5/24/2019
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Amar Chitra Katha
Publication information
PublisherAmar Chitra Katha Pvt. Ltd.
Publication date1967
No. of issues1029
Creative team
Written byVarious
Artist(s)Various
Amar Chitra Katha
AuthorsAnant Pai, Reena Ityah Puri (a Tamilian writer)

Amar Chitra Katha (ACK, 'Immortal Picture Stories') is one of India's largest selling comic book series, with more than 100 million copies sold in 20 Indian languages.[1] Founded in 1967, the imprint has more than 400 titles that retell stories from the great Indian epics, mythology, history, folklore, and fables in a comic book format. It was created by Anant Pai, and published by India Book House. In 2007, the imprint and all its titles were acquired by a new venture called ACK Media. On 17 September 2008, a new website by ACK-media was launched.[2][3]

Creation and creators[edit]

The comic series was started by Anant Pai in an attempt to teach Indian children about their cultural heritage. He was shocked that Indian students could answer questions on Greek and Roman mythology, but were ignorant of their own history, mythology and folklore. It so happened that a quiz contest aired on Doordarshan in February 1967, in which participants could easily answer questions pertaining to Greek mythology, but were unable to reply to the question 'In the Ramayana, who was Rama's mother?'.[4][5]

Chitra Katha Sinhala

The above is an oft-told story of how ACK was founded beginning with 'Uncle Pai', in Mumbai in 1967. However, Outlook Magazine has this article about the genesis of this popular comic series: The idea and proposal for Amar Chitra Katha was made by a Bangalore book salesman called G.K. Ananthram which led to the first Amar Chitra Katha comics being produced in 1965—in Kannada, not English. 'The English ACK titles begin from number eleven because the first ten were in Kannada,' clarifies Ananthram. To Anathram's satisfaction, the 1965 Kannada ACK venture was a great commercial success which led to Mirchandani in the head office in Mumbai pursuing the Amar Chitra Katha idea in English diligently. 'They brought in Anant Pai' says Ananthram. 'And he built a wonderful team and a great brand.'[6]

Writers like Kamala Chandrakant, Margie Sastry, Subba Rao, Debrani Mitra and C.R Sharma joined the creative team of Amar Chitra Katha, with Anant Pai taking on the role of editor and co-writer on most scripts. The notable illustrators were Ram Waeerkar, who illustrated the very first issue of Amar Chitra Katha, Krishna, Dilip Kadam, C. M. Vitankar, Sanjeev Waeerkar, Souren Roy, C.D Rane, Ashok Dongre, V.B. Halbe, Jeffrey Fowler, Pratap Mullick and Yusuf Lien aka Yusuf Bangalorewala.[7]

Comics[edit]

The original printings of Amar Chitra were not in full colour—because of budgetary constraints, the panels were printed using yellow, blue and green. Subsequent issues, however, changed to full colour. All Amar Chitra Katha books stuck to a monthly (later fortnightly) 30-page format, with emphasis on lucid, entertaining storylines. In addition to the 'singles' form, at the stories are also available as hardcover 3-in-1 and 5-in-1 bundles. There are special editions of the epics like the Mahabharata which is available in a 3 volume 1300+ pages set.

Occasionally there were 'bumper' issues with 90 pages, most collecting stories of a similar type from individual issues (e.g. Monkey Stories From The Hitopadesha, Tales of Birbal and some being longer stories The Story of Rama). As the epic stories became more popular, the team began to publish stories based on Indian history, of men and women belonging to different regions and religions and also on stories based on Sanskrit as well as regional classics. The continuous popularity of the comics led to reprints being issued frequently, which ensured that the back-issues remained in print throughout the seventies and the eighties. At the height of its popularity, in the mid-eighties, it had been translated into Bengali, Marathi, Assamese, Gujarati, Punjabi, Sanskrit, Telugu, Tamil and Urdu and selling half a million copies a month. Some titles were also translated into French, Spanish, German, Swahili, Fijian, Indonesian, and Serbo-Croat.

Towards the mid-nineties, the original comics were reprinted in sleeker and more durable editions, with thick cardstock covers and better colour separations. Today, Amar Chitra Katha has a national footprint across all major book retailers, hundreds of small bookstores, and tens of thousands of vendors. It is the best-selling children's publication in most large format stores.

In 2007, the publisher created a new online store that offers all the titles with shipping worldwide. The titles are divided in following categories

  1. Mythology (e.g. Sati and Shiva,Nachiketa,Savitri,Tirupati)
  2. The Epics (e.g. The Ramayana,Bhishma,Gandhari,Uloopi,Karna,Ravana)
  3. Literary Classics (e.g. Vasavadatta,Kannagi,Nagananda,Shakuntala)
  4. Fables & Folktales (e.g. Panchatantra,Jataka Tales,Avvaiyar,Lilan Chanesar)
  5. Humour & wit (e.g. Birbal,Tenali Raman,Vidyut Chora)
  6. Biographies (e.g. Rana Pratap,Narsinh Mehta,Raja Raja Chola,Lachit Borphukan)
  7. 3 in 1 Titles(e.g.The Mughal Court,Valiant Sikhs,Great Indian Emperor)
  8. 5 in 1 Titles(e.g.Brave Rajputs,The Kuru Clan,Great Rulers of India)
  9. Special Issues(e.g.Saptarshi,Param Vir Chakra)

Sinhala Chitra Katha Sinhala Akurin

Modernisation[edit]

Amar Chitra Katha has evolved over times. It launched in the first generation of IOS Appstore in 2009 by iRemedi Corp on ETHERMEDIA reader; followed by a launch in the iBookStore in 2010. It has since forayed into the digital world by launching its official digital store app across platforms – Windows 8, iOS and Android. Dubbed as ACK Comics, the store offers more than 300 titles. The free app gives readers access to Amar Chitra Katha comics, ranging from its archive but also including the latest books that Amar Chitra Katha publishes, with both free and paid comics. The digital comics can be read in the app in flip-book mode as well as panel-by-panel mode, which is convenient for smaller devices. Users can download and read their comics on multiple devices using a single user account.

