Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 11 de may. de 2022 · Island of Bombay. Administration of Justice in Bombay (1668-1726),The Portuguese were the first Europeans to acquire Bombay Island in 1661 from King Sultan Bahadur of Gujarat. The island was transferred as a dowry gift to Charles II by the Portuguese king Alfnous VI. Charles II transferred it to the East India Company in 1668 for an annual rent ...

  2. King's Visit to Bombay: Mit King George V, Queen Mary

  3. 30 de ene. de 2018 · In October 1875, Queen Victoria's eldest son Albert Edward, Prince of Wales (later King Edward VII), boarded HMS Serapis and made a passage to India. As with earlier major royal tours he had undertaken – one to Canada and the United States, another to Egypt and the Middle East – this trip would strengthen diplomatic links but also enable the heir apparent to learn more about a country he ...

  4. Description. The Queen and Prince Philip walk beneath the Gateway of India, Bombay, on their way to the Atomic Energy Establishment at Trombay. A monumental arch stands above them with carpeted steps in the foreground. Indian Naval Officers on left.

  5. Bombay Coffee House is an elegant coffee shop that serves a variety of Coffees, Savories, Hot Meals & Breakfast all day as well as a fully functioning patisserie. Bombay in the '70s was defined by the intermingling of various communities and sharing of the food from each one of these communities. Irani Kheema, Akuri on toast, the roadside Sev ...

  6. Photograph of Prince Edward of Wales standing, facing three-quarters to the left and wearing military uniform as he salutes. In the background an assembly of officers and civilians raise their hats; some of the hats suspended on poles held aloft. Two film cameras stand on tripods on the left of the centre. The photograph may have been taken during the Princes attendance at a Garden Party held ...

  7. 14 de ago. de 2017 · Ovington’s account of his visit to Bombay at the tail end of the siege was as detailed as anyone loyal to the Company ever got about the siege in print. The other main eye-witness account, by Alexander Hamilton, a Scottish sea captain, was both fairly detailed, though brief, and very critical of the Company, but it only appeared in 1727, almost four decades after Sidi Yakut Khan’s invasion.