[3][4][5] Blended with folklore and history, the poem is about the marriage of Ratnasimha and Sinhala and the ever-beautiful princess Padmavati of Chittor.
The Bengali version of the account focuses more on the topic of secular love and less on Sufism, unlike the original.
[6] According to this text, Padmini (Padmavati) handed over the responsibility of her two sons to the Sultan, Alauddin before her death by committing jauhar.
[7] According to Alaol, the people of Roshang wanted to hear the story of Padmavati, which was performed in the Chief Minister, Magan Thakur's assembly.
[8][9][10][failed verification][11][page needed] It inspired a number of novels, plays and poems in 19th-century Bengali literature.