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Meitei literature

Meitei literature, also known as Manipuri literature, is literature written in the Meitei language of Manipur. An ancient institution of learning, the Luwang Nonghumsang, later known as the Pandit Loishang, collected sources of indigenous Meitei knowledge and philosophy until the 18th century.[2] Writing by Meiteis is assumed to go back to the Kingdom of Kangleipak in the early 12th century.[3] The Meitei script is a Brahmic abugida. It is known only from the Puya manuscripts discovered in the first half of the 20th century. Manuscripts of the 18th and 19th centuries were written using the Bengali alphabet. The existence of the Meitei script in the 15th-century hinges on the authenticity of an inscription dated to the reign of Senbi Kiyamba.[4] The first printed Manipuri book, Manipurer Itihas, appeared in 1890 from the Baptist Mission Press, Calcutta. Though the kings of Manipur had established contact with the British from the middle of the eighteenth century onward the real impact of the contact came much later. Johnstone Middle English School, based on the western system of education, was started in 1885 at Imphal, and in 1891 Manipur lost its independence to the British. British domination facilitated the introduction of new systems in the civil, political and educational spheres, which hastened the process of modernization in Manipur, exposed as it was to new ideas and influences.[5]

Meitei literature

(Manipuri literature)

Meitei: Meitei Khorirol

Old Manipuri: Meitei Loinasinlol

British English: Meit(h)ei literature[a]
The Numit Kappa, a Classical Meitei epic text written during the 1st century, based on ancient Meitei mythology and religion (Sanamahism)
Stylistic originsMeitei culture
Cultural originsMeitei culture
Subgenres
Related topics
Puya (Meitei texts)

Puya Meithaba (Libricide of the PuYas)
Meitei language movements
Meitei linguistic purism movement

Meitei classical language movement

Ancient Meitei literature edit

Chada Laihui edit

The Chada Laihui (Meitei: ꯆꯥꯗꯥ ꯂꯥꯢꯍꯨꯢ) is a historical document (puya), about the genealogy of the Meitei kings from their mothers' sides.[6][7] It traces the genealogical account of the kings' mothers' lineage.[6][7][8][9] It is a supplementary document to the Cheitharol Kumbaba, the foremost royal chronicle of Manipur.[6]

Moirang Ningthourol Lambuba edit

"Moirang Ningthourol Lambuba" (Meitei: ꯃꯣꯢꯔꯥꯡ ꯅꯤꯡꯊꯧꯔꯣꯜ ꯂꯝꯕꯨꯕ) is a historical document (puya), which served as the court chronicle of the rulers of the kingdom in Ancient Moirang. It records the genealogy of the kings of the Moirang dynasty.[10][11][12]

The chronicle also slightly mentioned about the history of the Zeliangrong people.[13]

Medieval Meitei literature edit

Modern Meitei literature edit

Puyas edit

Puyas[14] are Meitei manuscripts written in Meitei script. They encompass a wide variety of topics such as religion, mythology, chronicle, folk medicine of Meitei people, history etc.[15] Archaic Meitei script which consist of 18 alphabets is derived from Wakoklon Puya[16][17][18] Puya manuscripts have been discovered by scholars, beginning in the 1930s.[19][20] The chronicles of puya state that Hindus arrived from the Indian subcontinent with royal marriages by the 14th century, from what are now modern Assam, Bengal, Uttar Pradesh, Dravidian kingdoms, and other regions.[20] Another manuscript suggests that Muslims arrived in Manipur in the 17th century, from what is now Bangladesh, during the reign of king Khagemba.[20] Meitei literature[clarification needed] documents the persistent and devastating Manipur–Burma wars.[21]

Lists of Puya

  • Wakoklon Heelel Thilel Salai Amailon Pukok Puya
  • Nongsamei Puya
  • Samsokngamba Puya
  • Nongsamei Puya
  • Nongkhai Puya Amailon

Suppression of Meitei Literature edit

 
Depiction of the Puya Mei Thaba (Burning of the Meitei texts) believed to have been ordered by king Pamheiba (Garib Niwaj)

After the adoption of Hinduism as state religion under Gharib Nawaz (Meitei: Pamheiba) (1717), it appears that the Puyas were "burnt completely" at Kangla Uttra under royal orders, in either 1729[25] or in 1732.[26]

