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सूरदास
1478–1583 CE (traditional) · Sihi village near Delhi; Vraja
Tradition: Krishna-bhakti; Pushti Marga
Bhakti through the imagery of Krishna's childhood and youth; vatsalya-rasa and madhurya-rasa.
Blind from birth (per tradition); met Vallabhacharya at Vrindavan and was accepted as a Pushti Marga ashtachhap (eight seal-poets); lived at Parasoli near Govardhan.
Most influential Hindi poet of the bhakti era; brought Krishna's lila to common Hindi-speaking devotees through padas (devotional songs).
Surdas stands within the lineage of Krishna-bhakti; Pushti Marga. Understanding a saint requires understanding the school of thought, the lineage of teachers, and the historical context that shaped them. The Krishna-bhakti; Pushti Marga tradition has shaped Hindu spiritual life through its philosophical foundations, its liturgy, its scriptures, and the institutions its founding ācāryas built and sustained across generations.
Saints in this tradition are not abstract figures from history — they are the living chain through which the tradition transmits itself. To read Surdas correctly is to read both the writings (where they survive) and the institutions they founded, the disciples they taught, and the practices they reinterpreted. Where written works are listed above, they remain the primary source for studying their thought; for the practical transmission, one studies under a teacher of the same lineage.
The dates and biographical details preserved in tradition often differ from those accepted by modern academic historians. Where the difference matters for interpretation, both views are noted; otherwise the traditional account is given with sources cited.
Awaiting scholar verification. If you spot a factual error in dates, lineage, or teaching, please write to us.