Budhasvamin
Budhasvamin (बà¥à¤§à¤¸à¥à¤µà¤¾à¤®à¤¿à¤¨, also transliterated as BudhasvÄmin and Budha·svamin), was a Sanskrit poet, known as the author of the Bá¹›hatkathÄÅ›lokasaṃgraha, or The Compilation of Verses from the Long Story. Nothing is known of his life.
Budhasvamin was a masterful poet. His Sanskrit is polished and easy to understand; although he occasionally shows off his virtuosity by using obscure words and archaic verb forms, he never lets his mastery get in the way of the story. He deliberately eschews elaborate description in favour of a fast-paced narrative and deft characterization. He displays a keen interest in all aspects of ancient Indian society: despite the poem being the story of a divine prince, the stories within the narrative have a wide range of protagonists, from artisans and seafaring traders to courtesans and forest-dwellers.
About the Bá¹›hatkathÄÅ›lokasaṃgraha
Budhasvamin’s Bá¹›hatkathÄÅ›lokasaṃgraha: A Literary Study of an Ancient Indian Narrative by E.P. Maten, Leiden, Netherlands: E. J. Brill, 1973.
English translations
The Clay Sanskrit Library has published a translation of Bá¹›hatkathÄÅ›lokasaṃgraha by Sir James Mallinson under the title of The Emperor of the Sorcerers (two volumes).
External links
- Clay Sanskrit Library (official page)