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Parijat – (1937–1993) – Nepali novelist, poet. First woman to win Madan Puraskar [53] Phatte Bahadur Singh – (1902–1983) – poet, jailed for life for publishing a volume of poetry, before being released four years later [54] [55] Prema Shah – (1945–2017) – poet, novelist and short–story writer [56] Ramesh Kshitij – (born ...
Lekhnath Paudyal (Nepali: लेखनाथ पौड्याल; December 28 1884–1966) is regarded as the founding father of modern Nepali poetry literature (Kabi Shiromani) in the twentieth-century. [1] [2] His most important contribution is believed to be to the enrichment and refinement of the language rather than to its philosophical ...
Bhupendra Man Sherchan, popularly known as Bhupi Sherchan (1937–1989) was a Nepali poet and academician. [1] He is one of the most beloved and widely read Nepali poets. [ 2 ] He was awarded the Sajha Puraskar for his 1969 poetry collection Ghumne Mech Mathi Andho Manche , which remains his most popular work.
The first–ever poet Bhanubhakta Acharya Bhupi Sherchan. Banira Giri (1946–2021) – poet; Bhanubhakta Acharya (1814–1868) – poet and translator; Bhim Nidhi Tiwari (1911–1973) – poet; Bhola Rijal – poet, doctor; Bhupal Rai – poet; Bhupi Sherchan (1937–1990) – poet; Bhuwan Dhungana – poet and storywriter
Motiram Bhatta (Nepali: मोतीराम भट्ट; 1866–1896) (1923–1953 BS) was a Nepalese poet, singer, essayist, publisher, literary critic and biographer. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] He is considered the first biographer and literary critic of Nepali literature and is credited for starting the first private printing press in Nepal in c. 1888 ...
Kedar Man Vyathit (Nepali: केदारमान व्यथित; 1914–1998) was a Nepali poet of Nepali, Newar and Hindi languages.Educated up to the third grade, he started out as an employee of a timber godown, but later co-founded Nepali Citizens Rights Forum with Sukraraj Shastri.
Bhanubhakta Acharya (Nepali: भानुभक्त आचार्य) (1814—1868 CE) (1871—1925 BS) was a Nepali writer, poet, and translator.He is widely regarded as the oldest poet in the Nepali language, for which he was conferred with the title of "Aadikabi": literally, "the first poet".
Dharanidhar Koirala was born in 1893 in what is now Sindhuli District into a Hindu Brahmin family. [3] He studied Sanskrit and English from Banaras, British India. [4] In Banaras, he saw Indian people promoting their mother tongue which inspired him to "think about Nepal and the Nepali language".