Anglo-India, Social, Moral, and Political, 1837: Being a Collection of Papers from the Asiatic Journal (Classic Reprint)

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FB&C Limited, Jul 9, 2015 - Biography & Autobiography - 380 pages
Excerpt from Anglo-India, Social, Moral, and Political, 1837: Being a Collection of Papers From the Asiatic Journal

From this last circumstance, an evil of great magnitude appears to have arisen. A Culina brah min may marry, or give his son in marriage to, a woman of an inferior order; but his daughters must marry persons of his own order, or remain ummar ried. When Culinas marry a woman of an inferior order, they receive large presents of money; and as they are not limited in the number of wives, some of them convert this privilege into a source of peen miary profit; and it is said that many of the disre putable Culinas marry from twenty to a hundred wives each. In the mean time, the sons of Culinas being generally pre - engaged in these venal matches, their daughters can find no husbands; and couse quently too frequently form irregular connections.

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