Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Vishnu Sharma" in English language version.
... credited to Pandit Vishnusharma somewhere between 1200 BC and AD 300. Many stories may have existed long before then, but Vishnusharma put them together as a single unit ...
... reached al-Mansur, the second Abbasid caliph ... he ordered it translated into Arabic ... Some claim it soon became second only to the Quran in popularity ... at least eleven Panchatantra tales are included in the work of La Fontaine ...
... He has concluded Kashmir as the birthplace of Vishnusharma taking into account the geographical features and the animals ...
... a king called Amarshakti. He had three sons – Bahushakti, Ugrashakti and Anantshakti – all dullards ...
... One of them named Sumati advised the ruler to hand over the princes to the care of the renowned teacher Acharya Vishnusharma ...
... a wise man named Sumati. He came up with the idea that the princes should not be taught the scriptures but only the wisdom in them. There is a man called Vishnusharma ...
... In return the king promised to pay a hundred land grants but Vishnusharma replied: 'Naham vidyavikrayam shasanshatenapi karomi.' Translated, 'I am not the man to sell good learning for a hundred land grants.' ...
... university is regarded as the setting for the composition and compiling of significant Sanskrit works, which include the Arthaśāstra (a treatise on economic, political and military strategy; see artha) by Kauṭilya, the Aṣṭādhyāyī (the first known grammar of Sanskrit) by Pāṇini (see language and linguistics), and the Pāñcatantra (collected animal fables) by Viṣṇuśarman.
... university is regarded as the setting for the composition and compiling of significant Sanskrit works, which include the Arthaśāstra (a treatise on economic, political and military strategy; see artha) by Kauṭilya, the Aṣṭādhyāyī (the first known grammar of Sanskrit) by Pāṇini (see language and linguistics), and the Pāñcatantra (collected animal fables) by Viṣṇuśarman.
... भारत की दक्षिण दिशा में स्थित महिलारोप्य नामक नगर किसी राज्य की राजधानी था (located in the south of India was a city named Mahilaropya, the capital of some kingdom)...
... भारत की दक्षिण दिशा में स्थित महिलारोप्य नामक नगर किसी राज्य की राजधानी था (located in the south of India was a city named Mahilaropya, the capital of some kingdom)...