M. Arunachalam - The Saivagama - Pañcabrahma
M. Arunachalam - The Saivagama - Pañcabrahma
M. Arunachalam - The Saivagama - Pañcabrahma
THE SAIVAGAMAS
M. Arunachalam
GANDHI VIDYALAYAM
T1RUCHITRAMBALAM,
MAYURAM TALUK - 609 204.
First Edition : 13-7-1983
Saint Manikkavacakar Day
Rupees Twenty only
Published with financial aid from
the Tirumalai - Tiruppati Devasthanams
<g) M. ARUNACHALAM
KALAKSHETRA
PUBLICATIONS PRESS,
THIRUVANMIYUR, MADRAS-600 041.
THE SAIVAGAMAS
‘ ^<9iLDLDrr&l r$<sisrg)j
The reasons for this neglect are not far to seek. The agamas
had existed mostly in South India, in the Tamil nad, in palmleaf
manuscript book form in the homes of the Sivacharyas who had been
entrusted with the duty of organizing and performing the consecra-
tion and the congregational worship ( parartha puja) in the Siva
temples for probably over two millennia and a half. These agamas
are not available in North India to the extent they are available in the
South, although they had been responsible for the culture of the
whole of India. Dr. Das Gupta has stated that ‘no agama manu-
script of any importance is found even in Banaras, the greatest
centre of Hindu religion, Sanskrit studies and culture’.
which was in use over a much larger area of India and in the north;
hence no wonder the agamas were left out of their ambit of study.
Arthur Avalon (Sir John Woodroffe) who happened to be a judge
of the Bengal High Court had devoted his whole life to the unearth-
ing and publishing of Sakta tantric works and expounding the Sakta
philosophy in the modern English language. Bengal is even today
the home of the Sakta cult and naturally he learnt if from the pandits
there. Otto Schraeder, a German had devoted his life to the ex-
,
vi
Agamas deal with upasana whereas the original Sankara philosophy
did not deal with upasana. Sankara’s philosophy *was an Absolute
Monism while the Saiva philosophy was a Theistic Monism called
Qualified Monism; the former did not countenance the latter.
The Agamas very strictly laid down that only the Sivacharya
class,the Siva brahmins, were competent to enter the garbha griha
and perform the worship in the Siva temples and that the brahmin
as such (i.e. the smart ha brahmin) shall not enter the sanctum and
shall not touch the Sivalinga or perform the worship. This might
also have been another and more important reason for the brahmin
antipathy towards the agamas.
But it is only the Saiva religion that held up the torch of Tamil
Culture by producing its own original basic scriptures in Tamil,
without recourse to Sanskrit through Meykandar in the 12th century,
probably just after the passing away of Ramanuja.. Further elucida-
tion of this aspect of Saivism is not relevant to the subject taken up •
Again, the Velalar, otherwise called the Saivas, who were them-
selves the followers of the agamas, evolved their own philosophic
doctrines from the 12th century and called their philosophy also the
(Suddha) Advaita Philosophy. By Velalar we designate here the
landed cultured class of agriculturists, who were total vegetarians
from known periods of history and who were the main stay of all
society and of all culture in the mediaeval period. All their original
writing in this Saiva philosophy was in Tamil; they called their-
system the essence of the Vedanta; still they continued to say that
they followed the Vedas and their philosophy was that of the Veda-
siras, the Upanishads. This irked the Sankara school still more.
The Saivas then assailed the Sankara concept of aham-brahtnasmi and
called it mayo, vada and ekatma vada. Naturally the cleavage bet-
ween the two further widened. The Saiva school emphasized
temple worship which was not the creed of the Sankara advaitins-
The Saivas now took the line of least resistance by limiting them-
selves to their new Tamil texts alone, ignoring all Sanskrit, unfortu-
including the Agamas also. All these attitudes caused
the
nately
agamas to recede into the background further. But it must be-
allegiance to the Vedas
categorically stated that the Saivas do owe
value written
and have a number of Sanskrit texts of scriptural
through the centuries, besides the Agamas.
Vlll
The agamas though written in Sanskrit were considered to
highlight the Tamil (often called the Dravida) culture and so the
Aryan dominated north would not recognise this Dravida culture.
But the Tamilians, though they were the most ancient people among
the Dravidians and the most ancient people in the whole of Bharat,
meekly submitted to the supremacy of the Aryan views and did not
boldly champion their own cultural continuity and great uniqueness.
are yet a few Sivacharyas (but they can be counted on one’s fingers)
who know the agamas thoroughly and who have the agama texts at
their finger tips and could hold their own againt any smartha
brahmin in disputation.
The Vedas were the preserve of the elite among the Aryans.
They never came down to the level of the common man. Nor did
their thoughts and rites reach the common man. On the other
hand,
the Agamas concerned themselves with all society, with the
common
man and his needs, both social and spiritual.
IX
f
ural sanctionand regulation for all that the temple stands for, and
for helping their upkeep in all their varied religious and cultural
aspects.
Time was when every one went about saying that Sanskrit
qualify
was the deva-bhasha and only a Sanskritic approach can
But the
one for worship and evolution in his religious aspirations.
that clouded people’s understanding has been
removed and we
film
be and is a deva-
can boldly declare that in Tamilnad Tamil can
Tamil can have also
bhasha, if not the only deva bhasha, and that
as Sanskrit had always
Sanskrit as a complement or a handmaid to it
been. We are prepared to employ Sanskrit and extoll it but this
the suppression of the mother
does not and can not of course be on
tongue.
Vaishnavism, had grown
do grant that Saivism, along with
We
would further emphasize that Sanskrit
is
also through Sanskrit; we
religious Tamilian’s language
(though today
as much the learned and
X
)
he might disown it) as Tamil is. but that does not give Sanskrit the
first position or the right to supplant Tamil.
The Second deals with the number of the agamas, their availa-
bility and printing. A table of the 28 Saivagamas and their
Upagamas as detailed in the Tantravatara patala of the major
agamas and a table of the Printing History of the Agamas(in Tamil
nadu) have also been appended here. The Matangagama ( vidya
pada also has been dealt with in the body of the book. Its other
three padas (not mentioned there) have since been released by the
French Institute of Indology at Pondichery after the printing of this
book was completed and so a note on these padas has been added at
page 137.
The Third section deals with the other schools of Saivism. the
Sakta agamas, the Vaishnava agamas, the Vira Saiva school and the
Advaita school, with a view to make this small book informative on
the several aspects of Hinduism today. The Panchayatana puja,
very much talked about in the modern day, has a separate note here-
xi
CONTENTS
CHAPTER
PAGE
Preface
V
. ^
4. Tamil Agamas
5. The Term Agama *
12
6. The Tantras and the Agamas
14
7. The Terms Tantram and Mantram
17
8. The Origin of the Agamas
lg
9. The Antiquity of the Agamas
19
10. The Number of the Agamas
20
11. Worship of the Agama Books
24
12. The Content of the Agamas 25
13. Jnana pada 27
14. Kriya pada 28
15. Charyapada 29
16. Yoga pada 30
17. Philosophy in the Agamas . . 32
18. Some Features of the Kriya pada 33
19. Yoga in Saiva Siddhanta . . . . 34
20. Synthesis in the Agamas . . . . 36
21. The Sadhana 39
22. Gita and the Siddhanta 41
23. The Significance of the Agamas . . 43
24. Apparent Contradictions . . . . 44
25. The Saiva Samaya Acharyas and the Agamas . . 45
26. Loss of the Agamas . . . . 48
27. Influence of the Agamas on Indian life and thought 50
CHAPTER PAGE
xiii
..
CHAPTER
PAGE
27. The Unpublished Agamas 98
28. Table of the 28 Siddhanta Agamas and their Upagamas
99
A. Sivabheda - agamas 10 100
B. Rudrabheda - agamas 18 101
29. Number of Slokas - Table 104
30. Printing History of the Agamas 105
A. Translations of the Agamas
Tamil translations 105
English Translations 105
134
Bibliography
135
A Note on Agama and Archanas
137
A Note on Matangagama Publication
138
The Original references from the Tamil texts
145
Glossary
152
Index
xiv
Section 1
THE SAIVAGAMAS
The Saiva Agamas
1. INTRODUCTION
The Saiva Agamas are some of the earliest books in the
Sanskrit language on the Saiva religion and philosophy, written
over a period of several centuries before the Christian era. They
represent an independent class of writing by Very early seers, who
had an inward experience and enlightenment from the Supreme
Being, Siva, and who were also perhaps influenced by the Vedas
in their original form. It is now recognised that the Vedas as they
are available today are only the compilations of Vyasa of a later day
and that their original forms are not available Vyasa-compiler.
;
They had realised in their lives and thoughts the general truths
taught by the early Upanishads. So far as Saivism is concerned,
these seers have to be considered as hailing from the South and
not from the North. But they were essentially representatives of
All India and they reflected in their thoughts, modes of meditation
and worship, in their writing, and in their very lives, the inherent
theism of the South.
The theism of the south or rather, the Saivism of the
Tamilians, was the growth of an unbroken tradition probably,
from the pre-historic past and this had three elements fused into
it. These are an external worship of images as the manifest
abode of God, both in the shrines throughout the land and in
the devotees’ own homes, symbolism, and the inward meditation
and realization.
A word may be added here about these three elements.
Worship of images in the temples was parartha puja for all mankind,
for the welfare of the entire society, and worship in the home was
for the individual and his family. Temple worship was done by a
dedicated group of Sivacharyas, always for the welfare of the
community, while worship in the home could be done by anyone
who had initiation under a competent guru.
The second element is symbolism; the idol worshipped is not
God; it is just a symbol intended to remind people of God and to
direct their minds and hearts through the perceived symbol to the
unperceivabie One Beyond. God for the worshipper is immanent
in theimage and yet transcends taking him
it, into the unknown
beyond.
The third element is meditation. What cannot be perceived
by the senses may be realized in the heart, with of course
externally,
His own Grace. Meditation may take many forms - such as reciting
of the divine scriptures, nama japa and so on; these are not medita-
tion but these help towards meditation. But without the resultant
concentration and meditation, external worship alone may not
result in realization. It is only this internal worship or medita-
tion, this atma puja, that lends meaning to the external worship,
bahir puja. These three are not separate compartments, but basically
one harmonious integrated whole in the ritual of worship.
When the Upanishads were added on to the Vedas in the
course of the later centuries, they could not but be influenced by
the religion and philosophy flourishing in the society around them.
These naturally embody a considerable volume of the thought of
the agamic seers, because some of the early agamas were earlier
than the many later Upanishads in point of time, and the agamas
were much more alive and vibrating with life and activity
than the Upanishads, because they dealt with definite and con-
crete objects, affecting not only the intelligentia but the entire com-
munity, while the others dealt only with abstract concepts, concepts
which could be grasped only by the advanced thinkers. The
very fact that some later Upanishads had come to be written
at all
schools
shows that the followers of the original Upanishadic
had to take note of agamic thoughts, and to bring them
also into
2
to affirm the derivation of the Agamas from the Vedas: ‘The
siddhanta consists of the essence of the Veda’ ( Suprabhedagama)
‘this tantra is of the essence of the Veda’, ‘this siddhanta knowledge
“It has been suggested that the agamic systems were developed
out of the Brahmanas in the same way as the Upanishads, though
at a much later stage, and that some of the later Upanishads like the
Svetasvatara which address the
,
Supreme Being by a sectarian title
3
:
The four parts of the Agamas are likened to the four parts
of the Vedas, - namely the mantra part or stotras comparable to
charya of the agamas, the brahmanas dealing with rituals com-
parable to kriya, the aranyaka part analogous to the yoga, and the
upanishad or philosophy part equivalent to the vidya or jnana-
pada of the agamas. It is also said that the Samhita (mantra) part
of the Vedas which is pure stotra is not repeated in the agamas
because the agamas utilise and do not use
the vedic mantras
separate stotras. They had not broken away from the Vedas and
so to avoid repetition they transplant Vedic stotras into their cult.
It should be noted that the Agamas have their own mantras for all
their kriyas. They employ vedic mantras only for the stotra part.
Exponents of the Agamas would go further and say that the
Supreme of Saivism, Siva, is mentioned in the Vedic terms such
as the following:
i„ the Kenopanishat
to Siva.
'^J^d oniy w
be dispenea only
the
Sri Uma
as Sakti or
5T
Um .
“
personified
of Siva’s Grace which is
^
ajagama,
Sa tasminneva akase striyam
Haimavatim.
bahu sobhamanam Umam,
T1
ma„y ::
lines (sloka 7)
4
Tam Aadi madhyanta vihinam Ekam Vibhum
Chidanandam Arupam Adbhutam
Uma sahayam Paramesvaram Prabhum
Trilochanam Nilakantham Prasaantam.
Here the description of Siva in so many words, as the consort of
Uma, Paramesvara (His special name), the Three-eyed, the Blue
throated, are significant as pointing to the Supreme Being as Siva.
The Narada Parivrajakopanishad is a large upanishad having
nine upadesas of which the eighth deals with the Pranava. In
its second sloka we find a phrase Sarvagamayas-Sivah. Though
this upanishad could not have been one of the early upanishads,
yet the mention of the agama here as the form of Siva is significant.
There is a similar reference in one of the Devi ashtottara
namas. Of the many ashtottara namas in use by the different
Sivacharyas in temple worship today, one begins with the term
“
“Dm Kalyanyai namah ”. One of its following names is Agama
rupinyai namah \ meaning that Devi is of the form of the Agamas.
,
Siva and Sakti are abhinna, not separate, and so this term also
is significant. Again Nama 290 in the LalitaSahasranama maybe
noticed here: Sakalagama sandoha sukti samputa mauktika -
“She wears the pearl in the nose ring enclosed in a shell composed
of all the agamas.” Though the Lalitha Sahasra nama is merely
pauranic in character, the mention of the agama is significant as
indicating the attempt to identify the agama with Sakti. The
references are indicative of the reverence with which the agamas
were held and also of the concept of Siva and of Sakti in the
agama form. Sakala agama is taken by the commentators to
mean all the scriptures; but the mention of the Agama is obvious;
it is also relevant to call the agama as the scripture (Veda).
The Saivagamas had gained importance in the country even
in the pre-Chola days. One of the titles assumed by Rajasimha
Pallava (686-705 a.d.) is Agama-priya, the lover of the Agamas.
There is an interesting remark in a verse of Saint Appar
(590-671 a.d.) regarding the Agamas and the Vedas even in
as early a period as the legendary Dakshayajna. Daksha
no doubt performed the yajna as laid down in the Vedas; but
he should have done it in the manner laid down in the Agamas
(which automatically would have given the chief place to Siva) and
that is implied as the reason for the destruction of the yajna by
Siva through the agency of Virabhadra (4, 65, 5).
5
;
Vedas stop with the three padas - charya, kriya and yoga; but the
Agamas go beyond and lead us to the further fourth pada,
jagra, svapna
Jnana. The Vedas speak of only the four states - ,
7
possible the original texts became elastic and new
ideas were
incorporated into the texts. But still, we may be sure
that the
agamas existed then and came later to be written down; the main
streams of thought, particularly philosophical thought, contained
in most of the original agamas, were indeed most ancient.
Later
some agamas and upagamas were, of course, written and added on
in the course of the later centuries, and additions were made to
existing standard agamas on a much later date. 1
Dr. Surendranath Das Gupta says: “The date of the Agamas
cannot be definitely fixed. It may be suggested that the earliest of
them were written some time in the second or the third century a.d.
and these must have been continued till the thirteenth or fourteenth
century” (A History of Indian Philosophy, Volume V Page 40).
