Abstract
For 300 years after Vasco da Gama touched Calicut generations of traders, merchants, missionaries, soldiers, and other emissaries from at least five different nations of Europe took their turn in India, pursuing their interests at a respectful distance, making no obtrusive efforts to scrape acquaintance with Sanskrit culture. Such advances were socially difficult, and would not have been welcomed. Moreover, our early associations were with Dravidian India, and very few cultured Brahmins sought membership of Christian Churches.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Reference4 articles.
1. English Studies, Feb., 1935.
2. Neue Schiveizer Eundsahau, July, 1935, pp. 176–8
Cited by
8 articles.
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