Name William Logan Role Poet | Fields Poetry | |
Education University of Iowa, Yale University Awards National Book Critics Circle Award for Criticism Books Our savage art, The Undiscovered Country, Strange flesh, Reputations of the Tongue, The whispering gallery |
William logan poetry reading sewanee writers conference 2011
William Logan (1841–1914) was a Scottish officer of the Madras Civil Service under the British Government. Before his appointment as Collector of Malabar, he had served in the area for about twenty years in the capacity of Magistrate and Judge. He was conversant in Malayalam, Tamil and Telugu. He is remembered for his 1887 guide to the Malabar District, popularly known as the Malabar Manual
Contents
- William logan poetry reading sewanee writers conference 2011
- William logan band sunday service at the blind poet 07 04 1013
- Malabar Manual
- References
Logan had a special liking for Kerala and its people. To commemorate this British official's work and life in Thalassery, the main road that cuts across the town is named after him as "Logan's Road".
William logan band sunday service at the blind poet 07 04 1013
Malabar Manual
Malabar by William Logan (popularly known as the Malabar Manual) is an 1887 publication commissioned by the Government of Madras, and originally published in two volumes. It is a guide to the Malabar District under the Presidency of Madras in British India, compiled during Logan's tenure as Collector of Malabar. It is an exhaustive volume giving the details of the geography, people, their religion and castes, language and culture. It depicts the life and style of the vernacular people of Malabar District, with some interesting notes on the English Raj's life then.
The work was later followed up by the Malabar Gazetteer of 1908, written by Charles Alexander Innes.