Lalla ( 720âÂÂ790 CE) was an Indian mathematician, astronomer, and astrologer who belonged to a family of astronomers. Lalla was the son of Trivikrama Bhatta and the grandson of à Ââmba. He lived in central India, possibly in the LÃÂá¹Âa region in modern south Gujarat. Lalla was known as being one of the leading Indian astronomers of the eighth century. Only two of his works are currently thought to be extant.
His best-known work is the à Âiá¹£yadhëvá¹Âddhidatantra ("Treatise which expands the intellect of students"). This text is one of the first major Sanskrit astronomical texts known from the period following the 7th-century works of Brahmagupta and BhÃÂskara I. It generally treats the same astronomical subject matter and demonstrates the same computational techniques as earlier authors, although there are some significant innovations, such that LallaâÂÂs treatise offers a compromise between the rival astronomical schools of his predecessors, ÃÂryabhaá¹Âa I and Brahmagupta. It is within the à Âiá¹£yadhëvá¹Âddhidatantra that the earliest known description of perpetual motion is described.
The other extant work by Lalla is the Jyotiá¹£aratnakoà Âa ("Treasury of Jewels"), a treatise on catarchic astrology. This work is one of the earliest known Sanskrit astrological works for determining auspicious and inauspicious times. No edition of this text has ever been published while the known manuscripts are incomplete.
In his work, Lalla drew on his predecessors Brahmagupta, and BhÃÂskara I. In turn, he influenced later generations of astronomers, including ÃÂryabhaá¹Âa II, à Ârëpati, Vaá¹Âeà Âvara, and BhÃÂskara II (who later wrote a commentary on the à Âiá¹£yadhëvá¹Âddhidatantra).
He followed the ÃÂryapaká¹£a or the school of ÃÂryabhaá¹Âa (continued by BhÃÂskara I), but divided the mahÃÂyuga in the traditional way, following the BrÃÂhmapaká¹£a school of Brahmagupta.