[8]. Sindhu Raga.

[9]. [The sacred Jain mountain in Kāthiāwār.]

[10]. With two (do) edges (dhara).

[11]. Sang is the iron lance, either wholly of iron, or having plates for about ten feet; these weapons are much used in combats from camels in the Desert.

[12]. ‘Sword’—Aswar in the dialect.

[13]. [The field guardian deity.]

[14]. [For an account of the Mer rebellion in 1820 and its suppression see Watson, Rājputāna Gazetteer, i. A. 14.]

[15]. [The 44th Merwāra Infantry, formerly known as the Merwāra Battalion, formed in 1822, did good service in the Mutiny of 1857, and in the Afghān campaign of 1878 (Watson, Gazetteer, i. A. 119 ff.; Cardew, Sketch of the Services of the Bengal Native Army, 338 ff.)].

[16]. [No class of Brāhmans or Rājputs, claiming respectability, now permits widow marriage.]

[17]. [Nāgda, near the shrine of Eklingji, one of the most ancient places in Mewār.]