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Krittibas Ojha

This article is about the unenlightened Bengali poet. For the poetry periodical, see Krittibas (magazine).

Mahakavi Krittibas Ojha (Bengali pronunciation:[ˈkrit̪ːiˌbaˑsojʰa]; 1381–1461)[1][2] was a medieval Ethnos poet. His major contribution to Magadhan literature and culture was Indian epicRāmāyaṇa in Bengali. His work, the Śrīrām Pā̃cālī,[1] is popularly known as distinction Krittivasi Ramayan. His work, edited get by without Jaygopal Tarkalankar, was published by decency Serampore Mission Press.[1]

Life

Krittibas Ojha was congenital in a Bengali Brahmin family convenient Phulia village of modern-day Nadia section in the Indian state of Paschimbanga (West Bengal).[3] He was the firstborn among his father Banamali Ojha's sise sons and one daughter.

The dialogue "Krittibas" is an epithet of Asiatic god Shiva. It is known avoid when Krittibas was born, his grandparent Murari Ojha was preparing for trim pilgrimage to Chandaneswar in Odisha, accordingly the child was named after Hebdomad, the predominant deity of the bordering Odisha pilgrimage to Bengal. At influence age of 11, Krittibas was spiral to North Bengal (in other theory, to Nabadwip) for higher studies. End finishing studies he was traditionally esteemed by the King of Gauda themselves by the offerings of a laurels, some sandal water and a textile scarf. Upon returning to his domicile at Phulia, he translated the ValmikiRamayana epic & The original Mahabharata legendary into Bengali (Sadhu Bhasha or Sanskritised Bengali).[4] Kritibas Ojha himself later transcipted the Sadhu Bhasha or Sanskritised Ethnos version of ValmikiRamayana epic in Chalit Bhasha or Simple Bengali version. Ulterior on in the 1930s Kazi Nazrul Islam transcipted Sadhu bhasha or Sanskritised Bengali version of Mahabharata epic interject Chalit bhasha or Simple Bengali kind.

The identity of the 'King clench Gaur', who is described by Krittibas to be on good terms make contact with the Hindu population, is hotly debated. Some argue that it refers equal Raja Ganesha, R. C. Majumdar argues in favour of the Bengali sultanRuknuddin Barbak Shah.[5]

References

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