Mahakavi Dhurjati (Telugu: దూర్జటి; c. 15th and 16th centuries CE) was a Telugu poet and an Ashtadiggaja in the imperial court of the Emperor Krishnadevaraya of Vijayanagara.


Dhurjati
దూర్జటి
BornSrikalahasti, Pottapi Nadu, India.
Pen namePedda Dhurjati
OccupationPoet
LanguageTelugu
NationalityIndian
Period Prabandha Period
Notable worksSri Kalahasteeswara Mahatyam
Sri Kalahasteeswara Satakam
ParentsNarayana (father) Singamma (mother)

Biography

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Dhurjati was born to Singamma and Narayana in Srikalahasti and was the grandson of Jakkayya. He was a great devotee of the God Shiva, also known as Kalahasteeshwara.

In his works, he referred to his birthplace as being a part of Pottapi Nadu, named after an earlier Telugu Chola Kingdom based at Pottapi in Cuddapah.

Works

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His works are to the praise of God Shiva.

His famous works include Sri Kalahasteeshwara Mahatyam (lit.'The glory of the Lord of Srikalahasti') and Sri Kalahasteeshwara Satakam (lit.'Over a hundred poems in the praise of the Lord of Srikalahasti').

He was known as Pedda Dhurjati (lit.'the Elder Dhurjati') as there were four other people from the same family line who went by the name of Dhurjati during the same period and after him. His grandson Venkataraya Dhurjati wrote Indumati Parinayam (lit.'the marriage of Indumati'), a story from Kalidasa's Raghuvamsa.

He is also credited with many chatuvus, stand-alone extempore poems.

Style

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Like his contemporaries during the Vijayanagara Empire's Prabandha period, he has taken themes from the Puranas and added regional lore to them in his works. Unlike some of his contemporaries like Peddana and Mallana, who have chosen the stories of monarchs for their works, he choose faith as the central theme of his poetry.

Emperor Krishnadevaraya described his poetry with "Stutimati yaina Andhrakavi Dhurjati palkulakelagalgeno atulita madhuri mahima...." (lit.'How is Dhurjati's poetry so immeasurably beautiful').[1]

References

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  • Dhurjati
  • Sri Kalhasteeswara Sathakam PDF Download
  • 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
  • Literary activity in Vijayanagara Empire
  • Sree Kaalahasti Maahaathyamu, Mahaakavi Dhoorjati, EMESCO BOOKS- Sampradaaya Saahiti - A low price edition, with Viswanatha Satyanarayana's introduction, 2006.

Notes

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  1. ^ Dhurajti Archived 2009-04-10 at the Wayback Machine