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Boston University offers on Saturdays and late in the afternoons of other days courses in Anglo-Saxon, English, French, German, Italian, Sanskrit, Education, Drama, Music, and Hygiene...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LIST OF EXTENSION COURSES | 9/25/1913 | See Source »

Professor C. R. Lanman, Ph.D., L.L.D., Wales Professor of Sanskrit will deliver an address in commemoration of the 2500th anniversary of Buddha's Enlightenment in New Lecture Hall this afternoon at 4.30 o'clock...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Address on 2500 Years of Buddhism | 5/12/1911 | See Source »

Dean Wright was born at Urumjah, Persia, in 1852. He was graduated from Dartmouth College in 1873, and three years later received from Dartmouth the degree of A. M. From 1876 until 1878 he was a student of classical philology and Sanskrit at Leipzig University, where he was the fellow student and intimate friend of the late Professor Minton Warren. In 1878 he became associate professor of Greek at Dartmouth; and in 1886 professor of classical philology at Johns Hopkins. The following year he became professor of Greek at Harvard, and was later made chairman of the division of ancient...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DEATH OF DEAN WRIGHT | 11/27/1908 | See Source »

Professor de Gubernatis graduated from the University of Turin, and in 1860 became professor of rhetoric in the Gymnasium of Chieri. In 1862 he was sent to Berlin by the Italian government to study under Professors Bopp and Weber. He became professor of Sanskrit and comparative literature at the University of Florence in 1863, and has been professor of Italian literature at the University of Rome since 1891. Professor de Gubernatis is well known as a dramatist, poet, journalist, critic, and orientalist. Among his best known plays are "Pere delle Vigue," "La Morte di Catone," "Romolo," and "Savitri...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: First Lecture by Count Gubernatis. | 3/14/1904 | See Source »

...Translation of the Atharva-Veda," by Professor W. D. Whitney h.'76, late of the Sanskrit Department of Yale, will soon be published in the Harvard Oriental Series by the University. Professor Whitney died in 1894, leaving the work unfinished. The manuscript was then turned over to Professor C. R. Lanman, of the Department of Indic. Philology, and editor of the Harvard Oriental Series, who has spent over five years in completing, revising, and editing it. Professor Whitney's translation of the nineteen books of the Atharva-Veda is an extremely close and literal English version. Exclusive of the matter...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Translation of Atharva-Veda. | 2/1/1904 | See Source »

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