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6. The Nanartharatna mala of Irupaga Dandadhinatha or Bhaskara. The author lived under King Harihara II of Vijayanagara in the second half of the 14th century.'
7. The Abhidhana tantra of Jaṭadhara. 'A synonymous and homonymous dictionary, chiefly made up of verses of the Amarakosa with additions.'" The author was a native of Cati- or Cattagrama (Chittagong) in Bengal. According to Aufrecht, Cat. Oxon. 191, he is earlier than Rayamukuṭa."
8. The Anekārtha-or Nanarthadhvanimañjarī of Gadasimha (Durgasimha in some MSS), a homonymous lexicon in about 88 slokas. The author mentions Rudra, Gangadhara, Dharani, and the Ratnakosa, and is quoted by Raghunandana in the 16th century. Another work of the same name, ascribed to the Kashmirian Mahākṣapaņa ka, consists of three parts (slokadhikara, ardhaslokādhikāra, and pādādhikara) of which the first contains most of the verses of Gadasimha's work. These two works are not known to be quoted by older commentators including Rayamukuṭa.
9. The Rupa mañjarināmamala of Rupacandra, composed in 1588, according to Bhandarkar, Report for 1883-84, p. 16. About the same time under the Emperor Akbar wrote Pundarika Vitthala the Sighrabodhanāma mālā."
10. The Sara diyakhyanāma mālā of Harṣakirti, written towards the end of the 16th century, accord
1 Ind. Wört., p. 36.
2
Ind. Off. Cat., p. 287.
Ind. Wört., p. 37.
KALPADRUKOSA
* C. C., I, 145.
Ind. Wört., p. 37.
Published in Satk oşasamgraha, Benares, 1873.