Thanks for bringing this historical perspective into the conversation, Harry.

A satisfactory explanation of the historical developments probably should start 
with Burrow (Sanskrit language, 2nd end., 1955, pp 90-95): PIE sḱ, the source 
of (c)ch, underwent the general development of *ḱ > ś, resulting in the cluster 
*sś which was assimilated to *śś. This development was parallel to that of *ḱs, 
where *ḱ underwent the conditioned change to š before obstruent; the resulting 
cluster *šs assimilated to *šš which turned into *ṣṣ. Subsequent to these 
changes, *śś and *ṣṣ underwent regular contact dissimilation to *cś and *ṭṣ. 
The latter underwent different environmentally conditioned changes resulting in 
final ṭ and medial kṣ (with exceptions as the result of analogy and other 
secondary changes. *cś may have stayed as such in some varieties of Vedic 
(compare the Kerala MSS). The phonetic cluster *ćs would be difficult to 
distinguish from cch, with the palatal quality of the stop overlapping the 
aspiration (leading to a palatal voiceless fricative release), so that *cś 
could be reinterpreted as a voiceless palatal aspirate, and with gemination 
preserving the coda weight of the preceding syllable. (On this issue see also 
the following: Hock, Hans Henrich. 1974. Historieal change and synchronic 
structure: the ease of the Sanskrit root nouns. Towards tomorrow's linguistics, 
ed. by R. W. Shuy and C-J. N. Bailey, 329-42. Washington: Georgetown University 
Press. [Reprinted in International Journal of Dravidian Linguistics 3: 321-35 
(1974).] Hock, Hans Henrich. 1987. Regular contact dissimilation. A festschrift 
for Henry Hoenigswald, ed. by George Cardona & Norman Zide, 143-153. Tübingen: 
Narr. A very different view in Kuiper, F B. J. 1967. The Sanskrit nom. sing. 
viṭ. Indo-Iranian Journal 10: 103-25, which however suffers from numerous 
problems, including apparently being unaware of Burrow’s 1955 proposal.) As I 
show in my 1987 paper, the dissimilation is sporadically shared for *ss, as in 
vatsyati from vas- vs. apassu/apaḥsu. (The irregularity of ss-dissimilation is 
attributable to the fact that there is a preexisting contrastive ts as in 
vetsyati from vid-)

All the best,

Hans Henrich



On Oct 20, 2023, at 13:56, Harry Spier via INDOLOGY 
<[email protected]> wrote:

Phillip Maas pointed me to W. Sidney Allen's Sandhi (on 
archive.org<https://urldefense.com/v3/__http://archive.org__;!!DZ3fjg!-pKPVo7MxcwGzPQRK15YlrKce7Lptu5ZdsNJbl4f0jWBWHW09s5rfHCkfVjdvhpYWnyLoNF7De3u8xNUdFDgN3gD-cV2$>
 
https://archive.org/details/allensandhi2ndedition1972/page/n43/mode/2up<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://archive.org/details/allensandhi2ndedition1972/page/n43/mode/2up__;!!DZ3fjg!-pKPVo7MxcwGzPQRK15YlrKce7Lptu5ZdsNJbl4f0jWBWHW09s5rfHCkfVjdvhpYWnyLoNF7De3u8xNUdFDgN2mP7Xly$>
 )
He discusses the historical basis for doubling of ch, and what he says agrees 
with what has been said on this thread.

Attached are the two relevant pages on vowel+ch .

Harry Spier


On Fri, Oct 20, 2023 at 11:12 AM Christophe Vielle via INDOLOGY 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
I am not a grammarian but I must confess that I do not understand the following 
passage in this interesting article, which appears to have forgotten that the 
rules of external sandhi (generally) apply to words forming compounds, and that 
the sandhi between words forming compounds cannot be rightly called "internal 
sandhi". I quote:

Pāṇinian grammar records compulsory gemination of ch when preceded by (i) a 
short vowel in both internal and external sandhis (Aṣṭādhyāyī́ 6.1.73: ché ca) 
as in svacchāyā and tena cchinnam, (ii) the particles ā and mā in both internal 
and external sandhis (Aṣṭādhyāyī́ 6.1.74: āṅmā́ṅoś ca) as in  ā cchāyā and mā 
cchaitsīt (iii) a long vowel in internal sandhi (Aṣṭādhyāyī́ 6.1.75: dīrghā́t) 
as in vicācchāyate. Optional gemination of ch is prescribed only when preceded 
by a long vowel in an internal sandhi (Aṣṭādhyāyī́ 6.1.76: padā́ntād vā) as in 
mālā chinnā or mālā cchinnā. There are not many words in Sanskrit which begin 
with ch and therefore, as the rules of grammar suggest, a non-conjunct ch is 
fairly rare.

In (i) the example of "internal sandhi" should have been e.g. gacchati or 
icchati
(ii) with ā and mā it concerns "external sandhi" only, even if the prefix ā is 
used in composition
(iii) ok in this case, the Kāśikāvṛttī gives the list of verbal forms: 
hrīcchati, mlecchati, apacācchāyate, vicācchāyate (the last two ones made with 
apa- and vi- on cho 4 P. (chyati, acchāt-acchāsīt, caus. chāyayati) - McD gives 
here the subst. mleccha-
(iv) should be corrected into "in an external sandhi", ex. sā chinatti or 
cchinatti, badarī(c)chāyā (Renou §8)


Le 20 oct. 2023 à 15:34, Dominik Wujastyk via INDOLOGY 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> a écrit :

This paper may be of interest in the context of scribal practice:

  *
Chakraborty, Deepro, Jason Eric Birch, Dominik Wujastyk, Andrey Klebanov, 
Harshal Bhatt, Madhusudan Rimal, and Vandana Lele. 2021. “The Graphemes Ch and 
Cch in the Nepalese Script.” Academia Letters, 1–7. 
https://doi.org/10.20935/al3954<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://doi.org/10.20935/al3954__;!!DZ3fjg!-pKPVo7MxcwGzPQRK15YlrKce7Lptu5ZdsNJbl4f0jWBWHW09s5rfHCkfVjdvhpYWnyLoNF7De3u8xNUdFDgN6_u5Eh4$>.


