It is perhaps commonplace to say that India is one of the  world's richest and enticing cultures. One thousand years have  passed since Albiruni, arguably the first 'Indologist', wrote his  outsider's account of the subcontinent, and two hundred years  have passed since the inception of Western Indology. And yet,  what this monumental scholarship has achieved is still outweighed  by the huge tracts of terra incognita: thousands of works lacking  scholarly attention, and even more manuscripts that still await  careful study whilst decaying in the unforgiving Indian climate.  
  In September 2009, young researchers and graduate students in  this field came together to present their cutting edge work at  the first International Indology Graduate Research Symposium to  be held at Oxford University. This volume, the first in a new  series publishing the proceedings of the Symposium, will make  important contributions to the study of the classical  civilization of the Indian sub-continent. The series, edited by  Nina Mirnig, Péter-Dániel Szántó, and Michael Williams, will  strive to cover a wide range of subjects reaching from  literature, religion, philosophy, ritual and grammar to social  history, with the aim that the research published will not only  enrich the field of classical Indology, but eventually also  contribute to the studies of history and anthropology of India  and Indianized Central and South-East Asia.