Hello Harry,

You've likely already looked at Nilakantha on that verse, assuming you are 
referring to CE 1.199.44b = Vulgate 1.207.46b. Note that the Vu has 
ajagatiparvata, goat-path mountains, which Nilakantha glosses as "artificial 
mountains for the purpose of the king's pleasure excursions" or something like 
that (ajagatiparvatair nṛpalīlāyātrārthaiḥ kṛtrimaiḥ parvataiḥ). Van Buitenen 
and Smith both seem to lean on this gloss since they respectively render their 
critical text jagatiparvata as "pleasure hillocks" and "pleasure-hills".

Just my two cents, I'd be curious to hear from others as well on that.

Best,
Chris

Dr. Christopher R. 
Austin<https://www.dal.ca/faculty/arts/religious-studies/faculty-staff/our-faculty/christopher-austin.html>
Associate Professor, Religious Studies
Dept. of Classics, Dalhousie University
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada


From: INDOLOGY <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Harry Spier 
via INDOLOGY
Sent: May 27, 2022 5:02 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [INDOLOGY] Meaning of "jagatiparvati" as a man made structure

CAUTION: The Sender of this email is not from within Dalhousie.
Dear list members,
I was asked this question:
I came across the word ‘jagatiparvata’ in the Mahabharata. It appears in a 
description of gardens around the city of Indraprastha. The context indicates 
that it probably refers to some man made structure. I am trying to figure out 
what kind of structure it may be referring to. No luck so far. Would you know 
any expert on iconography or architecture who might be familiar with the 
ancient architectural design and/or terms ?  If so, could you please make an 
inquiry for me?

Any ideas?
Harry Spier
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