Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute

The Bhandarkar Oriental Institute, Pune was founded on July 6, 1917. The, then Government of Bombay handed over its entire collection of manuscripts (nearly 20,000 manuscripts) to the InstituteThe Institute is a public organization registered under Act XXI of 1860, and is administered by a regulating council. It is partially supported by annual earmarked grants from the Maharashtra Government which nominates five representatives on the regulating council and two on the executive board. The Institute has also received grants from the Government of India and the University Grants Commission for specific research projects.

The Institute has, all these years, been looking after the preservation, lending out, and cataloguing of these manuscripts.

The Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute normally works through its four main Departments:
1. Mahabharata and Research Unit.
2. Manuscripts.
3. Publication and
4. Post-Graduate Teaching and Research.

Mahabharata
In 1919, the Institute undertook to prepare and publish a critical edition of the Mahabharata. This enormous literary project (19 volumes containing 13,000 demi quarto pages) was completed in 1966, and this historic event was formally announced by the then Rashtrapati Dr. S. Radhakrishnan at a special function held at Mahabharata Institute on Spetember 22, 1966.

Subsequently, the Institute also prepared and published a critical edition of the Harivamsa (2 volumes containing 1,711 pages). This was followed by the Pratika-Index (6 volumes containing 4,805 pages) and the Critically Constituted Text of the Great Epic, and the Harivamsa (5 volumes containing 3,150 pages). The Institute is now occupied with the last item in the great project of the Critical Edition, namely, the Epilogue , the Institute is preparing an exhaustive Cultural Index of the Mahabharata, of which Vol. I (containing viii + 506 pages) has been published.