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R. Ayyalaraju Ramabhadrudu; Ramarajabhushanudu; Kalipatnam Ramarao; T. Ramaswamy Choudary; Venigalla Rambabu; Duvvuru Ramireddy; Abburi Ramakrishna Rao; Addepalli ...
Atukuri Molla (ఆతుకూరి మొల్ల) was a 16th century Telugu poetess who authored Molla Ramayanam, a Telugu-language version of Sanskrit Ramayana. [1] [2] Identified by her caste, she was popularly known as Kummari Molla. [3]
Papineni Sivasankar; Potturi Vijayalakshmi; Potana Bammera; P. Lalita Kumari (Volga) Perugu Ramakrishna; Puranam Subrahmanya Sarma; Rajaram Madhurantakam
He was a Telugu poet who hailed from what is now the Andhra Pradesh region, generally known for his wit and humour. [6] He was one of the Ashtadiggajas or the eight poets at the court of Krishnadevaraya, the Vijayanagara emperor. When he was a child, his father was led to death.
Gurram Jashuva (Telugu: గుర్రం జాషువా; September 28, 1895 – July 24, 1971) was a Telugu poet. He is legendary figure in the Telugu literary world. With his immense wisdom and through the struggle he faced due to the caste-based discrimination, Jashuva wrote his poetry with a universal approach. He was called the "Poet ...
Gurajada Apparao (1862–1915), poet, writer and playwright who wrote the first Telugu play, Kanyasulkam; also an influential social reformer sometimes called Mahakavi ("the great poet") Gurram Jashuva (1895–1971), a dalit poet and writer and producer of All India Radio, awarded " Padma Bhushan " by the Govt of India, known for poetry on ...
Gurajada Apparao (1862–1915), poet, writer and playwright who wrote the first Telugu play, Kanyasulkam; also an influential social reformer sometimes called Mahakavi ("the great poet") Gurram Jashuva (1895–1971), a dalit poet and writer and producer of All India Radio, awarded "Padma Bhushan" by the Govt of India, known for poetry on social ...
Suka-Rambha Samvadamu (1893–1894) is translation into Telugu from the poets' own work of the same name in Sanskrit. Buddha Caritramu, 1899–1900; Vairagya Sataka of Appaya Dikshita, 1899–1900; Bala Ramayana of Rajasekhara, [2] 1901–1912; Mudra Rakshasa of Vishakhadatta, 1901–1912; Mrichchakatika of Shudraka, 1901–1912