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Katapayadi system

Kaṭapayādi system (Devanagari: कटपयादि, also known as Paralppēru, Malayalam: പരല്‍പ്പേര്) of numerical notation is an ancient Indian alphasyllabic numeral system to depict letters to numerals for easy remembrance of numbers as words or verses. Assigning more than one letter to one numeral and nullifying certain other letters as valueless, this system provides the flexibility in forming meaningful words out of numbers which can be easily remembered.

KaTaPaYadi System – Values

History edit

The oldest available evidence of the use of Kaṭapayādi (Sanskrit: कटपयादि) system is from Grahacāraṇibandhana by Haridatta in 683 CE.[1] It has been used in Laghu·bhāskarīya·vivaraṇa written by Śaṅkara·nārāyaṇa in 869 CE.[2]

Some argue that the system originated from Vararuci.[3] In some astronomical texts popular in Kerala planetary positions were encoded in the Kaṭapayādi system. The first such work is considered to be the Chandra-vakyani of Vararuci, who is traditionally assigned to the fourth century CE. Therefore, sometime in the early first millennium is a reasonable estimate for the origin of the Kaṭapayādi system.[4]

Aryabhata, in his treatise Ārya·bhaṭīya, is known to have used a similar, more complex system to represent astronomical numbers. There is no definitive evidence whether the Ka-ṭa-pa-yā-di system originated from Āryabhaṭa numeration.[5]

Geographical spread of the use edit

Almost all evidences of the use of Ka-ṭa-pa-yā-di system is from South India, especially Kerala. Not much is known about its use in North India. However, on a Sanskrit astrolabe discovered in North India, the degrees of the altitude are marked in the Kaṭapayādi system. It is preserved in the Sarasvati Bhavan Library of Sampurnanand Sanskrit University, Varanasi. [6]

The Ka-ṭa-pa-yā-di system is not confined to India. Some Pali chronograms based on the Ka-ṭa-pa-yā-di system have been discovered in Burma.[7]

Rules and practices edit

Following verse found in Śaṅkaravarman's Sadratnamāla explains the mechanism of the system.[8][9]

नञावचश्च शून्यानि संख्या: कटपयादय:।
मिश्रे तूपान्त्यहल् संख्या न च चिन्त्यो हलस्वर:॥

Transliteration:

nanyāvachaścha śūnyāni sankhyāḥ kaṭapayādayaḥ
miśre tūpāntyahal sankhyā na cha chintyo halasvaraḥ

Translation: na (न), ña (ञ) and a (अ)-s, i.e., vowels represent zero. The nine integers are represented by consonant group beginning with ka, ṭa, pa, ya. In a conjunct consonant, the last of the consonants alone will count. A consonant without a vowel is to be ignored.

Explanation: The assignment of letters to the numerals are as per the following arrangement (In Devanagari, Kannada, Telugu & Malayalam scripts respectively)

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0
ka क ಕ క ക kha ख ಖ ఖ ഖ ga ग ಗ గ ഗ gha घ ಘ ఘ ഘ nga ङ ಙ

