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| Home --> Palm Leaf Manuscripts |
It is a well known fact that from very early days, India has sustained the oral tradition of transmitting and disseminating knowledge from generation to generation. Interestingly, a written tradition had also coexisted, specially in respect of treatises and commentaries prepared by great teachers. A variety of writing media had been in use, from granite slabs to copper plates, tree barks and most importantly Palm leaves. The last two were the preferred methods to accommodate large treatises or writings and people had perfected a local technology to ensure that writings on palm leaves survived more than a few centuries. A good number of manuscripts relating to Art and Architecture, Mathematics, Astronomy and medicine which date back to several hundreds of years are still available for reference today and it is amazing how scholars packed so much information in what they wrote on these leaves. The manuscript is known to be about 200 years old and physically measures 6.5" * 2" (approx.). The text in the leaf transcribed into Devanagari is shown next. This is the same leaf which is presented in the section on applications. The contents relate to a musical composition of one of the composers of South India prior to the period of the trinity of South Indian classical music. The |
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![]() Writing on the manuscripts almost always was continuous without any delimiters or separators between words. Reading the manuscript will therefore require training as well as understanding of the language so that the lines may be split into words for easy reading by others. Splitting the text properly requires linguistic skills and cannot be easily automated through text processing programs. ![]() Here is another example of processing that may be of interest to the viewer. This example relates to a manuscript in Malayalam that is also about two hundred years old. The manuscript is titled " Visha Vaidyam" which relates to the treatment for poisons. The manuscript is physically about five inches by two inches (5x2 inches). The leaf seen has been scanned and the image created at 96 dpi resolution. ![]() The above image, when enhanced by applying tone modifications (darker regions made lighter) is lot easier to read but has changed colour. ![]() In the third step, when the image above is split into CMYK, i.e., separated into cyan, magenta, yellow and Black, the image is clearly visible and one can read the text. ![]() What has been shown is not necessarily the best approach but one that works in practice. Each manuscript will have to be examined for the best enhancement that can be attempted. |
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Local Time: 02 43 49 Kali Year 5113 Month: Vrshabam , Day:4 Star: Revati |