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Government Sanskrit College, Thiruvananthapuram, is one of the oldest undergraduate and postgraduate, coeducational college located in Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala. It was established in the year 1889. The college is affiliated with Kerala University. [1] This college offers different courses in Sanskrit literature.
It operated in the present day Government Sanskrit College building at Palayam until the tenure of C. P. Ramaswami Iyer, the Diwan of Travancore. Later it was split into three by C. P. Ramaswami Iyer, one of which located in Paruthikunnu (Cotton Hill) with upper primary (UP) and primary sections, Later it was upgraded to a high school (HS) in ...
The Sree Sankaracharya University of Sanskrit (SSUS) is a Sanskrit university in India established in 1993 in Kalady, Kochi, Kerala. The foundation stone for the university was laid by Bharathi Tirtha Mahaswamiji of the Sringeri Sharada Peetham. [1] SSUS provides education in Sanskrit, other Indian and Foreign languages, Social science and
Sanskrit: the department of Sanskrit started functioning in 1954, the year in which the college was founded. The college was affiliated to the then University of Travancore, which subsequently was renamed as University of Kerala after the reorganisation of states. Undergraduate and intermediate courses in Sanskrit were offered from the beginning.
Sree Sankara Vidyapeetom College, named after the great saint philosopher Sree Shankaracharya, was founded in 1967. The college is managed by the Sree Sankara Trust, which was formed in 1965 for promoting higher education in rural areas in conformity with the ideas propagated by Jagad Guru Adi Sankaracharya. Sree Sankara Vidyapeetom College
65. Govt. Ayurveda Medical College, Thiruvananthapuram 1989 Homeopathy Medical Colleges: 66. Govt. Homoepathic Medical College, Iranimuttom, Thiruvananthapuram 1983 67. Sri Vidhyadhiraja Homoeopathic Medical College, Nemom, Thiruvananthapuram.(Aided from 2002 onwards) 2001 Dental Colleges (Government) 68. Govt. Dental College, Thiruvananthapuram
Mahamahopadhyaya T. Gaṇapati Śāstrī (1860–1926) was a Sanskrit scholar who was editor of the Trivandrum Sanskrit Series, and discovered the plays of Bhasa. [1] He was also the principal of the Sanskrit college for some time, around 1903. [2] His father name is Ramasubba Iyer. He was born at Taruvai in Tirunelveli District in 1860 A.D [3]
Nair was born on 5 February 1923 in Peroorkada, Thiruvananthapuram to Govinda Pillai and Gourikutty Amma. He studied at Government Sanskrit College, earning a degree in Mahopadhyay. Following his studies, Nair worked at Mahatma Gandhi College as a Sanskrit tutor, before becoming a lecturer at University College Trivandrum in 1955.