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Madhura Vijayam

Madhurā Vijayam (Sanskrit: मधुराविजयम्), meaning "The Victory of Madurai", is a 14th-century C.E Sanskrit poem written by the poet Gangadevi. It is also named Vira Kamparaya Charitham by the poet. It chronicles the life of Kumara Kampana, a prince of the Vijayanagara Empire and the second son of Bukka Raya I. The poem describes in detail, the invasion and conquest of the Madurai Sultanate by the Vijayanagara empire.[1][2][3]

Madhura Vijayam 1924 Edition

The poem along with Ibn Battuta's memoirs and epigraphical and numismatic records, has been used as a historical source for determining the history of the Madurai Sultanate and the Vijayanagar empire's conquest of the Sultanate.[4][5]

Content edit

Madhura Vijayam (lit. The conquest of Madhura (Madurai)) or Vira Kamparaya Charitham (lit. The history of the brave king Kampa) is a mahākāvya (epic poem) in nine cantos (chapters), though possibly there was an extra canto (now lost) between the eighth and final canto. The available text contains 500-odd verses.[6]

The text from the Madhura Vijayam as translated by Henry Heras describe thus:

Kampanuduaver (Kampana Odeyar), a native of Karnata, having conquered the Muhammadans, took possession of the kingdom. He opened the Siva and Vishnu temples, which had been locked up. He opened the god’s temple at Madura, and obtained a personal view of the god. Things were found precisely as on the day when the temple was shut ; the lamp that was lighted on that day, the sandal wood powder, the garland of flowers, and the ornaments usually placed on the morning of festival days, were now found to be exactly as it is usual to find them in the evening of such festival days 4. The general seeing this miracle was glad, struck his eyes, and with great piety made the customary offerings ; he gave many villages to the temple and many jewels, and estab- lished ordinances for the regular performance of worship.[7]

M. Krishnamachariar in his History of Classical Sanskrit Literature describes the narrative as consisting of "melodious verses" and summarizes it thus:[8]

the exploits of her husband and narrates the history of his expedition to the south. The city of Vijayanagar with its temple and suburbs are described with all magnificence. Then comes the moving army and its relays on its way to Kāncī, where it is quartered for the winter. Inspired by the exhortation of a Goddess in his dream to extirpate the Mussalmans and to restore the country to its ancient glory, he advances to the South, kills the Sultan of Madura and commemorates his victory by munificent grants to the temples of the country.

In the early chapters, Gangadevi, the wife of Kumara Kampanna II, describes the historical background of the Vijayanagar empire, the benevolent rule of Bukka I, the birth and early life of Kumara Kampanna. The middle chapters detail the adulthood actions of Kampanna, his south bound invasion and conquest of Kanchipuram. After conquering Kanchipuram and subduing Sambuvaraya chieftain, Kampanna enjoys a brief interlude while consolidating his southern conquests. He is visited by a strange woman (described as the Goddess Meenakshi in disguise) who pleads with him to liberate South India from the rule of the Madurai Sultanate.

Heeding her exhortation, Kampanna resumes his invasion of the South. The final chapters chronicle his invasion of Madurai, where he destroys the Muslim armies, slays the last sultan in single combat and restores the temple of Srirangam to its old glory.[2][9]

In relation to other works edit

The fact that the Madhura Vijayam refers to the Kṛṣṇa-karṇāmṛta of Līlāśuka,[10] praising him (in verse 1.12) immediately after Daṇḍin and Bhavabhūti,[11] has been used to fix a bound on the date of its author.[12] S. K. De, in History of Sanskrit Literature co-written with S. N. Dasgupta, mentions this poem in the section on poems with historical themes alongside the later Raghunāthābhyudaya of Rāmabhadrāmbā (which is on Raghunatha Nayaka).[13] Again, in the section on the anthologies and women poets, along with the later Tirumalāmbā who wrote the Varadāmbikā-Pariṇaya, he calls Gaṅgādevī a "more gifted" poetess, and the poem as "written in a simple style, comparatively free from the pedantry of grammar and rhetoric".[14] Similarly, Dasgupta, in the section on historical kāvyas, mentions it alongside the Hammīra-kāvya.[15]

