'Raja
Bhoj' is well known to students of Indian history, as one of the
illustrious kings from the past. Raja Bhoj, ruled the central Indian
region of Mālwa from the beginning of the eleventh century to about
1055. He was a great warrior and fought many a battles during his
illustrious career, with many great and powerful adversaries
including army of Sultan Mahmud Ghaznavi, who had earlier invaded
famous shrine at Somnath. This king also died in the tradition of a
true warrior, defending his capital, in a battle.
Raja
Bhoj was not only a good general, with his military career seeing
several major victories over rival kings. He is remembered more for
his intellect and patronage to arts and culture. He constructed many
spectacular temples, one of the most dramatic of which is seen in the
form of the great temple of Shiva termed Bhojeshvara at Bhojpur about
30 km from Bhopal in Madhya Pradesh state. Another notable
construction, which is a historical civil engineering masterpiece, is
the Bhoj lake, which was built by damming and channelizing the Betwa
river.
He was
a philosopher and is also supposed to have paid great attention to
the education of his people. It is said that his subjects were so
learned that even humble weavers in kingdom also composed metrical
Sanskrit poetry or “Kavyaas.” He is believed to have authored as
many as 84 books. Though, we shall never know whether he actually
wrote these or just sponsored them. Many researchers however believe
a strong role by the King himself in the authorship.
One of
his books, Samarangana Sutradhara, written in Sanskrit, is a
discourse in 80 chapters, on civil engineering, detailing
construction of buildings, forts, temples, idols of deities and
mechanical devices. It is also rather famous as it devotes one full
chapter on building of flying machines. Being the only ancient
Indian source known about building airplanes, Raja Bhoj's work has
attracted much attention. But the book does not explain process of
building airplanes completely and says that it has been done
purposely, for sake of secrecy.
However
real greatness of this book lies in the other chapters which deal
with many varied subjects such as geology, astrophysics,
measurements, norms of town planning, residential houses, colonising,
temples, military camps and so on. This book has been studied, and
analysed by many scholars from India and abroad. However a full and
true translation, which would give full justice to the vastness of
the subject, was missing. An octogenarian from Pune city in India
has recently completed this stupendous task after working on it for
nearly two decades. The translated book would be published by Indira
Gandhi National Centre of Arts (IGNCA, Delhi), in six volumes by
October 2013.
Mr
Prabhakar Apte, the octogenarian, who has tranlated this book, has
an educational background of MA and PhD in Sanskrit. Prior to his
retirement, he was working with Archaeology Department of Deccan
College and Rashtriya Sanskrit Vidyapeeth (Tirupati). At Deccan
College, he was also the editor of Encyclopaedic Dictionary of
Sanskrit. During his professional stint at Tirupati, he came in
contact with temple architecture discipline. Mr. Apte says: "The
experience came handy during translation of Samarangana Sutradhara."
He also feels that he was in a better position to translate the book
because he had support from his engineer friend Aravind Phadnis. He
adds "It hasn't been an easy task. Translation and decoding of
such a text is only possible when a Sanskrit-oriented technologist
and technology-oriented Sanskritist come together. ”
This
book like all books written in those times, begins with a story
somehow linking the author to Gods. Story line here, begins with
mythological architect of the Gods, Vishwakarma, asking his four
sons, Jay, Vijay, Siddharth and Aparajita, to go in four directions
to colonise the earth. His sons come up with several questions. The
book gives us the answers given by Vishwakarma to these questions, in
words of Raja Bhoj.
Some
of the elements covered in the book include master plans of all site
plans, town planning, basic measurement units, colonies according to
social strata, palace complex, residential houses, temples, military
camps, definition of machines and more.
Mr
Prabhakar Apte deserves all praise for his painstaking work of two
decades and his research. His translation should prove to be a great
asset for scholars and researchers in future.
27
July 2013
Again a great post written by you. How this has not been appeared in any one of the news media yet ? I have forwarded this link to some of my known friends who have keen interest in this topic. Regards.
ReplyDeleteMangesh Nabar