Gough, Sir Hugh, commands army in Gwalior, [153;]
his victory at Maharajpore, [154;]
battles at Moodki and Ferozshahar, [158;]
at Sobraon, [159;]
Chillianwalla, [163;]
Goojerat, [164]

Government, old merchant rule in Madras, [5,] [8,] [12;]
municipal experiments, [14,] [16;]
Nawab rule in Bengal, [43;]
offer of the Dewani, [45;]
Great Mogul installed in British factory at Patna, [48;]
collision between the British and the Nawab in Bengal, [49;]
Clive's double government, [54;]
Warren Hastings a sovereign ruler, [56;]
British zemindar at Calcutta, [59;]
appointment of British collectors, [61;]
members of council at Calcutta appointed by Parliament, [65;]
quarrels, [66;]
Governor-General in Council empowered by parliament to make laws, [69;]
changes under the charter of 1833, [135;]
executive council remodelled by Lord Canning, [280;]
legislative councils of 1854 and 1861-6, [179,] [284;]
relations of legislative and executive, [293;]
British India a school for Asiatics, [297]

Govind, Guru, [155;]
founder of the Sikh Khalsa, [156]

Graves, Brigadier, commands station at Delhi, [209,] [210;]
preparations to resist rebel sepoys from Meerut, [211;]
escapes to Flagstaff Tower, [213]

Gubbins, Mr. Frederic, his municipal reforms at Benares, [235,] [236]

Gwalior, fortress of, captured, [73;]
interference and war by Lord Ellenborough, [152]

Gwalior contingent formed, [154;]
mutiny of, [228,] [229;]
victory of, at Cawnpore, [272]

H.

Hands, Right and Left, Hindu antagonism in Southern India, [10,] [11;]
see also [39] note

Hardinge, Lord, Governor-General, [154;]
commands the army at Moodki, [158;]
at Sobraon, [159;]
settles the government of the Punjab under a regency, [160;]
returns to England, [161]