Discovery and publication edit

Madhura Vijayam was discovered in 1916[6] in a private traditional library at Thiruvananthapuram by Pandit N Ramasvami Sastriar. It was found in the form of a single manuscript of sixty-one palm leaves, bound between two other unrelated works. The available poem is made up of nine cantos (chapters) containing 500-odd verses,[6] with some verses incomplete and others missing and presumed lost, including possibly an entire canto between the eighth and final canto.[9][16][6]

Though the printed editions have been based on this single manuscript discovered in Trivandrum, the New Catalogus Catalogorum lists three other manuscripts discovered later: two of them are also in Trivandrum, and the third, in Lahore, has even less text (contains only seven cantos).[6][17]

Influence on other works edit

Salman Rushdie's Victory City is seen as a fictional retelling of Madhura Vijayam, and the life of the poetess Pampa Kampana (Gangadevi). This fictional work falls under Magical Realism genre. Gangadevi lives for 247 years in this new retelling by Rushdie.[18]

Editions edit

  • (1916) Madhurāvijayam: or Vīrakamparāya Charitam by Gaṅgādēvī. Edited by Pandit G. Harihara Śāstri and Pandit V. Śrīnivāsa Śāstri, Smṛitviśārada. Printed at the Śrīdhara Press, Trivandrum. (Complete Sanskrit text.)
  • (1924) Madhura Vijaya or Virakamparaya Charita: An Historical Kavya by Ganga Devi. Edited by G. Harihara Sastri and V Srinivasa Sastri Smritvisarada. (Second edition revised by the former.) Printed at The Sridhara Power Press, Trivandrum. (Complete Sanskrit text.)
  • (1957) Madhurāvijayam of Gangā Dēvi. Edited by S Thiruvenkatachari. Published by Annamalai University. (Sanskrit text with English translation.)
  • (1969) Madhurāvijayam. Edited, with a commentary Bhāvaprakāśikā, by Pōtukucci Subrahmaṇyaśāstrī. Published by Ajanta Arts Printers, Kollur, Tenali.
  • (2001) Madhurāvijaya Mahākāvyam. Edited with Hindi translation by Dr Sharada Mishra. Published by Shri Sharada Publication and Printing Mart, Patrakar Nagar, Patna. (Sanskrit text with Hindi translation)
  • (2010) Madhurāvijayam of Gaṅgādevī: A historical work of 14th Century in Sanskrit (cantos 8 and 9). Edited by K S Kannan. Published by Bangalore University, Bangalore. (Text, translation and detailed notes on eighth and final cantos.)
  • (2013) The Conquest of Madhurā: Gaṅgādevī’s Madhurā Vijaya. Translated by Shankar Rajaraman and Venetia Kotamraju. Published by Rasāla Books, Bangalore. ISBN 978-81-924112-2-4. (Ebook ISBN 978-81-924112-3-1.) About 200 of the 500-odd Sanskrit verses are selected, and printed along with translation into English.

Further reading edit

  • (1976) Madhurāvijaya in Historical Mahākāvyas in Sanskrit (Eleventh to Fifteenth Century A.D.) by Chandra Prabha, pp. 320–344.
  • (1995) Madhurāvijayam mahākāvya kī ālocanātmaka mīmāṃsā by Padmāvatī Devī Tripaṭhī. Published by Pārijāta Prakāśana, Gorakhpur. 310 pages.
  • (2010) Gaṅgādevī's Madhurāvijayam. By A. Krishnamachariar, Shriranganachiar Publishers, Srirangam.
  • (2013) Sound Play and the Madhurā Vijaya of Gaṅgādevī. By Shankar Rajaraman and Venetia Kotamraju, Asian Literature and Translation, 1(4), pp. 1–17, doi:10.18573/j.2013.10202

