File:Krishna Splits the Double Arjuna Tree.jpg

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Summary

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English: As a child, Krishna was tied to a mortar by Yashoda for stealing freshly churned butter. Nearby was a twin-trunked tree, where a sage had imprisoned two arrogant, drunken sons of Kubera-the god of riches. Krishna rolls the mortar between the trunks and releases the youths.
Date circa 1720
date QS:P,+1720-00-00T00:00:00Z/9,P1480,Q5727902
Source Philadelphia Art Museum 1994-148-470
Author Anonymous, India, Gujarat, probably Surat
Permission
(Reusing this file)
Public domain
This work is in the public domain in India because its term of copyright has expired.

The Indian Copyright Act applies in India to works first published in India. According to the Indian Copyright Act, 1957, as amended up to Act No. 27 of 2012 (Chapter V, Section 25):

  • Anonymous works, photographs, cinematographic works, sound recordings, government works, and works of corporate authorship or of international organizations enter the public domain 60 years after the date on which they were first published, counted from the beginning of the following calendar year (i.e. as of 2024, works published prior to 1 January 1964 are considered public domain).
  • Posthumous works (other than those above) enter the public domain after 60 years from publication date, counted from the beginning of the following calendar year.
  • Any kind of work other than the above enters the public domain 60 years after the author's death (or in the case of a multi-author work, the death of the last surviving author), counted from the beginning of the following calendar year.
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The Indian Copyright Act, 1957 is not retroactive, so any work in which copyright did not subsist when it commenced did not have its copyright restored, and is in the public domain per the Copyright Act 1911.

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current17:17, 16 October 2009Thumbnail for version as of 17:17, 16 October 20091,300 × 1,500 (439 KB)TheMandarin{{Information |Description={{en|1=As a child, Krishna was tied to a mortar by Yashoda for stealing freshly churned butter. Nearby was a twin-trunked tree, where a sage had improsoned two arrogant, drunken sons of Kubera-the god of riches. Krishna rolls th

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