INDOLOGY Digest, Vol 34, Issue 19

Birendra Nath Prasad birendra176 at yahoo.com
Fri Nov 20 04:48:48 UTC 2015


One may also see my paper titled “Brahmanical Temples, Maṭhas, Agrahāras and a Buddhist Establishment in a Marshy and Forested Periphery of Two ‘Frontier’ States: Early Mediaeval Surma Valley (Sylhet and Cachar), c. 600 CE–1100 CE”. This paper was published in Religions of South Asia, Vol. 6, no.1 , 2012. Religions of South Asia is an international peer-reviewed journal, published by Equinox Publications, London. This paper analyses the complex pattern of interaction between religion, agrarian expansion , detribalisation and the evolution of a local state in the most forested and marshiest part of early medieval Bengal. 
Abstract of the paper may be seen at https://journals.equinoxpub.com/index.php/ROSA/article/view/10764

Birendra Nath Prasad
Asstt. Professor, History 
BB Ambedkar University
(A Central University)
Lucknow -226025	
Email : bnprasad at bbau.ac.in 
bp2629 at gmail.com



--------------------------------------------
On Thu, 11/19/15, indology-request at list.indology.info <indology-request at list.indology.info> wrote:

 Subject: INDOLOGY Digest, Vol 34, Issue 19
 To: indology at list.indology.info
 Date: Thursday, November 19, 2015, 10:30 PM
 
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 Today's Topics:
 
    1. Re: Ecology, Classical Knowledge
 System, and
       Social-political-religious Concerns
 (Mark McClish)
    2. Re: Ecology, Classical Knowledge
 System, and
       Social-political-religious Concerns
 (Mark McClish)
    3. Spatial and Visual Dimensions of
 Pilgrimage in South Asia -
       CFP for 24th ECSAS (Vera Lazzaretti)
    4. Re: Garbha-upanisad &
 Sariraka-upanisad (Piotr Balcerowicz)
    5. Professorship (W3) in ?Classical
 Indology? (Succession to
       Prof. Dr. Axel Michaels) (astridzotter at yahoo.de)
 
 
 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
 
 Message: 1
 Date: Wed, 18 Nov 2015 19:12:09 +0000
 From: Mark McClish <mark.mcclish at northwestern.edu>
 To: "INDOLOGY at list.indology.info"
 <INDOLOGY at list.indology.info>
 Subject: Re: [INDOLOGY] Ecology, Classical Knowledge System,
 and
     Social-political-religious Concerns
 Message-ID: <6440115E-D867-4477-8A10-B0D25B81EF9B at northwestern.edu>
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
 
 Niranjan,
 
 You might find Thomas Trautmann's Elephants and Kings: An
 Environmental History (Oxford 2015) helpful.
 
 Best,
 Mark
 
 On Nov 17, 2015, at 2:23 PM, Niranjan Saha <shrinsaha at gmail.com<mailto:shrinsaha at gmail.com>>
 wrote:
 
 Dear Tyler,
 
 Thank you so much for pointing out to me these two works on
 environmental history of India. While I need to prepare a
 half page write-up on the subject in a day or two, I'll see
 what ready-made material I could look at (for the time
 being).
 
 Best,
 Niranjan
 
 On Tue, Nov 17, 2015 at 10:15 PM, Tyler Williams <tylerwwilliams at gmail.com<mailto:tylerwwilliams at gmail.com>>
 wrote:
 Dear Niranjan,
 
 Kalyanakrishnan Sivaramakrishnan and Mahesh Rangarajan have
 edited a
 two volume environmental history of India that, while not
 always
 dealing directly with the question of knowledge systems,
 often touches
 upon them.  It might be a good starting point for
 finding references.
 
 2011. Environmental History of India 1: From Earliest Times
 to the
 Colonial Period. New Delhi: Permanent Black. 464 pps.
 
 2011. Environmental History of India 1: From Earliest Times
 to the
 Colonial Period. New Delhi: Permanent Black. 464 pps.
 
 Best,
 Tyler
 
 
 
 On Tue, Nov 17, 2015 at 12:22 AM, Niranjan Saha <shrinsaha at gmail.com<mailto:shrinsaha at gmail.com>>
 wrote:
 > Dear List,
 >
 > Could anybody shed light on the environmental
 humanities and its relation to
 > or influence on the formation of classical knowledge
 system and vice versa,
 > including the contemporary or pre-modern environmental
 debate in relation to
 > the socio-political-religious formations connected to
 the regional systems
 > in South and East Asia and Europe?
 >
 > Sharing of any articles and links will be highly
 appreciated.
 >
 >
 >
 > With regards,
 > Niranjan Saha
 >
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