Rabindranath Tagore

Ibat king Wikipedia
Rabindranath Tagore
Mibait7 ya ing Mayo 1861
Calcutta, Bengal Presidency, British India
Mete8 ya ing Agosto 1941 (edad 80)
Calcutta, Bengal Presidency, British India
Kapanintunan/propesionpoeta, talasúlat, dramaturgo, compositor, filosofo, mágreporma king kétawan (sociedad) ampóng pintor
AsawaMrinalini Devi
Ának5, kayabe ya i Rathindranath Tagore
Signature

I Rabindranath Tagore métung yang poeta, talasúlat, dramaturgo, compositor, filosofo, mágreporma king kétawan (sociedad) ampóng pintor ibat king India.[1][2][3] Bináyú ne ing literatura ampóng musicang Bengali ampó ing arte ó kalalangan ning India king kayang Contextual Modernism anyang kadwang dáké ning ka-19 a siglu ampó anyang múmúnang dáké ning ka-20ng síglu. Ya ing talasúlat ning"taganang sensitíbu, báyu ampóng malagung" kawatásan ning Gitanjali,[4] at anyang 1913 ya ing méging é-Europeo ampo ing múmúnang lyricist a sínambut kiing Galal a Nobel Para king Malagung Panyulat o Literatura.[5] Ákákit dó réng poeticong dálit nang Tagoreng 'spiritual and mercurial' ; kábang píkabaluan la king Indian subcontinent déng prosa ampóng poesia na.[6] Kayánib ya king Royal Asiatic Society. Áusan déng "the Bard of Bengal",[7][2][3] at pémansagan déng: Gurudeb, Kobiguru, ampóng Biswokobi.{{efn|Gurudev translates as "divine mentor", Bishokobi translates as "poet of the world" and Kobiguru translates as "great poet".

  1. Lubet, Alex (17 October 2016). Tagore, not Dylan: The first lyricist to win the Nobel Prize for literature was actually Indian.
  2. 2.0 2.1 (2001) Democracy and Dictatorship in South Asia: Dominant Classes and Political Outcomes in India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh (in en). Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-275-97041-3. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 Newman, Henry (1921). The Calcutta Review (in en). University of Calcutta. “I have also found that Bombay is India, Satara is India, Bangalore is India, Madras is India, Delhi, Lahore, the Khyber, Lucknow, Calcutta, Cuttack, Shillong, etc., are all India.” 
  4. The Nobel Foundation.
  5. O'Connell 2008.
  6. Sen 1997.
  7. "Work of Rabindranath Tagore celebrated in London", BBC News.