The Puya manuscripts discovered in the 20th century at best have a tenuous connection with the texts burned under Gharib Nawaz.[26] Like the Hindu and Jain Puranas, the extant Puyas contain cosmology, genealogies of gods and goddesses, and royal chronicles.[26]

Epics edit

 
The Capture of the wild Kao (bull) by Khamba
 
The Dance before the King by Khamba and princess Thoibi
 
The Torture of Khamba by the Elephant
 
The Tiger Hunt by Khamba and his rival Nongban Kongyamba
Scenes from the Khamba Thoibi epic legend

The Numit Kappa ("Shooting the Sun") is a mythological text in narrative verse. It was published in English translation by T.C. Hodson (1908).[27] A translation into modern Meitei was published in 1908.[28]

Ougri (also known as Leiroi Ngongloi Eshei) is a poem written in archaic Meitei.[29]

The sagas of the seven epic cycles of incarnations of the two divine lovers were originated from Moirang kingdom near the shores of the Loktak lake in Ancient Kangleipak (early Manipur). Among them, Khamba Thoibi is regarded as the last and the greatest epic.[30]

Chronicles edit

The Ningthourol Shingkak is a work written under Gharib Nawaz (Meitei: Pamheiba), written in the mode of "predictions" made during the rule of Khagemba (r. 1597–1652) and thus foretelling the birth and reign of Gharib Nawaz and his religious reforms. The Cheitharol Kumbaba or "Royal Chronicle" is a text written down in the early 19th century, under Jai Singh, the puppet king installed after the Burmese invasion, purportedly based on an older copy which was no longer available. It contains day-to-day transactions and occurrences the state.[31]

Scriptures edit

The Meitei scriptures are texts regarding the Meitei religion (Sanamahism) as well as Meitei mythology. They are the sacred literature to the followers of the Meitei religion.[32] Some of the puyas are regarded as scriptures, but not all of them.[33]

Literary awards edit

Sahitya Akademi awards edit

Patriotic Writers' Forum awards edit

See also edit

  • Aribam Syam Sharma
  • Heisnam Kanhailal
  • History of Manipur
  • Meitei mythology
  • Khwairakpam Chaoba
  • M. K. Binodini Devi
  • Meitei inscriptions
  • Rajkumar Singhajit Singh
  • Ratan Thiyam
  • List of Sahitya Akademi Award winners for Meitei

Notes edit

  1. ^ Most British scholars including Thomas Callan Hodson use the term "Meit(h)ei" instead of "Meitei".[1]