ఙ ങ

ca च ಚ చ ച cha छ ಛ ఛ ഛ ja ज ಜ జ ജ jha झ ಝ ఝ ഝ nya ञ ಞ ఞ ഞ
ṭa ट ಟ ట ട ṭha ठ ಠ ఠ ഠ ḍa ड ಡ డ ഡ ḍha ढ ಢ ఢ ഢ ṇa ण ಣ ణ ണ ta त ತ త ത tha थ ಥ థ ഥ da द ದ ద ദ dha ध ಧ ధ ധ na न ನ న ന
pa प ಪ ప പ pha फ ಫ ఫ ഫ ba ब బ ബ bha भ ಭ భ ഭ ma म ಮ మ മ
ya य ಯ య യ ra र ರ ర ര la ल ల ల ല va व ವ వ വ śa श ಶ శ ശ ṣa ष ಷ ష ഷ sa स ಸ స സ ha ह ಹ హ ഹ
  • Consonants have numerals assigned as per the above table. For example, ba (ब) is always 3 whereas 5 can be represented by either nga (ङ) or ṇa (ण) or ma (म) or śha (श).
  • All stand-alone vowels like a (अ) and (ऋ) are assigned to zero.
  • In case of a conjunct, consonants attached to a non-vowel will be valueless. For example, kya (क्य) is formed by, k (क्) + y (य्) + a (अ). The only consonant standing with a vowel is ya (य). So the corresponding numeral for kya (क्य) will be 1.
  • There is no way of representing the decimal separator in the system.
  • Indians used the Hindu–Arabic numeral system for numbering, traditionally written in increasing place values from left to right. This is as per the rule "अङ्कानां वामतो गतिः" which means numbers go from right to left.

Variations edit

  • The consonant, ḷ (Malayālam: ള, Devanāgarī: ळ, Kannada: ಳ) is employed in works using the Kaṭapayādi system, like Mādhava's sine table.
  • Late medieval practitioners do not map the stand-alone vowels to zero. But, it is sometimes considered valueless.

Usage edit

Mathematics and astronomy edit

അനൂനനൂന്നാനനനുന്നനിത്യൈ-
സ്സമാഹതാശ്ചക്രകലാവിഭക്താഃ
ചണ്ഡാംശുചന്ദ്രാധമകുംഭിപാലൈര്‍-
വ്യാസസ്തദര്‍ദ്ധം ത്രിഭമൗര്‍വിക സ്യാത്‌
Transliteration
anūnanūnnānananunnanityai
ssmāhatāścakra kalāvibhaktoḥ
caṇḍāṃśucandrādhamakuṃbhipālair

vyāsastadarddhaṃ tribhamaurvika syāt

It gives the circumference of a circle of diameter, anūnanūnnānananunnanityai (10,000,000,000) as caṇḍāṃśucandrādhamakuṃbhipālair (31415926536).
(स्याद्) भद्राम्बुधिसिद्धजन्मगणितश्रद्धा स्म यद् भूपगी:
Transliteration
(syād) bhadrāmbudhisiddhajanmagaṇitaśraddhā sma yad bhūpagīḥ
Splitting the consonants in the relevant phrase gives,
भ bha द् d रा rā म् m बु bu द् d धि dhi सि si द् d ध dha ज ja न् n म ma ग ga णि ṇi त ta श् ś र ra द् d धा dhā स् s म ma य ya द् d भू bhū प pa गी gī
4 2 3 9 7 9 8 5 3 5 6 2 9 5 1 4 1 3
Reversing the digits to modern-day usage of descending order of decimal places, we get 314159265358979324 which is the value of pi (π) to 17 decimal places, except the last digit might be rounded off to 4.
  • This verse encrypts the value of pi (π) up to 31 decimal places.
 गोपीभाग्यमधुव्रात-शृङ्गिशोदधिसन्धिग॥ खलजीवितखाताव गलहालारसंधर॥ 
 ಗೋಪೀಭಾಗ್ಯಮಧುವ್ರಾತ-ಶೃಂಗಿಶೋದಧಿಸಂಧಿಗ || ಖಲಜೀವಿತಖಾತಾವ ಗಲಹಾಲಾರಸಂಧರ || 

This verse directly yields the decimal equivalent of pi divided by 10: pi/10 = 0.31415926535897932384626433832792

 గోపీభాగ్యమధువ్రాత-శృంగిశోదధిసంధిగ | ఖలజీవితఖాతావ గలహాలారసంధర || 

Traditionally, the order of digits are reversed to form the number, in katapayadi system. This rule is violated in this sloka.

