Agastya - Wikipedia
Agastya - Wikipedia
Agastya - Wikipedia
In-universe information
Spouse Lopamudra
Children Drdhasyu
Etymology and
nomenclature
Sage Agastya in seated posture
Biography
Maharishi Agastya and Lopāmudrā
Agastya ashram …
Textual sources
Vedas …
—Rigveda
Ramayana …
Puranas …
The Puranic literature of Hinduism has
numerous stories about Agastya, more
elaborate, more fantastical and
inconsistent than the mythologies found
in Vedic and Epics literature of India.[3]
For example, chapter 61 of the Matsya
Purana, chapter 22 of Padma Purana, and
seven other Maha Puranas tell the entire
biography of Agastya.[13][35] Some list
him as one of the Saptarishi (seven great
rishi), while in others he is one of the
eight or twelve extraordinary sages of the
Hindu traditions.[40] The names and
details are not consistent across the
different Puranas, nor in different
manuscript versions of the same Purana.
He is variously listed along with Angiras,
Atri, Bhrigu, Bhargava, Bharadvaja,
Visvamitra, Vasistha, Kashyapa,
Gautama, Jamadagni and others.[41]
Tamil texts …
Agathiyar, Tamil Nadu
Siddhar …
Reverence at the Agastya shrine atop the peak of
Agastya mala, with garlands of fruits and flowers.
Buddhist texts …
Agastya Samhita …
Agastimata …
Others …
Legacy
Temples …
Literature …
The shrine to Agastya at the Pothigai hill
source of the river is mentioned in both
Ilango Adigal's Silappatikaram and
Chithalai Chathanar's Manimekhalai
epics.[87]
Martial arts …
Maharishi Agastya is regarded as the
founder and patron saint of silambam
and varmam -an ancient science of
healing using varmam points for varied
diseases and southern kalaripayat.[89]
Shiva's son Murugan is said to have
taught the art to Sage Agastya who then
wrote treatises on it and passed it on to
other siddhar.[90][91]
See also
Siddhars
Tirumular
Tamil Thai
References
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14. David Shulman 2016, p. 17,25-30:
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क य च तायोः । ते षु णो म तो मृळय तु ये
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Bibliography …
Further reading
T. Burrow (1958). "Sanskrit and Pre-
Aryan Tribes and Languages,"The
Bulletin of the Ramakrishna Mission
Institute of Culture (Reprinted in
collected papers on Dravidian
Linguistics, Annamalai
University,1968.)
Murray Barnson Emeneau.
1954Linguistic Prehistory of India,"
Proceedings of the American
Philosophical Society vol.98
P.282(Reprinted in Collected
Papers,Annamalai University,1967.)
Murray Barnson Emeneau 1956"India
As aLinguistic Area,"
Language,Vol.32,P. 3(Reprinted in
Collected Papers,1967).
G. S. Ghurye (1977). Indian
Acculturation : Agastya and Skanda ,
Popular Prakashan, Bombay.
A. B. Keith and A. A. MacDonnell
(1912). "A Vedic Index of Names and
Subjects" (2 Vols.,Reprint 1967)
F. E. Pargiter (1922). Ancient India
Historical Tradition(Reprint 1962)
Raghava Iyengar,M.1913 Velir Varalaru
(in Tamil),3rd ed. 1964.
R. Raghava Iyengar,R.1941 Tamil
Varalaru (in Tamil),Annamalai,
University(Reprint 1978 )
Dictionary of Hindu Lore and Legend
(ISBN 0-500-51088-1) by Anna
Dhallapiccola
Sanskrit-English Dictionary (ISBN 0-19-
864308-X) by Sir Monier Monier-
Williams
The Sauptikaparvan of the Mahabharata
A new verse translation by W.J.
Johnson
The Epic Tale of Mahabharatam
Dharma Bharathi, 2007, Karnataka,
India – Carried a series of articles on
Agastya Samhita and its contents.
Agastya, Amar Chitra Katha
External links
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