Page:The American Cyclopædia (1879) Volume V.djvu/51

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.
COLEBROOKE
COLENSO
47

company, he favored the withdrawal of its special privileges, and advocated free trade between India and England. Just after the death of Sir William Jones in 1794, Colebrooke was transferred from the financial to the judicial branch of the service. The code of laws compiled under the direction of Warren Hastings, and published in 1776, being very imperfect, at the solicitation of Sir William Jones the government had determined to have a more extensive and accurate compilation made. This was performed chiefly by a learned pundit, Jagannatha, and was to have been translated by Jones, but the task was committed to Colebrooke. The work was published under the title, " A Digest of Hindu Law on Contracts and Successions, with a Commentary by Jagannatha" (4 vols. 4to, Calcutta, 1797-'8). From that time until his death Colebrooke stands forth as the first of European Sanskrit scholars. While occupied with this work he had resided at Mirzapore, near Benares, the chief seat of Hindoo learning. In 1798 he was sent on a diplomatic mission to Nagpore, the capital of Berar; in 1801 he returned to Mirzapore, and shortly after was summoned to Calcutta, and appointed a member of the court of appeal. He was also appointed professor of Sanskrit in the college then recently established at Fort William, but he took no active part in teaching, acting rather as a director of the course of studies and as an examiner. In the same year appeared his essay on the Sanskrit and Prakrit languages, which showed that he was bringing within the range of his studies every part of Hindoo literature. In 1805 he became president of the court of appeal. During this interval from 1801 to 1805 he worked on the supplement to his " Digest of Laws," and at deciphering ancient inscriptions, assisted Roxburgh in the preparation of his "Flora Indica," wrote the first volume of his "Grammar of the Sanskrit Language," and prepared several essays. The first volume of his " Sanskrit Grammar " was published in 1805, and though it was never finished, it forms the best existing introduction to the study of the native grammarians. In the same year he published his famous essay "On the Vedas or Sacred Writings of the Hindus," which will always be regarded as a landmark in the history of the study of Sanskrit literature by Europeans. In 1806 he became president of the Asiatic society, and he contributed to its volumes essays " On the Sect of Jina," " On the Indian and Arabic Divisions of the Zodiac," and various others. The highest honor of a civilian in the service of the East India company, a seat in council, was conferred upon him in the same year. In 1810 he published translations of two important treatises on the Hindoo law of inheritance. In 1815, after having resided in India 33 years, he returned to England. The remainder of his life was' devoted almost uninterruptedly to the prosecution and promotion of Sanskrit studies. In 1817 he published "Algebra, with Arithmetic and Mensuration, from the Sanskrit of Brahmagupta and Bhaskara," preceded by a dissertation on the state of the sciences as known to the Hindoos. In the following year he presented to the East India company his collection of MSS., one of the most valuable ever brought to Europe. Pecuniary matters compelled him to spend a year at the Cape of Good Hope, and on his return to England in 1822 he was elected president of the astronomical society, succeeding Sir William Herschel. He also exerted himself to found the royal Asiatic society, of which he declined the presidency, but became its most active member; and for several succeeding years he contributed to its volumes essays upon the philosophy of the Hindoos, the value of which is yet unimpaired. These were his last contributions to the study of oriental literature. Many of his works yet remain unpublished. A collection of his miscellaneous essays was published in London in 1837; a second edition appeared in 1858; and in 1872 a third, in 3 vols. 8vo, including a selection from his correspondence, and a biography by his son, Sir Edward Colebrooke.


COLEMAN, a W. county of Texas, watered by Pecan bayou, Jim Ned creek, and other affluents of the Colorado; area, 1,000 sq. m.; pop. in 1870, 347, of whom 7 were colored. The surface is broken and rocky, adapted to stockraising. Timber is scarce, and the climate dry and salubrious. The chief productions in 1870 were 5,050 bushels of Indian corn, and 35 tons of hay. There were 14,198 cattle. Capital, Camp Colorado.


COLEMAN, William, an American journalist, born in Boston, Feb. 14, 1766, died in New York, July 13, 1829. He was educated for the bar, and commenced practice in Greenfield, Mass. During Shays's rebellion he took up arms against the insurgents. In 1794 he removed to New York, where for a short time he was a partner of Aaron Burr in the practice of law. Subsequently he was appointed reporter of the supreme court of the state of New York, a position which he lost after the defeat of the federal party in 1800. In 1801 Hamilton and other leading federalists conceived the idea of establishing a daily paper in the city of New York, and Coleman was selected to conduct it. The new organ, under the name of the "Evening Post," appeared Nov. 16, 1801, and for nearly 20 years Coleman remained its sole editor. His connection with it ceased only with his death. His attachment to federalist principles never wavered, and even after the party became extinct he continued to be its warm defender. He enjoyed the reputation of an able, honest, and fearless man.


COLENSO, John William, D. D., an English clergyman and colonial bishop, born in Cornwall, Jan. 24, 1814. He took his degree at St. John's college, Cambridge, with distinguished honor, in 1836, and became fellow of his college. In 1838 he became assistant master at

209
VOL. v.—4