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Lakulisha

Lakulisha (Sanskrit: लकुलीश IAST: Lakulīśa) (Etymology: लगुड (staff) or लकुट (mace) + ईश (lord) = meaning, the lord with a staff or mace or club or stick) was a prominent Shaivite revivalist, reformist and preceptor of the doctrine of the Pashupatas, one of the oldest sects of Shaivism.

Lakulisha at Sangameshvara Temple at Mahakuta, Karnataka (Chalukya, 7th century CE). His 5th–10th century ithyphallic statues[note 1] are also found in seated yogi position in Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh and elsewhere.[1]

According to some scholars, Lakulisha is the founder of the Pashupata sect. While, another section argues that the Pashupata doctrine was already in existence before Lakulisha, and he was only its first formal preceptor.

According to a tradition stated in the Linga Purana, Lakulisha is considered as the 28th and the last avatar of Shiva and the propounder of Yoga system. According to the same tradition, Lakulisha had four disciples, viz., Kaurushya, Garga, Mitra and Kushika. According to another tradition mentioned in the Avanti Khanda of the Skanda Purana, Lakulisha and his four disciples while passing Mahakalavana, installed a linga at that place, which was then known as Kayavarohaneshvara.[2] The Kurma Purana (Chap. 53), the Vayu Purana (Chap. 23), and the Linga Purana (Chap. 24) predicted that Shiva (Maheshvara) would appear in the form of a wandering monk called 'Lakulin' or 'Nakulisha', and that he would have four disciples named, Kushika, Garga, Mitra, and Kanrushya, who would re-establish the cult of Pashupati and would therefore be called Pashupata(s). Lakulisha was the fruition of these divine predictions. According to Vayu Purana V. 1.23.202-214, Lakulisha was a contemporary of Vyasa and Krishna, and was the 28th incarnation of Rudra (Shiva).

Life edit

Lakulisha was born in a village called Karavan on the bank of Narmada in Gujarat and propagated Saivism. It has been maintained that Lakulisha's thesis conflicted with that of Gosala, and Lakulisha opposed Jainism, and most particularly, Buddhism. Lakulisha is said to have restored practices of Hatha Yoga and Tantrism and the cosmological theories of the Samkhya and the duality associated with Samkhya tenets.

Historicity edit

 
Early Gupta relief on the Lakulisa pillar, inscribed Gupta era "year 61", 380 CE.

A pillar erected by Chandragupta II at Mathura in 380 CE states that a ‘Guruvayatana’ (Abode of the Gurus) was established by certain Uditacharya, who was 4th in descent from a teacher of Pashupata sect named Parashara, who in turn was 6th in descent from Kushika. If this Kushika is one of the four disciples of Lakulisha as described in the Linga Purana, the latter must have existed around 125 CE.

Renowned epigraphist John Faithfull Fleet contends that in North India, the Kushana emperors like Huvishka (140 CE) replaced the pictures of Hercules on their coins with ones of Shiva, and of Heracles with images of Lakulisha.[3]

In the 4th century CE, beginning with the reign of Chandragupta II, icons and representations of Lakulisha have been frequently found, which portray him as a naked yogi with a staff in his left hand and a citron (matulinga) in his right and, either standing or seated in the lotus posture. At about the beginning of the 11th century, the Lakulisha cult shifted its activities to southern India.

A sect of Pasupata ascetics, founded by Lakulisa (or Nahulisa), is attested by inscriptions from the 5th century and is among the earliest of the sectarian religious orders of Shaivite Hinduism.

Sculpture context edit

The penile erection representation illustrates the centrality of the energetic principle of Urdhva Retas (Sanskrit: ऊर्ध्वरेतस् IAST: Ūrdhvaretas, lit. "ascent of vital energies or fluid") practice of Brahmacarya or celibacy[4] and the upward flow of energy in spiritual pursuits, contrary to fertility or release of vital energies.[5][6][7][8][5][7] Controlling of the vital fluid, the seminal fluid, is thought to retain control of all passions and the achievement of desirelessness through the practice of Asceticism and Yogic Sadhana, leads to supreme mystical cognition or samādhi.[5][7] Lakulisha stands on top of a Apasmara (demon) dwarf, who symbolizes spiritual ignorance, greed, sensual desires or Kama and nonsensical speech on the spiritual path, hence must be subdued in spiritual pursuits.[9][10][11]

