![]() Check the Accept cookies from sites checkbox.If you are using Firefox and would like to enable cookies follow these instructions: Enter "" into the "Address of Web Site" field, then click the Allow button.Click the Privacy tab and click the Sites button.If you are using Internet Explorer and would like to enable cookies follow these instructions: We have detected that your cookies are not enabled. Select Allow all sites to run JavaScript.Click the Chrome menu icon in the top right of the browser.If you are using Chrome and would like to enable javascript follow these instructions: If you are using Safari and would like to enable javascript follow these instructions: ![]() If you are using Firefox and would like to enable javascript follow these instructions: Scroll to Activing Scripting and select Enable button.Click the Security tab and click the Custom level button.If you are using Internet Explorer and would like to enable javascript follow these instructions: We have detected that your javascript is not enabled. Use one of the links below to download the latest version of Internet Explorer, Firefox, Safari or Chrome ScholarOne Manuscripts does not support this browser at this time. ![]() We have detected that the browser you are using is MSIE 6.0. You can be directed to this page if there is an apostrophe (') or a quotation mark (") appended to the end of a ScholarOne Manuscripts web address. Please also verify the web address entered in your browser's address bar. Please use the links and instructions below to make changes, and try visiting the site again. We decided that using shadows would be the most effective way to reveal the text details, and we adjusted our capture studio lighting equipment, accordingly.You have been directed to this page because your browser does not meet our minimum requirements. In this manuscript, no such powder had been used, making the inscriptions difficult to see under direct studio lighting. Each leaf contains tiny etched characters that a reader would typically rub with a black or dark colored powder to make the text easier to read. First, we needed to make sure that each page was legible for later transcription. Given its fragility and structure, photographing this manuscript became a balancing act. The manuscript is comprised of a series of bound, dried, palm leaves each inscribed with text that was etched into the surface of the leaves. The Telugu Manuscript was by far one of the most unusual items photographed by the Digitization & Digital Curation Department at Emory Libraries. The manuscript captures the poetry of a lesser known poet, rather than the work of the Kavitraya, the famous trinity of Telugu poets (Nannaya, Tikkana, Errapragada) who are the authors of the canonical Andhra Mahabharatamu. It is notable as an original composition in Sanskrit and its subsequent re-imaginings in India’s vernacular languages, including Telugu. The Mahabharata is one of two major epics from India. The text is a work of poetry based on the Udyoga Parva of a Telugu Mahabharata by Kotikalapudi Viraraghavakavi (1663-1712). The online edition of this book is in the public domain, not protected by copyright, and has been made available by Emory University. Emory Libraries recently acquired the Kōṭikalapūḍi Vīrarāghavakavi (1663-1712) manuscript.
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