e-library of rare books launched in Pune - Bhandarkar
Oriental Research Institute (BORI)
BORI houses one of South Asia’s
largest collection of rare manuscripts
The Bhandarkar Oriental Research
Institute (BORI), which houses one of South Asia’s largest and most invaluable
agglomeration of rare manuscripts, opened its treasure vault digitally by
launching an e-library of ancient religious and historical works on Wednesday.
Nearly 1,000 rare books and
manuscripts in Sanskrit and its related languages are presently available for
readers worldwide to savour in this first phase of digitisation.
The institute, named after
legendary Indologist Ramkrishna Gopal Bhandarkar, was set up in 1917 and has in
its possession nearly two-and-a-half-lakh rare books and manuscripts, some of
them in an extremely brittle state. “The rationale behind the e-library is to
preserve at least some of these books. Hence, we chose to digitise 20,000 among
the rarest-of-the rare books and four to five thousand will be available for
readers to read them online for free,” said noted Indologist Prof. Shrikant
Bahulkar.
Three fully-automated Zeutschel
high-resolution German scanners were specially procured by the institute at a
cost of ₹15 lakh each.
“ We began with screening the two
lakh-plus manuscripts to zero down on the ones we would digitise,” said
Mithilesh Kulkarni of Nyansa, a firm specialising in heritage digitisation.
Chinmay Bhandari of Nyansa said
that the entire process was one of ‘non-destructive’ digitising, which ensured
that even books in decrepit condition were preserved while scanning. “For the
past two years, our 15-member team was working in three shifts every day and we
digitised more than 3 lakh pages each month,” Mr. Bhandari said.
Among the BORI’s notable
publications are a 19-volume edition of The Mahabharata, collated with copious
critical material, and legendary Sanskrit scholar P.V. Kane’s five-volume
History of Dharmashastra (1930). “The work on the Mahabharata, universally
acknowledged by scholars and researchers the world, is still on with the
Cultural Index to the Mahabharata still being prepared under the guidance of
scholar Dr. Ganesh Umakant Thite,” said Prof. Bahulkar.
Source | The Hindu | 20th December 2018
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