The Urdhva linga (IAST: ūrdhvaliṅga), pointing upward, conveys not only the retention of the seed once "stirred" but its upward condition, "through the spinal cord to the brain", retaining its integrity as 'creative substance', while being transformed and absorbed mentally as Bodhicitta, the "thought of Awakening".[12][6] The symbol of the ascent and transmutation of vital energy (sexual energy) into mental power, a channeling of the procreative into creative faculty, is artistically seen as tantric realization in Mukhalinga or "face-linga", the two overlapping components forming a visual unity, states Kramrisch.[note 2][12]

According to Stella Kramrisch, the pictorial rendering of the ascent of the vital energy should not be mistaken for fertility or sexuality.[5] Lakulisa, who is an ascetic manifestation of Shiva, is seen in later peninsular Indian scriptures, whose ithyphallic aspects connotes asceticism and conserved procreative potentialities (Brahmacarya), rather than mere eroticism.[14][15] The ithyphallic representation of the erect shape connotes the very opposite in this context, as it stands for "seminal retention", and represents Lakulisha as "he stands for the complete control of the senses, and for the supreme carnal renunciation".[16][6] In the path of Brahmacarya, Asceticism or, Sannyasa, the Yogi does not deny sexual urges, rather transforms the sexual energies and directs it away from procreation and pleasure towards intuited wisdom, towards freedom and bliss.[16][6]

Influence on philosophy and religion edit

 
Lakulisha among his four disciples Kusika, Garga, Mitra, and Kaurushya, rock-cut stone relief, Cave Temple No. 2 at Badami, Karnataka, Early Chalukya dynasty, second half of the 6th century CE

Author M. R. Sakhare argues in "The History and Philosophy of Lingayat Religion", the influence of Lakulisha was immense and spread rapidly, first in the North and then in the South of India. The Shaivite revival, supported by the Bharashiva Nagas of Mathura and Vakataka dynasty in Central and Northern India, gradually spread in the south under the impetus of artisan class Shaiva mystics, the Nayanars.

Teachings edit

Lakulisha Pashupata has been identified as ‘Dualistic-combined with-Non-dualistic Monism’ (bheda-abheda) Shaivism, and there was strong emphasis on Yoga system. The principal text of the Pashupata sect, the Pāśupata Sūtra is attributed to Lakulisha. The manuscripts of this text and a commentary of it, the Pañcārtha Bhāṣya by Kaundinya (c. 500 CE) were discovered in 1930. The Pāśupata Sūtra formalizes various canons of the Pashupata sect, and contains the basic theology of the sect. However, the authorship of Lakulisha over the Pashupata sutras have been a subject of debate. The Pashupata sutras are of an archaic character and do not bear the name of any author. Though certain traditions mention Lakulisha as the author, there is nothing to support this in the form of internal written evidence from the Sutras. Even, Kaundinya’s commentary only states the following:

" ... Tatha shishta pramanyat kamitvad ajatatvach cha, Manushya-rupi bhagavan brahmana-kayam asthaya kayavatarane avatirna iti | Tatha padbhyam ujjayinim praptah.."

Meaning, Shiva incarnated in the form of a human being by entering the body of a deceased Brahmana in the [village of] Kayavatara, thereafter wandered to Ujjain.

This account matches those narrated in the Puranas and the Karvana Mahatmya where Lakulisha incarnates in Kayavarohana (Karvan) village. However, unlike the latter accounts, the name Lakulisha is never mentioned, even though in the subsequent lines Kaundinya mentions that Shiva as the Brahmana imparted Shastra to the student Kushika. Only in subsequent Pashupata texts, Ratna Tika and Gana Karika, a clear mention of Lakulisha as the founder of the Pashupata system appears. This raises questions regarding Lakulisha being the actual composer of the Sutras.

