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Period
of VATSYAYANA
It is impossible to fix the exact date either of the life of
Vatsyayana or of his work. It is supposed that he must have
lived between the first and sixth century of the Christian
era, on the following grounds. He mentions that Satakarni
Satavahana, a king of Kuntal, killed Malayevati his wife
with an instrument called kartari by striking her in the
passion of love, and Vatsya quotes this case to warn people
of the danger arising from some old customs of striking
women when under the influence of this passion. Now this
king of Kuntal is believed to have lived and reigned during
the first century A.D., and consequently Vatsya must have
lived after him. On the other hand, Virahamihira, in the
eighteenth chapter of his `Brihatsanhita', treats of the
science of love, and appears to have borrowed largely from
Vatsyayana on the subject. Now Virahamihira is said to have
lived during the sixth century A.D., and as Vatsya must have
written his works previously, therefore not earlier than the
first century A.D., and not later than the sixth century
A.D., must be considered as the approximate date of his
existence.
On the text
of the `Aphorisms on Love', by Vatsyayana, only two
commentaries have been found. One called `Jayamangla' or `Sutrabashya',
and the other `Sutra vritti'. The date of the `Jayamangla'
is fixed between the tenth and thirteenth century A.D.,
because while treating of the sixty-four arts an example is
taken from the `Kavyaprakasha' which was written about the
tenth century A.D. Again, the copy of the commentary
procured was evidently a transcript of a manuscript which
once had a place in the library of a Chaulukyan king named
Vishaladeva, a fact elicited from the following sentence at
the end of it.
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