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Venmurasu (Tamil: வெண்முரசு Veṇmuracu; transl. Sacred Proclamation) is a Tamil language novel by the writer Jeyamohan. It is a modern re-narration of the Indian classical epic, the Mahābhārata. Consisting of 26 volumes spanning 22,400 pages, Venmurasu is considered one of the longest novels ever published. [2]
A weekly newspaper edited by Bharathi in 1907. By April 1907, he started editing the Tamil weekly India and the English newspaper Bala Bharatham along with M.P.T. Acharya. [1] These newspapers served as a means of expressing Bharathi's creativity and he continued to write poems in these editions.
List of Tamil-language newspapers. ... Dinamani தினமணி (Tamil Branch of The Indian Express) ... (India) - Evening Daily;
The Ritual of Battle, Krishna in the Mahabharata, SUNY Press, New York 1990. Hopkins, E. W. The Great Epic of India, New York (1901). Jyotirmayananda, Swami. Mysticism of the Mahabharata, Yoga Research Foundation, Miami 1993. Katz, Ruth Cecily Arjuna in the Mahabharata, University of South Carolina Press, Columbia 1989. Keay, John (2000).
Swadesamitran published a Who's Who in Tamil Nadu in 1980-1981 (edited by Philip Thomas born 18 July 1960 died 9 May 2006) and the publication was released in Madurai by Prime Minister Smt. Indira Gandhi during the celebrations marking the 2000th anniversary of the birth of Thiruvalluvar, the great Tamil poet and author of Thirukural.
[3] [5] The Mahabharata is divided into eighteen parva or 'books'. Like many other major characters, Abhimanyu is also introduced in the Adi Parva—the first of the 18 parvas. [6] The seventh book's Abhimanyu-badha Parva focuses on Abhimanyu, who is lauded throughout, and has a thorough account of how he died. [2]
Furthermore, as news of Krishna's death reaches Hastinapur, five of his wives ascended the funeral pyre, while others embrace ascetism. [214] Against these stray examples within the Mahabharata of sati, there are scores of instances in the same epic of widows who do not commit sati, and none are blamed for not doing so. [215]
Its regular edition was launched in 1969 at Madurai and became a daily newspaper in 1971. [citation needed] The paper's second edition started from Chennai in 1993. Its third edition started from Coimbatore in 2007. The fourth edition from Tiruchirappalli was launched as a conclusion of the August campaign. [3]