Probably a blend of Dravidian and Mongoloid elements, with a strain of IndoAryan blood in the higher groups. The head is broad ; complexion dark ; hair on face usually plentiful ; stature medium ; nose medium, with a tendency to broad. Ancient India - Page 47edited by - 1922 - 736 pagesFull view - About this book
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1907 - 774 pages
...mineralogical history. As might have been expected, Sir H. Risley's theory that the Bengalis represent a blend of Dravidian and Mongoloid elements with a strain of Indo-Aryan blood in the higher groups has been contested by those members of that enterprising race who claim a higher ethnical origin. The... | |
| James Sutherland Cotton, Sir Richard Burn, Sir William Stevenson Meyer - 1909 - 608 pages
...Brahmans and Kayasths, the Muhammadans of Eastern Bengal, and other groups peculiar to this part of India. Probably a blend of Dravidian and Mongoloid elements,...strain of IndoAryan blood in the higher groups. The head is broad ; complexion dark ; hair on face usually plentiful ; stature medium ; nose medium, with... | |
| 1910 - 860 pages
...Brahmans and Kayasths, the Muhammadans of eastern Bengal, and other groups peculiar to this part of India. Probably a blend of Dravidian and Mongoloid elements...strain of Indo-Aryan blood in the higher groups. The head is broad ; complexion dark ; hair on face usually plentiful ; stature medium ; nose medium with... | |
| Lionel David Barnett - 1914 - 406 pages
...Brahmans and Kayasths, the Muhammadans of Eastern Bengal, and other groups peculiar to this part of India. Probably a blend of Dravidian and Mongoloid elements,...strain of Indo-Aryan blood in the higher groups. The head is broad ; complexion dark ; hair on face usually plentiful ; stature medium ; nose medium, with... | |
| 1922 - 852 pages
...first throughout Hindustan, and eventually throughout the whole sub-continent The epoch of Indo-Aryan tribal migration was definitely closed. It was succeeded...(from whom Bengal has inherited its name) and the Kalingaa of Orissa were the 48 Peoples and Languages [CH. chief. On the north-west it is separated... | |
| John Buchan - 1923 - 334 pages
...predominating in the higher types. (e) Mongol- Dravidian, found in Bengal and Orissa, a blend of the Dravidian and Mongoloid elements with a strain of Indo-Aryan blood in the higher groups. (/) Mongoloid, found in the Himalayas, Nipal, Assam and Burma. (g) Dravidian, extending from Ceylon... | |
| John Buchan, Lord Edward Gleichen - 1923 - 338 pages
...predominating in the higher types. (e) Mongol- Dravidian, found in Bengal and Orissa, a blend of the Dravidian and Mongoloid elements with a strain of Indo-Aryan blood in the higher groups. (/) Mongoloid, found in the Himalayas, Nipal, Assam and Burma. (g) Dravidian, extending from Ceylon... | |
| Anthropological Society of Bombay - 1928 - 1060 pages
...Kayasths of Bengal, the Muhammadans of Eastern Lengul, and other groups peculiar to Bengal. There is " probably a blend of Dravidian and Mongoloid elements with a strain of Indo-Aryan blood in the higher groups."2 It has : (a) Stature, medium. (L) Complexion, dark. (c) Head, broad. (d) Hair, plentiful... | |
| 1910 - 854 pages
...Brahmans and Kayasths, the Muhammadans of eastern Bengal, and other groups peculiar to this part of India. Probably a blend of Dravidian and Mongoloid elements...strain of Indo-Aryan blood in the higher groups. The head is broad ; complexion dark ; hair on face usually plentiful ; stature medium ; nose medium with... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1907 - 756 pages
...mineralogical history. As might have been expected, Sir H. Risley's theory that the Bengalis represent a blend of Dravidian and Mongoloid elements with a strain of Indo-Aryan blood in the higher groups has been contested by those members of that enterprising race who claim a higher ethnical origin. The... | |
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