Universitätsbibliothek HeidelbergUniversitätsbibliothek Heidelberg
Metadaten

Buchanan, Francis
A Journey from Madras through the countries of Mysore, Canara and Malabar ... (Band 1) — London, 1807

DOI Page / Citation link:
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.2373#0430
Overview
Facsimile
0.5
1 cm
facsimile
Scroll
OCR fulltext
400

A JOURNEY FROM MADRAS THROUGH

VI.

Aug.

-6\

CHAPTER faith are anxious to be buried, as they consider the ground holy.
The only considerable temple was pulled down by Bahadur Khan,
the last Asoph of the place ; who Avas building a monument for his
wife with the materials, when the arrival of the British army put a
stop to such proceedings.

Near Sira the quantity of watered ground is greater than that of
dry-field; but unfortunately it is situated in a very dry climate;
so that, during the last fourteen years, the tanks have been filled
only five times so as to give a full crop. In the other nine years,
by means of the little rain that fell, and by the use of the machine
called Capily, the inhabitants have been able to raise a quarter of
the full crop; and one third of the whole grain consumed in the
country has been brought from other places, especially from the
banks of the Cavery. Scarcity is therefore a common evil; and in
the memory of young men, famine has several times spread all her
terrors over this unfortunate place. Although in the immediate
neighbourhood of a powerful garrison, all the villages are strongly
fortified. On asking the reason of such precautions from a very
intelligent chief of a village, from whom I took most of my infor-
mation, he told me, that it was chiefly on account of robbers, who
in the time of famine were very numerous. During this calamity
the inhabitants of one village wish, by plundering their neighbours,
to support life; and of course, expecting the same treatment, each
is shut up, and guarded from the nocturnal attacks of its neighbours,
as if these were its most inveterate enemies. In war also the people
have found these fortifications very useful. In their defence they
employ few weapons except stones, which both men and women
throw with great dexterity, and equal boldness. They do not at-
tempt to defend themselves against any thing that wears the face
of a regular body of men ; but they stone, with the greatest intre-
pidity, the irregular cavalry that attend all native armies, and who
are seldom provided with fire-arms. On a visit which I made to
the chief above mentioned, he boasted, that with ten men he had

Villages
strongly for-
tified.
Image description
There is no information available here for this page.

Temporarily hide column
 
Annotationen