Āgamas and Gives His Benefits To All Sādhakas. He Is Śiva, Sadāśiva, Bhairava, Tumburu, Soma
Āgamas and Gives His Benefits To All Sādhakas. He Is Śiva, Sadāśiva, Bhairava, Tumburu, Soma
Āgamas and Gives His Benefits To All Sādhakas. He Is Śiva, Sadāśiva, Bhairava, Tumburu, Soma
Today I will discuss the iconography of the Brahminical deities in the Netra
Tantra, a Svacchanda Bhairava Tantra that Alexis Sanderson has argued was likely written in
Kashmir in around the ninth century. The main text contains many dualistic elements and the
eleventh century commentator Kṣemarāja read the text through the non-dualistic lens of his
teacher Abhinavagupta. In this paper I focus primarily on the root text though have referred to
Kṣemarāja’s gloss as needed. The Netra Tantra comes to us in a handful of Nepalese manuscripts
and an edited edition as part of the Kashmir Series of Texts and Studies. I have relied almost
entirely on the edited edition for this work though a critical edition is long overdue.
The principle deity of the Netra Tantra is Amṛteśa, the Lord of Immortality or Non-Death.
Worship of Amṛteśa brings about worldly enjoyments, such as the cessation of pain and the end
of disease, as well as salvation. Supreme and free from disease, the text describes Amṛteśa as
fully enumerated, constant, eternal, and unmovable. He has no form or color and is
omnipresent. He delights in all āgamas, pervades all mantras, and grants all siddhis. He is like a
transparent crystal sewn onto a colored thread, always reflected with its color. He is found in all
āgamas and gives his benefits to all sādhakas. He is Śiva, Sadāśiva, Bhairava, Tumburu, Soma,
In his highest iconographic form, Amṛteśa appears as Mṛtyujit or Mṛtyñjaya, the conqueror of
death. This is the form that appears on the introductory slide. Here Mṛtyujit is accompanied by
his consort Amṛta-lakṣmī, who sits on his lap and shares many of his attributes. Several
examples of bronze figures of Mṛtyujit and Amṛtalakṣmī from Kashmir have been identified
and conform to the depiction of the deities as given in the Netra Tantra. Sanderson1 has
identified three representations of Mrtyujit and his consort Amṛtalakṣmī from the Himalayan
to the tenth or eleventh century and some, such as that in the second slide, have been previously
labeled Umā-Maheśvara or Viṣṇu and Lakṣmī. Gudrun Bühnemann has added to this a fourth
bronze sculpture from the eleventh century also identified as Umā-Maheśvara or Umā-
Maheśvara as Kumbheśvara. 3 The characteristics of these images are shared in amongst the
icons of Nepal's Royal Bath, also shown here, which dates to approximately the seventeenth
century. Like the bronzes, this image closely corresponds to portrayals of the deity as found in
Netra Tantra, especially at 3.17-23cd and 18.63-69ab. As we can see from these portions of the
text, [new slide] Mṛtyujit and Amṛta-lakṣmī sit in the middle of the soma maṇḍala, are compared
to the moon, cow’s milk, jasmine, mountain snow, are adorned with white clothing, garlands,
and pearls. They both sit in the baddha padma-āsana with hands that form the mudrās of wish-
Though manuscripts of the Netra Tantra made their way to Nepal as early as the thirteenth
century,4 Bühnemann demonstrates that the images of Mṛtyujit5 do not begin to appear until the
seventeenth century in Nepal. Therefore, she argues that the Tusā Hiti sculpture is more likely
based on depictions of the deity from manuals that follow the Netra's tradition rather than from
the Netra Tantra itself.6 She also theorizes that the iconographic form might have come from an
artist's model-book. This statue, and a presumed second statue at Mohancok Hiti in
and the Kathmandu Valley. Found in Odisha, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Bihar and many other
regions in modern-day India, this Mṛtyujit bathes himself in the nectar that flows from pots that
he holds above his own head or is showered from moon discs. According to Bühnemann, these
images likely come from accounts in the twelfth century Pra-pañca-sāra and begin to appear in
Returning to the Mṛtyujit of the Netra Tantra, we find a deity whom one can worship in various
forms using the mantra oṃ juṃ saḥ. Thus far, no appearances of these forms have been identified
within the physical record. However, within the text the deities described take on some of the
calendrical worship without neglecting their praise for Amṛteśa. What remains consistent in the
iconographic descriptions are the repeated characteristics that indicate a Śaiva affiliation for
visualization. For example, many of the deities wear a rud-rākṣa. This indicates their devotion to
After the Netra Tantra describes Mṛtyujit, it moves on to detail the five-faced Sadāśiva. Like
Mṛtyujit, Sadāśiva is compared to the moon, mountain snow, jasmine, and crystal. He sits in the
baddha padma-āsana, atop a white lotus, holds a water jar and holds the rud-rākṣa.
