Lost works •
Kāmashāstra of
Nandi or Nandikeshvara. (1000) •
Vātsyāyanasūtrasara, by
Kshemendra: eleventh-century commentary on the
Kama Sutra. Chapters •
Kāmashāstra, by Auddalaki Shvetaketu (500 chapters). •
Kāmashāstra or
Bābhravyakārikā. •
Kāmashāstra, by Chārāyana. •
Kāmashāstra, by Gonikāputra. •
Kāmashāstra, by Dattaka. •
Kāmashāstra or
Ratinirnaya, by Suvarnanāb. •
Kama Sutra, by
Vatsayana. •
Jayamangala or
Jayamangla, by
Yashodhara: important commentary on the
Kama Sutra. •
Jaya, by Devadatta Shāstrī: a twentieth-century Hindi commentary on the
Kama Sutra. •
Sūtravritti, by Naringha Shastri: eighteenth-century commentary on the
Kama Sutra. Medieval and modern texts Texts up to 10th century CE •
Kuchopanisad, by Kuchumara (tenth century). •
Kuttanimata, by the eighth-century Kashmiri poet Damodaragupta (Dāmodaragupta's
Kuṭṭanīmata, though often included in lists of this sort, is really a novel written in Sanskrit verse, in which an aged
bawd [
kuṭṭanī] named Vikarālā gives advice to a young, beautiful, but as yet unsuccessful courtesan of Benares; most of the advice comes in the form of two long moral tales, one about a heartless and therefore successful courtesan, Mañjarī, and the other about a tender-hearted and therefore foolish girl, Hāralatā, who makes the mistake of falling in love with a client and eventually dies of a broken heart.) •
Mānasollāsa or
Abhilashitartha Chintāmani by King Someshvara or Somadeva III of the Chālukya dynasty by Kalyāni. A part of this encyclopedia, the
Yoshidupabhoga, is devoted to the Kāma-shastra. (Manasolasa or Abhilashitachintamani).
Texts post 11th century CE •
Anangaranga, by Kalyanmalla; 15th-16th century text. •
Kāmasamuha, by Ananta (fifteenth century). •
Nagarasarvasva or
Nagarsarvasva, by Bhikshu Padmashrī, a tenth- or eleventh-century Buddhist. •
Panchashāyaka,
Panchasakya, or
Panchsayaka, by Jyotirīshvara Kavishekhara (fourteenth century). •
Ratirahasya, by Kokkoka; 11th-12th century CE text. •
Janavashya by Kallarasa: based on Kakkoka's
Ratirahasya. •
Ratiratnapradīpika, by Praudha Devarāja, fifteenth-century
Maharaja of
Vijayanagara. •
Samayamatrka, a satire by the 11th century poet
Ksemendra.
Others •
Dattakasūtra, by King Mādhava II of the Ganga dynasty of
Mysore. •
Kandarpacudamani •
Kuchopanishad or
Kuchumāra Tantra, by Kuchumāra. •
Rasamanjari or
Rasmanjari, by the poet
Bhānudatta. •
Ratikallolini, by Dikshita Samaraja. •
Smaradīpika, by Minanatha. •
Ratimanjari, by the poet
Jayadeva: a synthesis of the
Smaradīpika by Minanatha. •
Shrngaradipika, by Harihar. •
Shringararasaprabandhadīpika, by Kumara Harihara. •
Smarapradīpika or
Smara Pradipa, by Gunākara (son of Vachaspati). == Kāma-shastra and kāvya poetry ==