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Home / Education / Forgotten Sanskrit Scholars Rediscovered in India's Kaveri Delta

Forgotten Sanskrit Scholars Rediscovered in India's Kaveri Delta

17 Oct

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Summary

  • Cambridge scholars uncover vibrant Sanskrit scholarship in 1650-1800
  • Hundreds of pandits kept writing in Sanskrit despite British rule
  • Thiruvisanallur village was a hub of distinguished Sanskrit scholars
Forgotten Sanskrit Scholars Rediscovered in India's Kaveri Delta

According to new research by scholars at the University of Cambridge, a vibrant period of Sanskrit scholarship took place in India between 1650 and 1800, even as Britain was consolidating its control over the country. This "golden age" of Sanskrit literature, which includes erotic plays, poems, legal texts, and philosophical works, has largely been forgotten and remains untranslated.

The research team, led by Dr. Jonathan Duquette, a scholar of South Asian religions, is now conducting an extensive survey of sites in the Kaveri Delta region, where many of these Sanskrit pandits were concentrated. One key focus is the village of Thiruvisanallur, which was founded on land donated by Maratha military leader Shahaji Bhonsle to host a group of 45 distinguished Sanskrit scholars.

Despite the spread of English-medium schools in the late 19th century, which drew many Brahmin families away from the traditional path of becoming priests, the rural settlements of these Sanskrit scholars managed to keep the tradition alive. Duquette and his team are determined to uncover the importance of these sites and make the works of these literary geniuses better known in India and beyond.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
The Kaveri Delta region in southern India was a hub of Sanskrit scholarship between 1650-1800, with hundreds of pandits or scholars living in rural settlements and producing literary works, plays, and philosophy in the Sanskrit language.
Shahaji Bhonsle was a Maratha military leader who donated land to establish the village of Thiruvisanallur, which became home to a group of 45 distinguished Sanskrit scholars.
As English-medium schools spread in the late 19th century, fewer Brahmin families aimed for their sons to become priests. However, the rural settlements of Sanskrit scholars managed to keep the tradition alive, even as Britain tightened its grip on India.

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