K
Kabandha, headless demon, [228].
Kādī, or Kadī, Mīlacchrīkāra’s preceptor, [250].
Kaikeyī, wife of Daçaratha, [100], [101], [189], [227], [228].
Kaiyaṭa, on the Mahābhāṣya, [33].
Kalacuris, a royal house, [226], [232].
Kalahaṅsa, in the Mālatīmādhava, [193], [313].
Kalakaṇṭha, friend of Māruta, [257].
Kālapriya, probably Mahākāla, the deity of Ujjayinī, [186].
Kalhaṇa, historian, [129], [168], [220].
Kālidāsa, dramatist, [42], [58], [65], [76], [91], [93], [115], [120], [124]–6, [127], [129], [139], [143]–67, [196], [197], [239], [243], [256], [275], [280], [281], [284], [291], [292], [297], [309], [311], [334], [343], n. [1], [352], [353], [355], n. [3], [364].
Kalin̄ga, king, enemy of Vatsa, [173], [174].
Kalin̄gas, colour of, [366].
Kaliñjarapati, Bhīmaṭa described as, [239].
Kaliph of Baghdad, [250].
Kalivatsala, a licentious king, [262].
Kāliya, a demon foe of Kṛṣṇa, [99], [106].
Kāma, worship of, [172].
Kāmandakī, in the Mālatīmādhava, [187], [188], [193], [302], [361], [362].
Kanakalatā, a heroine, [264].
Kanakalekhā, a princess saved by Mantragupta, [193], n. [2].
Kanarese words, found in a Greek comedy, [60], n. [2].
Kāñcana Paṇḍita, author of the Dhanaṁjayavijaya, [266].
Kāñcī, described in the Mattavilāsa, [183].
Kaniṣka, king, [58], [70], [72].
Kaṅsa, uncle of Kṛṣṇa, [32], [33], [34], [35], [36], [37], [38], [40], [45], [48], [73], [98], [99], [116].
Kaṇva, foster-father of Çakuntalā, [152], [153], [302], [303], [325].
Kapālakuṇḍalā, a sorceress, [188].
Kāpālika, in the Mitrāṇanda, [259];
endeavours to sacrifice Madanamañjarī, [193] n. [2].
Kāpālikas, [313].
Kapālin, in the Mattavilāsa, [182], [184].
Kapittha, a monkey, [233].
Karṇa, ally of the Kauravas, [96], [106], [115], [213], [214], [215].
Karṇa, king of Cedi, [251].
Karṇadeva Trailokyamalla, of Aṇhilvāḍ, [256].
Karṇapūraka, slave of Vasantasenā, [141].
Karṇasundarī, a princess, [256].
Karṇīsuta, text-book by, on gambling, [134].
Karpaṭa, an authority on thieves’ practice, [182].
Karpūramañjarī, a princess, [234], [235].
Kārtyāyanī, a deity, [99].
Kāçi, colour of people of, [366].
Kāçīpati Kavirāja, author of the Mukundānanda, [264].
Kāçmīrī, recension of the Çakuntalā, [154].
Kashmir, dramatic exhibitions in, [371];
pronunciation of Sanskrit in, [287];
Hūṇas in, [144].
Kāṭayavema, commentator on Kālidāsa, [151], [154].
Kātyāyana, the grammarian, [31].
Kaumudī, heroine of the Kaumudīmitrāṇanda, [258], [259].
Kauṇḍinya, in the Çāriputraprakaraṇa, [82].
Kauçalyā, mother of Rāma, [191], [195].
Kauçāmbī, scene of the Ratnāvalī, [171].
Kauçikī, in the Mālavikāgnimitra, [148], [155], [156], [162], [165], [308].
Kavikarṇapūra, author of the Caitanyacandrodaya, [84], [85], [353].
Kaviputra, or Kaviputrau, dramatists, [91], [127], [128], [147].
Kavirāja, an ancestor of Rājaçekhara, [231].
Kāvya, Sanskrit, [71], [75], [76];
style, [115], [283], [284].
Keepers of drink shops, speech of, [88], [336].
Keçava, [48].
Keçin, a demon foe of Kṛṣṇa, [99].
Keyūravarṣa, Yuvarāja, of Tripurī, [232].
Khāravela of Kalin̄ga, [89].
Kharpara Khāna, a Mahomedan, [250].
Khasas, a people, speech of, [337].
Killing of animals forbidden by Kumārapāla, [253].
Kings, as patrons of literature, [286];
of actors, [362];
as heroes of the drama, [345], [347], [350], [366].
Kirātas, [312];
colour of, [366];
speech of, [336].
Kīrtivarman, king of Jejākabhukti, [251].
Kolāhalapura, city of uproar, [263].
Komudagandha, a Vidūṣaka, [84]. [[382]]
Konow, Professor Sten, theory of origin of drama, [25], [49], [54];
various views of, [66], [81], [92], [94], [95], [129], [130], [141], [204], [225].
Korybantes, [20].
Kosala, king, enemy of Vatsa, [172], [177], [178].
Kosalas, a people, colour of, [366].
Koṭilin̄ga, Yuvarāja of, [264].
Kouretes, [20].
Kṛpa, ally of the Kauravas, [213], [214].
Kṛpāsundarī, a princess, [254], [255].
Kṛçāçvins, followers of Kṛçāçva, [31].
Kṛṣṇa, [17], [26], [32], [35], [36], [37], [38], [40], [41], [42], [45], [48], [49], [50], [73], [83], [97], [98]–100, [106], [107], [110], [130], [213], [215], [247], [257], [264], [266], [267], [270], [272], [274], and see Vāsudeva and Viṣṇu.
Kṛṣṇa Avadhūta Ghaṭikāçata Mahākavi, author of the Sarvavinodanāṭaka, [267].
Kṛṣṇa Kavi, author of the Çarmiṣṭhāyayāti, [268].
Kṛṣṇamachari, R., author of the Vāsantikasvapna, [251].
Kṛṣṇamiçra, author of the Prabodhacandrodaya, [84], [85], [112], [251]–3, [353].
Kṛṣṇamiçra, author of the Vīravijaya, [267].
Kṛṣṇa Sūri, father of Mahādeva, [246].
Krakucchanda, a Buddha, [43].
Kṣatriya, [66], [81], [276];
colour of, [366];
seats for, [359].
Kṣemendra, of Kashmir, [236], [240], [247], [371].
Kṣemīçvara, or Kṣemendra, dramatist, [239]–41.
Kulaçekharavarman, author of the Tapatīsaṁvaraṇa and Subhadrādhanaṁjaya, [247], [371], n. [2].
Kumāra, the god, [267];
grove of, [150].
Kumāradāsa of Ceylon, alleged connexion with Kālidāsa, [143].
Kumāragiri, king of Koṇḍavīḍu, [151].
Kumārapāla, Caulukya, king of Gujarāt, [253], [254], [258].
Kumāravihāra, at Thārāpadra, [254].
Kumārila, alleged to be a teacher of Bhavabhūti, [186].
Kumbhakarṇa, son of Rāvaṇa, [228], [233], [246].
Kumbhīlaka, servant of Vasantasenā, [141].
Kumudacandra, a Digambara teacher, [260].
Kumudikā, a hetaera, [133].
Kuntibhoja, a king, [101], [109].
Kuran̄gī, a princess, [101], [109].
Kuça, son of Rāma, [30], [31], [191], [192].
Kuçalaka, a spy, [249].
Kuṣana, Kuṣāṇa, dynasty, [59].
Kuvalayā, an actress, [43].