INDEX

Acts of Parliament:
Age of Consent Act (1891),42, 75.
Charter Act (1833), 307, 308, 310.
Explosive Substances Act (1908), 98.
Government of India Act (1858), 307, 310.
Indian Councils Act (1909), 10, 100, 120, 162-175.
Indian Newspapers (Incitement
to Offences) Act, (1908), 96, 98.
Press Act (1910), 15, 98-99,335-337.
Punjab Land Alienation Act (1900), 156.
Summary Justice Act (1908), 98.
Universities Act (1904), 78,2, 229.

Administration of British India, comparison of the total number of Englishmen and Indians employed in, 293.

Aga Khan, 132, 133.

Age of Consent Act, 1891,42, 75.

Agriculture, the greatest of all Indian industries, 259; need for practical education in, 262.

Ahmad, Sir Syed, 122, 131.

Aitchison, Sir Charles, 213.

Ajit Singh, proceedings against, 112.

Akash, newspaper, Delhi, 21.

Ali, Mr. Ameer, 132.

All-India Moslem League, 131,132, 281.

All-India Temperance Conference, 200.

America, Indian revolutionary organizations in, 146, 147.

Anglo-Russian Agreement, 319.

"Animists," 177.

Anti Cow-killing Society, founded by Tilak in 1893, 43.

Anusilan Samiti Society, 99.

Army, Indian, position of Indians in, 328.

Arya Samaj, 27; founded by Swami Dayanand, 109; work of, 110-112; seditious activity of its members, 112-114; its scheme for restoring the Vedic system of education, 114; Sir Louis Dane on, 115; a powerful proselytizing agency, 116; propaganda in the Native Army, 117; hostile to Islam as to British rule, 117.

Asiatic Quarterly Review cited, 265.

Atkinson, Mr. (Madras), on ryotwari landlords, 260.

Ayerst, Lieut., murder of, 48.

Baig, Mr. M.A. Ali, 171.

Baker, Sir Edward, 272.

Bande Mataram, newspaper, 78, 149, 150, 151.

Banerjee, Mr. Surendranath, 30, 50, 52, 79, 83, 84, 88, 01, 224, 274, 341, 353.

Banks, co-operative, 261-262.

Bannerjee, Mr. W.C., President of the first Indian
National Congress, 75.

Bar, Native, disaffection in, 100.

Baroda, Gaekwar of, on the elevation of the depressed castes, 181-183; on the unrest, 193.

Baroda, State of, 186, 187

Bedari, newspaper, Lahore, 19.

Bekanir, State of, 190.

Belapur Swami Club, 69.

Bengal, before the Partition, 72-80; compared with the Deccan, 72-73; education in, 77, 214; Brahmanism in, 74, 102; the storm in, 81-105; outrages in, 96; deportation of nine prominent agitators, 99; disaffection in the native Bar, 100; comparison of the number of Hindus and Mahommedans in Government employ, 125; Sir Lancelot Hare on the lawlessness in, 342-345.

Bengal, Partition of, agitation against, 50; the signal rather than the cause of agitation, 81.

Bengal Iron and Steel Company, 268.

Bengalee, newspaper, 79, 101, 168, 353.

Besant, Mrs. Annie, influence of, 28-29.

Bhagvat Gita, 30, 79, 90, 201.

Bhandarkar, Dr., 42.

Bhopal, State of, 187.

Bijapurkar, Mr., 71.

Bilgrami, Mr. Husain, 171.

Bir, disturbances at, 69.

Birdwood, Sir George, 263.

Biswas, Mr. Ashutosh, murder of, 97.

Blavatsky, Mme., 28.

Bobbili, Rajah of, 171.

Bombay, comparison of the number of Hindus and Mahommedans in Government employ, 125.

Bombay Technical Institute, 264.

Bose, Mr. Bhupendranath, 163, 165, 168.

Bose, Khudiram, murderer of Mrs. and Miss Kennedy, 96, 97, 147, 340, 341.

Brahmanism, the system and its influences, 32-33; the stronghold of reaction, 36; most militant in the Deccan, 37; part played in the unrest in the Deccan, 37-63; in Bengal, 74, 102; in the Punjab, 109; in Southern India, 140-141; one of the two forces which aspire to substitute themselves for British rule, 324.

