Ram Raz
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Ram Raz (Rama Raja) (c. 1790–1833) was a native judge in Bangalore and an Indian scholar who translated Sanskrit sources and wrote one of the first works on Indian architecture which was published posthumously by the Royal Asiatic Society in London in 1834 as Essay on the Architecture of the Hindus. A corresponding member of the Royal Asiatic Society, he also contributed to the establishment of English systems of adjudication in southern India.
Ram Raz was born in Tanjore in a poor family but mastered English while working as a clerk with the 2nd Battalion of the 16th Madras Native Infantry Regiment. He then became a vakil. Around 1815 he was a clerk in the office of the English Military Auditor General. He helped translate Tipu Sultan's code of regulations for revenue officers from Marathi to English. As his abilities came to be known, he came to be appointed head English master at the college of Fort St. George in Madras. Later he was appointed to the position of Native Judge in the Hoossor Adawlut (Huzur Adalat) in Bangalore, Mysore state, where he worked for 23 years. Little is known of him but he was described as of small and delicate frame. He claimed that he was named after an ancestor who was a King of Vijayanagar. He died sometime before 1833, the Bangalore climate said to have been unsuitable for him. He was married, had a daughter and lived with his widowed mother.[1]