BHIKHAN (1480-1573), a medieval Indian saint two of whose hymns are included in the Guru Granth Sahib. There are in fact two saints of that time sharing the same name— Bhakta Bhikhan and Bhikhan the Sufi. Bhakta Bhikhan was a devotee in the tradition of Ravidãs and Dhannã. He was born at Kakori near Lucknow in present day Uttar Pardesh state in India.. His hymns in the Guru Granth Sahib reflect his dedication to the Name of Hari (God) which he describes as "cure for all ills of the world." Illuminated Guru Granth folio with nisan (Mool Mantar) of Guru Gobind Singh. ...
Bhagat Bhikhan was the most learnt of the learned men of the time of Emperor Akbar. For many years, he was engaged in teaching and instructing the people. He stated that this spiritual succession was from Mir Saiyid Ibrahim of Irij. He left several children who were adorned with piety, wisdom, knowledge and virtue. The hymns of Bhagat ji resemble those of Sheikh Farid Farid is a Persian and Arabic masculine personal name. ...
References
Excerpts taken from Encyclopedia of Sikhism by Harbans Singh. Published by Punjabi University, Patiala
The Sikh Religion, Vol 6,, Max Arthur MacAuliff, Oxford University Press, 1909.
BhagatNamdev Ji was born on October 26, 1270 in the state of Maharashtra village of Naras-Vamani, in Satara district (presently called Narsi Namdev).
Janabai, the family's maidservant and a bhagat and poetess in her own right, records the tradition that Namdev was born to Gonabai as a result of her worship of Vitthala in Pandharpur.
Bhagat Nam Dev is a pioneer of the Radical bhakti School.