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Vidya Niwas Mishra (28 January 1926 – 14 February 2005) was an Indian scholar, a Hindi-Sanskrit littérateur, and a journalist. He was honoured with Padma Bhushan . Dr. Vidhyanivas Mishra being interviewed by Dr. Archana Dwivedi
Mehrunnisa Parvez (1944–), Hindi novelist, short story writer and Padma Shri awardee; Madhur Kapila (1942–), art critic, Hindi writer, recipient of the 2011 Sahitya Akademi Award for contribution to literature; Mohan Rana (1964–), Hindi poet and philosopher; Mridula Garg (1938–), short story writer and novelist
Jeelani Bano was born on 14 July 1936 in Badayun, [1] in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh to Hairat Badayuni, [2] a known Urdu poet. [3] After her schooling, she enrolled for intermediate course when she married Anwar Moazzam, a poet of repute and a former head of the Department of Islamic Studies at the Osmania University and shifted to Hyderabad. [4]
Aaj ke lokpriy kavi (Ed. Vidya Niwas Mishra) Kaavya-stabak ( Ed by Vidya Niwas Mishra & Ramesh Chandra Shah) Sannate ka chhand (Ed by Ashok Vajpeyi) Ajneya: Sanklit kavitayen (Ed by Namvar Singh) Novels: Shekhar: Ek Jeevani I (1941) Shekhar: Ek Jeevani II (1944) Shekhar: Ek Jeevni III (Unpublished) Nadi ke dweep (1952) Apne-apne ajnabi (1961)
Gadul Singh Lama was born on 15 June 1939 in Gangtok, in the Northeast Indian state of Sikkim to Chandraman Ghising and Phulmaya Ghising. [1] After matriculating from the Sir Tyashi Namgyal High School (present day Tashi Namgyal Academy) in 1956 and, getting selected for the education initiative as a part of the 7 Year Development Programme of the government, secured a diploma in Engineering ...
Bhrigu (birthplace: Ballia), one of the seven great sages, the Saptarshis, one of the Prajapatis created by Brahma; Sur (birthplace: Mathura), saint, poet and musician; Tulsidas (Ramayana: Chitrakoot), Awadhi poet and philosopher; wrote Rāmacaritamānasa ("The Lake of the Deeds of Rama"), an epic devoted to Lord Rama
Boond Aur Samudra translated by the National Book Trust into Urdu, Punjabi, Marathi, Tamil, Bangla, Gujarati, Telugu, Asamese, Oriya, and Malayalam. Suhaag Ke Noopur translated into Marathi, Kannada, and Oriya. Amrit Aur Vish translated into Russian by Moscow's Hindi scholar, S. Trubnikova as "Naiktar E Yaad." This translation of 408 pages was ...
Vinod Dua, Journalist Extraordinaire Charcoal Portrait by Amitabh Mitra. Vinod Dua (11 March 1954 – 4 December 2021) was an Indian journalist who worked in Doordarshan and NDTV India.