Carnatic music edit

 
Melakarta chart as per Kaṭapayādi system
  • The melakarta ragas of the Carnatic music are named so that the first two syllables of the name will give its number. This system is sometimes called the Ka-ta-pa-ya-di sankhya. The Swaras 'Sa' and 'Pa' are fixed, and here is how to get the other swaras from the melakarta number.
  1. Melakartas 1 through 36 have Ma1 and those from 37 through 72 have Ma2.
  2. The other notes are derived by noting the (integral part of the) quotient and remainder when one less than the melakarta number is divided by 6. If the melakarta number is greater than 36, subtract 36 from the melakarta number before performing this step.
  3. 'Ri' and 'Ga' positions: the raga will have:
    • Ri1 and Ga1 if the quotient is 0
    • Ri1 and Ga2 if the quotient is 1
    • Ri1 and Ga3 if the quotient is 2
    • Ri2 and Ga2 if the quotient is 3
    • Ri2 and Ga3 if the quotient is 4
    • Ri3 and Ga3 if the quotient is 5
  4. 'Da' and 'Ni' positions: the raga will have:
    • Da1 and Ni1 if remainder is 0
    • Da1 and Ni2 if remainder is 1
    • Da1 and Ni3 if remainder is 2
    • Da2 and Ni2 if remainder is 3
    • Da2 and Ni3 if remainder is 4
    • Da3 and Ni3 if remainder is 5

Raga Dheerasankarabharanam edit

The katapayadi scheme associates dha 9 and ra 2, hence the raga's melakarta number is 29 (92 reversed). 29 less than 36, hence Dheerasankarabharanam has Ma1. Divide 28 (1 less than 29) by 6, the quotient is 4 and the remainder 4. Therefore, this raga has Ri2, Ga3 (quotient is 4) and Da2, Ni3 (remainder is 4). Therefore, this raga's scale is Sa Ri2 Ga3 Ma1 Pa Da2 Ni3 SA.

Raga MechaKalyani edit

From the coding scheme Ma   5, Cha   6. Hence the raga's melakarta number is 65 (56 reversed). 65 is greater than 36. So MechaKalyani has Ma2. Since the raga's number is greater than 36 subtract 36 from it. 65–36=29. 28 (1 less than 29) divided by 6: quotient=4, remainder=4. Ri2 Ga3 occurs. Da2 Ni3 occurs. So MechaKalyani has the notes Sa Ri2 Ga3 Ma2 Pa Da2 Ni3 SA.

Exception for Simhendramadhyamam edit

As per the above calculation, we should get Sa   7, Ha   8 giving the number 87 instead of 57 for Simhendramadhyamam. This should be ideally Sa   7, Ma   5 giving the number 57. So it is believed that the name should be written as Sihmendramadhyamam (as in the case of Brahmana in Sanskrit).

Representation of dates edit

Important dates were remembered by converting them using Kaṭapayādi system. These dates are generally represented as number of days since the start of Kali Yuga. It is sometimes called kalidina sankhya.

  • The Malayalam calendar known as kollavarsham (Malayalam: കൊല്ലവര്‍ഷം) was adopted in Kerala beginning from 825 CE, revamping some calendars. This date is remembered as āchārya vāgbhadā, converted using Kaṭapayādi into 1434160 days since the start of Kali Yuga.[11]
  • Narayaniyam, written by Melpathur Narayana Bhattathiri, ends with the line, āyurārogyasaukhyam (ആയുരാരോഗ്യസൌഖ്യം) which means long-life, health and happiness.[12]
In Malayalam ആയുരാരോഗ്യസൌഖ്യം
In Devanagari आयुरारोग्यसौख्यम्
In IAST āyurārogyasaukhyam
Value as per Kaṭapayādi 1712210
This number is the time at which the work was completed represented as number of days since the start of Kali Yuga as per the Malayalam calendar.

