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First published in 1868, this volume contains a collection of
twenty-four traditional stories from the southern Indian state of
Maharashtra. Mary Eliza Isabella Frere (1845 1911) travelled to
India in 1863 to stay with her father, Sir Bartle Frere, the
Governor of Bombay. She became fascinated with Indian culture and
transcribed these stories from her ayah (nanny and chaperone) Anna
Liberata da Souza who had been told them by her grandmother.
Expressive and detailed, these stories formed part of southern
India's traditional oral culture, at risk of being lost. This
volume includes an introduction by Sir Bartle Frere exploring the
cultural background to the stories and a chapter by Anna Liberata
da Souza describing her life and childhood. This volume was
extremely popular, being reprinted in four editions by 1889 and
encouraging the study of comparative mythology while revealing new
information concerning Indian traditional culture.
Old Deccan Tales is a collection of folk tales from India's rich
fairyland where rajas, ranis, rakshas, jackals, magicians, and
cobras prevail. Children will enjoy the daring, brave, and
wonderful creatures and people that populate the stories as they
strive to improve their lives or to save themselves, their friends,
and their loved ones from trials most deadly. * * * * First
published in 1868, this was the first English-language
field-collected set of twenty-four traditional stories from the
southern Indian state of Maharashtra. The author, Mary Eliza
Isabella Frere (1845-1911), travelled to India in 1863 to stay with
her father, Sir Bartle Frere, the Governor of Bombay. She became
fascinated with Indian culture and transcribed these stories from
her ayah (nanny and chaperone) Anna Liberata da Souza, who had been
told them by her grandmother. Expressive and detailed, these
stories formed part of southern India's traditional oral culture,
at risk at the time of being lost. German orientologist Max Muller
(1823-1900) reviewed this collection and wrote that her rendition
of Sanskrit originals read like a direct translation of ancient
Sanskrit. * * * * This is a copy of the third edition, published in
1881, and has a brief nine-page biography of the narrator, Anna
Liberata da Souza, describing her life and childhood. In the
third-edition Preface Mary Frere provides more details on the
events surrounding her collecting the stories, which is in addition
to the information on the stories themselves and the conventions
she took in recording them given in the Introduction and the
Collector's Apology. The books was extremely popular, being
reprinted in four editions by 1889 and encouraged the study of
comparative mythology while revealing new information concerning
Indian traditional culture. * * * * Check out the Flying Chipmunk
Publishing catalog at www.FlyingChipmunkPublishing.com, or Friend
us on Facebook for our latest Children's, Juvenile, and Adult
releases.
Mary Eliza Isabella Frere (1845-1911) was an English author of
works regarding India. In 1868 Frere published the first
English-language field-collected book of Indian fairy-tales, Old
Deccan Days. Frere was born in Gloucestershire, England on 11
August 1845. Her father, Henry Bartle Frere, served in the colonial
administration of Bombay since 1834. In 1862 he was appointed
Governor of Bombay. Mary Frere published several poems and a play.
Her most popular work was "Old Deccan Days; or, Hindoo Fairy
Legends, Current in Southern India. Collected From Oral Tradition,"
printed in 1868. According to Frere's introduction, she began her
collection of Indian folklore during long travels with her father.
Her only female companion was a local ayah named Anna Liberata de
Souza. She was a Christian descendant of the Lingaet caste from the
Mahratta country. What started as an idle conversation evolved into
a thorough recording and study of Indian culture. German
orientologist Max Muller reviewed Frere's collection and wrote that
her rendition of Sanskrit originals read like a direct translation
of ancient Sanskrit. Frere's father assisted with the editing of
the work and wrote an introduction to the first edition of Old
Deccan Days.
This scarce antiquarian book is included in our special Legacy
Reprint Series. In the interest of creating a more extensive
selection of rare historical book reprints, we have chosen to
reproduce this title even though it may possibly have occasional
imperfections such as missing and blurred pages, missing text, poor
pictures, markings, dark backgrounds and other reproduction issues
beyond our control. Because this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as a part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving and promoting the world's literature.
This scarce antiquarian book is included in our special Legacy
Reprint Series. In the interest of creating a more extensive
selection of rare historical book reprints, we have chosen to
reproduce this title even though it may possibly have occasional
imperfections such as missing and blurred pages, missing text, poor
pictures, markings, dark backgrounds and other reproduction issues
beyond our control. Because this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as a part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving and promoting the world's literature.
Old Deccan Days With an Introduc- tion and Notes by Albany, - 1897
-- CONTENTS. Am INTRODUCTIUN
.......................................... S THE COLLECTORS AWLOOY
.............................. Ia sat NARRATORS NARRATIVB
............................ I5 I . PUNCHKIN
........................................... 27 2 . A FUNNY STORY
..................................... H 3 . BRAVE SEVSNTEE.BAI
................................ 51 4 . TRUTHS TRIUMPH
................................... 81 5 . RAMA AND LUXMAN OR, THE
LEARND OWL ......... 98 6 . LITTLE SURYA BA1
................................... 113 7 . THE WANDERINGS OF
VICRAM -JAH ........... I29 8 . LESS IQUITY THAN MEN DEEM 161
.................. g . PANCH-PHUL RANBIB
................................. 16 10 . HOW THE SUN. THE MOON AND
THE WIND WENT OUT TO DINNER .......................................
