send mail to support@abhimanu.com mentioning your email id and mobileno registered with us! if details not recieved
Resend Opt after 60 Sec.
By Loging in you agree to Terms of Services and Privacy Policy
Claim your free MCQ
Please specify
Sorry for the inconvenience but we’re performing some maintenance at the moment. Website can be slow during this phase..
Please verify your mobile number
Login not allowed, Please logout from existing browser
Please update your name
Subscribe to Notifications
Stay updated with the latest Current affairs and other important updates regarding video Lectures, Test Schedules, live sessions etc..
Your Free user account at abhipedia has been created.
Remember, success is a journey, not a destination. Stay motivated and keep moving forward!
Refer & Earn
Enquire Now
My Abhipedia Earning
Kindly Login to view your earning
Support
Famous Painted Manuscripts
The Earliest Surviving Specimen Devotees are seen singing the Name of Hari playing on various instruments like cymbals and drums and marching as if in a celebratory procession. The figure in the lead appears to be carrying a copy of the Bhagavata in some sort of a portable book-case. The whole scene is reminiscent of the Bhagavata Bhramana celebration in which the Bhagavata is taken outdoors by the devotees on certain special occasions. The earliest extant example of an illustrated manuscript of the Satriya school is the Bhagavata Book X (Dasama) (the Citra Bhagavata) from the Bali Satra of the Nagaon district. It is dated as 1539 AD. Though sharing some common features with the western India miniatures, it has an independent identity and Dr Moti Chandra lays down the following distinctive features of the said manuscript:
These elements “give the Bhagavata illustrations a charm which distinguishes them from similar Bhagavata paintings from Udaipur and elsewhere.”
Many more illustrated manuscripts covering three centuries including the 19th century have been recovered from different Satras and households of Assam during last seventy years or so. Although the pictorial idiom by and large remains the same with all these works, there are stylistic variations among the artists mainly due to individual comprehension of the text and the ability of the artist in matching the verbal imagery through a parallel pictorial imagery.
The Citra Bhagavata was followed by the execution of the illustrated Bar Kirttana of Kathbapu Satra, the Bhakti Ratnavali executed in 1683 in Kamalabari Satra, the Gita Govinda and the Ananda Lahari seem to have rendered by a sattriya artist in the Ahom court of Rudra Singha (1695-1713 A.D.) and Siva Singha (1713-1744 A.D) (the Ananda-Lahari can be more precisely placed during 1720 A.D. and 1721 A.D), the Ajamilopakhyana of Purana Burka Satra, the Bhagavata VIII of Pubtharia, the Bhakti Ratnavali of Ratnavali-Than in Nagaon and the dated copy of the third transcript of the Bhakti -Ratnavali (1731 A.D) of Karatipar NaSatra in Nagaon . The artist of Bengena-ati-Satra in Majuli rendered paintings in the folios of the Sundarakanda Ramayana in 1715 A.D. In the same year, Visnurama of Chaliha-Bareghar Satra executed the paintings of the Ajamilopakhyana Nat written by the Satradhikara, Sriramadeva of the said Satra. Excluding the Bar-Kirttana, Sundarakanda, Ajamilopakhyana Nat, the other seven illustrated manuscripts stated above are stylistically similar and constitute one group from stylistic consideration.
One of the major contributions to the art of painting in Assam was the Lava Kusar Yuddha. The manuscript is undated. Its pictorial style is developed better than that of the Citra Bhagavata and those executed between 1683 and 1732 A.D.
In 1836 the Ahom prince, Purandar Singha, whom the British company placed on the throne for a very short period after the fall of the Ahom kingdom during the Burmese aggression, commissioned the services of one Durgaram Betha for illumination work in the folios of the Brahmavaivarta Purana (now in the British Library, London). It was a masterpiece of the 19th century. According to J.P. Losty, “this is the last of the great ones, in which the native Assamese style has triumphantly reasserted itself over the desiccated Ahom court style.”
Distinguishing features
Influence on Later (Sub) Schools
By: Ziyaur Rahman ProfileResourcesReport error
Access to prime resources
New Courses