Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Kannada literature is the corpus of written forms of the Kannada language, spoken mainly in the Indian state of Karnataka and written in the Kannada script. [1] Attestations in literature span one and a half millennia, [2][3][4][5][6] with some specific literary works surviving in rich manuscript traditions, extending from the 9th century to ...
Modern Kannada literature refers to the body of literature written in the Kannada language, a language spoken mainly in the Indian state of Karnataka. The Kannada script is the writing system used in Kannada literature. In the last forty years, eight modern Kannada authors have been awarded the Jnanpith award, a prestigious private literary ...
Kannada literature from Mysore Kingdom, Keladi Nayaka kingdom. Basappanayaka ( Shivatatwa Ratnakara – History Keladi Kings) Linganna ( Keladi Napra Vijaya – History of Keladi Kings) Chikkupadhyaya, Minister and teacher of His Highness Sri Chikkadevaraja Wodeyar (1670 AD) – more than 30 works in Kannada. Tirumalaraya (1680 CE ...
Medieval Kannada literature. Medieval Kannada literature covered a wide range of subjects and genres which can broadly be classified under the Jain, Virashaiva, Vaishnava and secular traditions. These include writings from the 7th century rise of the Badami Chalukya empire to the 16th century, coinciding with the decline of Vijayanagara Empire.
Kannada is attested epigraphically for about one and a half millennia and literary Old Kannada flourished during the 9th-century Rashtrakuta Empire. [14] [15] Kannada has an unbroken literary history of around 1200 years. [16]
Vijayanagara literature in Kannada is the body of literature composed in the Kannada language of South India during the ascendancy of the Vijayanagara Empire which lasted from the 14th through the 16th century. The Vijayanagara empire was established in 1336 by Harihara I and his brother Bukka Raya I. Although it lasted until 1664, its power ...
Kavirajamarga was formative in the literary growth of Kannada and is a guide book to the Kannada grammar that existed in that period. It laid the "royal path" for guiding many aspiring writers. It laid the "royal path" for guiding many aspiring writers.
S.Karnataka.1040-1326. 1195 Nagachandra's pampa ramayana. 1195 Kanti (poet) and Rajaditya (mathematician). 1098 Ramanujacharya converts Hoysala Crown prince to Vaishnavism. 1112 Nayasena's Dharmamrita. 1145 Nagavarma II's kavyavalokanam and Bhashabhushana. 1165 Harissvara's Girija-Kalyana. 1165 Raghavanka, earlier writer of Shatpadi.