Just to complement Dominik’s list:

There is an almost comprehensive catalogue of c. 100.000 Nepalese documents 
photographed by the NGMPP and sustainably maintained by the Heidelberg Academy 
of sciences and Humanities: 
https://nepalica.hadw-bw.de/nepal/catitems/index/0?page=4. The project 
cataloguing these data will last until October 2028. It will then have covered 
all metadata. For more information including access to the scans, see 
https://www.hadw-bw.de/en/research/research-center/documents-history-religion-and-law-pre-modern-nepalkindly
 or contact nepal[at]hadw-bw.de<mailto:[email protected]>.

Best,
Axel / Michaels

From: INDOLOGY <[email protected]> on behalf of 
"[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Reply to: Dominik Wujastyk <[email protected]>
Date: Friday, 18. July 2025 at 00:33
To: Tyler Neill <[email protected]>
Cc: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [INDOLOGY] NGMCP

I would like to thank Tyler Neill and Claudius Teodorescu for discussions about 
how to save and make available the data of the NGMCP Wiki.  My original panic 
about this has subsided now, since Hamburg yesterday put a simplified version 
of the data online again.

Tyler has already explained matters clearly.  In future you can consult this 
data at either of the following sites:

  *   https://www-archiv.fdm.uni-hamburg.de/ngmcp/index.html
  *   https://tylergneill.github.io/ngmcp-wiki-mirror
This data provides descriptive information on nearly 16,000 manuscripts.

A much simpler, searchable index of these and many more manuscripts is still 
available at Hamburg under the titles "Online Title List" and "Indic 
Manuscripts".  I think there are 117,406 manuscripts in this index:

  *   https://catalogue.ngmcp.uni-hamburg.de/content/search/ngmcpdocument.xed
And the Nepalese National Archives themselves provide a searchable index.  I 
don't know if it is based on the same data as the Hamburg "Online title list", 
but I think that is likely.  The NAK index says it has data on 114,552 
manuscripts:

  *     http://narchives.gov.np/List.aspx
Best wishes,
Dominik


--
Dominik Wujastyk, Professor Emeritus, Classical Indian History
University of Alberta

"The University of Alberta is committed to the pursuit of truth,
the advancement of learning, and the dissemination of knowledge
through teaching, research and other scholarly and creative activities and 
service."
-- Collective 
Agreement<https://www.ualberta.ca/human-resources-health-safety-environment/media-library/my-employment/agreements/2020-2024-collective-agreement---working-version.pdf>
 3.01


_______________________________________________
INDOLOGY mailing list
[email protected]
https://list.indology.info/mailman/listinfo/indology

Reply via email to