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Kapalkundala

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Kapalkundala
AuthorBankim Chandra Chattopadhyay
Original titleকপালকুণ্ডলা
LanguageBengali
GenreNovel
Publication date
1866
Publication placeIndia
Media typePrint
OCLC671908675

Kapalkundala (Bengali: কপালকুণ্ডলা) is a Bengali romance novel by Indian writer Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay.[1] Published in 1866,[1] it is a story of a forest-dwelling girl named Kapalkundala, who fell in love with and married Nabakumar, a young gentleman from Saptagram, but eventually found that she is unable to adjust herself with the city life.[2] Following the success of Chattopadhyay's first novel Durgeshnandini, he decided to write about a girl who is brought up in a remote forest by a Kapalika (Tantrik sage) and never saw anyone but her foster-father. The story is set in Dariapur, Contai in modern-day Purba Medinipur district, Paschimbanga (West Bengal) where Chattopadhyay served as a Deputy Magistrate and Deputy Collector.[2]

Kapalkundala is considered one of the finest and the most popular of Chattopadhyay's novels.[1] It has been translated into English, German, Hindi, Gujarati, Tamil, Telugu and Sanskrit.[2] Girish Chandra Ghosh, one of the pioneers of Bengali drama, and Atul Krishna Mitra dramatized the novel separately.[2]

Synopsis

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Nabakumar, a young gentleman from Saptagram, got lost in a forest while returning from pilgrimage in Gangasagar. He met a Tantric sage who trapped him, intending to make him a sacrifice to goddess Shamshaan Kali; but was later freed secretly by Kapalkundala, the sage's foster-daughter. She, at once, fell in love with Nabakumar and with the help of a village priest they got married on the next day. The priest urged Nabakumar to take Kapalkundala away from her wicked foster-father and also showed Nabakumar his way to Saptagram. Nabakumar returned home with his newly-wed wife Kapalkundala, now re-christened as Mrinmoyee. The sage, on the other hand, got annoyed at Kapalkundala's betrayal and began to plot his revenge. In the meantime, Nabakumar met Padmabati, his first wife, who was converted to Islam by his father, making Nabakumar to desert her. Padmabati, now renamed as Motibibi, expressed her love for Nabakumar, but he refused her. Later the sage came to Saptagram and met Motibibi. The sage wanted to kill Kapalkundala, but Motibibi wanted to separate her from Nabkumar only. They made a plot to prove Kapalkundala unfaithful. Padmabati called Kapalkundala to meet her in a nearby forest and she, herself, came there in a man's disguise. The sage showed Nabakumar that Kapalkundala came out at night to meet a ‘man whom she loves’. Then the sage made the angry Nabakumar bring Kapalkundala to the sacrificial ground where Kapalkundala revealed the truth to him. Nabakumar came to his senses and he asked Kapalkundala to come with him to his home, but she refused and jumped into the river. Nabakumar also jumped into the river to save her, but both of them were lost.

Sequel

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In 1874, Damodar Mukhopadhyay, a relative of Chattopadhyay, wrote Mrinmayee, a sequel to Kapalkundala. Mukhopadhyay also wrote Nabab-Nandini, a sequel to Chattopadhyay's first work Durgeshnandini, in 1901.[3]

In adaptation

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Films

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Bengali
Hindi

Television

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Others

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References

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  1. ^ a b c Bandyopadhyay, Asit Kumar (2007) [1998]. Bangla Sahityer Itibritta [History of Bengali Literature] (in Bengali). Vol. VIII (3rd ed.). Kolkata: Modern Book Agency Pvt Ltd. pp. 502–520.
  2. ^ a b c d Bagal, Jogeshchandra, ed. (2003) [1953]. "Upanyas-Prasange" [On Novels]. Bankim Rachanavali [Complete Works of Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay] (in Bengali). Vol. I (20th ed.). Kolkata: Sahitya Sansad. pp. XXXII–XXXIII. ISBN 81-85626-13-8.
  3. ^ Das, Sisir Kumar, ed. (2003). Samsad Bangla Sahityasangi [Samsad Companion to Bengali Literature] (in Bengali) (1st ed.). Kolkata: Sahitya Samsad. p. 96. ISBN 81-7955-007-9.
  4. ^ Kapalkundala at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata
  5. ^ Kapalkundala at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata
  6. ^ Kapalkundala at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata
  7. ^ Kapalkundala at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata
  8. ^ Kapalkundala at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata
  9. ^ "Kapal Kundala". nettv4u.
  10. ^ Debrani Mitra (1 April 1971). Kapala Kundala. Amar Chitra Katha Pvt Ltd. ISBN 978-81-8482-124-6.
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