fbpx
Wikipedia

Mahanarayana Upanishad

The Mahanarayana Upanishad (Sanskrit: महानारायण उपनिषद्, IAST: Mahānārāyaṇa Upaniṣad), also Brihannarayana Upanishad,[4] is an ancient Sanskrit text, and is one of the minor Upanishads of Hinduism. The text is classified as a Vaishnava Upanishad.[3][2]

Mahanarayana Upanishad
Portrait of Narayana, with his consort, Lakshmi sitting on his mount Garuda.
Devanagariमहानारायणोपनिषत्
IASTMahānārāyaṇa
Title meansGreat Narayana[1]
DateBCE
TypeVaishnava[1]
Linked VedaKrishna Yajurveda[2] or Atharvaveda[3]
Chaptersvaries
Versesvaries by manuscript
PhilosophyVaishnavism

The text exists in three main versions.[5] One version with 64 chapters is attached to the Krishna Yajurveda in several South Indian anthologies, and the same text in Andhra edition exists in an expanded form with 80 chapters attached to the same Veda.[2] A second version is attached to the Atharvaveda,[3] has 25 chapters and is prefixed with Tripadvibhuti.[6] These manuscripts are sometimes titled as the Yajniki Upanishad or Tripad-vibhuti-mahanarayana Upanishad.[7][3] According to Swami Vimalananda, this Upanishad is also called Yagniki Upanishad in reverence for sage Yagnatma Narayana.[8]

Author Doris Srinivasan says, The Upanishad, despite its title which means "Great Narayana",[9] is notable for glorifying both Narayana and Rudra, both as the first equivalent embodiment of Brahman, the concept of ultimate, impersonal, and transcendental reality in Hinduism.[5] The Upanishad uses Vedanta terminology,[10] and uses numerous fragments from Rigveda, Taittiriya Brahmana, Vajasaneyi Samhita and Principal Upanishads.[10]

When doing sandhyavandanam, the mantras used for Prāṇāyāma, Mantrācamana, Gāyatrī āhvānam, Devatānamaskāraḥ and Gāyatrī Prasthānam are directly from Mahanarayana Upanishad (Andhra rescension containing 80 anuvakas).[11]

Development Edit

The author and the century in which the Mahanarayana Upanishad was composed is unknown. The relative chronology of the text, based on its poetic verse and textual style, has been proposed by Parmeshwaranand to the same period of composition as Katha, Isha, Mundaka, and Shvetashvatara Upanishads, but before Maitri, Prashna, and Mandukya Upanishad.[12] Feuerstein places the relative composition chronology of Mahanarayana to be about that of Mundaka and Prashna Upanishads.[13] These relative chronology estimates date the text to second half of 1st millennium BCE.[12][14]

Srinivasan suggests a later date, one after about 300 BCE, and by around the start of the common era, probably the 1st century CE, based on the texts it cites and the comparison of details of the Samdhya ritual found in Mahanarayana Upanishad with those found in other Sutras and Shastras.[15] Deussen considers it to be ancient and a transitional link between the Upanishads of the three Vedas (Rig, Sama and Yajur) and the Atharvaveda.[1]

Manuscripts of this text are also found titled as Mahanaryanopanishad.[16][17] In the Telugu language anthology of 108 Upanishads of the Muktika canon, narrated by Rama to Hanuman, it is listed as Tripadvibhutimahanarayana Upanishad at number 52.[18] It is different from the shorter version of Narayana Upanishad of the Atharva Veda.[1] The tenth chapter of the Taittiriya Upanishad is adopted in this Mahanarayana text.[19]

The Mahanarayana Upanishad was among the text included in the collection of fifty Upanishads translated into Persian by Sultan Mohammed Dara Shikhoh in 1656, under the title Maha-narain, and listed at 30 in the compilation called the Oupanekhat.[20] In the Colebrooke's version of 52 Upanishads, popular in North India, it is listed at 39–40 as Brhadnarayana. In the Narayana anthology, popular in South India, it is included at number 34 as Mahanarayana or Brhadnarayana in Bibliothica Indica.[21] Even though Adi Shankara did not directly comment on this Upanishad, his commentary on Brahmasutras such as at III.3.24 applies to this text, since some of the Vedanta sutras are incorporated in this Upanishad.[8]

Contents Edit

All virtues are Tapas

Truth is Tapas,
Study is Tapas,
Quiet nature is Tapas,
Self-restraint is Tapas,
Charity is Tapas,
Sacrifice is Tapas,
when it said,
Bhur-bhuvah-svar-Brahman adore this,
it is also Tapas.

