-
Suktimuktavali (IAST:
Sūktimuktāvalī, 1257 CE) is an
anthology of Sanskrit-language
verses composed in the
Seuna (Yadava)
kingdom of present-day India...
- sources. A
verse attributed to the 10th
century poet
Rajashekhara in
Suktimuktavali praises two
writers -
Ramila and
Somila - for
jointly composing a novel...
-
Mugdhopadesa (not to be
confused with
Jalhana who
commissioned the
Suktimuktavali) Sarangadeva, c. 13th century. A musicologist, he
wrote Sangita Ratnakara...
-
Shridaradasa 1205
Consists of 2380
verses of 485
poets mainly from
Bengal 6
Suktimuktavali Jalhana 13th
century Jalhana was a
minister of the
Seuna (Yadava) king...
-
Other Sanskrit literary works created during the
Seuna period include:
Suktimuktavali by
Jalhana Hammiramadhana by
Jayasimha Suri[citation needed] Karnakutuhala...
-
Paddhati and Jalhana's
Suktimuktavali. Marula's
verses are
included in
Sanskrit anthologies such as Jalhana's
Suktimuktavali (13th century) and Sharngadhara's...
- were not enough, the
creator made
another ocean, the poet Ratnākara. —
Sūktimuktāvalī 4.77,
translated by
David Smith Sharma 1990, p. 1;
Pasedach 2017, p...
- Vijjāka or Vijjikā. A verse,
attributed to
Rajashekhara in Jalhana's
Suktimuktavali, states: That Vijayanka, the
Karnata woman,
conquers like Sarasvati...
- were not enough, the
creator made
another ocean, the poet Ratnākara. —
Sūktimuktāvalī 4.77,
translated by
David Smith Durgaprasad and
Parab cite a contemporary...
- Vijaya-Bhattarika. A verse,
attributed to
Rajashekhara in Jalhana's
Suktimuktavali,
compares Vijayanka to Sarasvati, the
goddess of
wisdom and learning...