Notwithstanding, the authorship of the Sutras, the philosophical doctrine of the Pashupata(s) as enunciated by Lakulisha are called "Ishvara Kartri Vadaha (the creative power of the sovereign being)", which was first found to be quoted later by Adi Shankaracharya in commentary on the Brahma Sutras (3.2.37). An analysis of it is found in one of the main Pashupata texts, the Gana Karika of Haradatta, and its commentary by Kaundinya called Panchartha Bhashya (commentary of the five subjects). Ramanuja attributed this philosophy to the tradition of the Kalamukha(s), the sect of "Black Faces" to which Lakulisha belonged. This Nakulisha Pashupata doctrine is divided into six parts, known as: (1) Karana (cause), (2) Karya (work/task), (3) Kala (divisibility), (4) Vidhi (method), (5) Yoga (union), and (6) Dukhanta (the end of suffering).

According to some scholars, Lakulisha modified the Maheshwara doctrine by putting different interpretations on all 5 main concepts in that doctrine and placed special emphasis on the different kinds of behaviour to be adopted at each of the 5 stages, in their progress from initiation to the attainment of the unlimited powers of knowing, willing and acting on the terrestrial place. The doctrines of the Lakulisha Pashupatas are explained at length in Sayana Madhava's Sarva Darshana Sangraha (p. 108, Cowell & Gough) Sarva-Darsana-Samgraha by Sayana-Madhava – Tr. by E.B. Cowell.

Iconography and images edit

 
Statue of Lakulisha, Pratihara, 9th century CE.
 
Lakulisha carving on the outer walls of Kudavelly Sangameswara temple at Alampur, Telangana built by Pulakesi I, circa 540 CE - 566 CE.

Lakulisha has been deified as an incarnation of Shiva, and is represented in front of the linga in the 6th to 8th centuries and also in the medieval period in temples of Kayavarohana and Timberva in Gujarat.[17][18] These icons are some more examples of iconic, image-lingas. D.R. Bhandarkar in op cit [1] mentions that the image in the sanctum of the Lakulishvara temple in Karvan is "the conjoint figure of Brahmeshvara and Lakulisha, confirming the statement of the Mahatmya that Lakulisha merged himself with Brahmeshvara". Brahmeshvara refers to the Shiva-linga. Lakulisha was identified with Mahesha (Shiva) in the Karvan Mahatmya and in iconographical programmes of several temples of Orissa and Rajasthan. So the images of Lakulisha conjoint with the linga, like other image-lingas, combine both the sakala (with form, manifest) and nishkala (formless, unmanifest) aspects of Shiva.

Lakulisha images have also been found in Saurastra, Gujarat, and also in some parts of the eastern India. Some of the images depict Lakulisha as a naked yogi and he carries prayer beads, a club, a cup of human skull. Lakulisha is shown as accompanied by animals. Almost all of Lakulisha's images appear as urdhav-linga (with an erect penis)[note 1] but neither symbolizing fertility nor sexuality, but the refined energetic principles (Urdhva Retas) during Sāyaṇa or Asceticism.[5][7][19]

Image of Lakulisha have been found depicted on the walls of the large hall at Elephanta Caves, suggesting that the caves may have been associated with Pashupata Shaivism.[20] Icons of Lakulisha have also been found on the Laxmaneswar group of Temples at Bhubaneswar, namely, the Satrughneswar, Bharateswar and Laxmaneswara temples.

 
Rock cut temple with bas relief of Lakulisha in the left, Pandya, 7th century CE.
 
Bas relief of Lakulisha, Pandya, 7th century CE.

A rock cut Shiva temple with bas reliefs of Ganapati and Lakulisa, carved by the seventh century Pandyas is located at Arittapatti near Madurai. This temple is maintained by the Archeological Department of Tamil Nadu.

Lakulisha carvings are also found on Kudavelly Sangameswara and Balabrahmeswara Swamy temples at Alampur, Gadwal Jogulamba district, Telangana.

