggs, Colonel J. A History of the Rise of Muhammadan Power. (Translation
of the Gulshan-i-Ibrāhīmi of Firishta. )
Fleet, J. F. Dynasties of the Kanarese Districts in the Bombay Presidency,
Ins, riptions relating to the period published in
(1) The Epigraphia Indica.
(2) The Epigraphia Carnatica.
(3) Nellore Inscriptions by Messrs Butterworth and Venugopal Chetti,
Longworth Damas, M. The Book of Duarte Barbosa. Hakluyt Society.
Major, R. H. India in the Fifteenth Century. Hakluyt Society.
Mysore Archaeological Reports, 1910–1921.
Rice, B. L. Mysore and Coorg from Inscriptions.
Sastri, Rai Bahadur H. Krishna. The Hoysalas in the Chola Country. A. S. R.
1909-10.
- The Dynasties of Vijayanagar, etc. A. S. R. 1907-8, 1908-9, 1911-12.
Sewell, R. A Forgotten Empire. London, 1900.
## p. 654 (#704) ############################################
654
BIBLIOGRAPHY TO CHAPTER XIX
CHAPTER XIX
SIND AND MULTĀN
1. ORIGINAL SOURCES
For Firishta, Gulshan-i-Ibrāhīmi, and Nizām-ud-din Ahmad, Tabaqāt-j-
Akbari, see Bibliography to Chapter 1.
For Shaikh Abu-'l-Fazl, Āin. i-Akbari, and Akbarnāma, and translations,
see Bibliographies to Chapters XII, XV, xvi and xvII.
2. MODERN WORKS
For Elliot and Dowson, The History of India as told by Its own Historians ;
and M. R. Haig, The Indus Delta Country, see Bibliography to Chapter 1 ;
Raverty, The Mihrān of Sind and Its Tributaries.
## p. 655 (#705) ############################################
BIBLIOGRAPHY TO CHAPTER XX
655
CHAPTER XX
THE NATIVE STATES OF NORTHERN INDIA
FROM A. D. 1000 TO 1526
1. ORIGINAL SOURCES
For Abu-'l-Fazal Baihaqi, Ta'rikh-i-Baihaqi; Al-'Uibi; Ta'rikh-i-Yamini ;
Budauni, Muntakhab-ui-Tawărikh ; Hamd Ullah Mustaufi Qazvini, Ta'rikh-i-
Guzida ; Minhāj-ud-din, Tabaqāt-i-Nāsirī, and translation by Raverty; Firishta,
Gulshan-i-Ibrāhīmi ; Nizām-ud-din Ahmad, Tabaqāt-i-Akbari ; see Bibliographies
to Chapters 1 and 11.
For Shaikh Abu-'l-Fazl, Āin-i-Akbarī, and translations by Blochmann and
Jarrett, see Bibliography to Chapter XII.
2. MODREN WORKS
For Elliot and Dowson, The History of India as told by Its own Historians, see
Bibliography to Chapter 1.
Chalterton, Eyre, D. D. , Bishop of Nagpur The Story of Gondwāna. Sir Isaac
Pitman and Sons, Lid. London, 1916.
Duff, C. Mabel. Chronology of India. Constable, 1899.
Indian Antiquary and Journals of the Asiatic Society of Bengal and the Royal
Asiatic Society, passim.
Sarda, Har Bilas. Hammira of Ranthambhor, the last Great Chauhan Monarch.
Ajmer, 1921.
Smith V. A. The Early History of India. 3rd edition, Oxford, 1914.
Tod, Li-Col. James. Annals and Antiquities of Rajasthan, edited by William
Crooke, C. I. E. Oxford, 1920.
## p. 656 (#706) ############################################
656
BIBLIOGRAPHY TO CHAPTER XXI
CHAPTER XXI
BURMA A. D. 1287–1531
The main narrative, both for the Burmese homeland round Āva, and for
Toungoo, to which they were driven, is the Hmannan Yazawin, the standard
Burmese chronicle compiled in 1829 from earlier chronicles and from inscripitions.
