MahÄbhÄá¹£ya
The MahÄbhÄá¹£ya (Sanskrit: महाà¤à¤¾à¤·à¥à¤¯, IPA: [məɦɑËbʱɑËÊ‚jÉ™], great commentary), attributed to Patañjali, is a commentary on selected rules of Sanskrit grammar from PÄṇini's treatise, the Ashtadhyayi, as well as KÄtyÄyana's Varttika, an elaboration of PÄṇini's grammar.[1] It is dated to the 4th century BCE. [2]
Overview
Patañjali is one of the three most famous Sanskrit grammarians of ancient India, other two being PÄṇini and KÄtyayana who preceded Patañjali (dated to c. 150 BCE). KÄtyayana's work (nearly 1500 vÄrtikas on PÄṇini) is available only through references in Patañjali's work.
It was with Patañjali that the Indian tradition of language scholarship reached its definite form. The system thus established is extremely detailed as to shiksha (phonology, including accent) and vyakarana (grammar and morphology). Syntax is scarcely touched, because syntax is not important in this highly inflexional language, but nirukta (etymology) is discussed, and these etymologies naturally lead to semantic explanations. People interpret his work to be a defense of PÄṇini, whose Sutras are elaborated meaningfully. Patañjali also examines KÄtyÄyana rather severely. But the main contributions of Patañjali lies in the treatment of the principles of grammar enunciated by him.
KÄtyayana introduced semantic discourse into grammar, which was further elaborated by Patañjali to such an extent that MahÄbhÄá¹£ya can be called a mix of grammar as such as well as a philosophy of grammar. KÄÅ›ika-vritti by JayÄditya and VÄmana (mentioned by Itsing) included viewpoints of other grammarians also which did not conform to Patañjali's views. Many commentaries on MahÄbhÄá¹£ya were written, of which Kaiyaá¹a's commentary named PradÄ«pa (c. 11th century CE) is most celebrated.
After Kaiyaá¹a, interest in the study of Sanskrit grammar according to traditional PÄṇinian sequence of sÅ«tras started declining, and a new simplified system gained ground which was started by Buddhist scholar Dharmakirti through his commentary on PÄṇini named RÅ«pÄvatÄra, which excluded Vedic sÅ«tras of PÄṇini in which DharmakÄ«rti had no interest and dealt with only 2664 sutras.
James R. Ballantyne (1813–1864) published the first part of the MahÄbhÄá¹£ya of Patañjali in 1856, for the first time opening native Indian grammatical tradition to a wider European scholarly audience.
Swami Vivekananda remarks that "The best prose in Sanskrit is Patanjali's Mahâbhâshya."
Story behind Mahabhashya
Aithihyamala, written by Kottarathil Sankunni, contains the following legend about the Mahabhashya. Patanjali is an incarnation of Adishesha who was blessed by Lord Shiva enabling him to write Mahabhashya. After he incinerates the 999 disciples in anger due to the misbehavior of one in leaving the class without his permission, he turns the last student also into ashes. It is through an Yaksha that he decides to spread his knowledge since the Yaksha was eavesdropping the classes. He curses the Yaksha into a Brahmarakshas, promising his revival only upon teaching a human, the Mahabhashya. The Yaksha teaches it to Govindaswami, the father of Vararuchi, Vikramaditya, Bhatti and Bhartruhari.
References
- ↑ K. Kunjunni Raja. "Philosophical elements in Patañjali's MahÄbhÄá¹£ya". In Harold G. Coward, K. Kunjunni Raja. Encyclopedia of Indian philosophies. 5 (The Philosophy of the Grammarians). Motilal Banarsidass Publ. p. 115. ISBN 81-208-0426-0.
- ↑ 4th century B.C.http://dsal.uchicago.edu/reference/gazetteer/pager.html?objectid=DS405.1.I34_V02_298.gif
Further reading
- The MahÄbhÄá¹£ya of Patañjali with annotation (Ahnikas I–IV), Translated by Surendranath Dasgupta, Published by Indian Council of Philosophical Research
- MahÄbhÄá¹£ya of Patañjali (ÅšrÄ«madbhagavat-patañjali-muni-viracitaṃ PÄtañjalaṃ MahÄbhÄá¹£yam) by Patañjali (in Sanskrit), Publisher: VÄrÄṇasÄ« : VÄṇīvilÄsa PrakÄÅ›ana, 1987-1988., OCLC: 20995237
- Bronkhorst, Johannes, 1992. PÄṇini's View of Meaning and its Western Counterpart. In, Maxim Stamenov (ed.) Current Advances in Semantic Theory. Amsterdam: J. Benjamins. (455-64)
- Scharfe, Hartmut, 1977. Grammatical Literature. Vol. V, Fasc. 2, History of Indian Literature, (ed.) Jan Gonda. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz.
- Staal, J.F. (ed.), 1985. A Reader on Sanskrit Grammarians. Delhi: Motilal Banarasidass.
External links
- vyaakaraN mahaabhaaShya in Devanagari.
- vyaakaraN mahaabhaaShya in CSX at GRETIL.
- VyaakaraN Mahaabhaashya in Roman transliteration