Sanskrit Literature

http://sanskrit.safire.com/

Sarasvati Study Sanskrit, read Sanskrit texts, listen to Vedic pundits chant, or read Sanksrit humor. This site contains a wide variety of Sanskrit texts and stotras in the pdf format, which you can view or print for your personal use. Most of the texts are in Devanagari script, some with English translation. The Bhagavad-Gita, Devi Mahatmyam, all of the sahasranama stotras, and several other texts are also encoded in transliteration (by popular demand). A lot of attention has been put into formatting the texts for maximum aesthetic appeal and ease of use.









संस्कॄतम् जालपत्रे सुश्वागतम्
संस्कृतभाषा भारतीय परम्परा तथा वृधेः आधारः । अस्माकं वृधेः, परम्परा, जीवनमुल्यवोध निमितं प्रतिदिन जीवने संस्कृतभाषायाः आवश्यकम् अस्ति । वेदः, रामायणं, महाभारतं, श्रीमद्भग्वद्गीता आदि धर्मग्रन्थाः संस्कृतभाषायां लिखितम् । इमे ग्रन्थाः निसन्देह अन्यग्रन्थाणाम् अपेक्षा मह्तरं भवन्ति ।
संस्कृतभाषा दशसहस्र वर्षादपि पूरातनम् । सहस्रवर्षव्यापि इयं भाषा अस्माकं कथितभाषा आसीत् । इयं संस्कृभाषा सर्वभाषाणां जननी अपि भवति । कथं इयं मुख्यभाषा तथा महत्वपूर्ण भवति सा स्वयम् कथयति । यदा अस्माकं भाषाज्ञानम् भविष्यति तदा वयम् अस्माकं भाषायाः परम्परायाः ग्रन्थाणां च प्रशंशा तथा ज्ञान्तुं समर्थाः भविष्यामः ।
अतः आगच्छन्तु प्रतिदिन-जीवने वयं शुद्धं संस्कृतं कथयिष्यामः

 http://samskrutam.com/samskrit/home-S.aspx?section=homecontent
                           


A Sanskrit Lyrical Ramayana Epic Poem, Gītarāmāyaṇam, composed by Svāmī Rāmabhadrācārya with Hindi meanings (2.57 MB) is available at http://jagadgururambhadracharya.org, or directly. He has also composed Bhāvārthabodhinī, Hindi (Rāmacaritamānasa commentary), Bhṛṅgadūtam, Sanskrit (Minor messenger poem), Arundhati , Hindi (Epic poem), and Śrībhārgavarāghavīyam, Sanskrit (Epic poem). In spite of loosing eyesight at infant age of two months, Swamiji has shown prodigal feats in memorizing complete Bhagvadgita and Ramacharitmanas at very young age. With exceptional grasp of devotional literature, intense education, and immense resolve, he has shown miraculous success in composing various large metrical poems. Listen to his lectures in Hindi on Ramayana at Videos gallery.


View/listen Bhagvadgita recitation by Dr Balram S. Agnihotri, in multiple parts, posted by his daughter Leena Mehendale, in video format at http://www.youtube.com/user/sanstuti. Portion of it is sung by Suresh Wadkar. This is a presentation of kaushalamtrust.com. The trust is busy in presenting "Sanskritki Duniya," proposing a Sanskrit revival and rejuvenation for future generations through TV series and innovative methods and networking. The interesting videos have been posted Sanskrit TV. Also see FAQ and request for support for additional details. (With a background of being a director of National Institute of Naturopathy, Leena has also presented video clips in Hindi on the topics such as Water therapy, Eye care, Sun therapy, Fasting and Silence, et cetera at Sanstuti account on YouTube)


संस्कृतवाणी Sanskrit Central, A Sanskrit Aggregator, Books and Everything Sanskrit at http://sanskritcentral.com/. This is an expanding (scroll down the page to see) blog list planned to cover all that is posted for Sanskrit. The list is also presented as categorized one with major headings. Sanskrit-central's own blog provides rationale behind the blog-list collection effort requesting "Sanskrit Lovers ! Let us work together." "संस्कृतसेवायां, संस्कृतव्याप्तौ च सर्वे समभागिनः भवेयुः इति मे प्रार्थना ।" The site is compiling stotras from various online sources in a page Stotra Ratnakara to be displayed in different scripts using utilities at http://eemaata.com. Sanskrit-central has built its own Sanskrit toolbar संस्कृतवाणी toolbar, perhaps displaying different aspects other than covered by one built by Dev at http://sanskrittools.ourtoolbar.com/ which itself is quite comprehensive.


Green Message at http://www.greenmesg.org : The Evergreen Messages of Spirituality, Sanskrit and Nature hosts javascript based searchable, tagged Sanskrit tools, Writing Pad, Dictionary Aid, Dictionary, Word List, English Pad, Declension, Sandhi Tool, and many more. The site categorizes additional information on the topics of Vivekananda, Ramana, Slokas, Temples, Saints, Sanskrit, Tamil, Nature, and Tools. "This site is for devotees and spiritually-minded persons."



India in Classrooms at indiainclassrooms.org is a non-profit, voluntary, network based organization in US to promote a deeper understanding about India through its Teacher Support Program. It has prepared presentations, podcasts, videos to avoid misrepresentations and stereotypical information about Indian history, religion, and culture. Formed in year 2003 in the San Francisco Bay Area, motivated by Mona Vijaykar, it has strived to form a grass-root organization and to provide broader cultural perspective to school children and educators. The site includes downloadable presentation modules, classroom worksheets, teachers' aids, useful links, and answers to FAQs in different categories. To expand its reachability beyond the bay area, contact the members for additional information.

 

 

Watch chanting of various Vedic mantras and Bhajans in a public performance by participants of Sound of Veda Fellowship in Zagreb, Croatia. The video clips include Ganapati Atharvashirsham, portion of Shri Rudram, Mantrapushpam, and Shivopasana mantra chanted in a methodic way. Vojko Kercan and Branimir Gonan, co-founders of Veda Union, conduct Shri Rudram classes regularly in Ljubljana, Slovenia. Veda Union seeks to unite all European Veda chanting groups. Veda Union has also prepared Rudram learning material for self learning and practicing purposes. See also Vedam Tutorials from Sri Sathya Sai Books and Publications Trust. The Rudram classes are held in Croatia, Germany, Hungary, and Slovenia under the Rudram 2012 project which one can join by contacting people listed here. Contact the group at email address info@vedaunion.org . One can also become a member of google group Veda Union.


Learn Sanskrit through Tamil at http://www.sangatham.com. This site provides book reviews, articles, humour, news, downloads, and links. In simple Sanskrit learning catagory, names of flowers and fruits with pictures, numbers, months and days, short stories are grouped. The lessons include spoken Sanskrit and topics related to grammar. Around the web "links" with pictures are carefully formatted.


The Lyrical Thyagaraja Blog (http://www.lyricaltyagaraja.com or LTB or its blogspot mirror) has a refreshing and uncommon approach to understand the lyrics of Tyagaraja in proper context, to learn his sublime message, and enjoy the music fully. The site is meant to be for both "informed readers and readers new to Indian music and culture." Each rendition/Kriti is addressed with authentic translation with an eye towards the translation as an independent art form. Read the note about themes in the works of Tyagaraja. Each posting is tagged for easy categorization, and with particular Raga, Tala and well studied comments to get the insight. Audio files of most of the songs are not included for copyright purpose, and are available elsewhere and can be searched online. Although Tyagaraqja, regarded as Saint, wrote compositions and plays in Telugu, he wrote a few famous songs in Sanskrit which are also addressed on the blog. The reader is encouraged to explore the site, and post comments and suggestions online or over email at lyricaltyagarajablog@gmail.com. A PDF version of all posts is available upon request. This is a much larger undertaking, and only a few posts are made available to gauge the response and encouragement from readers like you. The author states that the message of this site is simply : "Music transcends all. Music is universal! Music is life!"
A Sulabha Sanskrit, The Easy Sanskrit Online Course is available at http://easysanskrit.chinfo.org. It is a high-tech course with flash-player and presentation driven contents built by Chinmaya International Foundation (CIF). The foundation is the academic front of Chinmaya Mission Worldwide and is Affiliated to Rashtriya Sanskrit Sansthan, New Delhi and recognised by Mahatma Gandhi University, Kottayam, Kerala. The course is designed to be completed between 15-30 months and with the eligibility "an ardent desire and interest to learn Sanskrit." The online course fee is separated as for Residents of SAARC nations: (India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Maldives, Bhutan and Afghanistan) and Residents of other nations. The foundation conducts online and postal correspondence courses for Sanskrit and Vedanta. The Sulabha Sanskrit course will allow students to study Sanskrit texts such as Ramayana, Mahabharata and Bhagavad Gita independently. "The study of Sanskrit is indispensable for studying all aspects of Indian Knowledge - Yoga, Vedanta, Ayurveda, Itihasa (History), Purana and so on."


Rashtriya Sanskrit Sansthan, New Delhi (Established under the Auspices of the Ministry of Human Resource Development Government Of India) is a premier institution for promoting Sanskrit studies in India and abroad. Among many notable activities, it is hosting 15th World Sanskrit Conference-2012(5th-10th Jan) (पञ्चदशतमं विश्वसंस्कृतसम्मेलनम्-2012, 5 -10 जनवरी). It is also preparing a data bank of Sanskrit Scholars (संस्कृत विदुषां कोशः) which is to be published in a book form and also uploaded on the website. Scholars, professors, and teachers are requested to send their information in a prepared form to [whosanskrit [[at]] gmail.com]. The Sansthan site has downloadable ebooks, scanned books from DLI, list of doctoral dissertations on Sanskrit, audio/video teaching material, newsletters (large files), and e-journals (संस्कृत विमर्श:) with interesting articles. The institution also conducts correspondence course for Sanskrit.


Satyaveda : All about the Veda site is built to provide "information and insights" about Vedic studies. There are informative articles, translations, and links related to Veda. The author, Satya Sarada Kandula (on which the site name is derived and who holds the copyrights of the contents), is a student of Veda, Vedanta, Vedartha, and Vedanga, and teaches Sanskrit online.
Satyaveda: All about the Veda, site is a collection of information and links related to Vedic literature and studies. The author Satya Sarada Kandula (from which the site name is derived)


Free Education for All at http://www.school4all.org/ provides help to students, "opening the doors of knowledge to all who demand and deserve." The site has many links and information categorized according to languages Marathi, Hindi, English, Sanskrit (मराठी, हिंदी, इंग्रजी, संस्कृत) and subjects Mathematics, Science, History, Geography, Environment, Art, Music, Physical Education ( गणित विज्ञान इतिहास भूगोल पर्यावरण चित्रकला संगीत खेळ), Business Management and Information Technology. The site is maintained by Dnyanadeep Education and Research Foundation and is developed to help Education for all Project `सर्व शिक्षा अभियान' of Government of India. ज्ञानदीप एज्युकेशन अँण्ड रिसर्च फौंडेशन,१८, शिल्प चिंतामणी सोसायटी, विजयनगर, पोस्ट-वानलेसवाडी, सांगली - ४१६४१४. The foundation has undertaken several projects under the guidance of Dr. S. V. Ranade & Mrs. Shubhangi S. Ranade. The projects and activities are displayed on various websites : संस्कृत शिक्षणासाठी www.sanskritdeepika.org, विज्ञान शिक्षणासाठी www.vidnyan.net, मराठी साहित्य व संस्कृती जगभर पोहोचविण्यासाठी www.mymarathi.com, सांगली शहराची सर्व माहिती मराठीतून देणारी वेबसाईट www.mysangli.com, कोल्हापूर शहराची सर्व माहिती मराठीतून देणारी वेबसाईट www.mykolhapur.net, दूरस्थ शिक्षण व विविध शिक्षणसंस्थांना माहिती तंत्रज्ञानाच्या सुविधा पुरविण्यासाठी www.dnyandeep.net. The site appeals that "the idea is to search and provide useful and relevant free educational and informative links available on the internet. The success of this ambitious project depends on active participation of all who use internet for their work and study. Your contribution in content or otherwise shall help the foundation to enhance and enrich this website. "


Sanskrit Blogs : Listen to the podcast entries in Sanskrit at http://vaak.wordpress.com : संस्कृतभाषायाम् blog प्रयत्नः . "एतस्य उद्देशः अभ्यासः किञ्चित् चिन्तनं च । कीदृशः अभ्यासः इति चेत्, संस्कृतभाषायाः काव्यादिषु अभ्यासः वाङ्मयाभ्यासश्च । चिन्तनं नाम प्रासङ्गिकविचाराणाम् उपस्थापनं तेषां चर्चा च ।"
There is a growing list of "blogs" presented in Sanskrit or for Sanskrit study. Some of the mentionable ones are
Some others are listed in links of Sanskrit Subhashita, as well as in the above blogs.
(An active forum entry : Sanskrit-digest, speaksanskrit.org.)