Mahanarayana Upanishad Chapter 8[22]

The text opens with cosmology, with a verse describing the Brahman principle as existent before the creation of universe, which existed as and in light in the "boundless cosmic water".[5][23] The style of its opening verses suggest that the metaphysical principle of Brahman was well established by the time this text was composed.[5] It is described as that where and from which the world originated and into which it shall disintegrate, upon whom all the gods are founded, it is that which was past and what will be, it is all parts of time, it is that which envelops the entire universe, which procreates and is present in all creatures, mobile and immobile, and that which is in Om.[24] It is highest of the highest, greatest of the greatest,[25] it is the law, it is the truth, it is the Brahman.[24] The text calls this metaphysical principle as Agni (fire), Vayu (wind), Surya (sun), Chandrama (moon), Prajapati, Purusha, Rudra and Narayana, that they are all none other than Brahman.[26][27] It is that, states verse 10.19 which was already there before the gods appeared.[28]

The text extracts, repeats and integrates the hymns from the Vedic texts. For example, its first ten chapters reference and include hymn fragments or entire hymns from Rigveda 1.18, 1.22, 1.164, 2.3, 4.58, 5.82, 9.96 and 10.81,[29] Yajurveda 32.1 through 32.4,[30][31] Atharvaveda 10.8.13,[31] section 6.9 of Katha Upanishad, 4.2 of Shvetashvatara Upanishad, 2.1 of Mundaka Upanishad and others.[32] The chapter 2 of the text gives, for example, an elaborate version of the Rigvedic Gayatri mantra.[33][34][35]

Axiology in the Upanishad

The charity or gift is the armour in the world,
All beings live on the gift of the other,
Through gifts strangers become friends,
Through gifts, they ward off difficulties,
On gifts and giving, everything rests,
That is why charity is the highest.

Mahanarayana Upanishad 63.6[36][37]

Narayana is particularly solemnized in the 11th chapter of the text, calling Atman (soul) as Narayana.[38] This description mirrors those found in Yogashikha Upanishad and Yogatattva Upanishad.[38] Narayana is described as the highest goal, the light beyond, the highest self, the highest Brahman, the highest object of thought.[38][16]

The chapter 12 and twenty six verses that follow then solemnize Rudra, in a manner similar to Narayana, as being all the universe, the manifest One, the right, the just, the truth and the highest Brahman.[39][40] Once again, the text references and integrates numerous hymns and their fragments from the Vedas, as it solemnizes Narayana and Rudra.[41][42]

The Upanishad describes its axiology, describing the highest principles of human endeavor to be satyam (truth), tapas (penance), dama (temperance, self restraints), sama (quietude, stillness of the forest), danam (charity), dharmam (duty), prajanam (having children), agnihotram (sacred domestic fire), yajna (fire ritual), manasam (mind's contemplation), nyasa (renunciation, sannyasa).[43] It then declares renunciation as the exquisite among these, possibly because this text is followed by the Sannyasa Upanishads in the Atharvaveda.[43][16] The discussion of human virtues and value systems is carried in two parts of the Upanishad, once in chapter 8 and then again in chapters 62 and 63, but explained with different details.[44][16]

The last chapter of the text, in different versions of the manuscript is a poem of reverence for those who renounce for their journey of knowledge, metrically describing how the life of this sannyasi (monk) is an act of worship in itself.[45][16] He is a man of knowledge, asserts the Upanishad, whose faith is his wife, whose body is the sacred fuel, his chest is the sacrificial place, his tuft of hair is his sacrificial broom, his love is the sacred ghee (clarified butter), his speech is the Hotr priest, his breath is the Udgatr priest, his eyes are the Adhvaryu priest, his mind the object of his worship, his knowledge is his sacrifice.[46][16] This chapter of the Mahanarayana Upanishad has been called by the French Indologist Jean Varenne as a Sannyasa Upanishad by itself.[47]

