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Artigos de revistas sobre o assunto "Diamonds – India – History"

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Hofmeester, Karin. "Shifting trajectories of diamond processing: from India to Europe and back, from the fifteenth century to the twentieth". Journal of Global History 8, n.º 1 (18 de fevereiro de 2013): 25–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s174002281300003x.

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AbstractDiamonds have a long global history in which India plays a pivotal though little-known role. Indeed, it was in India that diamonds were first mined, finished, and worn. Diamonds and their finishing techniques reached Europe in the fifteenth century. Subsequently, part of the industry moved from India to Europe, where manufacturing shifted from one city to another, before returning to India in the twentieth century. These shifts, I argue, are determined by changes in one or more segments of the global commodity chain and they reveal the global interconnections between mining, trading, polishing, and consuming. Furthermore, these shifting centres are themselves a sign of the globalized character of diamond production, exchange, and consumption.
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Jain, Dr Neeru, e Ms Shipra Agrawal. "M-commerce: New Business Opportunities in the Jewellery Industry". MET Management Review 08, n.º 02 (2021): 19–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.34047/mmr.2020.8202.

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Mobile phones, or more accurately, smartphones, have revolutionized the diamond industry. To gain a competitive edge in India, diamond and jewelry producers, master diamond cutters, and graduate gemmologists specializing in diamonds are using M-commerce to deliver novel customer service choices to their clientele.Electronic commerce, also known as E-commerce, has revolutionized the way people do business. Through electronic systems such as the Internet and other computer networks, traders may buy and sell goods from anywhere in the globe. Many Indian diamantaires and jewellery manufacturers adapted to this approach and profited as a result. Mobile commerce appears to be next on the agenda. M-commerce, or mobile commerce, is billed as the next generation of wireless Ecommerce that eliminates the need for wires and plug-in devices. Handheld gadgets such as mobile phones or Personal Digital Assistants can be used to undertake financial and promotional activities (PDAs).Although not everyone will be interested in M-commerce in the next years, it is expected to develop significantly as more advanced wireless handheld accessories become available. Because it has a global customer, the Indian diamond sector is accepting it more quickly. To fully benefit from M-commerce, diamantaires and jewelry manufacturers should educate themselves on the subject so that they can have the necessary information and implement it in their businesses as needed.
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Phophalia, Ms Swati, Dr M. K. Sharma e Dr Shweta Kastiya. "Emerging Trends in Online Jewellery Retail". MET Management Review 08, n.º 02 (2021): 25–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.34047/mmr.2020.8203.

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Online jewellery retailing has caught on in India as E-Commerce has passed its inflexion point in India. Although most of us like to shop jewellery in-store due to the impact of COVID 19, the pandemic emphasized the importance of the digital presence of jewellery stores. Before the pandemic, the website of the jewellers are not on top priority and focus on their physical stores.Gold jewellery, diamonds, and other valuable stones were once only purchased from the trusted family jeweller. The trend is shifting now, with more consumers willing to buy jewellery online. In India, online jewellery retail is still in its infancy. India has never been more welcoming to internet jewellery purchases than it is now. These days, the usage of online media is gaining traction, and the jewellery retail business is taking advantage of it for promotion and brand growth. Online selling allows businesses to operate 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and over long periods. The appeal of online jewellery portals among discriminating young people is fuelled by interesting wearable designs, low base price points, the availability of 14, 18, or 22-carat gold, as well as a selection of diamond qualities, to pick from. There's also a try-before-you-buy option, as well as a quality guarantee and potential buyback. Thus the objective of this study is an attempt to help Traditional jewellery retailers further boost their sales through online retailing.
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Olivelle, Patrick. "Long-distance trade in ancient India: Evidence from Kauṭilya’s Arthaśāstra". Indian Economic & Social History Review 57, n.º 1 (janeiro de 2020): 31–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0019464619892894.

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Much of the significant data for long-distance and maritime trade across South Asia in the ancient period comes from archaeological sources. Nevertheless, textual sources too have some significant things to say about material culture and trade in the ancient world. In a special way, texts give insights into what people thought about trans-regional trade, the globalisation of the ancient world, both the good and the bad that came with it, insights that cannot be culled solely from archaeological data. This article’s focus is on the Arthaśāstra, which Kauṭilya wrote around middle of the first century ce, drawing on sources that predate him by a century or more. The Arthaśāstra does not have a separate section on trade, but trade data are scattered over at least four areas: (a) the treasury and its need for luxury goods: pearls, gems, diamonds, coral, sandalwood, aloe, incense, skins and furs, and cloth; (b) military needs: horses and elephants; (c) developing and guarding land and water routes and shipping; and (d) duties and taxes on imported goods. Significant data on trade are also provided in Kauṭilya’s discussion of trade routes and their protection, as well as data on duties and taxes on imported goods.
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Alam, Ishrat. "Diamond Mining and Trade in South India in the Seventeenth Century". Medieval History Journal 3, n.º 2 (outubro de 2000): 291–310. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/097194580000300205.

