New issue of EJVS: Mahadevan on Southern Mbh, Vedic Brahmins & paleography

Dipak Bhattacharya dbhattacharya2004 at YAHOO.CO.IN
Mon Jul 21 04:53:28 UTC 2008


21 07 08
Noted with interest
DB

--- On Sun, 20/7/08, Michael Witzel <witzel at FAS.HARVARD.EDU> wrote:

From: Michael Witzel <witzel at FAS.HARVARD.EDU>
Subject: New issue of EJVS: Mahadevan on Southern Mbh, Vedic Brahmins & paleography
To: INDOLOGY at liverpool.ac.uk
Date: Sunday, 20 July, 2008, 5:37 PM

We are happy to announce a new issue of the Electronic Journal of  
Vedic Studies, Vol. 15, issue 2 (July):
The Southern Recension of the Mahabaharata,
Brahman Migrations,
and Brahmi Paleography

by

    Tennilapuram P. Mahadevan


Summary:

The paper  is important  in several respects. It provides evidence  
for the
early (Sangam period)  movement of Northern  (Madhyadesha) Vedic
Brahmins into the peninsula and of that of their later successors in  
Pallava
and Cola time. The first group includes among others, the rare  
schools of
the Vadhula Taittiriyas, the Kaushitaki Rgvedins and the Jaiminiya
Samavedins.

The first  group wears the traditional tuft—shikha in Sanskrit and   
kutumi in
Tamil—toward the front of the head and is known thus as the Purvashikha
Brahmans; the second group wears it to the back of the head, and thus  
are
called  Aparashikha Brahmans.

The  Purvashikha group brought the archetype of the Mahabharata or its
proto-Sharada version to the peninsula, where it  evolved into the  
Southern
Recension (SR), written in Southern  Brahmi script by the beginning  
of the
Common Era. It was taken, in Kalabhra times, to Malabar by the  
historical
Nambudiris.

The SR text initially  also remained behind in the Tamil country with  
the
historical Sholiya Purvashikhas. The Aparashikha Brahmans arriving  
during
the Pallava period brought along a Northern Recension (NR) text giving
rise to the much  inflated Grantha-Telugu versions of the SR text.

This scenario explains the anomalous situation that the Malayalam  
version
of the  SR is the shortest of the SR texts and that  it is closely  
aligned to the
Sharada text of Kashmir.  It  also explains the influence of another  
NR text
on the  Grantha-Telugu versions of the SR text.

Electronic Journal of Vedic Studies (EJVS)
2008, Vol.15, Issue 2, p. 43 sqq
(c) ISSN 1084-7561

-------------------------

Michael Witzel
witzel at fas.harvard.edu
www.fas.harvard.edu/~witzel/mwpage.htm

Dept. of Sanskrit & Indian Studies, Harvard University
1 Bow Street
Cambridge MA 02138, USA

phone: 1- 617 - 495 3295 (voice & messages), 496 8570, fax 617 - 496  
8571;
my direct line (also for messages) :  617- 496 2990


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