The ACK store app has been developed by App9 Digital Studio, the digital division of Ninestars Information Technologies Pvt. Ltd.[8][9]

Criticism[edit]

According to feminst book critic Nilanjana Roy, the Amar Chitra Katha series reflects 'the stereotypes and prejudices of modern mainstream Indian culture; pink-skinned, fair heroes and heroines, dark asuras and villains, passive women drawn as in Indian calendar art from the male perspective'.[10] However, alongside these portrayals of light-browns, dark-brown skinned heroes like Ram, Krishna are among the most prominent titles covered in Amar Chitra Katha. Also, dark skinned servants and subservient women have been swapped for a more neutral skin tone and women who are active influencers in the stories like Ahilyabai Holkar.

Criticism of the Amar Chitra Katha comics has largely revolved around two central issues: the depiction of women and the portrayal of minorites, according to author Aruna Rao.[11] The creators have also been criticised for projecting the superiority of Brahminical or upper-caste Hindu culture over other viewpoints, presenting Indian caste hierarchies uncritically. However, Aruna Rao points out that India Book House responded to some of the criticism about the depiction of women and minorities, and attempted to make amends by adopting a broader perspective.[11]

The stories have often been criticised as distorted depictions of history, with characters being seen simplistically as 'good' and 'bad' – brave Hindu kings and Muslim 'outsiders', and so on.[12] The publisher has released an all new series focusing on personalities belonging from the Muslim community like Razia sultan, Bacha Khan, renowned ornithologist Salim Ali and more.[13][14] Also, the aim is often to create a hagiography and a lesson in character-building at the expense of authenticity and historical truth.[15] Another criticism is that comic books, by their very nature, do not reflect the richness and complexity of the oral tradition of Indian mythology in which multiple versions of a story can co-exist simultaneously.[16] The editors are now paying due effort in understanding different version of the mythological stories and accommodating them into regional language versions too. The new editions have been released featuring regional folktales and local heroes reflecting regional diversity of the country like Lachit Borphukan, the Assamese leader who fought the Mughals. The editors have tried to pay close attention to the changing sensitivities of the people and trying to accommodate the diversity of story telling by giving equal importance to regional versions and accommodating them in regional language version.[13][14]

References in popular culture[edit]

In Anurag Kashyap's controversial Hindi film Gulaal, an anti-casteist character Rananjay Singh Ransa expresses his disillusionment with his Rajput roots by saying that: 'मैं अमर चित्र कथा में नहीं जीना चाहता !' – I don't want to spend my life in Amar Chitra Katha.

Films[edit]

The following films were produced by Amar Chitra Katha under ACK Animation Studios banner

YearFilmDirectorNotes
2011Tripura – The Three Cities of MayaChetan SharmaTV Movie
Co-produced with Animagic
2012Sons of RamKushal RuiaCo-produced with Maya Digital Studios and Cartoon Network India

See also[edit]

  • List of Amar Chitra Katha comics for a comprehensive listing of all titles released till date.

References[edit]