The text is notable for using the word Nyasa with, states Patrick Olivelle, a meaning approximating Sannyasa (Yati, Bhikshu, Hindu Monk).[47]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d Deussen 1997, p. 247.
  2. ^ a b c Deussen 1997, pp. 247–248.
  3. ^ a b c d Tinoco 1996, p. 88.
  4. ^ Narayana; Jacob, George Adolphus (1888). The Mahanarayana-Upanishad, of the Atharva-Veda with the Dipika of Narayana. Edited by G.A. Jacob. Robarts - University of Toronto. Bombay Government Central Book Depôt. p. 1.
  5. ^ a b c d Srinivasan 1997, p. 112.
  6. ^ Deussen, p.248. Also, Bloomfield Concordance, Preface. Both cite Jacob 1888.
  7. ^ Deussen 1997, pp. 219, 247–248.
  8. ^ a b Vimalananda 1957, p. ix.
  9. ^ Mahanaraya, Sanskrit-English Dictionary, Koeln University, Germany (2012)
  10. ^ a b Deussen 1997, p. 247-268.
  11. ^ "Mahanarayana_Upanishad" (PDF). Swami Vimalananda (2 ed.). Sri Ramakrishna Math. 1968.
  12. ^ a b Parmeshwaranand 2000, pp. 458–459.
  13. ^ Feuerstein 1989, pp. 119–120.
  14. ^ Olivelle 1998, pp. 11–14.
  15. ^ Srinivasan 1997, pp. 112, 120.
  16. ^ a b c d e f Hattangadi 1999.
  17. ^ Vedic Literature, Volume 1, A Descriptive Catalogue of the Sanskrit Manuscripts, p. PA495, at Google Books, Government of Tamil Nadu, Madras, India, pages 291, 495–496
  18. ^ Deussen 1997, pp. 556–557.
  19. ^ Dalal 2014, p. 195.
  20. ^ Deussen 1997, pp. 558–59.
  21. ^ Deussen 1997, pp. 561–64.
  22. ^ Deussen 1997, p. 253.
  23. ^ Deussen 1997, p. 249.
  24. ^ a b Deussen 1997, pp. 249–250.
  25. ^ Srinivasan 1997, p. 114.
  26. ^ Deussen 1997, pp. 250–251.
  27. ^ Srinivasan 1997, p. 115.
  28. ^ Deussen 1997, p. 256.
  29. ^ Deussen 1997, pp. 249–252, 254–255 with footnotes.
  30. ^ Deussen 1997, pp. 249–252 with footnotes.
  31. ^ a b Srinivasan 1997, p. 113.
  32. ^ Deussen 1997, pp. 249–256 with footnotes.
  33. ^ Frawley 2006, p. 288.
  34. ^ Vimalananda 1957, pp. 39–50.
  35. ^ Hattangadi 1999, pp. 4–5.
  36. ^ Hattangadi 1999, p. 63.6, Quote:

    दानं यज्ञानां वरूथं दक्षिणा लोके दातार | सर्वभूतान्युपजीवन्ति दानेनारातीरपानुदन्त दानेन | द्विषन्तो मित्रा भवन्ति दाने सर्वं प्रतिष्ठितं तस्माद्दानं परमं वदन्ति ॥ ६॥

  37. ^ Deussen 1997, p. 264; Note: This hymn appears in Śatapatha Brāhmaṇa as well..
  38. ^ a b c Deussen 1997, p. 257.
  39. ^ Srinivasan 1997, p. 117.
  40. ^ Deussen 1997, p. 260.
  41. ^ Srinivasan 1997, p. 118.
  42. ^ Deussen 1997, pp. 257–260.
  43. ^ a b Deussen 1997, pp. 262–263.
  44. ^ Deussen 1997, pp. 253, 262–266.
  45. ^ Deussen 1997, pp. 267–268.
  46. ^ Deussen 1997, pp. 267–268, see introduction, verses 65.1 and 65.2.
  47. ^ a b Olivelle 2011, pp. 128–129.

Bibliography Edit

  • Dalal, Roshen (2014). Hinduism: An Alphabetical Guide. Penguin Publishing. ISBN 978-81-8475-277-9.
  • Deussen, Paul (1997). Sixty Upanishads of the Veda, Volume 1. Motilal Banarsidass Publishers. ISBN 978-8120814677.
  • Deussen, Paul (2010). The Philosophy of the Upanishads. Oxford University Press (Reprinted by Cosimo). ISBN 978-1-61640-239-6.
  • Frawley, David (1 January 2006). Yoga and the Sacred Fire: Self-Realization and Planetary Transformation. Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 978-81-208-2746-2.
  • Farquhar, John Nicol (1920). An outline of the religious literature of India. H. Milford, Oxford University Press. ISBN 81-208-2086-X.
  • Feuerstein, George (1989). Yoga: The Technology of Ecstasy. Tarcher. ISBN 978-0874775259.
  • Hattangadi, Sunder (1999). "महानारायणोपनिषत् (Mahanarayana Upanishad)" (PDF) (in Sanskrit). Retrieved 23 January 2016.
  • Olivelle, Patrick (2011), Ascetics and Brahmins: Studies in Ideologies and Institutions, Anthem Press, ISBN 978-0-85728-432-7
  • Olivelle, Patrick (1998). Upaniṣads. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0192835765.
  • Parmeshwaranand, S (2000). Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Upanisads. Sarup & Sons. ISBN 978-81-7625-148-8.
  • Srinivasan, Doris (1997). Many Heads, Arms, and Eyes. BRILL Academic. ISBN 978-9004107588.
  • Vimalananda, Swami (1957). Mahanarayanopanisad. Sri Ramakrishna Math. ISBN 978-0702501562. OCLC 851208392.
  • Tinoco, Carlos Alberto (1996). Upanishads. IBRASA. ISBN 978-85-348-0040-2.
  • Jacob, G.A., ed. (1888). The Mahānārāyaṇa-Upaniṣad of the Atharva-Veda. Bombay Sanskrit Series. Vol. XXXV. Bombay.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

