The Nandi Purana, also known in some traditions as the Nanda Purana, occupies a curious place in Hindu literature. Although classified among the Upapuranas—“secondary” Puranic texts written to supplement the eighteen major Puranas—its original form has been lost to time. What survives today are hundreds of verses preserved piecemeal in later compilations such as the twelfth‑century Kalpataru of Lakshmidhhara and the Apararka of Aparaditya. From these fragments scholars judge that the Nandi Purana was composed around the eighth or ninth century CE, a period of vigorous temple construction, codification of social norms, and expanding religious communities across South Asia. Historical and Literary Context By the eighth century CE, the great Puranas had already taken shape, codifying a vast array of myth, ritual, and social instruction. In this climate, Upapuranas like the Nandi Purana served to reinforce regional devotional traditions—often centered on particular deities or pilgrimage ...