See also edit

  • Lakulisa Mathura Pillar Inscription
  • Notes edit

    1. ^ Cynthia Packert Atherton (1997). The Sculpture of Early Medieval Rajasthan. BRILL. pp. 92–97, 102–103. ISBN 90-04-10789-4. from the original on 2 April 2017. Retrieved 2 April 2017.
    2. ^ Joshi, N.P. (1981). Regional Trends in some of the Mediaeval Brahmanical Sculptures of Malwa in M.D. Khare (ed.) Malwa through the Ages, Bhopal: Directorate of Archaeology & Museums, Govt. of M.P., p.112
    3. ^ John Faithfull Fleet ‘Siva as Lakulisa’ JRASGBI : 1907, p. 419-427
    4. ^ Ghurye, G.S., 1952. Ascetic Origins. Sociological Bulletin, 1(2), pp.162-184.
    5. ^ a b c d e Kramrisch 1994, p. 26.
    6. ^ a b c d Pensa, Corrado. "Some Internal and Comparative Problems in the Field of Indian Religions." Problems and Methods of the History of Religions. Brill, 1972. 102-122
    7. ^ a b c d Swami Agehananda Bharati (1970). The Tantric Tradition. Red Wheel/Weiser. p. 294. ISBN 0877282536.
    8. ^ "Urdhvaretas, Urdhvaretās, Ūrdhvaretas, Urdhva-retas: 7 definitions". www.wisdomlib.org. 9 September 2014.
    9. ^ T. A. Gopinatha Rao (1997). Elements of Hindu Iconography. Motilal Banarsidass. pp. 223–229, 237. ISBN 978-81-208-0877-5.
    10. ^ Shiva as Lord of the Dance (Nataraja), Chola period, c. 10th/11th century The Art Institute of Chicago, United States
    11. ^ P. Arundhati (2002). Annapurna : A Bunch of Flowers of Indian Culture. Concept. pp. 40–45. ISBN 978-81-7022-897-4.
    12. ^ a b Kramrisch 1994, p. 238.
    13. ^ Kramrisch 1994, p. 555.
    14. ^ Srinivasan 2004, p. 434.
    15. ^ O'Flaherty, Wendy Doniger. "Asceticism and Sexuality in the Mythology of Śiva. Part I." History of Religions 8, no. 4 (1969): 300-37. Accessed September 7, 2021. http://www.jstor.org/stable/1062019.
    16. ^ a b Kramrisch 1994, p. 218.
    17. ^ D.R. Bhandarkar, "Lakulisa", in Archaeological Survey of India, Annual Report 1906-7, Calcutta, 1909, pp. 179-92, figures 4, 5.
    18. ^ U.P. Shah, "Lakulisa: Saivite Saint" in Discourses on Siva, ed. Michael W. Meister, figs. 85-87.
    19. ^ T. A. Gopinatha Rao (1993). Elements of Hindu Iconography, Volume 2. Motilal Banarsidass. pp. 63–67. ISBN 978-81-208-0877-5.
    20. ^ A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India: From the Stone Age to the 12th Century, Upinder Singh (2008)
    1. ^ a b The ithyphallic representation of the erect shape connotes the very opposite in this context.[1] It contextualize "seminal retention" or practice of celibacy[2] (illustration of Urdhva Retas),[3][4] and represents Lakulisha as "he stands for complete complete control of the senses, and for the supreme carnal renunciation".[1]
    2. ^ Furthermore, the phallic shape, standing erect, always negates its function as an organ of procreation. Rather, the shape or pictorial representation is conveying that, the seed was channeled upward, not ejected for the sake of generation, but was reversed, retained and absorbed for regeneration as creative energy.[13]

    References edit

    • Choubey, M.C. Lakuliśa in Indian Art and Culture, Sharada Publishing House, New Delhi, ISBN 81-85616-44-2 (1997)
    • Dallapiccola, Anna. Dictionary of Hindu Lore and Legend (ISBN 0-500-51088-1)
    • Daniélou, Alain. "Shaiva Oracles and Predictions on the Cycles of History and the Destiny of Mankind"
    • Sharpe, Elizabeth, Shiva or The Past of India, Luzac & Co, London, (1930).
    • Satya Prakash, et al., "Cultural contours of India: Dr. Satya Prakash felicitation volume" [3]
    • Divanji, P. C.; Lakulisha of Karvan and his Pasupata Cult; in Gautam Patel et al. (Ed.); Contribution of Gujarat to Sanskrit Literature (Dr. M. I. Prajapati Felicitation Volume); Dr. M. I. Prajapati Sastipurti Sanman Samiti; Patan (Gujarat); (1998).
    • Bhandarkar, D. R. "An Eklingji stone inscription and the origin and history of the Lakulisa sect", Journal of the Bombay Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society : 22 (1908), p. 151-167.[4]
    • Kramrisch, Stella (1994). The Presence of Śiva. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691019307.
    • Srinivasan, Sharada (2004). "Shiva as 'cosmic dancer': On Pallava origins for the Nataraja bronze". World Archaeology. Vol. 36. The Journal of Modern Craft. pp. 432–450. doi:10.1080/1468936042000282726821. S2CID 26503807.