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Ernst, Carl W. (1992). Eternal garden: mysticism, history, and politics at a South Asian Sufi center (Illustrated ed.). SUNY Press. p. 297. ISBN 978-0-7914-0884-1.
  2. ^ a b Jackson, William Joseph (2005). Vijayanagara voices: exploring South Indian history and Hindu literature (Illustrated ed.). Ashgate Publishing. pp. 61–70. ISBN 978-0-7546-3950-3.
  3. ^ Chattopadhyaya, Brajadulal (2006). Studying Early India: Archaeology, Texts and Historical Issues. Anthem Press. pp. 141–143. ISBN 978-1-84331-132-4.
  4. ^ Aiyangar, Sakkottai Krishnaswami (1921). South India and her Muhammadan Invaders. Madras, British India: Humphrey Milford, Oxford University Press. p. 184.
  5. ^ Sastri, Kallidaikurichi Aiyah Aiyar Nilakanta (1958) [1955]. A History of South India: From Prehistoric Times to the Fall of Vijayanagar (Paperback ed.). Madras: Oxford University Press, Amen House, London. p. 241.
  6. ^ a b c d e Shankar Rajaraman and Venetia Kotamraju, 2013, page iv
  7. ^ Heras, Henry. The Aravidu Dynasty Of Vijayanagar. p. 154.
  8. ^ M. Krishnamachariar (1937), History of Classical Sanskrit Literature, Tirumalai-Tirupati Devasthanams Press, Madras, p. 215
  9. ^ a b "A portion from madhurAvijaya". bharatendu.com. 30 October 2008. Retrieved 3 February 2010.
  10. ^ Harihara Shastri and Srinivasa Shastri, Some Later poets mentioned in the Madhurāvijaya, Quarterly Journal of the Mythic Society, X, p. 381 f.
  11. ^ S. N. Dasgupta (1947), A History Of Sanskrit Literature Classical Period Vol 1, p. 663
  12. ^ K. Kunjunni Raja (1980), Contribution of Kerala to Sanskrit Literature, p. 43
  13. ^ Dasgupta, p. 361
  14. ^ Dasgupta, p. 418
  15. ^ Dasgupta, p. 679
  16. ^ Devi, Ganga (1924). Sastri, G Harihara; Sastri, V Srinivasa (eds.). Madhura Vijaya (or Virakamparaya Charita): An Historical Kavya. Trivandrum, British India: Sridhara Power Press. Retrieved 21 June 2016.
  17. ^ Entry मधुराविजय in New Catalogus Catalogorum Volume XVIII, page 141.
  18. ^ "Goodreads". Goodreads. Retrieved 22 March 2023.

