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Bhatts are recognized for their expertise in religious texts and rituals. Variations like "Bhatt" or "Bhaṭṭa" may also appear, but they generally point to the same cultural context. Sometimes people also spell Bhatta as Bhat, leading to confusion. [4]
On the basis of Bana Bhatta's description, some rational speculations about Mayur Bhatta can be made. In the Harshacharita, Banabhatta's describes himself as Vatsyayana Gotriya and Bhrigu vanshi who used to reside in a village called Pritikuta. He was a Shakadwipiya Brahmana (Mag or Bhojaka). He has also describes his childhood in the ...
Kādambarī is a romantic novel in Sanskrit.It was substantially composed by Bāṇabhaṭṭa in the first half of the 7th century CE, who did not survive to see it through completion.
Motiram Bhatta (Nepali: मोतीराम भट्ट; 1866–1896) (1923–1953 BS) was a Nepalese poet, singer, essayist, publisher, literary critic and biographer. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] He is considered the first biographer and literary critic of Nepali literature and is credited for starting the first private printing press in Nepal in c. 1888 ...
Somayaji has further stated that he was a Bhatta belonging to the Gargya gotra and was a follower of Asvalayana-sutra of Rigveda. References in his own Laghuramayana indicate that Nilakantha Somayaji was a member of the Kelallur family (Sanskritised as Kerala-sad-grama) residing at Kundagrama, now known as Trikkandiyur in modern Tirur, Kerala ...
In Chaitanya Charitamrita 2.9.108-124 [1] and further on Chaitanya talks about Krishna's supremacy in a joking mood with Venkatta Bhatta. [2] Also notable for being the father of Gopala Bhatta . When Chaitanya traveled through South India in 1509–10, he stayed at his house of at Srirangam . [ 2 ]
Bhanubhakta Acharya (Nepali: भानुभक्त आचार्य) (1814—1868 CE) (1871—1925 BS) was a Nepali writer, poet, and translator.He is widely regarded as the oldest poet in the Nepali language, for which he was conferred with the title of "Aadikabi": literally, "the first poet".
The word "Bhat" (Sanskrit: भट्ट, IAST: Bhaṭṭa) means "scholar" in Sanskrit.[2] [3] While the original shortened rendition of "Bhatta" was "Bhat" or "Bhatt," [4] many of the Kashmiri Brahmin and Kashmiri Muslim migrants to the Punjab region started spelling their surname as "Butt", which is the transliteration of the name when written using the Urdu/Persian alphabet (as opposed to ...