References edit

  1. ^ Folk-Lore/Volume 23/Meithei Literature
  2. ^ "Akademi | Hasta in Manipuri – Part 1". Akademi. 2 June 2020. Retrieved 18 November 2020.
  3. ^ Naorem Sanajaoba, Manipur Treaties and Documents-Vol I,1993, New Delhi. Book I: "Twelfth Century Meetei Constitution To Pemberton Report".
  4. ^ According to K.B. Singh, The Meiteis of Manipur (1989 [1962]), p. 157, an archaic form of the script had developed by the 11th century, and it was in use until the early 18th century, when it was replaced by the Bengali script. By contrast, O.Tomba, The Need to rewrite Manipuri History, Imphal, 1993, claims that the script is a development of c. 1930, with all supposedly older documents being deliberate forgeries (Frans Welman, Out of Isolation – Exploring a Forgotten World (2011), 468f.)
  5. ^ George, K. M. (1992). Modern Indian Literature, an Anthology: Surveys and poems. Sahitya Akademi. ISBN 978-81-7201-324-0.
  6. ^ a b c Datta, Amaresh (1987). Encyclopaedia of Indian Literature: A-Devo. Sahitya Akademi. ISBN 978-81-260-1803-1.
  7. ^ a b International Journal of Dravidian Linguistics: IJDL. Department of Linguistics, University of Kerala. 2011.
  8. ^ Commission, Indian Historical Records (1973). Proceedings of the Session. Superintendent Government Printing, India.
  9. ^ Documents of Anglo-Manipur War, 1891. N. Debendra Singh. 1991.
  10. ^ Indian Literature. Sahitya Akademi. 1984.
  11. ^ Medieval Indian Literature: An Anthology. Sahitya Akademi. 1997. ISBN 9788126003655.
  12. ^ "Moirang Ningthourol Moirang and Ebuthou Thangjing Part 6". e-pao.net. Retrieved 18 February 2023.
  13. ^ Kabui, Gangmumei (2004). The History of the Zeliangrong Nagas: From Makhel to Rani Gaidinliu. Spectrum Publications. ISBN 978-81-87502-76-0.
  14. ^ Gavelli, Francesco; Patrucco, Filippo (2019). "Could the glycemic gap fill the unfilled gaps?". Indian Journal of Endocrinology and Metabolism. 23 (1): 171. doi:10.4103/ijem.ijem_617_18. ISSN 2230-8210. PMC 6446665. PMID 31016176.
  15. ^ Kshetrimayum, Ibohal (2013). "Father, What Have You Done!". Indian Literature. 57 (1 (273)): 106–109. ISSN 0019-5804. JSTOR 43856715.
  16. ^ Noni, Arambam; Sanatomba, Kangujam (16 October 2015). Colonialism and Resistance: Society and State in Manipur. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-27066-9.pp-222-223
  17. ^ Sohini Ray (2009). "Writing the Body: Cosmology, Orthography, and Fragments of Modernity in Northeastern India". Anthropological Quarterly. 82 (1): 129–154. doi:10.1353/anq.0.0047. ISSN 1534-1518. S2CID 140755509.
  18. ^ Devi, Nunglekpam Premi (25 May 2018). Short Essays on Women and Society: Manipuri Women through the Century. FSP Media Publications.
  19. ^ FS Downs (1979). Indian Church History Review: Missionaries and Manuscripts. Vol. 13. Church History Association. pp. 159–163, 167–168.
  20. ^ a b c Naorem Sanajaoba (1988). Manipur, Past and Present: The Heritage and Ordeals of a Civilization. Mittal Publications. pp. 12–14. ISBN 978-81-7099-853-2.
  21. ^ Naorem Sanajaoba (1988). Manipur, Past and Present: The Heritage and Ordeals of a Civilization. Mittal Publications. pp. 3–6, 11–12, 15–18. ISBN 978-81-7099-853-2.
  22. ^ Devi, Khwairakpam Renuka (2012). "Mapping Histories Through Geographical Context: An Overview of the Written Records". Proceedings of the Indian History Congress. 73: 1425. ISSN 2249-1937. JSTOR 44156348.