External links edit

  • Madhura Vijayam original text at Digital library of India

madhura, vijayam, madhurā, vijayam, sanskrit, मध, जयम, meaning, victory, madurai, 14th, century, sanskrit, poem, written, poet, gangadevi, also, named, vira, kamparaya, charitham, poet, chronicles, life, kumara, kampana, prince, vijayanagara, empire, second, b. Madhura Vijayam Sanskrit मध र व जयम meaning The Victory of Madurai is a 14th century C E Sanskrit poem written by the poet Gangadevi It is also named Vira Kamparaya Charitham by the poet It chronicles the life of Kumara Kampana a prince of the Vijayanagara Empire and the second son of Bukka Raya I The poem describes in detail the invasion and conquest of the Madurai Sultanate by the Vijayanagara empire 1 2 3 Madhura Vijayam 1924 EditionThe poem along with Ibn Battuta s memoirs and epigraphical and numismatic records has been used as a historical source for determining the history of the Madurai Sultanate and the Vijayanagar empire s conquest of the Sultanate 4 5 Contents 1 Content 2 In relation to other works 3 Discovery and publication 4 Influence on other works 4 1 Editions 5 Further reading 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksContent editMadhura Vijayam lit The conquest of Madhura Madurai or Vira Kamparaya Charitham lit The history of the brave king Kampa is a mahakavya epic poem in nine cantos chapters though possibly there was an extra canto now lost between the eighth and final canto The available text contains 500 odd verses 6 The text from the Madhura Vijayam as translated by Henry Heras describe thus Kampanuduaver Kampana Odeyar a native of Karnata having conquered the Muhammadans took possession of the kingdom He opened the Siva and Vishnu temples which had been locked up He opened the god s temple at Madura and obtained a personal view of the god Things were found precisely as on the day when the temple was shut the lamp that was lighted on that day the sandal wood powder the garland of flowers and the ornaments usually placed on the morning of festival days were now found to be exactly as it is usual to find them in the evening of such festival days 4 The general seeing this miracle was glad struck his eyes and with great piety made the customary offerings he gave many villages to the temple and many jewels and estab lished ordinances for the regular performance of worship 7 M Krishnamachariar in his History of Classical Sanskrit Literature describes the narrative as consisting of melodious verses and summarizes it thus 8 the exploits of her husband and narrates the history of his expedition to the south The city of Vijayanagar with its temple and suburbs are described with all magnificence Then comes the moving army and its relays on its way to Kanci where it is quartered for the winter Inspired by the exhortation of a Goddess in his dream to extirpate the Mussalmans and to restore the country to its ancient glory he advances to the South kills the Sultan of Madura and commemorates his victory by munificent grants to the temples of the country In the early chapters Gangadevi the wife of Kumara Kampanna II describes the historical background of the Vijayanagar empire the benevolent rule of Bukka I the birth and early life of Kumara Kampanna The middle chapters detail the adulthood actions of Kampanna his south bound invasion and conquest of Kanchipuram After conquering Kanchipuram and subduing Sambuvaraya chieftain Kampanna enjoys a brief interlude while consolidating his southern conquests He is visited by a strange woman described as the Goddess Meenakshi in disguise who pleads with him to liberate South India from the rule of the Madurai Sultanate Heeding her exhortation Kampanna resumes his invasion of the South The final chapters chronicle his invasion of Madurai where he destroys the Muslim armies slays the last sultan in single combat and restores the temple of Srirangam to its old glory 2 9 In relation to other works editThe fact that the Madhura Vijayam refers to the Kṛṣṇa karṇamṛta of Lilasuka 10 praising him in verse 1 12 immediately after Daṇḍin and Bhavabhuti 11 has been used to fix a bound on the date of its author 12 S K De in History of Sanskrit Literature co written with S N Dasgupta mentions this poem in the section on poems with historical themes alongside the later Raghunathabhyudaya of Ramabhadramba which is on Raghunatha Nayaka 13 Again in the section on the anthologies and women poets along with the later Tirumalamba who wrote the Varadambika Pariṇaya he calls Gaṅgadevi a more gifted poetess and the poem as written in a simple style comparatively free from the pedantry of grammar and rhetoric 14 Similarly Dasgupta in the section on historical kavyas mentions it alongside the Hammira kavya 15 Discovery and publication editMadhura Vijayam was discovered in 1916 6 in a private traditional library at Thiruvananthapuram by Pandit N Ramasvami Sastriar It was found in the form of a