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  2. Kundalatha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kundalatha

    Kundalatha (or Kundalata, Malayalam: കുന്ദലത) is a novel by Appu Nedungadi, published in 1887. It is considered to be the first Malayalam novel. See also

  3. Malayalam novel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malayalam_novel

    It was also the first novel to be written by a Malayali Keralite and the first novel published in Malabar region. It had a historical narrative centred on Kundalatha, the daughter of the king of Kalinga. O. Chandhu Menon's Indulekha was the first major novel in Malayalam language.

  4. Malayalam literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malayalam_literature

    The first novel conceived and published in Malayalam was Appu Nedungadi's Kundalatha (1887). [75] Though Kundalatha is not considered a major novel, it gets the pride of place as the first work in the language having the basic characteristics of a novel. O. Chandhu Menon's Indulekha was the first major novel

  5. Oyyarathu Chandu Menon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oyyarathu_Chandu_Menon

    His 1889 work, Indulekha, was the first Malayalam fictional work which met with all the requisite characteristics of a novel according to widely accepted Malayalam literary convention. [7] It is not the first novel per se, as Kundalatha (a much inferior work) by Appu Nedungadi pre-dates it by two years.

  6. List of first novels by language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_first_novels_by...

    Kundalatha കുന്ദലത: Appu Nedungadi: India Meitei: 1930 Madhavi [5] মাধবী: Lamabam Kamal Singh India Marathi: 1857 Yamuna Paryatan [5] यमुना पर्यटन: Baba Padamji India Nepali: 1903 Bir Charitra [6] वीर चरित्र: Girish Ballabh Joshi: Nepal: Northern Ndebele: 1956 The Ndebele Uprising ...

  7. Cherupaithangal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cherupaithangal

    The first Malayalam book ever to be printed is Samkṣepavedārththham authored by Clemente Peani and printed in Rome in 1772. [4] Cherupaithangal is a collection of seven stories for children translated from English by the British missionary Benjamin Bailey and printed in C. M. S. Press, Kottayam in 1824.

  8. Unnayi Variyar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unnayi_Variyar

    Unnayi Warrier was a poet, writer, scholar, and dramatist who lived in Thiruvananthapuram, India during the 17th/18th century. He is best known for his chef-d'oeuvre Nalacharitham aattakatha and is known to have made significant contributions to the art of Kathakali, the classical dance-drama form of Kerala.

  9. Cherusseri Namboothiri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cherusseri_Namboothiri

    Cherusseri Namboothiri was a 15th-century Malayalam poet who belonged to Kolathunadu, in present-day North Malabar region of Kerala.He was a court poet of Udaya Varma (1446–1475) and the author of Krishna Gadha, a poem which is considered a landmark in the development of Malayalam literature.