  23. ^ Singh, W. Jyotirmoy (2016). "Elephant in the History of Manipur (1467 A.d. – 1800 A.d.)". Proceedings of the Indian History Congress. 77: 290–297. ISSN 2249-1937. JSTOR 26552654.
  24. ^ Yumnam, Rosy (31 December 2020). "Retelling the History of Manipur through the Narratives of the Puyas History". Journal of History and Social Sciences. 11 (2). doi:10.46422/jhss.v11i2.114. S2CID 234479978.
  25. ^ Singha, Komol (2012). "Nexus between Conflict and Development in India: A Case of Manipur" (PDF). International Journal of Humanities and Applied Sciences. 1 (5): 142–143. Retrieved 18 June 2015. Further, as an effort to popularise Hinduism and to make it as a state religion, on a full moon day of October (Wakching in Meitei), in 1729 AD, he collected all the Holy books (Puya) related to Sanna-Mahi religion and burnt them completely, devastated the ancient Meitei scriptures and cultural history.
  26. ^ a b c Soibam Birajit (2014). Meeyamgi Kholao: Sprout of Consciousness. ARECOM Publishers. pp. 120–121. GGKEY:3Z4QYHH8K7K.
  27. ^ T.C. Hodson, The Meitheis, 1908, London. Appendix II, page 180.
  28. ^ Chanam Hemchandra, Numit Kappa, translated and rendered into modern Meeteilon, 2008, Imphal, Manipur.
  29. ^ Ningthoujongjam Khelchandra, History of Ancient Manipuri Literature, Pub-Manipuri Sahitya Parishad, 1969.
  30. ^ Oinam, Bhagat; Sadokpam, Dhiren A. (11 May 2018). Northeast India: A Reader. Taylor & Francis. pp. 236, 237. ISBN 978-0-429-95320-0. The epics of the seven incarnations Apart from several other works based on the theme of love, mention may be made of the literature coming from the Moirang region of Manipur. A civilization situated on the magnificent Loktak Lake, the culture of the Moirang clan has been noted. Numerous manuscripts of the Moirang region dwell on the theme of love. One of the most popular stories refers to the seven pairs of lovers who are regarded as incarnations of the same souls in different generations or ages. The seven cycles are Akongjamba (hero) and Phouoibi (heroine): Henjunaha (hero) and Leima Lairuklembi (heroine); Khuyol Haoba (hero) and Yaithing Konu (heroine); Kadeng Thangjahanba (hero) and Tonu Laijinglembi (heroine); Ura Naha Khongjomba (hero) and Pidonnu (heroine); Wanglen Pungdingheiba (hero) and Sappa Chanu Silheibi (heroine); Khamba (hero) and Thoibi (heroine).
  31. ^ "The manuscripts collected by W. Yumjao Singh consist of literary, historical, astronomical, astrological and miscellaneous other works of which mention may be made of Cheitharon Kumbaba, the Ningthourol Shingkak, the Poireiton Khunthokpa, Dharani Samhita, Srimat Bhagabat. The Cheitharol Kumbaba or the royal chronicle has been the most valuable for historical investigations, as it professes to record all the important daily transactions and occurrences of the State.... By orders of Jai Singh this book was rewritten as the former copy was no more available then". "The Nigthourol Shingkak is a work written in the way of prediction. It professes to predict all important events that would happen from the time of Khagemba downward. It, therefore, professes to be a work of the early 17th century. It is an anonymous work, and in this book, we see for the first time Gharib Niwaz's having had some Naga connection in his childhood." Jyotirmoy Roy, History of Manipur, 1958, p. 8.
  32. ^ "Meitei Script and Scriptures". e-pao.net. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
  33. ^ Laishram, Sadhana. "Conservation and preservation of Manuscripts in Manipur" (PDF).

