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Shastra

Shastra (शास्त्र, IAST: Śāstra, IPA: [ʃaːst̪rə]) is a Sanskrit word that means "precept, rules, manual, compendium, book or treatise" in a general sense.[1] The word is generally used as a suffix in the Indian literature context, for technical or specialized knowledge in a defined area of practice.[2]

Shastra has a similar meaning to English -logy, e.g. ecology, psychology, meaning scientific and basic knowledge on a particular subject. Examples in terms of modern neologisms include

  1. bhautikaśāstra 'physics',
  2. rasaśāstra 'chemistry',
  3. jīvaśāstra 'biology',
  4. vāstuśāstra 'architectural science',
  5. śilpaśāstra 'science of mechanical arts and sculpture',
  6. arthaśāstra 'science of politics and economics',[3] and
  7. nītiśāstra 'compendium of ethics or right policy'.

In Western literature, Shastra is sometimes spelled as Sastra,[4] reflecting a misunderstanding of the IAST symbol 'ś', which corresponds to the English 'sh'.

Etymology edit

The word Śāstra literally means "that which has been instructed/decreed", from the root Śāsana which means "instruction/decree".[5][6]

Terminology edit

"Shastra" commonly refers to a treatise or text on a specific field of knowledge. In early Vedic literature, the word referred to any precept, rule, teaching, ritual instruction or direction.[1] In late and post Vedic literature of Hinduism, Shastra referred to any treatise, book or instrument of teaching, any manual or compendium on any subject in any field of knowledge, including religious.[1] It is often a suffix, added to the subject of the treatise, such as

  1. Yoga-shastra,
  2. Nyaya-shastra,
  3. Dharma-shastra,
  4. Koka- or Kama-shastra,[7]
  5. Moksha-shastra,
  6. Artha-shastra,
  7. Alamkara-shastra (rhetoric),
  8. Kavya-shastra (poetics),
  9. Sangita-shastra (music),
  10. Natya-shastra (theatre & dance) and others.[1][2]

In Buddhism, a "shastra" is often a commentary written at a later date to explain an earlier scripture or sutra. For example, Yutang Lin says that a text written by him and not given by Buddha, cannot be called a "Sutra"; it is called a "Sastra". In Buddhism, Buddhists are allowed to offer their theses as long as they are consistent with the Sutras, and those are called "Sastras."[8]

In Jainism, the term means the same as in Hinduism. An example of Jaina Shastra is the 12th-century Yoga Shastra of Hemchandracharya.[9]

Shastra is sometimes the root of compounded Sanskrit words. A custodian of Shastra, for example, is called Shastradhari (Sanskrit: शास्त्रधारी).[10]

References in the early texts edit

The term is found in several passages of the Rigveda (2nd millennium BCE), such as in hymn VIII.33.16.

नहि षस्तव नो मम शास्त्रे अन्यस्य रण्यति ।
यो अस्मान्वीर आनयत् ॥१६॥

— Rigveda 8.33.16, [11]

In this Rigvedic verse, the term means rule or instruction.

The Maitri Upanishad (mid to late 1st millennium BCE), similarly, mentions the materialist Charvakas and Brihaspati who disagreed that the Vedas are a treatise of knowledge, proposing relativism instead, in the following passage:[12]

बृहस्पतिर्वै शुक्रो भूत्वेन्द्रस्याभयायासुरेभ्यः क्षयायेमामविद्यामसृजत्
तया शिवमशिवमित्युद्दिशन्त्यशिवं शिवमिति वेदादिशास्त्रहिंसकधर्माभिध्यानमस्त्विति

The term is found in other Upanishads as well as in Bhagavad Gita such as in verses 15.20, 16.23–16.24, and 17.1.[14]

The Ṛigvedaprātiśākhya (11.36; 14.30) uses the term Shastra to refer to the prātiśākhya tradition. Kātyāyana, Patañjali and Pāṇini's Aṣṭādhyāyī use the term. Similarly, the Vedāṅgajyotiṣa uses the term to refer to astronomical treatises. The term vedāṅgaśāstrāṇām, refers to the śāstra of the Vedāṅgas.

