Hindu Administrative Institutions By V.R.Ramachandra Dikshitar
By: Dikshitar, V.R.Ramachandra [author.].
Publisher: New Delhi: Manohar, 2024Description: xxv, 401p. include Index (page no 393-401).ISBN: 9789391928827.Subject(s): Hinduism -- Administration | Hinduism -- Religious aspects -- Administration | Hindu law -- AdministrationDDC classification: 294.5654 Summary: One wonders with such an in-depth study of political and constitutional evolution and many more such works as traced in bibliography of this book, that the Hindu Polity was almost modern in character, having an uninterrupted course of existence for thousand of years, Independent India adopted an alien constitution and polity. In conclusion the author refers to Hindu Polity of Jayaswal; that the constitutional progress made by the Hindu has probably not been equal-led, much less surpassed by any polity of antiquity. It is all the more surprising that after so many years of Independence such classical studies are gathering dust in the library. If a study of the past makes our present better and future brighter, then this book is crying for urgent attention.Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | NASSDOC Library | 294.5654 DIK-H (Browse shelf) | Available | 54080 |
Browsing NASSDOC Library Shelves Close shelf browser
No cover image available | ||||||||
294.55541 NAT-N Nirguna Bhakti in Eastern India: | 294.5563082 LLE-L Legacy of women's uplift in India: contemporary women leaders in the Arya Samaj | 294.565 MUK-R RSS, scool texts and the murder of Mahatma Gandhi: the hindu communal project | 294.5654 DIK-H Hindu Administrative Institutions | 294.592 श्रीमद्भागवतम् : | 294.592 PRA-S Srimad Bhagavatam | 294.592 PRA-S श्रीमद्भागवतम् |
One wonders with such an in-depth study of political and constitutional evolution and many more such works as traced in bibliography of this book, that the Hindu Polity was almost modern in character, having an uninterrupted course of existence for thousand of years, Independent India adopted an alien constitution and polity. In conclusion the author refers to Hindu Polity of Jayaswal; that the constitutional progress made by the Hindu has probably not been equal-led, much less surpassed by any polity of antiquity. It is all the more surprising that after so many years of Independence such classical studies are gathering dust in the library. If a study of the past makes our present better and future brighter, then this book is crying for urgent attention.
English
There are no comments for this item.