¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Durbars
1. durbar [n] - See also: durbar
Lexicographical Neighbors of Durbars
Literary usage of Durbars
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The History of the Church Missionary Society: Its Environment, Its Men and by Eugene Stock (1899)
"... Montgomery in the Punjab—durbars at Lahore and Agra—The Punjab Missionary
Conference of 1862—Donald ..."
2. The Uprising of the Many by Charles Edward Russell (1907)
"CHAPTER XIX durbars AS A CURE FOR NATIONAL ILLS FOR many reasons of weight to
the world at large as well as to himself, ..."
3. Personal Observations on Sindh: The Manners and Customs of Its Inhabitants by Thomas Postans (1843)
"News how collected from Indian durbars. —Withdrawal of Troops from ... who were
present at the durbars, and knew the feelings of the chiefs, particularly as ..."
4. The Lawrences of the Punjab by Frederick P. Gibbon (1908)
"... Famine—Crisis in Bombay—Public Works—Tenancy Acts— Relations with Secretaries
of State—His Simplicity—Calumnies —His durbars—Raised to the Peerage. ..."
5. The Lawrences of the Punjab by Frederick P. Gibbon (1908)
"... Famine—Crisis in Bombay—Public Works—Tenancy Acts— Relations with Secretaries
of State—His Simplicity—Calumnies —His durbars—Raised to the Peerage. ..."
6. Under the Absolute Amir by Frank A. Martin (1907)
"Continued Amir's sons and his treatment of them—Princes and their duties and
durbars—Food supplied by Government to members of royal ..."