Brahmans, number in India, 33; number holding higher Government appointments in Bombay Presidency, 39; their grievances against Western education, 353-354.

Brahmo Samaj, 25, 27, 75.

Brodrick, Mr. (now Viscount Midleton), 86.

Buck, Sir Edward, 263.

Budget, Indian, and the new Councils, 174.

Burdwan, Maharajah of, 162.

Butler, Mr. Harcourt, first Minister of Education, 233,
237, 264.

Calcutta Presidency College, comparison of the
number of English and Indian professors, 214.

Calcutta Review, 78.

Capital, British, invested in India, 264.

Carey, Rev. Eustace, 24, 73, 209.

Cawnpore, proposal to establish a Technological College at, 267.

Central Hindu College, Benares, 28.

Central Provinces, comparison of the number of Hindus and
Mahommedans in Government employ, 125.

Chailley, J., Administrative Problems of British India, 107-108.

Chakilians, 177.

Chamars, 177.

Chandavarkar, Mr. Justice (Sir N.G.), 42, 340.

Chapekur, Damodhar, murderer of Rand and Ayerst, 48.

Charter Act of 1833, 307, 308, 310.

Chatterjee, Mr. A.C., 285, 260.

Chatterton, Mr. Alfred, Director of Industries, Madras, 266.

Chaubal, Mr. M.B., 171.

Chitnavis, Mr., 275, 276.

Chitpavans, most powerful and most able of the Brahmans, 37-38.

Christian Endeavour Convention, 200.

Civil Service, Indian, 290-301.

Clark, Mr., Minister for Commerce and Industry, 298, 317.

Clarke, Sir George S., 56, 57, 232, 352.

Clubs, Anglo-Indian, exclusion of Indians from, 290.

Cochin, State of, 186-187.

Colvin, Sir Auckland, 263.

Commerce and Industry, Portfolio of, 263.

Cost of living, increase during last decade, 2; effect on teaching profession, 224.

Cotton, duties on, 277.

Cotton, Sir Henry, 156.

Council of India, 171, 317.

Craddock, Mr. B.H., 136.

Creagh, Sir O'Moore, 167.

Credit societies, 261-262.

Cromer, Lord (then Major Baring), on the relations between the Secretary of State and the Viceroy, 356-357.

Crown, influence of the, 331.

Curzon, Lord, 126, 229, 231, 266, 286, 295, 303; his Universities Bill (1904), 78; effect of his fall on the anti-Partition campaign, 86; on ignorance in India, 247; on primary education, 248; on the excess of imports over exports, 255; on co-operative banks and credit societies, 261; on technical education, 263; creation of a separate portfolio of Commerce and Industry, 263; on the ill-treatment of Indians in South Africa, 283; tributes to his attitude on the question of the status of Indians in the Empire, 285; controversy with Lord Kitchener, 311; creation of Imperial Cadet Corps, 329.

DACCA COLLEGE, 231.

Dacca Conspiracy Trial, 341.

Dacca Gazette, 18.

Dadabhoy, Mr., 283.

Dairies, State, in Northern India, 266.

Dane, Sir Louis, 115.

Das, Pulin Bahari, 99.

Davar, Mr. Justice, 22, 55.

David, Sir Sassoon, 163.

Dayanand, Swami, founder of the Arya Samaj, 27, 109, 110.

Deccan, unrest in, 37-63; compared with Bengal, 72-73.

Deportation, of nine prominent Bengalee agitators (1908), 99; of two agitators from the Punjab (1907), 107.

Depressed castes, 167-134.

Dewas, Rajah of, on the unrest, 192, 194-195.

Dharma, newspaper, Calcutta, 18.

Dhingra, murderer of Sir W. Curzon Wyllie, 21, 148.

"Drain," the, 255, 355-356.

Duff, Dr. Alexander, 24, 75, 209.

Dufferin, Lord, 213.

Durga, worship of, 18, 102.

Dutt, Mr. Bhupendranath, 91.

Economic Department, creation of (1886), 263.

Economic progress of India, 254-270.

Education:—
General.—Deficiencies of the system, 2;
effect on the Bengalees, 77;
most difficult and most urgent problem in India, 207;
four important features of the system, 208;
system displays its gravest shortcomings in Bengal, 214;
greater elasticity wanted, 236;
grievances of Brahmans against Western education, 353-354.

