Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

H. Balasubramaniam

Indian translator and multilingual scholar (1932–2021) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

Harihara Iyer Balasubramaniam (10 April 1932 – 2 April 2021)[1] was an Indian translator and multilingual scholar in Hindi, Tamil, Malayalam, Sanskrit and English. Balasubramaniam translated Tolkaappiyam and the poems of Subramania Bharati into Hindi.

Quick facts Prof. Dr. H. Balasubramaniam, Born ...

He died from COVID-19 during the COVID-19 pandemic in India.[2]

Remove ads

Early life

Balasubramaniam was born on 10 April 1932, in Kayamkulam municipal village of Alappuzha district in present day Kerala. Father S.Harihara Iyer and mother P.Sivakami Ammal migrated to Thiruvananthapuram from Azhvarkurichchi of Tenkasi district, Tamil Nadu. Balasubramaniam’s younger brothers are H. Parameswaran and H. Padmanabhan[3] were also multilingual scholars and were involved in Translation works. Younger sister Alamelu Krishnan is also a multilingual scholar and involved in translation works. He was also awarded Sahitya Akademi Award.[4]

Remove ads

Contributions to Hindi and Tamil literature

  • ‘Jaag Utha Hai Kalbhairav (Hindi)’, a collection of poetry, Neeraj Book Centre, Delhi. (2000)
  • ‘Kamyabi Ki Dastaan: Nalli, (Biography of Nalli Kuppusamy Chettiar in Hindi) Brain Bank, Chennai. (2008)
  • Chinnappa Bharati Varga chetanaa ke jujhaaroo sahityakar - Compilation, (2011)
  • Inthiya Mozhi Ilakkiya katturaikal (Tamil), Collection of 9 essays published in various books and magazines), New Century Book House, Chennai. (2014)[5]
Remove ads

Translation works

Tamil to Hindi

  1. Kumari Nilacantan’s ‘August 15’ as ‘agast 15’, Notion Press, Chennai (2019)[6][7]
  2. Stalin Gunasekaran’s ‘Viduthalai velviyil tamizhagam’ as ‘Swatantrata yagya men Tamil Nadu’, Manitam pathippakam, Erode (2020)[8]

Hindi to Tamil

  1. Chandrasekhar Rath’s Novel ‘Yantrarudh’ as ‘Yanthira Vahanan’ Sahitya Akademi, New Delhi. (2007)[9]
  2. Amritlaal Naagar (Monograph by Shrilaal Shukla) Sahitya Academi, (2016)

Edited Tamil to Hindi

  1. Uttar aur Dakshin: Sanskritik Samanvay (study) NCBH, Chennai (2017)[10]
  2. Bindu mein Sindhu, Vairamuthu’s poem, Sahitya Sahakar, Delhi. (2017)[11]
  3. Vairamuhtu hone ka matalab, Abhivyakti Prakashan, Delhi (2017)

Notable awards

  1. Translation Prize for Tamil, Sahitya Akademi, New Delhi. (2002)[12]
  2. Kendriya Hindi Sansthan, Hindi Seva Samman conferred by the President of India (2011)[13]

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads