Indian Literature: Vedic, Classical Sanskrit, Dravidian, Medieval and Modern
Introduction
The word 'Literature' derives from the Latin litteratura ('writing formed with letters'). It is classified broadly into fiction and non-fiction, and further into poetry and prose. Ancient Indian literature is not confined to sacred texts — it encompasses epics, lyric poetry, drama, scientific treatises, court chronicles, and the rich oral traditions of Bhakti saints and bards.
Didactic vs Narrative Text:
- Didactic (Directive): Intends to persuade the reader into thinking a particular way; used for political/moral issues, sermons, religious treatises.
- Narrative: Provides essential information to explain a topic; most common form of prose; used in story writing and novels.
VEDIC LITERATURE
The Vedas
The word 'Veda' means knowledge. Compiled around 1500–1000 BC, initially transmitted orally by Brahmin families, they preached Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam (the world is one family). All four Vedas give prominence to yagna (sacrifice), and are accompanied by Brahmanas, Upanishads, and Aranyakas.
| Veda | Named After | Key Focus | Unique Feature |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rig Veda | Rik (hymn) | Worldly prosperity, natural beauty; chief deity Indra | Oldest Veda; 1028 hymns; 10 Mandalas; compiled 1200–900 BC |
| Sama Veda | Saman (melody) | Melody/chants | 1875 hymns; 75 original; rest from Rig Veda (Sakala branch); 16,000 ragas; called 'Book of Chants' |
| Yajur Veda | Yajus (sacrifice) | Rites and mantras of sacrifices | Two recensions: Shukla (Vajasaneyi Samhita) and Krishna (Taittiriya Samhita); guidebook for priests |
| Atharva Veda | Rishis Atharvah and Angira | Peace, prosperity, daily life; also known as Brahma Veda | Focuses on treatment of 99 diseases; magic and healing; two recensions: and |
Rig Veda deities: Chief — Indra; others — Agni (fire), Varuna (water), Rudra (wind/storm), Aditya (Sun), Vayu (air), Ashwini twins. Female goddesses: Usha (dawn), Prithvi (earth), Vak (speech).
Vedangas (limbs of the Veda — supplements to understand Vedas):
- Siksha (education), Nirukta (etymology), Chhanda (metrics), Jyotisha (astronomy), Vyakarana (grammar), Kalpa (ritual)
- These gave rise to Sutras — treatises on general rules of thought and conduct; most famous: Panini's Ashtadhyayi (Sanskrit grammar).
Brahmanas
Commentaries on each Veda; mixture of legends, facts, philosophy, and detailed explanations of Vedic rituals; composed 900–700 BC.
| Veda | Brahmanas |
|---|---|
| Rig Veda | Aitareya Brahmana, Kaushitaki Brahmana |
| Sama Veda | Tandya Mahabrahmana, Sadvimsha Brahmana |
| Yajur Veda | Taittiriya Brahmana, Shatpatha Brahmana |
| Atharva Veda | Gopatha Brahmana, Jaimaniya Brahmana, Panchvish Brahmana |
Aranyakas
Texts attached to Vedas describing rituals and sacrifices; compilations on birth/death cycles and the soul; taught by Munis (forest dwellers) → associated with Karma-kanda (ritualistic actions/sacrifice).
Upanishads
Derived from u-pa-ni-s(h)ad = 'to sit down near (the teacher)'; over 200 known Upanishads; the 108 most important form the Muktika Canon (108 = beads on a Hindu rosary/mala). Written in Sanskrit; also known as Vedanta (end of the Veda); associated with Jnana-kanda (knowledge/spirituality). Core subject: origin of universe, the soul, life-death cycle, path to Moksha.
Key difference: Upanishad = Jnana-kanda (Knowledge); Aranyaka = Karma-kanda (Ritualistic action)
THE TWO GREAT EPICS (MAHAKAVYAS)
Ramayana
- Author: Valmiki (also called Adikavi — first poet; Ramayana = Adikavya — first poem)
- Compiled ~1500 BC; 24,000 verses; divided into 7 books (Khandas)
- Teaches the four Purusharthas: Dharma, Artha, Kama, Moksha through the ideal man Rama
- Story: War between Rama and Ravana (Lanka = modern Sri Lanka); symbolises victory of good over evil
Mahabharata
- Author: Ved Vyas; written in Sanskrit
- Evolution: Initially 8,800 verses called Jaya (story of victory) → expanded to 24,000 verses renamed Bharata (after earliest Vedic tribes) → current form with 1,00,000 verses divided into 10 parvas (insets called Itihas Purana = mythical history)
- Story: Conflict between Kauravas and Pandavas over throne of Hastinapur; sutradhar (narrator/guide) = Lord Krishna
- Contains Bhagwata Gita: dialogue between Krishna and Arjuna on duties; advocates Nishkama Karma (selfless performance of duty)
THE PURANAS
- Purana = 'that which renews the old'; ancient mythological texts on creation and destruction of the universe; focus on Hindu Trimurti (Brahma, Vishnu, Mahesh)
- 18 major Puranas (Mahapuranas): Bhagvata, Brahma, Vayu, Agni, Garuda, Padma, Vishnu, Matsya, etc.
- Written as stories combining myths, legends, and sermons; translated into vernacular languages; use parables (human characters, spiritual lesson) and fables (animal/inanimate characters, moral lesson)
- Panchtantra: by Vishnu Sharma — didactic fable with animal characters
- Hitopadesha: by Narayan Pandit — similar animal-based wisdom text
Upa-Puranas (minor Puranas): ~19 texts; based on five subjects (per Amarasimha, Gupta-period Sanskrit lexicographer): Sarga (creation), Pratisarga (destruction/recreation cycle), Manvantra (Manu's lifetime), Vamsa (solar/lunar dynasty genealogies), Vamshanucharita (dynastic histories of kings).
CLASSICAL SANSKRIT LITERATURE
Sanskrit Drama (Nataka)
Rules of performance codified in Natyasastra by Bharata (1 BC–1 AD). Drama genre called Lokaranjana (entertainment for public).
| Playwright | Key Works | Subject |
|---|---|---|
| Kalidasa | Malavikagnimitra | Love story of Malavika and Agnimitra (son of Pushyamitra Shunga) |
| Vikramorvasiya | Love story of Vikram and Urvasi | |
| Abhigyana Shakuntala | Recognition of Shakuntala | |
| Sudraka | Mricchakatika (The Little Clay Cart) | Love affair of Brahmin Charudatta with courtesan Vasantasena |
| Vishakhdutta | Mudra Rakshasa | Political drama — ascent of Chandragupta Maurya to power |
| Devi Chandraguptam | — | |
| Bhavabhuti | (700 AD) |
Sanskrit Poetry (Kavya)
| Poet | Works | Subject |
|---|---|---|
| Kalidasa | Kumara Sambhava | Birth of Kumar |
| Raghuvamsa | Dynasty of the Raghus | |
| Meghaduta | The cloud messenger | |
| Ritusamhara | Medley of seasons | |
| Harisena (Gupta period) | Allahabad Pillar inscriptions | Praises of Samudragupta's valour |
| Jayadeva (12th century) | Gita Govinda | Life and love of Krishna and Radha; elements of Bhakti + nature |
| Bharavi (550 AD) | Kiratarjuniyam | Kirat (Shiva) and Arjuna |
Other Major Sanskrit Texts
Law and Statecraft:
- Dharmasutras (500–200 BC): books on law; compiled alongside Dharamshastras (Smritis)
- Manusmriti (200 BC–200 AD): defines role of man and woman; written as discourse by Manu
- Kautilya's Arthashastra: economic and social conditions of Mauryan empire; focus on military strategy; author = Kautilya/Vishnugupta (alias for Chanakya, scholar at Chandragupta Maurya's court)
Scientific texts:
| Author | Text | Subject |
|---|---|---|
| Charak | Charak Samhita | Medicine |
| Sushruta | Sushruta Samhita | Surgery |
| Madhava | Madhava Nidana | Pathology |
| Varamihira | Pancha-Siddhantika | Astrology |
| Brihat Samhita | Planetary movements, geology, architecture | |
| Aryabhatta | Aryabhatiya | Astronomy and mathematics |
| Lagdhacharya | — | Astrology |
| Pingala | — | Mathematics |
Medieval Sanskrit: Kalhan's Rajatarangani (Kashmir kings), Somadeva's Katha-sarit-sagar, Shriharsha's Naishadhiyacharitram.
BUDDHIST LITERATURE
Canonical Literature — Tripitaka (all in Pali)
| Pitaka | Content |
|---|---|
| Vinaya Pitaka | Rules and regulations for Buddhist monks |
| Sutta Pitaka | Dialogues and speeches of Buddha on morality and dharma |
| Abhidhamma Pitaka | Philosophy, metaphysics, ethics, theory of knowledge, psychology |
Non-Canonical Buddhist Texts
- Jatakas: Stories of Buddha's 550 previous births; best example of non-canonical Buddhist literature; combine popular tales, mythology, and socio-political conditions of North India (600–200 BC)
- Buddhacharita by Ashvagosha (78 AD): biography of Buddha in Sanskrit
- Dipavamsa (3rd–4th century BCE, Sri Lanka): 'Chronicle of the Island'; mentions Buddha's visit to Sri Lanka
- Milinda Panha: Dialogue between King Meander (Milinda) and monk Nagasena; highest philosophical enquiries
- Mahavamsa: Epic poem in Pali; historical account of kingdoms of South Asia; reign of King Vijaya
- Mahavastu: Jataka and Avadana tales; written in mixed Sanskrit/Pali/Prakrit (2nd century BC–4th century AD)
- Lalitavistara Sutra: Important Mahayana text; life of Buddha till first sermon at Sarnath
- Udana: Oldest Theravada text; contains famous story of 'Blind Men and the Elephant'
- Visuddhimagga: By Buddhagosha (5th century); Theravada doctrine; 7 stages of purification
- Mahavibhasa Shastra (~150 CE): Mahayana text; discusses non-Buddhist philosophies
- Abhidharmamoksha: By Vasubandhu; discussion on Abhidharma; in Sanskrit
JAIN LITERATURE
Jain monks wrote in Prakrit, Ardha-Magadhi, Tamil (Sangam Age), Sanskrit, Shauraseni, Gujarati, and Marathi.
Jain Agamas (Canonical)
- Sacred texts compiled by Gandharas (immediate disciples of Mahavira); important for Svetambaras
- Re-compiled by Svetambara council at Vallabhi (Gujarat) in mid-5th century AD
- Digambaras reject authority of Vallabhi Agamas
- 46 texts total: 12 Angas, 12 Upangas, 10 Prakirnakas, 4 Mulasutras, 6 Chedasutras, 2 Chulika Sutra
- Written in Ardha-Magadhi Prakrit
- 12 Angas: Acharanga Sutra (oldest), Sutrakritanga, Sthananga, Samavayanga, Vyakhyaprajnapti (Bhagavati Sutra), Jnatrdharma Katha, Upasakadasa, etc.; Drstivada (12th Anga) contained 14 Purvas
- Digambara sacred texts: Karmaprabhrita (Shatkhandagama) and Kashayaprabhrita
Notable Jain Authors
| Author | Period | Works/Contribution |
|---|---|---|
| Bhadrabahu | 3rd century BC | Teacher of Chandragupta Maurya; Uvasaggaharam Stotra, Kalpa Sutra (biographies of Tirthankaras); pioneer of Digambara sect |
| Acharya Kundkund | — | Samayasara, Niyamasara (Jain philosophy) |
| Samanta Bhadra | ~2nd century AD | Ratna Karanda Sravakachara, Aptamimansa |
| Ilango Adigal | 2nd century AD | Silappadikaram (greatest Tamil epic; story of Kannagi; Pandyan Dynasty) |
| Tirutakkatevar | — | Civaka Cintamani (Tamil epic) |
| Umasvati | 1st–2nd century AD | Tattvartha-sutra (Sanskrit; logic, epistemology, ethics, astronomy) |
Three gems of Kannada literature related to Jainism: Pampa, Ponna, and Ranna (9th–12th centuries).
DRAVIDIAN LITERATURE
Tamil (Sangam) Literature
- Sangam = fraternity; ~2381 poems by 473 poets + 102 anonymous poets; composed 300 BC–300 AD
- Two schools: Aham/Agam (inner field — love, sexual relations) and Puram (outer field — social life, ethics, valour)
- Organised in assemblies called Sangamas under Pandya kingdom; three Sangams held over 600–700 years
| Sangam | Place | Chairman | Key Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| First (Head) | Madurai | Agastya or Shiva | No surviving text; used Agattiyam as grammar |
| Second (Middle) | Kapatapuram | Agastya → then Tolkappiyar | Tolkappiyam (textbook on Tamil grammar; also covers habitats, animals, plants, humans); ~2000 poems |
| Third | Madurai | Nakkirar | Most of existing Sangam corpus written |
Anthologies: ~30,000 lines arranged in 8 anthologies (Ettuttokoi): divided into Patinenkil Kanakku (18 lower collections — older, more historical) and Pattupattu (10 songs).