  1. ^'Amar Chitra Katha, Tinkle to entertain kids on Net'. CNN-IBN. 27 January 2008. Archived from the original on 28 January 2008. Retrieved 28 January 2008.
  2. ^'ACK Media buys Amar Chitra Katha, Tinkle brands'. Business Line. 22 November 2007. Retrieved 28 January 2008.
  3. ^In India, New Life for Comic Books as TV CartoonsThe New York Times, 19 July 2009.'... sells about three million comic books a year, in English and more than 20 Indian languages, and has sold about 100 million copies since it was founded in 1967'
  4. ^Now, Amar Chitra Katha gets even younger Vijay Singh, TNN, The Times of India, 16 October 2009.
  5. ^The World of Amar Chitra KathaMedia and the Transformation of Religion in South Asia, by Lawrence A Babb, Susan S. Wadley. Motilal Banarsidass Publ., 1998. ISBN81-208-1453-3. Chapt. 4, p. 76-86.
  6. ^A Pandit Had A Dream ... Outlook India Magazine, 21 March 2011. Retrieved 17 September 2011
  7. ^For a short biography of Anant Pai, Kamala Chandrakant, Subba Rao, Margie Sastry, Ram Waeerkar, Pratap Mulick, see Norbert Barth, 'India Book House and Amar Chitra Katha (1970–2002)', Wuerzburg 2008, p.47-59.
  8. ^'Amar Chitra Katha's ACK Comics App Will Take You Back to Simpler Times'. NDTV Gadgets360.com. Retrieved 26 November 2015.
  9. ^'Amar Chitra Katha goes digital with ACK Comics app for Android, iOS and Windows'. www.fonearena.com. Retrieved 26 November 2015.
  10. ^Roy, Nilanjana S. (2 March 2011). 'Uncle Pai and the Amar Chitra Katha universe'. Business Standard.
  11. ^ abRao, Aruna (2001). 'From Self-Knowledge to Super Heroes: The Story of Indian Comics'. In John A. Lent (ed.). Illustrating Asia: Comics, Humor Magazines, and Picture Books. University of Hawaii Press. p. 43. ISBN978-0-8248-2471-6. Retrieved 17 April 2012.
  12. ^Desai, Chetan. 2003. 'The Krishna Controversy.' International Journal of Comic Art. Spring:325–333.
  13. ^ abDavid, Priti (16 December 2017). 'And now, a dapper Ravana: Amar Chitra Katha undergoes makeover'. The Hindu. ISSN0971-751X. Retrieved 16 January 2019.
  14. ^ ab'The undying world of Amar Chitra Katha'. dna. 10 June 2007. Retrieved 16 January 2019.
  15. ^John Stratton Hawley (1 January 1998). 'The Saints Subdued: Domestic Virtue and National Integration in Amar Chitra Katha'. In Lawrence A Babb & Susan S. Wadley (ed.). Media and the Transformation of Religion in South Asia. Motilal Banarsidass. pp. 107–. ISBN978-81-208-1453-0. Retrieved 17 April 2012.
  16. ^Steven E. Lindquist (1 October 2011). Religion and Identity in South Asia and Beyond: Essays in Honor of Patrick Olivelle. Anthem Press. pp. 385–. ISBN978-0-85728-790-8. Retrieved 17 April 2012.

Further reading[edit]

  • Love revives Indian comics After a break of 4 years, Amar Chitra Katha launches a new title on Mother Teresa: Little Acts of Love, on 26 August 2010, to celebrate the Mother's 100th birth anniversary.
  • India's Immortal Comic Books: Gods, Kings, and Other Heroes, by Karline McLain, Indiana University Press, 2009. ISBN978-0-253-22052-3.
  • The Classic Popular: Amar Chitra Katha (1967–2007), by Nandini Chandra, Yoda Press, 2008. ISBN81-903634-3-3.3
  • 'Amar Chitra Katha: Western Forms, Indian Contents', by Sanjay Sircar, Bookbird, A Journal of International Children's Literature, 2000, 38, Nr. 4, p. 35–36.
  • 'From Self-Knowledge to Super Heroes: The Story of Indian Comics', by Aruna Rao, 2001, in: Lent, A. John (Ed.), Illustrating Asia, Comics, Humour Magazines, and Picture Books, Richmond, p. 37–63.
  • 'India Book House and Amar Chitra Katha (1970–2002)',(German), by Norbert Barth, Würzburg 2008, http://www.opus-bayern.de/uni-wuerzburg/volltexte/2008/2789/pdf/indiabookhouse.pdf
  • Deepa Sreenivas (7 April 2010). Sculpting a Middle Class: History, Masculinity and the Amar Chitra Katha in India. Routledge. ISBN978-0-415-56310-9. Retrieved 17 April 2012.

External links[edit]

  • 'PVC – stories of 21 fearless soldiers'.Highest Gallantry Award
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Amar_Chitra_Katha&oldid=895668009'

This is a list of titles in the IndianAmar Chitra Kathacomic book series. The table below shows the numbering as part of the old series as well as that of the new series. Titles which were published in only one of the series have been indicated with a 'NA' against the series in which they did not appear. The old series runs from #11 to #436 and the new series starts from #501.New series issues typically appear in a deluxe format and are usually reprints of titles in old series. However some issues such as Kalpana Chawla, JRD Tata etc. have appeared in the new series alone. Similarly,although most of the old series have reappeared in the new series, certain issues such as Napoleon Bonaparte, Louis Pasteur etc. are present in old series alone.[1]

Three extra-long special issues were also published and numbered from 10001 onwards – Valmiki's Ramayana, Dasha Avatar and Jesus Christ. Few other special issues issued as part of the new series such as Tulsidas Ramayana, Mahabharata, Bhagawat Purana and Mahatma Gandhi are not numbered but are considered as part of the official title list of Amar Chitra Katha.[1][2]

As of May 2014 Amar Chitra Katha have released 465 titles (454 individual issues and 11 special issues).Amar Chitra Katha also issues a collection of individual comics as a set of '3 in one' or '5 in one'.[3][4]

List of Amar Chitra Katha Individual Issues[edit]

