Page:A Catalogue of Sanskrit Manuscripts in the Library of Trinity College, Cambridge (1869).djvu/62

 / CATALOGUE OF MANU8CEIPTS. 51 namely, the LUdmtl (fol. 1-65), and the V^jaganita. Foil. Q. and ^0 of the former tract are wanting. The Lilavati has been edited in Calcutta in 1833, and trans- lated by Taylor (Bombay, 1816), and Colebrooke (London, 1817). Of the Yijaganita we possess several Calcutta editions, and a trans- lation by Colebrooke, in his work: '^ Algebra with Arithmetic and Mensuration. London, 1817." R. IS. 114. 356 leaves, in oblong folio ; Indian paper ; Devan^- gari character. Copied in Argalapura in the year vararajye pravartamane). The Oanit&dhydya and Golddhy&ya of Bhdskara's Siddhdnta- firamanif with a conunentary, called GanitataUvachintd" maniy by Lakshmiddsa, a son of Y&chaspati, and grandson of Kesava. Bh&skara was bom in the year 1114, and composed this work at the age of thirty-six, consequently in 1150. Lakshmid&sa's commentary bears the date 1501. Both chapters, accompanied by a modem commen- tary, have been edited at Calcutta in 1842. A translation of the Gol&dhy&ya, by Wilkinson, has lately been published in the Bibliotheca Indica. The conmientary begins : 5hR* « ^ « ^tl^^fl^viiPi^viirtigniwIftnit etc. II ^ B iren-