    External links edit

    • Pashupata Shaivism
    • Pashupata Siddhant of Lakulisha 18 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine
    • Lakulish Yoga
    1. ^ a b Kramrisch 1994, p. 218.
    2. ^ Ghurye, G.S., 1952. Ascetic Origins. Sociological Bulletin, 1(2), pp.162-184.
    3. ^ Kramrisch 1994, p. 26.
    4. ^ Pensa, Corrado. "Some Internal and Comparative Problems in the Field of Indian Religions." Problems and Methods of the History of Religions. Brill, 1972. 102-122.

    lakulisha, sanskrit, लक, iast, lakulīśa, etymology, लग, staff, लक, mace, ईश, lord, meaning, lord, with, staff, mace, club, stick, prominent, shaivite, revivalist, reformist, preceptor, doctrine, pashupatas, oldest, sects, shaivism, sangameshvara, temple, mahak. Lakulisha Sanskrit लक ल श IAST Lakulisa Etymology लग ड staff or लक ट mace ईश lord meaning the lord with a staff or mace or club or stick was a prominent Shaivite revivalist reformist and preceptor of the doctrine of the Pashupatas one of the oldest sects of Shaivism Lakulisha at Sangameshvara Temple at Mahakuta Karnataka Chalukya 7th century CE His 5th 10th century ithyphallic statues note 1 are also found in seated yogi position in Rajasthan Uttar Pradesh and elsewhere 1 According to some scholars Lakulisha is the founder of the Pashupata sect While another section argues that the Pashupata doctrine was already in existence before Lakulisha and he was only its first formal preceptor According to a tradition stated in the Linga Purana Lakulisha is considered as the 28th and the last avatar of Shiva and the propounder of Yoga system According to the same tradition Lakulisha had four disciples viz Kaurushya Garga Mitra and Kushika According to another tradition mentioned in the Avanti Khanda of the Skanda Purana Lakulisha and his four disciples while passing Mahakalavana installed a linga at that place which was then known as Kayavarohaneshvara 2 The Kurma Purana Chap 53 the Vayu Purana Chap 23 and the Linga Purana Chap 24 predicted that Shiva Maheshvara would appear in the form of a wandering monk called Lakulin or Nakulisha and that he would have four disciples named Kushika Garga Mitra and Kanrushya who would re establish the cult of Pashupati and would therefore be called Pashupata s Lakulisha was the fruition of these divine predictions According to Vayu Purana V 1 23 202 214 Lakulisha was a contemporary of Vyasa and Krishna and was the 28th incarnation of Rudra Shiva Contents 1 Life 2 Historicity 3 Sculpture context 4 Influence on philosophy and religion 5 Teachings 6 Iconography and images 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksLife editLakulisha was born in a village called Karavan on the bank of Narmada in Gujarat and propagated Saivism It has been maintained that Lakulisha s thesis conflicted with that of Gosala and Lakulisha opposed Jainism and most particularly Buddhism Lakulisha is said to have restored practices of Hatha Yoga and Tantrism and the cosmological theories of the Samkhya and the duality associated with Samkhya tenets Historicity edit nbsp Early Gupta relief on the Lakulisa pillar inscribed Gupta era year 61 380 CE A pillar erected by Chandragupta II at Mathura in 380 CE states that a Guruvayatana Abode of the Gurus was established by certain Uditacharya who was 4th in descent from a teacher of Pashupata sect named Parashara who in turn was 6th in descent from Kushika If this Kushika is one of the four disciples of Lakulisha as described in the Linga Purana the latter must have existed around 125 CE Renowned epigraphist John Faithfull Fleet contends that in North India the Kushana emperors like Huvishka 140 CE replaced the pictures of Hercules on their coins with ones of Shiva and of Heracles with images of Lakulisha 3 In the 4th century CE beginning with the reign of Chandragupta II icons and representations of Lakulisha have been frequently found which portray him as a naked yogi with a staff in his left hand and a citron matulinga in his right and either standing or seated in the lotus posture At about the beginning of the 11th century the Lakulisha cult shifted its activities to southern India A sect of Pasupata ascetics founded by Lakulisa or Nahulisa is attested by inscriptions from the 5th century and is