Mansukhram Tripathi

{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2025}}

{{EngvarB|date=May 2025}}

{{Infobox writer

| name = Mansukhram Tripathi

| image = Mansukhram Tripathi.jpg

| image_size =

| image_upright =

| caption = Mansukhram Tripathi

| birth_date = {{Birth date|df=y|1840|5|23}}

| birth_place = Nadiad, British India

| death_date = {{Death date and age|df=y|1907|5|30|1840|5|23}}

| death_place = Nadiad, British India

| occupation = {{flatlist|

  • Essayist
  • biographer
  • thinker

}}

| language = Gujarati

| nationality = British Indian

| education =

| alma_mater =

| period =

| notableworks =

| spouse = Dahilakshmi

| children =

| relatives = Govardhanram Tripathi (younger cousin)

| awards =

| signature =

| years_active =

}}

Mansukhram Suryaram Tripathi ({{IPA|gu|mənsukʰɾɑːm suɾjəɾɑːm t̪ɾipɑːʈʰiː|pron|}}; 1840–1907) was a Gujarati essayist, biographer, and thinker from British India. He led a conservative school of Gujarati writers who advocated avoiding the use of foreign words in writing and speaking, and promoted the use of Sanskrit or Sanskritised words. He was a cousin of the Gujarati writer Govardhanram Tripathi.

Biography

Tripathi was born into a Vadnagara Nagar Brahmin family{{cite book|last=Vaidyashastri|first=Manishankar Govindaji|title=ગુજરાતી ગ્રંથકારો અને ગ્રંથો|trans-title=Who's Who in Gujarati Literature|url=https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.541274/page/n49|year=1902|volume=1|language=gu|pages=32–42}} on 23 May 1840 in Nadiad in the British Indian state of Gujarat to his father, Suryaram, and mother, Umedkunwar. His father died when he was eight.{{Cite book|title=ગુજરાતી વિશ્વકોશ|last=Joshi|first=Ramanlal|author-link=Ramanlal Joshi|publisher=Gujarati Vishwakosh Trust|year=1997|editor-last=Thaker|editor-first=Dhirubhai|editor-link=Dhirubhai Thaker|volume=VIII|location=Ahmedabad|pages=765–766|trans-title=Gujarati Encyclopedia|language=gu|oclc=164810484}} He received his secondary and college education in Kheda and Ahmedabad.{{cite book|editor-last=Lal|editor-first=Mohan|title=Encyclopaedia of Indian Literature: Sasay to Zorgot|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KnPoYxrRfc0C&pg=PA4395|year=1992|publisher=Sahitya Akademi|location=New Delhi|isbn=978-81-260-1221-3|page=4395}} In 1861, he joined Elphinstone College, but left due to an eye-problem. Later he made a career as a stock trader. He died on 30 May 1907 in Nadiad. Gujarati writer Govardhanram Tripathi was his younger cousin.{{cite book|editor-last=Patel|editor-first=Sujata|editor-link=Sujata Patel|title=Bombay: Mosaic of Modern Culture|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2ZJPAAAAMAAJ|last=Shukla|first=Sonal|chapter=Gujarati Cultural Revivalism|year=1995|publisher=Oxford University Press|location=New Delhi|isbn=978-0-19-563689-5|page=93}}

File:Dahilaxmi Library.jpg|left]]

Tripathi was associated with several literary associations in Gujarat. He was one of the founder members of Farbus Gujarati Sabha and was a member of Buddhi Vardhak Sabha. In 1870, he founded Dharma Sabha in Ahmedabad and became editor of its organ Dharmaprakash. He founded the Dahilakshmi Library in Nadiad in memory of his wife Dahilakshmi. He was appointed a fellow of Mumbai University, and was appointed a justice of the peace. In 1866–67 (Vikram Samvat 1923), Gokulji Zala, a dewan (a senior government official) of Junagadh state, heard a lecture by Tripathi at Bombay, and was impressed. Later Zala appointed Tripathi as one of agents of Junagadh state at Bombay.

Works

A collection of his essays was published as Astodaya (Rise and Fall). They are descriptive, narrative and reflective in nature. Since he wanted to use only words of Sanskrit origin, the language of his essays is highly loaded.

Tripathi wrote two biographies: Forbes Jivan Charitra (1869), which presents the career and achievements of Alexander Kinloch Forbes, a colonial administrator in British India. The second biography, Sujna Gokulji Jhala Jivancharitra (1900), tells the life story of Gokulji Jhala, the dewan of Junagadh state, and presents an account of Kathiawadi politics and society between 1860 and 1880. Since Gokulji was a Vedantist, the book also contains a detailed chapter on Shankaracharya, one of the founders of the Vedanta school of Hindu philosophy.{{cite book|author=V. K. Chavda|title=Modern Gujarat|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jIluAAAAMAAJ|year=1982|publisher=New Order Book Company|location=Ahmedabad|page=48|oclc=9477811}}

In collaboration with Ranchhodbhai Udayram Dave, he wrote Shakespeare Katha Samaj, which presents abridged versions of Shakespeare's plays.

Conservatism

File:Mansukhram Suryaram Tripathi plaque.jpg at Tripathi's birthplace]]

Tripathi led a conservative school of Gujarati writers.{{cite journal|last=Diwanji|first=Prahlad C.|title=Nāgara Apabhraṁśa and Nāgarī Script: A Review|date=1932–1933|journal=Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute|volume=14|issue=3/4|publisher=Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute|page=268|jstor=41682433}}{{closed access}} He was one of the earliest and strongest proponents of a highly Sanskritized Gujarati language. He insisted on removing all words of Persian, Arabic or English origin from Gujarati and replacing them with Sanskrit words. As a result of this Ramanbhai Neelkanth, a liberal intellectual and a proponent of Western culture, targeted him in his novel Bhadrambhadra in which the protagonist insists on using highly Sanskritized language.

Tripathi also tried to popularise the Devanagari script by writing several works in it, but he was unsuccessful. His style of Sanskritised Gujarati was followed by his younger cousin Govardhanram Tripathi in his epic novel Sarswatichandra. Manilal Dwivedi (fl. 1882–1898), a Gujarati writer, was also a follower of Tripathi.{{cite journal|last=Shukla|first=Sonal|author-link=Sonal Shukla|title=Cultivating Minds: 19th Century Gujarati Women's Journals|url=https://www.epw.in/journal/1991/43/review-womens-studies-review-issues-specials/cultivating-minds-19th-century-gujarati|journal=Economic and Political Weekly|date=26 October 1991|volume=26|issue=43|issn=0012-9976 |eissn=2349-8846|page=64|via=EPW}}{{closed access}}

See also

References

{{reflist}}