Once upon a time a powerful young king called Dabschelim ruled over India. One day he came upon a hidden treasure from a long-dead king. With it came a letter addressed to him. How did that letter come to be there? What did it mean? To solve the mystery, Dabschelim summoned the wisest man in his kingdom, Dr Bidpai, to his side. And so began the tales of Kalila and Dimna.
Of all the published oral collections from India, it is the ancient Hindu animal fables found in the Sanskrit Panchatantra - thanks to its Buddhist inspiration, the Jataka Tales - that have traveled furthest and influenced world literature the most. These mimed fables spawned equally famous literary classics in both Arabic and Persian before migrating to Europe, where by 1888, as The Fables of Bidpai, they existed in multiple editions from more than 70 variants in 16 languages.