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" The proposed measure will not debar the Government of India from stepping in to set right such serious abuses in a Native Government as may threaten any part of the country with anarchy or disturbance, nor from assuming temporary charge of a Native State... "
The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal - Page 482
1863
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The Rajah and Principality of Mysore: With a Letter to Lord Stanley

Evans Bell - 1865 - 68 pages
...interfering with the succession of adopted heirs, he says in his Despatch of the 30th April, 1860 :— " The proposed measure will not debar the Government...reason to do so. This has long been our practice. We have repeatedly exercised the power with the assent and sometimes at the desire of the chief authority...
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The Mysore Reversion: "an Exceptional Case"

Evans Bell - 1865 - 248 pages
...future claims from petty Jagheerdars or others whom it is not intended to include in this measure. 30. The proposed measure will not debar the Government...reason to do so. This has long been our practice. We have repeatedly exercised the power with the assent and sometimes at the desire of the chief authority...
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The Mysore Reversion: "an Exceptional Case"

Evans Bell - 1866 - 324 pages
...proposed measure will not debar the Government of India from stepping in to set right such serious abuse's in a Native Government as may threaten any part of...reason to do so. This has long been our practice. We have repeatedly exercised the power with the assent and sometimes at the desire of the chief authority...
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The Mysore reversion, 'an exceptional case'. With remarks on the ...

Thomas Evans Bell - 1866 - 368 pages
...may threaten any part of the country with anarchy or disturbance, nor from assuming temporary charye of a Native State when there shall be sufficient reason to do so. This has long been our practice. We have repeatedly exercised the power with the assent and sometimes at the desire of the chief authority...
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The illustrated history of the British empire in India and the ..., Volume 4

Edward Henry Nolan - 1878 - 446 pages
...British Government. " The proposed measure will not debar the Government of India from stepping in to right such serious abuses in a native government as...reason to do so. This has long been our practice." In accordance with this recommendation, the right of adoption was recognised in all chiefs above the...
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Our Indian Protectorate: An Introduction to the Study of the Relations ...

Charles Lewis Tupper - 1893 - 448 pages
...and that we do deliberately desire to keep alive a feudal aristocracy where one still exists.' It ' will not debar the Government of India from stepping...state when there shall be sufficient reason to do so. Neither will the assurance, worded as proposed, diminish our right to visit a state with the heaviest...
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Parliamentary Papers, Volume 59

Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons - 1894 - 698 pages
...Wellesley. FRONTIERS AND threaten any part of the country with anarchy or disturbance, nor from STATES1"50 assuming temporary charge of a Native State when there shall be sufficient reason to do so. Nor is its right diminished to visit a State with the heaviest penalty, even to confiscation, in the...
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The Criminal Law of India

John Dawson Mayne - 1904 - 1186 pages
...ib., 214. With Kutch, 1819, 7 Aitch., 19. » 6 Aitch., 142. » 4 Aitch., 163. * Lee Warner, 135—144. serious abuses in a Native Government as may threaten...be sufficient reason to do so. This has long been the practice." ''Neither will the assurance diminish our right to visit a State with the highest penalties,...
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The Native States of India

Sir William Lee-Warner - 1910 - 460 pages
...India from stepping in to set right such serious abuses in a Native Government as may threaten auy part of the Country with anarchy or disturbance, nor...be sufficient reason to do so. This has long been the practice. We have repeatedly exercised the power with the assent, and sometimes at the desire,...
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A Historical Geography of the British Colonies, Volume 7, Issue 1

Sir Charles Prestwood Lucas - 1921 - 454 pages
...of April 30, 1860, Lord Canning affirmed the principle that the government of India is not precluded 'from stepping in to set right such serious abuses...state when there shall be sufficient reason to do so '. The change from Company to Crown government made few changes in the Indian administration. The Charter...
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