| India - 1852 - 556 pages
...interpreted the general scope and tendency of the clause into a declaration, that thenceforth there should be no governing caste in British India — that whatever other tests of qualification might be adopted, distinctions of race and religion should not be of the number, that no subject of... | |
| India - 1852 - 566 pages
...interpreted the general scope and tendency of the clause into a declaration, that thenceforth there should be no governing caste in British India — that whatever other tests of qualification might be adopted, distinctions of race and religion should not be of the number, that no subject of... | |
| Sir Edward Shepherd Creasy - Constitutional history - 1872 - 438 pages
...present Act makes a material addition in the provisions relating to the College at Haileybury. But the meaning of the enactment we take to be, that there...caste in British India; that, whatever other tests or qualifications may be adopted, distinctions of race or religion shall not be of the number; that... | |
| Lionel James Trotter - India - 1886 - 482 pages
...Parliament the Court of Directors gave full support in words of the clearest and broadest meaning : — " That there shall be no governing caste in British...whatever other tests of qualification may be adopted, distinction of race or religion shall not be of the number ; that no subject of the King, whether of... | |
| India - 1898 - 494 pages
...Act in an explaining despatch in the following words : — -' The Court conceive this section to mean that there shall be no governing caste in British...whatever other tests of qualification may be adopted, distinction of race or religion shall not be of the number; that no subject of the King, whether of... | |
| Pherozeshah Mehta - Bombay (India) - 1905 - 1002 pages
...Directors interpreted the clause in the following words: — ' The Court conceive this section to mean that there shall be no governing caste in British...whatever other tests of qualification may be adopted, distinction of race or religion shall not be of the number; that no subject of the King, whether of... | |
| Religion and science - 1911 - 400 pages
...that whatever other tests or qualifications might be adopted, distinctions of race or religion should not be of the number ; that no subject of the king, whether of Indian, or British or mixed descent should be excluded from any post in the covenanted or uncovenanted service," they declared that " out... | |
| Ramananda Chatterjee - India - 1917 - 514 pages
...Directors which accompanied the Act of 1833 when it was forwarded to the East India Company, stated that "the meaning of the enactment we take to be that there...distinctions of race or religion shall not be of the number." Self-rule should be understood to be to the body politic what food and medicine are to the human body... | |
| G.A. Natesan - India - 1917 - 1052 pages
...that its full spirit and intention nl»y be transfused through our whole system of administration. But the meaning of the enactment we take to be that there...be adopted, distinctions of race or religion shall i.»t be of the number. That no subject of the King, whether of Indian or British or mixed descent,... | |
| Pherozeshah Mehta - Bombay (India : State) - 1918 - 568 pages
...said Company." The Court of Directors, in forwarding a copy to the Government of India, said " that the meaning of the enactment we take to be that there shall be no governing caste in British India," which is, however, what is really aimed at in air the multiform contentions of AngloIndians when they... | |
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