On Fri, 20 Oct 2023 at 03:45, Nagaraj Paturi via INDOLOGY 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
This discussion of paurushetva and apaurusheyatva of the Vedas is not related 
to , so a digression from the present relevant topic of primacy of orality 
while deciding the 'spelling' of certain phonetic/phomemic sequences.

Prof. Hock, Hans Henrich brought up the pertinent point of primacy of orality 
while deciding the 'spelling'  and Sri Harry Spier too rightly is focusing his 
attention on that aspect and trying to know the history / chronology of the 
shift from orality alone situation to literate (oral-literate dual ? ) 
situation..

गीती शीघ्री शिरःकम्पी तथा लिखितपाठकः ।
अनर्थज्ञोऽल्पकण्ठश्च षडेते पाठकाधमाः ।। ३२ ।।

is from पाणिनीयशिक्षा/सप्तमखण्डः available 
here<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://sa.wikisource.org/wiki/**l/**c__;4KSq4KS-4KSj4KS_4KSo4KWA4KSv4KS24KS_4KSV4KWN4KS34KS-4KS44KSq4KWN4KSk4KSu4KSW4KSj4KWN4KSh4KSD!!DZ3fjg!-pKPVo7MxcwGzPQRK15YlrKce7Lptu5ZdsNJbl4f0jWBWHW09s5rfHCkfVjdvhpYWnyLoNF7De3u8xNUdFDgN2CFR5AN$>.

So , that is the reason , the guru in Pune was apologetic in saying that the 
sishyas were using the printed version only tentatively.





On Fri, Oct 20, 2023 at 12:21 PM alakendu das via INDOLOGY 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Mr. Hart,
Mahabharata's  'Shantiparva ( 210/19)  specifically mentions the Apaurasheya " 
nature of the Vedas.

" Hrrishaya MantraDrashtarO
   Na tu Bedasya Kartaro"
 Na Kaschid Veda Karta cha
 VedaSmarta Chaturbhuja".

SayanaAcharya's commentary on Vedas, too, reflects an identical view

"Josya niswashitam Veda jo VedabhyaAkhilam Jogot. "....

I apologise for my inability to type in Sanskrit.

Any further elucidation/ correction  on the above would be highly beneficial.

Regards
Alakendu Das


From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Sent: Fri, 20 Oct 2023 03:04:48
To: Indology List 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: Re: [INDOLOGY] Whitney and doubling of "ch"


Well, perhaps not entirely apauruṣeya. See the RV:

ए॒तं ते॒ स्तोमं॑ तुविजात॒ विप्रो॒ रथं॒ न धीरः॒ स्वपा॑ अतक्षम् ।
यदीद॑ग्ने॒ प्रति॒ त्वं दे॑व॒ हर्याः॒ स्व॑र्वतीर॒प ए॑ना जयेम ॥ ५.००२.११

On Oct 19, 2023, at 12:13 PM, alakendu das via INDOLOGY 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:


Mr. Spier,

What we have learnt from Indological studies, Vedas were never written. We call 
it "Apaurasheya"... i. e. not written.
The Vedic Mantras came as revealations to the seers( we call them 'Drashta" i. 
e. one who sees) while in Meditation.
The hymns or mantras were then recited orally and passed on across generations 
of disciples. who memorised them.
Finally, sage Vyasa arranged a compilation and  divided them among his 4 
disciples namely, Poilo, Boishampayan, Jaimini and Sumanta.
Thus we got the 4 Vedas

In the 19th Century, Max Mueller edited the
Vedas.

Regards

Alakendu  Das.




From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Sent: Thu, 19 Oct 2023 19:40:15
To: "Hock, Hans Henrich" <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Cc: McComas Taylor via INDOLOGY 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: Re: [INDOLOGY] Whitney and doubling of "ch"


Hans Heinrich Hock wrote:
Whatever the motivation may be for the spelling with a single <ch> in the Rig 
Veda (and let’s keep in mind that the “real” Rig Veda is oral),
1) Can someone point me to some article on when and why the Rg-veda was first 
written down . what script etc.  Was it a British initiative or was the whole 
or parts written down before the colonial period?  I've seen in a modern 
Taittiriya Vedashala the students practicing some of their mantras using  
written material.  Did the medieval and later Vedashalas also use written 
materials to teach their students?

2) Is it possible that this  "Rg-veda written spelling gachati etc." is just a 
reflection of what was written when the Rg-veda was first written down?

Thanks,
Harry Spier



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--
Nagaraj Paturi

Hyderabad, Telangana, INDIA.


Senior Director, IndicA
BoS, MIT School of Vedic Sciences, Pune, Maharashtra
BoS Kavikulaguru Kalidasa Sanskrit University, Ramtek, Maharashtra
BoS Veda Vijnana Gurukula, Bengaluru.
Member, Advisory Council, Veda Vijnana Shodha Samsthanam, Bengaluru
BoS Rashtram School of Public Leadership
Editor-in-Chief, International Journal of Studies in Public Leadership
Former Senior Professor of Cultural Studies,
FLAME School of Communication and FLAME School of  Liberal Education,
Hyderabad, Telangana, INDIA.




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–––––––––––––––––––
Christophe 
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Louvain-la-Neuve








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