History of System: Macaulay's Minute (1835), 208-210;
Lord Hardinge's Educational Order (1844), 209;
influence of Dr. Alexander Duff, 209;
Sir Charles Wood's Educational Dispatch (1854),209-210;
Education Commission (1882-1883), 212;
Public Service Commission (1886-87), 212;
Sir Antony MacDonnell's resolution (1889), 229;
Government Resolution (March 11, 1904), 229, 263;
Conference presided over by Lord Curzon, 229-230.

Primary, 246-253; number of scholars in Government schools (1854), 210; Mr. Gokhale's resolution for free and compulsory education, 247; Educational Dispatch (1854), 248; Education Commission(1882-83), 248; Government Resolution (1904), 248; present situation, 249; cost of making primary education free, 249; difficulty of finding teachers, 250; Mr. Orange on the aims to be kept in view, 251-252.

Higher: Universities Bill (1904), 78, 82, 229; Europeans on staff of secondary schools and colleges, 215; the Indian student, 216-221; Dr. Garfield Williams on the Indian student, 217-219; provision of hostels for students, 231; question of raising fees charged for higher education, 234; wastage in Indian Universities, 351-352.

Female, 252-253; views of Mr. Sharp, 354-355.

Scientific and Technical: need of encouragement, 235; technical education, 263-267; proposal to establish a Technological College at Cawnpore, 267.

Religious, 238-245; the Maharajah of Jaipur on the need of religious education, 242.

Service: total number of Europeans in, 221;
effect of rise in the cost of living on the teaching profession, 224;
deficiencies of the native teaching staff, 226;
pay of teachers, 226-227;
effect of Public Service Commission (1886-87) on the native side of
the service, 227;
need of more and better training colleges for teachers, 232;
teachers must be brought into touch with parents, 235-236.

_"National" Schools, 241-242.

Vedic System, 114-115.

Education, Minister of (Mr. Harcourt Butler), 233, 237, 264.

Elibank, Master of, on the "drain" theory, 355-356.

Empire, status of Indians in the, 284.

Engineering Colleges, 263.

Evil of Continence, The, translated into the vernacular, 28.

Examiner, newspaper, Bombay, 352-353.

Executive Councils, reforms in, 171.

Explosive Substances Act (1908), 98.

Famines, 3; reduction of famine areas, 260.

Ferris, Col., conspiracy to murder (1908), 70.

Financial and fiscal relations between India and Great
Britain, 271-279.

Fraser, Sir Andrew, 88, 97.

Free Hindustan, newspaper, Seattle, 147.

Fuller, Sir Bampfylde, 87, 88, 255.

Ganesh, celebrations in honour of, 30, 44.

Ganpati celebrations, in honour of Ganesh, 30, 44.

Gazette of India, 169.

Ghose, Mr. Arabindo, 50, 52, 78, 79, 89, 90, 98, 337.

Ghose, Mr. Barendra Kumar, 90, 91, 98.

Ghose, Dr. Rash Behari, 75, 160.

Ghosh, Mr. Surat Kumar, 3.

Gladstone, Mr., attitude towards Mahommedanism, 126.

Gokhale, Mr. G.K., 42, 53,159, 163, 165, 169, 181, 202-206, 247, 252, 265, 280, 284, 294.

Gosain, Norendranath, murder of, 97, 146.

Government of India, 306-318; respective powers of the Secretary of State and Viceroy, 306-310; Government of India Act (1858), 307, 310; Charter Act (1833), 307, 308; Sir Courtenay Ilbert's summary of the powers of the Secretary of State, 307-308; "Governor-General in Council," 308; "Secretary of State in Council," 309; ultimate responsibility with the people of the United Kingdom represented by Parliament, 309; John Stuart Mill on the function of the Home Government, 310; twofold danger in any eclipse of the Governor-General in Council, 313-314; Council of India, 317; need for decentralization in India, 318.

Government of India, The, by Sir C. Ilbert, 307-308.

Gujarat, newspaper, 17.

Guntur, riots in, 144.

Gupta, Birendranath, murderer of Mr. Shams-ul-Alam, 101.

