Dear all,
I have now been kindly provided with the editions not only of the Jñānadīpikā on the Sabhā- and Bhīṣmaparvan, but also S. K. De's edition of that on the Udyogaparvan. It turns out that I had after all overlooked a collection on Archive; it seems that all the parts of Devabodha's commentary that have been published, starting with the Ādiparvan, can be found here: https://archive.org/details/mahabharata_202303/Texts%20%26%20Translations/Devabodha%27s%20Jnanadipika/Commentary%20By%20Devabodha%20On%20Adiparva%20Mahabharata%20Dandekar%20R.N.%20%28Gyna%20Dipika%29%20BORI.pdf
Sorry, then, for the unnecessary post, but hopefully this can save someone some trouble in the future.
Best wishes,
Jason
Quoting "jason.cannon-silber--- via INDOLOGY" <indology@list.indology.info>:
Dear all,
As many will know, Devabodha is apparently the earliest commentator on the Mahābhārata whose work is (partially?) extant. A scan of R. N. Dandekar's 1941 edition of his Jñānadīpikā on the Ādiparvan can already be found on Internet Archive: https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.279878/mode/2up. I have also seen references to a 1947 edition of the commentary on the Bhīṣmaparvan from S. K. Belvalkar, and a 1949 edition of the commentary on the Sabhāparvan from R. D. Karmarkar, but these do not seem to be readily available on the Internet. I would be very grateful if someone could provide me with scans of these two editions, or give me a hint as to how I might acquire one. I see that, in relatively recent times, Basile Leclère has been able to cite them in his article "New Light on Devabodha."
I would also be interested to know if anyone has been looking into the manuscript material recently—if, for example, unpublished MSS of his commentary for the other parvan-s are known.
Humbly yours,
Jason