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Debroy, in 2011, notes that updated critical edition of Svargarohana Parva, after removing verses generally accepted so far as spurious and inserted into the original, has 5 adhyayas (chapters) and 194 shlokas (verses). [5] The entire parva has been "transcreated" and translated in verse by the poet Dr. Purushottama Lal published by Writers ...
Mannu Bhandari (3 April 1931 – 15 November 2021) was an Indian author, screenplay writer, teacher, and playwright. Primarily known for her two Hindi novels, Aap Ka Bunty (Your Bunty) and Mahabhoj (Feast), Bhandari also wrote over 150 short stories, several other novels, screenplays for television and film, and adaptations for theater.
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The first Hindi books, using the Devanagari script or Nāgarī script were Heera Lal's treatise on Ain-i-Akbari, called Ain e Akbari ki Bhasha Vachanika, and Rewa Maharaja's treatise on Kabir. Both books were published in 1795. [citation needed] Munshi Lallu Lal's Hindi translation of Sanskrit Hitopadesha was published in 1809.
The Nagari Pracharini Sabha (ISO: Nāgarī Pracāriṇī Sabhā lit. ' Society for Promotion of Nagari '), also known as Kashi Nagari Pracharini Sabha, is an organization founded in 1893 at the Queen's College, Varanasi for the promotion of the Devanagari script and the Hindi language.
Anuj Dhar is an Indian conspiracy theorist, author and former journalist. [1] [2] He has published several books around the locus of death of Subhas Chandra Bose that propound theories about his living for several years after the purported plane crash, [2] [3] [4] thus contradicting the current consensus.
His works consist of poems, commentaries, plays and musical compositions of his works, etc. He has authored more than 250 books and 50 papers, including four epic poems (two each in Sanskrit and Hindi), a Hindi commentary on Tulsidas' Ramcharitmanas, and Sanskrit commentaries on the Ashtadhyayi and the Prasthanatrayi scriptures.
[2] [21] Both śrutis and smṛtis represent categories of texts of different traditions of Hindu philosophy. [22] According to Gokul Narang, the Sruti are asserted to be of divine origin in the mythologies of the Puranas. [23] For the people living during the composition of the Vedas the names of the authors were well known. [24]