The term "śāstra" is found in Yaska's Nirukta (1.2, 14), where the reference is to Nirukta (etymology). An early use of the term śāstra with reference to the literature on dharma is found in the vārttika of Kātyāyana, who uses the expression dharmaśāstra[15]

Chronology and authenticity edit

Shastras are predominantly post-Vedic literature, that is after about 500 BCE. However, it is unclear when various Shastras were composed and completed. The authenticity of the manuscripts is also unclear, as many versions of the same text exist, some with major differences. Patrick Olivelle, credited with a 2005 translation of Manu Dharma-sastra, published by the Oxford University Press, states the concerns in postmodern scholarship about the presumed authenticity and reliability of manuscripts as follows (abridged):[16]

The MDh (Manusmriti) was the first Indian legal text introduced to the western world through the translation of Sir William Jones in 1794. (...) All the editions of the MDh, except for Jolly's, reproduce the text as found in the [Calcutta] manuscript containing the commentary of Kulluka. I have called this as the "vulgate version". It was Kulluka's version that has been translated repeatedly: Jones (1794), Burnell (1884), Buhler (1886) and Doniger (1991). (...) The belief in the authenticity of Kulluka's text was openly articulated by Burnell (1884, xxix): "There is then no doubt that the textus receptus, viz., that of Kulluka Bhatta, as adopted in India and by European scholars, is very near on the whole to the original text."
This is far from the truth. Indeed, one of the great surprises of my editorial work has been to discover how few of the over fifty manuscripts that I collated actually follow the vulgate in key readings.

— Patrick Olivelle, Manu's Code of Law (2005)[16]

The literature of late 1st millennium BCE such as Arthashastra,[17] and Shastras of various fields of knowledge from the early 1st millennium period is of great interest as it helped the emergence of diverse schools and the spread of Indian religions such as Hinduism and Buddhism in and outside South Asia.[3][18][19]

The shastras are both descriptive and prescriptive. Among the various Shastras, Manu's code of law has been among the most studied as the colonial British government attempted to establish different laws in British India based on Sharia for Muslims and Manu's code of law.[20][21][22]

The shastras are not consistent or single-consensus documents. Dharma-sastras, for example, contain opposing views and contradictory theories. This is in part because they represent an ideal of human behaviour, while at the same time recognising the need to account for likely failings. The shastras do not present life as it was lived. Rather they reveal an idea of what life should be. The shastra texts constitute one of the great bodies of literature of the ancient world.[23]

Sutra edit

Sutras are another genre of Indian texts that emerged in the 1st millennium BCE, particularly after the 600 BCE.[24] Sutra (literally "binding thread") denotes a type of literary composition distinct from Shastra. In Sanskrit, "sutra" typically referred to one or more aphorisms; hence sutras use short, aphoristic, evocative statements. In contrast, a Shastra is typically longer, with more detail and explanations. An example of a Sutra is Patanjali's Yogasutras (considered a classic Hindu treatise), while an example of Shastra is Hemachandra's Yogasastra (considered a classic Svetambara Jain treatise), both on yoga.[25]

Shastras and Sutras are among the numerous other genres of literature that have survived from ancient and medieval India. Other genres include Vedas, Upanishads, Vedangas, Itihasa, Puranas, Bhasyas, and Subhashitas.[26]

Major shastras by topics edit


  1. Vastu Shastra (treatises on architecture)
  2. Vaimānika Shāstra, early 20th-century, sanskrit text on "science of aeronautics"
  3. Dharma Shastra:
    These a genre of Sanskrit theological texts, and refers to the treatises (śāstras) of Hinduism on dharma. There are many Dharmashastras, variously estimated to be 18 to about 100, with different and conflicting points of view.[27][note 1] Each of these texts exist in many different versions, and each is rooted in Dharmasutra texts dated to 1st millennium BCE that emerged from Kalpa (Vedanga) studies in the Vedic era.[29][30]
  4. Kamashastra (Kama Shastra)
  5. Yoga Vasistha
  6. Moksopaya (mahayana uttaratantra shastra)
  7. Artha Shastra, financial affairs
  8. Natya Shastra, performing arts
  9. Surya Siddantha, astronomy
  10. Mahayana Buddhist Shastras
  11. Samudrika Shastra
  12. Shilpa Shastra

