000 01169nam a22001697a 4500
999 _c74936
_d74936
082 _a1818.9.V5 J334 M
_b103658
100 _aJayantha Mishra
245 _aMahkavi-Vidyapathi
_hSanskrit
250 _a1 st ed
260 _aNew Delhi
_bRashtriya Sanskrit Sansthan
_c1995
300 _a119
490 _aRajatajayanthi Granthamala-8
500 _aVidyapati (1352–1448), also known by the sobriquet Maithil Kavi Kokil (the poet cuckoo of Maithili), was a Maithili poet and a Sanskrit writer. Vidyapati's poetry was widely influential in centuries to come, in the Hindustani as well as Bengali, Maithili, Newari, less actively Nepali language and other Eastern literary traditions. The language at the time of Vidyapati, the prakrit-derived late abahatta, had just begun to transition into early versions of the Eastern languages Maithili, Nepali, Bengali, Oriya, etc.[citation needed] Thus, Vidyapati's influence on making these languages has been described as "analogous to that of Dante in Italy and Chaucer in England"
505 _aVidyapaterjanma, Nanyadevasya mithilayamagamanam, Nanyadevasya vijayasenat parajaya.
650 _aSanskrit General
942 _cBK