Mr. Spier,
What we have learnt from Indological studies, Vedas were never written. We call 
it "Apaurasheya"... i. e. not written.The Vedic Mantras came as revealations to 
the seers( we call them 'Drashta" i. e. one who sees) while in Meditation.The 
hymns or mantras were then recited orally and passed on across generations of 
disciples. who memorised them.Finally, sage Vyasa arranged a compilation 
and  divided them among his 4 disciples namely, Poilo, Boishampayan, 
Jaimini and Sumanta.Thus we got the 4 Vedas
In the 19th Century, Max Mueller edited theVedas.
Regards 
Alakendu  Das. 



From: [email protected]
Sent: Thu, 19 Oct 2023 19:40:15 
To: "Hock, Hans Henrich" <[email protected]>
Cc: McComas Taylor via INDOLOGY <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [INDOLOGY] Whitney and doubling of "ch"


Hans Heinrich Hock wrote:
Whatever the motivation may be for the spelling with a single <ch> in the 
Rig Veda (and let’s keep in mind that the “real” Rig Veda is oral),1) Can 
someone point me to some article on when and why the Rg-veda was first written 
down . what script etc.  Was it a British initiative or was the whole or parts 
written down before the colonial period?  I've seen in a modern Taittiriya 
Vedashala the students practicing some of their mantras using  written 
material.  Did the medieval and later Vedashalas also use written materials to 
teach their students?
2) Is it possible that this  "Rg-veda written spelling gachati etc." 
is just a reflection of what was written when the Rg-veda was first written 
down?
Thanks,Harry Spier












_______________________________________________

INDOLOGY mailing list

[email protected]

https://list.indology.info/mailman/listinfo/indology

_______________________________________________
INDOLOGY mailing list
[email protected]
https://list.indology.info/mailman/listinfo/indology

Reply via email to