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Jatakalankara

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Sanskrit treatise on Hindu astrology
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Jatakalankara
AuthorGanesa
LanguageSanskrit
SubjectAstrology
Publication placeIndia
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Hindu scriptures and texts
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Jatakalankara is a briefSanskrit treatise comprising one hundred twenty-five slokas or verses on the predictive part ofHindu astrology written in the classicSloka format in the Srgdhara meter.[1] It was written by Poet Ganesa, son of Gopal Das (who was the second son of Kanhaji, and who was himself an accomplished poet, dramatist, artist and mathematician), in the year 1613 and describes manyyoga-formations that have immediate bearing on various aspects of human life. Ganesha wrote this treatise to please hisGuru Shiva[2] Its first translation into English was probably published, along with the original text, in 1941 by Sri Vijay Lakshmi Vilas Press.[3]

Ganesa examined the planetary influences on the health of individuals while observing thatritualistic remedia scriptures,medical andastronomico-astrological texts of instruction are propitiable as well as religious scriptures..[4] At the International Sanskrit Conference it was brought on record that Ganesa, son of Gopala, wrote this treatise in Vrddhapura (Vadanagara).[5]

This work describing numerous planetary combinationsyogas, some unique, some auspicious and other inauspicious, is divided into seven Adhyayas or chapters, viz – 1) Sangyadhyaya (12 stanzas) dealing with preliminaries, 2) Bhavadhyaya (38 stanzas) dealing with nature, characteristics and results of 12 bhavas i.e. houses, 3) Yogadhyaya (34 stanzas) dealing with planetary combinations and their results, 4) Vishakanyadhyaya (4 stanzas) dealing with combinations which indicate birth of Vishakanyas (inauspicious women), 5) Ayurdayadhyaya (23 stanzas) dealing with longevity, 6) Vaiparityasthadhyaya (9 stanzas) dealing with mutual exchange of signs by planets, and 7) Vanshadhyaya (5 stanzas) dealing with basic information about this text and its author. Its author, Ganesa, belonging to theBhardwajaGotra, was the son of Gopaldas. He wrote and completed this work in a village named Suryapur in the month ofBhadrapadaSaka year 1536 (1613 CE).[6]

References

[edit]
  1. ^David Edwin Pigree (1970).Census of the Exact Sciences in Sanskrit.American Philosophical Society. p. 113.ISBN 9780871690814.
  2. ^"Jataka Alankara".
  3. ^Jatakalankara. Sri Vijay Lakshmi Vilas Press.
  4. ^Satadal Kargupta (2002).Mystical Buddhism. Asiatic Society. p. 6/400.ISBN 9788172361167.
  5. ^Venkatarama Raghvan (1975).International Sanskrit Conference, Volume 1, Part 1. Ministry of Education and Social Welfare, Govt. of India. p. 185.
  6. ^Pt. Dinanath Jha.Ganesa Daivagnya's Jatakalankara. Jaikrishandas Haridas Gupta Chaukhamba Sanskrit Series 141. Archived fromthe original on 2015-12-08. Retrieved2013-02-19.
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