The Bengal Hurkaru and Chronicle

http://dbpedia.org/resource/The_Bengal_Hurkaru_and_Chronicle an entity of type: Thing

The Bengal Hurkaru and Chronicle (often abbreviated Bengal Hurkaru) was an English-language newspaper published in Calcutta, British India from 1795 to 1866. The paper was originally named The Bengal Hurkaru, but after its absorption of another Calcuttan paper, The Bengal Chronicle, in 1827, the named was changed. The paper's name uses the Bengali word hurkaru, which derives from the Persian harkara (messenger). rdf:langString
rdf:langString The Bengal Hurkaru and Chronicle
rdf:langString The Bengal Hurkaru and Chronicle
rdf:langString The Bengal Hurkaru and Chronicle
xsd:integer 56600913
xsd:integer 1108908527
xsd:gMonthDay --10-30
rdf:langString December 1866
xsd:date 1795-02-19
rdf:langString Hugh Boyd
xsd:integer 250
rdf:langString The Bengal Hurkaru and Chronicle (often abbreviated Bengal Hurkaru) was an English-language newspaper published in Calcutta, British India from 1795 to 1866. The paper was originally named The Bengal Hurkaru, but after its absorption of another Calcuttan paper, The Bengal Chronicle, in 1827, the named was changed. The paper's name uses the Bengali word hurkaru, which derives from the Persian harkara (messenger). The newspaper started out as a weekly, but became a daily on 29 April 1819. Most of the circulation was among the British military, merchants, and civil workforce, but a few subscribers came from the Bengali community as well. The paper absorbed Scotsman in the East in 1825, The Bengal Chronicle in 1827, and, finally, The India Gazette in 1834.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 2373
xsd:date 1795-02-19

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