The Ancient Voice, "Eternal Voices from the past," website contains material related to Mahabharata text and research. It contains 7500 plus categorized pages dedicated to each noun in Mahabharata and bond-data (noun-to-noun affinity) of 30 plus most frequent nouns in Mahabharata. It contains videos episode of television serial of Dr. BR Chopra's Mahabahrata, images with digital paintings and artwork, Digital Maps (Epic India), Google maps (Epic India) and animations related to Mahabharata. There are many related articles, sections demystifying myths, characterized kingdoms, personalities, and plenty of research material which is the result of 20 plus years of research into Mahabharata. There is a discussion forum to post comments.

Saturday, June 19, 2010

A Sanskrit Primer is now available as an iPhone and Android application. It is developed by Krishna Varma (KV). Visit his blog, http://iphonesanskrit.blogspot.com/ or at http://sparshapps.com/, and provide your comments and suggestions. . KV also has iphonegita.blogspot.com Bhagvadgita for iPhone, and iphonevishnu.blogspot.com Vishnu Sahasranaama on the iPhone, and may set plans to add more depending on user's response and needs.


Pandanus is a biannual international journal in English on nature symbolism in Literature, Art, Myth, and Ritual. As an outcome of 12+ years of efforts of Prof. Jaroslav Vacek and others, the Pandanus project at Prague, Czech Republic has resulted in presenting Database of Plants and searchable collection of Sanskrit electronic texts. Indian Plants Database has more than 4000 plant names of almost 400+ species in 8 languages (Latin, Sanskrit, Prakrit, Hindi, Bengali, Tamil, Malayalam, and English). Click on http://iu.ff.cuni.cz/pandanus/database/. Select Sanskrit tab to view plants with Sanskrit names. The searchable Sanskrit texts include 35+ of the large size documents available at etexts page, all transcribed and proofread by students of the Seminar of Indian Studies. (If a word is searched, and a verse selected for given text, clicking on the last line of the verse brings the next verse in line and so the entire text can be read but one line at a time.) The data for the project is jointly sponsored by Institute of South and Central Asian Studies, Philosophical Faculty, Charles University in Prague, Seminar of Indian Studies at Prague, Czech Republic.


http://balsanskar.com is a Marathi site to impart understanding of Marathi tradition and culture to children. "सुसंस्कारित पिढी हेच देशाचे भवितव्य !" ह्या मूळापदावर, "`मुलांना केवळ माहिती देणे', असा या संकेतस्थळाचा मर्यादित उद्देश नसून खऱ्या अर्थाने व्यक्तिमत्व विकास होण्यासाठी विविध सदरे देण्यात आली आहेत. व्यक्तिमत्व विकास म्हणजे शारीरिक, मानसिक आणि बौद्धिक अशा स्तरांवर मर्यादित न ठेवता, त्याही पुढे जाऊन आध्यात्मिक स्तरावरही होणे गरजेचे आहे. यासाठी त्यातील अंगांची येथे मांडणी केली आहे." शिक्षण, परीक्षा, अभ्यासाचे महत्व, व्यायाम व सूर्यनमस्कार, स्फूर्तिगीते, संस्कृत सुभाषिते, स्तोत्रे, बोधप्रद गोष्टी, शिस्त व आत्मविश्वास इत्यादी विषयांवर मार्गदर्शन करण्याचा ह्या संकेतस्थळाचा हेतू कळून येतो. संकेतस्थळाला आपल्या सहभागाची अपेक्षा आहे. (संपर्क)
Navavani at http://www.navavani.org plans to undertake and show a "new journey of Sanskrit." It is an humble attempt of Sanskrit teachers and students of Irinjalakuda (इरिङ्गालक्कुटा) Educational District, in Thrissur District, Kerala to promote Sanskrit Language through day to day discourses using web media. There are several sections composed entirely by the highschool students (Holy Cross High School, Mapranam) that will help a reader understand and enjoy Sanskrit better.
  • Picture Dictionary : contains pictures of common objects with Sanskrit names. Enjoy the categories शाकादीनि। वृक्षादयः। कीटाः। गृहसंबन्धिनी वस्तूनि। फलादयः। खाद्यानि। पुष्पाणि । वस्त्राणि आभरणानि च। शरीरावयवाः । खगाः । जन्तवः । विद्यालयसंबन्धिनः।
  • Online Magazine : contains articles written by students and Teachers
  • Audio Gallery : contains Sanskrit lessons given by experts
  • Sanskrit Radio : has audio clips of Sanskrit news from All India Radio
  • Photo Gallery : contains photos in connection with Sanskrit Teachers' Council, Irinjalakuda
  • Downloads : contains a collection of stories, Subhashithams and other useful references
  • Science in Sanskrit : contains illustrated images regarding the scientific inventions in old ages
  • Feedback : allows readers to raise doubts and share views in the discussion forum
Show your appreciation to the team behind the project.


Sanskrit Sambhashana Sandesha is now available online at http://samskritam.in/. Copies since 1994 are posted in DjVu format. The Sandesha has "articles that unearth the hidden treasures in Samskritam texts." It contains articles, stories for children and advanced students, puzzles, news items, book reviews, jokes, crosswords et cetera, all complete in Sanskrit. Subscribe to the magazine to receive future copies of the colorful, nicely printed, archival monthly magazine. Support the Sanskrit Bharati support activities. (Bharat : Samskrita Bharathi, “Aksharam”, VIII cross, Girinagar II phase, Bangalore - 560 085). The details are also available at http://www.samskritabharati.org/.
SaMskRutaadhyayanam with Shripad L. Abhyankar. Many lessons are provided under the title "Learning Sanskrit in distance learning mode" in addition to help on speaking Sanskrit. Shri Abhyankar participates and guides students of Sanskrit literature in the learnsanskrit.wordpress.com along with Prof. Himanshu Pota. See also http://slezall.blogspot.com/
Message from Masters, at messagefrommasters.com has compiled inspirational stories, quotes, videos, biographies, and links to books by notable thinkers and teachers. They include Gautam Buddha, Osho also known as Bhagwan Rajneesh, Jiddu Krishnamurti, Ramana Maharshi, Shri Ramakrishna, Lao Tzu Tao Te Ching, Gurdjieff, Ouspensky, Adi Shakaracharya, Meher Baba, Kahlil Gibran, Swami Vivekananda, and so on.
"A Million Books for a Billion People," projects of Arvind Gupta and his team, "Engineers helping those who must live on the ground." Visit and explore http://arvindguptatoys.com for a refreshing journey in to day to day scientific experiements, entertainment, toys, and much more.


A Jain eLibrary comprises of a vast collection of literature on Jain principles. The project involves an online, ever-growing, well-coordinated collection of scriptures, manuscripts, dictionary, encyclopedia, articles, magazines, and ancient and contemporary books in English, Hindi, Gujarati, Sanskrit, and other languages related to Jainism. It contains ancient and modern literature representing all aspects of Jainism. Catalogues of Jain manuscripts of various Jain libraries add to the diversity of this collection. A 4 DVD Set containing 2000 Jainism eBooks in various languages and Catalogue is available for purchase. This is a collective effort by Jain Education International Organization and various Jain organizations.


There are many sites that support transliteration for generation of display in many Indian scripts with Unicode format. Depending on one's preference and interest, these provide free, instant or online/off-line processing help in encoding. Some of these are listed here for reference (opens in new window): Web Interface/webitrans, Itranslator, Baraha/Direct, Sanscript (learnsankrit.org), Aksharamukha, HiTrans, Girgit, Shabdakosh, Mudgala-ime, Gumpad, Google Indic Transliteration and IME, Microsoft ILIT, akSharamAlA, quillpad, IITMadras Multilingual, HindiTypePad, UniNagari, maayboli, Pramukhpad, sarasvati, gujaratilexicon, Itrans2IAST, WebDunia, LexiLogos, WriteKA, Wordpress MonuSoft, UtopianVision, Kavitype, HindiIni, and perhaps many more unaccounted (!). With commonality provided by Unicode worldwide, most of these utilities cover typing and display of Devanagari (Sanskrit/Hindi/Marathi/Nepali), Gujarati, Punjabi/Gurumukhi, Telugu, Tamil, Kannada, Malayalam, Bengali and Oriya scripts. Wikipedia pages 1 and 2 provide a comprehensive list of such Indic support sites. Conversion utilities for to-and-from other fonts-based display are available at Mangla, Technical-Hindi-Group, Pratibhaas, Granthamandira, UPenn.


Jahnavi, a new Quarterly Sanskrit e-journal is edited by Bipin Kumar Jha (see sanskritam.ning.com below). "अस्याः संस्कृत पत्रिकायाः उद्देश्यं संस्कृतसंवर्द्धनं, संस्कृतस्यान्तर्गतज्ञान-विज्ञानवैशिष्ट्यस्य प्रकटीकरणञ्च विद्यते। मूलरूपेण अस्यां संस्कृतभाषायां निबद्धरचनानां संग्रहो भविष्यति। "


Esamskriti.com is an online encyclopedia of Indian culture and traditions, education in India, history, Indian leaders, festivals of India, languages, Ayurveda, book reviews & many more. It has carefully selected or well studied essays/articles on various topics. The site is well presented with many sharp photographs for places in States of India and around the world, and categorized albums with subjects including travelogues. It is a "platform to share knowledge and insights," and "to reconnect with Indian heritage." The contents of the site portray, in essence, the quote that "it is out of this past that the future has to be molded".


http://sanskritam.ning.com/ is a site developed by Bipin Kumar Jha. He writes "इदं जालपुटं संस्कृत-प्रेमिभि: संस्कृत-प्रेम्णा संस्कृत-प्रेमिणां कृते निर्मितम् । संस्कृत-गीतानि, संस्कृत-नाटकानि, संस्कृत-साहित्यं, चर्चा:,संस्कृत-लेखनं, पठनं, तथा च यद् यद् वयं चिन्तयितुं शक्नुम: तत् तद् अत्र मिलित्वा कर्तुं शक्येत इति एव अस्माकं दृष्टि: अस्ति । सर्वेऽपि अस्य जालपुटस्य माध्यमेन सोत्साहं संस्कृत-संवर्धनाय कार्यरता: भविष्यन्ति इति विश्वासेन इदम् आव्हानम् -
कार्य का उद्देश्य सभी संस्कृत जिज्ञासुओं को एक मंच प्रस्तुत करना है जो अपने विचारों के माध्यम से जनभाषा के रूप में संस्कृत का संवर्धन कर सकें। इसका उद्देश्य जनसामान्य की भाषा के रूप में संस्कृत को प्रतिष्ठापित करना, संस्कृत जिज्ञासुओं को अभिव्यक्ति हेतु उत्साहित करना है ताकि संस्कृत निरन्तर प्रवाहमयी धारा सदृश रहे "
The site includes a long list of downloadable files and links (महत्वपूर्णानि जालपुटानि), pictures indicating activities of members, discussion forum, videos, and audio feeds/songs related to Sanskrit. A membership is needed to participate in the activities and contribute material such as articles, photos, videos, to the collection.
Download and install a unique utility, Sanskrit Toolbar for common web browsers, that adds to the collection of links for Sanskrit study. Apart from common utilities such as search engine, time of the day, current temperature and weather, email notifier, it has Sanskrit and Hindi links presented in several categories. The links include Sanskrit news, books, read/write tools, chatting utility, dictionaries, scriptures and literature, scrolling news items from BBC and other Hindi dailies, games, cricket news, stock market analysis and many tools. "इस टूलबार में हैं संस्कृत -हिंदी के सभी जरूरी लिंक, समाचारों की फीड, रेडियो चैनल, वीडियो क्लिप, गेम्स तथा और भी बहुत कुछ। for IE, Firefox(Mozilla) and Safari etc. for Windows, Linux & Mac." It is safe to install. Contact Dev at sanskrittools@gmail.com for suggestions/improvements.


