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El. knyga: Ganitatilaka and its Commentary: Two Medieval Sanskrit Mathematical Texts

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The Ga itatilaka and its Commentary: Two Medieval Sanskrit Mathematical Texts presents the first English annotated translation and analysis of the Ga itatilaka by Sripati and its Sanskrit commentary by the Jaina monk Si hatilakasuri (13th century CE). Si hatilakasuri’s commentary upon the Ga itatilaka is a key text for the study of Sanskrit mathematical jargon and a precious source of information on mathematical practices of Medieval India; this is, in fact, the first known Sanskrit mathematical commentary written by a Jaina monk, upon whom we have substantial information, to survive to the present day.

In presenting the first annotated translation of these two Sanskrit mathematical texts, this volume focuses on language in mathematics, and put forward a novel, fresh approach to Sanskrit mathematical literature which favors attention to linguistic, literary features, and textual data. This key resource makes these important texts available in English for the first time for students of Sanskrit, medieval mathematics, South Asian history, and philology.

List of tables; Preface; List of abbreviations; Part 1: Introduction;
Chapter
1. Introducing the Gaitatilaka and its commentary;
Chapter
2. On the
edition of the Gaitatilaka and some methodological notes; Part 2:
Translation;
Chapter
3. Translation of the Gaitatilaka and its commentary;
Part 3: Text analysis;
Chapter
4. Text Analyis; Appendix 1: List of
mathematical rules and sample problems supplied by the SGT and which are
found in other works; Appendix 2: Rules and sample problems of the GT
occurring in other works; Appendix 3: Glossaries; Bibliography; Index
Alessandra Petrocchi completed a PhD in Sanskrit and Classical Indian Studies at the University of Cambridge, UK, and is currently a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow in the Faculty of Linguistics, Philology and Phonetics at the University of Oxford, UK, undertaking research into the early vernaculars of Italy and the history of numerals in the Renaissance. She has published several papers on Sanskrit sources on mathematics, comparative and historical Indo- European linguistics, and Italian Renaissance literature. Her research interests include textual criticism, manuscript studies, textual traditions and networks of knowledge across the Mediterranean, and the language-culture-literature interface.