Gupta, Mr. K.G., 171.

Gurukuls, in the Punjab, 114-115.

Gwalior, Maharajah of, on the unrest, 192.

Gwalior, State of, 186, 187, 190.

Hardie, Mr. Keir, 20, 255.

Hardinge, Lord, Educational Order (1844), 209.

Hardinge, Lord (present Viceroy), 299, 319, 320, 321.

Hare, Sir Lancelot, on the lawlessness in Bengal, 342-345.

Hewett, Sir John, 136, 263, 267.

Hind Swarajya, newspaper, 16.

Hinduism, loftiness of its philosophic conceptions, 26;
Western allies of, 28;
theory of government, 358-360.

Hindu revival, the, 24-36;
as consistently anti-Mahommedan as anti-British, 120-121, 133-134;
leaders allied with Radical politicians, 126-127.

Hindus, most dangerous forms of unrest confined to, 5; number holding Government appointments, 39, 125, 346-347; difficulties of loyal Hindus, 357-358; their antagonism to Mahommedans, 120-121, 133-134; this antagonism not the creation or the result of British rule, 124-125.

Hindu women, influence of, 103-104.

Hindu Punjab Conference, 200.

Hindu Tract Society of Madras, campaign against missionaries, 28.

Hitabadi, newspaper, 340.

Hitaishi, newspaper, Barisal, 18.

Hunter, Sir William, 212.

Hyderabad, State of, 186-187.

Ilbert, Sir Courtenay, The Government of India, 306.

Imam, Mr. Ali, appointed member of Viceroy's Council, 351.

Imperial Advisory Council, proposal to establish, 185.

Imperial Cadet Corps, created by Lord Curzon, 329.

Imperial Council, first session of, 162; drawbacks to, 166-167; reporting of debates, 163-169; can exercise no directly controlling power over Executive, 173; Mr. Gokhale's resolution in regard to elementary education, 247; resolution in regard to the ill-treatment of Indians in South Africa, 280.

India, financial and fiscal relations with Great Britain, 271; relations with the rest of the Empire, 280.

India, newspaper, 126, 347.

India and the Empire, by Mr. M. de P. Webb, 278.

"India House," Highgate, 60, 148.

Indians, British, treatment of in South Africa, 3, 166; status of in the Empire, 287; question urgently calls for settlement, 287.

Indian Councils, duties of Anglo-Indian officials in, 164.

Indian Councils Act (1909), 10, 100, 120, 162-175.

Indian Institute of Science, 264.

Indian newspapers (Incitement to Offences) Act (1908), 96.

"Indian Red Flag" organization, 147.

Indian Sociologist, newspaper, 112, 149.

Indo-American Association, 147.

Indore, State of, 187.

Industrial Conference, 200, 267.

Iron and steel industry in India, 268.

Irrigation, 260.

Iyangar, Mr. Srinivasaraghava, 142.

Iyengar, Mr. Rangaswami, 174-175.

Jackson, Mr., murder of, 30, 40, 48, 57-59, 67, 150.

Jaipur, Maharajah of, on the unrest, 192; on the need for religious education, 242, 244.

Jaipur, State of, 187, 190.

Japan, attitude towards Indian agitators, 148.

Jhang Sial, newspaper, 21.

Joshi, Mr. B.N., 65.

Joshi, Rao Sahib, 354.

Jubbulpore Engineering College, 263.

Justice, newspaper, 347-348.

Kal, newspaper, Poona, 17, 22, 52, 148.

Kali, worship of, 18, 27, 102; sacrifice of "white goats" to, 103, 345-346.

Kanhere, Ananta Luxman, murderer of Mr. Jackson, 58, 62, 103.

Kapurthala, State of, 188.

Karnatak Vaibhav, newspaper, 22.

Kashmir, State of, 186.

Kayasthas, 102.

Kelkar, Mr., on the staff of the Kesari, 49.

Kennedy, Mrs. and Miss, murder of, 55, 96, 147.

Kesari, newspaper, 22, 42, 48, 49, 52, 382, 337, 339.

Khadilkar, Mr., on the staff of the Kesari, 49, 337.

Khataiyas, 102.

Khulnavasi, newspaper, 19.

Killing of Kichaka, The, play by Mr. Khadilkar, 337-339.