The Computational Linguistics R&D, a Special Center for Sanskrit Studies at Jawaharlal Nehru University (J.N.U), New Delhi supports research in several areas of language technology for Sanskrit and other Indian languages. The center is supported by TDIL, a Government of India undertaking. The center has developed various unique tools to help students learn Sanskrit as a language as well as the source of the ancient literature. Some of the tools are : Online-Offline Sanskrit Multimedia & e-learning, Sandhi Generator, Subanta Generator, Online Multilingual Amarakosha, Mahabharata Search, Morphological Analyzer, Vowel Sandhi Splitter, Hindi Homonym Marker et cetera. There is a long list of Sanskrit prose articles as reading excercises. Some student projects such as indices of Ayurveda Herbs, Mahabhaata characters, Arthashastra, Panchatantra Named Entities, Subhashita, Sanskrit Grammar, Karma-kanda, Brahma-sutra and dictionaries/kosha of Sanskrit-Assamese-Bangla, Sanskrit-Hindi, Halayudh-Kosha et cetera will also be very interesting. The index searching comes up with a pad for click-selection/Itrans typing. (Make sure to use viraama/halanta on third row first symbol for a joDAkShara). A few of these are downloadable as perl scripts. Many of the projects at the center are supervised by Dr. Girish Nath Jha.
Visit Shashikant Joshi's atha Sanskritam practicalsanskrit.blogspot.com, which strives to "expound the joy of the wealth of sanskrit literature, wisdom for the modern times," "for those who want to learn something from the great minds of the ages, simple sanskrit, great ideas!" Along with subhAShitas and commentaries, the site lists some of the handy links, such as, How to Read/Write Sanskrit?, how to study ancient works (of sanskrit)?, Sanskrit noun and verb generators, and dictionaries.
In Parentheses site at http://www.yorku.ca/inpar/Sanskrit.htm presents Sanskrit Series with following free downloadable PDF files.
* Bhasa, Carudatta in Poverty, tr. A.C.Woolner and Lakshman Sarup (152K PDF)
* Bhasa, The Minister's Vows, tr. A.C.Woolner and Lakshman Sarup (180K PDF)
* Bhasa, The Vision of Vasavadatta, tr. A.C.Woolner and Lakshman Sarup (180K PDF)
* Harsha, Nagananda, tr. Palmer Boyd (192K PDF)
* Harsha, Priyadarsika, tr. G.K. Nariman, A.V.W. Jackson, C.J. Ogden, and G.C.O. Haas (180K PDF)
* Kalidasa, Shakuntala, tr. Arthur W. Ryder (256K PDF)
* Mahâbhârata, Karna Parva, tr. Kesari Mohan Ganguli (788K PDF)
* Mahâbhârata, Salya Parva, tr. Kesari Mohan Ganguli (532K PDF)
* Mahâbhârata, Sauptika Parva, tr. Kesari Mohan Ganguli (164K PDF)
* Mahâbhârata, Stree Parva, tr. Kesari Mohan Ganguli (168K PDF)
* Mahâbhârata, Strîparva ou Livre des Femmes, tr. L. Ballin (208K PDF)
* Mahâbhârata, Mausala Parva, tr. Kesari Mohan Ganguli (72K PDF)
* Mahâbhârata, Mahaprasthanika Parva, tr. Kesari Mohan Ganguli (48K PDF)
* Mahâbhârata, Swargarohanika Parva, tr. Kesari Mohan Ganguli (84K PDF)
Of Related Interest:
* Basic Sanskrit Flash Cards (transliterated and in Devanagari) 100 words (80K PDF)
* Sanskrit Flash Cards (transliterated and in Devanagari) 3200 words (744K PDF)
* Devanâgarî Flash Cards (72K PDF)
* Devanâgarî Orthography Manual (152K PDF)
* Devanâgarî Transliteration Practice (72K PDF)
Although well prepared, it seems, the flash cards have many serious errors and needs to be double checked with other sources before trusting the words. The words are also in apparent random order and are not useful as a dictionary. The roots are given without mention of गण and thus are hard to use!

Sunday, September 27, 2009

There is a well developed, scholarly site on the topic of Ancient Sanskrit, "an oldest known form of Sanskrit" that is distinguished from the presently known "Classical" Sanskrit that is believed to be developed around 400 BC. The topic is presented by Karen Thomson and Jonathan Slocum of the Linguistics Research center at University of Texas, Austin, and covers various lessons providing observation of distinct grammar style.
Visit http://sanskritebooks.org for downloadable links to Sanskrit books listed under various categories such as Dictionaries, Grammar (व्याकरणं), Learn Sanskrit, Plays (नाटकानि), Stories, Subhashitas et cetera. Most of these books are scanned printed books posted on internet for free download.

Saturday, September 05, 2009

Download or subscribe and read Prabuddha Bharat or Awakened India, the official journal of the Ramakrishna Order started by Swami Vivekananda in 1896. The Advaita Ashram, with branches in Mayavati-Uttarakhand and Kolkata, through publications, weekly classes, and study circles provides a forum for discussion on various topics related to Advaita Vedanta with emphasis on teachings by the trio, ,Shri Ramakrishna Sharada Devi, and Swami Vivekananda. The site also has downloadable audio lectures. Write for the journal, subscribe, and advertise your business an projeccts in the journal. Also read an appeal for its support.
News article in hindimedia.in : इन गाँवों में संस्कृत बोलते हैं लोग. In these villages, majority of people speak Sanskrit कर्नाटक का मुत्तुरु, उत्तर प्रदेश के बागपत जिले का बावली ग्राम, मध्य प्रदेश के नरसिंहपुर जिले का मोहद, मध्य प्रदेश के राजगढ़ जिले का झिरी, राजस्थान के बाँसवाड़ा जिले का गनोडा. Participate in similar efforts personally.
The Arsha Vidya Vahini has formatted Sanskrit texts of "prasthAna trayI," three pillars of Vedantic scriptures. In his MP3 audio talks clips, the founder Acharya Sri Prem Siddharth has addressed many topics such as Significance of Human Birth, Benefits of Meditation, Art Of Parenting, Bhaja Govindam, Upadesha Saaram, Jeeva Yatra, Sadhana Panchakam, Shiva Aparadha Kshamapana Stotram et cetera. There are some refreshing statements by Siddharthji in the questions-answers' sections :
  • A temple is meant for a devotee, not for God! Ceaseless rituals and prayers are carried out to purge the impurities.
  • Meditation comes under "Manasa Karma." Practice of Meditation etc., becomes an indirect means for Self-realisation. The direct means is Jnanam.
  • Mere presence of great culture is not enough. The majority of the present day society neither bothers to study the tenets of our culture nor live them. This is the cause for our degradation.
  • Preparedness and the maturity of the mind takes one to the teacher.
Alejandro Gutman from Buenos Aires, Argentina has developed El Portal de la India Antigua, dedicated to diffuse the achievements of the ancient Indian civilization in the Spanish speaking world. (English translation using Babelfish.yahoo.com.) The site provides many links to books (about 300) and articles (150, and more coming) related to ancient India and those freely available on the web, commented briefly in order to orient people in an increasingly confusing forest of publications. Alejandro has written a few articles on the topics such as cosmogony and eschatology in the Rigveda and translation of several complete hymns. One section intends to be a step by step Sanskrit course based on his own experiences and difficulties with the language. An extensive number of lessons, downloadable in pdf format, are planned and will be presented soon.

Other site related to teaching Sanskrit online through Spanish, English, and Portugese is Gabriel Pradīpaka & Andrés Muni's A Sun of Sanskrit Knowledge http://www.sanskrit-sanscrito.com.ar/
Sanskrit lessons, exercises, and solutions built by Alois Payer with help from Margarete. (The original German site is at http://www.payer.de/skrtlink.htm and the link here is translated through babelfish). The collection includes i) Indian history with information on inscriptions, coins, inheritances, and sources from Chinese, Tibetan, Arabic, Persian, Turkish, European records; ii) Sixty detailed Sanskrit lessons with exercises and solutions; iii) Notes on sandhi, roots, tenses, upasarga, suffixes etc.; iv) Apte's student's guide to Sanskrit compositions; v) Selected translations of charakasaMhitA, kAmasUtra, kauTilIya arthashAstra, dharmashAstra, manusmriti, nAradasmriti, shaivagamaparibhAShAmanjarI, and somadeva's kathAsaritasAgara; and vi) compilation of notes on Carnatic music. The individual pages in HTML format are made more interesting with excellent photographs and information interspersed throughout. The collection is part of department of Sanskrit of Tüpfli's global Village Library that addresses other topics. They offer it as "Free information for free citizens."


Font converters for Indic scripts


Veda Adhyayana Kendra is a non-profit organization located in Bangalore, India that aims at promoting India’s Vedic Heritage. This website presents information regarding the history, activites, membership and publications (a newsletter and a collection of articles on various topics) of the Kendra. The publications of Vedaganga and VedanAdasarit since 2004 are available online. Dr. C. L. Prabhakar, Prof. and HOD of the Department of Sanskrit (Retd.), National College, Jayanagar, founded the Kendra in 1994. He is assisted by a dedicated but small team of volunteers. The groups are separated in departments of Veda, Nada (Music), Jyotish (Astrology), and Yoga. The Kendra is also home of the “World Association for Vedic Studies” (WAVES) Organization’s Bangalore Chapter. (linked by Prasad Calyam)


A thousand Sitarists and other musicians played on one platform for the first time in the world, in the Brahma Naad concert for world peace. To make so many people sit in one place for practice & rehearsal is unimaginable. This was held in New Delhi on 21st Nov 2008. Sitar players of various age group, ranging from 6 to 70 years, from different parts of the world - India, Australia, USA, France and Abu Dhabi - performed in this grand celebration of peace and harmony. These included child prodigies, budding artists from renowned schools of classical music, senior practitioners and those who are visually challenged, among others. Click on the links below to enjoy the spectacular performance (with specified Raga).
Symphony 1 (gArA), Symphony 2 (bAgeshrI), and Symphony 3 (ha.nsadhvanI.)
This superlative performance conducted by the Art of Living is expected to find its way in the Guinness Book of World Records.


Bhagwadgomandal at http://www.bhagvadgomandal.com/ is the most prolific work in Gujarati that was derived after 26 years of scientific and detailed work. This encyclopedic dictionary of Gujarati language is available online, in searchable unicode format, with keypad entry and is free. ‘ભગવદ્ગોમંડલ’ જેવા અદ્વિતીય જ્ઞાનકોશ. Try searhing for સંસ્કૃત (use સ with virAma ્ to join with k).


The totalbhakti.com provides satsang and teachings of hundreds of Indian teachers in video format. The site includes thousands of bhajans/spiritual songs in over 15 Indian languages, mantras, shlokas, Gita, Ramayana, religious wallpapers, e-greetings, and many more. The website is dedicated to the world of spiritualism, through the internet, to promote daily practice of Yoga, Hinduism, and to provide all related religious & cultural information.
Lists of वर्णाः colors, दिशः directions, मासाः months, वासराः week days, कालः time periods, शरीरस्य भागाः body parts, मृगाः animals, and खगाः birds in Sanskrit are available at 2indya.com. Vivek Kumar is a freelance writer, motivated to perform सेवा sevA with Satya Sai Baba's guidance. एको गुणः खलु निहन्ति समस्तदोषान्।।


Enjoy a different approach to Sanskrit words' etymology. Read the articles on Sanskrit Puns by Richard Stoney of Orleans, CA. Some articles include "Gulliver's Travels and its Sanskrit Puns," "Sources of the Word Yahoo," "English Words derived from Sanskrit," "Hindu Linguistical Influence in Northern Europe: 1200-1600," "Etymology and Ethnobotany," "The Crucible" and Sanskrit, and more are forthcoming!