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Pandurang Vaman Kane mentions over 100 different Dharmasastra texts which were known by the Middle Ages in India, but most of these are lost to history and their existence is inferred from quotes and citations in bhasya and digests that have survived.[28]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Monier Williams, Monier Williams' Sanskrit-English Dictionary, Oxford University Press, Article on zAstra
  2. ^ a b James Lochtefeld (2002), "Shastra" in The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism, Vol. 2: N-Z, Rosen Publishing, ISBN 0-8239-2287-1, page 626
  3. ^ a b Boesche, Roger (January 2003). "Kautilya's Arthaśāstra on War and Diplomacy in Ancient India". The Journal of Military History. Society for Military History. 67 (1): 9–37. doi:10.1353/jmh.2003.0006. ISSN 0899-3718.
  4. ^ JDM Derrett (1973), Geschichte, Volume 1, Series Editor: Jan Gonda, Brill, ISBN 978-9004037403, pages 34–36
  5. ^ "Knowledge-Net of Amarakosha (अमरकोश-ज्ञान-जालम्)".
  6. ^ "शासना at Spokensanskrit.org".
  7. ^ Alex Comfort and Charles Fowkes (1993), The Illustrated Koka Shastra: Medieval Indian Writings on Love Based on the Kama Sutra, Simon & Schuster, ISBN 978-0684839813
  8. ^ The Unification of Wisdom and Compassion Dr. Yutang Lin
  9. ^ Amritlal Savchand Gopani (1989), The Yoga Shastra of Hemchandracharya: A 12th Century Guide to Jain Yoga, Prakrit Bharti Academy, OCLC 21760707
  10. ^ disctionary meaning of Shastradhari
  11. ^ transl. "Neither in thy decree nor mine, but in another's he delights,The man who brought us unto this." Rig Veda ऋग्वेदः मण्डल ८ Wikisource
  12. ^ a b Max Muller, Maitri Upanishad 7.9, Oxford University Press, page 342
  13. ^ Maitri Upanishad 7.9 Wikisource
  14. ^ Sanskrit: इति गुह्यतमं शास्त्रमिदमुक्तं मयानघ । एतद्बुद्ध्वा बुद्धिमान्स्यात्कृतकृत्यश्च भारत ॥ १५-२०॥;
    English Translation: Winthrop Sargeant (2009), The Bhagavad Gita: Twenty-fifth–Anniversary Edition, State University of New York Press, ISBN 978-0873958318
  15. ^ Olivelle, P. (2006). Explorations in the Early History of the Dharmaśāstra in P. Olivelle (ed.) Between the Empires: Society in India 300 BCE to 400 CE, New York: Oxford Unuiversity Press, ISBN 0-19-568935-6, p.169
  16. ^ a b Patrick Olivelle (2005), Manu's Code of Law, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0195171464, pages 353–354, 356–382
  17. ^ Patrick Olivelle (2013), King, Governance, and Law in Ancient India: Kauṭilya's Arthaśāstra, Oxford UK: Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0199891825, pages 30–32
  18. ^ Robert Lingat (1973), The Classical Law of India, University of California Press, ISBN 978-0520018983, page 77;
    Steven Collins (1993), The discourse of what is primary, Journal of Indian philosophy, Volume 21, pages 301–393
  19. ^ Keay, John, India, A History, New York, Grove Press, 2000
  20. ^ Rudolph, Susanne Hoeber; Rudolph, Lloyd I. (August 2000). "Living with Difference in India". The Political Quarterly. Wiley. 71 (s1): 20–38. doi:10.1111/1467-923X.71.s1.4.
  21. ^ Gaborieau, Marc (June 1985). "From Al-Beruni to Jinnah: Idiom, Ritual and Ideology of the Hindu-Muslim Confrontation in South Asia". Anthropology Today. Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. 1 (3): 7–14. doi:10.2307/3033123. JSTOR 3033123.
  22. ^ Pollock, Sheldon, From Discourse of Ritual to Discourse of Power in Sanskrit Culture, Journal of Ritual Studies 4:2, 1990, 315-45
  23. ^ Doniger, Wendy, The Hindus, An Alternative History, Oxford University Press, 2010, ISBN 978-0-19-959334-7 pbk
  24. ^ Arvind Sharma (2000), Classical Hindu Thought: An Introduction, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0195644418, page 205-206
  25. ^ Olle Quarnström (2002), The Yogaśāstra of Hemacandra: A Twelfth Century Handbook of Śvetāmbara Jainism, Harvard University Press, ISBN 978-0674009349
  26. ^ Ludwik Sternbach (1973), Subhashita – A forgotten chapter in the histories of Sanskrit literature, in Indologica Taurinensia, Torino, Vol I, pages 169–254
  27. ^ John Bowker (2012), The Message and the Book: Sacred Texts of the World's Religions, Yale University Press, ISBN 978-0300179293, pages 179–180
  28. ^ Kane, P.V. History of the Dharmaśāstras Vol. 1 p. 304
  29. ^ James Lochtefeld (2002), "Dharma Shastras" in The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism, Vol. 1: A-M, Rosen Publishing, ISBN 0-8239-2287-1, pages 191–192
  30. ^ Patrick Olivelle 1999, pp. xxiii–xxv.