External links edit

meitei, literature, further, information, meitei, classical, language, movement, meitei, linguistic, purism, movement, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, manipuri, click, show, important, translation, instruction. Further information Meitei classical language movement and Meitei linguistic purism movement You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Manipuri Click show for important translation instructions Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Manipuri Wikipedia article at mni ꯃ ꯇ ꯈ ꯂ ꯂ ꯜ see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated mni ꯃ ꯇ ꯈ ꯂ ꯂ ꯜ to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Meitei literature also known as Manipuri literature is literature written in the Meitei language of Manipur An ancient institution of learning the Luwang Nonghumsang later known as the Pandit Loishang collected sources of indigenous Meitei knowledge and philosophy until the 18th century 2 Writing by Meiteis is assumed to go back to the Kingdom of Kangleipak in the early 12th century 3 The Meitei script is a Brahmic abugida It is known only from the Puya manuscripts discovered in the first half of the 20th century Manuscripts of the 18th and 19th centuries were written using the Bengali alphabet The existence of the Meitei script in the 15th century hinges on the authenticity of an inscription dated to the reign of Senbi Kiyamba 4 The first printed Manipuri book Manipurer Itihas appeared in 1890 from the Baptist Mission Press Calcutta Though the kings of Manipur had established contact with the British from the middle of the eighteenth century onward the real impact of the contact came much later Johnstone Middle English School based on the western system of education was started in 1885 at Imphal and in 1891 Manipur lost its independence to the British British domination facilitated the introduction of new systems in the civil political and educational spheres which hastened the process of modernization in Manipur exposed as it was to new ideas and influences 5 Meitei literature Manipuri literature Meitei Meitei Khorirol Old Manipuri Meitei Loinasinlol British English Meit h ei literature a The Numit Kappa a Classical Meitei epic text written during the 1st century based on ancient Meitei mythology and religion Sanamahism Stylistic originsMeitei cultureCultural originsMeitei cultureSubgenresMeitei mythologyMeitei folkloreMeitei epics Epic cycles of incarnationsMeitei cinemaRelated topicsPuya Meitei texts Puya Meithaba Libricide of the PuYas Meitei language movements Meitei linguistic purism movement Meitei classical language movementContents 1 Ancient Meitei literature 1 1 Chada Laihui 1 2 Moirang Ningthourol Lambuba 2 Medieval Meitei literature 3 Modern Meitei literature 4 Puyas 5 Suppression of Meitei Literature 6 Epics 7 Chronicles 8 Scriptures 9 Literary awards 9 1 Sahitya Akademi awards 9 2 Patriotic Writers Forum awards 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 External linksAncient Meitei literature editChada Laihui edit The Chada Laihui Meitei ꯆ ꯗ ꯂ ꯢꯍ ꯢ is a historical document puya about the genealogy of the Meitei kings from their mothers sides 6 7 It traces the genealogical account of the kings mothers lineage 6 7 8 9 It is a supplementary document to the Cheitharol Kumbaba the foremost royal chronicle of Manipur 6 Moirang Ningthourol Lambuba edit Moirang Ningthourol Lambuba Meitei ꯃ ꯢꯔ ꯡ ꯅ ꯡꯊ ꯔ ꯜ ꯂꯝꯕ ꯕ is a historical document puya which served as the court chronicle of the rulers of the kingdom in Ancient Moirang It records the genealogy of the kings of the Moirang dynasty 10 11 12 The chronicle also slightly mentioned about the history of the Zeliangrong people 13 Medieval Meitei literature editThis section is empty You can help by adding to it April 2023 Modern Meitei literature editThis section is empty You can help by adding to it April 2023 Puyas editPuyas 14 are Meitei manuscripts written in Meitei script They encompass a wide variety of topics such as religion mythology chronicle folk medicine of Meitei people history etc 15 Archaic Meitei script which consist of 18 alphabets is derived from Wakoklon Puya 16 17 18 Puya manuscripts have been discovered by scholars beginning in the 1930s 19 20 The chronicles of puya state that Hindus arrived from the Indian subcontinent with royal marriages by the 14th century from what are now modern Assam Bengal Uttar Pradesh Dravidian kingdoms and other regions 20 Another manuscript suggests that Muslims arrived in Manipur in the 17th century from what is now Bangladesh during the reign of king Khagemba 20 Meitei literature clarification needed documents the persistent and devastating Manipur Burma wars 21 Lists of Puya Wakoklon Heelel Thilel Salai Amailon Pukok PuyaNongsamei PuyaSamsokngamba PuyaNongsamei PuyaNongkhai Puya AmailonCheitharol Kumbaba 22 23 24 Suppression of Meitei