Book Title: Bhattoji Diksita On Sphota Author(s): Johannes Bronkhorst Publisher: Johannes BronkhorstPage 38
________________ 40 JOHANNES BRONKHORST version de N.-J. Desvaulx. II: L'indologie du Père Coeurdoux: stratégies, apologétique et scientificité. Paris: Adrien-Maisonneuve. (Publications de l'Ecole Française d'Extrême-Orient, 146.) Nägesa Bhatta: Rasagangādharatikā. See under Jagannatha. Nāgesa Bhatta: Sphotavāda. Edited, with his own commentary Subodhinī, by V. Krishnamacharya. Adyar, Madras: The Adyar Library and Research Centre. 1946. Reprint 1977. Palsule, G.B. (ed., tr.) (1988): Mahābhāsyadipikā of BhartȚhari. Fascicule V: Ähnika II. Poona: Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute. (Post-Graduate and Research Department Series, 31.) Pandeya, Ramajna (1954). An Introduction to the Philosophy of Sanskrit Grammar. Banaras: Government Sanskrit Library. (The Princess of Wales Sarasvati Bhavana Studies, XI.) Patañjali: Vyakarana-Mahābhāsya. (1) See abbreviations, under Mahā-bh. (2) Edi ted, with Kaiyata's Pradīpa and Nāgoji Bhatta's Pradīpoddyota, by Vedavrata. Rohataka: Harayānā-sahitya-samsthāna. 5 vols. 1962-1963. Pathak, Parushottam Prasad (1995). Nāgesamate paribhāsāņām vivecanam. Delhi: Eastern Book Linkers. Pollock, Sheldon (2001). The death of Sanskrit. Comparative Studies in Society and History 43(2), 392-426. Pollock, Sheldon (forthcoming): The languages of science in early-modern India. In K. Preisendanz (ed.), Halbfass Commemoration Volume. Vienna: Akademie der Wissenschaften. Rāmacandra: Prakriyākaumudī. (1) The Prakriyākaumudī of Rāmachandra, with the comentary Prasāda of Vitthala. Ed. Rao Bahadur Kamalashankar Pranashankar Trivedi. 2 vols. Poona: Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute. 1925, 1931. (Bombay Sanskrit and Prakrit Series 78, 82.) (2) Prakriyakaumudi by Rāmacandrācārya with Prakāśa by Srikrisna. Edited, with his Raśmi, by Muralīdhara Miśra. Introduction (Prāstāvikam) by Bhāgiratha Prasāda Tripāthī. 3 vols. Varanasi: Sampurnanad Sanskrit Vishvavidyalaya. 1977-1980. (Sar asvatībhavana-Granthamālā, 111-112.) Ranganathasvami Aryavaraguru, S.P.V. (1912). On the Seshas of Benares. Indian Antiquary 41, 245-253. Richards, John F. (1993). The New Cambridge History of India, 1.5. The Mughal Empire. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Salomon, Richard (1985). The Bridge to the Three Holy Cities. The Sāmānya-pra ghattaka of Nārāyana Bhatta's Tristhalisetu. Delhi etc.: Motilal Banarsidass. Sarma, Sreeramula Rajesware (2002). From yāvanī to samskrtam: Sanskrit writings inspired by Persian Works. Studies in the History of Indian Thought Indo-shisőshi Kenkyū (Kyoto) 14, 71-88. Schwartzberg, Joseph E. (ed.) (1978). A Historical Atlas of South Asia. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press. Sesa Krsna: Prakriyāprakāśa. For the edition used, see Rāmacandra. Sesa Nārāyaṇa: Sūktiratnākara. See Bhāgavata, 1999. Sharma, Rama Nath (1995). The Astādhyāyī of Pānini. Volume III. English trans lation of adhyāyas two and three with Sanskrit text, transliteration, word-boundary, anuvștti, vștti, explanatory notes, derivational history of examples, and indices. New Delhi: Munshiram Manoharlal. Sharma, Sri Ram (1938). A Bibliography of Mughal India (1526-1707 A.D.). Bom bay: Karnatak Publishing House. Reprint: Porcupine Press, Philadelphia, 1977. Sherring, M.A. (Matthew Atmore) (1868): Benares, the Sacred City of the Hindus in Ancient and Modern Times. Reprint: B.R. Publishing Corporation, Delhi, 1975.Page Navigation
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