[INDOLOGY] Fwd: Announcement: launch of Searchable Aggregate Library of Sanskrit Etexts
Tyler Neill
tyler.g.neill at gmail.com
Sun Feb 15 13:50:08 UTC 2026
Dear Harry,
This is very cool. The search facility is intuitive and works great, taking
you right to the correct spot in the text. Thank you for
creating this option for the community. Lots of people have needed this for
a long time.
Small question: I am looking for Nyāyamañjarī from SARIT (I'm curious how
you manage the plain-text representation of more complex TEI cases), but I
cannot find it. Can you clarify the corpora scopes covered so far? An
overview table on the site somewhere could be helpful.
Best wishes,
Tyler
---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: Harry Spier <vasishtha.spier at gmail.com>
> To: indology at list.indology.info
> Cc:
> Bcc:
> Date: Sun, 15 Feb 2026 00:37:43 -0500
> Subject: [INDOLOGY] Fwd: Announcement: launch of Searchable Aggregate
> Library of Sanskrit Etexts
> Dear list members,
> I am extremely pleased to announce the launch of the "Searchable Aggregate
> Library of Sanskrit Etexts" newly created by myself from the major
> sanskrit etext collections on the web, whose licensing permits their
> copying for non-commercial use.
>
> Link: *searchable-sanskrit-library.org
> <http://searchable-sanskrit-library.org>*
>
> 1) It contains 1501 etexts giving a cross section of sanskrit texts from
> the vedic texts onward to pre-modern . The etexts are copied from the
> following collections.
> GRETIL sanskrit etext collection: 804 etexts
> SARIT sanskrit etexts in transliteration: 54 etexts
> University of Texas Dharma etexts and Upanishad etext collections: 86
> etexts
> Digital Corpus of Sanskrit vedic prose collection (containing many TITUS
> texts): 58 etexts.
> Muktabodha etext collections with Creative Commons licencing (not
> including its joint venture etexts) : 499 etexts
>
> 2) There is a single clickable index to the entire collection in sanskrit
> letter order.
>
> 3) The search engine allows searchs in normal mode or with regular
> expressions. The results are displayed in what's known as "search in files"
> format, which shows all the results in a single page. Clicking on a result
> opens the relevant etext to that line in a new tab.
>
> If clicking on a line doesn't open the file up, then your browser malware
> protection may be the problem and you will have to add the url *searchable-sanskrit-library.org
> <http://searchable-sanskrit-library.org>* as a safe site.
>
> 4) Care has been taken to give credit to the institutions and
> transcribers. All files have their original headers and the clickable
> index to the etexts lists in addition to the titles, the institution and
> the transcribers names that created the etext.
>
> It is hoped that this new etext library will be both a location to
> search for etexts but also given that the collection is a cross-section of
> the literature from the earliest times onwards and regular expression
> searchs can be done, it is hoped that it will also be a research tool.
>
> This is a private initiative unaffiliated with any organisation.
>
> Thank you,
> Harry Spier
>
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