Shankara Mishra, son of the great Ayachi Mishra, was a fifteenth-century philosopher of the Vaisheshika school and one of the most celebrated minds of medieval Mithila. A child prodigy in the family legend, he matured into an author whose commentaries — among them the Vaisheshika work Upaskara and the Bhedaratnaprakasha — were studied across the Sanskrit world.
He also wrote in lighter veins, including erotic and dramatic verse, showing the range of a Maithil pandit who could move between abstract logic and elegant poetry. Father and son together gave Sarisab-Pahi its lasting fame as a seat of learning.