Old Series NumberNew Series NumberTitleYear Of Publication
11501Krishna1969
12530Shakuntala1970
13626The Pandava Princes1970
14511Savitri1970
15504Rama1970
165071971
17577Harishchandra1971
18503The Sons of Rama1971
19502Hanuman1971
20582Mahabharata1971
21508Chanakya1971
22510Buddha1971
23564Shivaji1971
24563Rana Pratap1971
25604Prithviraj Chauhan1971
26531Karna1972
27661Kacha & Devayani1972
28568Vikramaditya1972
29506Shiva and Parvati1972
30674Vasavadatta1972
31532Sudama1972
32588Guru Gobind Singh1972
33627Harsha1972
34534Bheeshma1972
35533Abhimanyu1972
36535Mirabai1972
37536Ashoka1973
38537Prahlad1973
39540Panchatantra- The Jackal & the War Drum1973
40682Tanaji1973
41NAChhatrasal1973
42764Parashurama1973
43734Banda Bahadur1973
44605Padmini1973
45543Jataka Tales: Monkey Stories1973
46769Valmiki1973
47590Guru Nanak1973
48NATarabai1973
49726Ranjit Singh1974
50698Ram Shastri1974
51539Rani of Jhansi1974
52629Uloopi1974
53729Baji Rao I1974
54685Chand Bibi1974
55623Kabir1974
56746Sher Shah1974
57565Drona1974
58566Surya1974
59612Urvashi1974
60656Adi Shankara1974
61592Ghatotkacha1974
62551Tulsidas1974
63759Sukanya1974
64739Durgadas1974
65663Aniruddha1974
66738Zarathushtra1974
67541The Lord of Lanka1974
68BSTukaram1974
69763Agastya1974
70657Vasantasena1974
71567Indra & Shachi1974
72542Draupadi1974
73758Subhadra1975
74773Ahilyabai Holkar1975
75552Tansen1975
76810Sundari1975
77544Subhas Chandra Bose1975
78BSShridatta1975
79555Jataka Tales - Deer Stories1975
80599Vishwamitra1975
81591The Syamantaka Gem1975
82594Mahavira1975
83598Vikramaditya's Throne1975
84705Bappa Rawal1975
85673Ayyappan1975
86655Ananda Math1975
87559Birbal the Just1975
88515Ganga1975
89509Ganesha1975
90631Chaitanya Mahaprabhu1975
91556Hitopadesha - Choice of Friends1975
92706Sakshi Gopal1975
93666Kannagi1975
94BSNarsinh Mehta1975
95779Jasma of the Odes1975
96811Sharan Kaur1975
97697Chandrahasa1976
98NAPundalik&Sakhu1976
99823Raj Singh1976
100768Purushottam Dev & Padmavati1976
101546Vali1976
102BSNagananda1976
103569Malavika1976
104606Rani Durgavati1976
105570Dasharatha1976
106630Rana Sanga1976
107760Pradyumna1976
108632Vidyasagar1976
109753Tachcholi Othenan1976
110725Sultana Razia1976
111550Sati & Shiva1976
112516Krishna & Rukmini1976
113596Raja Bhoja1976
114694Guru Tegh Bahadur1976
115762Pareekshit1976
116814Kadambari1976
117571Dhruva & Ashtavakra1976
118664King Kusha1976
119727Raja Raja Chola1976
120624Dayananda1977
121815Veer Dhaval1977
122572Ancestors of Rama1977
123790Ekanath1977
124812Satwant Kaur1977
125621Udayana1977
126554Jataka Tales - Elephant Stories1977
127505The Gita1977
128692Veer Hammir1977
129BSMalati and Madhava1977
130547Garuda1977
131545Birbal the Wise1977
132452Ranak Devi1977
133633Tales of Maryada Rama1977
134757Babur1977
135659Devi Choudhurani1977
136548Rabindranath Tagore1977
137613Soordas1977
138562Panchatantra - The Brahmin & the Goat1977
139BSPrince Hritadhwaja1977
140789Humayun1977
141761Prabhavati1977
142686Chandra Shekhar Azad1977
143607A Bag of Gold Coins1977
144NAPurandara Dasa1977
145766Bhanumati1977
146517Vivekananda1977
147518Krishna & Jarasandha1977
148701Noor Jahan1977
149519Elephanta1977
150520Tales of Narada1977
151636Krishnadeva Raya1978
152557Birbal the Witty1978
153579Madhvacharya1978
154634Chandragupta Maurya1978
155723Jnaneshwar1978
156724Bagha Jatin1978
157822Manonmani1978
158521Angulimala1978
159622The Tiger & the Woodpecker1978
160512Tales of Vishnu1978
161635Amrapali and Upagupta1978
162637Yayati1978
163560Panchatantra - How the Jackal Ate the Elephant1978
164549Tales of Shiva1978
165638King Shalivahana1978
166748The Rani of Kittur1978
167522Krishna & Narakasura1978
168677The Magic Grove1978
169684Lachit Barphukan1978
170755Indra & Vritra1978
171681Amar Singh Rathor1978
172639Krishna & the False Vasudeva1978
173794Kochunni1978
174703Tales of Yudhishthira1978
175774Hari Singh Nalwa1978
176514Tales of Durga1978
177589Krishna & Shishupala1978
178523Raman of Tenali1978
179640Paurava and Alexander1978
180524Indra & Shibi1978
181791Guru Har Gobind1978
182NAThe Battle for Srinagar1979
183676Rana Kumbha1979
184652Aruni and Uttanka1979
185620Hitopadesha - How Friends are Parted1979
186NATiruppan and Kanakadasa1979
187741Tipu Sultan1979
188611Babasaheb Ambedkar1979
189785Thugsen1979
190NAKannappa1979
191796The King in a Parrot's Body1979
192NARanadhira1979
193720Kapala Kundala1979
194641Gopal & the Cowherd1979
