Alberuni's India
An Account of the Religion, Philosophy, Literature, Geography, Chronology, Astronomy, Customs, Laws and Astrology of India about AD 1030
Volume 2
Part of Cambridge Library Collection - South Asian History
- Author: Muḥammad ibn Aḥmad Bīrūnī
- Editor and Translator: Edward C. Sachau
- Date Published: May 2012
- availability: Available
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9781108047203
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Translated and annotated by orientalist Edward Sachau (1845–1930), this 1887–8 two-volume work is the account by Muslim polymath and traveller Alberuni (973–1048) of Indian political and social life in the medieval period. Sachau published the manuscript in Arabic in 1885–6, at the same time working on an English translation. Alberuni, born in Chorasmia, south of the Aral Sea, was one of the leading scholars of his day. He accompanied the Afghan ruler Mahmud on his invasion of India in the early eleventh century, and remained there for thirteen years, making a detailed study of Indian life and culture, and in particular studying the Hindu religion. Alberuni claims that his work is not polemical in nature, but a simple historical record of facts, and he commends the learning of the Hindus in philosophy, mathematics and astronomy. Volume 2 discusses among other subjects astronomy, religion, ritual and law.
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×Product details
- Date Published: May 2012
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9781108047203
- length: 440 pages
- dimensions: 216 x 25 x 140 mm
- weight: 0.56kg
- availability: Available
Table of Contents
49. A summary description of the eras
50. How many star-cycles there are both in a 'kalpa' and in a 'caturyuga'
51. An explanation of the terms 'adhimâsa', 'ûnarâtra', and the 'aharganas', as representing different sums of days
52. On the calculation of 'ahargana' in general, that is, the resolution of years and months into days, and, vice versa, the composition of years and months out of days
53. On the ahargana, or the resolution of years into months, according to special rules which are adopted in the calendars for certain dates or moments of time
54. On the computation of the mean places of the planets
55. On the order of the planets, their distances and sizes
56. On the stations of the moon
57. On the heliacal risings of the stars, and on the ceremonies and rites which the Hindus practise at such a moment
58. How ebb and flow follow each other in the ocean
59. On the solar and lunar eclipses
60. On the parvan
61. On the dominants of the different measures of time in both religious and astronomical relations, and on connected subjects
62. On the sixty years samvatsara, also called 'shashtyabda'
63. On that which especially concerns the Brahmans, and what they are obliged to do during their whole life
64. On the rites and customs which the other castes, besides the Brahmans, practise during their lifetime
65. On the sacrifices
66. On pilgrimage and the visiting of sacred places
67. On alms, and how a man must spend what he earns
68. On what is allowed and forbidden in eating and drinking
69. On matrimony, the menstrual courses, embryos, and childbed
70. On lawsuits
71. On punishments and expiations
72. On inheritance, and what claim the deceased person has on it
73. About what is due to the bodies of the dead and of the living (i.e. about burying and suicide)
74. On fasting, and the various kinds of it
75. On the determination of the fast-days
76. On the festivals and festive days
77. On days which are held in special veneration, on lucky and unlucky times, and on such times as are particularly favourable for acquiring in them bliss in heaven
78. On the karanas
79. On the yogas
80. On the introductory principles of Hindu astrology, with a short description of their methods of astrological calculations
Annotations
Index.
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