Difference between revisions of "Charles Edward Gover"
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| societies = Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce<br />Royal Asiatic Society | | societies = Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce<br />Royal Asiatic Society | ||
Revision as of 15:27, 28 May 2020
| Charles Edward Gover | |||||||||
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| File:Gover, Charles Edward.jpg | |||||||||
| Born | 1835 | ||||||||
| Died | 1872 | ||||||||
| Residence |
Military Orphan Asylum, Madras [A3] Military Orphan Asylum, Potacamund. Agents, Messrs Gladding and Co., Aldine chambers, 13 Paternoster row, EC [1869.08.01] | ||||||||
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Contents
Notes
Office Notes
House Notes
proposed 1867.11.05
Principal of the Military Male Orphan Asylum
Charles Edwin in A6:2, but appears to be Edward in printed sources
1871.10.20 an S. Gover resigned - him or not? [A10:1]
Notes From Elsewhere
joined RSEAM&C in 1867
Gover, Charles Edward (1835/1836-1872), writer on Indian folklore, was the son of Thomas Gover of Poplar, Middlesex. He became a schoolmaster in Madras in 1863 and was appointed principal of the Madras Military Male Orphan Asylum in 1864. He remained there until its amalgamation with the Lawrence Asylum in Ootacamund ...
GOVER, CHARLES E. (d. 1872), folklorist, was son of Thomas Gover of Poplar, Middlesex. In 1864 he was appointed principal and secretary of the Madras Military Male Orphan Asylum at Egmore (Madras People's Almanac, 1869, p. 390). In 1868 he became a member of the Royal Asiatic Society, but withdrew in 1871–2. He died at Madras 20 Sept. 1872. He was a member of the Society of Arts and a fellow of the Anthropological Society. He wrote a pamphlet on ‘Indian Weights and Measures, their condition and remedy,’ 8vo, Madras, 1865. During 1866 he communicated to the Asiatic Society a paper on ‘The Pongol Festival in Southern India’ (Journal, new ser. v. 91–118), where he asserted, without giving any proof, that this festival was a remnant of primitive Aryan life. Another contribution was an account of the moral condition and religious views of the lower classes in southern India, chiefly based on a large collection of popular songs in the ancient Canarese, of which he gave specimens in a poetical English version. He also wrote essays on Indian folk lore for the ‘Cornhill Magazine.’ Under the title of ‘The Folk-Songs of Southern India’ he collected his essays in 1872, 8vo, London. Gover's prose is spirited, but his verse translations are infelicitous. Philologists have discredited his hypothesis that, driven at a very early period into the extreme south, and cut off from intercourse with other peoples, the Dravidian nations have preserved their original vocabulary, and that true Dravidian roots, common to the three great branches, Tamil, Telugu, and Canarese, are pure Aryan.
Publications
External Publications
The folk-lore of southern India