Franklin

Fragmens de L'Ezour-Vedam.

Publication:
[Madras], [1775-1799]
Format/Description:
Manuscript
54 leaves : paper, illustrations ; 314 x 263 mm bound to 320 x 275 mm
Status/Location:
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Details

Other Title:
Ezour-Vedam
Subjects:
Vedas. Yajurveda.
Form/Genre:
Codices.
Drawings (visual works)
Manuscripts, French.
Manuscripts, European.
Summary:
Contains 42 pen and ink illustrations of the cycle of the Ezour-Vedam, a Hindu work concerning the cycles of creation of the world by Brahman and his later incarnations, with a partial commentary in French. The French text does not correspond to that of L'Ezour-Vedam ou Ancien Commentaire du Vedam, a pseudo-Veda purporting to be a translation of the Yajur-veda that was later found to be a fabrication by French Jesuit missionaries of Pondicherry, published in 1778 in France and attributed to Jean Calmette. It rather corresponds to the description given of another text brought to Europe under the name of the Yajur-veda, published in 1742 in the Report of Danish Missions in the East Indies, printed at Halle, which contained an account of the main content of the Yajur-veda supplied to missionaries by a Brahmin called Krishna, resident in Tranquebar. Moreover, the illustrations here do not correspond one-for-one with the excerpts from the Ezour-Vedam. Commentary is written on pages 1-16 and continues on the leaves of the first six drawings in the volume, some of these leaves are folded at the bottom. The remaining 36 drawings in the cycle have no commentary.
Notes:
Ms. codex.
Title from title page (p. i).
Commentary is written in one hand on pages numbered 1-28. The spelling of the Sanskrit words, apart from the influence of French orthography, reflects a Bengali pronunciation of Sanskrit as was also found in the Jesuit fabrications.
Pagination: Paper, ii (contemporary paper) + 54 + ii (contemporary paper); [ii], 1-16, [17-106]; contemporary pagination in ink, modern pagination in pencil, upper outer corners.
Script: Written in a cursive script.
Decoration: Forty-two illustrations, approximately 9.5 x 12.5 cm, in ink line drawing with pencil shading in the style of Madras influenced by the techniques of the Company School are skillfully executed and of the highest quality. Three additional drawings, 19.5 x 15.5 cm, in ink line and wash, and from a different hand, are tipped onto the final three leaves. Each of the three depicts a couple taking fruit from a tree entwined with a snake, suggesting a parallel with the temptation of Adam and Eve, but on the verso of each is a note "TireĢ du pagoda de Sandoli [or Sandole]" suggesting that these images were found in the murals of non-Christian temples.
Binding: 19th-century half-leather.
Origin: Probably written in Madras, late 18th century.
Summary, references, and notes on the text and illustrations provided by David N. Nelson whose description of the manuscript is on file in the Library.
Penn Provenance:
Sold by Sam Fogg (London), 1999.
Cited in:
Calmette, Jean. Die Sittenlehre der Braminen; oder, Die Religion der Indianer, (1794).
On the Report of Danish Missions in the East Indies see Windisch, Geschichte der Sanskrit-Philologie, 1917, pp. 8-11
Rocher, Ludo, ed. Ezourvedam : a French Veda of the eighteenth century (Amsterdam, Philadelphia: J. Benjamins Pub. Co., 1984).
Cited as:
UPenn Ms. Codex 811
OCLC:
187931738