Dasaradhi Rangacharya | |
Birth Date: | 24 August 1928 |
Birth Place: | Hyderabad State, British India |
Death Place: | Hyderabad, Telangana, India |
Nationality: | Indian |
Spouse: | Kamalamma |
Children: | 3 |
Relatives: | Dasarathi Krishnamacharya (brother) |
Awards: | Kala Ratna |
Dasaradhi Rangacharya (24 August 1928 – 7 June 2015), also spelled Dasarathi Rangacharya,[1] was an Indian poet and writer in the Telugu language. He participated actively in the Telangana armed struggle against the rule of the Nizams.[2] His writings incorporated the lifestyle of the people of Telangana under the rule of the Nizams. He was conferred with Kala Ratna award in 2006.
Dasaradhi Rangacharya was born on 24 August 1928 in Hyderabad State (in present-day Telangana). Upon being expelled from school, he moved to Vijayawada for further education.[3] He was married to Kamalamma and had a son and two daughters. His brother, Dasarathi Krishnamacharya, was also a writer.[4]
Dasaradhi started working as a teacher during 1951 to 1957. Later he moved to Hyderabad and worked between 1957 and 1988 in the municipal corporation in Secunderabad Division.
Dasaradhi incorporated the lifestyle of the people of Telangana under the rule of Nizam of Hyderabad in his novels, and he became a great writer in Telangana. He came into prominence after his trilogy novels, and . He wrote them in the Telangana dialect against the counsel of his peers. These are considered "rarest of the great novels produced in Telangana" on the account of feudalism and lower literacy rate present in then Telangana region. Chillara Devullu was published in 1969 and was adapted into a 1977 Telugu movie by the same name–.
Other novels that he wrote include (Ramayana), (Mahabharata),,, and among others. "Maya Jalataru", "Sara Talpam" and "Ranunnadi Edi Nizam". He translated the four Vedas into the Telugu language. He wrote his autobiography under the title .[5]
Dasaradhi was conferred with Kala Ratna in 2006 by the government of United Andhra Pradesh.[6]
Dasaradhi died on 8 June 2015 in Yashoda Hospitals in Somajiguda and was given a state funeral by the Government of Telangana.