Nandinagari Manuscript
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Nandinagari is a Brahmic script derived from the Nāgarī script which appeared in the 7th century AD.George Cardona and Danesh Jain (2003), The Indo-Aryan Languages, Routledge, , page 75 This script and its variants were used in the central Deccan region and south India, and an abundance of Sanskrit manuscripts in Nandinagari have been discovered but remain untransliterated.Reinhold Grünendahl (2001), South Indian Scripts in Sanskrit Manuscripts and Prints, Otto Harrassowitz Verlag, , pages xxii, 201-210P. Visalakshy (2003), The Fundamentals of Manuscriptology, Dravidian Linguistics Association, , pages 55-62 Some of the discovered manuscripts of Madhvacharya of the
Dvaita Dvaita Vedanta (); (originally known as Tattvavada; IAST:Tattvavāda), is a sub-school in the Vedanta tradition of Hindu philosophy. The term Tattvavada literally means "arguments from a realist viewpoint". The Tattvavada (Dvaita) Vedanta su ...
Vedanta school of Hinduism are in Nandinagari script. It is a sister script to Devanāgarī, which is common in other parts of India.Pandey, Anshuman. (2013)
''Preliminary Proposal to Encode Nandinagari in ISO/IEC 10646''.
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Etymology

Nagari comes from नगर (nagara), which means city. Nandinagar script inscription from Kakatiya rule found in Mahabubabad 212 km from Nandi Nagar, Hyderabad. The first part of the term "Nandi" is ambiguous in its context. It may mean "sacred" or "auspicious" (cf. Nandi verses in Sanskrit drama). Nandi is the name of Lord Siva's Vrishabhavahana (bull vehicle), a revered icon, and it may be the source of the name.


History

Nandinagari is a Brahmi-based script that was used in southern India between the 11th and 19th centuries AD for producing manuscripts and inscriptions in Sanskrit in south
Maharashtra Maharashtra (; , abbr. MH or Maha) is a states and union territories of India, state in the western India, western peninsular region of India occupying a substantial portion of the Deccan Plateau. Maharashtra is the List of states and union te ...
, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh. It derives from the central group of Nagari scripts and is related to Devanagari. There are also several styles of Nandinagari, considered by scholars as variant forms of the script. Some of the earliest inscriptions in Nandinagari have been found in Tamil Nadu. The 8th century Narasimha Pallava's stone inscriptions in Mamallapuram on Tamil Nadu's coast, the 10th-century coins from Chola king Rajaraja's period, the Paliyam copper plate inscriptions of the 9th century Ay king Varagunam are all in Nandinagari script. A Rigveda manuscript has been found written in Nandi nagari script, as well as manuscripts of other Vedas. Manuscripts of the first century BCE ''Vikramacarita'', also known as the "Adventures of Vikrama" or the "Hindu Book of Tales", have been found in Nandinagari script. In a Travancore temple of Kerala, an ''Anantasayana Mahatmya'' palm-leaf manuscript was found, and it is in Nandinagari script. Nandi Nagari script was used to spell the Sanskrit language, and many Sanskrit copper plate inscriptions of the Vijayanagar Empire were written in that script. Numerous Sanskrit manuscripts written in Nandinagari have been discovered in South India, but it is one of the least documented and studied ancient scripts of India. These cover Vedas, philosophy, commentaries on ancient works, mythology, science and arts. These are preserved in the manuscript libraries, particularly those in the southern regions of the country. Some Nandinagari texts are in biscript that include other major south India language scripts, such as Telugu, Tamil, Malayalam and Kannada scripts.


Comparison to Devanagari

Nandinagari and Devanagari scripts are very close and share many similarities, but they also show systematic differences. Nandinagari differs from Devanagari more in the shape of its vowels, and less in many consonant shapes. It has ''mātra'' (a headline at the top of the character) but lacks long connecting ''mātra'' over words. Nandinagari is thus a sister script of Devanagari, but not a trivial variation. The Nandinagari manuscripts also show cosmetic and style differences, such as the use of distinct Anusvaras and method of labeling each hymn or verse.Srinidhi (2015)
Encoding of Vedic characters used in non-Devanagari scripts
UNICODE International, pages 7-9


Unicode

Nandinagari script was added to the Unicode Standard in March 2019 with the release of version 12.0. The Unicode block for Nandinagari is U+119A0–U+119FF:


See also

* Shiksha – the Vedic study of sound, focusing on the letters of the Sanskrit alphabet


References


External links


Palaeographical Importance of Nandinagari
''HareKrsna.com'' {{list of writing systems Brahmic scripts Obsolete writing systems