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<p>Academic study of the tantric traditions has blossomed in recent decades in no small measure thanks to the magisterial contributions of Alexis G.J.S. Sanderson until 2015 Spalding Professor of Eastern Religions and Ethics at Oxford University. This collection of essays honours him and touches several fields of Indology that he has helped to shape (or in the case of Saivism revolutionised): the history ritual and philosophies of tantric Buddhism Saivism and Vaisavism religious art and architecture and Sanskrit belles lettres. Former students and other experts influenced by his scholarship here offer papers that contribute significantly to our understanding of the cultural religious and intellectual histories of premodern South and Southeast Asia. Contributors are: Peter C. Bisschop Judit Törzsök Alex Watson Isabelle Ratié Christopher D. Wallis PéterDániel Szántó Srilata Raman Csaba Dezso Gergely Hidas Nina Mirnig John Nemec Bihani Sarkar Jürgen Hanneder Diwakar Acharya James Mallinson Csaba Kiss Jason Birch Libbie Mills Ryugen Tanemura Anthony Tribe and Parul DaveMukherji. About the Author Dominic Goodall studied under Alexis Sanderson at Oxford (doctorate 1996) joined the École Française d'ExtrêmeOrient (2000) and is now head of its Pondicherry Centre. He has published editions and translations of Saiva works Sanskrit poetry and Cambodian inscriptions. Shaman Hatley studied under Harunaga Isaacson at the University of Pennsylvania (doctorate 2007) taught at Concordia University until 2015 and is now Associate Professor at the University of Massachusetts Boston. His research mainly concerns Tantric Saivism yoga and medieval goddess cults. Harunaga Isaacson Ph.D. in Sanskrit (University of Leiden 1995) was a postdoctoral fellow at Oxford University (1995–2000) and held positions at Hamburg University and the University of Pennsylvania before joining Hamburg University as Professor of Classical Indology in 2006. His main research areas are South Asian tantric traditions especially Vajrayana Buddhism classical Sanskrit poetry Indian philosophy Puranic literature and manuscript studies. Srilata Raman completed her M.Phil. at Oxford under the supervision of Alexis Sanderson in 1988. She is currently an Associate Professor of Hinduism at the University of Toronto and specializes in the textual history of Tamil religion in both its Sanskrit and Tamil iterations focusing on both Srivaisnava and Tamil Saiva traditions.</p>