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  2. Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bhandarkar_Oriental...

    This edition in 19 volumes (more than 15,000 demi-quarto size pages) comprised the critically constituted text of the 18 parvas of the Mahabharata consisting of more than 89,000 verses, an elaborate critical apparatus and a prolegomena on the material and methodology (volume I), written by V.S. Sukthankar.

  3. Vishnu Sitaram Sukthankar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vishnu_Sitaram_Sukthankar

    Sukthankar's principles of textual criticism were also put to use towards the Critical Edition of the Ramayana, prepared during the years 1951-1975 by the Oriental Institute at the Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda. In January 1943, Sukthankar was invited to deliver a series of four lectures on the Mahabharata at the University of Bombay ...

  4. Mahabharata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahabharata

    The translation is based not on the Critical Edition but on the version known to the commentator Nīlakaṇṭha. Currently available are 15 volumes of the projected 32-volume edition. Indian Vedic Scholar Shripad Damodar Satwalekar translated the Critical Edition of Mahabharata into Hindi [82] which was assigned to him by the Government of ...

  5. Adi Parva - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adi_Parva

    The Adi Parva or The Book of the Beginning is the first of eighteen books of the Mahabharata. "Ādi" in Sanskrit means "first". Adi Parva traditionally has 19 parts and 236 adhyayas (chapters). [1] [2] The critical edition of Adi Parva has 19 parts and 225 chapters. [3] [4]

  6. Harivaṃśa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harivaṃśa

    The Critical Edition or CE (1969–71, Ed. P.L.Vaidya), estimated to be c. 300 Common Era by Vaidya, [ 17 ] is around a third (118 chapters in 6073 slokas) [ 18 ] of this vulgate edition. Like the vulgate, the chapters in the CE are divided into three parvas, Harivaṃśa parva (chapters 1-45), Viṣṇu parva (chapters 46-113) and Bhaviṣya ...

  7. Vana Parva - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vana_Parva

    The Vana Parva, also known as the "Book of the Forest", is the third of eighteen parvas in the Indian epic Mahabharata. [1] Vana Parva traditionally has 21 parts and 324 chapters. [2] [3] The critical edition of Vana Parva is the longest of the 18 books in the epic, [4] containing 16 parts and 299 chapters. [5] [6]

  8. Anushasana Parva - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anushasana_Parva

    Anushasana Parva (Sanskrit: अनुशासन पर्व, IAST: Anuśāsanaparva) or the "Book of Instructions", is the thirteenth of eighteen books of the Indian epic Mahabharata. It traditionally has 2 parts and 168 chapters. [1] [2] The critical edition has 2 parts and 154 chapters.

  9. Sabha Parva - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sabha_Parva

    Sabha Parva, also called the "Book of the Assembly Hall", is the second of eighteen books of Mahabharata. [1] Sabha Parva traditionally has 10 parts and 81 chapters. [2] [3] The critical edition of Sabha Parva has 9 parts and 72 chapters. [4] [5] Sabha Parva starts with the description of the palace and assembly hall (sabha) built by Maya, at ...

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