An indispensable account of law and domestic life where two worlds met. Law and custom converge here. Hindu Family Law: As Administered In British India, by Ernest John Trevelyan, is a rigorous family law treatise from nineteenth century India that lays out how Hindu personal law was interpreted and enforced under colonial administration. Part practical manual, part legal history, it offers systematic guidance on marriage and inheritance law and clarifies the procedures that shaped family outcomes across diverse communities. Clear, methodical prose makes it usable as a Hindu law reference for administrators and a legal scholars resource for historians; at the same time, it serves as a law students textbook and remains accessible to curious readers interested in British India legal history. For comparative law studies and examinations of colonial legal systems, Trevelyan's account provides a primary-source window into colonial era jurisprudence and the social rules that legal authorities relied upon. Readable without specialist training, yet rich in detail, the book rewards both quick consultation and careful study, helping explain why nineteenth century India remains crucial to modern debates about personal law and inheritance. Accessible to casual readers curious about nineteenth century India, it is equally prized by collectors of classic legal texts and curators of legal history collections. Out of print for decades and now republished by Alpha Editions. Restored for today's and future generations. More than a reprint - a collector's item and a cultural treasure. Ideal for libraries, classrooms and private shelves that focus on colonial legal systems, comparative law studies and the evolution of Hindu personal law. Scholars tracing the formation of modern South Asian legal institutions will find Trevelyan's observations instructive, and readers of classic writing will appreciate the formal tone and period perspective. Collectors building a legal history collection will welcome a faithful reissue that respects the original text while making it readable for today. Whether consulted as a reference on British India legal history or enjoyed for its window into colonial-era jurisprudence, this volume rewards sustained attention.
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