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Religious thought and practice in Vaikhānasa Viṣṇuism1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 December 2009

Extract

The question as to how many individuals in one of the religious communities of ancient and modern India at a given historical moment understood all the meanings and implications of their traditional ritual symbolism may to a considerable extent be irrelevant, but the relation between religious practice and the philosophical or theological doctrines underlying it is of outstanding interest. Whereas we are, as far as this relation between thought and practice in Vedic religion is concerned, placed in favourable circumstances because the Brāhmaṇas explaining the thought solve many problems arising from a study of the sūtras describing the ritual acts, ritual texts compiled in the Hindu period, and even those which originated in the centuries of transition, often force us to apply modified methods of investigating these connexions. A special importance attaches to those documents, which, from one point of view that is often shared by the indigenous tradition, may be regarded as late representatives of Vedism, and from another as early products of Hinduism characterized by the prominence of other gods and the appearance of other cults. Among these texts those issuing from the religious community of the Vaikhānasas, which, as a small but important group, continues to exist in the South of India, are of special interest because they embody the tradition of a society of Indian devotees which at first constituted a Vedic school belonging to the Taittirīya branch of the Black Yajurveda, and in the transitional period and the centuries after came to transform itself into a community of devout worshippers of Viṣṇu.

Type
Aeticles and Notes and Communications
Copyright
Copyright © School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London 1977

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References

1 Abbreviations used: AiB—Aitareyabrāhmana; ĀnandaS—Ānandasaṃhitā;Āp.—Āpostamba; ĀpDhS—Āpastambadharmasūtra; ĀpGS—Āpastambagṛhyasūtra; ĀpŚS—Āpastam-baśrautasūtra; ĀśvGS—Āśvalāyanagṛhyasūtra; AtriS—Atrisaṃhitā; B—Baudhāyana; BĀU—Bṛhadāraṇyaka Upaniṣad; BGS—Baudhāyanagṛhyasūtra; BhG—Bhagavadgītā; BPS—Baudhā-yanapitṛmedhasūtra; ChU—Chāndogya Upaniṣad; G—Gobhila; GB—Gopathabrāhmaṇa; HGS—Hiraṇyakeśigṛhyasūtra; Hir.—Hiraṇyakeśin; K—Kātīya; KāśyS—Kāśyapasaṃhitā; KauṣU—Kauṣītaki Upaniṣad; KB—Kauṣītakibrāhmaṇa; Kh.—Khādira; KS—Kāṭhaka-saṃhitā; MahāNU—Mahānārāyaṇa Upaniṣad; MānAnugS—Mānava Anugrāhikasūtra; MāṇḍU—Māṇḍūkya Upaniṣad; MatsyaP—Matsyapurāṇa; MS—Maitrāyaṇīyasaṃhitā; MŚS—Mānavaśrautasūtra; P—Pāraskara; ParāśaraS—Parāśarasaṃhitā; PB—Pañcaviṃ-śabrāhmaṇa; RV—Ṛgveda; RVKh.—Ṛgvedakhila; Śāṅkh.—Śāṅkhāyana; ŚB—Śatapatha-brāhmaṇa; ŚGS—Śāṅkhāyanagṛhyasūtra; ŚvU—Śvetāśvatara Upaniṣad; TĀ—Taittirīya Āraṇyaka; TB—Taittirīyabrāhmaṇa; TS—Taittirīyasaṃhitā; VaikhS—Vaikhānasasaṃhitā; VaikhSmS—Vaikhānasasmārtasūtra; VāsDhS—Vāsiṣṭhadharmasūtra; ViṣṇuP—Viṣṇupurāṇa; ViṣṇuS—Viṣṇusmṛti; VS—Vājasaneyisaṃhitā; Yājn.—Yājñavalkyasmṛti.

2 I refer to Eliade, M., The quest, Chicago, 1969, 21.Google Scholar

3 I may, for reasons of space, refer to my book Die Religionen Indiens, I, Stuttgart, 1960, 214 ff., esp. 217.Google Scholar

4 For details see Caland, W., Over het Vaikhānasasūtra, Amsterdam Acad., 1926Google Scholar; idem, On the sacred books of the Vaikhānasas, ibid., 1928; idem, Vaikhānasasmārtasūtram, Calcutta, 1929, introductionGoogle Scholar; Goudriaan, T., Kāśyapa's book of wisdom, Utrecht, 1965, introduction, 7 ff.Google Scholar; Gonda, J., Medieval religious literature in Sanskrit, Wiesbaden, 1977, ch. ix.Google Scholar

5 The twice-born man who does not study the Veda is to be excluded from all religious acts (VaikhSmS 6, 11).Google Scholar

6 See e.g. Venkataraman, K. R., in Bhattacharyya, H. (ed.), The cultural heritage of India, iv, second ed., Calcutta, 1956, 160 ff.Google Scholar

7 See also Vira, Raghu, ‘Mantra index’, in Caland, W. (ed.), Vaikhānasa-śrautasūtram (Bibliotheca Indica, Work No. 265, Issue No. 1547), Calcutta, 1941.Google Scholar

8 In the literature it is usual to quote mantras occurring in the Saṃhitā or Brahmaṇa to which a text attaches itself by their opening words (pratīka only).