shastra, other, uses, film, shaastra, iast, Śāstra, ʃaːst, sanskrit, word, that, means, precept, rules, manual, compendium, book, treatise, general, sense, word, generally, used, suffix, indian, literature, context, technical, specialized, knowledge, defined, . For other uses see Shastra film and Shaastra Shastra श स त र IAST Sastra IPA ʃaːst re is a Sanskrit word that means precept rules manual compendium book or treatise in a general sense 1 The word is generally used as a suffix in the Indian literature context for technical or specialized knowledge in a defined area of practice 2 Shastra has a similar meaning to English logy e g ecology psychology meaning scientific and basic knowledge on a particular subject Examples in terms of modern neologisms include bhautikasastra physics rasasastra chemistry jivasastra biology vastusastra architectural science silpasastra science of mechanical arts and sculpture arthasastra science of politics and economics 3 and nitisastra compendium of ethics or right policy In Western literature Shastra is sometimes spelled as Sastra 4 reflecting a misunderstanding of the IAST symbol s which corresponds to the English sh Contents 1 Etymology 1 1 Terminology 2 References in the early texts 3 Chronology and authenticity 4 Sutra 5 Major shastras by topics 6 See also 7 Notes 8 ReferencesEtymology editThe word Sastra literally means that which has been instructed decreed from the root Sasana which means instruction decree 5 6 Terminology edit Shastra commonly refers to a treatise or text on a specific field of knowledge In early Vedic literature the word referred to any precept rule teaching ritual instruction or direction 1 In late and post Vedic literature of Hinduism Shastra referred to any treatise book or instrument of teaching any manual or compendium on any subject in any field of knowledge including religious 1 It is often a suffix added to the subject of the treatise such as Yoga shastra Nyaya shastra Dharma shastra Koka or Kama shastra 7 Moksha shastra Artha shastra Alamkara shastra rhetoric Kavya shastra poetics Sangita shastra music Natya shastra theatre amp dance and others 1 2 In Buddhism a shastra is often a commentary written at a later date to explain an earlier scripture or sutra For example Yutang Lin says that a text written by him and not given by Buddha cannot be called a Sutra it is called a Sastra In Buddhism Buddhists are allowed to offer their theses as long as they are consistent with the Sutras and those are called Sastras 8 In Jainism the term means the same as in Hinduism An example of Jaina Shastra is the 12th century Yoga Shastra of Hemchandracharya 9 Shastra is sometimes the root of compounded Sanskrit words A custodian of Shastra for example is called Shastradhari Sanskrit श स त रध र 10 References in the early texts editThe term is found in several passages of the Rigveda 2nd millennium BCE such as in hymn VIII 33 16 नह षस तव न मम श स त र अन यस य रण यत य अस म न व र आनयत १६ Rigveda 8 33 16 11 In this Rigvedic verse the term means rule or instruction The Maitri Upanishad mid to late 1st millennium BCE similarly mentions the materialist Charvakas and Brihaspati who disagreed that the Vedas are a treatise of knowledge proposing relativism instead in the following passage 12 ब हस पत र व श क र भ त व न द रस य भय य स र भ य क षय य म मव द य मस जत तय श वमश वम त य द द शन त यश व श वम त व द द श स त रह सकधर म भ ध य नमस त व त Maitri Upanishad 7 9 12 13 The term is found in other Upanishads as well as in Bhagavad Gita such as in verses 15 20 16 23 16 24 and 17 1 14 The Ṛigvedapratisakhya 11 36 14 30 uses the term Shastra to refer to the pratisakhya tradition Katyayana Patanjali and Paṇini s Aṣṭadhyayi use the term Similarly the Vedaṅgajyotiṣa uses the term to refer to astronomical treatises The term vedaṅgasastraṇam refers to the sastra of the Vedaṅgas The term sastra is found in Yaska s Nirukta 1 2 14 where the reference is to Nirukta etymology An early use of the term sastra with reference to the literature on dharma is found in the varttika of Katyayana who uses the expression dharmasastra 15 Chronology and authenticity editShastras are predominantly post Vedic literature that is after about 500 BCE However it is unclear when various Shastras were composed and completed The authenticity of the manuscripts