The Arsha Vidya Gurukulam Satsangs offers an online company of learned and teachings through talks and question-answers, "to get a better perception of life and make our priorities clearer." The site is a voluntary offerings from Arsha Vidya Gurukulam, "a center for learning the knowledge imparted by the Rishis," in Saylorsburg, PA, US. It was founded by Shri Swami Dayananda. Many audio-mp3 and text-PDF files of the scholarly speeches on varied topics by Gurukulam Swamis (Dayananda, Viditatmananda, Tattvavidananda, Pratyagbodhananda) are available. The files are categorized by speakers, topics, dates with details on the duration/length and file size. The topics include, just to list a few among many, Alertness, Detachment, Devotion, Hindu Dharma, Intelligent Living, Karma Yoga, Knowledge, Love, Purpose Of Life, Self Acceptance, Vairagya, Values, Vedanta, Yoga, and scriptural texts such as Bhagavatam, Bhagavad Gita, Bhaja Govindam, Brahmasutra, Durga Suktam, Ksetrajna Bhashyam, Uddhava Gita, Vedanta Dindima et cetera.


"Just be Happy, मौज में रहो ", Swami Anubhavananda is busy "spreading wisdom that unites and integrates people of the world" through his talks, meetings, and the site behappyinc.org. Read his A-Z "Just be happy" mantra. For example, "Xpect nothing if you want to be happy, You have to be happy, none can make you happy." Small sample Audio clips of some of his talks in Hindi and English, available on the site, are
  • Beyond Cause And Effect Sydney 2006
  • Bhagwat Kahanian (Hindi)_Pune 2006
  • Bhaj Govindam_Melbourne 2006
  • Drig Drishya
  • Gita Ka Sangeet (Hindi)_Hubli 2006
  • Happiness The Foundation Of Life_Sydney 2006
  • Happy Tips_Boston 2006
  • How To Be Calm In The Chaotic World_Singapore 2006
  • HRD Is Happy Relation Development_Pretoria 2006
  • Inner Strength Q&As_LA 2006
  • Ishavasya Happy Retreat_South Africa 2006
  • Kaivalya Upanishad_Auckland 2006
  • Living Gita In Daily Life - Atlanta 2006
  • Living Happily & Leaving Happily_Singapore 2006
  • Poornamadah Poornamidam (Hindi)_Bidar 2006 MP3
  • Ramayana Upset Vs Setup_Durban 2006
  • The Exit Policy_South Africa 2006
  • We And Stress_ Chicago 2006
  • Yajnavalkya On The Self_Melbourne 2006
Some video clips are also presented.


The Bhaktivedanta VedaBase Network at vedabase.net covers wide variety of scriptures related to Vaishnav bhakti. Each book has original text in Sanskrit, word meaning/synopsis, translation, and detailed commentary mostly by the well-known A. C. Bhaktivedānta Swāmī Śrīla Prabhupāda,
  • Bhagavad-gītā As It Is
  • Śrīmad Bhāgavatam
  • Śrī Caitanya Caritāmṛta
  • Teachings of Lord Caitanya
  • Nectar of Devotion
  • The Nectar of Instruction
  • The Topmost Yoga System
  • The Krishna Book
  • Teachings of Lord Kapila
  • Teachings of Queen Kuntī
  • Śrī Brahma-saṃhitā
  • Śrī Īśopaniṣad
  • Mukunda-mālā-stotra
  • Nārada Bhakti Sūtra
  • Śrī Śikṣaṣtaka
These and other books are available in print format from Bhaktivedanta Book Trust Krishnastore.com.



Sanskrit Language Software tools and fonts are now available at the web based Indian Language Data Centre (ILDC) site through Technology Development for Indian Languages (TDIL) Programme. It has the objective to develop information processing tools to facilitate human machine interaction in Indian languages and to develop technologies to access multilingual knowledge resources. कार्यक्रमस्य ध्येयम् अस्ति – मानवयन्त्रयोर्मध्ये भाषावरोधेन विना अन्योन्यक्रियासौकर्याय सूचना प्रक्रियाकरणोपकरणानां प्रविधीनां च विकसनम्। This activity is being executed in close coordination with CDAC, Gist, Pune.
The software tools for Windows 95/98/XP/2003 and newer and for Linux, include
  • Lexical Resources : Online Multilingual Amarakosha (बहुभाषीय अमरकोश), Mahabharata Search (महाभारत अनुक्रमणी)
  • Language Analyzers : Vowel Sandhi Splitter (स्वर-संधि विश्लेषक), Subanta analyzer (सुबंत विश्लेषक), Tinanta analyzer (तिङन्त विश्लेषक), Kridanta Analyzer (कृदन्त विश्लेषक), POS tagger (पद-परिचायक), Karaka analyzer (कारक-विश्लेषक), Gender Recognizer and Analyzer for Sanjna Pada (GRASP), (संस्कृत-संज्ञापद-लिङ्ग-विश्लेषण)
  • Language Generators : Sandhi Generator (संधि), Subanta Generator(सुबंत), Tinanta generator (तिङन्त)
  • Sanskrit Pradipika


Gita Foundation, Miraj, Maharashtra has published a special Diwali Magazine dharmayaj~na 2008 (धर्मयज्ञ दिवाळी अंक २००८) in Marathi. "नैतिकतेच्या अतिरेकास उत्तर देण्याचा नैतिकतेस प्रवृत्त करणारा यज्ञ म्हणजे धर्मयज्ञ॰" The trust is formed by Mr. Dilip V. Apte and a few friends. The special issue is available in PDF format on the site and includes referencee articles by notable individuals.
Subscription to the foundation includes this issue (128 pages) with an audio CD of Gita and portion of Bhagavat, and a monthly newsletter of approximately 40 pages. All proceeds go to needy Children's Education foundation.

Also read following online Diwali Anka


New All-Sanskrit Vishvani Issue at speaksanskrit.org from umd_samskritam yahoo group.
Nov 10, 2008 : "तुलसीपूजायाः उत्थानद्वादश्याः च शुभाशयाः । अस्मिन् शुभावसरे विश्ववाण्याः नूतना सञ्चिका प्रकाशिता अस्ति । पत्रिकाम् अत्र प्राप्तुं शक्यते : http://www.speaksanskrit.org/vishvavani यथापूर्वम् अस्मिन् अङ्के अपि पदबन्धः प्रहेलिका विविधलेखनानि च सन्ति : अलम् अधिकप्रचारेण, यत्स्वल्पमपि तद्बहु, सङ्गणकेषु देवनागर्या कथं लिख्यते ?, पदबन्धः - ३, सुभाषितम्, प्रहेलिका, मुद्रिकारहस्यम्, परिसरप्रेमी, नरेन्द्रात् विवेकानन्दः,प्रहेलिकायाः उत्तरम्, चातुर्मास्यकथा, सूक्तिः, इत्यादि | पदबन्धस्य उत्तरं डिसेम्बर्-मासान्त्यात् पूर्वं यैः प्रेष्यते, तेषां नामानि अग्रिमाङ्के प्रकाशिष्यन्ते । पत्रिकां पठित्वा भवतां प्रतिस्पन्दान् vishvavani [[at]speaksanskrit.org प्रति प्रेषयन्तु । लेखनानि शीघ्रमेव http://vishvavani.blogspot.com इत्यत्र अपि उपलब्धानि भवन्ति ।"


Read the poetic presentation Significance of pancha-bhootas and the exchanges by Kavitha Kalyan at Indian Temples and Iconography site.


Banglapedia, National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh, has an historical overview of Sanskrit from ancient times to the present. The article is written by Narayan Chandra Biswas and highlights contribution of notable Bengali speakers to the advancement of Sanskrit literature and learning. A project for collecting and developing manuscripts, storing them in microfilms format, accompanied by short descriptions, was conducted from 1984-1988 under the supervision of Dhaka University Library. It has resulted in multivolume collection.
The translation of yogasutras of Patanjali (YSP), its commentaries, and links are available in various languages such as Bulgarian, Chinese, Croatian, Dutch, English, French, German, Hungarian, Italian, Polish, Portuguese, Punjabi, Romanian, Russian, Sanskrit, Slovakian, Spanish, and Swedish, at the YSP site

There is another in Hindi by Surinder Shanker Anand at http://sites.google.com/site/shankyandy/Patanjal-Yog that is well documented with word meanings, translation, and commentary. The site has the entire book in PDF format along with many English articles on Adhyatma (Spiritualism) and lessons in Jyotish (Astrology). See the downloads section. It also has texts of Aditya Hridayam Stotra, Essence of Gita, Mind, Likes and dislikes, Vedic Sandhya etc. Author's basic motive behind "this effort is to spread the teachings of Maharshi Patanjali amongst the true seekers. But at the same time, it was the fervent desire to help needy and poor students in their education. Therefore, all the profit earned from the sale of this book will be utilized for this noble cause."


Sanskrit Dina at Pittsburgh, USA.
The विश्वसंस्कृतदिनं World Sanskrit Day was celebrated on October 18th in Pittsburgh. Many children participated in the event with their dances, shloka chanting, a skit, and songs. The अमृतवाणी Amritavani and त्रिवेणी Tiveni Sanskrit groups meet regularly to learn and converse in Sanskrit. The event was organized by Sanskrit Bharati, Pittsburgh with the help of other local groups. Click for program brochure and contact Shruthi Vembar for more details.
The Sudharma, Sanskrit Daily from Mysore is now online at http://sudharma.epapertoday.com. This newspaper is being published by K.V.Sampath Kumar from Mysore. It has been in print for the last 39 years. Contact sudharma.sanskritdaily@gmail.com, Phone : 0821-2442835 / 4287835 . Paypal donation is accepted.
संस्कृत भारती, कोंकण प्रदेश संस्कृत सम्मेलनं
Sanskrit Bharati, Konkan Pradesh Sanskrit Sammelanam
Dates - Nov-1 & 2 (coming Sat and Sun) 2008.
Time - from 9am on Nov 1 to 6pm on Nov 2.
Venue - Pendharkar college, MIDC area, Dombivali (east)
Fee - Rs.100 (with food and stay)
Lectures and programs-
- Nov 1. A formal inauguration of the संस्कृत विज्ञान प्रदर्शिनी Sanskrit-Vigyaan Pradarshini (charts and working models prepared on bases of ancient sanskrit texts)
- A formal inauguration of the Sammelanam by Shri Ramesh Jadhav (hon.Mayor) and key note address by the Sammelana-Adhyaksha Dr.Gauri Mahulikar (HOD Univ of Mum Dept of Sanskrit)
- A lecture by Shri Chandragupta Varnekar on Science in Sanskrit presided by Dr.Vijay Bedekar.
- A lecture on various efforts being made by various institutions all over the world for popularizing Sanskrit by Shri Chinmay Amshekar (Konkan Pranta Samyojaka- Samskrita Bharati)
- A Sanskrit drama को न याति वशं लोके "ko na yaati vashaM loke"
- Shobha yatra
- A special address by Shri Prabhaakar Panshekar (a famous personality in marathi theater)
- A special address by Shri Dinesh Kaamat (all india organisational head of SamskritaBharati)
- संस्कृत क्रीडोत्सव Samskrita Kreeda-utsav - simple games with running commentry in Sanskrit by Dr.Malhra Kulkarni (Prof. of Sanskrit at IIT Mumbai)
- An analysis of condition of Samskrita and its relevance in modern world
- कार्याभियान मास Kaarya-Abhiyana-Maasa - an interactive session about what each one of us can do for Sanskrit.
- Publication and Sale of new Samskrita-books
Click for invitation

For registration and details contact Sanskrit Bhasha, sanskritbhasha@gmail.com Neeraj Dandekar- 9820256996


Sanskrit Snehasammelan at Mulund (Mumbai) held on 29th September, 2008
Maharashtra Seva Sangh, Mulund held its second Sanskrit Shehasammelanam with 500 delegates attending. It was a day long program, extremely well organized. Following were the highlights:
a. Inauguration at the hands of Jyotirbhaskar Jayantrao Salgaoncar and Shri Prabhakarpant Panshikar
b. Upanishad recital
c. Dialogue with experts (Q&A from participants) from a variety of fields related to Sanskrit.
d Sanskrit Orchestra, presented by Sanskrit Bhasha Sanstha founded by Ga. Vaa. Karandikar.
e. Sanskrit Prashnottari (Quiz), presented by Sanskrit Bhasha Sanstha founded by Ga. Vaa. Karandikar.
f. Two Sanskrit One-act plays: Aksha Eva Jayate by Mrs. Manjoosha Gokhale and Mukta (Aatoon Kirtan Varun Tamasha) written by Prabhakar Bhatkhande, the prime mover for last 23 years for Sanskrit speaking programs in the region.
g. Geet Dattatreyam (based on compositions of Sanskrit Shahir Nanivadekarji)
h. Sanskrit Antakshari conducted by Dr. Tanmay Almadi & Sau. Surekha Joshi entirely in Sanskrit preceded by their rendering of Sanskrit songs brilliantly. Dr. Tanmay Almadi's Sanskrit translation of "Mana udhaan varyachhe" which he himself sang, received a great acclaim.