As only 207 out of its 1358 pages have been translated (Luce and Tin, "The Glass
Palace Chronicle. Oxford University Press, 1923), my references are throughout
to the original.
The Shāns were illiterate and had no records. The best books on them are
Cochrane, ‘The Shāns,' and the Gazetteer of Upper Burma and the Shān States.
The only surviving Talaing records are their mss. chronicles of which the
chief are Razadarit Ayedawpon, Thatonhnwemun Yazawin, and Sayadaw Athwa :
pagoda records, of which the chief, Slapat Rajawan Datow Smin Ron, is translated
and in print ; and the Paklat Talaing chronicles, printed in Siam. The best study
of the race is Halliday, 'The Talaings. '
All the above are court chronicles (see Harvey, 'History of Burma,' pp. xvii-
xx, 103), and for social conditions we have nothing but inſerence. There are a
number of inscriptions, all Burmese ; they have been printed, but inaccurately
(see Harvey, 'History of Burma,' pp. xvi, 380), and only in vernacular ; I therefore
refer only to Tun Nyein's small volume of selected translations. None of the
inscriptions translated in Epigraphia Birmanica are as late as the period covered by
this chapter.
Chinese records, which throw a scanty but invaluable light on the period, are
found in Huber's great articles in the Bulletin de l'Ecole Francaise d'Extreme
Orient, and in Parker's printed work which, save for • Burma, relations to China,'
is buried in the political files of the Rangoon Secretariat ; much of these files are,
however, incorporated in the articles on the various Shān states in the alphabetical
portion of the Gazetteer of the Shān States and Upper Burma.
indicates a vernacular work.
Anderson. English Intercourse with Siam in the Seventeenth Century. Publ.
Kegan Paul. London, 1890.
Badger. The Travel, of Ludovico di Varthema. Publ. Hakluyt Society. London,
1863.
Chau Ju-kua. By Hirth and Rockhill. Publ.
Imperial Academy of Sciences.
St Petersburg, 1912.
Cochrane, The Shāns. Publ. Superintendent Government Printing. Rangoon,
1915.
Coulo. Da Asia. Publ. His Majesty's Press. Lisbon, 1778-88.
Duroiselle. The Ari of Burma and Tantric Buddhism. In Annual Report of the
Archæological Survey of India, 1915-16.
Faria y Sousa. The Portuguese in Asia. Trans. Stevens. Publ. London, 1695.
Forchammer. The Jardine Prize ; an Essay on the Sources and Development of
Burmese law. Publ. Superintendent Government Printing. Rangoon, 1885.
Notes on the Early History and Geography of British Burma. Publ. Super-
intendent Government Printing. Rangoon, 1884.
## p. 657 (#707) ############################################
BIBLIOGRAPHY TO CHAPTER XXI
657
Furnivall. Matriarchy in Burma. In Journal of the Burma Research Society,
1912. Publ. Rangoon.
Gazetteer of Upper Burma and the Shān States. Publ. Superintendent Govern-
ment Printing. Rangoon, 1900.
Gerson da Cunha. Memoir on the History of the Tooth. Relic of Ceylon. In
Journal of the Bombay Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1875.
Halliday. The Talaings Publ. Superintendent Government Printing. Rangoon,
1917.
Slapat Rajawan Datow Smin Ron. In Journal of the Burma Research Society,
1923. Publ. Rangoon.
Harvey. History of Burma. Publ. Longmans. London, 1925.
*Hmannan Yazawin. Publ. Upper Burma Press. Mandalay, 1908.
Huber. Une Ambassade chinoise en Birmanie en 1406. In Bulletin de l'Ecole
Francaise d'Extrême Orient, 1904. Publ. Hanoi and Paris.
