Editing Natata Ved
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β | '''Natata Ved''', also known as '''Natata Oileyes''' or simply '''Oileyes''', was an ancient [[Jah Keved|Veden]] scholar |
+ | '''Natata Ved''', also known as '''Natata Oileyes''' or simply '''Oileyes''', was an ancient [[Jah Keved|Veden]] scholar.{{book ref|sa3|53}} Her nickname was given to her by her contemporaries,{{book ref|sa3|53}} but its meaning is unknown. |
Natata lived in [[Jah Keved]] two hundred years after the death of King [[NanKhet]] and the founding of the [[Siln]] dynasty. She is best known for writing a dramatized account of NanKhet's life and death, which is the earliest source of information about him to have survived to the present day.{{book ref|sa3|53}} |
Natata lived in [[Jah Keved]] two hundred years after the death of King [[NanKhet]] and the founding of the [[Siln]] dynasty. She is best known for writing a dramatized account of NanKhet's life and death, which is the earliest source of information about him to have survived to the present day.{{book ref|sa3|53}} |
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β | Despite the long time passing between NanKhet's death and her work, she insisted that her research was rigorous, although [[Jasnah Kholin]] notes that modern scholarship was still in its infancy during Natata's lifetime. |
+ | Despite the long time passing between NanKhet's death and her work, she insisted that her research was rigorous, although [[Jasnah Kholin]] notes that modern scholarship was still in its infancy during Natata's lifetime. She is said to have had a passion for the dramatic, and took delight in describing the irony of NanKhet's final moments.{{book ref|sa3|53}} |
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