Literature edit nbsp Depiction of the Puya Mei Thaba Burning of the Meitei texts believed to have been ordered by king Pamheiba Garib Niwaj After the adoption of Hinduism as state religion under Gharib Nawaz Meitei Pamheiba 1717 it appears that the Puyas were burnt completely at Kangla Uttra under royal orders in either 1729 25 or in 1732 26 The Puya manuscripts discovered in the 20th century at best have a tenuous connection with the texts burned under Gharib Nawaz 26 Like the Hindu and Jain Puranas the extant Puyas contain cosmology genealogies of gods and goddesses and royal chronicles 26 Epics editMain articles List of epics in Meitei language and Epic cycles of incarnations This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2022 nbsp The Capture of the wild Kao bull by Khamba nbsp The Dance before the King by Khamba and princess Thoibi nbsp The Torture of Khamba by the Elephant nbsp The Tiger Hunt by Khamba and his rival Nongban KongyambaScenes from the Khamba Thoibi epic legend The Numit Kappa Shooting the Sun is a mythological text in narrative verse It was published in English translation by T C Hodson 1908 27 A translation into modern Meitei was published in 1908 28 Ougri also known as Leiroi Ngongloi Eshei is a poem written in archaic Meitei 29 The sagas of the seven epic cycles of incarnations of the two divine lovers were originated from Moirang kingdom near the shores of the Loktak lake in Ancient Kangleipak early Manipur Among them Khamba Thoibi is regarded as the last and the greatest epic 30 Chronicles editThe Ningthourol Shingkak is a work written under Gharib Nawaz Meitei Pamheiba written in the mode of predictions made during the rule of Khagemba r 1597 1652 and thus foretelling the birth and reign of Gharib Nawaz and his religious reforms The Cheitharol Kumbaba or Royal Chronicle is a text written down in the early 19th century under Jai Singh the puppet king installed after the Burmese invasion purportedly based on an older copy which was no longer available It contains day to day transactions and occurrences the state 31 Scriptures editThe Meitei scriptures are texts regarding the Meitei religion Sanamahism as well as Meitei mythology They are the sacred literature to the followers of the Meitei religion 32 Some of the puyas are regarded as scriptures but not all of them 33 Literary awards editSahitya Akademi awards edit Sahitya Akademi Award for Meitei Sahitya Akademi Translation Prize for Meitei Yuva Puraskar for MeiteiPatriotic Writers Forum awards edit Pacha Meetei Literary Award R Kathing Tangkhul Literary Award Dr Saroj Nalini Parratt Literary AwardSee also editAribam Syam Sharma Heisnam Kanhailal History of Manipur Meitei mythology Khwairakpam Chaoba M K Binodini Devi Meitei inscriptions Rajkumar Singhajit Singh Ratan Thiyam List of Sahitya Akademi Award winners for Meitei Portals nbsp Asia nbsp Books nbsp History nbsp India nbsp Languages nbsp Linguistics nbsp Literature nbsp Mythology nbsp PoetryNotes edit Most British scholars including Thomas Callan Hodson use the term Meit h ei instead of Meitei 1 References edit Folk Lore Volume 23 Meithei Literature Akademi Hasta in Manipuri Part 1 Akademi 2 June 2020 Retrieved 18 November 2020 Naorem Sanajaoba Manipur Treaties and Documents Vol I 1993 New Delhi Book I Twelfth Century Meetei Constitution To Pemberton Report According to K B Singh The Meiteis of Manipur 1989 1962 p 157 an archaic form of the script had developed by the 11th century and it was in use until the early 18th century when it was replaced by the Bengali script By contrast O Tomba The Need to rewrite Manipuri History Imphal 1993 claims that the script is a development of c 1930 with all supposedly older documents being deliberate forgeries Frans Welman Out of Isolation Exploring a Forgotten World 2011 468f George K M 1992 Modern Indian Literature an Anthology Surveys and poems Sahitya Akademi ISBN 978 81 7201 324 0 a b c Datta Amaresh 1987 Encyclopaedia of Indian Literature A Devo Sahitya Akademi ISBN 978 81 260 1803 1 a b International Journal of Dravidian Linguistics IJDL Department of Linguistics University of Kerala 2011 Commission Indian Historical Records 1973 Proceedings of the Session Superintendent Government Printing India Documents of Anglo Manipur War 1891 N Debendra Singh 1991 Indian Literature Sahitya Akademi 1984 Medieval Indian Literature An Anthology Sahitya Akademi 1997 ISBN 9788126003655 Moirang Ningthourol Moirang and Ebuthou Thangjing Part 6 e pao net Retrieved 18 February 2023 Kabui Gangmumei 2004 The History of the Zeliangrong Nagas From Makhel to Rani Gaidinliu Spectrum Publications ISBN 978 81 87502 76 0 Gavelli Francesco Patrucco Filippo 2019 Could the glycemic gap fill the unfilled gaps Indian Journal of Endocrinology and Metabolism 23 1 171 doi 10 4103 ijem ijem 617 18 ISSN 2230 8210 PMC 6446665 PMID 31016176 Kshetrimayum Ibohal 2013 Father What