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File 15: A Bibliography of the Hill Tribes of Assam and the Chittagong Tracts by J.P. Mills.
Archive & Special Collections
PP MS 58/01/15
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PP MS 58, Mills, Papers, Box 1
Date(s) of creation:
c. 1958
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File 2: Transcripts of notes on a tour in the Chittagong Hill Tracts by J.P. Mills, I.C.S., submitted to the government of Bengal.
Chaks of the Chittagong Hill Tracts (Image number V.072, J.P. Mills Photographic Collection)
Published: (1926)
File 3: Diary of a tour by J.P. Mills starting at Chittagong. Includes a linguistic classification of the tribes in North-East India, and general notes on Kacharis, Manipuris, Kukis and Kabuis.
Chaks of the Chittagong Hill Tracts
by: Mills; James Philip (1890-1960); colonial administrator and anthropologist
Sherdukpen dancers during a meeting with J.P. Mills in Assam, performing a Sherdukpen version of Aji Lhamu, a romance widely known in the Tibetan Buddhist world, including the neighbouring Monpas : they are performing for J : P : Mills, Adviser to the Governor of Assam for Tribal Areas : Mills came to meet the Sherdukpen Sat Rajas 'Seven Kings', at their winter camp on the Belsiri River, east of Charduar, where they presented him with an honorary scarf : Each year Sherdukpens and other Arunachal tribes, came to Charduar, in Assam, to receive annual payments from the government : Charduar was the headquarters of the Balipara Frontier Tract, which included most of the eastern districts of present-day Arunachal Pradesh, where Sherdukpens Akas, Mijis, Monpas and Buguns, live : Charduar 'Four-Door/Gate', was one of several duars along the base of the eastern Himalayas where hill tribes came to transact business with the rulers of the plains : Many tribes received an annual payment posa, in goods and/or cash in return for not raiding villages in the plains : For some tribes, these payments continued for several years even after 1947
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