Chintaman Vinayak Vaidya (18 October 1861– 20 April 1938) was a Marathi-language historian and writer from Bombay Presidency, British India. He was Chief Justice of Gwalior State for a period.[1] He was born in a Chitpavan Brahmin family.[2]
In 1908, Vaidya chaired the Marathi Sahitya Sammelan held in Pune. Later, he became involved in the nationalist Congress Democratic Party, which was led by Lokmanya Bal Gangadhar Tilak.[3]
Works
The following is a list of the titles of his major works:
- Samagra Awalonnati Lekhamālā (1906)
 - Mahābhārat — Samālochan (1914)
 - Mahābhārat — A Criticism
 - Nibandha Aṇi Bhāshaṇẽ (1915)
 - Vālmīki-Rāmāyaṇ Parīkshaṇ (1920)
 - Madhyayugīn Bhārat, Athawā, Hindu Rājyāñchā Udbhav, Utkarsh, Aṇi Uchchhed (1920)
 - History of Mediaeval Hindu India, Being a History of India From 600 to 1200 A.D. (in three volumes) (Poona: Oriental Book Supplying Agency, 1921-1926)
 - Downfall of Hindu India
 - Shrī Kru̥shṇa Charitra (1922)
 - Sanskrut Wāngmayāchā Troṭak Itihās (1922)
 - Shriman Mahābhāratāche Marāṭhī Suras Bhāshāntar (1922)
 - Durdaivī Raṅgū, Athawā, Pānipatachā Shewaṭacha Saṅgrām (1924) - a work of fiction based on the Third Battle of Panipat[4]
 - Early History of Rajputs (750 to 1000 A.D.) (Poona, 1924)
 - Shrī Rām Charitra (1926)
 - History of Sanskrit Literature (1930)
 - Hindu Dharmāchi Tatwe, Arthāt, Yāsambandhĩ̄ Niranirāḷyā Wishayānwar Vaidyāni Dileli Wyākhāne Va Lihilele Lekh (1931)
 - Vaidyānche Aitihāsik Nibandha (1931)
 - Marāṭhā Swarājya Sãsthāpak Shrī Shivājī Mahārāj (1932)
 - Shivaji – The Founder of Maratha Swaraj
 - Saṅgīt Sãyogitā Nāṭak, Arthāt, Patinishṭhā (1934)
 - Epic India, or, India As Described in the Mahabharat and the Ramayan (in two volumes)
 - The Riddle of the Rāmāyaṇ
 - Marāṭhī Bhāshechi Utpatti
 
References
Citations
- ↑ Cashman (1975), pp. 176, 187
 - ↑  Organiser, Volume 32. Bharat Prakashan. 1980. p. 6. 
The great Sanskrit scholar C. V. Vaidya, a Chitpavan Brahmin...
 - ↑ Cashman (1975), pp. 186–187
 - ↑ Das (1995), p. 499
 
Bibliography
- Cashman, Richard I. (1975), The Myth of the Lokamanya: Tilak and Mass Politics in Maharashtra, University of California Press, ISBN 9780520024076
 - Das, Sisir Kumar (1995), History of Indian Literature: 1911-1956, struggle for freedom : triumph and tragedy (Reprinted ed.), Sahitya Akademi, ISBN 9788172017989
 
External links
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