Definition of Dubashes. Meaning of Dubashes. Synonyms of Dubashes

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Definition of Dubashes

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Meaning of Dubashes from wikipedia

- Tondaimandalam, Ponneri and Pundamalli Vellalas use the title Mudaliar; Most of the Dubashes in the late eighteenth-century Madras were Telugu brahmans or Telugu perikavārs...
- percentage of ownership. Some of the Kondaikatti Velaalar were emplo**** as dubashes, literally, a person who could speak two languages, in the Company. When...
- worked for the British East India Company. As in the early 19th century, dubashes such as Avadhanum Paupiah were notorious for their corrupt practices, the...
- festival, Is it done for you to miss this excitement, Poompavai? The early dubashes or Indian merchants who worked for the British East India Company were...
- mostly dubashes (middlemen) of British merchants and business establishments. Several of the streets in the neighbourhood are named after these dubashes. The...
- ISSN 0019-4646. PMID 21128371. Neild-Basu, Susan (February 1984). "The Dubashes of Madras". Modern Asian Studies. 18 (1): 1–31. doi:10.1017/S0026749X00011203...
- particularly after Indian independence. Vallal Pachayappa Mudaliar- a famous Dubashe of Madras and the founder of Pachayappa Educational Trust. V. L. Ethiraj-...
- estimated at five lakhs of pagodas or 1.7 million rupees" Reference: The Dubashes of Madras by Susan Neild-Basu (1984)). The bequests, however, remained...
- grandfather, Mothavarapu Dera Venkataswami Naidu. His family was involved as dubashes (interpreters and middlemen in business dealings with the British) and...
- Street'. Several of them were Telugu speaking, followed by the middlemen or dubashes (men who knew two languages), chiefly Telugu-speaking Komutti and Beri...