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#h4##span class="mw-headline" id="TEXT_112"#TEXT 112#/span##/h4#
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#dl##dd#puruṣottama, śrī-gālīma, jagannātha-dāsa#/dd#
#dd#śrī-candraśekhara vaidya, dvija haridāsa#/dd##/dl#
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puruṣottama — of the name Puruṣottama; śrī-gālīma — of the name Śrī Gālīma; jagannātha-dāsa — of the name Jagannātha dāsa; śrī-candreśekhara vaidya — of the name Śrī Candraśekhara Vaidya; dvija haridāsa — of the name Dvija Haridāsa.
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The sixty-eighth branch of the original tree was Puruṣottama, the sixty-ninth was Śrī Gālīma, the seventieth was Jagannātha dāsa, the seventy-first was Śrī Candraśekhara Vaidya, and the seventy-second was Dvija Haridāsa.
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There is some question about whether Dvija Haridāsa was the author of Aṣṭottara-śata-nāma. He had two sons named Śrīdāma and Gokulānanda, who were disciples of Śrī Advaita Ācārya. Their village, Kāñcana-gaḍiyā, is situated within five miles of the Bājārasāu station, the fifth station from Ājīmagañja in the district of Murśidābād, West Bengal.
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#h4##span class="mw-headline" id="TEXT_112"#TEXT 112#/span##/h4#
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#dl##dd#puruṣottama, śrī-gālīma, jagannātha-dāsa#/dd#
#dd#śrī-candraśekhara vaidya, dvija haridāsa#/dd##/dl#
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#h4##span class="mw-headline" id="SYNONYMS"#SYNONYMS#/span##/h4#
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puruṣottama — Puruṣottama; śrī-gālīma — Śrī Gālīma; jagannātha-dāsa — Jagannātha dāsa; śrī-candreśekhara vaidya — Śrī Candraśekhara Vaidya; dvija haridāsa — Dvija Haridāsa.
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The sixty-eighth branch of the original tree was Puruṣottama, the sixty-ninth was Śrī Gālīma, the seventieth was Jagannātha dāsa, the seventy-first was Śrī Candraśekhara Vaidya, and the seventy-second was Dvija Haridāsa.
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#h4##span class="mw-headline" id="PURPORT"#PURPORT#/span##/h4#
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Śrīla Bhaktisiddhānta Sarasvatī Ṭhākura writes in his Anubhāṣya, “There is some question about whether Dvija Haridāsa was the author of Aṣṭottara-śata-nāma. He had two sons, named Śrīdāma and Gokulānanda, who were disciples of Śrī Advaita Ācārya. Their village, Kāñcana-gaḍiyā, is situated within five miles of the Bājārasāu station, the fifth station from Ājīmagañja in the district of Murśidābād [in West Bengal].”
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