Fin de la Dynastie de Pagān. Ibid. 1909.
Mackenzie. Climate in Burmese History. In Journal of the Burma Research
Society, 1913
Publ. Rangoon.
Major. India in the Fifteenth Century. Publ. Hakluyt Society. London, 1857.
Mayers. Chinese Explorations of the Indian Ocean during the Fifteenth Century.
In China Review, Vol. iii. Publ. Hong Kong.
*Paklat Talaing Chronicle. Thudammawatiyazawuntha Thihayazadiyazawuntha.
Printed at Paklat in Siam. 1910.
Pallegoix. Description du Royaume Thai ou Siam. Publ. Mission de Siam. Paris,
1854.
Parker. Burma with special reference to her relations to China. Publ. Rangoon
Gazette Press. Rangoon, 1893.
* Précis' of Chinese records. Printed in the political files of the Rangoon
Secretariat.
Pemberton. Report on the Eastern Frontier of British India. Publ. by Govern-
ment. Calcutta, 1835.
*Razadarit Ayedawpon Ms.
Report of the Superintendent Archaeological Survey, Burma. Publ. annually by
the Superintendent Government Printing. Rangoon.
Rockhill. Notes on the Trade of China with the Coast of the Indian Ocean during
the Fifteenth Century. In T'oung Pao, 1914, 1915. Publ. Leyden.
*Sayadaw Athwa. Burmese trans of his Talaing History of Pegū, used by Phayre,
now in the British Museum. MS No, OR. 3462-4.
*Shwemawdaw Thamaing. Publ. Hanthawaddy Press. Rangoon, 1917.
Taw Sein Ko. The Kalyāni Inscriptions. In Indian Antiquary, 1893 and 1894.
Temple. The Thirty-Seven Nats, a phase of Spirit-Worship prevailing in Burma.
Publ. Griggs. London, 1906.
*Thatonhnwemun Yazawin ms.
Tun Nyein. Inscriptions of Pagân, Pyinya, and Āva. Translation with notes. Publ.
Superintendent Government Printing Rangoon, 1899.
Whiteway. The rise of the Portuguese Power in India, 1497—1550. Publ. Con-
stable. London, 1899.
C. H. I. III.
42
## p. 658 (#708) ############################################
658
BIBLIOGRAPHY TO CHAPTER XXTİ
CHAPTER XXII
CEYLON A. D. 1215-1527.
The Mahāvaṁsa (Mv. ) which includes the ChūlavarsaPali.
Katikāvat-sangarā compiled by D. B. Jayatilaka. Sinhalese.
Dambadeni-asna. Sinhalese. ms.
Rājaratnākara. Sinhalese.
Rājāvaliya. Sinhalese.
Nikāyasa ugraha. Sinhalese.
Attanagaluvaṁsa. Pali and Sinahlese.
Pūjāvaliya. Sinhalese.
Daladāsirita. Sinhalese.
Bodhivama, Sinhalese version.
Madras Epigraphy : Report for 1907.
Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1913.
Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, Ceylon Branch, 1904 and 1912
The Lankātilaka Inscription. Sinhalese.
Saddharma-ratnākara. Sinhalese.
Spolia Zeylanica. June 1912.
Ruvanmal-nighaņķu. Sinhalese.
Kitsirimevan Kälaņi inscription.
Vāgiri-devāle inscription.
## p. 659 (#709) ############################################
BIBLIOGRAPHY TO CHAPTER XXIII
659
CHAPTER XXIII
THE MONUMENTS OF MUSLIM INDIA
1. ARCHITECTURE
GENERAL
Choisy, A. Histoire de l'Architecture. 2 vols. Paris, 1899.
Fergusson, J. History of Architecture in all countries. 5 vo's. 1893.
Fletcher, B. F. A History of Architecture on the Comparative Method. 6th edition.
London, 1921.
Porter, A. K. Mediaeval Architecture.