| Somadeva Bhatta | |
|---|---|
| Born | Kashmir, India |
| Occupation | Poet, writer |
| Language | Sanskrit |
| Period | 11th century CE |
| Notable works | Kathasaritasagara |
Somadeva, also known as Somadeva Bhatta, was an 11th century writer from Kashmir. He is best known for his work Kathasaritsagara.1
Somadeva is believed to have lived in Kashmir, a region in the northwestern part of the Indian subcontinent, during the 11th century CE. He was a Shaivite Brahmin scholar and a court poet, serving in the court of King Ananta of Kashmir.1 Somadeva's most famous work, "Katha Sarit Sagara," is a vast compilation of stories and folktales drawn from various sources, including earlier Indian texts, oral traditions, and the literary heritage of Kashmir.2 The work is divided into 18 books (or lambakas), each containing a series of interconnected stories within a larger narrative framework. Most of his work was composed under Ananta's patronage and were composed for Ananta's queen, Suryamati, a princess of Jalandhara.
References
References
- Tawney, Charles (1880). The Kathá Sarit Ságara; or, Ocean of the Streams of Story. Baptist Mission Press.
- "Unparalleled civilizational contributions from Kashmir". Daily Excelsior.
- The Katha Sarit Sagara, or Ocean of the Streams of Story, Translated by C.H.Tawney, 1880
External links
External links
- Works by Somadeva Bhatta at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Somadeva Bhatta at the Internet Archive
- Works by Somadeva at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)

- Somadeva Bhaṭṭa at the Library of Congress, with 43 library catalogue records