Kumārasambhava

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Kumārasaṃbhavam (

Classical Sanskrit.[1][2] The style of description of spring set the standard for nature metaphors pervading many centuries of Indian literary tradition.[3] Kumārasaṃbhavam basically talks about the birth of Kumara (Kārtikeya), the son of Shiva and Parvati.[4]
The period of composition is uncertain, although Kālidāsa is thought to have lived in the 5th century.

Legend say that Kālidāsa could not complete his epic Kumārasambhava because he was cursed by the goddess Pārvatī, for obscene descriptions of her conjugal life with Śiva in the eighth canto. But later it has inspired the famed sculpture of Khajuraho temples. The English renderings of these Sanskrit plays tend to avoid erotic and explicit aspects due to moral tastes of modern audience.[5] The play depicts Kālidāsa as a court poet of Chandragupta who faces a trial on the insistence of a priest and some other moralists of his time.[6] [7]

Contents

Kumārasambhava literally means "The Birth of Kumāra". This epic of seventeen

tapas (spiritual penance) to win the love of Shiva. Consequently, Shiva and Parvati's son Kartikeya was born to restore the glory of Indra, king of the devas
.

Adaptations

Kumara Sambhavam is a 1969 Indian film adaptation of the poem by P. Subramaniam.[8]

References

Bibliography

External links