among the earliest of the sectarian religious orders of Shaivite Hinduism Sculpture context editThe penile erection representation illustrates the centrality of the energetic principle of Urdhva Retas Sanskrit ऊर ध वर तस IAST urdhvaretas lit ascent of vital energies or fluid practice of Brahmacarya or celibacy 4 and the upward flow of energy in spiritual pursuits contrary to fertility or release of vital energies 5 6 7 8 5 7 Controlling of the vital fluid the seminal fluid is thought to retain control of all passions and the achievement of desirelessness through the practice of Asceticism and Yogic Sadhana leads to supreme mystical cognition or samadhi 5 7 Lakulisha stands on top of a Apasmara demon dwarf who symbolizes spiritual ignorance greed sensual desires or Kama and nonsensical speech on the spiritual path hence must be subdued in spiritual pursuits 9 10 11 The Urdhva linga IAST urdhvaliṅga pointing upward conveys not only the retention of the seed once stirred but its upward condition through the spinal cord to the brain retaining its integrity as creative substance while being transformed and absorbed mentally as Bodhicitta the thought of Awakening 12 6 The symbol of the ascent and transmutation of vital energy sexual energy into mental power a channeling of the procreative into creative faculty is artistically seen as tantric realization in Mukhalinga or face linga the two overlapping components forming a visual unity states Kramrisch note 2 12 According to Stella Kramrisch the pictorial rendering of the ascent of the vital energy should not be mistaken for fertility or sexuality 5 Lakulisa who is an ascetic manifestation of Shiva is seen in later peninsular Indian scriptures whose ithyphallic aspects connotes asceticism and conserved procreative potentialities Brahmacarya rather than mere eroticism 14 15 The ithyphallic representation of the erect shape connotes the very opposite in this context as it stands for seminal retention and represents Lakulisha as he stands for the complete control of the senses and for the supreme carnal renunciation 16 6 In the path of Brahmacarya Asceticism or Sannyasa the Yogi does not deny sexual urges rather transforms the sexual energies and directs it away from procreation and pleasure towards intuited wisdom towards freedom and bliss 16 6 Influence on philosophy and religion edit nbsp Lakulisha among his four disciples Kusika Garga Mitra and Kaurushya rock cut stone relief Cave Temple No 2 at Badami Karnataka Early Chalukya dynasty second half of the 6th century CE Author M R Sakhare argues in The History and Philosophy of Lingayat Religion the influence of Lakulisha was immense and spread rapidly first in the North and then in the South of India The Shaivite revival supported by the Bharashiva Nagas of Mathura and Vakataka dynasty in Central and Northern India gradually spread in the south under the impetus of artisan class Shaiva mystics the Nayanars Teachings editLakulisha Pashupata has been identified as Dualistic combined with Non dualistic Monism bheda abheda Shaivism and there was strong emphasis on Yoga system The principal text of the Pashupata sect the Pasupata Sutra is attributed to Lakulisha The manuscripts of this text and a commentary of it the Pancartha Bhaṣya by Kaundinya c 500 CE were discovered in 1930 The Pasupata Sutra formalizes various canons of the Pashupata sect and contains the basic theology of the sect However the authorship of Lakulisha over the Pashupata sutras have been a subject of debate The Pashupata sutras are of an archaic character and do not bear the name of any author Though certain traditions mention Lakulisha as the author there is nothing to support this in the form of internal written evidence from the Sutras Even Kaundinya s commentary only states the following Tatha shishta pramanyat kamitvad ajatatvach cha Manushya rupi bhagavan brahmana kayam asthaya kayavatarane avatirna iti Tatha padbhyam ujjayinim praptah Meaning Shiva incarnated in the form of a human being by entering the body of a deceased Brahmana in the village of Kayavatara thereafter wandered to Ujjain This account matches those narrated in the Puranas and the Karvana Mahatmya where Lakulisha incarnates in Kayavarohana Karvan village However unlike