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Notes on the Sanskrit Drama

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 December 2009

Extract

The fate of Bhāsa has been an unhappy one; long but little more than a name, his dramas have now been rescued from oblivion only to become the object of an energetic attack, which assures us that they are compilations and adaptations made for the stage of Kerala not earlier than the eighth century A.D., derived to some unknown extent from the works of Bhāsa. which, however, are now lost.

Type
Papers Contributed
Copyright
Copyright © School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London 1924

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References

1 Above, Vol. III, Pt. I, pp. 107 ff.

2 Über das Verhältnis zwischen Cārudatta und Mrcchakatikā.

3 Above, Vol. III, Pt. I, p. 35.

1 See Śāstrī, T. Gaṇapati, Tapatīsaṁvaraṇa (1911), pp. 2, 4.Google Scholar

1 Cf. Konow, S., Das indische Drama, p. 25.Google Scholar

2 JRAS. 1923, pp. 585 ff.Google Scholar

1 Das indische Drama, p. 71.Google Scholar

2 Mehendale, K. C. (Bhandarkar Commemoration Volume, pp. 367 ff.)Google Scholar merely places Çūdraka about A.D. 550.

3 JRAS. 1923, p. 600.Google Scholar

1 VOJ. ii, 213 ff.Google Scholar

2 See Dhruva, K. H., VOJ. v, 25 f.Google Scholar