Others edit

  • Some people use the Kaṭapayādi system in naming newborns.[13][14]
  • The following verse compiled in Malayalam by Koduṅṅallur Kuññikkuṭṭan Taṃpurān using Kaṭapayādi is the number of days in the months of Gregorian Calendar.
പലഹാരേ പാലു നല്ലൂ, പുലര്‍ന്നാലോ കലക്കിലാം
ഇല്ലാ പാലെന്നു ഗോപാലന്‍ – ആംഗ്ലമാസദിനം ക്രമാല്‍
Transliteration
palahāre pālu nallū, pularnnālo kalakkilāṃ
illā pālennu gopālan – āṃgḷamāsadinaṃ kramāl
Translation: Milk is best for breakfast, when it is morning, it should be stirred. But Gopālan says there is no milk – the number of days of English months in order.
Converting pairs of letters using Kaṭapayādi yields – pala (പല) is 31, hāre (ഹാരേ) is 28, pālu പാലു = 31, nallū (നല്ലൂ) is 30, pular (പുലര്‍) is 31, nnālo (ന്നാലോ) is 30, kala (കല) is 31, kkilāṃ (ക്കിലാം) is 31, illā (ഇല്ലാ) is 30, pāle (പാലെ) is 31, nnu go (ന്നു ഗോ) is 30, pālan (പാലന്‍) is 31.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Sreeramamula Rajeswara Sarma, THE KATAPAYADI SYSTEM OF NUMERICAL NOTATION AND ITS SPREAD OUTSIDE KERALA, Rev. d'Histoire de Mathmatique 18 (2012) [1]
  2. ^ J J O'Connor; E F Robertson (November 2000). "Sankara Narayana". School of Mathematics and Statistics, University of St Andrews, Scotland. Retrieved 1 January 2010.
  3. ^ Usenet Discussion. "Aryabhatta's numerical encoding". Archived from the original on 17 July 2011. Retrieved 1 January 2010.
  4. ^ Plofker, Kim (2009). Mathematics in India. Princeton University Press. p. 384. ISBN 978-0-691-12067-6.
  5. ^ J. F. Fleet (April 1912). "The Ka-ta-pa-ya-di Notation of the Second Arya-Siddhanta". The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland. 44. Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland: 459–462. doi:10.1017/S0035869X00043197. JSTOR 25190035. S2CID 163907655.
  6. ^ Sreeramamula Rajeswara Sarma (1999), Kaṭapayādi Notation on a Sanskrit Astrolabe. Ind. J. Hist. Sc.34(4) (1999)[2]
  7. ^ J.F. Fleet (July 1911). "The Katapayadi System of Expressing Numbers". The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland. 43 (3). Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland: 788–794. doi:10.1017/S0035869X00041952. JSTOR 25189917. S2CID 163597699.
  8. ^ Sarma, K.V. (2001). "Sadratnamala of Sankara Varman". Indian Journal of History of Science (Indian National Academy of Science, New Delhi) 36 (3–4 (Supplement)): 1–58. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 17 December 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  9. ^ Anand Raman. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 June 2011. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  10. ^ Sarma (2001), p. 26
  11. ^ Francis Zimmerman, 1989, Lilavati, gracious lady of arithmetic – India – A Mathematical Mystery Tour . Archived from the original on 6 September 2009. Retrieved 3 January 2010.
  12. ^ Dr. C Krishnan Namboodiri, Chekrakal Illam, Calicut, Namboothiti.com Dr. C Krishnan Namboodiri. ""Katapayaadi" or "Paralpperu"". Namboothiri Websites Trust. Retrieved 1 January 2010.
  13. ^ Visti Larsen, Choosing the auspicious name[permanent dead link]
  14. ^ "The Principles of Naming".

