The Harshacharita (, ; English: The deeds of Harsha) is the biography of emperor Harsha by Banabhatta, also known as Bana, who was a Sanskrit writer of seventh-century CE India. He was the Asthana Kavi, meaning Court Poet, of Harsha. The Harshacharita was the first composition of Bana and is considered to be the beginning of writing of historical poetic works in the Sanskrit language.
The earliest clear reference for chaturanga (the common ancestor of the board games chess, chatrang (Persian chess), xiangqi (Chinese chess), janggi (Korean chess), shogi (Japanese), sittuyin (Burmese chess), makruk (Thai chess) and modern Indian chess) comes from Harshacharitha:Andreas Bock-Raming. The Gaming Board in Indian Chess and Related Board Games: a terminological investigation. Board Games Studies 2, 1999.
The work was translated into English by Edward Byles Cowell and Frederick William Thomas in 1897. The military historian Kaushik Roy describes Harshacharita as "historical fiction" but with a factually correct foundation.
This work was translated into Telugu language prose by M. V. Ramanachari (Medepalli Venkata Ramanacharyulu) of Maharajah's College, Vizianagaram in 1929.
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