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Introduction: Situating Sanskrit after the Sultanates
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2021
Abstract
- Type
- Introduction
- Information
- Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society , Volume 32 , Special Issue 1: Situating Sanskrit after the Sultanates , January 2022 , pp. 3 - 11
- Copyright
- Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Royal Asiatic Society
References
1 Śrīvara's Jainataraṅgiṇī 1.1.72-4. Here I follow the edition and the German translation of Walter Slaje in Slaje, ‘Schleuder, Katapult, Armbrust und Kanonen: Zur weniger bekannten Militärtechnologie des mittelalterlichen und frühneuzeitlichen Indien’ In Zeitschrift der Deutchen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft 169, 2 (2019), pp. 126–131
2 See Śrīvara's Jainataraṅgiṇī, 1.4.
3 Śrīvara's Jainataraṅgiṇī 1.4.29.
4 Digby, Simon, “Export industries and handicraft production under the Sultans of Kashmir,” Indian Economic and Social History Review 44, 4, (2007), pp. 407–423CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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6 For a history of śleṣa in Sanskrit literature, see Yigal Bronner, Extreme Poetry: The South Asian Movement of Simultaneous Narration (New York, 2010).
7 For instance, his word for “cannonball”, vajrabāṇa translates literally as “thunderbolt-arrow” and the word for “cannon” is yantrabhāṇḍa, literally “mechanism-vessel”.
8 S. N. Dasgupta A History of Sanskrit Literature: Classical Period. Vol. 1 (Calcutta, 1962), p. cxviii.
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