External links edit

  1. Kaṭapayādi Saṅkhyā, a Kaṭapayādi encoding-decoding system.

Further reading edit

  • A.A. Hattangadi, Explorations in Mathematics, Universities Press (India) Pvt. Ltd., Hyderabad (2001) ISBN 81-7371-387-1 [3]

katapayadi, system, this, article, should, specify, language, english, content, using, lang, transliteration, transliterated, languages, phonetic, transcriptions, with, appropriate, code, wikipedia, multilingual, support, templates, also, used, august, 2022, t. This article should specify the language of its non English content using lang transliteration for transliterated languages and IPA for phonetic transcriptions with an appropriate ISO 639 code Wikipedia s multilingual support templates may also be used See why August 2022 This article contains Indic text Without proper rendering support you may see question marks or boxes misplaced vowels or missing conjuncts instead of Indic text Kaṭapayadi system Devanagari कटपय द also known as Paralpperu Malayalam പരല പ പ ര of numerical notation is an ancient Indian alphasyllabic numeral system to depict letters to numerals for easy remembrance of numbers as words or verses Assigning more than one letter to one numeral and nullifying certain other letters as valueless this system provides the flexibility in forming meaningful words out of numbers which can be easily remembered KaTaPaYadi System Values Contents 1 History 2 Geographical spread of the use 3 Rules and practices 3 1 Variations 4 Usage 4 1 Mathematics and astronomy 4 2 Carnatic music 4 2 1 Raga Dheerasankarabharanam 4 2 2 Raga MechaKalyani 4 2 3 Exception for Simhendramadhyamam 4 3 Representation of dates 4 4 Others 5 See also 6 References 7 External links 8 Further readingHistory editThe oldest available evidence of the use of Kaṭapayadi Sanskrit कटपय द system is from Grahacaraṇibandhana by Haridatta in 683 CE 1 It has been used in Laghu bhaskariya vivaraṇa written by Saṅkara narayaṇa in 869 CE 2 Some argue that the system originated from Vararuci 3 In some astronomical texts popular in Kerala planetary positions were encoded in the Kaṭapayadi system The first such work is considered to be the Chandra vakyani of Vararuci who is traditionally assigned to the fourth century CE Therefore sometime in the early first millennium is a reasonable estimate for the origin of the Kaṭapayadi system 4 Aryabhata in his treatise Arya bhaṭiya is known to have used a similar more complex system to represent astronomical numbers There is no definitive evidence whether the Ka ṭa pa ya di system originated from Aryabhaṭa numeration 5 Geographical spread of the use editAlmost all evidences of the use of Ka ṭa pa ya di system is from South India especially Kerala Not much is known about its use in North India However on a Sanskrit astrolabe discovered in North India the degrees of the altitude are marked in the Kaṭapayadi system It is preserved in the Sarasvati Bhavan Library of Sampurnanand Sanskrit University Varanasi 6 The Ka ṭa pa ya di system is not confined to India Some Pali chronograms based on the Ka ṭa pa ya di system have been discovered in Burma 7 Rules and practices editFollowing verse found in Saṅkaravarman s Sadratnamala explains the mechanism of the system 8 9 नञ वचश च श न य न स ख य कटपय दय म श र त प न त यहल स ख य न च च न त य हलस वर Transliteration nanyavachascha sunyani sankhyaḥ kaṭapayadayaḥ misre tupantyahal sankhya na cha chintyo halasvaraḥ Translation na न na ञ and a अ s i e vowels represent zero The nine integers are