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  2. Sushruta Samhita - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sushruta_Samhita

    Sushruta Samhita Book 1, Chapter XXXIV Translator: Bhishagratna Date The most detailed and extensive consideration of the date of the Suśrutasaṃhitā is that published by Meulenbeld in his History of Indian Medical Literature (1999-2002). Meulenbeld states that the Suśrutasaṃhitā is likely a work that includes several historical layers, whose composition may have begun in the last ...

  3. Arthashastra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthashastra

    Arthashastra Books 2.10, 6-7, 10 A notable structure of the treatise is that while all chapters are primarily prose, each transitions into a poetic verse towards its end, as a marker, a style that is found in many ancient Hindu Sanskrit texts where the changing poetic meter or style of writing is used as a syntax code to silently signal that the chapter or section is ending. All 150 chapters ...

  4. Sanskrit literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanskrit_literature

    Sanskrit literature is a broad term for all literature composed in Sanskrit. This includes texts composed in the earliest attested descendant of the Proto-Indo-Aryan language known as Vedic Sanskrit , texts in Classical Sanskrit as well as some mixed and non-standard forms of Sanskrit.

  5. Natya Shastra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natya_Shastra

    The title of the text is composed of two words, "Nāṭya" and "Shāstra". The root of the Sanskrit word Nāṭya is Nata (नट) which means "act, represent". [12] The word Shāstra (शास्त्र) means "precept, rules, manual, compendium, book or treatise", and is generally used as a suffix in the Indian literature context, for knowledge in a defined area of practice.

  6. Sangita Ratnakara - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sangita_Ratnakara

    Sangita Ratnakara was written by Śārṅgadeva, also spelled Sarangadeva or Sharangadeva.Śārṅgadeva was born in a Brahmin family of Kashmir. [11] In the era of Islamic invasion of the northwest regions of the Indian subcontinent and the start of Delhi Sultanate, his family migrated south and settled in the Hindu kingdom in the Deccan region near Ellora Caves (Maharashtra).

  7. Rigveda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rigveda

    v. t. e. The Rigveda or Rig Veda (Sanskrit: ऋग्वेद, IAST: ṛgveda, from ऋच्, "praise" [ 2 ] and वेद, "knowledge") is an ancient Indian collection of Vedic Sanskrit hymns (sūktas). It is one of the four sacred canonical Hindu texts (śruti) known as the Vedas. [ 3 ][ 4 ] Only one Shakha of the many survive today, namely ...

  8. Yoga Vasistha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoga_Vasistha

    Yoga Vasistha philosophy, Christopher Chapple The date or century of the text's composition or compilation is unknown, and variously estimated from the content and references it makes to other literature, other schools of Indian philosophies. Scholars agree that the surviving editions of the text were composed in the common era, but disagree whether it was completed in the first millennium or ...

  9. Vyākaraṇa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vyākaraṇa

    This text, as its very title suggests, consists of eight chapters, each divided into four padas, cumulatively containing 4000 sutras. [7] The text is preceded by abbreviation rules grouping the phonemes of Sanskrit. [8] Pāṇini quotes ten ancient authorities whose texts have not survived, but they are believed to have been Vyākaraṇa ...