Vol. XI, No. 9.] History of Navya Nyaya in Bengal. 281 
(W.8.] 
calls himself son of Bhavanatha and Bhavani, and praises his 
father’s ee as better than those contained in the Prakasa 
and the Makaranda.' is -tol must have been well-con- 
ducted, for it Sedocel two such highly learned scholars as 
Jayarama aoe talaga Bhattacarya and Jagadisa Tarka- 
. Bhattacar 
must be ae r than Samvat 1670 or 1613 a.p., when 
a MS, of his Padartha-tativa-vivecana-prakasa (No. v) was copied. , 
As the preceptor of Jagadisa and Jayarama, he should be older 
Raghunatha, on whose works he commented. He might be 
placed eo in the fourth quarter of the sixteenth century, 
if not earli 
paid be distinguished from the two Ramabhadra 
NyayGlankira Bhattaécaryas, both older than him, one a gram- 
marian and the other a jurist. 
10. JAGADISA TARKALANKARA BHATTACARYA. 
famous writer. He wrote in Nya 
(i) The Tattva-cinta-mani-didhiti- crabaieha(n a sub-commen- 
tary of Raghunatha’s work, a standard commentary familiarly 
known as the Jagadisi. It was widely read, was commented 
ae by half a score of writers and was criticized by Candranara- 
“(i The Tattva-cinta-mani-mayukha, a commentary direct- 
ly on Gangesa’s work, of which only portions have survived. 
(iii) The Nyay-adarsa or Nyaya-saravali, dealing with the 
octrine of causalit 
(iv) The Sabda-sakti-prakasika, + on the force of words, etc., 
4 grammatico-philosophical treatise. It contains an elaborate 
discussion of words and their grammatical relations from the 
standpoint of Nyaya. Among grammars and grammarians it 
names Phani-bhasya-krt, the Vik, ya-padiya, Bhartrhari, Panini, 
Scars, Kaumarah, Pees Kalapah, Varttika-krt, the 
Pe Ge rs aaa ETE =e 
see Kanu jt ya, Sans. Coll. Cat., MS. III. 318, introd. 
waratlwaarenal fret vaRTas 
aqraTees we a wees me (41 
AACS IGIT BT Bre afaenasas 
aaistyat ralfnianthaindetn te nfen] 
Sans, Coll, Cat., IIL. p. 241, No. 399, final colophon:-—tfa AYCT#- 
baba Dagricksatcieanect qata: | Haq UsO° VHA ee . 
“ fafeatad yea egihet Nl 
; * H. Shastri, Notices, I is 213. 
Printed in Calcutta (Saka 1760), aad in Benares. 
