Tulsi Das, poet

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[[File:  Tulsi Das and prince Shah.jpg|  Tulsi Das and prince Muazzam Shah Alam |frame|500px]]  
 
[[File:  Tulsi Das and prince Shah.jpg|  Tulsi Das and prince Muazzam Shah Alam |frame|500px]]  
 
From the Facebook page of the [https://www.facebook.com/196174216674/photos/a.212955701674.174468.196174216674/10152801132436675/?type=1&relevant_count=1  Rare Book Society of India]  
 
From the Facebook page of the [https://www.facebook.com/196174216674/photos/a.212955701674.174468.196174216674/10152801132436675/?type=1&relevant_count=1  Rare Book Society of India]  
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Source: © Smithsonian Institution
 
Source: © Smithsonian Institution
  
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TULSI DAS, POET]]

Latest revision as of 00:54, 28 October 2022


[edit] Muazzam Shah Alam and Tulsi Das

Tulsi Das and prince Muazzam Shah Alam

From the Facebook page of the Rare Book Society of India

A Prince visits the poet Tulsidas

ca. 1700-1710

[A miniature painting from Mewar painted furing the reign of the] Sisodia dynasty

Opaque watercolor and gold on paper

Udaipur, Mewar, India

The lower part of this painting depcits Muazzam Shah Alam, a Mughal prince, visiting Tulsidas, the poet and saint who authored a 16th-century version of the Ramayana (Story of Rama). The inscription, written in a dialect of Hindi called Braj, says that the prince asked Tulsidas why Hindus worship stones. Tulsidas quoted from his poem, the Kavitavali (Necklace of Poems), which tells the story of Prahlad, a boy who worshipped Rama (a form of Vishnu) despite his father's opposition. Challenged by his father, who asked "Where is Rama?" the boy answered "He is everywhere." "Is he in this pillar?" the father asked. "Yes," the boy said. Then as depicted in the upper register, Narasimha, the man-lion form of Vishnu, jumped out and attacked the father until the boy asked him to stop. Tulsidas explained that this incident convinced people that god is everywhere, and since that time they have worshipped stones.

Source: © Smithsonian Institution

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