Key Tamil texts:
- Kural by Thiruvallurar: 3 parts — epics, polity/governance, love; translated into many languages
- Avvaiyar: Famous female saint in Sangam literature
- Silappadikaram (story of an anklet) by Ilango-Adigal (6th century AD): two major Tamil epics
- Manimekalai by Sattanar (6th century AD)
- Bhakti: 12 Alvars (Vaishnava saints, 7th–12th century); one female Alvar = Andal
- Nayanars: Shaivite Bhakti saints
- Secular works: Periya Puranam, Kambaramayanam
Malayalam Literature
- Originated ~11th century; significant corpus within 4 centuries
- Medieval works: Kokasandisan, Bhasa Kautilya (commentary on Arthashastra)
- Ramacharitam: epic poem by Cheeraman (13th century)
- Ezhuthachan: Bhakti proponent; father of Malayalam literature
Telugu Literature
- Nannaya (11th century): first Telugu poet
- Golden age: Vijayanagara period (especially under Krishnadevaraya, 1509–1529)
- Uttaraharivamsam by Nachana Somanatha: court poet of King Bukka I
- Krishnadevaraya wrote Amuktamalyada (written during Kalinga campaign via Vijayawada)
- Ashtadiggajas: eight literary luminaries at Krishnadevaraya's court:
| Poet | Key Work |
|---|---|
| Allasani Peddana (Andhra kavita pitamaha — grandfather of Telugu poetry) | Manucharitam |
| Nandi Thimmana | Parijathapaharanam |
| Tenali Ramakrishna (court jester and poet) | Panduranga Mahatmayam |
| Ramaraja Bhushanudu (Bhattumurti) | Vasucharitram, Narasabhupaliyam, Harishchandra Nalopakhyanam |
| Madayyagari Mallana | Rajashekharacharitra |
| Ayyalaraju Ramabhadrudu | Ramabhyudayam, Akalakathasara |
Krishnadevaraya also wrote Sanskrit works: Madalasa Charita, Satyavadu Parinaya, Rasamanjari, Jambavati Kalyana; his Rajaguru was Kannada saint Vyasatirtha.
Kannada Literature
- First Jain foray: Dharmanathapurana by Madhava
- First recorded Kannada text: Kavirajamarga by Nripatunga Amoghavarsha I (10th century; powerful Rashtrakuta king)
- Ratnatraya (three gems): Pampa ('father of Kannada'), Ponna, and Ranna — all 10th century
- Pampa: Adipurana, Vikramarjuna Vijaya; attached to court of Chalukya Arikesari
- Ponna: Shanti Purana; attached to Rashtrakuta king Krishna III
- Ranna: Ajitanatha Purana; attached to Rashtrakuta king Krishna III
- Andayya: Madana Vijaya (also Kabbigara Kava) — first pure Kannada text with no Sanskrit words
- Shabdamanidarpana by Kesirja (Kannada grammar)
- Suktisudharnava by Mallikarjuna
- Sarvajna: called the 'people's poet'; composed tripadi (three-lined poems)
- Honnamma: first Kannada poetess of repute; wrote Hadibadeya Dharma (Duty of a devout wife)
MEDIEVAL LITERATURE
Persian
Came to India with Turks and Mongols in the 12th century; court language of Delhi Sultanate and Mughals.
| Author/Ruler | Work | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Amir Khusrau Dehlavi | Diwan, Nuh Sipihr, Masnavi Duwal Rani Khizr Khan | Finest Persian poet; also wrote in nascent Urdu |
| Zia-ud-din Barani | Tarikh-e-Firuz Shahi | Top historian of Delhi Sultanate |
| Babar | Tuzuk-I-Babari | Autobiography in Turkish; Mughal conquest of India |
| Jahangir | Tuzuk-I-Jahangiri | Account of Jahangir's reign |
| Gulbadan Begum (half-sister of Humayun) | Humayun-nama | Humayun's life and struggles |
| Abul Fazl | Ain-e-Akbari, Akbarnama |
Urdu
- Developed through interaction of Persian and Hindi in the barracks of the Turkish army.