7The fountain at Mohancok Hiti is located in a private section of the Hanūmāṇdhokā Palace
and is inaccessible. Photographs indicate that many of the seventy-two extant sculptures at Tusā
Hiti have counterparts at Mohancok Hiti. Bühnemann, 2009, p. 107. Both palaces sustained
damage during a major earthquake on 25 April, 2015 and the condition of the Tusā or
Mohancok Hitis sites remains unclear.
As Sanderson notes,8 the objects Sadāśiva holds here are unique to the Kashmirian tradition,
with a more typical collection being a trident, axe, sword, thunderbolt, fire, a snake, noose, bell,
and the mudrā of protection.9 Other deities described in the Netra Tantra also deviate somewhat
The Netra Tantra describes Bhairava and his companion, Aghoreśī, with more attention than
Sadāśiva. Bhairava appears in various colors. His frightening and screaming mouth is matched
by an assortment of dangerous and deathly ornaments. Like many of the goddesses, Bhairavī
has the same ornamentation and weaponry as her male counterpart. In addition, Bhairavī holds
the medicinal śata-vārī (Asparagus racemosus), a plant grown in the Himalayan region and used
in Āyurveda to delay aging, improve mental faculties, and help fight disease.10
Like Sadāśiva, Bhairava has five faces. He rides a lion that stands on a corpse and wears a snake
garland. He holds various objects in his hands -- a skull, sword, khaṭvāṅga, etc. -- The last of his
ten hands form the mudrās of wish-granting and protection. The text instructs the practitioner to
meditate on him in times of peace and prosperity as well as to suppress sickness and vice, and
to protect cows, brahmins, and men. Again, we find a deity who is compared to snow, jasmine,
the moon, pearls, and quartz though he can also appear red like the sun or a lotus, or yellow
like orpiment. Aghoreśī appears with him, red with erect hair, five faces, each with three eyes.
Her hands end in curved talons and she wears a garland of severed heads.
Śāradā Tilaka, in which she has a single, white face with three eyes, and holds a book, a rosary,
and a jar of amṛta.11 Bhairava and Aghoreśī are surrounded by various devīs and dūtis. Though
here I focus on the depictions of male gods, I have begun a comparative study of the devīs, dūtis,
and yoginīs who appear in the Netra Tantra. Like the companion goddesses, many of these
secondary feminine figures bear the characteristics of the deities they surround.
