[5] He was the court poet of King Harisimhadeva of the Karnat dynasty of Mithila (r.
This work provides valuable information about the life and culture of medieval India.
An incomplete list of 84 Siddhas is found in the text, which consists only 76 names.
[8] His major Sanskrit play, the Dhūrta Samāgama (The Meeting of the Knaves) (1320) is a two act Prahasana (comedy).
The play relates the contest between a religious mendicant Viśvanagara and his disciple Durācāra over a lovely courtesan Anaṅgasenā whom the Brahmin arbitrator Asajjātimiśra keeps for himself.