19 I I . SINGH-RAJAH AND THE -G LITTLE JACKALS .... 196 I1 . THE
JACKAL. THE BARBER AND THE BRAHMIN WHO HAD SEVEN DAUGHTERS
................................ I 13 . TIT FOR TAT
........................................ 118 I4 . THE BRAHMIN. THE
TIGER AND THE SIX JUDGILS ..... 130 15 . THE SELFISH SPARROW AND
THE HOUSELESS CROWS .. 115 8 4 Contents . O 16 . THE VALIANT
CFIATTEE.MAKER ...................... 327 .
.............................. 17 THE RAKSHAS PALACE 236 18 . TIiE
BLIND IbIAN, TIIE DEAF MAN AND TSF DONKEY .. 248 I9 . MUClrlE LAL
......................................... 258 20 . CIIUNDUN RAJAH
.................................... 26s 11 . SODEWA BA1
............................... . ... 2fb 22 . CIIANDRAS VENGEANCE
.............................. 291 23 . HOW TIIE THREE CLEVER MEN
OUTWITTED TIIE DEMONS 314 . ................... 24THE ALLIGATOR AND
THE JACKAL 326 NOTES
.................................................. 333 A
INTRODUCTION. FEW words seem necessary regarding the origin of
these stories, in addition to what the Narrator says for herself in
her Narrative, and what is stated in the Collectors 16 Apology.
With the exception of two or three, which will be recognized as
substantially identical with stories of Pilpay or other well-known
Hindoo fabulists, I never before heard any of these tales among the
Mahrattas, in that part of the Deccan where the Narrator and her
family have lived for the last two generations and it is probable
that most of the stories were brought from among the Lingaets of
Southern India, the tribe, or rather sect, to which Anna de Souza
tells us her kmily beIonged befbre their conversion to
Christianity. The Lingaets form one of the most strongly marked
divisions of the Hindoo races south of the river Kistna. They are
generally a well-favored, well-to-do people, noticeable for their
superior frugality, intelligence and industry, and for the way in
which they combine and act together as a separate body apart from
other Hindoos. They have many peculiarities of costume, of social
ceremony and of religion, which strike even a casual observer and
though clearly not aboriginal, they seem to have much ground for
their claim to belong to a more ancient race and an earlier wave of
imrni. gration than most of the Hindoo nations with which they are
now intermingled. The country they inhabit is tolerably familiar to
most English readers on Indian subjects, for it is the theatre of
many of the events described in the great Dukes earlier despatches,
and in the writings of Munro, of Wilkes, andof Buchanan. The
extraordinary beauty of some of the natural 1 6 features of the
coast scenery, and the abundance of the archi- tectural and other
remains of powerful and highly civilized dindoo dynasties, have
attracted the attention of tourists and antiquaries, though not to
the extent their intrinsic merit deserves...
This scarce antiquarian book is included in our special Legacy
Reprint Series. In the interest of creating a more extensive
selection of rare historical book reprints, we have chosen to
reproduce this title even though it may possibly have occasional
imperfections such as missing and blurred pages, missing text, poor
pictures, markings, dark backgrounds and other reproduction issues
beyond our control. Because this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as a part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving and promoting the world's literature.
The activity of a bacterial enzyme "able to degrade penicillin" had
first been described in 1940, even before the exact structure of
penicillin was elucidated and, by 1970, several enzymes had been
purified to homogeneity, the amino acid sequence of a
staphylococcal penicillinase was also known and that of its
Bacillus licheniformis counterpart was well under way. By contrast,
their catalytic mechanism remained quite mysterious. A Zn++
metallo-beta-lactamase (ss-lactamase II, BcII or ssII) had also
been described as soon as 1967 and later purified. It was thus
surprising that the first mechanistic information demonstrating the
presence of a penicillin-binding serine residue was obtained with a
penicillin-sensitive DD-peptidase rather than a ss-lactamase. This
seemed to open the floodgates and several class A ss-lactamases
were then rapidly shown to be active-site serine enzymes. This book
presents current research in the study of beta-lactamases.
Mary Frere: Marchen aus der indischen Vergangenheit.
"Hindustanische Erzahlungen aus dem Suden von Indien"
Edition Holzinger. Taschenbuch
Berliner Ausgabe, 2014, 3. Auflage
Vollstandiger, durchgesehener Neusatz bearbeitet und
eingerichtet von Michael Holzinger
Jena: Hermann Costenoble, 1874.
Textgrundlage ist die Ausgabe: Frere, M ary]: Marchen aus der
indischen Vergangenheit. Hinduistische Erzahlungen aus dem Suden
von Indien, Nach mundlichen Ueberlieferungen niedergeschrieben und
gesammelt von -, Nach der zweiten Auflage aus dem Englischen
ubersetzt von A.Passow, Autorisirte Ausgabe, Nebst 4 Illustrationen
in Farbendruck und 47 Holzschnitten, Jena: Hermann Costenoble,
1874.
Herausgeber der Reihe: Michael Holzinger
Reihengestaltung: Viktor Harvion
Gesetzt aus Minion Pro, 11 pt.
"
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