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Barrett, T. H. "The Feng-tao k'o and Printing on Paper in Seventh-Century China". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 60, n.º 3 (outubro de 1997): 538–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0041977x00032547.

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One of the arguments for supposing that the ‘world's earliest printed book’, the Diamond Sūtra in the Stein collection in London, is actually the outcome of a long process of development relies on the very high quality of the images contained in the frontispiece. It is possible, of course, to point to much more crudely formed Buddha images stamped on paper from the same source at Tunhuang, but the dated examples that have been studied are actually later than the Stein Diamond Sūtra itself.1 The practice of printing Buddha images on paper and silk in India is attested in 792 by the Nan-hai chi-kuei nei-fa chuan of I-ching who was in India 673–85, and Paul Pelliot for one was prepared to believe that this practice, using Chinese materials, was originally derived from China itself.2 Frustratingly enough, however, no Chinese source has so far been identified which clearly mentions printing on paper at any point earlier than I-ching's text, which itself does not antedate by more than half a century or so the earliest printed materials we actually possess, notably in the form of a dharaṇī from Korea.3
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Babu, Vimal. "Family Entrepreneurship in India’s ‘Diamond City’: A Phenomenological Research". Studies in Business and Economics 14, n.º 2 (1 de agosto de 2019): 216–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/sbe-2019-0036.

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AbstractThe history of family run business in Surat, India is more than 350 years now. However, over the last several decades, it has been observed that family run enterprises in Surat have not been able to scale up the business by untapping opportunities in international markets. The paper aims to explore the experiences of family-run enterprise owners in their attempt to grow their businesses in Surat. Given the stagnant growth trajectory, less expansion, and minimal diversification over the last several decades, the researcher is intrigued to study the experiences of these family-run enterprise owners. As a phenomenological research study, there is only one question: What experiences have these enterprise owners faced in a family-run enterprise as they attempt to grow their businesses? Non-leading prompts were asked to encourage participants to expand their responses to lead to a deeper understanding of those experiences. As respondents, seventeen family-run enterprise owners have been contacted for In-Depth Interview (IDI). The respondents were from diamond, textile and restaurant business in Surat. The study aided in identifying existing challenges and strengths making the whole experience of family-run enterprise owners unique, diverse and different from the conventional businesses operating in different industry. The findings indicate that the potential of family-run enterprises have not been harnessed to its fullest due to prevailing mediocrities, sub-standard practice, sophisticated and disoriented business procedures and system. Organization Development (OD) interventions would be effective in unearthing deeper issues and problems amongst these family-run enterprises in Surat.
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Gupta, Shilpi, Rahul Gupta, Soumyodhriti Ghosh, Arun Kumar Gupta, Arvind Shukla, Vinita Chaturvedi e Praveen Mathur. "Intestinal Atresia: Experience at a Busy Center of North-West India". Journal of Neonatal Surgery 5, n.º 4 (7 de outubro de 2016): 51. http://dx.doi.org/10.21699/jns.v5i4.405.

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Objective: To evaluate the presentation, management, complications and outcome of intestinal atresia (IA) managed at our center over a period of 1 year.Materials and methods: Records of patients of IA admitted in our center from January 2015 to December 2015 were retrospectively analyzed. Demographic data, antenatal history, presenting complaints, location (duodenal, jejunoileal, colonic) of atresia, surgery performed and peri-operative complications were noted.Results: Total 78 cases of IA were included in the analyses. Mean age and weight at the time of presentation was 5.8 days (range 0-50), and 1.9 kg (range 1.1-3.2), respectively. IA included duodenal atresia [DA (32)], jejuno-ileal atresia [JIA (40)], colonic atresia [CA (3)] and atresia at multiple-location (sites) in 3 cases. Ninety percent of patients underwent surgery within 5 to 20 hours of admission. All cases of DA except one underwent Kimura’s diamond shaped duodeno-duodenostomy. One case with perforated duodenal web underwent duodenotomy with excision of web. Seven patients with JIA and CA required primary stoma, while rest were managed by excision of dilated proximal segment and primary anastomosis. Complications included anastomotic leak in 5, proximal perforation in 2, functional obstruction in 7, aspiration pneumonitis in 3, and wound infection in 6 patients. Mean hospital stay for survivors was 11 days. Overall survival was 63%.Conclusion: Late presentation, overcrowding in intensive care unit, septicemia, functional obstruction and anastomotic leak are the causes of poor outcome in our series. Early diagnosis, some modification in surgical technique, use of total parenteral nutrition and adequate investigations for other congenital anomalies may improve the outcome.
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Finlay, Molly. "Children of Empire". Groundings Undergraduate 13 (1 de abril de 2022): 96–107. http://dx.doi.org/10.36399/groundingsug.13.156.