is also unclear as many versions of the same text exist some with major differences Patrick Olivelle credited with a 2005 translation of Manu Dharma sastra published by the Oxford University Press states the concerns in postmodern scholarship about the presumed authenticity and reliability of manuscripts as follows abridged 16 The MDh Manusmriti was the first Indian legal text introduced to the western world through the translation of Sir William Jones in 1794 All the editions of the MDh except for Jolly s reproduce the text as found in the Calcutta manuscript containing the commentary of Kulluka I have called this as the vulgate version It was Kulluka s version that has been translated repeatedly Jones 1794 Burnell 1884 Buhler 1886 and Doniger 1991 The belief in the authenticity of Kulluka s text was openly articulated by Burnell 1884 xxix There is then no doubt that the textus receptus viz that of Kulluka Bhatta as adopted in India and by European scholars is very near on the whole to the original text This is far from the truth Indeed one of the great surprises of my editorial work has been to discover how few of the over fifty manuscripts that I collated actually follow the vulgate in key readings Patrick Olivelle Manu s Code of Law 2005 16 The literature of late 1st millennium BCE such as Arthashastra 17 and Shastras of various fields of knowledge from the early 1st millennium period is of great interest as it helped the emergence of diverse schools and the spread of Indian religions such as Hinduism and Buddhism in and outside South Asia 3 18 19 The shastras are both descriptive and prescriptive Among the various Shastras Manu s code of law has been among the most studied as the colonial British government attempted to establish different laws in British India based on Sharia for Muslims and Manu s code of law 20 21 22 The shastras are not consistent or single consensus documents Dharma sastras for example contain opposing views and contradictory theories This is in part because they represent an ideal of human behaviour while at the same time recognising the need to account for likely failings The shastras do not present life as it was lived Rather they reveal an idea of what life should be The shastra texts constitute one of the great bodies of literature of the ancient world 23 Sutra editMain article Sutra Sutras are another genre of Indian texts that emerged in the 1st millennium BCE particularly after the 600 BCE 24 Sutra literally binding thread denotes a type of literary composition distinct from Shastra In Sanskrit sutra typically referred to one or more aphorisms hence sutras use short aphoristic evocative statements In contrast a Shastra is typically longer with more detail and explanations An example of a Sutra is Patanjali s Yogasutras considered a classic Hindu treatise while an example of Shastra is Hemachandra s Yogasastra considered a classic Svetambara Jain treatise both on yoga 25 Shastras and Sutras are among the numerous other genres of literature that have survived from ancient and medieval India Other genres include Vedas Upanishads Vedangas Itihasa Puranas Bhasyas and Subhashitas 26 Major shastras by topics editThis section needs expansion with Read hidden edit comment by clicking edit expand by adding one liner description of each listed item expand the list etc You can help by adding to it May 2020 List of ShastrasVastu Shastra treatises on architecture Vaimanika Shastra early 20th century sanskrit text on science of aeronautics Dharma Shastra These a genre of Sanskrit theological texts and refers to the treatises sastras of Hinduism on dharma There are many Dharmashastras variously estimated to be 18 to about 100 with different and conflicting points of view 27 note 1 Each of these texts exist in many different versions and each is rooted in Dharmasutra texts dated to 1st millennium BCE that emerged from Kalpa Vedanga studies in the Vedic era 29 30 Kamashastra Kama Shastra Yoga Vasistha Moksopaya mahayana uttaratantra shastra Artha Shastra financial affairs Natya Shastra performing arts Surya Siddantha astronomy Mahayana Buddhist Shastras Samudrika Shastra Shilpa ShastraSee also editVaimanika Shastra Dharmasastra Kamashastra Kama Shastra Yoga Vasistha Mokshopaya mahayana uttaratantra shastra Arthashastra Mahayana