428 
G. Thibaut —Contributions to the 
[No. 4, 
49. 
64 
-mula. 
124 
49. 
13 
-punarvasu. 
124 1 
50. 
uttarashadha. 
124 
50. 
35 , , ,, 
-purvaphalg, 
124 
51. 
sravishtlia. 
124 
51. 
57 
■- purvaphalg. 
124 
52. 
Q 
-- uttarabhadrap. 
124 
no 
OJj* 
—- hasta. 
124 
53. 
28 , . , 
-asvirn. 
124 
53. 
101 ,,, 
-— svati. 
124 
54. 
50 
—- krittika. 
124 ' 
54. 
123 
-A— anuradha. 
124 
55. 
72 . 
—^ mngasiras. 
55. 
21 
-purvashadha. 
124 1 
56. 
94 
-punarvasu. 
124 
56. 
43 , 
~— sravana. 
124 
57. 
aslesha. 
124 
57. 
satabhishaj. 
58. 
14 
-uttaraphalg. 
124 
58. 
uttarabhadrap. 
59. 
36 „ 
124 Cbltra ' 
59. 
109 , . , 
124 aSVml - 
60. 
•“77 visakha. 
124 
60. 
124 
61. 
jTjJ jyeshtha. 
61. 
29 , . „ 
124 ardl ' a ' 
62. 
102 ' - 1 ,-n,' 
purvashadha. 
62. 
51 1 
124 PUShya ' 
Adding to the last full moon 14 we get again sravana, the 
first new moon of the next following yuga. 
We must now look about if there can be found in the Jyotisha itself 
any traces indicating that its author acknowledged a list of the same nature 
as that given above. Our attention will naturally direct itself to the enig¬ 
matical eighteenth verse which according to the commentator contains an 
enumeration of the nakshatras in which a certain number of full moons take 
place. The twenty-seven disconnected syllables of which the verse consists 
are doubtless meant to represent the twenty-seven nakshatras, each syllable 
being taken either from the name of the nakshatra itself or from the 
name of the divinity presiding over it. The following is a list of the nak¬ 
shatras arranged in the order implied in the verse ; 