Contact for Sanskrit Bhasha Sanstha (founded by Ga. Vaa. Karandikar, now 85)
A 402, Shanti Apartment,
Mahakali Nagar, Vidyalaya Marg,
Mulund (E), Mumbai 400 081 Tel 2563 2253

There were many stalls for selling Sanskrit books / CDs including Amarakosha recitations based on the spardhaa organized by Tarangini Khot, daughter of Prabhakar Panshikar.
Listen and download Marathi kirtan mostly by संत श्री बाबा महाराज सातारकर in MP3 format. The audio clips are produced and the section moderated by Haridas Badwe, who also maintains collection of BhagvadGeeta, Dnyaneshwari, and Marathi/Hindi Bhajans
॥ वृत्तेन आर्यो भवति ॥ "vR^ittena Aryo bhavati" is the guiding principle for a new site SuSanskrit.org. संस्कृत के बिना भारत की भव्य संस्कृति, नीतिमूल्यों, और जीवनमूल्यों को यथास्वरुप समझना संभव नहीं । It is developed to promote Sanskrit and Sanskriti for layman as a non-profit initiative. The site is displayed in Devanagari Unicode with Hindi translation. (set your browser for UTF8 encoding everytime). It contains subhAshita-s by subject, suktis (one liners), useful articles in Hindi, Gita chapters and more. You can contribute with your entries. विद्यार्थीयों की संस्कृत में रुचि और भाषासमागम बढाने के यज्ञ में सम्मिलित होने की भावना भी यहाँ ज़रुर रही है । It also facilitates searching, sorting, and Devanagari/Hindi (and other scripts) typing using Pramukh Pad developed by Vishal Monpara.
A newly launched Sanskrit Voice Digest has a compilation of summary and links of blogs by different internet Sanskrit blog-authors. It makes it easy for readers to access many online Sanskrit related articles in one place. A well-meant theme is that "the effort has been initiated to educate people, especially the youth, about the wisdom conveyed in the ancient texts, and revive Sanskrit for the modern age." A similar Sanskrit newsfeeds and podcasts are brought together at Sanskrit In The News.


Summer Camps Revive India's Ancient Sanskrit, an article in washingtonpost.com by Rama Lakshmi covering aspects of the debate over importance of learning Sanskrit and its implementation. Apart from portraying commonly fashionable "Hindu-bashing" stance, there are some important statements in the news report that need personal attention, such as : "It is critical to understand Sanskrit in order to study ancient Indian civilization and knowledge"; "We are nothing without Sanskrit"; "Sanskrit is a beleaguered language in India today, caught in a web of widespread apathy and questions about its utility"; "In the name of so-called secularism, it has become fashionable to attack any attempt to promote Sanskrit"; "To talk about Sanskrit is very political in India today, that is the plight of the language." "When I learn any language, I learn about its history and its literature, but when I study Sanskrit, I learn who I am. It is my identity."
For the contents of the profound literature, can Sanskrit be taken closer to one's heart and learned for personal enrichment?


The Gospel of Matthew in Sanskrit is newly added on Ulrich Stiehl's sanskritweb.net. The file includes Devanagari text, Roman transliteration, and English translation. It was translated two hundred years ago into Sanskrit by William Carey, who also spoke Bengali and numerous other languages.


Key to the Vedas : Integral Hermeneutics by M. I. Mikhailov and N. S. Mikhailov. A detailed summary is available at itved.com along with other books by Mikhailovs. Authors warn that "Contrary to popular belief, one of the biggest problems facing Vedic and Sanskrit start-up scholars is NOT lack of information... It's INFORMATION OVERLOAD... False promises... Usual pitfalls of colonial, naturalistic, nationalistic and religious ideology..." Authors are founders and supporters of the Online International Academy of Vedic Programming.
http://www.vedicsciences.net/ has a collection of articles with studied photographs and well formatted presentations on the various topics of Vedic literature and its scientific implications. The topics include Vedic Mathematics, The Vedic Paradigm's approach to knowledge, Consciousness Within Science?, Oriental Seeds in Occidental Soil, Sanskrit — Language of Enlightenment, and Sanskrit and Artificial Intelligence. See also
Sanskrit Voice for additional articles and an interface to McDonnel's Sanskrit dictionary.


The blogger.com engine now allows "Blog in your native Indic script, Convert English characters to Indic script as you type! This may increase the number of sites that use Devanagari/Sanskrit display.
Daniel Salas has been involved with Sanskrit Decipherment of the Indus Valley Script. See various links of Daniel's bold discoveries with diagrams and graphs for Metal and Writing in the Bronze Age Indus Valley; 'Metal' Teacher of the Planets; Guru Jyotis; MahAdeva "City of Buddha," Evolution from the Indus Script; Sumerian to Indus translitation; and pages on Vira-bhadra, Gandharva.
Chetan has created Sanskrit utilities that cover Ajax-Based Online Interface to Monier Williams Sanskrit Dictionary using a Java-J2EE Backend, Transliterator to generate display in Devanagari using multiple transliteration schemes (Itrans, Kyoto, and single key map), a Sandhi engine that joins two words and displays them in Devanagari, and a Pratyahara-Decoder based on the Shiva sutra of Panini. The Java based sandhi project software is available for download. An article "Introduction to the Technique of Paninian Grammar" supplements the utilities. The dictionary allows Copy to ClipBoard function for the Devanagari/eLatin Output and makes it more User-Friendly.


Visit Sanskrit Literature blog site at http://venetiaansell.wordpress.com and participate. The site objective is "Bringing Sanskrit literature to a wider global audience." The site is maintained by Venetia Ansel, "hoping to start a Sanskrit literature forum which would generate fresh interest in Sanskrit literature around the world by promoting texts, translations, literary criticism and artistic interpretations," and to "bring together Sanskritists, literature fans, readers and audiences." The site is grouped in different categories such as art, books, film and television, theatre and dance, and verses, quotes, excerpts with links to other relevant blogs, Sanskrit resources and organizations. Read the motivation behind the site and get involved in Sanskrit studies.




  • Listen to the MP3 audio files of English translation of Bhagavadgita. It includes all the chapters with summary read by Michael Scherer of americanaphonic.com. The publication is "Srimad Bhagavad Gita : The Scripture of Mankind," by Swami Tapasyananda. The book is available at Sri Ramakrishna Math, Chennai, India. If you listen to any of it and like it, please let Mike know.



  • Ramayana Sites in Sri Lanka – Visit places of Lankapura such as Ashok Vatika, Sita Kotuwa and Seetha Eliya. Watch a You-tube video on the places visited under Ramayana tours. The site is built by Dream vacations for travel promotion to Sri Lanka.


    Visit BhashaIndia.com, a community site, sponsored by Microsoft, related to Languages of India for their technological enhancement and world-wide outreach. It provides resources for end-users as well as developers. Resources include IMEs in different scripts (Hindi Tamil Kannada Gujarati Marathi Telugu Bengali Malayalam Punjabi Konkani Oriya Sanskrit Nepali), Tri-Lingual Dictionary, Keyboard Layout Creator, sample interviews in regional languages and some minor texts.
    "To London, to Learn Sanskrit", Hindustan Times news item by Aditya Ghosh. Also included is a short interview of Dr. Warwick Jessup, Sanskrit teacher, by Sumana Ramanan, "An exquisitely refined language." St. James Independent School of London, founded in 1975 by Leon Maclaren, teaches Sanskrit as a required language. Have children attending the school benefited by learning Sanskrit?


    The Tamil classic, Thirukkural (Sacred Couplets), attributed to Thiruvalluvar(2nd or 3rd century A.D.) has been translated into many major languages of the world. A project is underway by N.V.K. Ashraf at http://nvkashraf.co.cc (also linked from http://www.geocities.com/nvkashraf) to gather, decode, and present it in many languages. The available translations are grouped in Indian, Asian, and European languages : Gujarati, Burmese, Dutch, Hindi, Chinese, English, Kannada, Fiji, Finnish, Konkani, Japanese, French, Malayalam, Korean, German, Marathi, Malay, Hungarian, Oriya, Sinhalese, Italian, Punjabi, Urdu, Latin, Rajasthani, Norwegian, Sanskrit, Polish, Saurashtra, Russian, Tamil, Spanish, Telugu, Swedish, and more. Many of these are already uploaded on the site.


    Read the ongoing translation of yogavAsiShTha online at google newsgroup yoga-vasishtha. It is being translated by Jiva Das, a long term yoga practitioner. He warns in his preface that the "central teaching of this Masterpiece of Philosophical Literature has mainly this to say: 'This Universe in which you take so much stock,--it never was, it is not now, and it will never be. And if you are ripe for such lunacy, then you should settle down for a seven-year journey." Some of the difficult Sanskrit words are explained in a separate file. Author's favorite verse from Yogavasishtha is
    santoShaH paramo lAbhaH satsa~NgaH paramA gatiH |
    vichAraH paramaM j~nAnaM shamo hi paramaM sukham ||
    सन्तोषः परमो लाभः सत्सङ्गः परमा गतिः ।
    विचारः परमं ज्ञानं शमो हि परमं सुखम् ॥
    Contentment is the highest gain, Good Company the highest course, Enquiry the highest wisdom, and Peace the highest enjoyment.
    The Atma Jyoti Ashram is a spiritual center in Cedar Crest, New Mexico and is also dedicated to promoting and living the traditional Hindu monastic life in US. The well developed site provides many articles, audio/video clippings, high resolution photographs, well-written blogs by Swami Nirmalananda Giri and details of Om Yoga Meditation, and inspiring tips to spiritual seekers. It maintains a Sanskrit glossary which could be modified to promote correct pronunciation of Sanskrit words.



    Streaming realplayer audio of Sanskrit stotras at spiritual-happiness.com and bhajans/devotional songs devotionalsinging.com chanted/sung by Kumuda, aka Sharon Janis.
    Indolipi, a software for indologists and linguists developed by Elmar Kniprath at the Department of Indian and Tibetan Studies, University of Hamburg, Germany. It is a multipurpose tool box dealing with Unicode Open Type fonts of various scripts.



    The site http://www.geocities.com/yajur.veda hosts many documents from Krishna Yajur Veda with vedic svaras with display in Sanskrit, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam, and Grantha-Tamil scripts. The texts include Rudram, Pancha Suktam, Yajur Veda Suktas, Mahanyasam, Taittiriya Aranyaka, Brahamanam, and Samhita, and upanishads. It is built by K. Narasimha Rao .



    The Kootastha Veda Shastra Poshaka Sangha in Bangalore is established to promote the study of the Vedas and the Shastras. The http://www.kootastha.org site has audio and video clips of suprabhatams, rudra, and suuktas for download. Most of the meanings are in Kannada.


    Information on the Unicode for Vedic Sanskrit are available at TDIL (directly at Vedica.pdf), Omkarananda Ashram site, and separate Mailing list forum. Sites request participation and feedback.
    Kalidas Festival in Ujjain. उज्जैन में कालिदास समारोह, स्वर्ण जयंती आयोजन | कालिदास समारोह का शुभारंभ भारतीय पंचांग के अनुसार कार्तिक मास की देवप्रबोधिनी एकादशी को होता है | कालिदास व्याख्यानमाला, 21 स्थानों पर संस्कृत संभाषण शिविरोंका आयोजन, सात दिन तक संस्कृत नाटकों और शास्त्रीय नृत्य का प्रदर्शन, संस्कृत वाद विवाद प्रतियोगिता | Visit Kalidas Academy website http://kalidasaakademi.nic.in/ for project information.