sutras Samudrika Shastra Shilpa ShastrasNotes edit Pandurang Vaman Kane mentions over 100 different Dharmasastra texts which were known by the Middle Ages in India but most of these are lost to history and their existence is inferred from quotes and citations in bhasya and digests that have survived 28 References edit a b c d Monier Williams Monier Williams Sanskrit English Dictionary Oxford University Press Article on zAstra a b James Lochtefeld 2002 Shastra in The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism Vol 2 N Z Rosen Publishing ISBN 0 8239 2287 1 page 626 a b Boesche Roger January 2003 Kautilya s Arthasastra on War and Diplomacy in Ancient India The Journal of Military History Society for Military History 67 1 9 37 doi 10 1353 jmh 2003 0006 ISSN 0899 3718 JDM Derrett 1973 Geschichte Volume 1 Series Editor Jan Gonda Brill ISBN 978 9004037403 pages 34 36 Knowledge Net of Amarakosha अमरक श ज ञ न ज लम श सन at Spokensanskrit org Alex Comfort and Charles Fowkes 1993 The Illustrated Koka Shastra Medieval Indian Writings on Love Based on the Kama Sutra Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0684839813 The Unification of Wisdom and Compassion Dr Yutang Lin Amritlal Savchand Gopani 1989 The Yoga Shastra of Hemchandracharya A 12th Century Guide to Jain Yoga Prakrit Bharti Academy OCLC 21760707 disctionary meaning of Shastradhari transl Neither in thy decree nor mine but in another s he delights The man who brought us unto this Rig Veda ऋग व द मण डल ८ Wikisource a b Max Muller Maitri Upanishad 7 9 Oxford University Press page 342 Maitri Upanishad 7 9 Wikisource Sanskrit इत ग ह यतम श स त रम दम क त मय नघ एतद ब द ध व ब द ध म न स य त क तक त यश च भ रत १५ २० English Translation Winthrop Sargeant 2009 The Bhagavad Gita Twenty fifth Anniversary Edition State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0873958318 Olivelle P 2006 Explorations in the Early History of the Dharmasastra in P Olivelle ed Between the Empires Society in India 300 BCE to 400 CE New York Oxford Unuiversity Press ISBN 0 19 568935 6 p 169 a b Patrick Olivelle 2005 Manu s Code of Law Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195171464 pages 353 354 356 382 Patrick Olivelle 2013 King Governance and Law in Ancient India Kauṭilya s Arthasastra Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199891825 pages 30 32 Robert Lingat 1973 The Classical Law of India University of California Press ISBN 978 0520018983 page 77 Steven Collins 1993 The discourse of what is primary Journal of Indian philosophy Volume 21 pages 301 393 Keay John India A History New York Grove Press 2000 Rudolph Susanne Hoeber Rudolph Lloyd I August 2000 Living with Difference in India The Political Quarterly Wiley 71 s1 20 38 doi 10 1111 1467 923X 71 s1 4 Gaborieau Marc June 1985 From Al Beruni to Jinnah Idiom Ritual and Ideology of the Hindu Muslim Confrontation in South Asia Anthropology Today Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 1 3 7 14 doi 10 2307 3033123 JSTOR 3033123 Pollock Sheldon From Discourse of Ritual to Discourse of Power in Sanskrit Culture Journal of Ritual Studies 4 2 1990 315 45 Doniger Wendy The Hindus An Alternative History Oxford University Press 2010 ISBN 978 0 19 959334 7 pbk Arvind Sharma 2000 Classical Hindu Thought An Introduction Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195644418 page 205 206 Olle Quarnstrom 2002 The Yogasastra of Hemacandra A Twelfth Century Handbook of Svetambara Jainism Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674009349 Ludwik Sternbach 1973 Subhashita A forgotten chapter in the histories of Sanskrit literature in Indologica Taurinensia Torino Vol I pages 169 254 John Bowker 2012 The Message and the Book Sacred Texts of the World s Religions Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300179293 pages 179 180 Kane P V History of the Dharmasastras Vol 1 p 304 James Lochtefeld 2002 Dharma Shastras in The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism Vol 1 A M Rosen Publishing ISBN 0 8239 2287 1 pages 191 192 Patrick Olivelle 1999 pp xxiii xxv sfn error no target CITEREFPatrick Olivelle1999 help Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shastra amp oldid 1179775914, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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