represented by consonant group beginning with ka ṭa pa ya In a conjunct consonant the last of the consonants alone will count A consonant without a vowel is to be ignored Explanation The assignment of letters to the numerals are as per the following arrangement In Devanagari Kannada Telugu amp Malayalam scripts respectively 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 ka क ಕ క ക kha ख ಖ ఖ ഖ ga ग ಗ గ ഗ gha घ ಘ ఘ ഘ nga ङ ಙ ఙ ങ ca च ಚ చ ച cha छ ಛ ఛ ഛ ja ज ಜ జ ജ jha झ ಝ ఝ ഝ nya ञ ಞ ఞ ഞ ṭa ट ಟ ట ട ṭha ठ ಠ ఠ ഠ ḍa ड ಡ డ ഡ ḍha ढ ಢ ఢ ഢ ṇa ण ಣ ణ ണ ta त ತ త ത tha थ ಥ థ ഥ da द ದ ద ദ dha ध ಧ ధ ധ na न ನ న ന pa प ಪ ప പ pha फ ಫ ఫ ഫ ba ब బ ബ bha भ ಭ భ ഭ ma म ಮ మ മ ya य ಯ య യ ra र ರ ర ര la ल ల ల ല va व ವ వ വ sa श ಶ శ ശ ṣa ष ಷ ష ഷ sa स ಸ స സ ha ह ಹ హ ഹ Consonants have numerals assigned as per the above table For example ba ब is always 3 whereas 5 can be represented by either nga ङ or ṇa ण or ma म or sha श All stand alone vowels like a अ and ṛ ऋ are assigned to zero In case of a conjunct consonants attached to a non vowel will be valueless For example kya क य is formed by k क y य a अ The only consonant standing with a vowel is ya य So the corresponding numeral for kya क य will be 1 There is no way of representing the decimal separator in the system Indians used the Hindu Arabic numeral system for numbering traditionally written in increasing place values from left to right This is as per the rule अङ क न व मत गत which means numbers go from right to left Variations edit The consonant ḷ Malayalam ള Devanagari ळ Kannada ಳ is employed in works using the Kaṭapayadi system like Madhava s sine table Late medieval practitioners do not map the stand alone vowels to zero But it is sometimes considered valueless Usage editMathematics and astronomy edit Madhava s sine table constructed by 14th century Kerala mathematician astronomer Madhava of Saṅgama grama employs the Kaṭapayadi system to list the trigonometric sines of angles Karaṇa paddhati written in the 15th century has the following sloka for the value of pi p അന നന ന ന നനന ന നന ത യ സ സമ ഹത ശ ചക രകല വ ഭക ത ചണ ഡ ശ ചന ദ ര ധമക ഭ പ ല ര വ യ സസ തദര ദ ധ ത ര ഭമ ര വ ക സ യ ത Transliteration anunanunnanananunnanityai ssmahatascakra kalavibhaktoḥ caṇḍaṃsucandradhamakuṃbhipalair vyasastadarddhaṃ tribhamaurvika syat It gives the circumference of a circle of diameter anunanunnanananunnanityai 10 000 000 000 as caṇḍaṃsucandradhamakuṃbhipalair 31415926536 Saṅkara varman s Sad ratna mala uses the Kaṭapayadi system The first verse of Chapter 4 of the Sad ratna mala ends with the line 10 स य द भद र म ब ध स द धजन मगण तश रद ध स म यद भ पग Transliteration syad bhadrambudhisiddhajanmagaṇitasraddha sma yad bhupagiḥ Splitting the consonants in the relevant phrase gives भ bha द d र ra म m ब bu द d ध dhi स si द d ध dha ज ja न n म ma ग ga ण ṇi त ta श s र ra द d ध dha स s म ma य ya द d भ bhu प pa ग gi 4 2 3 9 7 9 8 5 3 5 6 2 9 5 1 4 1 3 Reversing the digits to modern day usage of descending order of decimal places we get 314159265358979324 which is the value of pi p to 17 decimal places except the last digit might be rounded off to 4 This verse encrypts the value of pi p up to 31 decimal places ग प भ ग यमध व र त श ङ ग श दध सन ध ग खलज व तख त व गलह ल रस धर ಗ ಪ ಭ ಗ ಯಮಧ ವ ರ ತ ಶ ಗ ಶ ದಧ ಸ ಧ ಗ ಖಲಜ ವ ತಖ ತ ವ ಗಲಹ ಲ ರಸ ಧರ This verse directly yields the decimal equivalent of pi divided by 10 pi 10 0 31415926535897932384626433832792 గ ప భ గ యమధ వ ర త శ గ శ దధ స ధ గ ఖలజ వ తఖ త వ గలహ ల రస ధర Traditionally the order of digits are reversed to form the number in katapayadi