single manuscript of sixty one palm leaves bound between two other unrelated works The available poem is made up of nine cantos chapters containing 500 odd verses 6 with some verses incomplete and others missing and presumed lost including possibly an entire canto between the eighth and final canto 9 16 6 Though the printed editions have been based on this single manuscript discovered in Trivandrum the New Catalogus Catalogorum lists three other manuscripts discovered later two of them are also in Trivandrum and the third in Lahore has even less text contains only seven cantos 6 17 Influence on other works editSalman Rushdie s Victory City is seen as a fictional retelling of Madhura Vijayam and the life of the poetess Pampa Kampana Gangadevi This fictional work falls under Magical Realism genre Gangadevi lives for 247 years in this new retelling by Rushdie 18 Editions edit 1916 Madhuravijayam or Virakamparaya Charitam by Gaṅgadevi Edited by Pandit G Harihara Sastri and Pandit V Srinivasa Sastri Smṛitvisarada Printed at the Sridhara Press Trivandrum Complete Sanskrit text 1924 Madhura Vijaya or Virakamparaya Charita An Historical Kavya by Ganga Devi Edited by G Harihara Sastri and V Srinivasa Sastri Smritvisarada Second edition revised by the former Printed at The Sridhara Power Press Trivandrum Complete Sanskrit text 1957 Madhuravijayam of Ganga Devi Edited by S Thiruvenkatachari Published by Annamalai University Sanskrit text with English translation 1969 Madhuravijayam Edited with a commentary Bhavaprakasika by Pōtukucci Subrahmaṇyasastri Published by Ajanta Arts Printers Kollur Tenali 2001 Madhuravijaya Mahakavyam Edited with Hindi translation by Dr Sharada Mishra Published by Shri Sharada Publication and Printing Mart Patrakar Nagar Patna Sanskrit text with Hindi translation 2010 Madhuravijayam of Gaṅgadevi A historical work of 14th Century in Sanskrit cantos 8 and 9 Edited by K S Kannan Published by Bangalore University Bangalore Text translation and detailed notes on eighth and final cantos 2013 The Conquest of Madhura Gaṅgadevi s Madhura Vijaya Translated by Shankar Rajaraman and Venetia Kotamraju Published by Rasala Books Bangalore ISBN 978 81 924112 2 4 Ebook ISBN 978 81 924112 3 1 About 200 of the 500 odd Sanskrit verses are selected and printed along with translation into English Further reading edit 1976 Madhuravijaya in Historical Mahakavyas in Sanskrit Eleventh to Fifteenth Century A D by Chandra Prabha pp 320 344 1995 Madhuravijayam mahakavya ki alocanatmaka mimaṃsa by Padmavati Devi Tripaṭhi Published by Parijata Prakasana Gorakhpur 310 pages 2010 Gaṅgadevi s Madhuravijayam By A Krishnamachariar Shriranganachiar Publishers Srirangam 2013 Sound Play and the Madhura Vijaya of Gaṅgadevi By Shankar Rajaraman and Venetia Kotamraju Asian Literature and Translation 1 4 pp 1 17 doi 10 18573 j 2013 10202See also editGangadevi Madurai Sultanate Vijayanagara EmpireReferences edit Ernst Carl W 1992 Eternal garden mysticism history and politics at a South Asian Sufi center Illustrated ed SUNY Press p 297 ISBN 978 0 7914 0884 1 a b Jackson William Joseph 2005 Vijayanagara voices exploring South Indian history and Hindu literature Illustrated ed Ashgate Publishing pp 61 70 ISBN 978 0 7546 3950 3 Chattopadhyaya Brajadulal 2006 Studying Early India Archaeology Texts and Historical Issues Anthem Press pp 141 143 ISBN 978 1 84331 132 4 Aiyangar Sakkottai Krishnaswami 1921 South India and her Muhammadan Invaders Madras British India Humphrey Milford Oxford University Press p 184 Sastri Kallidaikurichi Aiyah Aiyar Nilakanta 1958 1955 A History of South India From Prehistoric Times to the Fall of Vijayanagar Paperback ed Madras Oxford University Press Amen House London p 241 a b c d e Shankar Rajaraman and Venetia Kotamraju 2013 page iv Heras Henry The Aravidu Dynasty Of Vijayanagar p 154 M Krishnamachariar 1937 History of Classical Sanskrit Literature Tirumalai Tirupati Devasthanams Press Madras p 215 a b A portion from madhurAvijaya bharatendu com 30 October 2008 Retrieved 3 February 2010 Harihara Shastri and Srinivasa Shastri Some Later poets mentioned in the Madhuravijaya Quarterly Journal of the Mythic Society X p 381 f S N Dasgupta 1947 A History Of Sanskrit Literature Classical Period Vol 1 p 663 K Kunjunni Raja 1980 Contribution of Kerala to Sanskrit Literature p 43 Dasgupta p 361 Dasgupta p 418 Dasgupta p 679 Devi Ganga 1924 Sastri G Harihara Sastri V Srinivasa eds Madhura Vijaya or Virakamparaya Charita An Historical Kavya Trivandrum British India Sridhara Power Press Retrieved 21 June 2016 Entry मध र व जय in New Catalogus Catalogorum Volume XVIII page 141 Goodreads Goodreads Retrieved 22 March 2023 External links editMadhura Vijayam original text at Digital library of India Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Madhura Vijayam amp oldid 1215532604, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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