- Sahasanka") is a Sanskrit-language epic poem
written by the
Paramara court poet
Padmagupta, who
lived in 10th-11th century. It is
fantasy re-telling of the exploits...
-
clans now
known as the Rajputs, the
legend might have been
invented by
Padmagupta, a 10th-century
court poet of the
Paramara dynasty. His Nava-sahasanka-charita...
-
legend was
probably invented by the 10th-century
Paramara court poet
Padmagupta,
whose Nava-sahasanka-charita
mentions only the
Paramaras as fire-born...
- from Nava-sahasanka-charita, an
eulogistic composition by his
court poet
Padmagupta. The work is a
fusion of
history and mythology.
Sindhuraja succeeded his...
-
earliest known source to
mention this
story is the Nava-sahasanka-charita of
Padmagupta Parimala, who was a court-poet of the
Paramara king
Sindhuraja (c. 997–1010)...
-
literary figures known by the name "Kālidāsa":
Parimala Kālidāsa
alias Padmagupta (author of Navasāhasāṅka Carita), Kālidāsa
alias Yamakakavi (author of...
-
epigraphic evidence indicate that
Bhoja succeeded his
father Sindhuraja.
Padmagupta, the
court poet of
Sindhuraja and Bhoja, also
supports this fact. According...
-
Vidyadhara king Shikhandaketu,
mentioned in the Nava-sahasanka-charita of
Padmagupta; this king sent his son
Shashikhanda to
render help to the
Paramara king...
-
resulted from the Chahamana-Paramara conflict. The
Paramara court poet
Padmagupta states that the
Munja "caused the
pearls in the
necklaces worn by the...
- Ubhaya-Chakravarthi (imperial poet in two languages) from
Rashtrakuta king
Krishna III.
Padmagupta Parimala was a
Paramama court poet. In the mid-11th century,
Nannaya was...