system This rule is violated in this sloka Carnatic music edit nbsp Melakarta chart as per Kaṭapayadi system The melakarta ragas of the Carnatic music are named so that the first two syllables of the name will give its number This system is sometimes called the Ka ta pa ya di sankhya The Swaras Sa and Pa are fixed and here is how to get the other swaras from the melakarta number Melakartas 1 through 36 have Ma1 and those from 37 through 72 have Ma2 The other notes are derived by noting the integral part of the quotient and remainder when one less than the melakarta number is divided by 6 If the melakarta number is greater than 36 subtract 36 from the melakarta number before performing this step Ri and Ga positions the raga will have Ri1 and Ga1 if the quotient is 0 Ri1 and Ga2 if the quotient is 1 Ri1 and Ga3 if the quotient is 2 Ri2 and Ga2 if the quotient is 3 Ri2 and Ga3 if the quotient is 4 Ri3 and Ga3 if the quotient is 5 Da and Ni positions the raga will have Da1 and Ni1 if remainder is 0 Da1 and Ni2 if remainder is 1 Da1 and Ni3 if remainder is 2 Da2 and Ni2 if remainder is 3 Da2 and Ni3 if remainder is 4 Da3 and Ni3 if remainder is 5 See swaras in Carnatic music for details on above notation Raga Dheerasankarabharanam edit The katapayadi scheme associates dha displaystyle leftrightarrow nbsp 9 and ra displaystyle leftrightarrow nbsp 2 hence the raga s melakarta number is 29 92 reversed 29 less than 36 hence Dheerasankarabharanam has Ma1 Divide 28 1 less than 29 by 6 the quotient is 4 and the remainder 4 Therefore this raga has Ri2 Ga3 quotient is 4 and Da2 Ni3 remainder is 4 Therefore this raga s scale is Sa Ri2 Ga3 Ma1 Pa Da2 Ni3 SA Raga MechaKalyani edit From the coding scheme Ma displaystyle leftrightarrow nbsp 5 Cha displaystyle leftrightarrow nbsp 6 Hence the raga s melakarta number is 65 56 reversed 65 is greater than 36 So MechaKalyani has Ma2 Since the raga s number is greater than 36 subtract 36 from it 65 36 29 28 1 less than 29 divided by 6 quotient 4 remainder 4 Ri2 Ga3 occurs Da2 Ni3 occurs So MechaKalyani has the notes Sa Ri2 Ga3 Ma2 Pa Da2 Ni3 SA Exception for Simhendramadhyamam edit As per the above calculation we should get Sa displaystyle leftrightarrow nbsp 7 Ha displaystyle leftrightarrow nbsp 8 giving the number 87 instead of 57 for Simhendramadhyamam This should be ideally Sa displaystyle leftrightarrow nbsp 7 Ma displaystyle leftrightarrow nbsp 5 giving the number 57 So it is believed that the name should be written as Sihmendramadhyamam as in the case of Brahmana in Sanskrit Representation of dates edit Important dates were remembered by converting them using Kaṭapayadi system These dates are generally represented as number of days since the start of Kali Yuga It is sometimes called kalidina sankhya The Malayalam calendar known as kollavarsham Malayalam ക ല ലവര ഷ was adopted in Kerala beginning from 825 CE revamping some calendars This date is remembered as acharya vagbhada converted using Kaṭapayadi into 1434160 days since the start of Kali Yuga 11 Narayaniyam written by Melpathur Narayana Bhattathiri ends with the line ayurarogyasaukhyam ആയ ര ര ഗ യസ ഖ യ which means long life health and happiness 12 In Malayalam ആയ ര ര ഗ യസ ഖ യ In Devanagari आय र र ग यस ख यम In IAST ayurarogyasaukhyam Value as per Kaṭapayadi 1712210 This number is the time at which the work was completed represented as number of days since the start of Kali Yuga as per the Malayalam calendar Others edit Some people use the Kaṭapayadi system in naming newborns 