Kingsford, Mr., magistrate at Muzafferpur, 96.

Kitchener, Lord, 273, 311.

Kolhapur, State of, 64, 69, 186, 190.

Kolhapur, Maharajah of, 64, 65, 66.

Kolhapur Shivaji Club, suppressed, 69.

Krishnavarma, Shyamji, 60, 112, 114, 149, 152.

Kshatrya Conference, 200.

Lahore, disturbances at (1907), 107.

Lal, Mr. Roshan, President of the Lahore branch of the
Arya Samaj, 111-112.

Lalcaca, Dr., murder of, 148.

Lansdowne, Lord, 158, 172, 229.

Legislative Councils, reforms in, 172.

Literacy, in Southern India, 143; in India generally, 246; amongst Indian women, 252.

Lyon, Mr. P.C., 165, 168.

Lytton, Lord, 293.

MacDonnell, Sir Antony, 261, 263.

Mackarness, Mr., 156, 299.

Madigas, 177.

Madras, Bishop of, 180.

Madras Engineering College, 263.

Mahabharata, 358-360.

Mahmudabad, Rajah of, 163.

Mahommedan College, Aligarh, 233, 244.

Mahommedans, not implicated in the unrest, 5; Number holding Government appointments, 39, 125, 346-347; everything to gain from the Partition of Bengal, 85; difficult position of, 118-135; Hindu antagonism to, 120-121, 133-134; representation in the Indian Councils, 127-128; desire separate electorates, 128; number in India, 130.

Malaria Conference, (1909), 20.

Malavya, Pandit Mohan, 160, 163.

Maniktolla bomb outrage, 90, 98.

Manu, Code of, 33.

Manumakkathayam system, in Southern India, 140-141.

Mazhar-ul-Haq, Mr., 165.

Mazzini, Autobiography translated by Vinayak Savarkar, 146; Life of, by Lajpat Rai, 146.

Mehta, Sir Pherozeshah, 51.

Military charges, on the Government of India, 273-274.

Minto, Lord, 1, 90, 99, 163, 167,169, 170, 172, 138, 197, 248, 266, 306, 311, 313, 314, 315, 329; attempted assassination of, 62; relations with Lord Morley, 311-312.

Mlenccha, term applied by Hindus equally to Europeans and Mahommedans, 44.

Mohsin-ul-Mulk, Nawab, 132.

Moneylenders, influence of, 107, 108, 261.

Montagu, Mr. E.S., Under-Secretary of State for India, 299, 306-311, 313.

Mookerjee, Dr. Ashutosh, 75, 214, 223, 230, 239, 245.

Mookerjee, Mr. E.N., 351.

Morley, Lord, 1, 15, 86, 128, 154, 172, 173, 175, 233, 271, 306, 311, 313, 314, 316, 317, 321, 332; constitutional reforms, 170-175; relations with Lord Minto, 311-312; retirement of, 333-334.

Moslem Educational Congress, 200.

Muchis, 177.

Mudholkar, Mr., 267, 285.

Mukti con pathe ("Which way does salvation lie?"), reprinted from the Yugantar, 95.

Mullick, Dr., on the Indian student, 218-219.

Mysore, State of, 143, 186.

Nabha, State of, 186.

Namasudras, Brahman agitation among, 102; rise of, 183.

Naoroji, Mr. Dadabhai, 10, 51, 155.

Nasik, murder of Mr. Jackson at, 57; a great stronghold of Hinduism, 60.

Natal, Indian indentured labour for, 280.

National Congress, Indian, 154-161; ideas of founders, 25; subsidies to supporters in England, 347; meetings of: Poona (1895), 159; Benares (1905), 50, 51, 159; Calcutta (1906), 50, 51, 159, 202; Surat (1907), 52, 159; Madras (1908), 160; Lahore (1909), 160, 163, 281.

"National" schools, 241-242.

National Social Conference, Indian, 200.

Native Princes, on the unrest, 190-196; influence of, 329-330.

Native States, 185-197; total population of, 185; proposal to establish an Imperial Advisory Council, 185; no voice in questions of tariff, &c., 189; Lord Minto on our policy towards, 188; their action in regard to the unrest, 190.

Natu, the brothers, allied with Tilak, 42.