As pointed out already, 'the earliest agamas date back to centuries
earlier than the 6th century b.c.; it is even understandable that
additions were made, and the agamas were written perhaps upto
the 10th century as in the case of the upanishads.
Some Jain polemical writings of a much later date were called
the Jinagama. 2There were also the Saktagamas, in praise of Sakti.
Vaikhanasa and Pancharatra are the agamas of the two Vaishnava
schools. The number of Saivagamas is very large and most of
them preceded the books of the other schools in point of time.
From the remote past, i.e. from the very early days when the
purana was written long before the days of Sankara the Siva ;
9
Panmelalahar (of the 13th century),
the great commentator
KU ™SCemS *° be ver we " verse
d m the Agamas. Interpreting
t
L C
V
r
decad of Kurd, TTT ° CCUrring in a verse of
he l.sts the eight attributes of
invocational
Siva and says that
hese are taken from the
Saivagamas. There are no such
eight
attributes to Vishnu in the
Vaishnava books nor is he happy
in this context, over the reference
to the eight attributes of
Arhadeva
as found in the Jain books. Here, though he
an ardent Vaish-
is
nava, he mentions the Saivagamas as
authoritative. Again in his
commentary on Paripadal (c. 2nd entury a.d.) he
mentions the
Agamas twice. “Thou (Vishnu) art incomprehensible
even to all
the vast Agamas, to the ego and to the mind,
to the sensory percep-
tions and to everything else” (Verse 3: lines
48-50); “the priests
agamas now commencing the festivities’ for the Lord,
well recite the
the Presiding Deity of the Ardra constellation
(11. 77-8)”; the
second again a reference to the Saivagamas.
is
4. TAMIL AGAMAS
Some Tamil scholars had thrown out the suggestion that the
Agamas were first written in Tamil several thousand years ago,
embodying an independent body of doctrines and that they were
lost owing to natural and political causes; the Sanskrit translators
had assimilated the Tamil thoughts into the vedic religion; that the
vedic origin claimed for the agamas is not worthy of credence;
that the very name agama (‘that which has come, presumably from
another language) is itself indicative of its support for this theory;
and that the tantra itselfof Tamilian origin ( tantu means thread,
is
10
came back or were brought back subsequently to the fold inciden-
1
tally enriching the parent stock of culture”.
The Mohenjadaro excavations have brought to light Siva-
member that the only member of the Dravidian group which can
lay any claim to antiquity in culture and language is Tamil and the
Indus valley civilization can easily be equated with a proto-Tamil
one. Research workers of all nationalities have been trained in a
tradition which had always held Sanskrit to be supreme; and
most had not heard of Tamil as a parallel, if not as a more ancient,
language and culture. Hence when here Sanskrit was the rule, they
were unable to think of a Tamil or proto-Tamil but could think
only of a proto-Dravidian. Dravidian in all the ancient periods
meant only Tamil. we may say without any contradic-
Hence also
tion that the Sivalinga worship derivable from the excavations could
have been regulated by some Tamil texts which can now be called
the Tamil agamas.
However no fragment of direct evidence to support
there is
this theory of Tamil agamas. But the whole concept is not on that
account to be dismissed as mere conjecture. Besides, the inde-
pendent nature of the Sivagama thoughts which are partially
opposed to the abstract Vedanta may also lend support to their
Tamil origin.
Again, the submerged continent theory is now gaining ground.
Lemuria had a vast wealth of Tamil literary works and it is quite
possible that the Tamil agamas (by whatever name they were
called then) had also been in existence but lost along with the other
named Tamil texts.
Tirumular says in several places that he is uttering the
Sivagama after meditating on the Lord’s feet daily (73): that the
agamas are the nine (63) that the
: Lord created him so that he might
write about Him Tamil (81):
in
Contemplating on Him daily , I am now expounding the
Agama (73).
11
He created me in theproper manner so that / might mite
on Him in the Tamil language (81).
Tirumular also mentions nine Sanskrit agamas
(vide page 6,
footnote). It is evident from these that he is
writing now the Siva-
gama afresh in Tamil because the Tamil agamas which had
exis-
ted previously had all disappeared.
The position mentioned here by Tirumular has happened
definitely because the originals in Tamil had disappeared,
the
Sanskrit agamas had taken their places, and so he is now giving the
agama essence afresh in Tamil. The term agama in Sanskrit
may also mean that which has come into Sanskrit from Tamil.
12
;
13
6. THE TANTRAS AND THE AGAMAS
In the history of the Sanskrit source
material for the Saiva
Siddhanta Philosophy, the Agamas occupy
a unique position.
Modern students of the Sanskrit sources have often
confused the
Saiva Agamas with the Tantra texts. Hence
we shall say here a
few words in general terms about the two. It is
stated that the
Vedas, the Smritis, the Puranas and the Tantras were
respectively
intended for the four yugas - the Satya (or Krta), the
, Treta , the
Dvapara and the Kali yugas ; the Kali yuga is the age in which we
live. To suit the progressive concepts of social living, the Tantras
have been made more cosmopolitan and democratic in character
in this, that they are open to both the sexes and to all the
four
castes, 1 unlike the Vedas which are considered to be reserved only
for the higher castes. Tantra means that which is well constructed
and which protects ( tan yate trayate ca tantra-that which is well
made, that which protects is tantra).
The Tantras (wrongly called the Agamas) are of several
different schools, the Saiva ,
the Saktla the Vaishnava, the Saura
(relating to the sun) and the Ganapatya (relating to the worship
of Ganapati). The followers of these five schools were collectively
known as the Pancha-Upasakas. Later, the Kaumara school,
relating to the worship of Kumara (Subrahmanya)-also seems
to have been added. With this addition, the six schools had come
to be known as the six Schools of worship, the Skanmatas.
The main schools had several sub-divisions each. Of these,
apart from the Saiva and the Vaishnava cults, only the Sakta
school has any large following in the present day.
2 This was
we learn three branches-
the chief cult in the whole of Bengal, where
the Kaula the Misra and the Samya - existed. The Saiva school
,
had two main divisions, the Kashmir school and the Saiva Sid-
dhanta school of the Tamilnad. The Kashmir school had imbibed
from the beginning a considerable amount of the Advaita philoso-
phy of day Sankara.
later
But the Southern school of Siddhanta had always retained
its
1 The four castes or varnas as adopted by the Aryans were the Brahmana,
three being called the higher castes.
Kshatriya, Vaisya and Sudra castes, the first
the Maharashtra area.
2. Ganapati worship is prevalent extensively in
14
advaita of Sankara. The Saiva school seems to have preserved
through the Agamas its own independent and pure character till
the advent of Sankara. The branch which absorbed part of
Sankara’s doctrines probably got isolated as the Kashmir school,
while the Southern school of Saivism retained its wholly pure and
individual character, through its adherence to the Agamic
doctrines and later through the teaching of the Siddhanta
prophet, Meykandar. According to Das Gupta, ‘the Agamic
Saivism belongs principally to the Tamil country, the Pasupata to
Gujarat, and the Pratyapijna to Kashmir and the northern parts
of India (page 18).
The Tantras in Bengal may be said to run on parallel lines
with the Saiva Agamas in the South. Both have a Supreme Being,
the Sakti for the Tantras and Siva for the Agamas. The four
padas, jnar>a, yoga, kriya and chary a are dealt with by both. But
the two are essentially different in their starting point, their develop-
ment, their sadhana or practices, and their ultimate goal. Both
profess to have the greatest reverence to the Vedas, but the Agamas
have a subtle reservation, which has been referred to earlier in
the words of the Saiva Siddhanta Paribhasha. The Upanishads
have been said by scholars to have made an attempt to re-state the
jnana content of the Vedas in philosophical terminology. The
Tantras have been probably considered an attempt to revive
as
the other three padas of the Vedic cult. But the Agamas seek to
revive and re-state all the four padas equally, from a different stand
point. They have been interwoven with the philosophic thought and
spiritual discipline of the ancient Tamil people from a hoary past.
Temple worship is not only part of the spiritual discipline
of the Saiva aspirant but it is also a sadhana for ultimate release
in Saiva Siddhanta.Temple worship finds no place in the Vedas
or the Upanishads; they do not mention temples. The Vedas
have their emphasis on agnikarya and sacrifices but have no place
for the temple or temple worship. We do not propose to go here
into a discussion of the need or otherwise for temple worship. This
worship may perhapsbe said to be a parallel to the cult of fire
worship elaborated in the Vedas. In this respect, the Tantras are
at variance with the Agamas, since they lay down an elaborate
discipline practically for personal worship and not for external
worship or congregational worship in a shrine, which is intended
for the welfare of the society. No doubt the Tantras also deal with
15
the four padas, but the difference on the
is all emphasis and the
practice.
The Tantras have emphasized a wide range of devatas each ,
16
; :
Upanishad), Agamanta
l just as Vedanta the essence of the Veda (i.e. the
is
Siddhanta).
is the essence of the Agama (i.e. the ,
18
the 12th century). This took root in the Tamilnad some centuries
later from the days of Saints Santalinga swami, Sivaprakasa swami,
Kumara deva and Chidambara swami in the 17th century, and of
course could have had nothing to do with Tirumular. His argu-
ment that agamas were earlier than the Saiva acharyas by at
the
least a thousand years and that Tirumular would have lived earlier
than the 6th century a.d. are of course quite true. 1
There is one more point to be noted. Excavations at Mohen-
jadero and Harappa have brought to light a proto- dravidian
civilization,which had Sivalinga worship; a sculpted figure of a
dancer has also been unearthed. These facts go to indicate that
Saivism had been prevalent throughout the Indian sub-continent
five thousand years ago, and therefore there is no basis for saying
1. Das Gupta fixed Tirumular in the first century a.d.; this may not be
correct (ibid. Page 19). Tirumular is considered to have lived in the fifth
century a.d.
19
temple worship rituals elaborated from the days
of the Chola
Emperors. Shodasa upacharas (sixteen acts of homage and honour)
are offered to the Sivalingas in
all the major temples daily. Gita
vadya nrutta (vocal music, instrumental music and dance)
are
part of the sixteen upacharas. The dance upachara is still being
done in several temples by women dancers who had been hereditory
temple dancers and who had been given land endowments by the
rulers and had been enjoying them for about a thousand years.
The dancer figure found in the Mohenjadaro excavations suggest
to us that dance might also have been one of the offerings made to
the Sivalinga even in that remote past.
There is an interesting remark in a verse of Saint Appar
(590-671 a.d.) regarding the Agamas and the Vedas even in as
early a period as the legendary Daksha yajna. Daksha no doubt
performed the yajna as laid down Jn the Vedas but he should have
;
20
are heterodox However, the terms agama, tantra,
systems. 1
siddhanta and mantra are found used synonymously in many agamic
writings.
The aspects of Siva are five in number- Sadyojata, Vamadeva,
Aghora, Tatpurusha and Isana.
2 Each of these has five faces;
from these twentyfive faces were revealed numberless agamas,
according to one tradition.
Arulnandi sivam classifies the sastras into two categories - the
Vedas and the Sivagamas; it is significant that he calls the Sivaga-
mas, Saiva Books here; he calls the other Sivagamas, the Saiva
Books (Vedas nuul and Saiva nuul). All other books are derived
from these. These two books were eternally revealed by Siva.
Of the two, the Vedas are general and disclosed for the benefit of
all; the Agamas are special and revealed for the benefit of the
blessed and they contain the essential truths of the Veda and the
Vedanta. All other books are heterodox” ( Sivajnana siddhiyar
supaksha 267 Tamil).
One agamas
tradition says that Sadasiva revealed the four
to Garuda 3 Vama Bhutatantra and Bhairava from the four faces -
, ,
1. Sivajnanaswami mentions these and says that only the mantra is the
Siddhanta and the other four are herterodo x-Sivajnana bhashya, introduction.
2. These represent - the western, northern, southern eastern, and
uplifted countenances of Si\a is this order.
3. Garuda: Garuda (the king eagle) is the mount of Vishnu. The Kira-
nagama is said to have been revealed to Garuda. This might well have been
the Garudagama metnioned here. Besides, the first upagama under Kirana
is also named Garuda.
4. Velliambalavana Tambiran (C. 1675-1720) in his Jnanabharana
vilakkam, Dharmapuram page 9.
21
,
w f0U , dfe „,
'* 0f
Saiva is said to have had h JT* ^ these ’ the
v„ p
*£; *» ooo.»o,d i„ h,
dttraoB, Svachanda Z br,nd‘
™ KW„ni, Sai,.
z rtu r
- *— «£“
E^csr The agamas
are again said to be of
-
two categories-the srauta
• -
W, the Veda > and the ^srauta,
not related to the
Veda, K
Ved°a the Kapahka, p
Pasupata and the Kalamukha
schools of
Saivism are said to belong to the
a-srauta category while the
28
Saivagamas and their upagamas are
of the srauta category. '
(or Anala) and Vira, and gave them to sage Bharadvaja. The
Tatpurusha gave rise to Raurava, Makuta, Vimala, Chandrajnana
and Mukhabimba (or Bimba), and taught them to sage Gautama.
The last face Isana revealed the remaining eight agamas namely,
'
Prodgita, Lalita, Siddha, Santana, Sarvokta, Paramesvara, Kirana
and Vatula, and taught them to Sage Agastya. 2
The first ten agamas were taught by Sadasiva to the Vidyes-
varas and other celestial beings and so they are called the Siva-
bheda agamas (Saiva or God-taught). The remaining 18 were
22
taught to 36 Rudras, beginning from Anadirudra, and hence these
were called the Rudrabheda agamas (Raudric or man-realized).
The ten were taught again in turn to three celestial beings each,
first
while the other eighteen were taught to two each, thus making a
36) who learned the agamas.
+ 1
total of 66 celestials (30
Anantesvara taught the agamas to Srikantha, who in turn
taught them to the sages. The sages initiated their disciples into
the mysteries of the agamas and thus the books came to have
currency among the mortals. The Kamikagama tabulates all the 28
agamas in serial order, their origin, the number of verses therein,
the organ of Siva which they represent, persons to whom they were
revealed and the Upagamas under each.
It is the tradition in Sanskrit to trace the origin of any valuable
book and so there is nothing unusual in the
to a divine source
Saivagamas claiming their origin from Lord Siva Himself.
Though the principal Saiva Agamas had been said to be 28 in
number in many books and in the Agamas themselves, there
had existed a doubt among many that perhaps the number was an
exaggeration and the whole story was a myth. This doubt has
been removed by the patient researches of the French Institute
of Indology, Pondichery, which has been able to gather in whole or
in parts, 28 principal agamas so far, (according to its Editor, Sri N.
R. Bhatt) and 45 of the Upagamas. AlmosLall of these have been
quoted in the notes to the Institute’s editions of the agamas. It is
true that all the parts of all the agamas have not yetbecome fully
availableand that only some parts or padas of some agamas have
been recovered. But still we may say as a matter of certainty that
the number of the principal agamas was indeed 28.
1 . In the Saiva canonical books, the terms Agama and Saiva are often
used synonymously. Saint Arulnandi has taken the cue .evidently from a
mention by Sekkilar. In the first verse of the biography of Sambandhar,
Sambhandhar was born on this earth in order that the Vedic
Sekkilar says that”
system might prosper and the Saiva system might illumine the land”; the Saiva
system here means the Agama school \Veda neri talaithonga mihu saivathurai
vilanga - Periyapurcnam 1904. The number 66 here arrived at is also the
number mentioned in Tirumantiram 57.
