Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Pamulaparthi Sadasiva Rao

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pamulaparthi Sadasiva Rao
Remove ads

Pamulaparthi Sadasiva Rao (17 July 1921 26 August 1996) was a thinker, philosopher, and free lance journalist. He started the monthly magazine Kakatiya Patrika in 1944 in Warangal, India, in 1948 with his cousin P. V. Narasimha Rao, later Prime Minister of India.

Quick facts Born, Died ...
Remove ads

Early life

Sadasiva Rao was born in Warangal to Durgabai and Hanumantha Rao. He was educated at the then Collegiate High School, Hanamkonda in Warangal district of the then Hyderabad State.[citation needed]

Literary career

Among his Telugu writings were GatiTarkika Bhotika Vadam (on dialectic materialism), Charitra, Sanskriti, Kala (history, tradition, culture and art), and Tatva Shastra Praadhamika Paathalu (fundamentals of philosophy).

He translated Theory of Knowledge, an English language book by Maurice Cornforth, into the Telugu Gyana Siddhantam, published by the Visalandhra Publishing House.

Death

He died of cancer on 26 August 1996.

Remove ads

Commemoration

There is a memorial trust and an annual Pamulaparthi Sadasiva Rao endowment lecture at Kakatiya University.[1]

References

Further reading

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads