Ad
related to: basava pampa award
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Pampa Award (or Pampa Prashasti) is a literary award in the Indian state of Karnataka.The award was established in 1987 by the government of Karnataka.It is the highest literary honor conferred by the Department of Kannada and Culture, Government of Karnataka State, and recognises works written in the Kannada language (1 of the 22 official languages of India).
Basava Puraskara is an award conferred by the Government of Karnataka on the basis of an individual's achievements in the areas of literature, social justice, and harmony. [1] It is named after Basava , who was a philosopher and Lingayat social reformer in the 12th century.
Basava (1131–1196), also called Basavēśvara and Basavaṇṇa, was an Indian philosopher, poet, Lingayat social reformer in the Shiva-focused bhakti movement, and ...
2005 – Basava Puraskara; 2008 - Nadoja Award by Kannada University [3] The other awards conferred on him are Chidhananda Award, Prof. Sam.Shi. Bhusanur Mutt Foundation Award, Pampa Prashasthi and the Chavundaraya Award. The areas of his specialization included textual criticism, prosody, literary research and translation.
A number of Kannada writers also returned their Karnataka Sahitya Akademy Awards in October 2015. [25] About forty national Akademi awardees returned their awards, upon which the Akademi requested the recipients to keep their awards. [26] [27] Kalburgi, was a progressive voice among Lingayat. Kalburgi's life work has been to provide insights ...
Allamaprabhu was a 12th-century Lingayat-saint and Vachana poet (called Vachanakara) of the Kannada language, [4] [5] propagating the unitary consciousness of Self and Shiva. [web 1] [6] Allamaprabhu is one of the celebrated poets and the patron saint [note 1] of the Lingayata [note 2] movement that reshaped medieval Karnataka society and popular Kannada literature.
Nijaguna Shivayogi was an Indian poet and a prolific writer in the Kannada language.He lived in the 15th century. He was a follower of the Veerashaiva faith (devotee of the Hindu god Shiva), which he attempted to reconcile with the Advaita Hinduism of Adi Shankaracharya. [1]
Ratnakaravarni was a 16th-century Kannada poet and writer. [1] He is considered to be one of the trailblazers in the native shatpadi (hexa-metre, six line verse) and sangatya (composition meant to be sung to the accompaniment of musical instrument) metric tradition that was popularised in Kannada literature during the rule of the Vijayanagara empire in modern Karnataka.