    Following the principle of NCERT "Learning Without Burden" one can find many well formatted text books for Classes I to XII at NCERT, National Council of Educational Research and Training Publication Division, Government of India, New Delhi; select textbooks. Sanskrit subject starts from sixth division; books entitled ruchirA, shreyasI, shemushI, bhAsvatI, shAshvatI. There are quite a few subjects presented here. The books are presented in browsable PDF formats.
    Also read the news item.
    विज्ञान और कंप्यूटर की समर्थ भाषा , श्री नारायण प्रसादजी का यह शोधपरक लेख संस्कृत की वैज्ञानिक विशिष्टताओं को ही नहीं प्रस्तुत करता है अपितु संस्कृत जैसी शुध्द वैज्ञानिक भाषा को लेकर तथाकथित बुध्दिजीवियों द्वारा किए जा रहे छद्म प्रचार की भी कलई खोलता है। hindimedia.in/

    Response : The specific "plan" is to create technical terminology using Sanskrit words and grammar rules. Raghuvir had made such campaign. Many others have attempted to create and standardize such terminologies and there are some dictionaries.

    Learning how to create the words is not the problem, it is relatively easy!

    The problem is how to get the created words established as standard terminology.
    Remember the word for density from school? density = ghanataa = daarDhya!

    Thus, the use of the word determines their success. You don't expect scientists from different part of India talking and thinking in Sanskrit.

    It is more efficient to just adopt the technical words from other languages as given and start using them. If some Sanskrit words become popular and catch on, so be it. (For instance the word guNa from Sanskrit grammar is used by Linguists, but they have enhanced its meaning. They also make words like "gunation"- process of the guna transformation!) Languages grow and intermingle, that is their beauty! (A)


    A video clip depicting commendable decision and efforts by villagers and children of a village in Madhya Pradesh learning and speaking in Sanskrit.
    Sanskar TV Online has round the clock religious Hindu bhajans, kirtans, aartis, aradhanas and spiritual discourses by prominent, respected sants, and documentaries.


    अरविन्दाश्रमे संस्कृतम् aravindAshrame sa.nskR^itam relinked site http://sanskrit.sriaurobindoashram.org.in/ for various online display and audio of Sanskrit related publications from Sri Aurobindo Ashram, Pondicherry. The publications can be ordered from SABDA, Sri Aurobindo Ashram, Puducherry - 605 002, India. For Ordering Information http://www.sabda.in
    One of the aims of Dr. Ratnakar Narale is "producing at least one thousand Sanskrit Speaking People in Toronto, within next ten years." Dr. Narale has written several books to promote learning of Sanskrit, Hindi, and Gita. He has been appointed as a Principal of Hindu Institute of Learning (hilwebsite.com), providing awareness and quality education in Indian Languages, Arts, and Culture. The site's Sanskrit Language page has excerpts of some his books related to Sanskrit, learn to read-write and speak Sanskrit, Sanskrit literature. Many projects are forthcoming. Dr. Narale is also an established artist specializing in visual artwork.


    Read Sanskrit journals/magazines online
    Samskriti, yearly magazine from Samskrita Sangha, संस्कृतसङ्घः, Indian Institute of Technology, Bangalore.
    Sahridaya Vol 5, pages 383.
    Sahridaya Vol 6, pages 317.
    Sahridaya Vol 8, published in 1925, pages 435 with plays.
    vishvavANi from UMD Samskritam, speaksanskrit.org.
    apUrvavANI, published by Samskrita Bharati in Bay Area.
    Surabharati, publication by Sri Aurobindo Ashram, Pondicherry.
    A good collection of popular Sanskrit devotional songs, dedicated to different gods and goddessess, is available at DEVOTIONAL SANSKRIT 01 eSnips Folder. The audio collection is built by Hari Narayana Bhat.


    A. V. Gopalakrishna Warrier from Kochi, Kerala has attempted to connect the ideas in Taittiriya Upanishad to the context of real life in this world at Taittiriya Upanishad - A Contemporary Interpretation
    Sanskrit grammar, व्याकरणम्, blog site http://srinilakshmi.wordpress.com by Acharya Srinivasakrishnan is an easy guide to the Laghusiddhantakaumudi, लघुसिद्धांतकौमुदी, a primer on Paninian grammar. Classes are held with selected number of students using Skype.

    There is also a set of 24 video clips of lectures delivered in Sanskrit on You Tube on the topic of Laghusiddhantakaumudi . These classes were conducted in Bangalore and videos are titled "Vyakarana Kakshya (Sanskrit Grammar Classes) by LSK."


    Samskrta-Subodhini: A Sanskrit Primer is a well researched book/tutorial by Professor Madhav M. Deshpande for learning Sanskrit. As a rare release and as a kind gift, Dr. Deshpande has recorded all the lessons and readings in audio format in his own voice, and have made them available free in downloadable MP3 format. The printed book is available from Center of South Asian Studies, University of Michigan and Amazon.com in hardcover/cloth and paperbook formats. Listen to Buddha's short biography in the first reading exercise : Buddha answers to a question "katham vayam duHkham tyajemeti?" "कथम् वयम् दुःखम् त्यजेमेति?" "ichChaa duHkhasya kAraNam |" "इच्छा दुःखस्य कारणम् ।"
    The Gumpad is "yet another Indian language text composer" devloped by Pradyumna Revur. It is Windows based freeware/ software that can generate texts in several Indian scripts such as, Bengali, Devanagari, Gujarati, Gurmukhi, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Oriya, Tamil, and Telugu (which are also standard for Itrans interface or bhomiyo). One can either type directly or read already prepared text and convert to see it in chosen script. It uses Unicode based fonts built-in to the operating system. A rare feature, not commonly found in other software that user can modify easily, is that it allows custom mapping of standard keypad letters to assigned script letters. This can be a useful feature for people used to typing in Itrans, Kyoto, or other phonetic based transliteration if a proper mapping is developed. There are plans to incorporate additional user friendly features.
    Puja.net has informational audio Podcasts under the topic of Vedic Mythology, Music, and Mantras and well presented multimedia audio and video resources. The podcasts include commentaries, stories, and relevant Sanskrit mantras and storas. The yagya group was formed by Sri Narasimha Bhattar and Benjamin Collins with assistance from Sri Seetharam Sastri. The site is built with commercial precision and outlook although the mission statements highlight that "Service, not profit, is the driving motive behind puja.net" and that "Our sponsorship of yagyas is intended not only to result in positive benefit for ourselves. Through our participation, we honor and preserve the Vedic traditions in India, and provide meaningful employment for highly qualified priests." It provides Jyotish consultations, blogs such as daily pUjA insights and yagyanotes, yearly pUjA schedule, and excellent pUjA videos/photos.


    Google Indic Transliteration has some intelligence added to the data base; Sanskrit sanskrit samskrit saMskrit give the संस्कृत. The letter अ on the top left needs to depressed to get the Devanagari characters and can be used as a toggle between Devanagari and Roman. hindi/Hindi and hiMdi give different output, first with nasal n and next with anusvAra. A space after any word/letter prompts the conversion. Clicking on the word allows selection of multiple choices in addition to the editting feature. Marathi La and Ra are missing. It is a matter of time that this gets expanded in other Indic scripts. The unicode output is transferable to Word, notepad or such editors. A similar creative online tool built by an enthusiast, without the mega resources of Google, that also parallels the development, can be seen at bhomiyo.com where Typepad | X-literate Site | X-literate Text Tools are available in various language scripts.
    Introduction to Vedanta eSnips Folder
    Sw. Paramarthananda's lectures


    DiCrunch is a diacritic conversion utility that converts text between many common transliteration conventions and some Indic scripts. The common transliteration schemes are Balaram, CSX, Harvard-Kyoto, ITRANS, Shakti Mac, Unicode, and Velthuis with display in Devanagari, Bengali, and Oriya scripts.


    A news article about Metro Plus Kochi : Spoken Sanskrit on the web. Klaus Glashoff, retired professor of Mathematics from Germany, has initiated the site http://www.spokensanskrit.de that provides "hypertext Sanskrit dictionary, English - Sanskrit, and Sanskrit - English for spoken Sanskrit" of common words.


    General sites
    The Indology Site
    Sanskrit Studies Links
    Speak Sanskrit Forum
    International Association of Sanskrit Studies
    Sanskrit Page, Omniglot

    Sanskrit dictionaries

    Sanskrit Heritage Dictionary
    Sanskrit Heritage Dictionary plugin for Firefox browser by Bernard Lombart
    Open directory Sanskrit page
    Report on the Cologne Sanskrit Dictionary Project (1997)
    Cologne Dictionaries Server
    Cologne Sanskrit Dictionaries Download
    Searchable revised Monier-Williams Dictionary
    DCS (Digital Corpus of Sanskrit) at Heidelberg University
    Reversed Sanskrit Dictionary
    Sanskrit utilities tools of Chetan Pandey
    Scanned Monier-Williams ebook
    xhtml Monier-Williams dictionary at Prem Pahlajraj's site
    Apte's dictionary search (Chicago)
    Macdonell's dictionarysearch (Chicago)
    Dictionnaire sanskrit-français de N. Stchoupak, L. Nitti et L. Renou
    Dictionnaire sanskrit-français d'Emile Burnouf (1866)
    Glossarium Sanscritum by Francisco Bopp
    SARVA (South Asian Residual Vocabulary Assemblage)
    On-line dictionaries for Sanskrit
    Small portal to Sanskrit dictionaries
    Page Lexilogos pour le sanskrit
    Richard Mahoney's HTML search in Monier-Williams Dictionary
    Marking the Monier-Williams Dictionary
    Louis Bontes MWSDD (Interface for Monier-Williams Dictionary on Windows) [dated 2002]
    Bhaktivedanta's Monier-Williams searchable freeware for Windows
    Monier-Williams scanned in Djvu format
    André Signoret's French to Sanskrit dictionary (2001)
    Òscar Pujol's diccionari sànscrit-català
    Taantrikaabhidhaanakoza (Somadeva Vasudeva)

    Sanskrit digital libraries

    The Sanskrit Library
    GRETIL e-library introduction
    Göttingen Register of Electronic Texts in Indian Languages (GRETIL)
    SARIT: Search and Retrieval of Indic Texts
    The Clay Sanskrit Library
    Somadeva's Electronic texts site
    Digital South Asia Library, U. of Chicago
    Digitalisierte Werke auf dem Felde der Indologie
    Linguistic archeology of South-Asian manuscripts at Cambridge University Library
    Sanskrit Texts and Stotras
    Valmiki Ramayana site
    Muktabodha site of Indological Research Institute
    Apte's Student's Guide to Sanskrit Composition
    Richard Mahoney's Indica et Buddhica
    The Early Buddhist Manuscripts Project
    Digital Sanskrit Buddhist Canon
    Indologie Text archiv, Universität Zürich
    Mathematics and Mathematical Astronomy
    Ancient Sanskrit Online by Karen Thomson and Jonathan Slocum at University of Texas
    Washington University's Early Buddhist Manuscripts project
    Les 108 Upanishads
    Study of Upanishats
    Vedic litterature at Maharishi University of Management
    Detlef Eichler's Sanskrit documents
    Rigveda pdf edition by Keith Briggs
    Sacred Text Archive on Hinduism
    Digital Library of India, IISc Bangalore
    Indian Heritage site at CDAC
    Pandanus Sanskrit e-Texts (Prague)
    The International Cooperative Project for Digitization and Cataloguing of the Woolner Collection, Punjab University Library, Lahore
    Gaudiya Grantha Mandira
    Stotras from Prapatti.com
    Academy for Ancient Texts
    Mahabhasya in Intratext
    Sanskrit Ebooks
    Sanskrit Etexts (Somadeva Vasudeva)
    Guide to manuscript libraries in India
    Rare Buddhist Sanskrit Manuscripts
    Resources for East Asian Language and Thought
    Samkarsha Kanda of Jaimini
    The Plants of Kaalidaasa's Meghaduuta

    Devanagari Fonts and Translators

    Google transliteration for Sanskrit
    Manuel Batsching's site on free and open source software for Asian studies
    Devanagarii portal
    How to type and display Sanskrit on a PC/Mac
    Luc Devroye's Indic language fonts page at McGill University
    Washington University Fonts portal
    ITranslator from Omkarananda Ashram
    Sanskrit Web of Ulrich Stiehl (Fonts, Itranslator, Yajurveda corpus)
    Devanagari Fonts
    Siddhanta Font of Mihail Bayaryn
    Indian Fonts of Vijay Patel
    Unicode Font Guide for Free/Libre Open Source Operating Systems
    utf-skt for TeX
    Indian Standard UDC 681.3 for ISCII-91 code (pdf document)
    Avinash Chopde's old ITRANS Software
    ITRANS to Unicode translator of Ashish Banerjee
    Somadeva's tools for Sanskrit processing on Mac OS X
    Sanskrit typewriter by Richmond Mathewson

