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Jagannath Prasad Bhanu

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Photograph of Jagannath Prasad Bhanu
Photograph of Jagannath Prasad Bhanu

Hindi writer (1859-1945)

Jagannath Prasad Bhanu (Hindi: जगन्नाथ प्रसाद भानु, 8 August 1859 – 25 October 1945) was a Hindi scholar of poetry and prose. He is recognized as a pioneering scholar of aesthetics in Hindi. His best known work was the Chandaḥprabhākara, a work of Hindi prose, published in nine editions during his life.

Life

Jagannath Prasad Bhanu was born on 8 August 1859 at Nagpur, the capital of then Central Provinces. He spent most of his life in Bilaspur in modern-day Chhattisgarh. He was a scholar of Hindi, Sanskrit, Prakrit, English, Urdu, Persian, Odia and Marathi. He was especially interested in linguistics and mathematics.

In 1940, Bhanu received the title of Mahamahopadhyaya. He died in 1945.

Major works

  • Chandaḥprabhākara (1894): A Hindi prose work. This popular work saw many editions during his lifetime, and was published in its ninth edition in 1939.
  • Navapañcāmṛta Rāmāyaṇa (1897): This is a work based on the Ramcharitmanas.
  • Kāvyaprabhākara (1909): A work on poetics in Hindi.
  • Chanda Sārāvalī (1917).
  • Alaṅkāra Praśnottarī (1918).
  • Hindī Kāvyālaṅkāra (1918).
  • Kāvya Prabandha (1918).
  • Kāvya Kusumāñjali (1920).
  • Nāyikā Bheda Śaṅkāvalī (1925).
  • Rasaratnākara (1927): A work on aesthetics in Hindi.
  • Śrī Tulasī Tatva Prakāśa (1931).
  • Rāmāyaṇa Varṇāvalī (1936).
  • Alaṅkāra Darpaṇa (1936).
  • Śrī Tulasī Bhāva Prakāśa (1937).

References

  1. ^ Singh, Rahul (12 January 2012). "भानु कवि" [The poet known as Bhanu] (in Hindi). Bilaspur: Dainik Haribhumi. p. 4.
  2. ^ Das, Sisir Kumar (1991). History of Indian Literature: 1911-1956, struggle for freedom : triumph and tragedy. New Delhi, India: Sahitya Akademi. p. 760. ISBN 9788172017989. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
  3. Trivedi, Sushil (2012). हिन्दी के प्रथम साहित्य शास्त्री: जगन्नाथ प्रसाद भानु [Jagannath Prasad Bhanu, the first scholar of aesthetics in Hindi] (in Hindi). New Delhi, India: Yash Publications. ISBN 9788192081564.
  4. ^ Das, Sisir Kumar (2000). History of Indian Literature, Volume 1. New Delhi, India: Sahitya Akademi. pp. 672, 760. ISBN 9788172010065. Retrieved 16 April 2012.

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