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Sanskrit College, Mysore was established by Krishnaraja Wodeyar III, maharaja of Mysore. After his death, the next king Chamaraja Wodeyar formally opened a Sanskrit School in 1876. After his death, the next king Chamaraja Wodeyar formally opened a Sanskrit School in 1876.
The Maharaja Alak Narayana Society of Arts and Science (MANSAS) Trust, which was established by P.V.G. Raju on 12 November 1958, was instrumental for the development of the college. [2] During the recent years, there is declining interest in the government and public about the Sanskrit education, the college has got only single digit students.
The college finds its origins in the English-school known as "Maharaja Patashala" established by Maharaja of Mysore, Krishnaraja Wadiyar III in 1833, at the request of a British officer, General Fraser. Subsequently, it became a High School, and in 1868, after the death of Maharaja was handed over to the Government of Mysore.
Mishra began his career as a lecturer at Maharaja Sanskrit College in Jaipur, later advancing to the position of professor. In 1956, he was elected as a Minister and subsequently as Minister-in-Chief in 1959 for the All India Sanskrit Literature Association, an organization established by Pt. Madan Mohan Malaviya to represent Sanskrit ...
It was established in 1844 as Maharaja's School by Maharaja of Jaipur, Sawai Ram Singh II, along with Pandit Shivdeen, who also became its first principal.Originally affiliated with University of Calcutta,and subsequently with University of Allahabad in 1890, the college went on to become one of six constituent colleges of University of Rajasthan, established in 1947.
The school opened in 1859 under Maharaja Sri Uthram Thirunal as a free school for girls in Thiruvananthapuram.It operated in the present day Government Sanskrit College building at Palayam until the tenure of C. P. Ramaswami Iyer, the Diwan of Travancore.
Sudharma (Sanskrit: सुधर्मा) is the daily newspaper printed in Sanskrit in India. [1] The paper is published from the city of Mysore in the Indian state of Karnataka . [ 2 ] Established in 1970, the paper is mainly distributed via mail, a method that its founder resorted to when news vendors refused to stock his paper.
Vasudevacharya was born in an orthodox Madhwa Brahmin family in Mysore and started learning music from Veena Padmanabhiah, the chief musician of the Mysore court. He also mastered Sanskrit and allied fields such as Kavya, Vyakarana, Nataka, Alankaram, Tarka, Itihasa, Purana having studied at the Maharaja Sanskrit college in Mysore while learning music privately.