    Educational Institutions for Sanskrit in India and South-East Asia

    Rashtriya Sanskrit Sansthan
    Centre of Advanced Study of Sanskrit, Pune University
    Department of Sanskrit and Prakrit Languages, Pune University
    Department of Sanskrit Studies, University of Hyderabad
    Department of Sanskrit, Faculty of Arts, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi
    Kalakosa, Indira Gandhi National Center for the Arts
    Academy of Sanskrit Research in Melkote
    More on Academy of Sanskrit Research
    Varanasi Sanskrit College
    Sansknet, Rashtriya Sanskrit Vidyapeetha, Tirupati
    Rashtriya Sanskrit Vidyapeetha, Tirupati
    Special Center for Sanskrit Studies, Jawaharal Nehru University, New Delhi
    Lal Bahadur Shastri Rashtriya Sanskrit Vidyapeetha, Delhi
    Kavikulguru Kalidas Sanskrit Univerity, Ramtek, Maharashtra
    Shadvala Center for Sanskrit Studies, Goa
    Indology dept. Institut Français de Pondichéry
    Centre de Pondichéry, Ecole Française d'Extrême Orient
    Muktabodha Indological research institute
    Samskrita Bharati Organisation
    Utkal University Sanskrit Dept

    Sanskrit Conferences

    World Sanskrit Conferences
    Xth World Sanskrit Conference, Bangalore, 1997
    11th World Sanskrit Conference, Torino, 2000
    12th World Sanskrit Conference, Helsinki, 2003
    13th World Sanskrit Conference, Edinburgh, 2006
    Third Annual Sanskrit Conference, McGill University, Montreal, April 2007
    1st International Symposium on Sanskrit Computational Linguistics, Paris, October 2007
    2nd International Symposium on Sanskrit Computational Linguistics, Providence, May 2008
    3rd International Symposium on Sanskrit Computational Linguistics, Hyderabad, Jan. 2009
    1st National Sanskrit Conference, Australian National University, 2007
    Workshop on Bhattoji and Nagoji, Oxford, Feb. 29th 2008
    14th World Sanskrit Conference, Kyoto, 2009
    South Asian Languages Analysis Roundtable XXVIII, Denton, Oct. 2009
    International Indology Graduate Research Symposium
    28th Annual STIMW Symposium (Sanskrit Tradition in the Modern World), Manchester, May 2011
    5th International Symposium on Sanskrit Computational Linguistics, IIT Bombay, Jan. 2013

    Indological Departments and Resources out of India

    Australia

    Asian Studies WWW Virtual Library, Australian National University
    Sanskrit at La Trobe University, Melbourne

    Austria

    Institut für Südasien, Tibet and Buddhismuskunde, Universität Wien
    Die Sanskrit-Manuskripte der Woolner-Sammlung, Lahore

    Belgium

    Belgian Indology

    Canada

    Department of Asian Studies, University of British Columbia
    Department of East Asian Studies, University of Toronto

    China

    Research Institute of Sanskrit manuscripts and Buddhist litterature at Peking University

    Finland

    Institute for Asian and African Studies, University of Helsinki

    France

    Centre d'études de l'Inde et de l'Asie du Sud de l'EHESS
    Centre d'études de l'Inde et de l'Asie du Sud de l'EHESS
    Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes (Sciences historiques et philologiques) Cours de Jan Houben
    Research team "Mondes Iranien et Indien", UMR 7528 CNRS
    Sanskrit at Université Sorbonne Nouvelle Paris3
    Sanskrit at Université de Lyon
    Sanskrit at Université de Lille
    Sanskrit at Université de Provence (Aix)

    Germany

    Göttingen portal on South Asian linguistic resources
    South Asia Institute, Heidelberg
    Südasien-Institut, Heidelberg
    Institut für Indologie und Södasienwiessenschaften, Martin-Luther-Universität, Halle-Wittenberg
    Institut für Indologie und Tamilistik, Universität zu Köln
    Institut für Indologie und Zentralasienwissenschaften, Universität Leipzig
    Institut für Sprachen und Kulturen Südasiens, Freie Universität Berlin
    Institut für Indologie und Iranistik, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
    Center for Buddhist studies, University of Hamburg
    Asien-Afrika Institut, University of Hamburg
    Seminar für Indologie, Universität Tübingen
    Lehrstuhl für Indologie, Universität Würzburg
    Bhasa-Projekt Universität Würzburg
    Indologie und Tibetologie, University of Marburg
    Fachgebiet Indologie und Tibetologie, University of Marburg

    Great Britain

    Department of the Languages and Cultures of South Asia, SOAS, London
    Edinburgh University School of Asian Studies - Sanskrit
    South Asia portal from the British Association for South Asian Studies
    Faculty of Oriental Studies, University of Oxford
    Department of Oriental Collections, Bodleian Library, Oxford
    Centre of South Asian Studies, University of Cambridge
    St James International Sanskrit Examination Resource

    Italy

    CESMEO, Torino
    indologia e tibetologia, Universita La Sapienza, Roma

    Israel

    Department of Asian Studies, University of Haifa

    Japan

    Gateway to South Asian Studies in Japan
    Department of Sanskrit Language and Literature, Kyoto University
    Institute of Oriental Culture, The University of Tokyo
    Research Institute for Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies (TUFS)

    Netherlands

    International Institute for Asian Studies (IIAS)
    Leiden University Institute for Area Studies (LIAS)
    Kern Institute in Leiden
    Prof. dr. A. (Arlo) Griffiths, at Leiden University
    Prof. dr. P.C. (Peter) Bisschop, at Leiden University
    Prof. dr. J.A. (Jonathan) Silk, at Leiden University

    Norway

    Prof. Ute Hüsken, University of Oslo

    Russia

    Russian Sanskrit site

    Switzerland

    Abteilung für Indologie, Universität Zürich
    Front för linguistische Antizyklik und Erneuerung Zörich

    USA

    South Asia Institute, Columbia University
    Middle East and Asian Languages and Cultures, Columbia University
    Sanskrit Knowledge Systems Project, Columbia University
    Harvard University Sanskrit Department
    Brown University Sanskrit Program
    UCLA Department of Asian Languages and cultures
    Project South Asia, South Dakota State University and Missouri Southern State University
    Department of South Asian Languages and Civilizations, U. of Chicago
    Department of South Asian Languages and Civilizations, U. of Chicago
    South Asian Studies Program, Rutgers University
    Department of Asian Languages and Literature, University of Washington
    Department of South Asian Studies, University of Washington
    Center for South Asia Studies, University of California at Berkeley
    Department of Asian Studies, University of Texas at Austin
    South Asia Institute of University of Texas at Austin
    University of Colorado at Boulder
    Sanskrit at John Hopkins University
    Sanskrit Courses regularly offered at the University of Wisconsin-Madison
    Sanskrit Department, Florida Vedic College at Coral Springs
    Many more links may be found in the Göttingen portal on South Asia Research Institutions on the Internet
    and at page Academic Sanskrit Studies around the World.

    Sanskrit sites of individual scholars

    Sheldon Pollock's home page
    Ian Houben's Vedic Ritual Site
    Ian Houben's professional page at UMR 7528
    Georges-Jean Pinault's professional page at UMR 7528
    Pascale Haag's professional page at EHESS
    Gérard Colas's professional page at EHESS
    Lyne Bansat-Boudon's professional page at EHESS
    Brendan Gillon's home page
    Paul Kiparsky's home page
    Ashok Aklujkar's home page at University of British Columbia
    Adheesh Sathaye's home page at University of British Columbia
    Madhav Deshpande's home page at University of Michigan
    Stella Sandahl's page at University of Toronto
    Dominik Wujastyk's home page at University of Vienna
    Frits Staal's home page
    Peter Schreiner's Indic site
    John Smith's home page
    Johannes Bronkhorst's home page
    Asko Parpola's home page
    Michael Witzel's home page
    Richard F. Gombrich's home page
    Patrick Olivelle's page, Department of Asian Studies, University of Texas at Austin
    Alexis Sanderson's page
    Christopher Minkowski's page
    His inaugural lecture for the Boden Chair
    A. M. Lubotsky's page at Universiteit Leiden
    Detlef Eichler's personal page
    Hans Henrich Hock's home page at University of Illinois
    Benjamin Slade's home page
    Wendy Doniger's home page at University of Chicago
    Matthew Kapstein's home page at University of Chicago
    Yigal Bronner's home page at University of Chicago
    Pr Gopabandhu Mishra, Department of Sanskrit, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi
    Renate Sohnen-Thieme's home page at SOAS
    Gregory T. Stump's home page at University of KentuckyS
    Timothy C. Cahill's page at Loyola University in New Orleans
    Richard Salomon's page at University of Washington
    Collett Cox's page at University of Washington
    Timothy Lenz's page at University of Washington
    Prem Pahlajrai's page at University of Washington
    Heike Moser's page at Universität Tübingen
    Takashima's Labo at TUFS
    Rama Nath Sharma's faculty page at University of Hawaii at Manoa
    George Thomson's faculty page
    Anand Mishra site on Paninian Grammar
    Saroja Bhate's home page
    Jared S. Klein's page at the University of Georgia
    Ashwini Deo's home page at Yale University
    Ralph Bunker's home page at Maharishi University of Management
    Nalini Balbir's professional page at UMR 7528
    Bruno Dagens' professional page at UMR 7528
    Christine Chojnacki' professional page at Université Jean Moulin (Lyon 3)
    Karl Potter's Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies site at University of Washington
    Michael Hahn's home page at University of Marburg
    Paul Hackett's home page at Columbia University
    McComas Taylor's home page at the Australian National University
    McComas Taylor's YouTube Sanskrit videos page
    Greg Bailey's home page at La Trobe University
    Adi Hastings's home page at the University of Iowa
    Daniel Stender's home page at University of Bonn
    Steven Linsquist's home page at Southern Methodist University
    Ithamar Theodor's home page at University of Haifa
    Site de Michel Angot
    Site de Guillaume Jacques
    Anna Aurelia Esposito, Universität Würzburg
    Albrecht Wezler's citation for Max Planck Research Award for Humanities
    Harunaga Isaacson's home page at Universität Hamburg
    Jambudvipa site of Paolo Magnone
    Gerd Unruh's home page
    Sylvain Brocquet's home page
    A Cashmirian Sanskritist blog by Mrinal Kaul
    Sarasvatam caksuh blog by Somadeva Vasudeva
    Tantric Studies Reader project by Somadeva Vasudeva
    Granthinam blog by Daniel Stender
    Cikitsa blog by Dominik Wujastyk
    Chantal Pousse's Carmina Vedica site
    John Brough's memorial site
    Colette Caillat's memorial page
    Thomas Burrow's memorial page
    Arthur William Ryder's memorial page

    Sanskrit courses and workshops

    Australia Feb. 2006
    Leiden Indological Summer School, Aug. 2006
    New Mexico Sanskrit Institute Summer 2006
    South Asia Summer Language Institute, Madison, Wisconsin
    A Summer Course in Beginning Sanskrit, Vancouver, British Columbia
    August Sanskritam Residential Camp, Bangalore, India
    Production, distribution and collection of Sanskrit manuscripts in Ancient South India - Workshop, Leiden, 20-21 April 2007
    Summer School in Spoken Sanskrit 2007 in Heidelberg
    Prakrit Summer School in Finland (2007)
    The Sanskrit Tradition in the Modern World
    Sanskrit courses at Rutgers University, summer 2008 session
    Summer School in Spoken Sanskrit 2008 in Heidelberg
    Australian Spoken Sanskrit Summer School, Feb. 2009
    Summer School in Spoken Sanskrit 2009 in Heidelberg
    Sri Aurobindo Society one week intensive course on Sanskrit June 2011
    Harvard Beginning Sanskrit Summer 2011

    Indo-European Linguistics

    Titus server
    The Perseus Digital Library
    IndoEuropean Studies at UCLA
    Indogermanisches Seminar der Universität Zürich
    IndoEuropean Etymological Dictionary
    Turner's comparative dictionary of Indo-Aryan languages
    Dnghu server
    Electronic Journal of Vedic Studies

