Bibliography of the Sanskrit Drama/Advertisements

COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY

INDO-IRANIAN SERIES


Edited by A. V. Williams Jackson
Professor of Indo-Iranian Languages in Columbia University


Volume 1. A Sanskrit Grammar for Beginners. With Graded Exercises, Notes, and Vocabulary. By A. V. Williams Jackson. In preparation.

The aim of this work is a practical one; it is designed to furnish a book for the study of the classical Sanskrit in American and English colleges and universities.

Volume 2. Indo-Iranian Phonology, with Special Reference to the Middle and New Indo-Iranian Languages. By Louis H. Gray, Ph.D., sometime Fellow in Indo-Iranian Languages in Columbia University. New York, 1902.
Cloth, 8vo, pp. xvii + 264, $3.00.

A brief statement of the phonetic developments undergone by the principal Indo-Iranian languages from the Sanskrit, Avestan, and Old Persian through the Pali, the Prakrits, and Pahlavi down to the Hindi, Singhalese, New Persian, Afghan, and other Indo-Iranian dialects. Special pains have been taken to make the work as convenient as possible for reference.

Volume 3. A Bibliography of the Sanskrit Drama, with an Introductory Sketch of the Dramatic Literature of India. By Montgomery Schuyler, Jr., A.M., sometime Fellow in Indo-Iranian Languages in Columbia University. New York, 1906.
Cloth, 8vo, pp. xi + 105, $1.50.

The design of this bibliography is to give as complete a list as possible of all printed and manuscript Sanskrit plays and of articles and works relating to the Hindu drama. The introduction furnishes a convenient epitome of the whole subject.

Volume 4. An Index Verborum of the Fragments of the Avesta. By Montgomery Schuyler, Jr., A.M. New York, 1901.
Cloth, 8vo, pp. xiv + 106, $1.50.

This index collects in convenient form all examples of each word found in the hitherto discovered fragments not included in Geldner's edition of the Avesta.

In addition to the Sanskrit Grammar for Beginners, the following volumes are also in preparation:

Priyadarśikā, a Hindu Drama ascribed to King Harsha. Translated from the Sanskrit and Prakrit by G K. Nariman and A. V. Williams Jackson, with notes and an introduction by the latter.

This romantic drama on the adventures of a lost princess was supposedly written by Harsha, king of Northern India in the seventh century, and is now to be published for the first time in English translation. Besides giving a detailed account of the life and times of the author, the introduction will deal also with the literary, linguistic, and archaeological aspects of the play.

Vāsavadattā, a Sanskrit Novel by Subandhu. Translated for the first time, with introduction, notes, and appendixes, by Louis H. Gray, Ph.D.

This literary composition is one of the best examples of the artificial and ornate style in Sanskrit prose. The introduction will contain an account of the author and an elaborate discussion of the Oriental novel in general; an appendix will furnish a list of mythological, geographical, and other allusions in the text.

Daśarūpa, a treatise on Hindu Dramaturgy by Dhanaṃjaya. Translated for the first time, with an introduction, notes, and appendixes, by George C, O. Haas, A.M., sometime Fellow in Indo-Iranian Languages in Columbia University.

This work, composed at the court of King Bhoja in the latter half of the tenth century, is one of the three most important treatises on the canons of dramatic composition in early India, a full discussion of which will be given in the introduction. The appendixes will include, among other things, a table of parallel passages in the other treatises on dramatics and a list of technical terms.


The following volume, not in the Indo-Iranian series, is also published by the Columbia University Press:

Zoroaster, the Prophet of Ancient Iran. By A. V. Williams Jackson. New York, 1899.
Cloth, 8vo, pp. xxiii + 314, with a map and 3 illustrations, $3.00.

This work aims to collect in one volume all that is known about the great Iranian prophet, the Master whose teaching the Parsis today still faithfully follow. The story of the life and ministry of Zoroaster is told in twelve chapters, and these are followed by appendixes on explanations of Zoroaster's name, the date of the Prophet, Zoroastrian chronology, Zoroaster's native place and the scene of his ministry, and classical and other passages mentioning his name.


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