9 Edition: Vaikhānasagranthamālā, 7 and 14, Madras, 1920.

10 The Jn¯anakāṇḍa, a name used also for the whole Kāśyapasaṃhitā (two other parts of which have not been found) was edited by B. Pārthasārathi Bhattacharya, Tirupati, 1948, and translated by Goudriaan, op. cit.

11 For particulars, editions etc., see Goudriaan, op. cit., introduction. The Atrisaṃhitā is being translated by C. van der Burg (Utrecht).

12 Marīci, , Ānandasaṃhitā, 15.Google Scholar

13 Caland, , Sacred books, 6.Google Scholar

14 Caland, , Sacred books, 7.Google Scholar

15 cf. e.g. Viṣṇu P 3, 4, 1 ff.Google Scholar

16 According to Marīci, Vimānārcanakalpa, ch. 97, Vikhanas received this knowledge from Viṣṇu (similarly, AtriS 31, 58Google Scholar); according to ch. 96, however, from Brahmā.

17 (Raghunathachakravarti Bhattacharya and) Ramakrishna Kavi, introduction to the edition of Atri's Samūrtārcanādhikarana, Tirupati, 1943, pp. vii f. See also AtriS 30, 36 ff.Google Scholar, where a series of formulae is quoted which are to accompany the oblations into the five fires and in which the purusa Acyuta is associated with the Gārhapatya fire, the puruṣa Satya (Satyamūrti) with the Anvāhārya, the Puruṣa with the Āhavanīya, Aniruddha with the Āvasathya, Viṣṇu (puruṣaṃ viṣṇudevam) with the Sabhya fire.

18 See e.g. Gonda, J., Viṣṇuiam and Śivaism, London, 1970, 45.Google Scholar

19 See Gonda, J., Aspects of early Viṣṇuism, Utrecht, 1954 (reprinted Delhi, 1969), 77 ff.Google Scholar

20 See e.g. ŚB 5, 2, 1, 20Google Scholar; 5, 3, 5, 15; 5, 4, 1, 14, etc.

21 See Śrautakośa, 1, 2, Poona, 1962, p. 1048.Google Scholar

22 For these particulars see Kane, P. V., History of Dharmaśāstra, II, Poona, 1941, 668 f.; 700 ff.Google Scholar

23 Kane, , op. cit., II, p. 668, n. 1590.Google Scholar

24 Kane, , op. cit., II, 668.Google Scholar

25 See Gonda, , Viṣṇuism and Śivaism, p. 178, n. 105.Google Scholar

26 See Caland, , Over het Vaikhānasasūtra, 5.Google Scholar

27 I refer to Caland, , Over het Vaikhānasasūtra, 10Google Scholar f., and Sacred books, introduction, p. xx, where more instances are mentioned.Google Scholar

28 I refer to my paper on ‘Adhvará and adhvaryú’, Vishv. Ind. Journal, III, 2, 1965, 163 ff., esp. 173.Google Scholar

29 I shall have to deal with this point in another publication.

30 These rites did not of course discourage those compilers who focused their attention on temple ritual.

31 For particulars see Kane, , op. cit., II, 807 f.Google Scholar

32 Kane, , op. cit., II, 827.Google Scholar

33 Gonda, , Viṣṇuism and Śivaism, 62 f.Google Scholar

34 cf. also Kane, , op. cit., II, 884 f.Google Scholar

35 Kane, , op. cit., II, 700 f.Google Scholar

36 The ritual use of which I intend to discuss elsewhere.

37 cf. e.g. AtriS 45, 71Google Scholar quoting Bhṛgu, Kāśyapa, and Marīci.

38 I refer also to my remark made on p. 553, 11. 10 ff.

39 God's ‘forms’.

40 See also Goudriaan, , op. cit., 30.Google Scholar

41 Cf. also Gonda, , Die Religionen Indiens, I, 129.Google Scholar

42 See e.g. Keith, A. B., The religion and philosophy of the Veda and Upanishads, Cambridge Mass., 1925, 323 f.Google Scholar

43 Gonda, , op. cit., 163.Google Scholar

44 See Gonda, , Aspects of early Viṣṇuism, 77.Google Scholar

45 This will be discussed elsewhere.

46 See my remarks in ‘Atharvaveda 11, 7’, in Mélanges d'indianisme à la mémoire de L. Renou, Paris, 1968, 301 ff.Google Scholar

47 As to authors belonging to a later period see the brief remarks made by Renou, L., ‘Sur la forme des Brahmasūtra’, in Bender, E. (ed.), Indological studies in honor of W. Norman Brown, New Haven, Conn., 1962, 195.Google Scholar

48 I do not speak here of the well-known observations on variant ritual practices adopted by other schools or teachers (such as e.g. ĀpŚS 1, 8, 12Google Scholar; a non-identifiable reference to the tradition of the Vājasaneyins: 1, 14, 13; 1, 15, 10).

49 cf. e.g. ĀpŚS 1, 1, 9 (a quotation from TB 3, 2, 1, 2); 1, 4, 7 (from the Vājasaneyaka); 2, 12, 3 (TS 2, 5, 10); 2, 14, 2 (TS 2, 5, 11, 7); ĀpGS 1, 2, 10 f. (TB 2, 1, 4, 5); HGS 1, 3, 10, 3 (where anonymous authorities are cited); and comparatively often in ĀpDhS, e.g. 1, 1, 1, 10 f. (a reference to a Brāhmaṇa); 1, 1, 3, 9 (cf. GB 1, 2, 4); 1, 1, 3, 26; 1, 2, 7, 11; 1, 4, 12, 1 ff. (cf. 11, 14, 3, etc.); 1, 5, 17, 28; 31; 1, 6, 18, 26. Cf. also SGS 4, 5, 6, etc.

50 For which see Kane, , op. cit., II, 726 ff.Google Scholar

51 cf. TS 5, 5, 1, 4; ŚB 3, 1, 3, 1; 5, 2, 3, 6 and see Caland, W. and Henry, V., L'Agniṣṭoma, Paris, 1906, 15 f.Google Scholar

52 See Gonda, , Aspects of early Visṣṇuism, 113.Google Scholar

53 Other instances worth mentioning occur in VaikhSmS 8, 7Google Scholar; 9, 5.

54 See Caland, , Sacred books, p. 64Google Scholar, n. 3 (Caland hesitantly translates ‘viands’); Gonda, J., The meaning of the Sanskrit term dhāman, Amsterdam Acad., 1967, 58 f.Google Scholar

55 Caland refers to TS 6, 2, 4, 5, and TB 3, 2, 4, 3 (op. cit., p. 64, n. 4).

56 As is often the case in Hindu treatises of this character references to the authoritative texts are also formulated as follows: According to the Scriptures, as we know, Nārāyana ‘has pervaded this whole existence and stays in it’ (KāśyS 68; the text is MahāNU 11, 6 = 245).

57 The identity of these authorities may occasionally be established: thus the expression ‘face of Agni’ (agnimukham), occurring in VaikhSmS 1, 15Google Scholar was already used in BGS 1, 3, 32.Google Scholar

58 Translated by Deussen, P., Sechzig Upanishad's des Veda, Leipzig, 1921 (reprinted Darmstadt, 1963), 611 ff.Google Scholar

59 See Gonda, J., Die Religionen Indiens, I, 158 f.Google Scholar

60 This expression is also used in prescriptions (VaikhSmS 3, 11).Google Scholar

61 This point will be discussed elsewhere.

62 The mantra ā mā gantu pitaro … has been borrowed from Baudhāyana (Caland, W., Altindischer Ahnencult, Leiden, 1893, 259).Google Scholar

63 I refer to another publication.

64 For some comment see Caland, , Sacred books, p. 123, n. 13.Google Scholar

65 See Goudriaan, , op. cit., 91.Google Scholar

66 See Kane, , op. cit., II, 191 f.Google Scholar

67 For mourners and similar tabooed persons clad in rags see Frazer, J. G., The golden bough, abbr. ed., reprinted, London, 1957, 271.Google Scholar

68 cf. e.g. Meyer, J. J., Über das Wesen der altindischen Rechtsschriften, Leipzig, 1927, 366.Google Scholar

69 For some details see Caland, W., Die altindischen Todten- und Bestattungsgebräuche, Amsterdam, 1896, 81 ff.Google Scholar; Hillebrandt, A., Ritualliteratur, Strassburg, 1897, 89 f.Google Scholar

70 Caland, , op. cit., 111.Google Scholar

71 Gonda, , Die Religionen Indiens, I, 137.Google Scholar

72 For particulars see Kane, , op. cit., iv, Poona, 1953, 356.Google Scholar

73 See also Mookerji, R. K., Ancient Indian education, London, 1947, 201.Google Scholar

74 Gonda, J., Eye and gaze in the Veda, Amsterdam, 1969, 32, 57, 69.Google Scholar

75 Nor in Kane's survey, History of Dharmaśāstra, II, 802 ff.Google Scholar

76 But compare Āśv. 2, 7, 9, 12Google Scholar; Kh. 4, 2, 14f.Google Scholar

77 For further references see Kirfel, W., Die Kosmographie der Inder, Bonn/Leipzig, 1920, 36Google Scholar; Kane, , op. cit., v, Pt. I, Poona, 1958, 501.Google Scholar

78 Porāṇical traditions are different: Kirfel, , op. cit., 131, 134.Google Scholar

79 Compare also AtriS 45, 86 ff.Google Scholar

80 See e.g. Dasgupta, S., A history of Indian philosophy, III, Cambridge, 1940, 442f.Google Scholar; Gail, A., Bhakti im Bhāgavatapurāṇa, Wiesbaden, 1969, 41 f.Google Scholar

81 Otto, R., Viṣṇu-Nārāyaṇa, Jena, 1923, 85 f.Google Scholar