- Follows grammar of Hindi + form and script of Persian.
- Initially called Dakkani (southern) as it was used by the Bahamani states (Ahmedabad, Golconda, Bijapur, Berar).
- Major Urdu poets: Mirza Ghalib (Diwan), Sauda, Dard, Mir Taqi Mir, Iqbal (Bang-i-Dara; wrote 'Saare jahan se achcha')
Hindi and its Dialects
- Evolved 7th–14th century from Apabhramsa (which evolved from Prakrit)
- Boosted by the Bhakti movement (shunned Sanskrit; wrote in vernacular)
- Prithviraj Raso: first Hindi book; documents life of Prithviraj Chauhan
- Four phases of Modern Hindi (Adhunik Kaal): Bhartendu Yug (1868–1893), Dwivedi Yug (1893–1918), Chhayavad Yug (1918–1937), Contemporary (1937–today)
Key Bhakti/Hindi writers:
- Kabir: dohas (couplets)
- Tulsidas: Ramcharitmanas (Braj + Persian influence); wrote in Awadhi
- Surdas: Sur Sagar (Krishna's infancy with gopis)
- Mirabai: Bhakti poetry for Lord Krishna
- Bihari: Satsai
- Swami Dayanand: Satyartha Prakash (Hindi)
Modern Hindi writers:
- Bharatendu Harishchandra: Andher Nagari (City of Darkness, 1850s)
- Munshi Prem Chand: Godan, Bade Bhhaiya (anthologies in Hindi and Urdu)
- Mahadevi Verma: Padma Vibhushan recipient; highlighted women's condition
- Others: Sumitranandan Pant, Ramdhari Singh 'Dinkar', Harivansha Rai Bachchan (Madhushala)
MODERN LITERATURE — REGIONAL
Bengali
- Baptist Mission Press at Serampore by William Carey (1800) → spread Bengali print literature
- Raja Ram Mohan Roy: first to write in Bengali and English
- Bankim Chandra Chatterjee: Anand Math — Vande Mataram (national song) is an excerpt
- Rabindranath Tagore: Geetanjali — Nobel Prize 1913 (first Indian Nobel laureate)
- Others: Sharat Chandra Chatterjee, Qazi Nazrul Islam, R.C. Dutta
Assamese, Odia
- Medieval Assamese dominated by buranjis (court chronicles); Shankardev composed devotional poetry
- Modern Assamese: Padmanaba Gohain Barua, Lakshmi Nath Bezbarua
- Odia: first work by Sarala Das; medieval — Upendra Bhanja (1700); modern — Radha Nath Ray, Fakirmohan Senapati
Gujarati, Rajasthani, Sindhi
- Gujarat: Narsinh Mehta (Krishna Bhakti + folk); Govardhan Ram (Saraswati Chandra); Dr K.M. Munshi (Prithvi Vallabha)
- Rajasthani: two forms — Dingal and Pingal; most famous text: Dhola Maru; oral bards sang virkavya (victory songs)
- Sindhi: influenced by Rajasthan, Gujarat, and Sufism; prominent: Dewan Kauramal, Mirza Kalish Beg
Kashmiri, Punjabi, Marathi
- Kashmiri: Rajatarangani (Kalhan) in Sanskrit; first Kashmiri female poetess: Lal Ded (Shaivite mystic); later — Noor Din (Nand Rishi) (blended Hindi and Islamic elements)
- Punjabi: composed in Persian and Gurmukhi; love epics: Sohni-Mahiwal, Sassi-Punnu, Heer-Ranjha (by Waris Shah); Sufi: Baba Farid, Bulley Shah (Kafis); nationalistic: Bhagat Singh's 'Rang de Basanti Chola'; Bhai Vir Singh wrote Rana Surat Singh
- Marathi: Oldest known work by Saint Jnaneshwar (13th century; started kirtan tradition; commentary on Bhagwata Gita); oldest female writer: Janabai; 16th century: Eknath; Bhakti: Tukaram, Ramdas; nationalism: Bal Gangadhar Tilak published Kesari (Marathi newspaper)
Applied Anchors
- Vedas as living civilisation: The Vedas were transmitted orally for centuries before being written down — this oral tradition (guru-shishya parampara) is itself a UNESCO-recognized intangible heritage and proof of India's non-literate but knowledge-rich civilisation.
