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Allasani Peddana

Allasani Peddana (15th and 16th centuries CE) was a famous Telugu poet[1] and was ranked as the
foremost of the Ashtadiggajalu, the title for the group of eight poets in the court of King Krishnadevaraya, a
ruler of the Vijayanagara Empire.

Contents
Biography
Lores
Works
Style
Awards and Titles
See also
References
Notes
Modern editions

Biography
There were difference of opinions on birth place of

Allasani Peddana..

1.He is the native of Pedda dornala of present prakasam district which is near to Srisailam..

2.Peddana was a native of Somandepalli near Anantapur.[2] He later moved to Peddanapadu, a small village
located at 5 km from Yerraguntla on Yerraguntla-Vempalli road in Kadapa District, which is an Agraharam
given by Krishnadevarayalu.

He wrote the first major Prabandha, a form of fictional poetry in Telugu, and for this reason, he is revered as
Andhra Kavita Pitamahudu (the grand father of Telugu poetry). It is believed that he was also a minister in
the king's court and is hence sometimes referred as Peddanaamaatyudu (Sandhi: Peddana + Amaatyudu =
Peddana, the minister). He dedicated his works to king Krishnadevarayalu.

Lores
The emperor himself lifted and bore the weight of the palanquin in which Peddana was seated.
He was bestowed with Kanakabhishekam by the king.
He was the only poet who had the privilege of mounting the royal elephants.
On the demise of Sri KrishnaDevaRayalu the poet Peddana expressed his profound sorrows
telling that " Atti Krishna Rayala thoti divikegaleka brathiki yundithi jeevatchavambu naguchu "
Meaning I became a living dead by not going to heaven along with Sri Krishna Deva Raya .

Works
His famous work was Swaarochisha Manu Sambhavam (also known as Manu Charitra). This work is the
development of an episode in Markandeya Puranam relating to the birth of Svarochishamanu, who is one of
the fourteen Manus. Pravarudu is a pious Brahmin youth who goes to Himalayas for sight seeing. In
Himalayas Varudhini, a Gandharva girl falls in love with him, but Pravara rejects her love as he is already
married. Knowing this a Gandharva youth who was earlier rejected by Varudhini assumes the form of
Pravara and succeeds to win her love. To them is born Svarochi, the father of SvArochishamanu.[3]

Some of his other famous works such as Harikathaasaaramu are untraceable now.

The Great king Krishna Devarayalu ornamented Peddana's leg with a big golden
bangle/bracelet called " GANDA PENDERAM " as a mark of excellent poetry

Style
The theme for his Manu Charitra is a short story from Markandeya Purana. It is about second Manu of
fourteen manus (fathers of mankind societies according to Hindu mythology), translated into Telugu from
Sanskrit by Marana (1291–1323),[4] disciple of Tikkana. The original story was around 150 poems and
Peddana extended into six chapters with 600 poems by adding fiction and descriptions. His work was treated
as one of the Pancha Kavyas, the five best works in Telugu. Peddana used a mix of words from Telugu and
Sanskrit and a small number of Kannada words.

Awards and Titles


He was honoured with Title Andhra Kavita Pitamaha by Krishnadevaraya.
His style of poetry was described as 'Allasani Vari Allika Jigi Bigi'

See also
Srinatha, the first Telugu Prabandha writer.

References
1. Sen, Sailendra (2013). A Textbook of Medieval Indian History. Primus Books. p. 109.
ISBN 978-9-38060-734-4.
2. Adluri, Seshu Madhava Rao (1998). "aShTadiggajamulu (Introduction)" (http://www.engr.mun.c
a/~adluri/telugu/classical/prabandha/peddana/peddana.html). mun.ca.
3. P.T, Raju; Rao. A Telugu Literature. India: Onal Book House.
4. Adluri, Seshu Madhava Rao (1998). "allasAni peddana" (http://www.engr.mun.ca/~adluri/telug
u/classical/prabandha/peddana/peddana1.html). mun.ca.

Notes
A Great Compilation of Telugu poets / poetesses (http://www.maganti.org/page5.html)
Peddana Allasani (https://web.archive.org/web/20070522062558/http://www.inca.engr.mun.ca/
~adluri/telugu/classical/prabandha/peddana/peddana.html)
Peddana style (https://web.archive.org/web/20070525001556/http://www.inca.engr.mun.ca/~ad
luri/telugu/classical/prabandha/peddana/peddana1.html)
K.A. Nilakanta Sastry, History of South India, From Prehistoric times to fall of Vijayanagar,
1955, OUP, New Delhi (Reprinted 2002) ISBN 0-19-560686-8
Golden age of Telugu Literature (https://web.archive.org/web/20070207182515/http://www.tlca.
com/youth/golden-age.html)
Literary activity in Vijayanagara Empire (https://web.archive.org/web/20081012045138/http://w
ww.ourkarnataka.com/states/history/historyofkarnataka47.htm)

Modern editions
The Story of Manu, by Allasani Peddana, translated by Velcheru Narayana Rao and David
Shulman, Murty Classical Library of India, Harvard University Press (January 2015),
hardcover, 656 pages, ISBN 9780674427761

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This page was last edited on 12 June 2020, at 03:27 (UTC).

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