    Sanskrit software, Electronic teaching aids to Sanskrit

    Sanskrit Heritage Site
    Sanskrit Morphology Generator
    Sanskrit Lemmatizer
    Sanskrit Reader
    Amba Kulkarni's Sanskrit analysis tools, U. of Hyderabad
    Skt Heritage mirror at U. of Hyderabad
    Skt Primer and other Android apps
    Dhaturatnakara.h by Rashtriya Sanskrit Vidyapeetha
    Sanskrit Tools from TDIL for Windows
    Sanskrit Subanta Recognizer and Analyzer from JNU
    Sanskrit Tinanta Generator from JNU
    Ganakashtadhyayi by Dr Shivamurthy Swamiji, Taralabalu Kendra, Bangalore
    Acharya from IIT Madras
    Anand Mishra's site on the Paninian System of Sanskrit Grammar
    The Sanskrit Reader site of Oliver Hellwig
    The Learn Sanskrit site of Arun Prasad
    The Paninian System of Sanskrit Grammar by Anand Mishra
    Audio files for Pr Deshpande's Samskrta-Subodhini Sanskrit Primer
    UBC Sanskrit Learning Tools
    AVG-Sanskrit electronic classes
    The Sanskrit Tutor of Sudhir Kaicker at JNU
    John Smith's utility programs (format conversion)
    Tools and Materials for Home-Study of Sanskrit
    Learn Sanskrit page by Himanshu Pota
    A Practical Sanskrit Introduction by Charles Wikner
    The Sanskrit Declension Trainer from Leipzig by Michael Bunk
    Sandhi program according to Laghu Siddhanta by Chetan Pandey
    A Sanskrit tutor by the Chitrapur math
    A translator between Sanskrit and English
    Indian Language Converter by Vijay Lakshminarayanan
    Sanskrit online transliterator
    Liberation Philology Software
    An Analytical Cross Referenced Sanskrit Grammar by Lennart Warnemyr
    Recitations of grammatical paradigms recorded by Timothy C. Cahill
    Recommended Sanskrit grammar books
    An introductory course based on Srila Jiva Gosvami's grammar (downloadable pdf, 60 pages)
    Initiation au sanskrit par Guillaume Jacques (downloadable pdf, 21 pages)
    Discover Sanskrit site
    The Spiritual Seeker's Essential Guide to Sanskrit, by Dennis Waite (downloadable pdf, 161 pages)
    The Devanagari Animated Calligraphy page of Claude-Alice Marillier
    Ukindia Sanskrit Lessons
    Sanskrit Alphabet help

    Sanskrit publications

    Samskrita Bharati monthly magazine
    Sudharma daily
    Trivandrum Sanskrit Series

    Sanskrit on Hindu sites

    The Hindu Wisdom Sanskrit page
    The Advaita Sanskrit pages
    The Dvaita Organisation
    Realization Sanskrit site
    Glossary of Sanskrit Terms for Self Discovery
    The Hindu Universe
    The Hindu Web
    Devastanam
    Sri Aurobindo Ashram
    Sanskrit Spiritual Glossary
    Gaudiya Grantha Mandir forum
    Kalpa Heritage Trust site
    Ramlal Kapoor Trust site

    Miscellaneous other sites related to Sanskrit

    Open Directory Project - Sanskrutam site
    Sanskrit page
    Sanskrit World
    Brian Akers' Yoga Vidya Site
    Vyaas Houston's American Sanskrit Institute
    Sanskrit in WordlLanguage
    Sanskrit Translation by Lingo24
    Sanskrit & Sánscrito with many further links to Sanskrit-related sites
    The Speak Sanskrit Movement
    International Sanskrit Research Academy
    Learn Sanskrit page at Himanshu Pota's personal site
    The Sanskrit Academy in San Jose
    Sanskrit Sounds (Nicolai Bachman, Santa Fe)
    Sanskrit Mantras and Spiritual Power
    Le monde des langues - sanskrit

    Sanskrit periodicals

    Sudharma, Sanskrit daily newspaper from Mysore on the Web

    Sanskrit in the Press

    Who's afraid of Sanskrit? Bharat Gupt, The Indian Express, November 20, 1998
    Govt pledges to popularise Sanskrit. The Indian Express, March 14, 1999
    The Hindu, August 28, 2001
    Sanskrit struggles to survive, BBC News August 5, 2002
    The Times of India, Sept 13, 2002
    Sanskrit still blooming in a tiny village in Karnataka. The Free Press Journal, Jan. 30, 2003
    Sanskrit's former glory revived online. Rediff, July 24, 2003
    Libraries struggle to preserve books. The Times of India, Jan. 23, 2004
    Manuscripts open new vistas of medieval India. Hindustan Times, April 14, 2006
    Sanskrit wrapped in heritage. The Hindu, June 28, 2004
    Seduced by Sanskrit. Chronicle of Higher Education, March 3, 2006
    Sanskrit, the Language of Life. Canberra Times, May 22, 2006
    Thinking allowed - Sanskrit tradition (video interview of Prof. Dean Brown), Dailymotion, 04-06-2006
    Sanskrit stages a comeback in the US. CNN-IBN August 18, 2006
    Cambridge closes door on Sanskrit, Hindi. The Times of India, October 12, 2006
    Ancient Sanskrit manuscript goes digital, BBC News 17-11-06
    Sanskrit is not a Hindu language, Dr Ahmed, The Assam Tribune, 23-12-06
    Kalam on why Sanskrit is important, Rediff News 01-02-07
    The Lord's language. Sanskrit thrives in 21st century America, India Abroad, 23-02-07
    At US university, Sanskrit comes of age, Rediff News 01-06-07
    Sanskrit echoes around the world, The Christian Science Monitor, 05-07-07
    Sanskrit gaining popularity in US, Europe, The Hindustan Times, 10-07-07
    Sanskrit manuscripts in Punjab University in Lahore, The News on Sunday, 12-08-07
    Reworking the language of the Gods, Expressindia, 12-11-07
    Summer Camps Revive India's Ancient Sanskrit, The Washington Post, 15-06-08
    A marathon lexicography work, The Hindu, 11-08-08
    Sanskrit boulevard, Hindustan Times, 20-09-08
    Haryana announces incentives to promote Sanskrit, Hindustan Times, Indo-Asian News Service, 06-12-08
    Ex-CEC has a new mission: Serve Sanskrit, The Times of India, Indo-Asian News Service, 05-03-09
    Panini to the rescue, Business Line, 18-05-09
    Wax Sanskritic, Outlook, 06-07-09
    Dept of Sanskrit lexicography at Deccan College, The Times of India, 02-11-09
    China claims to have 1st pop singer in Sanskrit, The Times of India, 26-01-10
    Sanskrit gets chic avatar, Deccan Chronicle, 21-02-10
    In Orissa, a village of Sanskrit pundits, Rediff News, 06-04-10
    Sanskrit: reviving the language in today's India; Live Mint, 19-04-10
    Vaak, a newspaper that helps brush up `practical' Sanskrit; Live Mint, 20-04-10
    Sanskrit thriving in British schools: NDTV, 28-06-10
    Rs.2 crore sanctioned for catalogue project: The Hindu, 22-10-10
    Oriental Research Institute: Star of Mysore, 20-11-10
    World Sanskrit Book Fair: Deccan Herald, 31-12-10
    World Sanskrit Book Fair: The Hindu, 06-01-11
    He speaks Sanskrit like a native. Times of India, 08-01-11
    The American Born Confused Desis Are Ideal Students Of Sanskrit. Sheldon Pollock's interview, Businessworld, 27-01-11
    European Misappropriation of Sanskrit led to the Aryan Race Theory. Rajiv Malhotra, Huffington Post, 21-03-11
    Sanskrit slips at Deccan college to be digitised. The Times of India, 19-04-11
    A journey in heritage, with a pen. The Times of India, 16-05-11
    Sanskrit goes defunct at Andhra University. The Times of India, 29-06-11
    Sanskrit gaining worldwide recognition. The Times of India, 12-08-11
    Digitisation of 40,000 Sanskrit manuscripts on at BISM. The Times of India, 22-09-11
    Lady Gaga learns Sanskrit. The Times of India, 13-10-11
    Read the Ramayana in French — for Rs 58,000. Firstpost, 21-10-11
    Who says Sanskrit is dead? Deccan Chronicle, 03-11-11
    Now, Cambridge to study ancient Sanskrit texts. Firstpost, 08-11-11
    These Panini girls can cross swords with anyone. The Times of India, 10-11-11

    Sanskrit in the Indian Parliament and Government

    Report on the Sanskrit Commission 1956-57
    Questions April 21, 1993
    Central Plan Scheme for Development of Sanskrit Education through State Government/Union Territories
    Pdt Kalam on Sanskrit is our Cultural Heritage, Mantralayam 01-02-07

    Sanskrit in the movies

    Adi Shankaracharya, sanskrit movie by director G. V. Iyer (1983)

    Sanskrit on the radio

    Navavani site

    Sanskrit recordings

    The Four Vedas (Smithsonian Folkways)
    Sri Rudra 1st anuvaka, form Vojko (Ljubljana, Slovenia)

    Sanskrit on the Web

    Sanskrit and OCR - the video of a presentation by Dan Ingalls, CSL PARC and Daniel Ingalls Harvard University on April 17, 1980
    Sanskrit News Headlines
    Sanskrit on Answers.com
    Sanskrit on Wikipedia
    Sanskrit on Wikipedia in French
    Sanskrit in the West on Wikipedia
    Ancient Voice Wiki
    Sanskrit on Indopedia
    Sanskrit on Opentopia
    Sanskrit Forum
    Sanskrit Voice Digest
    Vishvavani Sanskrit Webzine
    Vishvavani blog
    Samskrute likhaama.h blog
    Sanskrit blog
    Shastapriyaa blog by Swami Neelakantha
    gItA anvaya sandhi vigraha Google group
    El Portal de la India Antigua
    Sanskrit literature blog of Venetia Ansell
    Samskrita bhasa of Nicole Edouard Péquériau
    Learn Sanskrit blog
    Study Sanskrit blog by Slabhyankar
    Sanskrit Chat
    Web Of LifeMakers blog
    Nagari Google Group of Marcis Gasuns
    Sanskrit Proverbs blog
    Vyaakara.nam blog
    Samskrita Sangha blog at IISc
    Sanskrit - Ancient Language of India blog
    Indien und Sanskrit site, Tuepflis Global Village
    German Yoga blog
    Samskritavani (spanish)
    Samskrit for tattoes and such stuff
    Sanskrit quote of the day
    The Sanskrit Web Ring
    Kalidasa group
    The Utah Sanskrit mailing list
    Usenet newsgroup humanities.language.sanskrit
    Sanskrit deepika project (Dnyandeep Infotech Pvt. Ltd.)

    Miscellaneous Web documents relevant to Sanskrit

    Ancient Sanskrit Online
    Sanskrit: an anachronism?
    Why teach or study Sanskrit?
    Geopolitics and Sanskrit Phobia, by Rajiv Malhotra
    Relevance of Sanskrit in Contemporary Society by B. Mahadevan
    An Appeal to Google Books for Sanskrit Literature
    Blogging in Sanskrit binds Indian students overseas
    V. C. Govindarajan page

    Sanskrit recordings

    The Four Vedas (Frits Staal, Smithonian Folkways)
    Mahakavyas recorded by Sri SitaRama VedaSamskrutha VidyaPeethamu

    Sanskrit and Computers

    Panini's Grammar and Computer Science
    The Panini-Backus Form in Syntax of Formal Languages by T.R.N. Rao
    Sanskrit, Machine Language of The Gods
    Debunking the Forbes magazine hoax
    Sanskrit and Artificial Intelligence - NASA (by Rick Briggs)
    Sanskrit and the Technological Age (by Vyasa Houston))

    Commercial sites

    Sanskrit books at Egctraders.com
    Sanskrit Vijay Font
    Shoreline Community College. Introductory course on Sanskrit.
    Tantric books at VivaSadhana.com
    Expert translations in Sanskrit, Tibetan, Hebrew, Chinese, Hindi, and Gujarati for tattoos, names and sentences
    A Mathematical Analysis of Panini's sivasutras, by Wiebke Petersen, in J. of Logic, Language and Information (13, 4, March 2004,Springer)
    Primary Education in Sanskrit: Methods and Goals in Journal of the American Oriental Society, Vol. 122, No. 4 (Oct.-Dec. 2002), pp. 661-690
    World Samskrit Book Fair, Bangalore, Jan. 2010.