Patna
Patna,[1][2] scriptura Devanagari पटना Paṭanā, apud Indos antiquos Pataliputra, Graece Παλι(μ)βόθρα, Latine Pali(m)bothra, est Indiae urbs flumini Gangei adiacens circiter 1.458.800 incolarum et civitatis Bihar caput. Patnae antiqua universitas est.

Notae recensere
- ↑ "Patna" inter regna enumerata s.v. "India" in Iohannes Iacobus Hofmannus, Lexicon universale (1698) ~
- ↑ Cf. "Archidioecesis Patnensis" e The Hierarchy of the Catholic Church (situs a Davide M. Cheney elaboratus) (Anglice)
Bibliographia recensere
- "Patna" in Encyclopaedia Britannica. 11a ed. (Sicagi, 1911) html djvu
- "Patna (Padmavati)" in Walter Hamilton, The East India Gazetteer (Londinii: Murray, 1815) textus
- "Patna[nexus deficit]" in H. Yule, A. C. Burnell; Gulielmus Crooke, ed., Hobson-Jobson. 2a ed. (Londinii: Murray, 1903) ~ ~
- "Patna Division; Patna District; Patna City" in William Stevenson Meyer et al., The Imperial Gazetteer of India (2a ed. 26 voll. Oxonii: Clarendon Press, 1908-1931) textus
- "Bankipur; Patna" in A Handbook for Travellers in India, Burma, and Ceylon (8a ed. Londinii: John Murray, 1911) Textus
Nexus externi recensere
Haec stipula ad urbem spectat. Amplifica, si potes! |
Agra • Allahabadum • Amedebatum • Amritsar • Aurangabad • Bengalurus • Bhopala • Calcutta • Coimbatore • Dellium • Dhanbad • Faridabad • Ghaziabad • Gualeorum • Haora • Hyderabadum • Iaipura • Indore • Jabalpur • Jodhpur • Kalyan-Dombivli • Kanpur • Kota • Lakhnau • Ludhiana • Maderaspatanum • Madura • Merath • Mumbai • Nagpur • Nashik • Navi Mumbai • Patna • Pimpri-Chinchwad • Pune • Rajkot • Ranchi • Raipur • Srinagar • Surata • Thane • Vadodara • Visakhapatnam • Varanasi • Vasai-Virar • Vijayawada