Kuvempu

Poet

Birthday December 29, 1904

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Hirekodige, Koppa, Chikmagalur, Kingdom of Mysore (now in Karnataka)

DEATH DATE 1994-11-11, Mysore, Karnataka, India (89 years old)

Nationality India

#20315 Most Popular

1904

Kuppalli Venkatappa Puttappa (29 December 1904 – 11 November 1994), popularly known by his pen name Kuvempu, was an Indian poet, playwright, novelist and critic.

He is widely regarded as the greatest Kannada poet of the 20th century.

He was the first Kannada writer to receive the Jnanpith Award.

1920

Kuvempu studied at Mysuru University in the 1920s, taught there for nearly three decades and served as its vice-chancellor from 1956 to 1960.

He initiated education in Kannada as the language medium.

1929

Thereafter, he pursued college studies at the Maharaja College of Mysore and graduated in 1929, majoring in Kannada.

Kuvempu began his academic career as a lecturer of Kannada language at the Maharaja's College in Mysore in 1929.

1936

He worked as an assistant professor in the Central college, Bangalore from 1936.

1937

Kuvempu married Hemavathi on 30 April 1937.

He was forced into enter marital life on this faculty out of Ramakrishna Mission.

Kuvempu has two sons, Poornachandra Tejaswi and Kokilodaya Chaitra, and two daughter, Indukala and Tharini.

Tharini is married to K.Chidananda Gowda the former Vice-Chancellor of Kuvempu University.

His home in Mysore is called Udayaravi.

His son Poornachandra Tejaswi was a polymath, contributing significantly to Kannada literature, photography, calligraphy, digital imaging, social movements, and agriculture.

1946

He re-joined Maharaja's college in Mysore in 1946 as a professor.

1948

The Kuvempu University in Shimoga, Karnataka was established in 1948

. The Vishwamanava Express was named in honour of Kuvempu's idea of "Vishwa Manava" ("Universal Man").

1955

He went on to become the principal of the Maharaja's college in 1955.

1956

In 1956 he was selected as the Vice-Chancellor of Mysore University where he served till retirement in 1960.

He was the first graduate from Mysore University to rise to that position.

The childhood home of Kuvempu at Kuppali has been converted into a museum by Rashtrakavi Kuvempu Pratishtana (a trust dedicated to Kuvempu).

This trust has undertaken immense developmental works in Kuppali to showcase Kuvempu and his works to the external world.

1964

For his contributions to Kannada Literature, the Government of Karnataka decorated him with the honorific Rashtrakavi ("National Poet") in 1964 and Karnataka Ratna ("The Gem of Karnataka") in 1992.

1988

He was conferred the Padma Vibhushan by the Government of India in 1988.

He penned the Karnataka State Anthem Jaya Bharata Jananiya Tanujate.

Kuvempu was born in Hirekodige, a village in Koppa taluk of Chikmagalur district and raised in Kuppalli, a village in Shivamogga district of the erstwhile Kingdom of Mysore (now in Karnataka) into a Kannada-speaking Vokkaliga family.

His mother Seethamma hailed from Koppa, Chikmagalur, while his father Venkatappa was from Kuppali, a village in Thirthahalli taluk (in present-day Shimoga district), where he was raised.

Early in his childhood, Kuvempu was home-schooled by an appointed teacher from South Canara.

He joined the Anglo-Vernacular school in Thirthahalli to continue his middle school education.

Kuvempu's father died when he was only twelve.

He finished his lower and secondary education in Kannada and English languages in Thirthahalli and moved to Mysore for further education at the Wesleyan High School.

1997

India Post honoured Kuvempu by releasing a postage stamp in 1997 and 2017.

2015

On 23 November 2015 night, many valuables including the Padma Shri and Padma Bhushan awards conferred on poet laureate Kuvempu were stolen from Kavimane.

The entire museum has been ransacked.

The surveillance cameras there have also been damaged.

The Jnanapith award kept there has remained intact..

The gradually rising hill south of the house is named Kavishaila, Kuvempu's mortal remains were placed at Kavishaila.