- Mādhavāchārya and
Sāyaṇāchārya were said to have
studied under Vidyatirtha of Sringeri, and held
offices in the
Vijayanagara Empire.
Sāyaṇāchārya was a minister...
- 1877. Sontakke, N. S. (1933). Rgveda-Samhitā: Śrimat-
Sāyanāchārya virachita-bhāṣya-sametā.
Sāyanachārya (commentary) (First ed.).
Vaidika Samśodhana Maṇḍala...
- are two interpretations. One is by Prof. Max Muller. The
other is by
Sayanacharya.
According to Prof. Max Muller, it
means 'one
without nose' or 'one with...
-
Ramayana and
Mahabharata epics,
written by well
known figures such as
Sayanacharya (who
wrote a
treatise on the
Vedas called Vedartha Prakasha whose English...
-
places is used to mean, ‘praise’. However, both Adi
Shankaracharya and
Sayanacharya have
stated that
Manisha means "the
independence of
intellect (mati)’...
- the time of Savitr’s
appearance is when
darkness has been removed.
Sayanacharya (on Rig Veda)
remarks that
before his
rising the sun is
called Savitr...
-
refers to
having a flat nose, or no nose at all. Whereas, the second, by
Sayanacharya, is read as an-asa, and
refers to the lack of mouth, or the lack of good...
- (1972), Sontakke, N. S.; Rājvade, V. K. (eds.), Rgveda-Samhitā: Śrimat-
Sāyanāchārya virachita-bhāṣya-sametā (First ed.), Pune:
Vaidika Samśodhana Maṇḍala...
-
commentary of
Sayanacharya.
Edited by Max Müller, 1849, page 719 The
Taittiriya Aranyaka of the
Black Yajur Veda, with the
Commentary of
Sayanacharya, ed. by...
- The
first two
verses of the
Purusha sukta, with
Sayanacharya's commentary. Page of Max Müller's Rig-Veda-samhita
rendered into the
devanagari script, the...