Salutation to the Buddha's 32 marks of a great man in Pali verse and a bilingual translation of it. Extent and format of original material: 1 fascicle of 5 inscribed folios.
A supplementary grammatical work discussing the methods of establishing the meaning of words in Pali. Extent and format of original material: 1 fascicle of 18 inscribed folios. Author(s) of original material: Chūʺ tvaṅʻʺ pacʻ Charā toʻ Nāgita.
A vernacular verse text on the aspects of Pāli grammar intended for memorization by students at monastic schools. Identified as the Niyaṃ mū sacʻ in the manuscript. Extent and format of original material: 3 and 3/4 inscribed folios, complete. Author(s) of original material: Jāgara, Rhve kyaṅʻ ...
A vernacular verse text on the aspects of Pāli grammar intended for memorization by students at monastic schools composed by a late nineteenth-century monk from the village of Tvaṅʻʺ krīʺ bearing the title Vilāsābhisirīdhaja mahādhammarājadhirājaguru. Extent and format of original material: 2 a...
A vernacular verse text on the aspects of Pāli grammar intended for memorization by students at monastic schools. Might be considered, perhaps, the most influential of the nineteenth-century niyaṃ texts that still remains in curricular use. The present witness skips the introductory verses and i...
A vernacular text of 153 verses on the aspects of Pāli grammar intended for memorization by students at monastic schools. Ākhyātasāmi niyaṃ also known as the Toṅʻ tvaṅʻʺ niyaṃ is the most influential eighteenth-century work and the most widely used of all niyaṃ texts. It is ascribed to Toṅʻ tvaṅ...
Unidentified niyaṃ text, begins with Tthaṃ tvaṃ tthana paccaya ṇika ṇiya ṇilasā tu saddā chaññʻʺ 6 paccañʻʺ. Extent and format of original material: 3/4 and 1/4 inscribed folios, complete.
A vernacular text of 90 verses on the aspects of Pāli grammar intended for memorization by students at monastic schools. A work by an otherwise unknown monk Tipiṭakanāga. Extent and format of original material: 3/4 and 3/4 inscribed folios, complete. Author(s) of original material: Tipiṭakanāga.