In 1791, during the
Benares State, a resident of the
East India Company,
Jonathan Duncan, proposed the establishment of a Sanskrit college for the development and preservation of Sanskrit
Vangmaya (eloquence) to demonstrate British support for Indian education. The initiative was sanctioned by governor general
Charles Cornwallis. The first teacher of the institution was Pandit Kashinath and the governor general sanctioned a budget of 20,000 per annum. The first principal of Government Sanskrit College was
John Muir, followed by
James R. Ballantyne,
Ralph T. H. Griffith,
George Thibaut,
Arthur Venis,
Sir Ganganath Jha and
Gopinath Kaviraj. In 1857, the college began postgraduate teaching. An examination system was adopted in 1880. In 1894, the famous Saraswati Bhavan Granthalaya building was built, where thousands of manuscripts remain preserved today. These manuscripts have been edited by the principal of the college and published in book form. More than 400 books have been published in a series known as
Sarasvati Bhavana Granthamala. In 1958, the efforts of
Sampurnanand changed the status of the institution from that of a college to a Sanskrit university. In 1974, the name of the institution was formally changed to Sampurnanand Sanskrit University. ==Departments==