Tibetan and Himalayan Library - THL

THL Title Text
THL Resource: Yes
Title: Nepālaka Prācīn Gaṇeśamūrti
Language of title: Nepali
Author/Creator: Mohanaprasād Khanāl
One Sentence Summary: The article is a study of ancient sculptures of Ganesh in Nepal.

Description: The article is a study of ancient sculptures of Ganesh in Nepal. Eighteen ancient sculptures of the Hindu god Ganesh have been discovered in the Kathmandu valley. The author tries to trace the tradition of Nepali Hindu worship of Ganesh. It discusses the shapes and structures of the sculptures and the various names, like Vinayak, of Ganesh. The article includes 9 leaves of plates. (Rajeev Ranjan Singh 2007-02-25)

Publisher Place: Kirtipur, Nepal
Publisher: Center for Nepal and Asian Studies
Normalized publisher place: Kathmandu
Publisher country: Nepal
Publisher URL: http://www.cnastu.org.np/
Published Date: 1994-07
URL: http://www.thlib.org/static/reprints/contributions/CNAS_21_02_06.pdf
Classification: Tibetan and Himalayan -- Journals -- Journals Focused on Regions -- Nepal -- Contributions to Nepalese Studies -- (1994) Vol. 21, no. 2
Cultural Coverage: Nepal
Language: Nepali
Source: Contributions to Nepalese Studies
Source Editor: Prem K. Khatry
Source Type: Journal
Source Volume: 21
Source Number: 2
Source Page Numbers: 221-233
ISBN/ISSN: 3767574

Means of availability: Available online as a PDF within the Tibetan & Himalayan Library's bibliographic database.

Format: Online resource
Print media (print or manuscript)
Media type: text
Resource Type: Article
Digital Encoding: pdf
Release Flag: OK for viewing
Date Of Record Creation: 0000-00-00 00:00:00
Date Last Modified: 0000-00-00 00:00:00
Cumulative Rating: this resource has a 1 star rating
Resource Comments

(no comments available yet for this resource)

 
Copyright THL 1999-Present   |   Comments, Suggestions, Feedback? Use our feedback form.

Loading...

SQL Statement: DELETE FROM APSessionData WHERE SessionId = '674380604'
SQL Error: Table './thl_scoutportal2/APSessionData' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed