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Momal Rano or (In Sindhi: مومل راڻو) is a romantic tale of Momal and Rano from the Sindhi folklore and Rajasthani folklore. [1] It is a multifaceted story that entails adventure, magic, schemes, beauty, love, ordeals of separation, and above all romantic tragedy.
Although originally an oral tradition, the genre was incorporated into longer poems, epics and narratives by a number of Indian poets [8] across major Modern Indo-Aryan languages including—Hindi, Urdu, Bengali, Gujarati, Rajasthani languages, Bihari languages, Punjabi etc., and can be found in the folk poetry of the tribal people too. [9]
'Dhola Maru ri chaupai' a book composed by Jain monk Kushallabh in 1617, in which he writes that the story is old one. Some manuscripts of 1473 also describe the story. 'Dhola Maru ra doha' is the edited text by Kashi nagari Pracharini sabha. The tale depicts one of the most mesmerizing chapters of Rajput and rajasthani history.
Vijay Kumar Singh's 2022 Hindi poetry collection "Chitralekha" has an entire section of 8 poems dedicated to the Ashta-Nayika. The 8 poems each have different Ashta-Nayikas as their protagonist and the individual poems are named after the different Ashta-Nayikas they are about.
The term Marwari once referred to the area encompassed by the former princely state of Marwar, also called the Jodhpur region of southwest Rajasthan in India.It formed from the two constituent words, Maru(region of Thar desert) [3] and Wadi(enclosure), [4] effectively indicating the western part of modern day Rajasthan.
The writer of the Rajasthani film 'Bharkhama', based on the Sahitya Akademi-awarded book 'Bharakhma' is Dr Jitendra Kumar Soni and he has received the Sahitya Akademi Yuva Puraskar. [5] [6] This film based on the struggle of love was (previously) to be released on 5 July [7] [8] in 60 theatres across the country, [3] [5] [4] was postponed till ...
Standard Rajasthani or Standard Marwari, a version of Rajasthani, the common lingua franca of Rajasthani people and is spoken by over 25 million people (2011) in different parts of Rajasthan. [7] It has to be taken into consideration, however, that some speakers of Standard Marwari are conflated with Hindi speakers in the census.
Geographical distribution of Rajasthani languages. Marwari (मारवाड़ी, ماروارؕی, Mārwāṛī) [a] is a language within the Rajasthani language branch of the Indo-Aryan languages. Marwari and its closely related varieties like Dhundhari, Shekhawati and Mewari form a part of the