Navasakti, newspaper, 91.

New India, newspaper, 78.

Nicholson, Sir Frederick, 261.

Nizam, of Hyderabad, 186-187; on the unrest, 191-192, 194, 196.

Northbrook, Lord, 356-357.

Nulkar, Mr. A.K., 42.

Official relations between Englishmen and Indians, 290-301.

Olcott, Col., 28.

Opium policy, 189, 272.

Orange, Mr. H.W., 226, 251, 352, 354.

Oxford Mission, Calcutta, 216.

Pal, Mr. Bepin Chandra, 9, 10-14, 50, 51, 78, 89, 143-144, 160, 295.

Palshikar, Mr., 59.

Panchamas, 177-184, 180-181.

Parciyas, 177.

Parmanand, Bhai, 112.

Parsee Conference, 200.

Parsees, number holding higher Government appointments in
Bombay Presidency, 39.

Patiala, Kur Sahib of, 162.

Patiala, State of, 113, 186, 190.

"Permanent Settlement" in Bengal, 260, 291.

Poona College of Science, 263.

Prarthana Samaj, 25, 27.

Prem, newspaper, Firozpur, 20.

Press, Indian, 325, 335-337. Akash (Delhi), 21. Bande Mataram, 78, 149, 150, 151. Bedari (Lahore), 19. Bengalee, 79, 101, 168, 353. Calcutta Review, 78. Dacca Gazette, 18. Dharma (Calcutta), 18. Examiner (Bombay), 352-353. Free Hindustan (Seattle), 147. Gazette of India, 169. Gujarat, 17. Hind Swarajya, 16. Hitabadi, 340. Hitaishi (Barisal), 18. India, 126, 347. Indian Sociologist, 112, 149. Jhang Sial, 21. Justice, 347-348. Kal (Poona), 17, 22, 52, 148. Karnatak Vaibhav, 22. Kesari, 22, 42, 48, 49, 52, 332, 337, 339. Khulnavasi, 19. Navasakti, 91. New India, 78. Prem (Firozpur), 20. Rashtramat (Poona), 52, 57. Sahaik (Lahore), 20. Sandhya, 91, 340. Shakti, 17. Swarajiya, 113. Talvar, 149. Vartabaha (Ranjpur), 21. Vishvavritta, 71. Yugantar (Calcutta), 16, 91-96, 98, 113, 295, 340.

Press Act (1908), 96, 98.

Press Act (1910), 15, 98-99;
Sir H. Risley's speech on its introduction, 335-337.

Press, History of the Indian, by Sir. G.C. Sanial., 78.

Prince of Destiny, The, by Mr. S.K. Ghosh, 3.

Protection, Indian desire for, 274.

Public Service Commission (1886-1887), 212, 227.

Public Instruction, Department of, 209.

Public Works Department, 289.

Punjab, 106; deportation of two prominent agitators (1907), 107; Brahmanism in, 109; gurukuls in, 114-115; free from outrages and dacoities, 116.

Punjab Land Alienation Act (1900), 156.

Raffeisen System, the, 261.

Rai, Mr. Lala Lajput, 110, 112, 146, 275.

Raj, Mr. Lala Dev, 201.

Rajput Conference, 200.

Ranade, Mahadev Govind, 36, 40, 41, 201, 257.

Rand, Mr., murder of, 48.

Rashtramat, newspaper, Poona, 52, 57.

Ratlam, Rajah of, on the unrest, 193.

Rawal Pindi, disturbances at (1907), 107, 112.

Religion, the basic element of Indian life, 239-240.

Ripon, Lord, 126, 212.

Risley, Sir H., on the language of Bengal, 73; on the demoralization of the Native Press, 335-337.

Roy, Ram Mohun, 25, 75, 201.

Rurki Engineering College, 263.

Sabnis, Rao Bahadur, 65, 68.

Sahaik, newspaper, Lahore, 20.

Salisbury, Lord, 356.

Samitis, or "national volunteers," 84.

Sandhya, newspaper, 91, 340.

Sanial, Mr. G.C., History of the Indian Press, 78.

Sanyasis, 103.

Satyarath Prakash, by Swami Dayanand, 109.

Savarkar, Vinayak, 60, 146, 148, 140.

