1880.] Annual Report. 31 



Vol. I. Fasc. V, VI, VII, VIII, IX, Nos. 605, 66V, GTS, 670, 6SA, Vol. 

 II. Fasc. I, II, III, IV, V. Total ten fasciculi. 



3. Tarikh-i-Firuz Shahi', or the Annals of the reign of Firuz Shah 

 of the Tughlaq Dynasty, by Shams i Siraj Afif, edited by Maulvi Vilayat 

 Hosain. This work is to be distinguished from the Tarikh-i-Firuz 

 Shahi, by Zia-i-Barni. Nos. 662, 666, 680, 601, Fasc. I, II, III, IV. 

 Total four fasciculi. 



4. Zafarn.ujah, or Book of Victory, an account of the wars of 

 Timur, by Maulana Sharf-ud-din 'Ali, of Yazd, edited by Maulvi Muham- 

 mad Illmdad. Gibbon, who made use of a French translation of this 

 work, says that its geography and chronology are wonderfully accurate. 

 rTos. 646, 651, 660, 674, 683, Fasc. IV, V, VI, VII, VIII. Total five- 

 fasciculi. 



B. Sanshrit Series. 



5. AshtA-sahasrika PrajSa Paramita, or the Transcendental 

 Knowledge of the Buddhists of the Mahayana School, in 8,000 slokas, 

 The publication of this work has been completed under the editorship 

 of Raja Rajendrakila Mitra r LL. D., C. I. E. The edition has been pre* 

 pared- from six manuscripts collected from various sources, of which the- 

 editor gives an account in the preface. In the introduction the editor 

 gives an account of the various recensions of the Prajna Paramitas. 

 The present work treats of S'linyatd or the doctrine of the evolution of 

 cosmos from vacuity. Nos. 645> 671,- 600, Fasc. IV, V, VI. Total 

 three fasciculi. 



6. Anu Bhashyam, edited by Pandit Hemachandra Vidyaratnay. 

 is a bhdshya commentary on the Vedanta Aphorisms of Badarayana by 

 Vallabhacharya, the founder of a Vaishuava sect in Western India wh» 

 flourished about the year 1470. Vallabha considered the non-dualistic 

 commentary of these Aphorisms, by S'amkaracharya to be erroneous 

 and founded a new School in which an attempt was made to recon- 

 cile the dualistic and non-dualistic theories in one harmonious whole. 

 No. 637, Fasc. I. Total one fasciculus. 



7. Advaita Braijma Siddiii, of Sadananda Yati, an inhabitant of 

 Kashmir, edited by Pandit Vtiman S'astri, with notes and explanations in 

 Sanskrit. An attempt has been, made in this work to bring all the 

 various philosophical schools into harmony by rejecting every thing in 

 them which is opposed to the Vedas. The chapters of the work are 

 called Mudgaraprahdra or blows with a club on the head of the writer's 

 opponents. Nos. 661, 608, Fasc. I, II. Total two fasciculi. 



8. Vkihad-dharma Purana, edited by Pandit Haraprasad S'asin 

 This is a system of mythology and tradition indicating the latest phase 



