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Hinduism - Who Are The Ashtachap Surdas?



The “eight seals” or Ashtachap Surdas, Krishnadas, Parmananddas, Kumbhadas, Nanddas, Chaturbhujdas, Chitswami, and Govindswami are a set of eight northern Indian bhakti (devotional) poets


  • All eight of these poets are identified as members of the Pushti Marg and companions of the Pushti Marg's early leaders in the sectarian literature of the Pushti Marg, a Vaishnava group whose members are devotees (bhakta) of Krishna
  • Surdas, Krishnadas, Parmananddas, and Kumbhadas are linked to Vallabhacharya (1479–1531), the Pushti Marg's founder; Nanddas, Chaturbhujdas, Chitswami, and Govindswami are linked to Vallabhacharya's son and successor, Vitthalnath (r. 1566–1585). 
  • For several of the poets, evidence of their membership can be discovered in their poetry, which supports this claim; but, for Surdas, this claim seems extremely improbable.


~Kiran Atma


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References And Further Reading:


  1. Rao, V., 1998. Seeing Radha/Being Radha: Singing Ashta Chap Poetry and Thumri. Studies in Humanities and Social Sciences5(2), pp.151-169.
  2. Kamalnath, A., A comparative study of bhakthi literature of Ashtachap poets in Hindi and Daskoot poets in Kannada from the 16th to the 18th century.
  3. Rao, V., 2003. Seeing Radha, Being Radha: Singing Ashta Chap Poetry and Thumri. Re-searching Indian Women, p.37.
  4. Vemsani, L., 2016. Krishna in History, Thought, and Culture: An Encyclopedia of the Hindu Lord of Many Names: An Encyclopedia of the Hindu Lord of Many Names. ABC-CLIO.
  5. Bury, H., 2006. Geographies, histories, boundaries: The formation of a regional cultural idiom in colonial North India. University of London, School of Oriental and African Studies (United Kingdom).
  6. Dwyer, R., 2004. The Swaminarayan Movement. In South Asians in the Diaspora (pp. 180-199). Brill.
  7. Jaina, S., 1990. Ashṭachāpa kāvya kī antarkathāoṃ kā adhyayana. Rādhā Pablikeśansa.
  8. Manhas, L., 2016. Contribution of Shri Harirayji in the Growth of Bhakti Sangeet (Doctoral dissertation, Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda (India)).
  9. Ramaswamy, V. ed., 2003. Re-searching Indian Women. Manohar Publishers.
  10. Ambalal, A., Krishna, K., Bachrach, E., Lyons, T. and Shah, A., 2015. Gates of the Lord: the tradition of Krishna paintings. Yale University Press.
  11. Sathe, P., 2017. The Traditional Legacy Of Jaipur Gharana–Kathak (Doctoral dissertation, Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda (India)).
  12. Sircar, J., KRISHNA'S LONG JOURNEY.
  13. Packert, C., 2010. The art of loving Krishna: ornamentation and devotion. Indiana University Press.
  14. Gokhale, N. and Lal, M. eds., 2018. Finding Radha: The Quest for Love. Penguin Random House India Private Limited.
  15. Beck, G.L., 2012. Sonic liturgy: Ritual and music in Hindu tradition. Univ of South Carolina Press.