Have You Done Indian Literature 57 1 273 106 109 ISSN 0019 5804 JSTOR 43856715 Noni Arambam Sanatomba Kangujam 16 October 2015 Colonialism and Resistance Society and State in Manipur Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 27066 9 pp 222 223 Sohini Ray 2009 Writing the Body Cosmology Orthography and Fragments of Modernity in Northeastern India Anthropological Quarterly 82 1 129 154 doi 10 1353 anq 0 0047 ISSN 1534 1518 S2CID 140755509 Devi Nunglekpam Premi 25 May 2018 Short Essays on Women and Society Manipuri Women through the Century FSP Media Publications FS Downs 1979 Indian Church History Review Missionaries and Manuscripts Vol 13 Church History Association pp 159 163 167 168 a b c Naorem Sanajaoba 1988 Manipur Past and Present The Heritage and Ordeals of a Civilization Mittal Publications pp 12 14 ISBN 978 81 7099 853 2 Naorem Sanajaoba 1988 Manipur Past and Present The Heritage and Ordeals of a Civilization Mittal Publications pp 3 6 11 12 15 18 ISBN 978 81 7099 853 2 Devi Khwairakpam Renuka 2012 Mapping Histories Through Geographical Context An Overview of the Written Records Proceedings of the Indian History Congress 73 1425 ISSN 2249 1937 JSTOR 44156348 Singh W Jyotirmoy 2016 Elephant in the History of Manipur 1467 A d 1800 A d Proceedings of the Indian History Congress 77 290 297 ISSN 2249 1937 JSTOR 26552654 Yumnam Rosy 31 December 2020 Retelling the History of Manipur through the Narratives of the Puyas History Journal of History and Social Sciences 11 2 doi 10 46422 jhss v11i2 114 S2CID 234479978 Singha Komol 2012 Nexus between Conflict and Development in India A Case of Manipur PDF International Journal of Humanities and Applied Sciences 1 5 142 143 Retrieved 18 June 2015 Further as an effort to popularise Hinduism and to make it as a state religion on a full moon day of October Wakching in Meitei in 1729 AD he collected all the Holy books Puya related to Sanna Mahi religion and burnt them completely devastated the ancient Meitei scriptures and cultural history a b c Soibam Birajit 2014 Meeyamgi Kholao Sprout of Consciousness ARECOM Publishers pp 120 121 GGKEY 3Z4QYHH8K7K T C Hodson The Meitheis 1908 London Appendix II page 180 Chanam Hemchandra Numit Kappa translated and rendered into modern Meeteilon 2008 Imphal Manipur Ningthoujongjam Khelchandra History of Ancient Manipuri Literature Pub Manipuri Sahitya Parishad 1969 Oinam Bhagat Sadokpam Dhiren A 11 May 2018 Northeast India A Reader Taylor amp Francis pp 236 237 ISBN 978 0 429 95320 0 The epics of the seven incarnations Apart from several other works based on the theme of love mention may be made of the literature coming from the Moirang region of Manipur A civilization situated on the magnificent Loktak Lake the culture of the Moirang clan has been noted Numerous manuscripts of the Moirang region dwell on the theme of love One of the most popular stories refers to the seven pairs of lovers who are regarded as incarnations of the same souls in different generations or ages The seven cycles are Akongjamba hero and Phouoibi heroine Henjunaha hero and Leima Lairuklembi heroine Khuyol Haoba hero and Yaithing Konu heroine Kadeng Thangjahanba hero and Tonu Laijinglembi heroine Ura Naha Khongjomba hero and Pidonnu heroine Wanglen Pungdingheiba hero and Sappa Chanu Silheibi heroine Khamba hero and Thoibi heroine The manuscripts collected by W Yumjao Singh consist of literary historical astronomical astrological and miscellaneous other works of which mention may be made of Cheitharon Kumbaba the Ningthourol Shingkak the Poireiton Khunthokpa Dharani Samhita Srimat Bhagabat The Cheitharol Kumbaba or the royal chronicle has been the most valuable for historical investigations as it professes to record all the important daily transactions and occurrences of the State By orders of Jai Singh this book was rewritten as the former copy was no more available then The Nigthourol Shingkak is a work written in the way of prediction It professes to predict all important events that would happen from the time of Khagemba downward It therefore professes to be a work of the early 17th century It is an anonymous work and in this book we see for the first time Gharib Niwaz s having had some Naga connection in his childhood Jyotirmoy Roy History of Manipur 1958 p 8 Meitei Script and Scriptures e pao net Retrieved 25 February 2023 Laishram Sadhana Conservation and preservation of Manuscripts in Manipur PDF External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Meitei literature nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Folk Lore Volume 23 Meithei Literature Sahitya Akadmi Award Manipuri Literature Archived 24 April 2018 at the Wayback Machine Books Reviews Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Meitei literature amp oldid 1194613361, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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