| William Hughes - 1859 - 396 sider
...the Laccadive Islands, the Maldive Islands, and the Andaman Islands. INDO-CHINESE COUNTRIES. extends from the Bay of Bengal on the west to the China Sea on the east, and which stretches to the southward into the smaller and more elongated Malay peninsula. Three distinct... | |
| William Hughes - 1860 - 156 sider
...peninsula (or India-beyond-the-Ganges) forms the south-east portion of the Asiatic continent. It extends from the Bay of Bengal on the west to the China Sea on the east. Three distinct countries are comprehended within this region — the empire of Burmah, the kingdom... | |
| Robert Joseph Sullivan - 1861 - 364 sider
...GANGES. India beyond the Ganges forms the south-easterly division of the Asiatic continent. It extends from the Bay of Bengal on the west, to the China Sea on the east; and includes within it what is called the Eastern Peninsula. DIVISIONS.—1. British Territories. 2.... | |
| Robert Sullivan - 1862 - 432 sider
...GANGES. India beyond the Ganges forms the south-easterly division of the Asiatic continent. It extends from the Bay of Bengal on the west, to the China Sea on the east ; and includes within it what is called the Eastern Peninsula. DIVISIONS. — 1. British Territories.... | |
| Frank Vincent - 1890 - 302 sider
...portion of the great peninsula of southeastern Asia, styled Farther India, or Indo-China, and extending from the Bay of Bengal on the west to the China Sea on the east. In fact, the "white wonder" is seldom found within the strict boundaries of the Kingdom of Siam. Readers,... | |
| William Hughes - 1908 - 942 sider
...the southeasterly division of the Asiatic continent. It. embraces the vast peninsula which extends from the Bay of Bengal on the west to the China Sea on the east, and which stretches to the southward into the smaller and more elongated Malay Peninsula. With the... | |
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