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The Matta-Vilāsa and “Bhāsa”
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 December 2009
Extract
In 1912 Pandit Ganapati Sastri, the learned editor of the Trivandrum Sanskrit Series, began to publish a group of thirteen plays, all apparently by the same author, which now fill numbers 15–17, 20, 22, 26, 39, and 42 of the series, and for which he claims Bhāsa as author. As Bhāsa was considerably earlier than the great Kālidāsa, who speaks of him in the prelude of his Mālaxikâgnimitra as a poet of established reputation, and as no works of Bhāsa have hitherto been known to survive, this discovery has naturally aroused much interest, and the erudite accepted.
- Type
- Papers Contributed
- Information
- Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies , Volume 1 , Issue 3 , October 1920 , pp. 35 - 38
- Copyright
- Copyright © School of Oriental and African Studies 1920
References
1 Nāgasēna is the name of the famous Buddhist divine who is the protagonist of the Milinda-panhā
2 See South Indian Inscriptions, vol. i pp. 29–30Google Scholar; Epigraphia Indica, vol. iv, p. 152Google Scholar; Archaological Surrey of the Director-General of Archaology, 1903–4, pp. 270 ff.Google Scholar; Jouvean-Dubreuil, G.The allaras, pp. 37 ff., etc.Google Scholar