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  2. Tulsidas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tulsidas

    Tulsidas did not shine by composing poetry, rather it was Poetry herself that shone by getting the art of Tulsidas. The Hindi poet Mahadevi Varma said commenting on Tulsidas that in the turbulent Middle Ages, India received enlightenment from Tulsidas. She further went on to say that the Indian society as it exists today is an edifice built by ...

  3. Vinaya Patrika - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinaya_Patrika

    Vinaya Patrika (Letter of petition [1]) is a devotional poem composed by the 16th-century Indian poet, Goswami Tulsidas (c. 1532 – c. 1623), containing hymns to different Hindu deities, especially to Rama. [2] The language of the text is Braj Bhasha. [1] Vinaya Patrika is an important work of medieval Hindi Literature and Bhakti movement.

  4. Tulsidas (poem) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tulsidas_(poem)

    Tulsidas is a long poem (khandakavya) in Hindi written by Suryakant Tripathi 'Nirala'. It is based on an episode of the life of the medieval bhakti poet-saint of the same name . Originally written in 1934, the work was first published in 1935 in the Hindi magazine Sudha and later released as a separate edition in 1939.

  5. Ramcharitmanas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramcharitmanas

    Ramcharitmanas consists of seven Kānds (literally "books" or "episodes", cognate with cantos) and composed of approximately 12,800 lines, divided into 1,073 stanzas. [25] Tulsidas compared the seven Kāndas of the epic to seven steps leading into the holy waters of Lake Manasarovar "which purifies the body and the soul at once". [27] [28]

  6. Rudrashtakam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rudrashtakam

    Tulsidas composed this mantra in the late fifteenth century in what is now Uttar Pradesh and created many other literary pieces including the magnum opus Ramcharitmanas. Rudrashtakam appears in the Uttara Kand of the Ramcharitmanas , where the sage Lomasha composed the hymn to invoke the energy of Shiva .

  7. Surdas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surdas

    The book Sur Sagar (Sur's Ocean) is traditionally attributed to Surdas. However, many of the poems in the book seem to be written by later poets in Sur's name. The Sur Sagar in its present form focuses on descriptions of Krishna as the lovely child of Gokul and Vraj, written from the gopis' perspective.

  8. Sudha Arora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sudha_Arora

    Sudha Arora (born in 1946) is an Indian author who writes in Hindi. [1] [2] [3] She has published over 100 short stories, novels, and plays. [4]Her works have been widely translated into various Indian and foreign languages.

  9. Ramchandra Shukla - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramchandra_Shukla

    Ram Chandra Shukla (4 October 1884 – 2 February 1941), [1] better known as Acharya Shukla, was an Indian historian of Hindi literature. He is regarded as the first codifier of the history of Hindi literature in a scientific system by using wide, empirical research [2] with scant resources.