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While the British Empire is acknowledged to have functioned from the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, it was during the nineteenth century that its greatest expansion in terms of size, population, and wealth occurred. Dominating the nineteenth century, the Victorian Era (1837-1901) is considered by scholars such as Amy Lloyd and Peter Marshall to be the period in British history in which the monarchy became increasingly identified with empire. Queen Victoria was granted the title of Empress of India in 1876; this, as well as occasions such as Queen Victoria’s Golden and Diamond Jubilees 1887 and 1897, continued to rouse imperialism towards the end of the nineteenth century. In the context of this essay, discourses of empire can be understood as texts, discussions, and ideals concerning imperialism; Pramod Nayar suggests in Colonial Voices: The Discourses of Empire that discourses are not only a reflection of events, but serve to define reality for viewers, giving insight into lived experiences. Accordingly, this article will examine the way in which discourses of empire permeated Victorian experiences of childhood before and after the 1870 Education Act.
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Lee, Lavina, e John Lee. "Japan-India Cooperation and Abe's Democratic Security Diamond: Possibilities, Limitations and the View from Southeast Asia". Contemporary Southeast Asia 38, n.º 2 (31 de agosto de 2016): 284–308. http://dx.doi.org/10.1355/cs38-2e.

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Livros sobre o assunto "Diamonds – India – History"

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Bharadwaj, Monisha. Great diamonds of India. Mumbai, India: India Book House, 2002.

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2

Durey, Hugh. Sacred & symbolic: Ancient India and the lure of its diamonds. [Perth]: Hugh Durey, 2010.

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3

Tomlinson, Heather. Toads and diamonds. New York: Henry Holt, 2010.

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4

Choppra, Kusum. Beyond diamond rings. New Delhi: Cedar Books, 2009.

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5

Gavin, Jamila. The blood stone. London: Egmont, 2003.

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6

National Symposium on Recent Developments in Applied Analytical Chemistry (2nd 1988 Calcutta, India). Institution of chemists (India), 1928-1988: Diamond jubilee celebrations. Calcutta: [Diamond Jubilee Celebration Committee, 1988.

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7

1901-, Vincent Rose S., ed. The French in India: From diamond traders to Sanskrit scholars. Bombay: Popular Prakashan, 1990.

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8

Society, Indian Physical, ed. Indian Physical Society: Diamond jubilee (1934-94) : souvenir. Calcutta: The Society, 1994.

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9

Central Food Technological Research Institute (India). Sixty years of CFTRI: Reminiscences : diamond jubilee of CFTRI, 1950-2010. Mysore: Central Food Technological Research Institute, 2010.

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10

1945-, Martin Charles H., e Craver Rebecca McDowell, eds. Diamond days: An oral history of the University of Texas at El Paso. El Paso, Tex: Texas Western Press, University of Texas at El Paso, 1991.

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Capítulos de livros sobre o assunto "Diamonds – India – History"

1

Hofmeester, Karin. "Labour as a Commodity". In The Oxford Handbook of Commodity History, 335–56. Oxford University Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780197502679.013.21.

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Abstract Recent scholarship is resulting in a reappraisal of how we should understand labour as a commodity. The chapter begins with an overview of the debate that began in the eighteenth century with Adam Smith, before being developed by Marx and Polanyi. However, this focused exclusively on wage labour. Sociologists and historians have now begun widening the scope of what should be considered ‘commodified labour’. This has found expression in the Global Collaboratory on the History of Labour Relations, and its taxonomy, which explicitly places commodified labour within the wider framework of other types of labour relations—including other, often coerced forms of commodified labour. The chapter illustrates this with a case study of rough diamond production in India, Brazil, and South Africa, from the seventeenth till the early twentieth century, showing how this more inclusive definition enables a long-term global analysis of labour as a commodity.
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Rowson, Martin. "Is Franklin Blake a thief and a rapist?" In The Literary Detective, 663–68. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192100368.003.0092.

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Abstract The Moonstone has an honoured place in literary history as, to quote no less an authority than T. S. Eliot, ‘the first, longest and best of English detective novels’. Many detective novels have been written since Eliot’s accolade (offered, it is pleasing to note, in the first World’s Classics edition of The Moonstone). But Collins’s novel still retains the power to delight and to surprise. The story, a version of the ‘locked room mystery’, hinges on a jewel theft. A fabulous Indian gem, the Moonstone, is left to Rachel Verinder. So nervous is she on getting possession of it that she keeps it safely secreted in her bedroom suite at night. None the less, it is stolen. The thief must be someone in the household. Sergeant Cuff of Scotland Yard is called in. There is a likely looking clue. Whoever stole the diamond must have brushed against some wet paint on the door to Rachel’s boudoir. But the incriminatingly stained garment is never found.
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