the latter accounts the name Lakulisha is never mentioned even though in the subsequent lines Kaundinya mentions that Shiva as the Brahmana imparted Shastra to the student Kushika Only in subsequent Pashupata texts Ratna Tika and Gana Karika a clear mention of Lakulisha as the founder of the Pashupata system appears This raises questions regarding Lakulisha being the actual composer of the Sutras Notwithstanding the authorship of the Sutras the philosophical doctrine of the Pashupata s as enunciated by Lakulisha are called Ishvara Kartri Vadaha the creative power of the sovereign being which was first found to be quoted later by Adi Shankaracharya in commentary on the Brahma Sutras 3 2 37 An analysis of it is found in one of the main Pashupata texts the Gana Karika of Haradatta and its commentary by Kaundinya called Panchartha Bhashya commentary of the five subjects Ramanuja attributed this philosophy to the tradition of the Kalamukha s the sect of Black Faces to which Lakulisha belonged This Nakulisha Pashupata doctrine is divided into six parts known as 1 Karana cause 2 Karya work task 3 Kala divisibility 4 Vidhi method 5 Yoga union and 6 Dukhanta the end of suffering According to some scholars Lakulisha modified the Maheshwara doctrine by putting different interpretations on all 5 main concepts in that doctrine and placed special emphasis on the different kinds of behaviour to be adopted at each of the 5 stages in their progress from initiation to the attainment of the unlimited powers of knowing willing and acting on the terrestrial place The doctrines of the Lakulisha Pashupatas are explained at length in Sayana Madhava s Sarva Darshana Sangraha p 108 Cowell amp Gough Sarva Darsana Samgraha by Sayana Madhava Tr by E B Cowell Iconography and images edit nbsp Statue of Lakulisha Pratihara 9th century CE nbsp Lakulisha carving on the outer walls of Kudavelly Sangameswara temple at Alampur Telangana built by Pulakesi I circa 540 CE 566 CE Lakulisha has been deified as an incarnation of Shiva and is represented in front of the linga in the 6th to 8th centuries and also in the medieval period in temples of Kayavarohana and Timberva in Gujarat 17 18 These icons are some more examples of iconic image lingas D R Bhandarkar in op cit 1 mentions that the image in the sanctum of the Lakulishvara temple in Karvan is the conjoint figure of Brahmeshvara and Lakulisha confirming the statement of the Mahatmya that Lakulisha merged himself with Brahmeshvara Brahmeshvara refers to the Shiva linga Lakulisha was identified with Mahesha Shiva in the Karvan Mahatmya and in iconographical programmes of several temples of Orissa and Rajasthan So the images of Lakulisha conjoint with the linga like other image lingas combine both the sakala with form manifest and nishkala formless unmanifest aspects of Shiva Lakulisha images have also been found in Saurastra Gujarat and also in some parts of the eastern India Some of the images depict Lakulisha as a naked yogi and he carries prayer beads a club a cup of human skull Lakulisha is shown as accompanied by animals Almost all of Lakulisha s images appear as urdhav linga with an erect penis note 1 but neither symbolizing fertility nor sexuality but the refined energetic principles Urdhva Retas during Sayaṇa or Asceticism 5 7 19 Image of Lakulisha have been found depicted on the walls of the large hall at Elephanta Caves suggesting that the caves may have been associated with Pashupata Shaivism 20 Icons of Lakulisha have also been found on the Laxmaneswar group of Temples at Bhubaneswar namely the Satrughneswar Bharateswar and Laxmaneswara temples nbsp Rock cut temple with bas relief of Lakulisha in the left Pandya 7th century CE nbsp Bas relief of Lakulisha Pandya 7th century CE A rock cut Shiva temple with bas reliefs of Ganapati and Lakulisa carved by the seventh century Pandyas is located at Arittapatti near Madurai This temple is maintained by the Archeological Department of Tamil Nadu Lakulisha carvings are also found on Kudavelly Sangameswara and Balabrahmeswara Swamy temples at Alampur Gadwal Jogulamba district Telangana See also editLakulisa Mathura Pillar InscriptionNotes edit Cynthia Packert Atherton 1997 The Sculpture of Early Medieval Rajasthan BRILL pp 92 97 102 