[80] F. Wrede. Asiatic Researches, VII, 181. Account of the St. Thomé Christians.
[81] Hunter. Indian Empire.
[82] In the preparation of the above sketch, the following authorities, among others, were consulted: Sir W. W. Hunter, Indian Empire and History of British India; J. Hough, History of Christianity in India; T. Whitehouse, Lingerings of Light in a Dark Land; G. T. Mackenzie, Christianity in Travancore; F. Day, Land of the Perumauls; T. Logan, Manual of Malabar; Christian College Magazine, Madras, Vol. VI; and Judgments of the Civil Courts of Travancore and Cochin. To the bibliography relating to the Syrian Christians may also be added L. M. Agur, Church History of Travancore, the Rev. G. Milne Rae, the Syrian Church in India, and the Rev. W. J. Richards, the Indian Christians of St. Thomas. The Malabar Quarterly Review, VI, 1 and 2, 1907, may also be consulted.
[83] The Syriac is not a modern Syriac dialect, but is very like the ancient Aramaic.
[84] Notes from a Diary, 1881–86.
[85] Recherches Anthropologiques dans le Caucase, IV, 1887.
[86] Reisen in Lykien, Melyas, und Kibyratis, II, 1889.
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