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Art. XI.—On the Connexion of the Mōns of Pegu with the Koles of Central India

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 March 2011

C. J. F. S. Forbes
Affiliation:
Burmese Civil Commission.

Extract

Among the races now occupying the Indo-Chinese Peninsula, the oldest, the Mōn, has been little studied, and is generally passed over as an insignificant tribe of little interest in any way. Yet the facts which point them out as being the occupiers of the Delta of the Irrawaddy before the arrival of the Tibeto-Burman tribes, from whom they are quite distinct, seem worthy of consideration.

Type
Original Communications
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Asiatic Society 1878

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References

page 234 note 1 In the Mōn language, T'kaw 'k'mīng.

page 235 note 1 There is, nevertheless, a certain amount of resemhlance to the Mōn in the vocabulary of the Nancowry dialect.

page 236 note 1 Journal Asiatic Society Bengal, 1873, p. 35.Google Scholar

page 240 note 1 Tylor, , Early History of Man, p. 226.Google Scholar

page 241 note 1 Journ. Ind. Arch. vol. ii. pp. 70, 76.Google Scholar