After different business and trading classes, including the Jains, rose in power and influence at the end of the ninth century CE, the widespread speaking of classical Sanskrit waned. Apabhransa and Abahatta thus became very popular, especially amongst common people, functioning as a lingua franca throughout the north of the Indian subcontinent.[2]
Abahatta, which existed from the 6th century to the 14th century, was contemporaneous with some Apabhraṃśas, as well as early modern languages, such as Old Odia, Old Bengali and Old Assamese. Many poets, such as the Charyapada poets, who wrote dohas or short Buddhist religious verses, composed both in Abahatta and modern languages;[3] the Maithili poet Vidyapati wrote his poem Kirtilata in Abahatta. Many works authored in Abahatta were translated into Sanskrit, while other texts were also written using multiple languages, such as Somprabha's Kumarpala-pratibodha in 1195.[2]