Maithili

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  Maithili
(मैथिली maithilī)
 
Parlé en Inde, Népal
Région Bihar, Terai
Nombre de locuteurs ~ 24 million
Classement 40e
Classification par famille

 -  Langues indo-européennes
    -  Langues indo-iraniennes
       -  Langues indiques
          -  Langues indiques occidentales
             -  Maithili

(Dérivée de la classification SIL)
Statut officiel et codes de langue
Officielle
en
Bihar
ISO 639-1 bh
ISO 639-2 mai
ISO/DIS
639-3
SIL
Voir aussi : langue, liste de langues, code couleur
Icône de détail Article connexe : Bihari.

Le maithili (autonyme : मैथिली maithilī) est une langue de la famille des langues indo-iraniennes qui fait partie des langues indo-européennes. Il est parlé dans l'État du Bihar et dans la région orientale du Népal appelée Terai. Les linguistes considèrent que le maithili est une langue indo-aryenne orientale, différente du hindi, alors qu'il a été longtemps considéré comme un dialecte de l'hindi ou du bengalî. Ce n'est qu'en 2003 qu'il a acquis le statut de langue autonome, y compris comme langue officielle reconnue par la constitution



Maithili was traditionally written in the Maithili script (also known by the names Tirhuta and Mithilakshar, which has some resemblance with the Bengali script. It was also written in the Kaithi script, but the Devanagari script is the script most commonly used today for Maithili. An effort is underway to preserve the Maithili script and to develop it for use in digital media by encoding the script in the Unicode standard, for which a proposal, submitted by Anshuman Pandey, to encode the script in the Unicode Roadmap has been submitted as the first step.

The term Maithili comes from Mithila, which was an independent state in ancient times. Maithili is a separate language, having a large Maithili-speaking community (4.5 crore, or 45 million, people) with a rich literature. The most famous literary figure in Maithili is the poet Vidyapati. He is credited for raising the importance of 'people's langauage', i.e. Maithili, in the official work of the state by influencing the Maharaja of Darbhanga with the quality of his poetry. The state's official language used to be Sanskrit, which distanced common people from the state and its functions. The name Maithili is also one of the names of Sita, the consort of the Rāma.

Maithili Literature

It is a fact that scholars in Mithila used Sanskrit for their literary work and Maithili was the language of the common folk (Abahatta). The earliest work in Maithili appears to be Varn Ratnakar by Jyotirishwar Thakur dated about 1224 AD.

The Medieval age of Maithili appears to be during Karnat Dynasty when the names of the following scholars got prominence: Gangesh, Padmanabh, Chandeshwar, Vireshwar, Vidyapati, Vachaspati, Pakshadhar, Ayachi, Udayan, Shankar etc.

Vidyapati is said to have lived in the period 1350 to 1450. Vidyapati, though a Sanskrit scholar, wrote innumerable poems(songs) relating to Bhakti and Shringar in Maithili. Though equally accepted in Bengal and Mithila, his songs are the soul of Mithila and no celebration is complete without his songs. It will not be an exagerration to say that his songs have survived in the throats of Maithil women folk.

Theatrical writings in Medieval age are not less important. The following need mention: Umapati: (Parijat Haran), Jyotireeshwar: (Dhurt Samagam), Vidyapati: (Goraksha Vijay, Mani Manjari), Ramapati: (Rukmini Haran), Lal: (Gauri Swayambar), Manbodh: (Krishna Janma)

Modern Maithili Literature has been blessed with the contribution of the following scholars: Parmeshwar Jha, Sitaram Jha, Kabishekhar Badrinath Jha, Murali Jha, Surendranath Jha Suman, Kashikant Mishra Madhup, Chandranath Mishra Amar, Kanchinath Jha Kiran, Prof. Hari Mohan Jha, Ishnath Jha, Brajkishore Verma Manipadma, Baidyanath Mishra Yatri (Nagarjuna), Sudhanshu Shekhar Choudhary, Upendra Nath Jha Vyas, Prof. Radha Kant Jha, Mahamahopadhyay Umesh Mishra, Dr. JayKant Mishra, Prof. Krishna Kant Mishra, Kumar Ganganand Singh, Dr Chandra Nath Jha(Mangarauni), Sri Gaya Nand Jha kaviji (Antour, Benipur), Sri Hemant Kumar Jha (Antour, Benipur), Dr. Ramanath Jha, Prof. Tantra Nath Jha, Dr. Laxman Jha Dr. Subhadra Jha, Achutanand Dutt, Bhola Lal Das, Baidyanath Jha, Yoganand Jha, Narendra Das, Rajeshwar Jha, Arsi Prasad Singh, Prof. Buddhidhari Singh Ramakar, Prof. Uma Nath Jha and many more.

Maithili, though not included in VIIIth schedule of the Indian Constitution, was accepted by Sahitya Academy and since its inclusion has won awards almost every year. A number of academy awards have been won for translation from other languages.

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