23
:
the Book, the water pot, the dagger and the shield; the dhyana
sloka says: ‘May the Saivagama deva contemplated upon in this
manner afford me protection.’
The Tattvanidhi, a late Silpa sastra (1838 a.d.) quotes the
Lakshmi narayana samhita under Skanda purana as its authority
for the dhyana of the Agama devata
Saivagamas chaiva dikshavasah panchaksharo rshih,
Suddha sphatika sankasah tripundrankita mastakah.
Trayakshas charmaparidhanah vaiyaghrajina samsthitah
Suddha padmasano devi yashtabhyaih khatvanga sulaka.
Sakti dandam chapa banau vara bhiti gadankusam
cinmudrikam cakshamalam pustakam ca kamandalam
khadga khetau dadhano ayam payat saivagamaivahuh.
sveta varnah.
(As these dhyana slokas may not be so easily available to
24
1,
and for the vidya pitha is done; the latter is the pustaka puja, in
essence only a puja for the agama sastra.
it is
The installation of
Sivalingas in the name of the 28 agamas is just a projection
of the
vidyapitha puja of the svartha puja into the ritual of parartha puja
or temple worship. of course the palm leaf manuscript
The book is
length and breadth for the leaves of the book are prescribed and
different names for the different sized books are also mentioned.
Saint Manikkavackar says that as the Agama, Siva confers
bliss. Here he identifies Siva with the Agama. Hence Agama
worship is itself Siva worship. 28 Siva lingas have been installed
in the remote past in the name of the 28 agamas in the north-
western corner of the outer court of the Vriddhagirisvarar temple
in Vriddhachalam, an important town in South Arcot district in
Tamilnad. The lingas are known as the respective Agamesas,
from Kamikesa to Vatulesa.
which although bound up with gross matter, can free itself from all
this bondage and seek oneness with the Supreme Self and, with the
guidance of Divine Grace, to know that Self and become one with
It. Sadasiva revealed to spiritually advanced souls, the agamas,
which embodied the path of such salvation to the mortals who are
caught up in the cycle of births and deaths. The four paths towards
this end have been developed by Tamil Siddhanta sastra writers
in the evolutionary order of Charya, Kriya, Yoga, and Jnana.
These four are fully dealt with in the agamas, mostly in the order
of Jnana, Kriya, Yoga and Charya. The Jnana part is the Philo-
sophy of the agamas while the other three may be taken as dealing
with the sadhana or practice.
Of the agamas available in print today, only the Suprabheda
the Mrgendra (upagama) and the Kirana contain all the four parts.
From the volume of writing under each head, it can be clearly
seen that the emphasis of the agamas was equally on the jnana and
the kriya parts, that is, both the philosophical and the ritualistic
aspects.
The total number of verses in all the agamas is given as 1
25
:
26
are treated in the available agamas, which deal with more than one
part:
Suprabheda Kriya, Charya, Yoga, and Vidya.
Raurava I and II Vidya and Kriya.
Kirana Vidya, Kriya, Charya and Yoga.
Matanga Vidya, Kriya, Charya and Yoga.
Mrgendra Vidya, Yoga, Kriya and Charya.
[Siddhanta Saravali 1 Vidya, Kriya, Yoga and Charya.]
dealing with all the four padas. It was written by Trilocana sambhu, perhaps
in the 13th century. It was published in 1887 with the Sanskrit gloss of Ananta
Sivacharya and also with a Tamil translation. The book is valuable as serving
as an introduction to the four parts of the agamas.
27
14. THE KRIYA PADA
This pada considers not the individual man alone
but considers
man * n It has a concern and involvement
in the community
around. The temple is an outward expression of
this concern.
Influences between man and the community around are mutual.
The thoughts, aspirations and actions of the one affect the other.
For the society to hold together intact as a unit, there has to be an
identity of all thought and aim and activity. The community
as such or the masses are not attracted by abstract thoughts or
philosophy but are attracted by definite activity such as rituals and
puja or worship, festivals and the like, where they also have some
kind of physical participation. Congregational worship besides
festivals is the one great force that holds together society without
disintegrating and the kriya pada lays down an elaborate code there-
for which is^ooth emotional and artistic, and rational at the same
time. All symbolism has come into himself and helped him to realise
the Inner Presence; when a large mass of humanity concentrates on
one activity, an activity which is a spiritual activity, each individual
aspiration gets a fulfillment, growth, strength, nourishment and
ultimately in good time and through His grace even realization.
It is this activity that has held together the Hindu society through
is in three divisions
- a. karshana to pratisthantam, that is from
suitability for temple con-
ploughing the ground for examining its
pratishtha to u,savantam that
is
struction, to consecration; b.
of all types of festivals; and
from consecration upto the conduct
28
c. prayascitta kriyas i.e. ,
expiatory rites combined with other purifi-
catory rituals.
With preamble we shall look at the available kriya padas
this
in the agamas. The Kriya part is generally the largest part in all
the available agamas. (Some details are here given under the two
agamas Karana and Suprabheda). This part is concerned with
worship, both individual worship and temple worship. All the
aspects of worship are very elaborately described here. There seems
to be no aspect which is beyond the purview of the kriya pada so
far as puja or ritualistic congregational worship is concerned.
Many of the larger agamas have chapters on the tantravatara
and the mantr avatar a. The tantravatara narrates at length details
about the principal agamas, their revelation, the disciples to whom
they were revealed, the number of verses, their upagamas and other
similar details, in short the descent on earth of the agamas. The
mantravatara deals with the mantras their svarupa (real form),
,
1 5 . THE CH AR YA PADA
The seeker Truth or the aspirant, the siddhantin has to
after ,
29
both in himself and in the environment is essential. This is the
code of personal conduct and discipline, the way of behaviour
or
funtioning and this is charya. The charya part is not a
difficult
one nor is it very complicated either for understanding or for follow-
ing. It a sort of rudimentary preparation, intended to purify
is
and equip the sadhaka in body, mind and spirit, a personal training
or discipline. The path chalked out for him is the godward path,
because as a sadhaka, one who practises the means for attaining
oneness with Siva, he is the cynosure of all eyes. He has in a
limited sense to begin with, to lead others. Society looks up to
him and by his personal life, affiliations, behaviour and progress
and attainments, he sets the model. Human life being what it is
there may be some leniency or laxity in the charya pada, although
the kriya pada is very strict in all its observances allowing for
no slackness or exemptions.
The charya pada deals with the daily observance and the
personal discipline of the worshippers. Of the available three
agamas, only the Suprabheda agama deals elaborately with it. The
purificatory ceremonies for the individual from the time of his
birth, the dikshas (initiation), the ultimate funeral rites and similar
other ceremonies are described here.
the Vedas. They would claim that the yajnas, sacrifices, were
themselves a sort of yoga practice where the vedic seer tried to
unite himself with the particular celestial who was invoked. Yagna-
valkya smriti says that Hiranyagarbha first expounded the
yoga.
Some aspects of yoga are also found interwoven into the various
sections of the kriya pada.
The agamas deal with the different aspects of temple and temple
worship and these aspects are called kolas. They are three in
number: the tantra kala, dealing with the temple construction,
31
™ k ‘" f hC
^°
nS thCir f0rmS etC
’ -
; the mantra kala dealing
> with
f
installation and consecration and the upadesa kala
dealing with the
philosophical tenets which help the
devotee in ultimate emancipa-
ion from earthly bonds. The
three kalas roughly correspond
to the charya, the knya and yoga,
and the jnana padas respectively
are created. There are three entities - Pati (Siva), pasu the indi-
vidual souls and pasa, all of whom are eternal and co-existent.
Siva is the instrumental cause and He helps the souls to develop
each according to its own nature governed by karma. His direc-
tion always fbr good, though occasionally it may seem to cause
is
suffering. Siva has no physical body and His body is only the
‘
mantra body. God is not the creator of the souls or their bodies,
but He only directs the proper karma to attach itself to the souls
32
soul’s effort, guided by the sakti, it unfolds itself as a natural
course. Karma is experienced and reduced to naught, not
necessarily in one birth but may be in several births.
33
3
even
press',
in the
modern day.
„s " h
ti
relevant
,
”
C 8raP i$ MOther SUb
S,o„! r° ^
Stone figures and copper
J ect whicl> has
and bronze icons
full scope here
are discussed. Measure-
or each figure and the relative
sizes of all the images are
given. Rules for the installation and
consecration of the images
the r weapons and their mounts and
the conduct of festivals -
daily, seasonal and annual, are
exhaustive.
34
posture suitable for meditation. As against the west, Indian yogic
asanas concentrate on the nerves more than on the muscles. They
concern themselves with the internal organs and glands than with
the mere skeleton or shape and they consider the flexibility
of the
in Hindu life.
It consists of three stages: puraka - inhalation of the breath,
kumbhaka - retention of the breath in the lungs for a few seconds,
and recaka - slow exhalation.
Pratyahara withdrawing of the senses from the outward
is
objects, i.e. shutting the mind against all impressions from the
outside world. These steps, we may take
have helped to bring it,
35
now Ashtanga yoga had been
called the in existence in the Tamil
nad independent of Sanskrit treatises.
Now this eight-fold ashtanga yoga is taken as a step or steps
to a higher yoga in Saiva Siddhanta which seeks a spiritual union
beyond the mental disciplines and it is called the Praasaada yoga. 1
This is a sort of training for the latent power in the Sushumna nadi
called Kundalini sakti, which isand for taking
like a coiled serpent
it through sixteen' stages called kalas; they are medha kala, arghisa
36
castes (not varnas). More important, since all the castes were
sastras and the Silpa sastras and could even pull up the
Sivacharya
when he went wrong. In may be mentioned in passing that the
Silpa sastras were mere elaborations or condensations of the
Agama dhyana sloka etc. It will be a mere repetition to say that
the stapatis were all good Sanskrit scholars themselves.
In short the Agamas did not merely theorise but were intimately
concerned with and involved themselves in the life of
life itself
the common man, not only the elite and the very learned, and
attempted to guide him and lead him forward spiritually.
The Vedic mantras had remained as mere sound, mere agni
rituals. But the Agamas had developed the mantra concept and
had helped to give form and shape to the mantra concept, when
temples were constructed and images were installed. From the
abstract, the agamas led man to the concrete, so that his senses
could have the satisfaction of perception and grasp, along with
faith. Art was added on and there was a complete harmonious
and integrated fulfillment in all fields, physical, intellectual and
aesthetical.
The Agama synthesis is not a mere jumble of many thoughts,
teachings and ancient traditions. Its four parts effect a synthesis
of the whole life of man, and of man and society. Its jnana part
provides a satisfying and even a compelling understanding of the
aim and purpose of life, the Intention of life. In Saivism it is to
work out a divine purpose, the divine purpose of shedding all
impurities and reaching an oneness through self-effort, of course
under God’s guidance. The systematic presentation of this
jnana aspect has its own metaphysics and its own philosophy.
These are accompanied by steps taken to put them into practice
and this is the agamic yoga, which translates the higher philosophy
into practice. The guru is most important in this yoga, which seeks
to purify Life and uplift it for effective realization.
Man is a member of society; he influences it and in turn is
influenced by it. He is just a unit in a great organisation. Edu-
cation of single units will ultimately result in the education of the
aggregate society. A
congenial and mentally helpful interplay
has to be evolved between man and the group. The mass mind
37
.
OM Trayambakam yajamahe
sugandhim pushti vardhanam
Urvaruham iva bandanat
mrityor mukshiya mamrutat.
Tryambaka, the
“We adore the Father of the three worlds,
fullness and strength. May I be
Three- eyed One, the increaser of
detached from Death like the
cucumber from its stem, but not
from Immortality.” .. . .
38
disciples, the sages Sanandana and Sanat
Sanaka, Sanatana,
kumara. On the west, we have usually the Lingotbhava form
(the form of Siva whose crown could not
be reached by Brahma
who flew up as a swan to find it, and whose feet could not be
as a boar
reached by Vishnu who dug into the bowels of the earth
But in many temples there is installed in the place of
to find it).
Lingotbhava the form of Vishnu with four arms and the Chanku
and Chakra. On the north, in a goshta exactly above the gomukhi ,
which leads out the abhisheka water from the sanctum there is
installed the four faced form of Brahma to ,
whom legends would
This with reference to the
say there shall be no worship. is
21. THESADHANA
The Sadhana (i.e. the means and the path for release) has
39
above, and the last is the word namah which means ‘I salute.’ With-
out the pranava, the primordial sound OM , no mantra for any
deity is valid. The bija mantra is the most important. Bija is
seed. Here it consists of a single
sound represented by one voiced
letter ending in m. This is different for the different deities and
consists in essence of a sound or syllable which is the principle of
the form. It pleases the deity and makes it come down to the
disciple at the time of invocation and puja.
The third or the primary essential is the Guru. In Saiva
thought, Siva Himself is considered to have come down on earth in
this form for the guidance and redemption of this disciple. “Guru
is Siva, taught my master” says Tirumular (1581). The guru is
considered to be in partial communion with the Lord Siva through
his own sadhana and practices. He implants the mantra along
with his own personal spiritual dynamism into the disciple. It is
the guru’s grace that pauses the progress of the disciple in the
chosen spiritual path towards the final goal. Achievement or
attainment depends on the spiritual fervour and practice of the
disciple and God’s grace no doubt, but the guru’s initial upadesa
and identity lead the disciple a long way The guru
in the path.
40
;:
and in the jnana kanda , the absolute identity between the Paramatma
and the jivatma. These are to be eschewed. All the matter in the
Siddhanta (i.e., the agama) is to be accepted and followed.’*
41
This not the place to elaborate on this
is
subject but yet this
eserves particular mention and this
would lend support to the
view that the Agama has a large amount
of non- Aryan or Dravi-
dian element in it. This will also explain
the Siddhantin’s refuta-
tion of the Gita. Sivajnanasiddhiyar, the most elaborate of the
(Tamil) Siddhanta sastras would dismiss the Gita
calling its “text
for killing.” The other two scriptures of the Prasthana-traya-
the Vedas (i.e. the Upanishads ) and the Brahma sutras- are accept-
able to the Siddhantin while the Gita is not. This is quite a funda-
mental concept that has to be accepted.
In a philosophy where there is only the Supreme Reality and
where all else is illusion, mere maya, the teaching of the Gita may
be fully relevant. Its ultimate teaching crystallises into this: “So
long as there is life action is unavoidable. None can exist with-
out action. But the world and life in it are transitory and sorrow-
laden; so the individual has to make the best use of it for his own
moral and spiritual advancement.. This can be achieved only by
a progressive and conscions surrender to God. Though he conti-
nues to function in the world it is for the sake of others and it is
erent perspective. God, here, the perfect and the fountain of all
mercy and compassion, has created life, and man is not to run away
from it or reject it. God is all bliss, ananda, and the world His
creation is also capable of leading man towards this ananda. Life
is not opposed to bhoga. Even through this bhoga, man can grow
will on
to his fullest height in the conscious performance of God’s
This is a duty and rare privilege and hence the Tamil
saints
earth.
have sung that “lam not afraid of being born” {Tiruvacakam 5.2)
Appar 4.81.4).
and “birth as a human being is to be welcomed” (St.
individual his
The very concept of God as Siva and Sakti shows the
through a stern disciplin
goal through even this earthly bhoga ,
42
He isexpected to sublimate it into one of joy in service to God
and godly men and it is here that the joy multiplies. Hence it is
finds joy in God’s
that the Siddhantin differs from the Gita and
work. Action is not devoid of joy here. Though he merely
without any anxiety for the fruits thereof, but weaves into it a
spirit of service and joy which is the outcome of its own theistic
philosophy.
That such a discerning philosopher and painstaking scholar
like Dr. Das Gupta remarks, that a large part of the agamas do
not have philosophical value is only because all the agamas have
not been made availabe to orientalists in original in the nagari
script, nor have any authentic translations been published in
English so far. As he himself has conceded, the vidya pada is a
distinctive section in the agamas, it is quite extensive and it enun-
ciates the Siddhanta philosophy.
43
.
“™ bcr ° .
° r verses n eacl1 anc* the
*
upagamas which
’
Sanskrit Editio
2. Saiva Siddhanta Paribhasha of Surya Sivacharya,
1929, page 39., quoted on page
41
44
knowledge or the particular characteristics. contended
Hence it is
since the entities and doctrines involved are the same there cannot
be any real difference in the subject matter of the various agamas,
and whatever differences may be apparent, will, in the ultimate
analysis, be found to deal only with the three entities of Siddhanta.
He also discusses at length how the Veda is a scripture general
in charater, while the agama is specific in this, that it speaks not of a
god but of Siva. He sees no difference between the two and
observes that while the Veda is applicable only to the first three
varnas (castes), the agama is applicable to all the four varnas and so
possesses greater sanction. 1
45
extracted here: “The Agamas number and they were
are 28 in
revealed by Paramesvara from His five faces to the 66
sages. But
it should be said that they were really
280 million and one hundred
thousand agamas and 700 million verses. They were handed down
from Siva to Sakti, from Sakti to Sadasiva, and so on, until nine
agamas were handed down to Nandi, my guru. These nine are the
Karana, Kamika, Vira, Chintya, Vatula, Yamala, Kalottara,
Supra (bheda) and Makuta”. In another place, he says: “The
Veda and the agama are the true revelations of God. One is
general, and the other particular, with special reference to Saivism.
Both are His words. Some say the ultimate end they point to is
different. But the more advanced souls do not see any difference”. 1
From these lines, we know definitely that some of the principal
agamas were much earlier than the age of Tirumular.
The Devaram hymns of Appar, Sambandhar and Sundarar
make several references to the agamas. Sambandhar says that
2
Siva revealed the Veda, the Vedanta and the Agama.
Sekkilar makes many references to the agamas in his Periya-
puranam: “The agamas were revealed by Siva. Temples are built
according to the rules laid down in the agamas. Siva puja is
worship”.
We get the following picture of the authority and influence
” million
:
r-r co cr) and 2397 The number 280
number of agamas revealed was
,y
the
very large.
2 Sambandhar Devaram 3. 23. o.
46
agama lines (801, 804). Nilanakkar performs the puja accord-
St.
ing to the agama (1838). In the days of St. Naminandi, the king,
seated on the throne, renders all endowments for the worship of the
Lord at Tiru Arur, glorifying the Veda and the Agama scriptures
(1889).”
Speaking about the temple built mentally by St. Pusalar,
Sekkilar says that he laid the foundation according to the agama
rules, and mentiones the upana (pedestal), the various layers of the
disclosed the agamas from the Mahendra hill out of His five faces
(2: 20), that he recovered them from the fish which had swallowed
47
e ext and hidden it and that appearing as the Agamas,
(2, 18),
e imparts bliss (1.4.)
The reference to recovery from the fish
is perhaps to a period
before Manikkavacakar, when the agamas
were forgotten and had gone into oblivion,
and when Lord Siva
had rescued them and given them a
new currency among the
Saiva people. This is quite possible. We find that the Saiva
Devaram songs and the Vaisnava Prabandham songs
had passed
into obscurity for some centuries, after which
they were rescued
by the Grace of God, by Nambiyandar Nambi and Nathamunihal
respectively and given fresh life. Manikkavacakar here says that
the agama is Siva Himself 1 and that it confers bliss. The implica-
tion is that the agama is considered by him not merely as a manual
of rituals but as a treatise on philosophy, leading one to final
union with God.
Saiva samaya neri of Maraijnana sambandhar (16th century)
deals with the agamas, their origin number of verses, subject matter
etc. in about 20 verses 2 Tamil Language.
in the
Some of the thoughts given in this book in addition to the
usual details about the revelation of te agamas are the following:
“Just as creation is different, so also the agamas appear different.
Clear the place before commencing agama study and let the student
purify himself also. Strew flowers on the agama before taking it
up for study. Before commencing and at the close, let the student
salute the feet of the guru”. The following days are prohibited
for agama study: the 14th day, 8th, the New moon and full moon
days; the 1st day, days of eclipses, the three occasions of sandhya
(morning, evening and noon) and other similar days which are taboo
days of births and deaths in the house and days when the deity goes
out in procession.
It may be recalled that this author had written a Tamil
48
the Agamas (and Upagamas) and their parts. From the early
period of after Sankara, they were unable to shake off the glamour of
the Ekatmavada ( Kevalattna vadd) cult. This was the cult of the
smartha brahmins after Sankara and their influence was such that
the ignorant among the Sivacharyas styled themselves just brahmins,
went the full length of the Vedic adhyayana and tried to place them-
selves on a par with the aham-brahmasmi brahmins. This was a
criminal and unforgivable betrayal of Saivism. The vedic brahmin
and the agamic Sivacharya were entirely different from each other.
But the latter, in his studied imitation of the former, neglected his
own heritage and the Agamas were the loser in the process. At
a particular stage in history, between the 14th and the 17th cen-
turies, the agamikas relegated agamic studies to the background and
went after Vedic studies and elaborate agii karyas. For their
temple services and rituals these two were not absolutely essential
but the craze blinded them to their own greater heritage. The result
was that the agamas and agamic study got neglected. Many agama
texts perished through non-study and non-copying when the older
manuscripts got brittle and needed re-copying.
Further, the agamic study was kept as a rare preserve in the
homes of the Sivacharyas. They never taught them to the others
and when their own inclinations were towards brahminism, their
own characteristic Siva culture languished. Their progeny could
not get the best out of their earlier ancestor and so the agamic
ritual continued as a mere formal ritual without its glorious soul.
This was the real reason for the decay of the agamas and for the
loss of the books themseleves.
Foreign aggression and suppresion of the native culture
could not be said to be the cause for the loss of the agama books.
When so many other books like the Vedas and the Devaram are
available today, the loss of the Agamas cannot be explained except
by the neglect of the agama custodians, the Sivacharyas themselves.
From the history of Sivagama publication, it can be seen that the
publication was due to the enterprising nature of non-sivacharyas.
Excepting for the Archakar Association which came into existence
in the second half of the 20th century for the cause of Agama
publication, all the other publishers have been bhaktas and non-
sivacharyas. If the Sivacharyas are today in a poorly state in
society, it has to be said that they themselves are responsible for
their state and none other.
49
4
27. INFLUENCE OF THE AGAMAS ON INDIAN LIFE
AND THOUGHT
The influence of the Agamas onand thought of the
the life
people of India not only in the South but in the North also has been
quite marked. It has been wide and deep. What was formerly
vedic rites containing sacrifices (including animal sacrifices before
the advent of the Buddha) had been totally metamorphosed by
agamic concepts. Even apart from Buddhist preaching, the
agamas, with their insistance on jnana as the supreme path for
attainment of final bliss, had themselves played a significant part in
doing away with animal sacrifices. The jnana part had dealt with
only philosophy and its impact on rituals was equally profound. A
considerable period before the advent of Saint Tiru Jnanasam-
bandhar, the agamas had emphasised the oneness of all creation
and had paved the way for the riddance of animal sacrifice in the
land. They were a great force in the South and so foot hold for
Jainism with its emphasis on non-killing was scarce in this part
of the country, because non-killing was already there in Saivism,
as one of its fundamental doctrines. A very small section of
Hindu society and it was looked down upon by the more orthodox
which dismissed it contemptuously with the word
vamachara.
sects,
Scholars have said that although the Vedanta
of Sankara follo-
Ramanuja’s theism
wed the Vedanta philosophy of the Upanishads,
the Vedanta Sutras
was closer to the ideas of Badarayana in
the Agamas. Snkantha
which showed a considerable influence of
pre-Sankara but considered by the
Sivacharya, hailed by some as
to be a contemporary of
Ramanuja
more conservative scholars
Indian philosophy.
1. p. T. Srinh^saTyengarTOutlines of
50
Temple has been very ancient in South India. Ilango
ritual
51
the temples according to a general pattern and design, to install the
deities therein for worship and to consecrate them. Through
several centuries before Christ, even before the Buddha, the special
clan of temple priests in Tamilnad. known by several names such
as the Siva brahmins, the gurukkal, the archakas, Adi Saivas and the
Sivacharyas, gradually separated from the general community
itself
the gods with prayers and dhupa and flowers They offered dhupa . .
"
1 . Paddy is the word used in the text ; evidently akshata is meant.
53
of the agamas temple worship. These details were certainly
in
not races of Vedic worship nor due to Vedic influence. There is
f
no worship in the Vedas other than agni karya. Ag>u karya is one
of a hundered details in Siva worship according to the Agamas.
To organise worship on the above lines, the influence must
have been at work several centuries earlier. Besides, we find that
Karikala restored and rebuilt the temples ravaged by his foes.
So the temples must have been very much earlier in origin. Sum-
ming up, we say that the agama influence was there in the Tamilnad
even 2500 years back. The indication from the Mohenjadaro
excavations that Saiva worship was there among the Tamils over
five thousand years ago appears to be quite plausible even on
other literary evidence.
The Saiva canon beginning with Tirumular and Karaikkal
ammai (5th century a.d.) and Silappadhikaram (3rd century a.d.)
give almost all the details regarding the agamic practices and rituals,
but since we have restricted our observation to the texts now known
as the classics of the Sangham age (3rd century b.c. to 2nd century
a.d.) we have not drawn upon the later works.
out the Tamil speaking country, which they had visited with
their
55
Karana and the Sukshma
are followed Tim
™*“*>
K .fLoS»"
in Tl, “ xr«n
J,
N * “'
ll
,
»
» unique pl«, , he
hal^rf ^
aUthonty
said to T tem P les where Nataraja
in
Z
is
shrines
° ne of «is Cosmic Dances. In such
shrTnes His Ardra darsana
festival is considered to be of special
igmficance. They have special dance halls known as the
sabha (gold - Chidambaram), Kanaka
Rajata sabha (silver-Madurai),
C° P
Tambra
rUn Ve ",’ Ra,na Sahha
S"
CAitrn Mtftafr /(art-Tirukutralam).
x tem-Tiruva.ankadiTand
The dances of Nataraja are
seven and they were performed
in these and other places.
The
Makutagama deals specially with the dance
of Nataraja and hence
Its appropriateness to
these places of Nataraja.
We learn that this agama governs the worship in the Tiru-
nallaru temple also. This temple is held to be of special signi-
ficance to the planet Saturn (Sani in
Tamil)
whose baneful influence
brought untold misery and suffering to Prince
Nala, celebrated
in the Sanskrit epic Mahabharata.
Although the Siva temples, follow the same pattern
and
layout, there are many differences in conception
and construction.
We shall give two examples here. The sanctum (garbha graha) is
always square in shape. But very rarely there are some with
a
circular shape. Similarly, the tower on the sanctum is always
circular; in the Chola temples, these towers, called vimana,
early
are very huge in size (as in Tanjavur, Gangai konda cholapuram,
Darasuram, and Tiru Bhuvanam) and are square in shape. But
there are a few, called the gaj'a prishta, which are like the form of a
reclining elephant. Similarly, the avudaiyar of most of the Siva-
lingas is circular in shape. A few are square. To understand these
structures, agamic knowledge is necessary. Almost all of these
were constructed more than a thousand years ago. Owing to the
muslim onslaught and the British overlordship, the tradition of
temple construction had been broken and naturally understand-
ing also was on the wane. But however construction is now being
revived on a large scale. To guide the architects and sculptures,
the administrators and archakas expert knowledge is necessary.
The agamas supply this knowledge and help in the renovation and
reconstruction of temples. Besides, from a historical point of view,
the agamas also help the study of the architecture and sculpture of
the existing temples, helping us to understand their age, their
classification, the different styles of construction, the disposition
of the various sub-tempies therein, the conduct of temple worship
and festivals according to the different historical periods, ceremonies
like consecration etc.
57
An ldst the man y currents and cross currents of today’s
J socio-
political agitations, we would do well to remember that they
have
nothing particularly ‘braminical’
about them. Tirumular himself
says that our temples can have
nothing to do with brahminism 1 .
keeps him out. This does not make him a brahmin. He was
and is a Saiva, the adisaiva.
Besides, the Tamil Siddhanta Sastras have not said everything
about the Saiva Siddhanta philosophy and where we find some
lacuna, where further elucidation is necessary, and where many
-
steps have not been explained, as for example in the case of the
process of the evolution and the involution of the tattvas, a refer-
ence to the Agamas helps us to clear doubts, to supply further
elucidation, and to have a better understanding of the philosophic
concepts.
In the present day when there is a large awakening in matters
of dance (bharata natya ) and art, there is no other scriptural autho-
ritythan the agamas to lay down the rules for temple dance and its
parts such as mudras, musical instruments, and the like. We
should remember, all classical dances have their origin in temple
dances and the sanction for all the dances is contained only in the v
of time than the agamas; Bharata first wrote his sastra in Tamil
and later wrote which was the lingua franca among
it in Sanskrit
all the learned people of the whole of India. The very' concept
mudras in the natya
of dance is Tamilian and the large number of
All that has been said so far is external in the matter of Agama
relevance in modern But there
society. is one fundamental aspect
of the relevance of the agamas which is intrinsic and which is
relevant not only to the modern society; it had been relevant during
59
,
Most of the agamas yet remain only in the palm leaf manuscript
stage, with the Sivacharyas. All of them without a single excep-
tion had been written in the grantha script, which was the special
script evolved by the Tamil people to write the Sanskrit language.
North India had adopted the devanagiri script for the Sanskrit
language. The Sivacharyas who were virtually the custodians of
61
th,s nagari script till the
T,h
Quarter o the twentieth
quarter century. Even the few agamas
second
that were
printed were in the gramha script
(except for two agamas) and so
rientalists, who as a rule knew
only the devanagari, had no oppor
tunity to study the agamas at all.
The eminent Saiva scholar, J. M. Nallaswami
Pillai, published
in the years 1900-2 some accounts
of the Mrgenda and the Sukshma
agamas in his English journal, the Siddhanta Deepikai,
but they did
not attract much notice. P. T. Srinivasa Aiyangar,
had devoted a
section to the Saivagamas in his Outlines
of Indian Philosophy*,
but here he had sought to give an account of the
Saiva Siddhanta
system of philosophy and to prove the antiquity of the
Siva worship
but had not undertaken a detailed examination of any
agama. In
his monumental work on Indian Philosophy two volumes in
covering about 1500 pages, Dr. Radhakrishnan had dismissed
the Saivagamas with just a mention in three sentences. 2
On the
other hand, Dr. Surendranath Das Gupta has devoted a whole
volume to the study of Saivism in his History of Indian Philosophy 3
in which he has devoted several sections to the study of the
Mrgendra, Matanga Porameswara Vatula and Paushkara agamas,
,
The emphasis inthis sentence is all wrong. Saivism was the basic religion of
or sprouted as a
the Tamil country, from which Vaishnavism branched off
to be the most wide
separate cult later. And Saivism had been and continues
spread religion in the whole of Tamilnad.
3. History of Indian Philosophy, Volume V ,
1955.
62
.
immemorial. They are not Brahmins but are called in the agamas
the Siva- Brahmins. A generation back, there were scores of really
very learned and devoted Sivacharyas, who know the more import-
ant agamas by heart. modern days there are many who
Even in
can quote freely from many unpublished agamas like the Lalita,
Vira, Makuta (recently printed) Sukshma, Bimba etc. Those that
quote these agamas are not really in possession of the agama
manuscripts. But a thorough knowledge of the texts has passed
on from father to son and master to disciple through instruction.
As they are given the duty of parartha-Siva puja, they are very
thorough with the kriya or the ritualistic part. But in modern days,
the range of scholarship in the agamas is dwindling even among
them. Many of them have only small treatises or manuals, which
contain selected portions from one or more agamas, dealing with
their day to day duties in the temple, such as performance of the
worship and special puja and festivals in the temples. These
from the kriya
selections are just vidhis (or paddhatis), rules culled
pada and nothing more. The Sivacharyas thus do not have a
comprehensiove knowledge of even the kriya pada itself, much
less of the equally important jnana pada.
The Sivacharyas have been through the ages ministers to the
spiritual needs of the society. But now atheism and a negation of
the spirit has come to be the fashion of the day. In the name of
reason and radicalism, culture, apprenticeship or heritage is no
longer considered important for spiritual ministering. Sivacharyas
as a result are not held in the respect that is due to them. And
they in turn fail to rise up to the high standards of discipline and
spiritual leadership expected of them. Many young men among
them seek other avocations in life and go out of the fold. The clan
is fast dwindling in numbers. Besides, when the older generation
passes out, there are hardly any who can step into its place and fulfil
the duties of its exalted position
63
the exscavation of a temple of
Sambhu (Siva); a stone inscription of
Kumaragupta (415-6 a.d.) at Udayagiri recording
the building
of a number of minor temples in the
temple of Mahesvara; the
Bihar of Skandagupta and the Mandasor Pillar of
pillar
Yaso-
dharma; a Kousambi inscription (dated 428-9 a.d.)
on a stone
image during the days of Bhimavarma.
These inscriptions will suffice to indicate the wide spread
and
advanced nature of the Saiva cult at the beginning of the 5th century
throughout India. Quite a long period of development
would
naturally have preceded this wide prevalence. The
Mohenja-daro
and the Harappan excavations seem to indicate that Siva worship
was part of a Tamilian (Dravidian) civilization which flourished
in the area even five millennia ago. The mention of Uma in the
Kenopanishad and the philosophical ideas contained in the Svetas-
vatara Upanishad tell us that the concept of Siva as the Supreme
Being is not so new after all, but quite a very ancient one; Uma is
just a name for the Grace of Siva. The occurrence of the phrase
namas Sivaya in the Krishna Yajur vcda-Taittiriya somhita is also
significant.
What is called now the Tamil literature of the Sangham age
bears ample evidence to the fact that two thousand years ago Siva
was known Tamilnad as the Supreme Being. Though His
in the
name Siva, is not mentioned there, His manifest form as is known
today has been referred to in different places. He is the One
under the ficus (kallal) tree; the constellation ardhra is specially
sacred to Him; He has the bull on His banner; He is the Supreme
Lord (Isa); He is the holy one with the matted locks; He holds
the battle axe (mazhu) in His hand. His mount is the bull; He is
the blue throated Lord; cassia (konrai) is His favourite flower-;
He had received the Ganga and contained her fury in His locks;
He wears the crescent moon on the locks; He has eight arms; He is
the three eyed; He reduced to ashes the three flying fortresses; He
has Uma on His left. These attributes do not attach themselves
but to Siva the
to Rudra, the Destroyer, one of the Hindu Trinity
Absolute of Metaphysics and the Brahman of Vedanta.
From all we can rightly say that Siva, who has all these
these
attributes, was very well known and
worshipped in the Tamilnad
several hundred years before the age
of the Sangham
at least
‘
literature.
Now we must understand that the Saiva and his religon, the
Saiva Siddhanta prevalent in the Tamilnad, have a message to the
world. This is important in the sense that India, particularly
Tamilnad South India, has an unbroken tradition in culture,
in
civilization and religion which has been continuing for several
65
5
Smv.sm. The agamas are the basic
texts for both the rituals and
he concepts. It ls high time
that pressure is brought to bear
upon the Mutts and Temple managements,
and their administra-
tive Government department,
to utilise their funds to ensure that
all
the available agamas are brought
out in the nagari script in care-
ully annotated and translated editions, by
competent scholars,
with suitable photographic illustrations, so
that they may be
useful not only to the Saiva Tamilianshere,
but also to the wider
world of English knowing research workers and
students of reli-
gion and philosophy abroad and a better understanding
of the
Tamilian spiritual thought may be brought about, the world
over.
A large part of this work now
being done by the French Institute
is
67
from the aspect of Siva as Rudra or Sarva or the god of
destruction. 1
Siva is the Supreme, the Brahman, the Paramatman,
at whose bidd-
ing in the view of Saivism, the three murtis Brahma, Visnu and
Rudra
perform their triple functions of creations, maintenance and destr-
uction. Siva is not one of the Trimurti but the Super Power which
directsand controls the Trimurth
All the Tamil areas of Sri Lanka -the whole of Jaffna, eastern
areas and many areas besides are inhabited by the Saiva people
who have been worshippers of only Siva unless converted to Chris-
tiantity or Islam in the modern day. There is no Vaishnavism there.
The fact that Saints Tiru Jnanasambahdhar (636-651) and Sundara-
murti 700 A.D.; were under a sort of religious compulsion to
(c.
Lanks, the whole island followed Saivism. This would also indicate
that Saivism had reigned supreme in the mother country even a very
long time earlier than the 3rd century B.C.
.Besides the Tamil areas of Sri Lanka, Nepal is probably is the only
Sovereign state which professes the Saiva Religion (Hinduism).
All this religion here is Sanskrit based and it is significant to note
that many agamas had been found there by the scholars. The stan-
the agama represents, the rshi to whom it was revealed and those
through whom it was propagated on earth.
69
the upagamasare available in print. Ramakantha seems to
have
been a great agama exponent.
The salient features of the printed agamas are discussed
below.
2. KAMIKA AGAMA
The Kamikagama, the first in the order of the 28 agamas, re-
presents the Feet of Siva printed in two parts, by the Sivajnana-
bodham press, in 1901. The total number of verses in it are
12,000, made up as follows: Purva-5166, Uttara-6477; verses
lost 357. The term Kamika means ‘the object desired’; the Kami-
kagama is said to signify the Book which grants the desired object
to the souls and helps them to final release through severance of
bonds.’ The editor says in his introduction that this agama has
all the four parts, but as this part-kriya-deals elaborately with the
relevant topics from the other three also, those parts do not appear
to have much currency among the Sivacharyas. The Kamika is the
agama which is widely in use today among them. Sivacharyas
say that its authority derives from the fact that it always prescribes
the rules very definitely saying “this and not that”. Other agamas
like the equally important Karana, though larger in size, are said
of the deities.
in the text, in double royal size. The book is printed with double
70
temple two successive years, and so took up the work for the
in
benefit of mankind. The editor, publishing this part, Uttara kamika
without a gloss, says that, to those who had gone through the first
part with the Tamil gloss, the second part will be easy of under-
standing, even without any explanation.
3. KARANA AGAMA
The Karanagama, representing the ankle of Siva, is even a larger
treatise, the fourth in the first group of five. It consists of two parts,
the Purva Karana and the Uttara Karana. Both were published in
71
that the code of temple worship laid down
agamas, more in the
than at 1000 years ago, is fully alive and pulsating with life
least
and vitally even in the 20th century.
The Uttara Karana has 105 chapters. The initial chapter on
tantraxatara again covers the same ground, viz, origin of the
agamas
etc. Other chapters are mantraxatara, karshana, and similar details
in full on agnikaraya, sixalinga sthapana, renovation, festivals,
monthly festivals and special festivals in the course of the 12 months
beginning from Karttikai, including the Ardra and Sivaratri celeb-
rations. Then there are separate chapters for the worship of each
of the 25 Siva murtis like Somaskanda, Sarabhesvara and so on.
Divya xriksha puja (divine temple tree) is mentioned in a chapter of
25 verses.
Further chapters deal with Mahamari pratishtha, 1 the temple
car ( ratha ), Bhadrakali, Matham (Mutt), Vidya pitham, Rishi
sthapana, Sivabhakta pratishtha, dvaja sthapana, the temple flower
garden, Mahabhisheka and Soura’ sthapana. That these chapters
are later additions is quite obvious, from the fact that they provide
72
4.
AJITA AGAMA
The Ajitagama the fifth is said to represent the knees of Siva.
Its kriya pada alone has been published in
two parts by the French
Institute. It was revealed to Achyuta (Vishnuj by
Paramesvara.
The two parts contain 54 chapters. A s usual it deals with all aspects
of kriya, beginning with tantravatara and ending with Surya puja.
Some aspects on charya and the mudras are a special feature of this
agama. Special chapters on bathing Siva with milk, ghee etc. are
found here. The 25 Siva murtis and other deities are described
5.
elaborately. The sub-temples and the rules for installation of the
6. SAHASRA AGAMA
The Sahasragama, the eighth in the series of ten Sivabheda-
agamas is one of the five revealed from the Vamadeva conntenance
to Kala, Bhima and Dharma. It is said to have ten Upagamas.
73
lhtnt
otTZ
Va '
respectively
respecttveljr.
la
‘
f
L7
le P0rtl0n of the a anla and was
^Thi^
8
°" e C0U d UPPly th6m
'
'
the
12, 3
orS"
and 3
this agama lavs can be
judged from the length of the
treatment of each part
1 he need for so many
agamas covering the same topics
will
be apparent if we compare
two large agamas. For example,
a
comparison of the kriya padw, of Karcna
and Suprabheda indicates
clearly that the one is a
complement to the other and that both
cover different grounds. Although
the Suprabheda mentions the
same topics, the details are entirely
different. Mudras are mention-
e here briefly but archana and the Various equipments for festivals
and the materials to be gathered therefor
are dealt with at great
length. The chapter on praasaada lakshana vidhi is
similarly a very
elaborate one.
The charya pada deals with the Saiva bhedas, diksha, kriya,
xratas for different ashramas and the like.
The yoga pada very brief in the agamas, where it is available.
is
Here also it contains only three chapters, Nadi chakra, Kala chakra
and Adara adeya; only the ashta iga yoga is mentioned.
The Jnana pada also is here quite brief. It deals with Siva,
pasu and adhva; under adhva, the six adhvas, the various worlds
above and below the earth, and the 38 kolas are explained.
7. RAURAVA AGAMA
The Rauravagama the sixteenth, representing the ears of Siva,
isone of the principal agamas, said to be taught to sage Ruru (hence
the name Raurava) by Siva Himself. The first volume thereof has
been published by the French Institute of Indology, in 1961, with
variant readings, copious notes, parallel passages from the other
agamas, very useful indices and tables. This contains 2 parts,
the Vidyapada and the Kriyapada. The first part was first printed
with 142 verses in four chapters and later, six more chapters, with
202 verses, found in Raurava sutra scngraha, have been added at the
end. The second part, Kriyapada, contains 847 verses in 16 chapters.
The editor has done a large amount of research work in editing the
agama as can be seenfrom the contents of the various tables in the
Rauravagama. To give an example Agnikarya ’is an important
:
part of the Kriya pada. The editor has given here a very large table,
74
of the names of the various
compiled from 1 7 agamic and other texts,
nose, tongue, heads, feet, vehicle and
agnis, their heads, horn, eye,
From the Karanagama alone 13 types of agnis are
weapons.
tabulated. .
published in 1972
The second volume of the Rauravagama,
by the French Institute, follows the
same pattern as the first.
Variant readings, notes, parallel passages
from the Sivagamas,
and tables have been added. Illustrative plates for
indices
mandapam, vimanas and several tnurtis have also been attached.
The text consists of chapters 27 to 46, with an appendix entiled
PaYicdsc.dak.hy a vidhi patala; according to the
editor, this is an
75
a
° f * he tWe Ve VerSeS
'
in the so ' called
patch
P Me’fon^
are found in a manuscript
P^a-mochma
entitled Srayambhuva
but are no, found san*rah a
in the Srayambhuva
that the twelve verses
agama. This goel
Tndicate
might perhaps have been
selected from
different sources and strung
together to give a continuous
treatment
Besides, the language employed
in -those verses is the
language of
the nyay* sastnnn diction and
syntax and not the agamic
language
Hence also we have to conclude that they
never formed part of an
“
n d not «° farther here into the
ff®* •
^
icn of the Tamil text. What is
question of transla-
more likely is that some Sanskrit
over translated the Sutras of Meykandar
into Sanskrit and called
them the Sanskrit Sivajnana bodham, under
the fond notion of the
Sanskntists of the day that any worthwhile
sastra could be only
in Sanskrit. This translation had given rise to such
a legend from
about the early 14th century. There is also a
Raurava Sutra
Sangraha in manuscript.
8. MAKUTAGAMA
The Makutagama, 17th in the series was taught by Paramesvara
to Rudra named Siva. This represents the mastaka or head or
crown of Sadasiva. The agama is said to be in two parts.
Makutam and Makutotharam. has the usual pur vet and uttar
It
bhagas under Kriya pada. Neither the whole of the agama nor
even the whole of this pada is available in full. Swaminatha siva-
charyar of Tiru Avaduturai was able to collect only 12 chapters
from Tantravatara patala to Acharya lakshana vidhi and this part was
published in the grantha script in 1977 by C. Swaminatha Siva-
charyar, secretary of the South Indian Archakar Association. The
published portion has about 1980 slokas.
The chapters deal as usual with the origin and revelation of
the Agamas in general and the Makutagama in particular, details
9. MATANGA PARAMESVARA
The Matanga Paramesvara Agama, the twenty sixth, repre-
senting the garland of Siva, has been published by the Sivagama
Siddhanta paripalana Sangham of Devakottai in the nagari script
in 924.
1 This agama deiives its name from Sage Matanga to whom
it was revealed by Srikantha. Originally this was written by
'
into the other details here for want of space. Good householders
in Tamilnadu will no doubt realise how correct and healthy this dis-
tribution is, even today. From we may perceive
this that nothing
disciplines for the preceptor, the Saiva and the novice, and praasaada
lakshana are some of the salient features of this part. A few verses
also mention the rules for the renovation of temples.
consists of seven chapters. Only the first has
The yoga pada
This deals
anything to do with yoga as we understand it today.
with the practice of yoga. Yoga may be practised in the home or in
Then the three parts
the temple. Eight asar.as are here described.
of pranayama are given. Then the other chapters deal with sub-
jects like sraddha and matruka nyasa. The agama ends with a re-
ference to the Dipta and Suprabheda agamas.
THE VIRAGAMA 1
THE SUKSHMAGAMA
According to the Tamil manual, Saiva samaya neri, verse 501
(16th century), the Sukshmagama is a special text devoted to the
rules of the atmartha linga puja. The agama has not been published.
79
i
The other two parts, the kriya pada and the charya pada
have been published by the French Institute, in 1962, in the nagari
script, with the commentary of Bhatta Narayana kantha.
The
kriya pada has eight chapters, while the charya has. only one.
The Kriyapada deals with snana, agni karya, diksha etc. Here
11 mudras are described in detail. The book contains full photo-
articles
graphic illustrations of these mudras, as also of the various
80
,
book.
The charya part of one chapter, contains 130 verses. Perhaps
available now.
there were more chapters, which however are not
The Mrgendragama has often been quoted in the Sarvadar-
sanasamgraha. This work is said to be a subsidiary part of Kami’
kagama supposed to be one of the oldest of the Agamas, and has
been referred to in the Suta-samhita which refers to the Kami-
1
kagama with the reverence that is due to very old texts.
differences. The editor has added the last chapter, mantra kila
patalam as a sort of appendix and, from the nature of its contents,
we infer that it is a very late addition.
There is only part of this Vatula and it does not appear to be
divided into the usual four padas. This agama is mentioned by
Kachiyappa Sivacharya (15th century) in his Tamil Skanda puranam
(3. 21. 120): “Only those who have mastered the agamas like the
Suddha Vatula can realise Him (Sri Kumara) a little”.
The mulagama, Vatula, has not seen the light of print; what
81
6
we have so far discussed appears to be only a upagama
under the
principal Vatula. But Das Gupta has discussed the Vatulagama
from the study of a manuscript in the Oriental Reserrch Institute,
Mysore. He says therein that this agama contains more verses
in concluding tenth chapter in which the Vira Saiva doctrine is
its
and the Vira Saiva cult as such originated from him. Das Gupta
himself remarks that Madhva (14th century), who mentions the
Pasupatas and the Agama Saivas, does not seem to know anything
about the Vira Saivas. Hence it should be clear that the tenth
chapter mentioned here is obviously a later interpolation made
after the 14th century. should be clear that neither
Hence also it
founder of the
verse sung in praise of Sivaprakasa desikar
A
that this Sivaprakasar
Tiruttutaiyur Vira Saiva Adhinam states
wrote Advaita Venba in 411 verses to
expound the philosophy
is even called the Sakala-
contained in the Vatulagama. The venba
even said to
agamasara Advaita Verba and the object of the book is
the Linga worn on ft. It has
an
be the merging of the body in
written by Nannul Sivaprakasar,
elaborate Vira Saiva commentary
the sixth in this line.
82
14. PAUSHKARA AGAMA
The Paushkaragama, also known as Pushkciram, is one of the
upagamas of Paramesvaram. The Jnanapada is apparently the
only part of it that is available now.
Dr. Das Gupta has devoted nine pages to the analysis of the
biddhanta concepts contained in this agama, the longest in his
account of five agamas in his History of Indian Philosophy Vol. V.
83
,
iis==£3sss
celebrations
trart,H f ,
An
U I
’ terS
I deals Wlth monthly
worship and monthly
tr0dUCt0ry V€rse sta «s that
this agama is J-
Kachi V a PP a Sivacharya
earher) savs' this (mentioned
(4
8
"at>' “The
,
the kumbha,
•
13
The y offered
ff
rt aled
worship to Kumara in the r
10 Umadevi b >' Paramesvara
T
three places
the agni and the linga, as
laid down in the Kumara
tantra, which was revealed to Umadevi'
by Paramesvara.”
This is an upagama under the
principal agama Lolita. This
upagama emphasizes atevery stage the Shanmurti
mantras. 0,n
Jagat Bhuve namah, Om Vacat Bhuve namah, Om Visva
Bhuve namah, Om Brahnma Bhuve
u ra
bhuve, Om
namah, Om Bhuva
Bhine namah. Dhyana, Japa and mantra
aie given separately; and
the dhyana slokas are such as to
imprint clearly the form of the
murti in the mind of the meditator. The
chanters Skandotsava vidhi
patala and masa puja vidhi patah are the
longest with 38S and 380
slokas. The Say ana vidhi patala is said to be not available
in the
manuscripts.
This tantra has been republished in 1974 by the
South Indian
Archakar Association in the nagcri script.
84
;
85
the agamas or their upagamas. but it could be a different re-
cension under Kqlottora ( Kalajnaam under the
) Vatulagama. The
Sar\ ajnanottcr am, has gone through several editions
in Sanskrit;
it has 240 verses in
9 prakaranas or chapters and deals only with the
Vidya padas There is a metrical Tamil translation of this agama
.
1
Saint Umapati Sivacharya, the last of the four Santana Acharyas
of the Saiva Siddhanta School. We shall speak about it further
the agamas for ritua-
on. There have been many selections from
listic purposes such as the
Santiratnakaram and the Santikusuma-
86
out and re-arranged for specific purposes. They are said to be
18 in number after the legendary 18 Sivacharyas.
discussion A
1
of these has been made by us separately.
Besides these, we learn there have been abridged versions of
some agamas in use. The Rauraxa and the Swayambhuva seem
to have been condensed in this manner; we hear also of the Raurava
sangraha, the Rauravottara, the S \vcyambhuva sangraha etc.
a later disciple wrote it). Though this selection had been mentioned
by a few Tamil writers, it had not been available in the Tamilnadu.
However, the text and the commentary were printed and published
in Calcutta under Umapati’s name, byPanchananSastri inthe nagari
script, as volume XXII of the Arthur Avalon Tantric Texts Series.
87
i
of many polemic treatises
and translations, had made
::,r n: ’
th s agamic ** ai
°i the
Ca ed
'
°- ^ a faithful
a hu*rre
Sa,amam malai and was published in
;
.
1944 The ,
.
tl0n IS m
g °° d P ° etiC f° rm a " d
TurJ one also an
puja and as such it deals only with the kriya part. It is in four
chapters - vutyakcrtna vidhi dealing with daily disciplines and rituals,
Sivarchana vidhi or rules for Siva puja, Sivalaya darsana vidhi or
rules for the devotees’ participation in the temple worship, and
pakavidhi, rules for the cooking and offering of food.
The manual has been reissued by the South Indian Archakar
Association in 1974 in the nagaii script. In this edition, verses'
are found under the caption Navagraha puja at the end of first part
ending with Surya puja puja for the sun god. The earlier slokas
*
end with the puja relating to Surya with his consorts Usha and
Pratyusha, while here are given the forms and the puja for the
other eight grahas which are the parivara devatcs for Surya. They
are mentioned in the following order: Soma (Moon), Budha, Guru,
Sukra, Angaraka, Sani, Rahu and Ketu. The slokas are mentioned
here as quotations from the Kiranagama. But on verification
they are not found in the Kirara. The inference naturally is that
88
them sound authentic, they were said to have been culled fi om some
agama, in this case the Kir ana. The original was not easily
avail-
may be found my
Tamil History of Tamil Literature 16th century Volume
in i
89
Itdoes not treat the subjects
of the Saiva Siddhanta in
a subiectwise
anner but in a numberwhe
manner. It has ten sections
each
3 4 etC Upt0 l0 (He
evenV teh**,’
0 COl
'Ah0n)
’
The
'
calls his’ book
'
iects ,haIt
'
T ? first
'
£e «ion deals with sub-
were ascetics.
The entire book consists of the Jnana pada (27 slokas), the
Kriya pada (90) the Yoga pada (8) and the Chary a pada (41) in this
order. The Jnana pada deals with the following subjects: the
90
three entities Pati, Pasu and Pose, the three categories of souls,
the tattvas, Siva’s threefold functions and anugraha. The Kriya
pada deals with the dikshas, praasaada mantras, kalanyasa, antaryaga
puja and bahiryaga puja, invocation, jopa, agni karya, again dikshas,
the five kolas and purnahuti. The Yoga part deals with nodi suddhi,
Siva dhyana and the five a vasthas. The Charya pada deals with
Sivalingas and the merit accruing from Sivalinga puja.
The author’s disciple Ananta Siva has written a valuable and
exhaustive commentary on the text. Herein he says that Rajendra
Chola (1012-1044,) the son of Rajaraja I, who took out an
expedition to the Ganges and assumed the title ‘the Chola who
brought the Ganga to his capital city,’ also brought with him some
sivacharyas from the Gangetic plain and settled them in the Kanchi
area (Pallavanad) and in Cholanad.
The text and commentary with a Tamil translation were printed
by Shanmukhasundara Mudaliyar in 1887 in the grantha script.
It was reprinted by the South Indian Archakar Association in 1975
41 6166
91
livedby about 1225-1250 A.O. He says that he is the pupil of
Krishna son of Janardana Chudamani and of another Krishna
in
Banaras. This book has been quoted by many Dharma Sastra
Nibandha works of the 16- 17th centuries. This no doubt deals
with the usual four parts jnana, yoga, charya and kriya but not
under these headings but under the three kcndas mentioed above.
The Nitya kanda deals with the routine personal disciplines
of the Saiva who has undergone the diksha.
The second section, the Nnknittika kanda deals with the annual
purificatory rites, like initiation of the pupils, the qualifications
of the teachers, the different kinds of dikshas, prayaschittas or
expiatory rituals and obsequial and the death anniversary or
rites
also with the evolution of the tattvas (reals or categories) from Siva
~
and deals elaborately about the worship of Siva.
The third section, the Kamya kanda describes the construction
f
of the temples beginning with bhu pariksha or examination o the
site and the soil, and karshana and ends
with the consecration.
2. He has been noted upon under the head 2 Saivagama 1 , Paribhasha man-
jari in the section of Selections
from the Agamas (page 89).
93
commentary by a disciple of the author, in 1888.
The commentator
says at this
one of the five upagamas under Santana
is
Sarvoktam
namely Isanam, Sivadharmam ,
Sivadharmottaram, Divyaproktam
,
94
virtuous and meritorious services to Siva and His devotees. He
says therein that he is extracting these thoughts from Chintya
Visxa
not been noticed so far. The Jnana puja vidhi is a short Tamil
treatise of 18 verses written in the 14th century; it is said to contain
the essence of the Vatula; this has several commentaries.
Meymoli Tamil metrical Siddhanta work is said to
Charitai, a
be a free rendering of the thoughts of Chintyagama. This book
has been printed in the Madras University Tamil Departmental
journal, Tamil Ayxu. There is also said to be a summary of the
Chintyagama in 30 quatrains; parts of some subjects purporting
1
to be taken from Chintyagama in Tamil prose have been published.
The Sixarchana chandrika of Appayya Dikshitar is a famous
work on Siva worship, based on the agamas and it had been
published with a Tamil translation by the Devakottai Sangham
(1922). But another work of the same name (aparently an antho-
logy) not so well known, is the book by one Sadyojata sivacharya
published in the last decade of the 19th century. It contains about
four thousand verses, distributed over about ten chapters. Of these,
the first half is a selection of chapters from the Sakcdagama sangraha
while the remaining chapters are from the Ajitagama. The transla-
tion follows the text verse by verse.
The Sakalagama sara was a Tamil work in the kural venba
metre by Marai jnana sambandha (author of Saiva Samaya neri).
It is quoted very often in late exegetical writings but the book
itself seems to be lost today. This author was a great scholar in
Sanskrit and has rendered into Tamil in his several books many
thoughts from the agamas.
95
25. ENGLISH TRANSLATIONS
The Vidya pada of the Mrgcvidra was translated into English
by M. Narayanan swami Aiyar in the pages of the Siddhanta
Dipikai in 1900-1 ; but has not been published in book form.
it
and the Suprabheda and five upagamas the Mrgendra, the Vatula,
the Paushkara the Kumaratantra and the Sakalagama sangraha
, ,
97
manjari, and plan to bring out more,.
It is noteworthy that the
publications are subsidized by the Paris
University.
All the texts
give many
variant readings collected from several
manuscripts,
aod also give a list of the manuscripts used,
and very useful tables,
illustrations and indices besides parallel passages from the other
Agamas.
Besides they have also published the Somasambhu
paddhati
(in 2 parts), Sivayoga ratnam, Mayamata (a
treatise an sculpture)
etc. The
publications have laid the Saiva world under a deep
debt of gratitude to the Institute.
“ 1
100
. .
B. RUDRA BHEDA-AGAMAS - 18
III. Revealed by the Aghora mukha (11-15):
101
16.Rauravam: (a) Arbudashtakam (8000 crores). (b) Ears.
(c) Brahmanesa, Nanidikesvara. (d) Kalakhyam (Kalatitam),
Kaladahanam, Rauravam, Rauravottaram, Mahakalamatam,
Aindram (Chandiam) - 6.
17. Makutam: (a) 100, 000. (b) Crown, (c) Siva, Mahadeva
(d) Makutam and Makutottaram - 2.
18.Vimalam: (a) 300,000. (b) Arms, (c) Sarvamatra,
Virabhadra. (d) Anantam, Bhogam, Akrantam, Vrshapingam,
Vishodaram, Vrshodbhutam, Raudram, Sudantam, Dharanam,
Arevatam, Atikrantam, Attahasam, Bhadravidham, Achintam,
(Architam), Alamkrutam and Vimalam (Tantram). - 16.
19. Chandrajnanam: (a) 3 Crores. (b) Chest, (c) Ananta,
Brhaspati. (dj Sthiram, Sthanu, Mahantam, Varunam, Nandikes-
varam, Ekapadapuranam, Sankaram, Nilarudrakam, Sivabhadram,
Kalpabhedam, Srimukham, Sivasasanam, Sivasekharam and
Devimatam - 14.
20.Mukhabimbam: (a) 100,000. (b) Face, (c) Prasanta,
Dadhichi. (d) Chaturmukham, Samstomam, Pratibimbam, Ayoga-
jam, Atmalamkaram, Vayavyam, Tautikam, Tutinirakam, Kutti-
mam, Tulayogam, Kalatyayam, Mahasauram, Pattasekharam,
Nairrutam and Mahavidya - 15.
Tongue.
300,000. (c) Sulin,
(b)
21. Prodgitam: (a)
Pingalamatam,
Kavacha. (d) Varaham, Kavacham, Pasabandham,
Vijnanam,'
Ankusam, Dandadharam, Dhanurdharam, Sivajnanam,
Sarpadamshtravibhe-
Srikalajnanam, Ayurvedam, Dhanurvedam,
danam, Gitakam, Bharatam and Atodyam - 16.
8000. (b) Cheeks, (c) Alayesa, Rudra-
22. Lalitam: (a)
many sciences and arts are noted as upagamas: eg. see Ayurvedam ,
103
: 1
UPAGAMAS
1. Mrgendra n&g 445 65 551 130 1191
2. Vatula g 782 — — — 782
3. Paushkara g 937 — — — 937
4. Kumaratantra g&n — — 3524 3524
5. Sardha-trisati Kalottara n — — 350 350
6. Sarvajnanottara 240 — — — 240
g
7. Sivadharmottara
(Tamil verses*) — — — - *1222 —
Sakalagamasara
Sangraha g - 1678 1678
Saivagama Paribhasha
n 1134 — 1134
manjari
-
g - grantha; n nagari.
104
30. PRINTING HISTORY OF THE AGAMAS
Given below are (1) a History of the Translation in Tamil and
in English and (2) a History of the Printing of the Agamas and
Upagamas, with the seript, granta or nagari, the name of the
year of printing.
publisher and the 1.
2. ENGLISH TRANSLATIONS
1. KARANAGAMA: Nitya puja vidhi patala only: deva-
nagari script. 450 slokas: J. W. V. Curtis, 1974. Hoe & Co.
Madras.
105
2. MRGENDRAGAMA : Vidya pada: K. Narayana
Swamy Aiyar, 1900-1. Text not given. Siddhanta Ebpikai.
3. SATARATNA SANGRAHA: Selection by St. Umapati
Sivacharya with his commentary, Ullekhini. Text alone in deva-
nagari script, commentary in English Translation by Professor
P. Tirujnanasambandhan, University of Madras, 1973.
French Institute of
(b) AJITAGAMA: Part II: do.
6 . (a)
Devokottai
script. Sivagama Paripalana Sangham,
1928.
106
(b) Matanga PARAMESVARA Vidya Pada: wilh the
commentary of Bhatta Rama Kantha. Devanagari
script, The French Institute of Indology 1977.
107
(c) MRGENDRAGAMA KRIYA PADA AND
CHARYA PADA: Commentary by Bhatta Nara-
yana kantha. —9 (b) under B.
108
SECTION - 3
109
1. S1DDHANTA AND THE OTHER SAIVA SCHOOLS
A study of the Saivagamas will not be complete without a re-
ference to the various schools of Saivism, mentioned in other types
of religious literature. At the outset, we should say that the 28
Agamas treat only of the Siddhanta school and do not refer to the
other schools at all. The Saiva Siddhanta, with its emphasis on
the three eternal entities, Pati pasu and pasa-G od, soul and matter-
, ,
purusha
Sadasiva Kala- Black Vira-
South Aghora
(linga) mukha bhadra
1 .
110
.
Blood rites were indeed associated with the temples of Mari and
Draupadi among the people in the lower strata of society; they also
formed part of the rite of veri-adal in Tamil literary convention
relating to love poetry. But they certainly had nothing to do with
Siva temples and no where are they even hinted at in the agamas.
The orgies of the Kapalikas included the smearing of the body with
ashes. The Saiva emblems emphasized in the agamas are three -
the sacred ash, the rudraksha beads and the Siva mantra. These
are inseparable elements in the Siddhanta School. The ash is
adopted by the Kapalikas on a large scale and it is wrong to reduce
the Siddhanta schools on that account to the level of the orgies.
The Kurma and Varaha puranas consider some of the Saiva
schools such as Lakulisa and Kapalika as being outside the pale of
Vedic (and Agamic) thought since they are held to follow delusive
sastras ( moha sastras ). s The Kapalika comes for the greatest
ridicule in Mahendra varman’s Mattavilasa prahasana for his
uncouth practices.
Vacaspati in Bhamati mentions four schools of Saivism - the
Saiva, Pasupata, Karunika siddhantin and Kapalika and calls
them Mahesvai as. All of them are said to hold that Siva is the
Ill
instrumental cause (as the Saiva Siddhantins hold). The Saiva
siddhanta though based on the agamas seems to have been an
indigenous Tamilian system of philosophy as later complete develop-
ment and elaboration in the Tamil language would indicate. It has
to be clearly remembered here that neither Sankara nor Ramanuja
or Vacaspati dared to notice the Tamilian Saiva Siddhanta cult,
its religion and philosophy and flourishing all around them,
existing
for fear of losing their prestige and caste with the Sanskritists of
their day. Sanskrit has a wider sway in the vast non-dravidian
states of North India and these great men either did not care to
know the great philosophy practised in the land of their birth or,
knowing it, did not want to speak about it but by ignoring it con-
nived at suppressing it. All the study and criticism of Saiva
Siddhanta is only modem.
verses 241-242.
1 .
Tamil Tattuva-Prakasam
page 4.
2. Das Gupta, Volume V,
112
2. SIDDHANTA AND THE PRATYABHIJNA
Pratyabhijna is recognition (or recall of identity or similarity)
and that is what is otherwise known as the Kashmir Saivism. It has
quite a substantial volume of Sanskrit philosophical treatises
expounding it. It is also a non-dualist ( advaita) school, having
considerable agreement with Saiva Siddhanta in externals but
difference in fundamentals. Both recognize pati, pasu and pasa.
But for the Pratyabhijna school Pati is the sole reality. Siva is
here both efficient eause as in the Siddhanta, but also the material
cause, while maya is the material cause in the Siddhanta. Recogni-
tion of the soul as intelligent and all pervasive (though the term
pratyabhijna is not used) has an important part in the scheme of
salvation in Saiva Siddhanta. The parable of the king’s son in
the hunters’ company is well known. Release is the realization
of the true nature of the soul as distinct from all the bonds and
matter and its perfect freedom as a total surrender and service to
the Lord.
113
3. THE SAKTA AGAMAS AND THE SAKTI
CULT
The concept of Sakti is as old as the
Vedas. The Krishna
Yajur Veda mentions Her as the consort of
Siva; in the Sata-
Rudriya, it mentions Soma
one of the names of Rudra; Soma is
as
Sa-Uma (with Uma), the aspect of Siva with His
consort Uma,
The Kena upanishad also mentions Uma. Sakti
inseparable from
Siva, is the symbol of Divine Grace. The Kena says that a Divine
Effulgence up the sky but great powers like Agni and Vayu were
lit
114
which are however considered efficacious in developing a lower
order of occult powers, something like what is generally under-
stood by the term witch-craft; alchemy and the like also come
under these practices. This is the source for the development
of the later Vamachara sect in the Sakta cult.
115
tion. Yantras (mystic diagrams) and mantras (mystic
syllables)
together with sacrifices had a large part to play in this type
of wor-
ship. The Sakti worship was not the One Absolute, but there were
many forms and the Yantras etc. also varied with the form worship-
ped. Initiation into these devices was by a guru and there always
were secret rituals. 1
116
worship and meditation, although it also makes use of the yantras
and yoga, (b) Vishnu taught the agama to five rshis during five
nishts. (c) It relates to the five states of Vishnu - Vibhu, vibhava,
vyuha, antaryami and archa.
During the days of Vedanta Desika (1269-1370) Vaishnavism
Vadakalai.
separated itself into two sects-the Tenkalai and the
We need not go here into the distinctions that separate them.
The Pancharatra agamas {samhitas) are said to be 108.
Saktam, Vaishnavam
1 . They are the Sauram, Ganapatyam, Kaumaram,
and Saivam— see pages 131-134.
A Agamas gives some interesting
reference to the Pancharatra
information. In this branch of the Hindu religion, all agamas .
Ser/off S
h
v nU
V i
^
Vaikanasa
that alth ° Ugh the
sect
among
*. s ,ht “ “ °” “ “ °f »
U Ult has bee “ made the most
Whollof Iorth l H P°P ular cul ‘ in the
e XCept Kashmir where
the Siva
rf u from ,.
Ts in Tamilnad
as .
the remote past to the present.
cult continues
122
propagate a new cult in his land. Born a brahmin, he preached a
times were
new gospel of a casteless and classless society but the
not ripe to receive his message and he died a frustrated
man. But
after him his message caught on and today the majority of the
Karnataka people follow his new school which came to be called
the Vira Saiva School; it is so called because it is said to follow the
all to this linga; the contact of the linga with the physical body is
The chief tenets of the Vira Saiva cult can be summarized in the
following words. Ashtaxarana or the eight sheaths serve as the
shields to protect the soul against the attack of avidya; they are the
guru, jangama (devotees), padodakam (water washing the feet),
prasaada. vibhuti, rudraksha and mantra. The panchakchara or
five disciplines serve to unite the Vira saivas into one family.
Lingachara is the wearing of the linga on one’s person and offering
worship to it three times a day. Sadachara is one’s employment in
some avocation and following therein in the path of dharma.
123
;
and there are no more births for him; on death he is not said to have
died but said to have become one with the lingas. Daily bath and
daily worship of the lingas worn, twice are most import. There is no
impurity through any type of pollution. Women have equal right
to wear the personal linga. No meat and no liquor. Sivaratri
l° puja
a later day emphasize the
^Th.e^enfuJ^Srof
example, the Kaivo y
to be supreme. Fo
of each deity held by it
panishat says:
Uma sohayam Paramesvaram Prabhum
prasantam
Trilochanam Nilakantham
124
Dyatva munir gachati bhuta yonim
samasta sakshim tamos a parastat.
The worshipper of Paramesvara, by his meditation, attains true
knowledge and bliss. Similarly the Ganapatyopanishat, Devi-upa -
shat, Suryopanishat and Ndrayanopanishat glorify the puja and
upsana of the individual deities as the means for attaining supreme
knowledge and the state of bliss.
All these pujas are in a sense vaidika or even tantric, enjoined
by the smritis and puranas, but are not agamic or Saiva in character.
Later in time, the concepts of a combined puja for the five seems
to have been evolved by the Puranakaras and it has been labelled
the Paichayata ia puja.
The householder should perform the pujas of the five daily; they
are Aditya (the Sun), Ambika (Sakti), Vishnu, Gananatha (Ganapati)
and Mahesvara (Siva). The Devi Bhagavatam in its nineth
skanda deals with the Panchayatana puja. It narrates here the
story of Savitri and Satyavan. Savitri in the course of her entreaty
with Yama, asks him the means for escaping the horrors of hell.
He tells her that the worshippers of the Pancha devas will not see
hell even in their dreams. He enumerates the various virtues
accruing from the puja; “It destroys births and deaths, old age,
disease and sorrow. It is of the form of all good and is the cause
of supreme bliss and of the attainment of all siddhis. It
saves
one from hell. It causes the sprouting of the tree of bhakti.
It
destroys the tree of karma. It confers the indestructible state
125
:
He Yama
concludes
Na cha pasyanti svapnepi
Pancha devarchaka narah.
The aims of the five pujas are also discussed in the books.
Ganesa is worshipped for removal of all difficulties and obstaclse.
126
:
(Vinayakam-Ganapatyam Skandam-Kaumaram).
;
this puja accrues the merit of the puja for one thousand years.
Panchamirtha bath is prescribed as being efficacious in con-
ferring moksha. Panchamirtha consists of milk, curds, ghee,
honey and sugar (of course brown country sugar). During the
bath the mantras, Isanas Sarvavidyanam, Tatpurusha, Aghora,
Vamadeva and Sadyojata are uttered. The usual sixteen upa-
charas are offered. (They are avahana, asana^ padya, arghya,
achamana, madhuparkka, snana, vastra, upavita, gandha, pushpa,
dhupa, dipa, nivedana, karpura and pradakshina namaskara). For
archana fragrant flowers are preferred. Some flowers are not to
be used for some deities- Vilva forSurya, tulasi (basil) for Ganapati,
aruhu (hariali grass) for Sakti, datura for Vishnu and tazhai (serew
pine) for Siva are taboo. Vilva for Siva and tulasi for Vishnu
may be used for many days. Mantras are prescribed for gathering
the flowers. There is a fine meaningful mantra for vilva the
favourite flower leaf petal of Siva. It is a salutation to the Vilva
Tree and prays for forgiveness from the tree for taking its leaves;
Salutations to thee, O Thou art the cause for the
Vilva tree?
attainment of the requisite benefits from the puja. Though art
the Giver of the four states ( saloka samipa sarupa and sayujyd).
, ,
Thou art the form of the Three Murtis (Brahma, Vishnu and
Rudra). am gathering thy leaves for the archana of the Supreme
I
127
th.^?oS"^ —
“** poignant sentiment
Hinduism 'reflecting theT* v?* in aU
*•
^
for
dom as vegetable Icing-
may be rememberedThere
» *** *** “ «* BbudeW
are Th
and hills am Thy breasts O Vishnu
garnient
Pzt^LTIT t0 J ee Please -
Tr
t
with myf
forgive me for touching Thee
-
namaskara.
Such is the panchayatana puja and the disciplines attached
to it. Naturally as is evident from what has been said here, it
ismostly directed to Siva and follows the entire Saiva disciplines
regarding puja. But yet it is not for the Saiva (and not for the
Vaishnava also). It is for the smartha who is expected to hold
fast to the doctrine of aham-brahmasmi. To save him from the
state of a mental negation of worship, this has been prescribed in
corporating all the different deities in the worship. As stated
already this is personal and is not a temple ritual. So far as the
Saiva concerned, atmartha and parartha are almost identical and
is
128
the Saiva and the Vaishnava and that it is a panacea for so many
evils seen today. Whatever may be said in justification of the puja,
we can only say it has no sanction in the agamas.
has no mention in the agamas and no rules are prescribed for any
of its rituals. Some of the agamic procedure is followed here but it
is all mostly pragmatic and not compulsory or mandatory. In
129
Surya. Ganapati, Skanda, Siva, Sakti and Chandesa. This is
one complete course of an integrated Siva puja.
Skanda, Sakti, Siva and Vishnu. It may thus be realized that the
very agamic worship is itself an integration of all the different
schools of the orthodox or the vaidika religions.
Nepal.
It may be
appropriate to give here a short note on the concept
of the six darsanas and the six matas. The Darsanas are schools
of philosophy which have been existing in India from the very
ancient past. They are schools which accept the authority of the
Vedas and are mentioned together with the names of the Sages who
first enunciated them. They are the Nyaya of Gautama, Vaise-
shika of Kanata, Samkhya of Kapila, Yoga of Patanjali, Purva-
mimomsa of Jaimini and Uttara mimamsa of Badarayana. These
are also known as the Astika darsanas. These are distinct from the
Nastika schools which deny the authority of the Vedas; these are
the Ajivaka and Nirghanta (grouped together generally as Jainism),
Lokayata and Charvaka (grouped together as Atheism) and South-
ranthikam, Yogacharam, Madhyamikam nda Vaibhashikam (group-
131
cd together as Buddhism). Nyaya philosophy
is mostly as chool of
logic. The nyaya darsana holds
that prakrti is insentient, achit,
and so a be admitted for creating it; this creator is God.
chit is to
Because of this argument or nyaya, it is called the
Tarkkika darsana.
Vaiseshika is allied to this; it explains how the seen world has been
created. The Samkhya is the logical basis for all schools
and
even matas of the later period. According to this, the self is
chit\
it is deluded by prakriti the prime, cause for the seen world and
imagines that it is itself the cause of everything; kaivalya is the
state where removed and this is Samkhya. The
this delusion is
Yoga school prescribes the yoga system as the sadhana for the
attainment of this state.
Purva mimamsa is the path of the first three parts of the Veda-
the mantra brahmana and the aranyaka. It is the kriya marga
,
are dedicated
Tanjavur District and the Konarak temple of Orissa
specially to the Sun.
(Vinayaka) as the
Ganapatyam is the worship of Ganapati
is considered by
Supreme Being. The elephant -faced Ganapati
Siva-Parvati and he receives a
the puranas as the first son of
worship every where in any ritual.
He is the head of the Siva
name. He is given a place in
ganas (Siva’s forces) and hence the
independent school of religion i
Atmartha Siva puja, but as an
M2
had never existed in Tamilnad. Some upanishads deal with
Ganapati.
Kaumaram is the worship of by
Kumara (Subrahmanya) said
ture; he is the patron deity of kurinji (hill regions) usually the first
133
other sects like Sauram, Ganapatyam Kaumaram and Saktam and
,
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Volume V 1955.
S. N. Das Gupta A History of Indian Philosophy,
:
134
A NOTE ON AGAMA AND ARCHANAS
Muchhas been written in newspapers and spoken on platforms
in 1982 on this subject but unfortunately all that has been done
without an actual reference to what is prescribed in the Agamas
and without an actual understanding of what an archana is. As
there is a lot of confusion in popular understanding in the matter,
we shall try to explain the subject here briefly.
had offered the mantra pushpa at the feet of the deity. This kind of
utterance of the name (in the form of eg. OM Sri Matre namah
(I salute the Mother Sri Matru i.e., Sakti as Lalita) is no where men-
tioned or prescribed in any agama. This form of worship is born
out of the desire of the worshipper to please the deity by his homage
to the deity in its various names. The priest is agreeable to this type
of worship and this is done in the name of archana; but this is not
archana at all (because archana is puja beginning from Avahana and
135
: °
S;ri r m
h ! "” p "* 16 *«*“>
„ „f »U ,
° UD
r“
are al > puramc in character
and not agamic
' PUra “ as have become Prominent
the importance because of
f fh
commentaries written on them by
aloTe A 6r am°“ g
eminent
Pray6rS ° r SahaSra namas (100°
names) are three'
3. Lalita sahasranama
on Sakti as Lalita the destroyer of Banda-
,
guarded against. Not only these, but prayers in all the Indian
languages may be offered. This settles the question. The agama
laysdown that prayers should be offered in the local languages. If
we know that the sahasranama archana and the like are not puja
but are only prayers, there can be no objection to reciting them in
language-
the Siva temples etc. in the deities presence in the local
136
Now we two points have been made clear in erespect th of
believe
Sahasranama archana and the like in Tamil nadu:
1. This sahasranama etc. archanas are not mentioned in the
agamas at all and they are all only a sort of prayer.
2. They can be done, according to the agamas, in the mother
tongue and in the other local languages.
A NOTE ON MATANGAGAMA
(Kriya, Yoga and Charya Padas)
The Kriya pada is in 15 chapters and 989 slokas and deals with
diksha, snana, archana, agnikarya, dreams, the lingaandthe images.
The Yoga pada has 7 chapters in 452 slokas dealing with yoga in
general, getting over the tattvas and the breath. The Charya pada
has 10 chapters in 482 slokas dealing with different personal disci-
plines, purification, taking alms etc. In all, herewe have a text of
1923 slokas. This publication makes this the third Mulagama
which is available in full, i.e., with the four parts, the other two being
Suprabheda and Kirana (and also the upagama Mrgendra).
KAMIKAGAMA KRIYAPADA
As the Printing of this page is completed, we learn the
Archakar Association has released the Uttara bhaga of the
Kamikagama, Kriyaqada in the nagari script.
137
. . . .
Qujt)JD 5 <si>
/ ^&iLDih c* rrrr&ssrii) suit u5)«ld
(3 <5(3657.
epULSla) GT(Lp<3&rTL± ILf^LD g)0/5
Page 8. :
&ii]&rrasTirrf
GrbGpKu, *LDem sifbGprTLL,.
^rraQiuisi
mA ^rrrruj^rnb; — urr*ffliu£*
SeirpgiiuiTib $&Ga>rru>:
QsisjgiL sifUurTtnarf
&j&rr™
Qufr/rfluSffl gfflnruSI
Garrofljb
^msnm euapsrrii&rr #>
138
. l , . )
Page 11. Tirumular: The Tamil verses are given against page 6,
note 1 Page 16. Note 1 Abhirami antadi
. : :
SUCSVITSOlU^Jlb LD §jl (Lf £)]GgiI Glttfl LpSl LprESSlI LD LDIT SVILD SUSmTEjS)
gtgm gjib G&euu^tLirruj 7; ^Srijir piEj&nsn . oprrem
^m/DL^Itu (Lpeaflpg QuuDLDrrsv)! ib cLpc^/rj^je^iGup
erjemib &ijsmib •
<oT6sr fihobrjj) njmu&i} 61; r^iumiEi&im puisir fr)iss)i_ hot 3jss)iib Gsu &>(Lpih
prr rj rr em Gsy Lb ^mssiiib uij syib l® rr it ld sugogSI 74. ^
The concept of the Sakti as the Supreme Power is found even
in the epic of the early period, Silappadhikaram. Chapter 12,
Vettuvavari :
139
& $
Do. Sambandhar Devaram 3.25. 1 (and many oth ers) :
rnnCosu i
'
/ rrQtii ^Q&LDLb sunrEjShLjib
^Q^eifhqib.
S-JDJD g>ib(Lp&rEja <snnjb usmf)8j
140
Tirumantram 57 :
141
u .. . ,
6T 6B SI snaFI film
1 jt) ili Gl it
0 sir gt &, ensusiu
1
girGsiar
Page 46. Periya puranam : cf. the following lines from the
verses therefrom :
^/ 5 ^) 0 a; 0
(
(3 591); s.snier^ssmfeisrrm
«fr (Qrr&srih qpgsShu §>0
njrrmtgfSmsGiLD QgGrTtgnj ^g^i£lLprr g) $($(_Lpevif (3 568).
(Lp(gff,S\ 60 mg <%6$fl
g g]6vrf6vmuLj iSleisrSssr Gaerreueisr
LDtiTQ&sreosdiT ld qpeifr&srffSI uj& Q&gstt)! QGV6srrS\&
G)<y0« &>6fT g&tfg §)jT) 60 Lfiluj& :
Q&JDJD G6Vgg6isr
JBgJ6SsBgglT6k 6jl(rjj6VU}- gjLD Q&6TT615fl 6T)6ULJl5lf
^l(r^siSl60iEi(g &)(iT)Qldt L^levrr uj 6T6mQ grr eif&jjxg
6TL^60LD!Tl — LD 6T(L£)UgJ Q&UJ gJ60&Lb ^6mL-_
&)(ti)8i(g6dggi 6V6rT&G#rTLpasr G&rtgg G&rruSleo
,©0 rsemrog^rt LD6Sisfl ldit i rib G&rfujJs&r&GerT.
143
; .
16, 24 :
144
Glossary
advaita non-dualism.
agama Saiva scripture ;
revelation, scriptural auth-
ority.
ahimsa non-violence.
ananda bliss.
145
10
atma puja internal worship, worship of God within.
atmartha puja worship for one’s own welfare.
archaka priest who performs the worship of a deity.
avudaiyar the circular or square part of the Sivalinga
in the middle of which the bana is
placed.
Bahir puja worship of God externally.
bhaga part.
bhoga enjoyment.
bhoga marga path of enjoyment.
bija mantra the ‘seed’ mantra special to the particular
devata.
cit consciousness.
devata deity.
146
dharma righteousness, virtue, law, duty.
dhvaja banner.
dipa lamp.
dvaita dualism.
gurukkal Sivacharya.
Havis sacrificial food offering.
Ishta-devata personal god.
Japa repeating a mantra in prayer a number of
times.
147
kumbhaka temporary stoppage of breath in the pract-
ice of pranayama.
maaya illusion.
mochana liberation.
moksha release.
mukti liberation.
centre.
nigama veda.
nirvana beatitude.
nitya daily.
nuul book.
Pada part.
pancha five.
grace.
148
panchakshara the five syllabled mantra for Siva; na-ma-si-
va-ya.
paricheda chapter.
149
samhita sectarian scripture generally of the Vaish-
nava school.
samsara the cycle of births and deaths.
sangraha condensation.
sankhya the earliest school of Indian philosophy
said to be enunciated by Kapila.
sannyasi ascetic, one who has renounced the world.
sastra scripture.
sthaapana installation.
sthiti preservation.
sutra aphorism.
tirodhana obscuration.
150
tranam protection,
151
6 4 3 3 4 3
INDEX
Abhirami antadi 16, 116 revealed by Isana,102
adi saiva, 52
revealed by Sadyojata.100
advaita, 32, 53 revealed by Tatpurusha,101
advaita school, 121 revealed by Vamadeva.100
Advaita venba, 82 selections, 86
agama and tantra, 1
slokas - table, 104
apaurusheya, 7 slokas total, 25-26
devata,24 study, neglect of, 65
called tantra, 13 syntheiss,36
contradiction in, 55 unfamiliar names,21
drove out Buddhism, unpublished, 88
four parts equated to 4 vedas,4 worship for, 51
goes to turiyatita,6 Agama vacana bhushanam,93
influence-antiquity, 53 *,
a gamesa,25
influence on Indian life, 50 agamic cult and vedic cult,
influence on Upanishads,2 Aghora sivacharya paddhati,80, 82, 92
meaning of the word, 12-1 agni karya,54
name in Christianity, 13 aham brahmasmi,49,128
agamanta,53, 87 aims of life,51
Agama priya-title of Rajasimha,5 Aiyappan cult,12A
Agama rahasya,82 Ajitagama,73, 95, 97, 100, 104, 106
agama represents anugraha,6 Alagappa mudaliyai ,73,8 1 ,97,99
Agamarta sangraha,89 Ambalavana navalar,83, 88
agama, worship of, 24-5 Amsumat agama.9,101
agama as fifth veda,3 Analam.101
agamas as pillars in Nataraja hall, 19 ananda,42,102
changes and interpolations,? Ananta siva,91
152
8 5 1 9 5
153
2 77
upanishad, 1 24-5
Kalidasa’s Raghuvamsam,6
Gandhian non-violence,33
Kalladam,20
Gangai konda solapuram,56
Kalottaragama,84-6,94
Ganapatya,127
Kalpasara,91
garbhagriha,52
Kamikagama, 23,43, 55,69-71 ,80-1,
shape, 56 104-6,136-7
Garuda,21 significance, 70
mantra,! 19 Kanata,131
Gautama,131 Kannappar,46
Cautama nyaya sutra, 22 Kapala,22
Gita,121 Kapalika, 110-1
and Siddhantam,41 Kapali sastry,13
God-immanence and transcendance2 Kapila, 131
grace of God,32 Karaikkal Ammai,51
karuna,60 Karanagama,29,55-6,7 1 -2,97,100,
special feature of agamas,59 103-6
grantha,54,59,61 Kriya pada,26
grantha and nagari,61-2 nitya puja vidhi,96
guru, 39-40 vastness, 71
Harappa, 19,64 where followed, 70
hatha yoga, 34 Karikal Chola,53-4
Hinduism absorbs Buddhism,3 Karunataka, home of Virasaiva,82
History of Indian Philosophy, 8,14,89 karma, 33
Iconography, 34 karma mimamsa,132
idol is not God.l Karuna or Grace,112
internal worship, Karunika siddhantam,59
intolerance between Vaikanasa and Kashmir and agamanta,18
Pancharatra,120 Kashmir Saivism, 14,68,1 13
Isana upagama,94 Kevalatma vada,49
Jaimini,131 Kasyapa,l 18
Jinagama,8 samhita,119
Jnanaratnavali,88 Kenopanishad,4,64,l 14
154
05 1 1 1 ,
Nirmalamani desikar,98
Pranava,5,35,39
Nisvasagajna,87
Prasaada yoga, 3 1,35-6
niyama (in yoga), 34
Prastana traya,42,121
nyaya sastra,13l
pratyabhijna, 18 , 1 1,113
Paddhati,63
pratyahara (in yoga), 3 5
Padma purana,126 Printing of the agamas,125
Padma samhita,13 Prodgitam,85,102
pancha kriya,27 puja-atmartha and parartha, 54
panchakshara,39,4l ,44, 28 1
details, 8 5
pancha makara,l 1
Vidhana,129
pancharatra,7-8, 118-9 purushakara,109
different meanings, 1 18 purusharthas,51
pancha upasakas,14 Purva mimamsa, 1 3
panchayatana puja, 109, 124,131 Pusalar nayanar,49
panorama of panchaatra literature pustaka puja, 24
119
parable of the king’s son,113 Qualified monism, 53
Paramagama chudamani, 1 1
Parakhyagama, 77, 94,96 Radhakrishnan, Dr.S.,8,62
paramesvaram,34, 1 03-4, 1 06-7. .,Raghuvamsa,6
parartha puja, 59,63,1 35 Rajaraja Chola 1,47
kriya aspect in three divisions, 28 Rajasimha Pallava as agama priya,5
purpose,! Rajendra Chola, 91
Parasakti, 1 1 Ramakantha, Bhatta, 26, 69-70, 85,1 37
Parimelalahar,10,l 38 Ramakrishna Paramahamsa,l 17
ParipadaUO Ramanasastri,18
Parvati samhita,13 Ramanuja, 61,1 18-9
Pasamochana patala in Rauravagama Vaishnavism,60
75 Ramayana,50
Pasupata, 7,22, 92,1 10 Rauravagama, 27,69, 74-6, 79, 104, 06 1
119 93,97,108
vrtti,98 Saivagamas and Sakta tantras,
156
7 5 4
Saiva upanishads,2
Shanmukham pillai, Mayilai.85,93
Saivism-four paths, 25 Shanmukha sundara mudaliyar,73,
78,83,91,96,98
three elements, 1
shanmurti mantras,84
Sakalagama sara,94
(Tamil), 48
shodasakala praasaada,36
shodasa upacharas,20
Sakalagama sara sangraha,88,97-8,
Siddhagama,43,102
194
Siddhanta and Pratyabhijna,113
Sakhya dynasty,
Siddhanta branch of agamas,22
Sakta school, 14
Saktagamas.114 Siddhanta, 62, 96
Sakti,7
Siddhanta definition, 22
saravali, 27,90, 104-5
Sakti as the supreme,115
as Uma,114 sastras in adequacy, 58
different names,! 17 sekaram,91
sutras, 1 15 Silappadhikaram,33,5 1 ,1 1 5,1 39
samadhi,35 Silpa sastras, 37
Sambandhar,7 ,23,43 ,50,55 ,60 Siva and Sakti,
struggle with Jainism,l 10 and Vishnu treated alike,119
samhita,86 Sjvabheda agamas,22,60
Samkhya,9 Siva brahmin, 63
Sanatkumara,114 Si vacharyas, 1 ,49, 5 2, 58 , 62 - 3
157
— 5 8 1
Sivarchana chandrika,95
Tanjavur,56
Siva’s countenances, 21
tantra,! 7
five contenances,44
and mantra, 17
form in Sangham poetry,64
open to all vamas,14
six countenances, their puja
schools (agama),14
etc. ,110
Sakta agamas,13
Siva sutras of Kashmir, 165
tanu karana bhuvana
Siva yoga ratnam,98 bhoga,32
Tarkkikka dersana.132
Skanda gupta,63 Tattuva nidhi,24
purana,8,18 Tattuva praksham,12
smarthas,124
Tattuvarayar, 121-2
Smriti sara,125 tattvas, 36-32
Soma,22,92 temple administration, 67
Somasambhu paddhati,88,98 temple construction, 55
Soundaryalahari,18 funds utilization, 66
Soutrantika,132 rituals, 51, 65
Sri as mediasor,109 worship, 1,1 5, 29
Brahmasutra bhashya,6 Tiru Avaduturai math, 59
Sri Lanka, 68 Bhuvanam,56
Srinivasa Aiyangar, P.T.,3,63 Chitrambala desikar,59
Sthapati,37 lngoy,55
Subhagamas,114 Jnanasambandhar,96
Sukshmagama, 56, 62-3, 79,99-100 Kurralam,56
Sundarar, Saint, 47, 55, 58 Mangai alvar,51
Suprabhedagama,3,25, 27,29, 73-4,97 Tiru Mantram.6,18,26,45,1 38
101,104 MuJar,6,l 1-2,1 0-21,45-7,54,58,1 16
Surya bhatta,4 1 ,44 Nelveli,56
Suranarayana sastri, S.S.,3,7,10 tondattohai,47
Sury opanishad, 125 Tiruvacakam,42,142
Suta samhita,81 Tii uvenkatanathar, 1 1
158
1 88 1 8
Vaishnavagamas, 1 1 Viramahesvara,18
Vaishnava contribution towards Vira saivism.9,1 9,82, 1 22
establishment of Hinduism is nil sects,79
vidya pada,57
vidya pitha puja,25
vidya purana tantra,13
ijayagama.101
159
BOOKS BY THE AUTHOR
ON LITERATURE
RS. P.
Ballad Poetry 20 00
Outlines of Saivism 6 00
Kalabhras in Pandinad 6 00
Festivals of Tamilnad 40 00
The Saivagamas 20 00