Dear McComas,This must have happened gradually after the Sanskrit Pundits were exposed to English printing. Even the early Sanskrit printed texts in the form of pothis did not separate words. I have many such old printed materials. I have attached a sample page. If this practice continued into early printing, it is simply because the printing style was copying the writing style of the manuscripts. I have photographs of a few texts that were hand written by the famous Pandit Vasudeva Shastri Abhyankar where I do not see gaps between the words. Early pothis of Vedic texts printed by the Nirnaya Sagara Press also do not show any gaps between words.Madhav DeshpandeCampbell, CaliforniaOn Mon, May 14, 2018 at 9:02 PM, McComas Taylor via INDOLOGY <indology@list.indology.info> wrote:______________________________Dear colleagues
A student has asked me a questions I cannot answer: 'When did scribes begin to insert spaces between words in Sanskrit manuscripts?'
Can any of you learned folk help us out?
Thanks in advance
McComas
------------------------------------------------------------ ------------ McComas Taylor, SFHEA
Associate Professor, Reader in Sanskrit
College of Asia and the Pacific
The Australian National University, Tel. + 61 2 6125 3179
Website: https://sites.google.com/site/mccomasanu/
Address: Baldessin Building 4.24, ANU, ACT 0200
Ask me about my new project:
'Translating the Viṣṇu Purāṇa'
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