Native Woman: Difference between revisions
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When a child was baptised, sometimes the mother was described as '''‘a native woman'''’. | When a child was baptised, sometimes the mother was described as '''‘a native woman'''’. | ||
==See also== | |||
*[[Anglo Indian]] | |||
*[[East India Company Army#Wives and children|East India Company Army - Wives and children]] | |||
The following information is taken mainly from the [[Mailing lists|India List]]: | The following information is taken mainly from the [[Mailing lists|India List]]: |
Revision as of 20:24, 24 January 2010
When a child was baptised, sometimes the mother was described as ‘a native woman’.
See also
The following information is taken mainly from the India List:
- The term 'native woman’ applied to Hindu or tribal women. More details in this thread.
- There was also a term ‘Bunnoo native woman’. Bunnoo or Banoo or Bunnoa was an area in Eastern Afghanistan, according to Thornton's 1844 Gazetteer, but a researcher advised more often the term implied a Muslim (of any northern origin). (Bannu District is now in Pakistan.)
- This thread discussed a possible Persian/Parsee connection
- If there was a marriage in a church, the wife had become a Christian. More details in this thread.
- This thread showed how one researcher found details of an Indian mother from her son's school record.