Dr. Sheikh JALAL

Pampore

Sunday, February 22, 2026

Beyond the Legend: Did Saffron Bloom in Kashmir 2,000 Years Ago?

Did Saffron Bloom in Kashmir 2,000 Years Ago?
Before 1300 AD, saffron was already a deeply established part of Kashmiri life, appearing in both ancient literature and religious records. While local folklore often credits Sufi saints for its arrival in the 12th century, historical and literary evidence suggests it was blooming in the valley centuries earlier.

1. Earliest Historical & Literary Mentions

Saffron is documented in several key texts long before the 14th century:

  • 3rd Century CE: The Chinese herbalist Wan Zhen recorded that saffron was cultivated in Kashmir, specifically noting that people grew it to offer to the Buddha.
  • 6th–7th Century CE: The Nilamata Purana, an ancient Kashmiri text, mentions saffron (referred to as Kumkuma or Bahukam) as an ingredient in religious rituals and a food item offered to deities.
  • 7th Century CE: King Harshavardhana’s Sanskrit drama Ratnavali mentions the saffron of "Kashmira" as being superior in fragrance and color to any other.
  • 12th Century CE: The historian Kalhana, in his famous chronicle Rajatarangini, mentions that saffron was cultivated in the valley as early as 725 CE. He describes the flowers blooming in the fields of Pampore (ancient Padmapura).

1.     2. Origins and Arrival Theories

2.   Historians debate exactly how the spice first arrived. The three most prominent theories for the pre-1300 era are:

TheoryPeriodDetails
Persian Influence~500 BCSuggested that Persian traders brought corms to Kashmir when parts of the region were under the influence of the Achaemenid Empire.
Buddhist Missions~5th Century BCBuddhist mythology credits the missionary Madhyântika with planting the first harvest in Kashmir to support the coloring of monastic robes.
Sufi Legends11th–12th Century CEPopular folklore attributes it to two Sufi saints, Sheikh Khwaja Masood Wali and Hazrat Sheikh Shariffudin, who allegedly gave a saffron bulb to a local chieftain after he cured their illness.