Å›rÄ«hará¹£a, raghu-miÅ›ra, paṇá¸ita laká¹£mÄ«nÄtha
baá¹…gavÄá¹Ä«-caitanya-dÄsa, Å›rÄ«-raghunÄtha
Å›rÄ«hará¹£a - ÅšrÄ«hará¹£a; raghu-miÅ›ra - Raghu MiÅ›ra; paṇá¸ita laká¹£mÄ«nÄtha - Laká¹£mÄ«nÄtha Paṇá¸ita; baá¹…gavÄá¹Ä«-caitanya-dÄsa - Baá¹…gavÄá¹Ä« Caitanya dÄsa; Å›rÄ«-raghunÄtha - ÅšrÄ« RaghunÄtha.
Raghu MiÅ›ra is described in the Gaura-gaṇoddeÅ›a-dÄ«pikÄ (195 and 201) as KarpÅ«ra-mañjarÄ«. Similarly, Laká¹£mÄ«nÄtha Paṇá¸ita is mentioned as RasonmÄdÄ, and Baá¹…gavÄá¹Ä« Caitanya dÄsa is mentioned as KÄlÄ«. The ÅšÄkhÄ-nirṇaya states that Baá¹…gavÄá¹Ä« Caitanya dÄsa was always seen with eyes full of tears. He also had a branch of descendants. Their names were MathurÄprasÄda, RukmiṇīkÄnta, JÄ«vanakṛṣṇa, YugalakiÅ›ora, Ratanakṛṣṇa, RÄdhÄmÄdhava, ŪṣÄmaṇi, Vaikuṇá¹hanÄtha and LÄlamohana, or LÄlamohana ÅšÄhÄ ÅšÄá¹…khÄnidhi. LÄlamohana was a great merchant in the city of Dacca. The Gaura-gaṇoddeÅ›a-dÄ«pikÄ (194 and 200) mentions that RaghunÄtha was formerly VarÄá¹…gadÄ.