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Niranam poets

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The Niranam poets, also known as the Kannassan poets, were three poets from the same family, Madhava Panikkar, Sankara Panikkar, and Rama Panikkar, from Niranam, a small village in southern Kerala, India, near the town of Thiruvalla. They were influenced by the Bhakti movement. As Panikkars, they were probably akin to members of the Nayar caste, who patronised Sanskrit literature and the development of Malayalam.[1] They lived between 1350 and 1450 C.E.[2]

It is believed that they all belonged to the same Kannassa family[3] and that Madhava Panikkar and Sankara Panikkar were the uncles of Rama Panikkar, the youngest of the three. They revived the Bhakti school and in the place of the excessive sensuality and eroticism of the Manipravalam poets, the seriousness of the poetic vocation was reasserted. Madhava Panikkar wrote Bhasha Bhagavadgita, a condensed Malayalam translation of Bhagavad Gita, perhaps its first translation into any modern Indian language.[4] Sankara Panikkars's main work is Bharatamala, a masterly condensation of Mahabharata. Perhaps the most important was Rama Panikkar who is the author of Ramayanam, Bharatam, Bhagavatam, and Sivarathri Mahatmyam. Kannassa Ramayanam and Kannassa Bharatam are the most important of these Niranam works. The former is an important link between Cheeraman's Ramacharitam, Ayyappilli Asan's Ramakathapattu and Ezhuthachan's Adhyathmaramayanam. Ulloor has said that Rama Panikkar holds the same position in Malayalam literature that Edmund Spenser has in English literature.[5]

References

  1. ^ Freeman, Rich (2003). "Literary Culture of Pre-Modern Kerala". In Pollock, Sheldon I. (ed.). Literary Cultures in History: Reconstructions from South Asia. University of California Press. pp. 465–468. ISBN 9780520228214.
  2. ^ "The Niranam Poets". Public Relations Department Kerala State Government. Archived from the original on 2014-10-14. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |dead-url= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  3. ^ Menon, A. Sreedhara (1979). Social and cultural history of Kerala. Sterling.
  4. ^ Datta, Amaresh (1987). Encyclopaedia of Indian Literature: A-Devo. Sahitya Akademi. ISBN 9788126018031.
  5. ^ Dr. K. Ayyappa Paniker (1977). A Short History of Malayalam Literature. pp 25-26.