195553Jataka Tales - Jackal Stories1979
196781Hothal1979
197784The Rainbow Prince1979
198525Tales of Arjuna1979
199719Chandralalat1979
200603Akbar1979
201702Nachiketa1979
202600Kalidasa1979
203653Jayadratha1979
204642Shah Jahan1979
205643Ratnavali1980
206693Jayaprakash Narayan1980
207526Mahiravana1980
208NAJayadeva1980
209644Gandhari1980
210558Birbal the Clever1980
211711The Celestial Necklace1980
212718Basaveshwara1980
213749Velu Thampi1980
214527Bheema & Hanuman1980
215687Panna & Hadi Rani1980
216750Rani Abbakka1980
217817Sukhu & Dukhu1980
218574Jataka Tales - The Magic Chant1980
219645Lokamanya Tilak1980
220528Kumbhakarna1980
221658Jahangir1980
222NASamarth Ramdas1980
223717Baladitya & Yashodharma1980
224619Jataka Tales - Nandivishala1980
225601Tales of Sai Baba1980
226581Raman the Matchless Wit1980
227NASadhu Vaswani1980
228618Birbal to the Rescue1980
229742Shankar Dev1981
230765Hemu1981
231683Bahubali1981
232788Dara Shukoh & Aurangzeb1981
233585Panchatantra - The Dullard & other stories1981
234608Bhagat Singh1981
235716The Adventures of Agad Datta1981
236NABahman Shah1981
237584Gopal the Jester1981
238609Friends & Foes - Animal Tales from the Mahabharata1981
239795Hakka & Bukka1981
240782Sahasramalla1981
241787Balban1981
242561Panchatantra - Crows & Owls1981
243715Ramanuja1981
244593The Pandavas in Hiding1981
245BSTyagaraj1981
246575Jataka Tales - The Giant & the Dwarf1981
247586Jataka Tales - Stories of Wisdom1981
248775Bidhi Chand1981
249662The Learned Pandit - Tales told by Sri Ramakrishna1981
250770Sambhaji1981
251651The Adventures of Baddu & Chhotu1981
252529Kartikeya1981
253670The Golden Mongoose and other tales from the Mahabharata1981
254513Hanuman to the Rescue1981
255808The Mystery of the Missing Gifts1981
256NASakhi Sarwar1981
257714The Queen's Necklace1982
258809The Secret of the Talking Bird1982
259804The Miraculous Conch and a Game of Chess1982
260595Sri Ramakrishna1982
261713The Fool's Disciples1982
262721Rash Behari Bose1982
263743The Prince & the Magician1982
264617Jataka Tales - The Hidden Treasure1982
265460Echamma the Brave1982
266803Mandukka, the Lucky Astrologer1982
267646The Pandit & the Milkmaid and other tales told by Sri Ramakrishna1982
268597Tales of Shivaji1982
269576Jataka Tales - The Mouse Merchant1982
270707The Tiger-Eater1982
271647Lal Bahadur Shastri1982
272802Andher Nagari1982
273538The Churning of the Ocean1982
274578Kesari, the flying thief1982
275708Subramania Bharati1982
276772Animal Tales from Arunachal Pradesh1982
277616Jataka Tales - Tales of Misers1983
278688Bimbisara1983
279573Jataka Tales: Bird Stories1983
280820Kumanan1983
281NAShunashepa1983
282BS'The Taming of Gulla1983
283709Jagannatha of Puri1983
284777Albert Einstein1983
285462Joymati1983
286463Thanedar Hasan Askari1983
287771The Pious Cat and other tales1983
288667Bikal the Terrible1983
289816The Elusive Kaka1983
290628Ramana Maharshi1983
291797The Prophecy - a Tibetian Tale1983
292744Chokha Mela1983
293752Beni Madho & Pir Ali1983
294824Durgesh Nandini1983
295740Guru Arjan1983
296NAMahamati Prannath1983
297798The Lost Prince1983
298NADamaji Pant and Narhari1983
299799The Silent Teacher1983
300696The Historic City Of Delhi1983
301689Tripura1984
302776Dhola & Maru1984
303NASenapati Bapat1984
304NADr. Kotnis in China1984
305610Ravana Humbled1984
306NAThe Story of a Scientist - Y. Subba Row1984
307783The Bridegroom's Ring1984
308712Andhaka1984
309678Veer Savarkar1984
310BSThe True Conqueror1984
311751Kunwar Singh1984
312654Tales of Balarama1984
313818Shantala1984
314668The Acrobat - Buddhist Tales1984
315805The Golden Sand1984
316767The Parijata Tree1984
317NAAnnapati Suyya1984
318671The Cowherd of Alawi1984
319669Ashwinis to the rescue1984
320NAChandrapeeda1984
321807The Green Demon1984
322730Shrenik - Jain Tales1984
323648Samudra Gupta1984
324695Nahusha1984
325699Jagadis Chandra Bose1985
326NATales of Avvaiyar1985
327745Tapati1985
328NARajbala1985
329BSMahabharata 1: Veda Vyasa1985
330754Vidyut Chora1985
331BSMahabharata 2: Bheeshma's Vow1985
332587Birbal the Genius1985
333BSMahabharata 3: The Advent of the Kuru Princes1985
334675Mangal Pandey1985
335BSMahabharata 4: The Pandavas at Hastinapura1985
336710The Fearless Boy1985
337BSMahabharata 5: Enter Drona1985
338690The Legend Of Lalitaditya1985
339BSMahabharata 6: Enter Karna1985
340BSThe Making of a Swordsman1985
341BSMahabharata 7: The Conspiracy1985
342625Battle of Wits1985
343BSMahabharata 8: The Escape1985
344728Deshbandhu Chittaranjan Das1985
345BSMahabharata 9: The Birth of Ghatotkacha1985
346813Maarthaanda Varma1985
347BSMahabharata 10: The Pandavas at Ekachakra1985
348SIThe March to Freedom - 1: The Birth of the Indian National Congress1986
349BSMahabharata 11: Enter Draupadi1986
350NAGuru Ravidas1986
351BSMahabharata 12: Draupadi's Swayamvara1986
352821The Adventures of Pratapan1986
353BSMahabharata 13: The Pandavas Recalled to Hastinapura1986
354747Sea Route to India1986
355BSMahabharata 14: Arjuna's 12-Year-Long Exile1986
356786The March to Freedom - 2: A Nation Awakes1986
357BSMahabharata 15: A Hall of Yudhishthira1986
358704Jallianwala Bagh1986
359BSMahabharata 16: The Pandavas Conquer the World1986
360SIThe March to Freedom - 3: The Saga of Indian Revolutionaries1986
361BSMahabharata 17: Yudhishthira's Rajsooya Yajna1986
362672The Priceless Gem1986
363BSMahabharata 18: Indraprastha Lost1986
364NAKhudiram Bose1986
365BSMahabharata 19: The Pandavas in the Forest1986
366BSPatali Putra1986
367BSMahabharata 20: Arjuna's Quest for Weapons1986
368NAThe Nawab's Diwan1986
369BSMahabharata 21: Arjuna in Indraloka1986
370NARaja Desing1986
371BSMahabharata 22: The Reunion1986
372583Panchatantra-The Greedy Mother in Law & Other Tales1987
373BSMahabharata 23: Duryodhana Humbled1987
374BSHamsavali1987
375BSMahabharata 24: The Twelfth Year1987
376NALila & Chanesar1987
377BSMahabharata 25: The Pandavas at Virata's Place1987
378BSShringabuja1987
379BSMahabharata 26: Panic in the Kaurava Camp1987
380NAPadmavati1987
381BSMahabharata 27: Sanjaya's Mission1987
382733Ghanshyam Das Birla1987
383BSMahabharata 28: Duryodhana Refuses to Yield1987
384722Megasthenes1987
385BSMahabharata 29: Krishna's Peace Mission1987
386680Fa Hien1987
387BSMahabharata 30: The War Begins1987
388NASundarsena1987
389BSMahabharata 31: Bheeshma in Command1987
390691Hiuen Tsang1987
391BSMahabharata 32: The Fall of Bheeshma1987
392649Tales from the Upanishads1987
393BSMahabharata 33: Drona's Vow1987
394NAPulakeshi II1987
395BSMahabharata 34: The Slaying of Abhimanyu1987
396731Ellora Caves1988
397BSMahabharata 35: Arjuna Fulfils His Vow1988
398793Chennamma of Keladi1988
399BSMahabharata 36: The Battle at Midnight1988
400665The Deadly Feast1988
401660Ajatashatru1988
402BSMahabharata 37: Karna in Command1988
403792Narayana Guru1988
404BSMahabharata 38: The Kurus Routed1988
405819Prince Jivaka1988
406BSMahabharata 39: After the War1988
407BSKohinoor1988
408BSMahabharata 40: Yudhishthira's Coronation1988
409BSMahabharata 41: The Ashwamedha Yajna1989
410780Kanwal and Kehar - A Legend of Rajasthan1989
411BSMahabharata 42: The Celestial Reunion1989
412756Roopmati1989
413BSBhagawat Purana 1: Krishna - The Darling of Gokul1989
414650Mahatma Gandhi - The Early Days1989
415BSBhagawat Purana 2: Krishna - The Subduer of Kaliya1989
416BSMahatma Gandhi - The Father of the Nation1989
417BSBhagawat Purana 3: Krishna - The Upholder of Govardhan1989
418476The French Revolution1989
419BSBhagawat Purana 4: Krishna - Victory over Kamsa1989
420580Birbal the Inimitable1989
421BSBhagawat Purana 5: Krishna - The Lord of Dwaraka1990
422NALouis Pasteur1990
423BSBhagawat Purana 6: Krishna - The Enchanter1990
424806The Clever Dancer1990
425BSBhagawat Purana 7: Krishna - The Victorious1990
426614Jataka Tales - True Friends1990
427BSBhagawat Purana 8: Krishna - An Ally of the Pandavas1990
428NANapoleon Bonaparte1990
429BSBhagawat Purana 9: Krishna - The Saviour1990
430SIAn Exciting Find1990
431615Jataka Tales: Stories of Courage1990
432SIThe Indus Valley Adventure1990
433602The Quick Witted Birbal1991
434BSThe Chosen Bridegroom1991
435778Pierre & Marie Curie1991
436700Jawaharlal Nehru1991
NA679Swami Pranavananda1998
NA732Swami Chinmayananda2001
NA735JRD Tata2004
NA736Kalpana Chawla2005
NA737Jamsetji Tata2005
NA800Mother Teresa2010
NA825Surjya Sen2010
NA826Heroes of Hampi2011
NA827Tales of Indra2011
NA828Tirupati2011
NA829Vaishno Devi2011
NA830Ganesha And The Moon2011
NA831Tenzing Norgay2011
NA832Stories Of Creation2011
NA833Konark2012
NA834Anant Pai2012
NA835Salim Ali2012
NA836Thanjavur2012
NA837The Blue Umbrella2012
NA838Jim Corbett2012
NA839Kubera2012
NA840Saraswati2012
NA841M S Subbulakshmi2012
NA842Srinivasa Ramanujan2012
NA843The Unhappy Tiger2013
NA844Amba2013
NA845Verghese Kurien2013
NA846Two Oxen2014

Key

  • NA denotes that the comic is Not Available in that series.
  • BS denotes that the comic has been published as part of a Bounded Set ( 3 in 1 (or) 5 in 1)[3][4]
  • BS' denotes that the comic has been published as part of a Bounded Set ( Coffee Table Books )[5]
  • SI denotes that the comic has appeared as part of a Special Issue/Bumper Issue which was a compilation of multiple issues together[6]
  • Issue 801 was originally Tales Of Ganesha and was later released as 830 Ganesha and the Moon.[2]
  • Issue 418 wasn't reprinted but released online as issue 476.

List of Amar Chitra Katha Special Issues[edit]

New Series NumberTitleYear Of PublicationNotes
10001Valmiki's Ramayana1978No individual equivalent
10002Dasha Avatar1978No individual equivalent
10003Jesus Christ1980No individual equivalent
10004Tales from the Panchatantra
10005Tales from the Jatakas
10006Tales of Hanuman--Hanuman, Hanuman to the Rescue, Bheema and Hanuman
10007Tales of Birbal
10008More Tales of Birbal--Birbal the Genius, Birbal the Witty, Birbal the Just
10009Tales of Krishna
10010Great Plays of Kalidasa--Urvashi, Shakuntala, Meghdoota
10011Great Sanskrit Plays--Ratnavali, Udyana, Vasantsena
10012Great Indian Emperors--Ashoka, Samudra Gupta, Harsha
10013Vishnu the Saviour--Dhruva and Ashtavakra, Tales of Vishnu, Tales of Narada
10014Ranas of Mewar--Rana Kumbha, Rana Pratap, Rana Sangha
10015Tales from the Hitopadesha
10016Matchless Wits
10017More Tales from the Jataka--Deadly Feast, Hidden Treasure, Battle of Wits
10018Adventures of Krishna--Krishna and Narakasura, Krishna and Jarasandha, Krishna and the False Vaasudeva
10019Tales of the Mother Goddess
10020Vishnu to the Rescue
10021More tales from the Panchatantra
10022Buddhist Tales
10023More Buddhist Tales
10024The Sons of Shiva--Ayyapan, Ganesha, Kartikeya
10025Tales told by Sri Ramakrishna
10026Further tales from the Jatakas
10027The Sons of the Pandavas--Abhimanyu, Ghatotkach, Uloopi
10028Bengali Classics--Anand Math, Devi Choudhurani, Kapala Kundala
10029The Three Gurus--Guru Nanak,Guru Tegh Bahadur, Guru Gobind Singh
10030Funny Folk Tales
10031Yet more tales from the Jatakas
10032The Great Hindi Poets--Tulsidas, Soordas, Mirabai
10033Shivaji the Great Maratha--Shivaji, Tales of Shivaji, Tanaji
10034Tales of Love and Devotion
10035Travellers of India--Megasthenes, Fa Hien, Hiuen Tsang
10036Tales of Devotion
10037Architects of Modern India--Jamsetji Tata, GD Birla, JRD Tata
10038Heroes to be remembered--Paurava and Alexander, Baladitya and Yashodharma, Hemu
10039Animal Tales of India
10040Maratha Bravehearts--Sambhaji, Baji Rao 1, Ahilyabai Holkar
10041Valiant Sikhs--Ranjit Singh, Hari Singh Nalwa, Bidhi Chand
10042Tales from the desert--Hothal, Dhola and Maru, Kanwal and Kehar
10043Famous Scientists
10044The Prophecy and Other Stories
10045The green demon and other stories--The green demon, The secret of the talking bird, The mystery of the missing gifts
10046Tales of Valour--Satwant Kaur, Sundari, Sharan Kaur
10047Tales from Bengal
10048Famous Queens--Rani Abbaka, Shantala, Chand Bibi
10049Young Revolutionaries--Surja Sen, Bhagat Singh, Bagh Jatin
10050The Mughal Court--Noor Jahan, Kohinoor, Dara Shikoh and Aurangzeb
10051Tales from the Puranas
10052Stories in Stone--Elephanta, Ellora Caves, The Historic City of Delhi
10053Champions of Change--Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar, Babasaheb Ambedkar, Rabindranath Tagore
10057Poet Saints of India--Tukaram, Tyagraja, Narsinh Mehta
Special IssueMahabharata1989Consists Of Mahabharata#1 to Mahabharata#42
Special IssueBhagawat - The Krishna Avatar2000Consists of 9 odd number issues from #413 to #429
Special IssueTulsidas's Ramayana2007Consists of 5 individual comics not published separately
Special IssueMahatma Gandhi2009Consists of 2 issues #414 & #416
Special IssueDevotees and Demons-I201011 issues: Hanuman, Ghatotkacha, Garuda, Sudama, The Lord Of Lanka, Jagannatha Of Puri, Mahiravana, Kaccha And Devyani, Vishwamitra, Dhruva And Ashtavakra, Tripura
Special IssueGods and Goddesses201022 issues: Shiva, Vishnu, Durga, Ganesha, Rama, Krishna, Indra, Ashwini Kumars...
Special IssueGreat Indian Classic2010Consists of 20 issues: Shakuntala / Malavika / Urvashi / Udayana / Ratnavali / Vasantasena / Nagananda / Bankim Chandra / Devi Choudhurani / Ananda Math / Raj Singh / Kapala Kundala / Kannagi / Manonmani / Prince Jivaka / Kumanan / Satwant Kaur / Veer Dhaval / The Elusive Kaka / The Taming of Gulla / The Legend of Marthanda Varma
Special IssueThe Indus Valley Adventure2012Consists of 2 issues #430 & #432
Bumper Issue 010The Story Of The Freedom Struggle1997 & 2012 ( New Reprint)Compilation of issues #348, #356 and #360
Special IssueDhyan Chand2013No individual equivalent
Vol. 1The Ramayana - Bala Kand2013No individual equivalent
-Divine Beings2014No individual equivalent;

Jatayu

Nandi

Shyama and Sabala

Airavata

Gandaberunda and Sharabha ;

Stories from Shiva Purana, Vishnu Purana, Gajashastra, the Brahmanas and also from folklore.

Vol. 2The Ramayana - Ayodhya Kand Part I2014No individual equivalent
-Param Vir Chakra2015No individual equivalent

The Param Vir Chakra is the most important military award in India. Since its institution on 26 January 1950, it has been awarded to 21 bravehearts of the Indian Armed Forces.

Major Somnath War (Indo-Pak War) 1947-48

Lance Naik Karam Singh (Indo-Pak War) 1947-48

Second Lieutenant Rama Raghoba Rane (Indo-Pak War) 1947-1948

Naik Yadunath Singh (Indo-Pak War) 1947-48

Company Havildar Major Piru Singh Shekhawat (Indo-Pak War) 1947-48

Captain Gurbachan Singh Salaria (Congo Crisis) 1960-65

Major Dhan Singh Thapa (Sino-Indian War) 1962

Subedar Joginder Singh (Sino-Indian War) 1962

Major Shaitan Singh (Sino-Indian War) 1962

Company Quarter Master Havildar Abdul Hamid (Indo-Pak War) 1965

Lieutenant Colonel Ardeshir Burzorji Tarapore (Indo-Pak War) 1965

Lance Naik Albert Ekka (Bangladesh Liberation War) 1971

Flying Officer Nirmaljit Singh Sekhon (Bangladesh Liberation War) 1971

Second Lieutenant Arun Khetarpal (Bangladesh Liberation War) 1971

Major Hoshiar Singh (Bangladesh Liberation War) 1971

Naib Subedar Bana Singh (Siachen Conflict)

Major Ramaswamy Parameswaran (Operation Pawan) 1987

Captain Manoj Kumar Pandey (Kargil War) 1999

Grenadier Yogendra Singh Yadav (Kargil War) 1999

Rifleman Sanjay Kumar (Kargil War) 1999

Captain Vikram Batra (Kargil War) 1999

-Leave it to Birbal2016No individual equivalent
Vol. 3The Ramayana - Ayodhya Kand Part II2016No individual equivalent
-Swachh Bharat2016No individual equivalent
-Saptarshi - The Seven Supreme Sages2016No individual equivalent.

The Seven Sages are:

Atri and Anasuya

Vasishtha and Arundhato

Kashyapa

Vishwamitra

Gautama and Ahalya

Jamadagni and Renuka

Bharadwaja

-Valmiki’s Ramayana - The Box Set20176 volume set of 960 pages. No individual equivalent

The 6 Volumes are titled:

Bala Kand

Ayodhya Kand

Aranya Kand

Kishkinda Kand

Sundara Kand

Yuddha Kand

Special IssueSardar Patel2017No individual equivalent
Special IssueAPJ Abdul Kalam2018No individual equivalent
Special IssueBharat Ke Veer - Alive in our Hearts2018No individual equivalent
Special IssueShakti - Tales of the Mother Goddess2018No individual equivalent
Special IssueLegend and Lore - Regional Folktales of India2019No individual equivalent

List of Amar Chitra Katha Issues #1 to #10[edit]

Amar Chitra Katha issues ranging from #1 to #10 were reproductions of western fairy tales. They were never published in English but were published in Kannada first and then the following Indian languages-Hindi, Marathi, Gujarati, Bengali, Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam

Series NumberTitleYear Of Publication
1Jack & The Bean Stalk1967
2Cinderella1967
3Little Red Riding Hood1967
4Aladdin & His Lamp1967
5The Magic Fountain1967
6The Three Little Pigs1967
7The Sleeping Beauty1967
8The Wizard of Oz1967
9Pinocchio1967
10Snow White & Seven Dwarfs1967

References[edit]

  1. ^ ab'Amar Chitra Katha Title List'. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
  2. ^ ab'ACK Blog List'. Archived from the original on 6 May 2012. Retrieved 30 January 2012.
  3. ^ ab'ACK 3 in 1 & Special Issues'. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
  4. ^ ab'ACK 5 in 1'. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
  5. ^'Great Indian Classics'. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
  6. ^'March to Freedom Series'. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
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