The New Indian Express: Panchatantra stories come to life through traditional art forms
BENGALURU: Old and familiar Panchatantra stories are finding new visual expression at the national art camp, where young artists are reimagining the ancient fables through diverse traditional Indian ...
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A Panchatantra relief at the Mendut temple, Central Java, Indonesia The Panchatantra (IAST and ISO: Pañcatantra; Sanskrit: पञ्चतन्त्र; lit. 'Five Treatises') is an ancient Indian collection of interrelated animal fables in Sanskrit verse and prose, arranged within a frame story. [2]
Panchatantra, popular collection of Sanskrit beast fables composed about 200 bce, according to Sanskrit scholar Johannes Hertel. The work has been widely circulated and translated, both in India, its country of origin, and throughout the world. This collection was known in Europe as The Fables of Bidpai. The tales contained therein were supposedly narrated by an Indian sage, Bidpai—also ...
The Panchatantra is a series of inter-woven colourful tales, mostly fables. According to its introductory narration, these inter-woven tales are meant to illustrate, for the benefit of three ignorant princes, the primary Hindu principles of nïti - "the wise conduct of life" or "prudent worldly conduct". In a brief introductory narrative - Vishnu Sharma, is introduced as reciting and ...
About the Panchatantra One of India's most influential contributions to world literature, the Panchatantra (also spelled Pañcatantra or Pañca-tantra) consists of five books of animal fables and magic tales (some 87 stories in all) that were compiled, in their current form, between the third and fifth centuries AD. The German Sanskrit scholar Johannes Hertel (1872-1955) believed that the ...