Sharada Peeth is a
ruined Hindu temple and ancient centre of learning located in present-day Pakistan-administered Jammu and Kashmir. Between the 6th and 12th centuries CE, it was among the most prominent
temple universities in the
Indian subcontinent. Known in particular for its library, stories recount scholars travelling long distances to access its texts. It played a key role in the development and popularisation of the
Sharada script in
North India.
Library at Sharada Peeth Sharada Peeth was also valued by scholars across the Indian subcontinent for its library, and stories detail long journeys they would take to consult it. • In the 11th century, the
Vaishnava saint
Swami Ramanuja traveled from
Srirangam to Sharada Peeth to refer to the
Brahma Sutras, before commencing work on writing his commentary on the Brahma sutras, the
Sri Bhasya. of Pāṇini's grammar treatise from
Sharada Peeth • The 13th century CE (1277 – 78) text
Prabhāvakacarita contains a story of the
Śvētāmbara scholar
Hemachandra. As Sharada Peeth was the only place with a library known to have all such works available in their complete form, Hemachandra requested
King Jayasimha Siddharaja to send a team to retrieve copies of the existing eight Sanskrit grammatical texts preserved there. These supported his own text of Sanskrit grammar, the
Siddha-Hema-Śabdanuśāśana.
Important students The important pupil who studied here include: •
Vaṭeśvara, a tenth century
Indian mathematician who presented several
trigonometric identities. He was the author of Vaṭeśvara-siddhānta written in 904 AD, a treatise focusing on astronomy and applied mathematics. • •
Rinchen Zangpo, a principal lotsawa or translator of
Sanskrit Buddhist texts into
Tibetan, is also said to be studied here. • The Kashmiri historian
Kalhana Pandit • Hindu philosopher
Adi Shankara. ==Pushpagiri Vihara==