Science Progress, 266.

Secretary of State for India, powers of, 306-310; position in regard to Viceroy, 356-357.

Sen, Keshub Chunder, 25, 201.

"Servants of India" society, 202-206, 294.

Shakti worship, 18, 29, 83-84, 93.

Shakti, newspaper, 17.

Shains-ul-Alam, Mr., murder of, 97, 101, 341-342.

Shams-ul-Huda, Maulvi Syed, 165.

Sharp, Mr., on female education, 354-355.

Shivaji-Maharaj, cult of, 27, 45, 84, 339-340.

Sibpur Engineering College, 263.

Sikh Educational Conference, 200.

Sikhs, loyalty of, 107.

Sinha, Mr. S.P., 128, 171.

Social reform in India, 198-206.

Social relations between Englishmen and Indians, 3, 288-305.

South Africa, ill-treatment of British Indians in, 3, 281-282.

Southern India, position in, 137-144.

Strachey, Mr. Justice. 22.

Student, the Indian, 216-228.

Sudras, 178.

Summary Justice Act (1908), 98.

Swadeshi, 11, 30, 31, 83, 254-270, 275.

Swaraj, 9, 10-14, 31, 254.

Swarajiya, newspaper, 113.

Tagore, Dr., 25, 36

Tai Maharaj case, 49, 340.

Talvar, newspaper, 149.

Tata, Mr. Jamsetjee N., 264, 277.

Tata, Messrs., and the iron and steel industry. 268.

Telang, Mr. K.T., 156.

Telugu Mission, work among the Namasudras 180-181.

Thackersey, Sir Vithalda, 271-273.

Theosophists, influence on Hindu revival, 28.

Tilak, Bal Gangadhar, a Chitpavan Brahman, 40;
the father of Indian unrest, 41;
initial campaign in the Deccan, 41-48;
compelled to sever his connexion with the Poona Educational Society,
42;
denounces the Age of Consent Bill, 42;
forms the Anti Cow-killing Society, 43;
organizes Ganpati celebrations, 44;
becomes master of the Poona Sarvajanik Sabha, 44;
revives the memory of Shivaji, 45-46;
returned as member of the Bombay Legislative Councils 47;
"no-rent" campaign, 47;
imprisoned (1897), 48;
the Tai Maharaj case, 49, 340;
begins second campaign in the Deccan, 49;
associates himself with the Indian National Congress, 50;
one of the first champions of Swadeshi, 50;
starts movement for the creation of "national" schools, 52;
influence on the cotton operatives in Bombay, 53;
twofold appeal to Hindus, 54;
arrested (1908), 55;
riots in Bombay following his sentence, 50;
his conviction a heavy blow to the forces of unrest, 57;
the Kesari and the Kal on his sentence, 22;
his connexion with the Indian National Congress, 159-160.

Tilang, Mr. Justice., 42.

Tinnevelly, riots in, 144.

Tiwana, Malik Umar Hyat Khan of, 163.

Travancore, State of, 186-187.

Tuticorin, riots in, 144.

Udaipur, Maharana of, on the unrest, 192.

Udaipur, State of, 186-187.

United Provinces, comparison of the number of Hindus and
Mahommedans in Government employ, 125.

Universities, Indian, wastage in, 351-352.

Universities Act (1904), 78, 82, 229.

Vartabaha, newspaper, Ranjpur, 21.

Veda Bashya Basmika, by Swami Dayanand, 109.

Vedic system of education, 114-115.

Viceroy of India, powers of, 306-310; position in regard to the Secretary of State, 356-357.

Vishvavritta, newspaper. 71.

Vivekananda, Swaini, 29, 91.

War of Indian Independence of 1857, by Savarkar, 149.

Watt, Sir George, 263.

Webb, Mr. M. de P., 278.

Wedderburn, Sir William, 261.

Whitehead, Dr., Bishop of Madras, 180.

Williams, Dr. Garfield, on the Indian Student, 317-219.

Wilson, Sir Fleetwood, 275.

Wood, Sir Charles, Educational Dispatch (1854), 209.

Wyllie, Sir W. Curzon, murder of, 21, 148-149.

Young India Association, 147.

Yugantar, newspaper, Calcutta, 16, 91-96, 98, 113, 295, 340.