- Literature as social mirror: Sangam literature (300 BC–300 AD) is exceptional because, unlike court-focused Sanskrit texts, it directly reflects the social, economic, and emotional life of South Indian commoners — making it invaluable to historians.
- Bhakti literature and democratisation of culture: The Bhakti movement — from Jnaneshwar in Marathi to Tulsidas in Awadhi to Andal in Tamil — bypassed Sanskrit elites and put spiritual literature directly in the hands of the masses, connecting language, religion, and social reform.
- Literature and Nationalism: Vande Mataram (Bankim Chandra), Kesari newspaper (Tilak), Rang de Basanti Chola (Bhagat Singh) — literature was a primary instrument of anti-colonial nationalism.
- Krishnadevaraya as a literary anchor: His reign is a PYQ-favourite because it represents the apex of Telugu literature and multi-language patronage, demonstrating the Vijayanagara empire's role as a cultural protector.
- Jain and Buddhist literature as historical sources: Jain Agamas and Buddhist Tripitaka are not merely religious texts — they are primary sources on the political economy of North India (600–200 BC), preserving data no royal chronicles provide.
Exam Traps
- Sama Veda ≠ Rig Veda: Most hymns in Sama Veda are borrowed from the Sakala branch of the Rig Veda; only 75 are original. Don't confuse the source.
- Atharva Veda is also called Brahma Veda (not to be confused with Brahmanas). Its focus is healing and magic — not sacrifice (that's Yajur Veda).
- Yajur Veda has two recensions: Shukla (white/pure) = Vajasaneyi Samhita; Krishna (black/dark) = Taittiriya Samhita. Examinations swap these frequently.
- Shatpatha Brahmana belongs to Yajur Veda, NOT Rig Veda. Aitareya Brahmana → Rig Veda.
- Mricchakatika (Little Clay Cart) is about a Brahmin Charudatta and a courtesan (not a daughter of a courtesan).
- Malavikagnimitra by Kalidasa features Agnimitra, son of Pushyamitra Shunga (founder of Sunga dynasty).
- Harisena wrote the Allahabad Pillar inscription praising Samudragupta — not Chandragupta or Ashoka.
- Jatakas are NON-canonical Buddhist literature (not part of Tripitaka). Tripitaka = canonical (Vinaya, Sutta, Abhidhamma Pitaka).
- Dipavamsa mentions Buddha's visit to Sri Lanka; Mahavamsa covers reign of King Vijaya — do not swap.
- Valmiki is called Adikavi (not Vyasa). Vyasa wrote the Mahabharata.
- Mahabharata's original version was called Jaya (8,800 verses) — not the final 1,00,000-verse version.
- Pancha-Siddhantika (by Varamihira) is on ; Aryabhatiya is on .
Quick Revision Points
- Rig Veda: oldest; 1028 hymns; 10 Mandalas; chief deity Indra; 1200–900 BC.
- Sama Veda: 1875 hymns (75 original); melody; 16,000 ragas; 'Book of Chants'.
- Yajur Veda: sacrifice; Shukla (Vajasaneyi) + Krishna (Taittiriya) recensions.
- Atharva Veda: Brahma Veda; treats 99 diseases; magic/healing; Paippalada + Saunakiya.
- Upanishads: Vedanta; 200+ known; Muktika Canon = 108; Jnana-kanda.
- Ramayana: Valmiki (Adikavi); 24,000 verses; 7 Khandas.
- Mahabharata: Vyas; Jaya (8800) → Bharata (24000) → 1,00,000 verses (10 parvas); Bhagwata Gita inside.
- Natyasastra: by Bharata (1 BC–1 AD); rules for classical drama.
- Sangam literature: 300 BC–300 AD; 3 Sangams (Pandya); Tolkappiyam (2nd Sangam); Kural (Thiruvallurar).
- Ashtadiggajas: 8 poets of Krishnadevaraya; most important = Allasani Peddana.
- Andayya: first pure Kannada text (no Sanskrit words).
- Jain Agamas: 46 texts; Ardha-Magadhi Prakrit; Vallabhi council.
- Buddhist Tripitaka: Vinaya + Sutta + Abhidhamma (Pali); canonical.
- Mahabharata → Persian = Razmnama (Akbar's order).
- Vande Mataram: from Bankim Chandra Chatterjee's Anand Math.
- Tagore: Nobel Prize 1913 for Geetanjali; first Indian Nobel laureate.
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