13 14 The following verse compiled in Malayalam by Koduṅṅallur Kunnikkuṭṭan Taṃpuran using Kaṭapayadi is the number of days in the months of Gregorian Calendar പലഹ ര പ ല നല ല പ ലര ന ന ല കലക ക ല ഇല ല പ ല ന ന ഗ പ ലന ആ ഗ ലമ സദ ന ക രമ ല Transliteration palahare palu nallu pularnnalo kalakkilaṃ illa palennu gopalan aṃgḷamasadinaṃ kramal Translation Milk is best for breakfast when it is morning it should be stirred But Gopalan says there is no milk the number of days of English months in order Converting pairs of letters using Kaṭapayadi yields pala പല is 31 hare ഹ ര is 28 palu പ ല 31 nallu നല ല is 30 pular പ ലര is 31 nnalo ന ന ല is 30 kala കല is 31 kkilaṃ ക ക ല is 31 illa ഇല ല is 30 pale പ ല is 31 nnu go ന ന ഗ is 30 palan പ ലന is 31 See also editAbjad numerals Aksharapalli Aryabhata numeration Bhutasamkhya system Gematria Greek numerals Kerala school of astronomy and mathematics Madhava s sine table Mnemonic major system Notarikon Temurah Kabbalah Alphasyllabic numeral systemReferences edit Sreeramamula Rajeswara Sarma THE KATAPAYADI SYSTEM OF NUMERICAL NOTATION AND ITS SPREAD OUTSIDE KERALA Rev d Histoire de Mathmatique 18 2012 1 J J O Connor E F Robertson November 2000 Sankara Narayana School of Mathematics and Statistics University of St Andrews Scotland Retrieved 1 January 2010 Usenet Discussion Aryabhatta s numerical encoding Archived from the original on 17 July 2011 Retrieved 1 January 2010 Plofker Kim 2009 Mathematics in India Princeton University Press p 384 ISBN 978 0 691 12067 6 J F Fleet April 1912 The Ka ta pa ya di Notation of the Second Arya Siddhanta The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 44 Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 459 462 doi 10 1017 S0035869X00043197 JSTOR 25190035 S2CID 163907655 Sreeramamula Rajeswara Sarma 1999 Kaṭapayadi Notation on a Sanskrit Astrolabe Ind J Hist Sc 34 4 1999 2 J F Fleet July 1911 The Katapayadi System of Expressing Numbers The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 43 3 Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 788 794 doi 10 1017 S0035869X00041952 JSTOR 25189917 S2CID 163597699 Sarma K V 2001 Sadratnamala of Sankara Varman Indian Journal of History of Science Indian National Academy of Science New Delhi 36 3 4 Supplement 1 58 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 17 December 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Anand Raman The Ancient Katapayadi Formula and the Modern Hashing Method PDF Archived from the original PDF on 16 June 2011 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Sarma 2001 p 26 Francis Zimmerman 1989 Lilavati gracious lady of arithmetic India A Mathematical Mystery Tour Lilavati gracious lady of arithmetic India A Mathematical Mystery Tour UNESCO Courier Find Articles at BNET Archived from the original on 6 September 2009 Retrieved 3 January 2010 Dr C Krishnan Namboodiri Chekrakal Illam Calicut Namboothiti com Dr C Krishnan Namboodiri Katapayaadi or Paralpperu Namboothiri Websites Trust Retrieved 1 January 2010 Visti Larsen Choosing the auspicious name permanent dead link The Principles of Naming External links editKaṭapayadi Saṅkhya a Kaṭapayadi encoding decoding system Further reading editA A Hattangadi Explorations in Mathematics Universities Press India Pvt Ltd Hyderabad 2001 ISBN 81 7371 387 1 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Katapayadi system amp oldid 1213016462, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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