Navaratnas
Nauratan/Navaratnas (
Vikramaditya ruled from Ujjain. According to folk tradition, his court had 9 famous scholars. The earliest source that mentions this legend is Jyotirvid-abharana (22.10), a treatise attributed to Kalidasa. According to this text, the following 9 scholars (including Kalidasa himself) attended Vikramaditya's court:[1]
- Amarasimha
- Dhanvantari
- Ghatkharpar
- Kalidasa
- Kshapanaka (astrologer)
- Shanku
- Varahamihira
- Vararuchi
- Vetala-Bhatta
Another popular tradition mentions the astronomer Brahmagupta and the magician Vaitalik, instead of Ghatkharpar and Vetala-Bhatta, among the nine scholars.[2]
However, Jyotirvid-abharana is a literary forgery of a date later than Kalidasa,[1] and was probably attributed to Kalidasa to popularize it.[3] V. V. Mirashi dates the work to 12th century, and points out that it could not have been composed by Kalidasa, because it contains grammatical faults.[4] Other scholars have variously dated the text to the 13th century (Sudhakara Dvivedi), 16th century (A.B. Keith), and 18th century (H. Kern).[3]
There is no mention of such "Navaratnas" in earlier literature.
There is no historical evidence to show that these nine scholars were contemporary figures or proteges of the same king.
Kalidasa is the only figure whose association with Vikramaditya is mentioned in works earlier than Jyotirvidabharana. Rajasekhara's Kāvyamimāṃsa (10th century), Bhoja's Sringara Prakasa (11th century) and Kshemendra's Auchitya-Vichara-Charcha (11th century) mention that Vikramaditya sent Kalidasa as his ambassador to the Kuntala country (identified with present-day Uttara Kannada). The historicity of these legends is doubtful.[5]
Akbar's Nauratan
According to popular tradition, the court of the Mughal ruler Akbar had nine intellectuals called the Navaratnas or the nine gems. As in Vikramaditya's case, this tradition has no historical basis. According to historian G.S. Sardesai, Hindu pandits in the court of Shah Jahan or Dara Shikoh - Jagannathrai or Kavindracharya - may have started this tradition.[2]
Since this tradition is historically inaccurate, the names of the nine gems varies between sources. Some of the names included in various lists include:[2][7]
- Abu'l-Fazl ibn Mubarak
- Faizi
- Todar Mal
- Man Singh I
- Raja Birbal
- Mulla Do-Pyaza (often depicted as mythical)
- Tansen
- Hakim Humam
- Bairam Khan
- ʽAbd al-Qadir Badayuni
- Abdul Rahim Khan-i-Khanan
For example, a painting kept at the Lala Sri Ramdas Library (Delhi) in the 1940s depicts the following people as the nine gems: Abdul Rahim, Todar Mal, Man Singh, Birbal, Miyan Kokultash, Hakim Humam, Abul Hasan, Abu'l-Fazl, and Faizi.[7]
Raja Krishnachandra's Nabaratnas
Similar groups
Many famous emperors in India had courtiers labeled in similar ways. For example, the valuable members of the court of
References
- ^ ISBN 9788120802841.
- ^ a b c G.S. Sardesai (1943). Ramananda Chatterjee; Kedar Nath Chatterji (eds.). "The Nine Gems of Akbar's Court". The Modern Review. 74 (1–6): 129–133.
- ^ OCLC 28644897.
- ^ ISBN 978-81-7154-468-4.
- ^ ISBN 978-8121503488. Archived from the originalon 17 June 2016.
- ISBN 978-81-208-0824-9.
- ^ a b Makhanlal Roychoudhury (1941). The Din-I-Ilahi or The Religion of Akbar. University of Calcutta. p. 137.
- ^ "www.historyofbengal.com: Shivniwas". www.historyofbengal.com. Retrieved 11 April 2016.
- ISBN 0-226-75691-2. pp. 314-318.
- ISBN 81-7215-025-3, pp.424-32
- ^ Harding 1998 , p.220
- ^ a b c d e f "kotha to bolar jonyei (কথা তো বলার জন্যেই): নবরত্ন -- সুস্মিতা". kotha to bolar jonyei (কথা তো বলার জন্যেই). 1 May 2017. Retrieved 5 April 2022.
- ^ "The Five Jewels of Laxmana Sena" (PDF). Orissa Review. Retrieved 19 September 2023.