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Two oldest Veda manuscripts : facsimile edition of Vājasaneyi-Saṃhitā 1-20 (Saṃhitā- and Padapāṭha) from Nepal and Western Tibet (c. 1150 CE)

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Harvard oriental series edited by Michael Witzel ; Vol. 92Publication details: Cambridge Harvard University Press 2018Description: 180ISBN:
  • 9780674988262
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 294.592041 WIT
Summary: This volume offers unexpected insights into the history of the Veda, the earliest texts of South Asia, and their underlying oral transmission. In side-by-side facsimiles, Michael Witzel and Qinyuan Wu present the two oldest known Veda manuscripts, the Vājasaneyi Saṃhitā of the White Yajurveda and its contemporaneous sister text, a Vājasaneyi Padapāṭha, recently found in western Tibet. These two manuscripts have retained an unusual style of representing the pitched accents, and their juxtaposition in this edition invites comparison between the oral Veda transmission of a thousand years ago and the recitation still maintained today. Both manuscripts are important testimonies for the history of the Vedas, their medieval transmission, and their first codification in writing. As such, they are of great interest to historians, Indologists, and scholars studying the interface of oral and written traditions.
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Books Books Gandhi Smriti Library 294.592041 WIT (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 163417
Total holds: 0

This volume offers unexpected insights into the history of the Veda, the earliest texts of South Asia, and their underlying oral transmission. In side-by-side facsimiles, Michael Witzel and Qinyuan Wu present the two oldest known Veda manuscripts, the Vājasaneyi Saṃhitā of the White Yajurveda and its contemporaneous sister text, a Vājasaneyi Padapāṭha, recently found in western Tibet. These two manuscripts have retained an unusual style of representing the pitched accents, and their juxtaposition in this edition invites comparison between the oral Veda transmission of a thousand years ago and the recitation still maintained today. Both manuscripts are important testimonies for the history of the Vedas, their medieval transmission, and their first codification in writing. As such, they are of great interest to historians, Indologists, and scholars studying the interface of oral and written traditions.

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