Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The extant works of the Dvaita founder-philosopher, Madhvacharya, called the Sarvamūla Granthas, are many in number.The works span a wide spectrum of topics concerning Dvaita philosophy in specific and Vedic thought in general.
Sudha Parimala is a Sanskrit work on Dvaita philosophy written by Raghavendra Swami. It is a lucid adaptation of the well-known commentary on Jayatirthas Nyaya Sudha , which is a commentary on Madhvacharya 's Anu Vyakhyana .
The Pallava script, or Pallava Grantha, is a style of Grantha script named after the Pallava dynasty of Southern India and is attested to since the 4th century CE. In India, the Pallava script evolved from Tamil-Brahmi . [ 2 ]
In Sanskrit, grantha is literally 'a knot'. [13] It is a word that was used for books, and the script used to write them. This stems from the practice of binding inscribed palm leaves using a length of thread held by knots. Grantha was widely used to write Sanskrit in the Tamil-speaking parts of South Asia from about the 5th century CE into ...
In the field of Sanskrit literature it is tradition to use unique word to refer to each chapter in a book. (Other terms used elsewhere include Ullaasas , Parichedaas , Udyota etc.). The author treats Nrutyam , Nruttham as components of a rupakam' only (play);
Built up by the Nayak and Maratha dynasties of Thanjavur, Saraswathi Mahal Library contains a very rare and valuable collection of manuscripts, books, maps and painting on all aspects of arts, culture and literature. The scripts include Grantha, Devanagari, Telugu and Malayalam, Kannada, Tamil, Tigalari and Oriya. French Institute of Pondicherry
Proficient in both Sanskrit and Kannada, he authored approximately 4000 pages of Sanskrit Vyakhyana across roughly 150 books, including works in other languages. He wrote a screenplay for the Sanskrit film " Bhagavadgita " and " Shankaracharya ," drawing from his experience in Madhvas Tattvavada or Madhva philosophy.
Sripadaraja was born in a Madhva Brahmin family [4] in Abbur, a village in Channapatna taluk, Karnataka. His father, Sheshagiriappa, served as an accountant while young Sripadaraja looked after the cattle, studying Sanskrit texts in his spare time.