Preis:
25.00 EUR zzgl. 2.80 EUR Versand
Preis inkl. Versand:
27.80 EUR
Alle Preisangaben inkl. USt
Verkauf durch:
Antiquariat Heinzelmännchen
Karl Heinzelmann
Karl-Pfaff-Strasse 26/1
70597 Stuttgart
DE
Zahlungsarten:
Rückgabemöglichkeit:
Ja (Weitere Details)
Versand:
Standard Gewicht / Büchersendung
Lieferzeit:
3 - 7 Werktage
Beschreibung:
28 Seiten. Breitrandiger Druck. Einfach Papierbroschur (Gebrauchsspuren). 26x19,5 cm
Bemerkung:
* Bhattikavya (Sanskrit: "Bhatti's Poem") is a Sanskrit-language poem dating from the 7th century CE, in the formal genre of the "great poem" (mahakavya). It focuses on two deeply rooted Sanskrit traditions, the Ramayana and Panini's grammar, while incorporating numerous other traditions, in a rich mix of science and art, poetically retelling the adventures of Rama and a compendium of examples of grammar and rhetoric. As literature, it is often considered to withstand comparison with the best of Sanskrit poetry.[citation needed] The Bhattikavya also has Rava?avadha ("The Death of Rava?a") as an alternative title. It is improbable that this was the original title as Ravana's death is only one short episode in the whole poem. It may have acquired this title to distinguish it from other works concerning themselves with the deeds of Rama. The poem is the earliest example of an "instructional poem" or sastra-kavya. That is, not a treatise written in verse but an imaginative piece of literature which is also intended to be instructive in specific subjects. To modern tastes, however, this can create an unpardonable artificiality in the composition. To the critics of late classical times in India technical virtuosity was much admired. Much of the Bha??ikavya's popular success could also be ascribed to the fact that it must have been useful as a textbook. The author, Bha??i, describes himself at the end of the book: "I composed this poem in Valabhi which is protected by Narendra, son of Shri-dhara, hence may the fame of that king increase, since the king causes joy among his subjects." (Bhattikavya 22.35). Even this eulogy is unreliable since variant readings of the verse show that his patron may have been Sri Dharasena. Either way, the composition of the poem is placed at about 600 CE. (Quelle Wikipedia)