Collection: | Indic Manuscripts |
Item: | 50 |
Repository: | John Hay Library |
Institution: | Brown University |
Location: | Providence, Rhode Island, United States of America |
Catalog: | Poleman |
Item: | 815 |
Locus: | f. 1r–f. 180r (incomplete) |
Author: | Nannaya |
Title: | Āndhra Mahābhāratamu |
Part: | Parvan 1 |
Cover rubric: |
?: P[uj]aratam 1st Book |
Incipit: |
f.1r, lines 1–2:
śrīvāṇigirijā .
śrīrāyup.
adhatopakṣomukhāṁgeṣu .
yelokānastot.
am.
a[?][?] ttivihitā .
[missing -1 akzaras, Some text is lost due to frayed edges in the right margin.]
|
Explicit: |
f.180r, lines 3–4: dānidṛpadarājatnayayudapastiyasvayaṁsvarotsavamunapuḍumāḍaganinavārudriṣṭigaviganapulamellaganinavāruparamakātukamunā .. va .. |
Final rubric: | none |
Colophon: | none |
Note: | The manuscript contains the Ādiparvan of the Āndhra Mahābhāratamu, the Telugu version of the Mahābhārata composed by the Telugu poets Nannaya, Tikkanasomayāji, and Erārpragaḍa. Of the eight āśvāsas in the Ādiparvan, the present manuscript contains the text of āśvāsas 1–6 and part of 7; it is missing the latter part of 7 and all of 8. |
Language: | Telugu in Telugu script |
Form: | Folia |
Material: | Palm leaf. |
Extent: | 183 |
Dimension: | 4 x 43 cm |
Collation: | Single leaves. |
Condition: | Good condition; browned leaves; minimal fraying at the edges; a few cracked and split leaves that don't interfere with legibility; some major worm holes that create lacunae and compromise the structural integrity of folios. Two inches on the left side of folio 86 (f. 86r, f. 86v) are broken. Two inches on the right side of folio 1 (f. 1r, f. 1v) and 174 (f. 174r, f. 174v) are broken off with some loss of text. The handwriting is difficult to decipher. |
Binding: | Unbound. |
Layout: | Written in 5–8 lines per page. Writing ends in the middle of f. 72v, and f. 132v, and after a single line on f. 163v. |
Hand 1: | Scribal hand changes f. 104v to f. 106r. |
Hand 2: | xxxxx |
Additions: |
In the left margin on f. 1r is written the following:
“śrīrāma
In the left margin on f. 22r is written the following:
“śrīrāma
Unidentifiable markings are scattered around the left margin of f. 26v. Only the Telugu character “ma” is legible. In the left margin on f. 35v is written “bayyenasmatulaṁ” . In the left margin on f. 44r is written the following:
“śrīrāma
In the left margin on f. 73r is written the following:
“śrīrāma
On f. 107v there are 7 lines of illegible text in the left margin and 5 lines of illegible text in the right margin. In the left margin on f. 108r is written the following:
“śrīrāma
In the left margin on f. 164r is written the following:
“śrīrāma
|
Illustration: | Flowers are drawn in the left margin on f. 133r. |
Acquisition: |
Stuart C. Sherman (1977: 79) describes the acquisition of the Indic manuscripts in the Brown University Library as follows:
Indic Manuscripts A collection of fifty-three codices (not after 1800) in Burmese, Cambodian, Telugu Skandhas, Bengali, and Sinhalese script on palm leaves with lacquered wood covers tied with cords. Subjects include Buddhist canon, Pālī grammar and lexicons, Epics, Dance, Drama, and a treatise on midwifery and diseases of women. Recorded in (A Census of Indic Manuscripts in the United States and Canada, by Horace I. Poleman, New Haven: American Oriental Society, 1938.) Register available. Gift of Baptist missionaries to Burma, among whom was Adoniram Judson Brown Class of 1807, who first translated the Bible into Burmese. |
SubjectLC: | Mahābhārata |
SubjectLC: | Manuscripts, Telugu |
SubjectLC: | Manuscripts – India – 18th century |
SubjectSL: | Mahābhārata |
Line 1:
śrīvāṇigirijā .
śrīrāyup.
adhatopakṣomukhāṁgeṣu .
yelokānastot.
am.
a[?][?] ttivihitā .
[missing -1 akzaras, Some text is lost due to frayed edges in the right margin.]
Line 2:
pūjitāvassuraibhūyāsuḥpuruṣottamā[?]s ṁbbujabhavaśrīkaṁdharāśreyane ..
va ..
anisakalabhūvanarakṣaṇaprabhūvulayenayādyuvaina .
Line 3:
Line 4:
dānidṛpadarājatnayayudapastiyasvayaṁsvarotsavamunapuḍumāḍaganinavārudriṣṭigaviganapulamellaganinavāruparamakātukamunā ..
va ..
Record revised: | 29 January 2011 |
---|