Of the twelve deities in the Netra Tantra, which I have charted here with some of their main
characteristics, Nārāyana and Sūrya have two forms each; Viṣṇu has eleven total -- including
Nārāyana and a separate deity identified by the name Viṣṇu who one may also visualize as a
boy surrounded by beautiful naked women, Nara-siṃha, Varāha, Vāmana, Kapila, an honorable
As we see here, both Tumburu and Rudra take the form of Sadāśiva. Within he mantramārga
textual tradition, five streams of revelation emit from the mouths of Sadāśiva. From Īśāna, the
upward facing top head, comes the Siddhānta scriptures. The Vāma Tantras emerge from the
North facing, mild Vāma face. The Vāma Tantra focus on Tumburu and the goddesses who
surround him. The Dakṣiṇa Tantras focus on Bhairava and emerge from the Southern Aghora
face. Finally, the Gāruḍa Tantras from Tatpuruṣa's Eastern-facing mouth, and the Bhūta Tantras
from Sad-yojāta’s face at the west.12 Sanderson notes that the works of the Vāma Tantras made
some impact in Kashmir but do not appear to have taken hold in the same manner as texts of
the Dakṣiṇa Tantra stream.13 Both the Vāma Tantras and Dakṣiṇa Tantras focus on goddesses, a
While I would like to devote more time to all the deities and their attendants, time permits me
to only discuss a few of Amṛteśa’s form. I will end with Sūrya, an important deity in Kashmiri
temple practice. Here Sūrya appears low in the hierarchy of deities. He has two forms, only one
of which uses the mudrās. A ninth century sculpture of Sūrya, housed in the Sri Pratap Singh
Museum in Srinagar, depicts Sūrya seated atop a chariot with seven horses.14 As we can see, this
statue is heavily damaged and we do not know how many heads, eyes, or arms the statue
original had. Sūrya ruins of an eighth century sun temple in Kashmir, about fifty kilometers
sun temples fail to describe statuary in detail, though clearly some remained at that time.15
Modern studies show that those sculptures that do remain are worn down and difficult to
identify.16 This mean the Netra Tantra offers a unique illustration of Sūrya as imagined in
medieval Kashmir. The size and location of this temple, which appears to have been in use until
the fifteenth century, demonstrates its importance during the medieval period. Four of six
temples that Kalhaṇa cites in the Rājataraṅgiṇī, described by Stein and others, appear to have
been smaller than the Martand sun temple.17 Of these other temples, all ascribed to the reign of
for building these and many other shrines, including those dedicated to Śiva and Jain saints.20
Unlike the previous deities, the Netra Tantra's description of Sūrya does not report a retinue of
goddesses. Instead, the eight planets, Nak-ṣatras, and Lokapālas21 surround Sūrya, each on its
own lotus. The Nak-ṣatras vary in number.22 This image differs greatly from an eighth century
brass Kashmiri figure of Sūrya currently housed at the Cleveland Museum of Art, bottom
right.23 The Cleveland figure has one head, two arms, and holds a lotus flowers in both hands.
He has two eyes and an inlaid sacred mark between his eyebrows that has been lost, his face is
adorned with a mustache, and he wears a crown decorated with flowers. Most strikingly
different from the Sūrya described in the Netra Tantra is that the bronze figure stands rather than
sits mounted on a chariot or horse. Lee notes that the long, belted robe and boots are similar in
style to those worn by Buddha statues from Afghanistan. The boots of the Cleveland image are
identical in style to those found on a seventh century marble statue of Sūrya in the National
Museum of Afghanistan.24 Like the description in the Netra Tantra, the Kabul Sūrya rides a
chariot, though he has only four attendants.25 The Kabul Sūrya is also notable for its European
this European sitting position. Shimkhada notes this figure shares other attributes with the
Afghanistan Sūrya and may be based on Kushāṇa dynasty royal statues. 27 This demonstrates a
wide variety of Sūrya iconography, none of which conform to that found in the Netra Tantra.
Though more images that conform to the deific forms of the Netra Tantra may be uncovered, the
text largely focuses on the visualization of these deities. This means worship of Amṛteśa in
various forms was separate from ordinary temple worship. However, there is clearly overlap
with that temple worship as the mantrin performs the calendrical rites to the Brahmanical
deities with their appropriate offerings while imagining the forms of Amṛteśa and using the
Mṛtyujit mantra. This allows the king's officiant to worship Amṛteśa during all calendrical
festivals by what I call a Śaivizing of the Brahmanical deities, giving them unique attributes that
do not contradict their ordinary states but include Śaiva elements. Through this worship, the
mantrin honors the deity of each particular festival and simultaneously performs rites in honor
of Amṛteśa that ultimately protect and prolong the life of the monarch.
26Lee, 1967, p. 49; Deepak Shimkhada, 1984, "The Masquerading Sun: A Unique Syncretic
Image in Nepal," Artibus Asiae, Vol. 45, No. 2/3, p. 226.
27 Shimkhada, 1984, p. 226.