Quick Facts
Flourished:
700 ce
Flourished:
700 -

Bhavabhuti (flourished 700 ce) was an Indian dramatist and poet, whose dramas, written in Sanskrit and noted for their suspense and vivid characterization, rival the outstanding plays of the better-known playwright Kalidasa.

A Brahman of Vidarbha (the part of central India later called Berar), Bhavabhuti passed his literary life chiefly at the court of Yashovarman of Kannauj (Kanauj). Bhavabhuti is best known as the author of three plays: Mahaviracharita (“Exploits of the Great Hero”), which gives in seven acts the main incidents in the Ramayana up to the defeat of Ravana and the coronation of Rama; Malatimadhava (“Malati and Madhava”), a complex original love intrigue (complete with sorcery, human sacrifice, and Tantric practice) in 10 acts abounding in stirring, though sometimes improbable, incidents; and Uttararamacharita (“The Later Deeds of Rama”), which continues the story of Rama from his coronation to the banishment of Sita and their final reunion. This last play bears some resemblance to Shakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale. Though it contains far less action than the two earlier plays, it shows Bhavabhuti at the height of his power in characterization and in presenting suspense and climax. Bhavabhuti is considered to be a master of the kavya form, a literary style that is dominated by elaborate figures of speech, particularly metaphors and similes.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.

Sanskrit literature, body of writings produced by the Aryan peoples who entered the Indian subcontinent from the northwest, probably during the 2nd millennium bc. It developed as the vehicle of expression for the Brahmanical society that gradually established itself as the main cultural force throughout the region in the period before the Muslim conquest. Beginning c. 1500 bc, with the era of the Vedic hymns, the classical period of Sanskrit drew to a close c. ad 1000. Throughout this period of 2,500 years the dating of most literary works is problematical; the difficulty is aggravated by the tendency to ascribe authorship to well-known or legendary names. Two main periods in the development of the literature are discernible: the Vedic period, approximately 1500–200 bc; and, somewhat overlapping it, the classical period, approximately 500 bcad 1000.