103 ISBN 90 04 10789 4 Archived from the original on 2 April 2017 Retrieved 2 April 2017 Joshi N P 1981 Regional Trends in some of the Mediaeval Brahmanical Sculptures of Malwa in M D Khare ed Malwa through the Ages Bhopal Directorate of Archaeology amp Museums Govt of M P p 112 John Faithfull Fleet Siva as Lakulisa JRASGBI 1907 p 419 427 Ghurye G S 1952 Ascetic Origins Sociological Bulletin 1 2 pp 162 184 a b c d e Kramrisch 1994 p 26 a b c d Pensa Corrado Some Internal and Comparative Problems in the Field of Indian Religions Problems and Methods of the History of Religions Brill 1972 102 122 a b c d Swami Agehananda Bharati 1970 The Tantric Tradition Red Wheel Weiser p 294 ISBN 0877282536 Urdhvaretas Urdhvaretas urdhvaretas Urdhva retas 7 definitions www wisdomlib org 9 September 2014 T A Gopinatha Rao 1997 Elements of Hindu Iconography Motilal Banarsidass pp 223 229 237 ISBN 978 81 208 0877 5 Shiva as Lord of the Dance Nataraja Chola period c 10th 11th century The Art Institute of Chicago United States P Arundhati 2002 Annapurna A Bunch of Flowers of Indian Culture Concept pp 40 45 ISBN 978 81 7022 897 4 a b Kramrisch 1994 p 238 Kramrisch 1994 p 555 Srinivasan 2004 p 434 O Flaherty Wendy Doniger Asceticism and Sexuality in the Mythology of Siva Part I History of Religions 8 no 4 1969 300 37 Accessed September 7 2021 http www jstor org stable 1062019 a b Kramrisch 1994 p 218 D R Bhandarkar Lakulisa in Archaeological Survey of India Annual Report 1906 7 Calcutta 1909 pp 179 92 figures 4 5 U P Shah Lakulisa Saivite Saint in Discourses on Siva ed Michael W Meister figs 85 87 T A Gopinatha Rao 1993 Elements of Hindu Iconography Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass pp 63 67 ISBN 978 81 208 0877 5 A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India From the Stone Age to the 12th Century Upinder Singh 2008 a b The ithyphallic representation of the erect shape connotes the very opposite in this context 1 It contextualize seminal retention or practice of celibacy 2 illustration of Urdhva Retas 3 4 and represents Lakulisha as he stands for complete complete control of the senses and for the supreme carnal renunciation 1 Furthermore the phallic shape standing erect always negates its function as an organ of procreation Rather the shape or pictorial representation is conveying that the seed was channeled upward not ejected for the sake of generation but was reversed retained and absorbed for regeneration as creative energy 13 References editChoubey M C Lakulisa in Indian Art and Culture Sharada Publishing House New Delhi ISBN 81 85616 44 2 1997 Dallapiccola Anna Dictionary of Hindu Lore and Legend ISBN 0 500 51088 1 Danielou Alain Shaiva Oracles and Predictions on the Cycles of History and the Destiny of Mankind 2 Sharpe Elizabeth Shiva or The Past of India Luzac amp Co London 1930 Satya Prakash et al Cultural contours of India Dr Satya Prakash felicitation volume 3 Divanji P C Lakulisha of Karvan and his Pasupata Cult in Gautam Patel et al Ed Contribution of Gujarat to Sanskrit Literature Dr M I Prajapati Felicitation Volume Dr M I Prajapati Sastipurti Sanman Samiti Patan Gujarat 1998 Bhandarkar D R An Eklingji stone inscription and the origin and history of the Lakulisa sect Journal of the Bombay Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society 22 1908 p 151 167 4 Kramrisch Stella 1994 The Presence of Siva Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691019307 Srinivasan Sharada 2004 Shiva as cosmic dancer On Pallava origins for the Nataraja bronze World Archaeology Vol 36 The Journal of Modern Craft pp 432 450 doi 10 1080 1468936042000282726821 S2CID 26503807 External links editPashupata Shaivism Pashupata Siddhant of Lakulisha Archived 18 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine Lakulish Yoga a b Kramrisch 1994 p 218 Ghurye G S 1952 Ascetic Origins Sociological Bulletin 1 2 pp 162 184 Kramrisch 1994 p 26 Pensa Corrado Some Internal and Comparative Problems in the Field of Indian Religions Problems and Methods of the History of Religions Brill 1972 102 122 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lakulisha amp oldid 1206162313, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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