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The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society is an academic journal which publishes articles on the history, archaeology, literature, language, religion and art of South Asia, the Middle East (together with North Africa and Ethiopia), Central Asia, East Asia and South-East Asia.
Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society (JRAS): 751–771 (21 pages). 1895.. [15] "The Jains". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society (JRAS). 1895. " The Tathāgata". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society et Cambridge University Press: 103–115 (13 pages). 1898.. (Note: this is the text referred to above, presented at the International Congress of ...
It has been published under its current name since 1991, having previously been the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland (1834–1991) and Transactions of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland (1824–1834). [30] The present editor of the Journal is Daud Ali of the University of Pennsylvania.
Jay's Journal is a 1979 book that was published in a diary format. The book is presented as an autobiographical account of a depressed teenage boy who becomes involved with a Satanic group . After participating in several occult rituals, Jay believes he is being haunted by a demon named "Raul."
Roger Mervyn Savory (27 January 1925 – 16 February 2022) was a British-born Professor Emeritus at the University of Toronto [1] who was an Iranologist and specialist on the Safavids.
Daud Ali (born 1964) is an American historian of Indian descent, born in Calcutta, India.He is currently Associate Professor of South Asian history at the University of Pennsylvania and the editor of the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society. [1]
Richard Bertram Whitehead (6 November 1879 – 4 March 1967), usually cited as R. B. Whitehead, was a British numismatist and an authority on Indian coins. He played "a major role in establishing the study of coinage as an essential technique of Indian historical research", for which he received numerous awards and honours, and was the first Honorary Fellow of the Numismatic Society of India.
Reginald Enthoven was born in Hastings, Sussex, England, on 23 November 1869, the fifth son of James and Miriam Enthoven. [2] [3] He attended Wellington College and then, using his family connections as a great-nephew of James Joseph Sylvester, he was able to secure a place at New College, Oxford reserved for students intending to pursue a career in the Indian Civil Service.