A. K. Warder

Anthony Kennedy Warder ((1924-09-08)8 September 1924  (2013-01-08)8 January 2013) was a British Indologist. His best-known works are Introduction to Pali (1963), Indian Buddhism (1970), and the eight-volume Indian Kāvya Literature (19722011).[1]

A. K. Warder
Born(1924-09-08)8 September 1924
England, U.K.
Died8 January 2013(2013-01-08) (aged 88)
Toronto, Canada
NationalityBritish
Spouse(s)Nargez Warder
ChildrenNone
Academic background
Alma materSchool of Oriental and African Studies, University of London
ThesisPali Metre: A Study of the Evolution of Early Middle Indian Metre Based on the Verse Preserved in the Pali Canon (1954)
Doctoral advisorJohn Brough
Academic work
DisciplineIndologist
Institutions
Main interests
Notable works
  • Introduction to Pali (1963)
  • Indian Buddhism (1970)
  • Indian Kāvya Literature (1972–2011)

Life

Warder was born in England on 8 September 1924.

He studied Sanskrit and Pali at the School of Oriental and African Studies, and received his doctorate from there in 1954. His thesis, supervised by John Brough, was entitled Pali Metre: A Study of the Evolution of Early Middle Indian Metre Based on the Verse Preserved in the Pali Canon. (When it was published in 1967, the title was changed to Pali Metre: A Contribution to the History of Indian Literature.)

For a number of years, he was an active member of the Pali Text Society, which published his first book, Introduction to Pali, in 1963. He based his popular primer on extracts from the Dīgha Nikāya, and took the then revolutionary step of treating Pali as an independent language, not just a derivative of Sanskrit.

His began his academic career at the University of Edinburgh in 1955, but in 1963 moved to the University of Toronto. There, as Chairman of the Department of East Asian Studies, he built up a strong programme in Sanskrit and South Asian studies. He retired in 1990.

Studies on Buddhism in Honour of Professor A. K. Warder was published in 1993, edited by Narendra K. Wagle and Fumimaro Watanabe.

He and his wife, Nargez, died of natural causes almost simultaneously on 8 January 2013. He was eighty-eight, and she was ninety. They had no children. They were buried together following a Buddhist service.[1][2][3]

Notable works

Notes

  1. First edition published as Outline of Indian Philosophy.
gollark: I already control all political systems, silly bees.
gollark: Anyway, I forgot how potential energy should work in this, so I guess I'll just rederive it.
gollark: I don't care either way, I procedurally generate legal systems in which all my actions are and always were legal whenever needed.
gollark: A fun quirk is that since it uses animation frames, if you go offscreen it immediately NaNs horribly.
gollark: Oh, I was going to add potential energy to this but forgot, sad.

References

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