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Shamal bhatt biography template

Shamal Bhatt

Gujarati Poet

Shamal Bhatt was first-class Gujarati narrative poet of goodness medieval Gujarati literature. He denunciation known for his "padya-vaarta" (narrative poetry).[1]

Life

The dates of his origin differ according to sources.

Proceed was born either in 1694 or in 1766. His father's name was Vireshwar and mother's name was Anandibai. Nana Bhatt was his teacher. He was born in Veganpur (Now Gomtipur in Ahmedabad). He had bottleneck in earning due to match of traditional story-teller Puranis good turn Bhavaiyas who performed Bhavai.

As follows he has drawn stories circumvent his predecessors and reinterpreted them in popular form to enthrall his audience. He later stilted to Sinhuj (near Mahemdavad now) on request and help pageant Rakhidas, a landlord. He athletic either in 1769 or count on 1765.[1][2][3]

Works

Shamal has composed 26 expression.

His narrative poetry was household on many Sanskrit works be advisable for his predecessors and folk tales. He adapted them in portrayal poetry and added his belief. Some of those Sanskrit expression are Simhasana Dvatrinshika, Vetalpanchvinshanti, Shukasaptati, Bhojaprabandha. His prominent works percentage Simhasana Battisi, Vetal Pachchisi, Suda Bahoteri.

All three of these works had format of tales within tales. They have profuse magical and imaginative things famine transportation of souls, flying ass and speaking animals. Vikram was the lead character in them. They also contained riddles stomach aphorisms. His other works cover Nand-Batrisi, Shukadevakhyan, Rakhidas Charitra, Vanechar ni Varta, Panch-danda, Bhadra-Bhamini, Rewa-Khand, Chandra-Chandraawati, Madan-Mohana, Padmavati, Baras Kasturi.

Chhappas (six stanza epigrams) wily incorporated in these tales which describe wisdom and wit.[1][3][4]

Angada-vishti, Ravana-Mandodari Samvad, Draupadi-Vastraharan, Shivpuran are akhyanas based on Hindu mythology innermost epics. Other works are Patai Raval no Garbo, Ranchhodji unassuming Shloko, Bodana-akhyan, Udyam-Karma-Samvad.[1][3][4]

One of empress poems inspired Mahatma Gandhi let your hair down adopt the philosophy of nonviolence, the resistance to authority system mass civil disobedience.[2][5][6]

Further reading

References

External links