mahanarayana, upanishad, sanskrit, मह, यण, उपन, षद, iast, mahānārāyaṇa, upaniṣad, also, brihannarayana, upanishad, ancient, sanskrit, text, minor, upanishads, hinduism, text, classified, vaishnava, upanishad, portrait, narayana, with, consort, lakshmi, sitting. The Mahanarayana Upanishad Sanskrit मह न र यण उपन षद IAST Mahanarayaṇa Upaniṣad also Brihannarayana Upanishad 4 is an ancient Sanskrit text and is one of the minor Upanishads of Hinduism The text is classified as a Vaishnava Upanishad 3 2 Mahanarayana UpanishadPortrait of Narayana with his consort Lakshmi sitting on his mount Garuda Devanagariमह न र यण पन षत IASTMahanarayaṇaTitle meansGreat Narayana 1 DateBCETypeVaishnava 1 Linked VedaKrishna Yajurveda 2 or Atharvaveda 3 ChaptersvariesVersesvaries by manuscriptPhilosophyVaishnavismThe text exists in three main versions 5 One version with 64 chapters is attached to the Krishna Yajurveda in several South Indian anthologies and the same text in Andhra edition exists in an expanded form with 80 chapters attached to the same Veda 2 A second version is attached to the Atharvaveda 3 has 25 chapters and is prefixed with Tripadvibhuti 6 These manuscripts are sometimes titled as the Yajniki Upanishad or Tripad vibhuti mahanarayana Upanishad 7 3 According to Swami Vimalananda this Upanishad is also called Yagniki Upanishad in reverence for sage Yagnatma Narayana 8 Author Doris Srinivasan says The Upanishad despite its title which means Great Narayana 9 is notable for glorifying both Narayana and Rudra both as the first equivalent embodiment of Brahman the concept of ultimate impersonal and transcendental reality in Hinduism 5 The Upanishad uses Vedanta terminology 10 and uses numerous fragments from Rigveda Taittiriya Brahmana Vajasaneyi Samhita and Principal Upanishads 10 When doing sandhyavandanam the mantras used for Praṇayama Mantracamana Gayatri ahvanam Devatanamaskaraḥ and Gayatri Prasthanam are directly from Mahanarayana Upanishad Andhra rescension containing 80 anuvakas 11 Contents 1 Development 2 Contents 3 See also 4 References 4 1 BibliographyDevelopment EditThe author and the century in which the Mahanarayana Upanishad was composed is unknown The relative chronology of the text based on its poetic verse and textual style has been proposed by Parmeshwaranand to the same period of composition as Katha Isha Mundaka and Shvetashvatara Upanishads but before Maitri Prashna and Mandukya Upanishad 12 Feuerstein places the relative composition chronology of Mahanarayana to be about that of Mundaka and Prashna Upanishads 13 These relative chronology estimates date the text to second half of 1st millennium BCE 12 14 Srinivasan suggests a later date one after about 300 BCE and by around the start of the common era probably the 1st century CE based on the texts it cites and the comparison of details of the Samdhya ritual found in Mahanarayana Upanishad with those found in other Sutras and Shastras 15 Deussen considers it to be ancient and a transitional link between the Upanishads of the three Vedas Rig Sama and Yajur and the Atharvaveda 1 Manuscripts of this text are also found titled as Mahanaryanopanishad 16 17 In the Telugu language anthology of 108 Upanishads of the Muktika canon narrated by Rama to Hanuman it is listed as Tripadvibhutimahanarayana Upanishad at number 52 18 It is different from the shorter version of Narayana Upanishad of the Atharva Veda 1 The tenth chapter of the Taittiriya Upanishad is adopted in this Mahanarayana text 19 The Mahanarayana Upanishad was among the text included in the collection of fifty Upanishads translated into Persian by Sultan Mohammed Dara Shikhoh in 1656 under the title Maha narain and listed at 30 in the compilation called the Oupanekhat 20 In the Colebrooke s version of 52 Upanishads popular in North India it is listed at 39 40 as Brhadnarayana In the Narayana anthology popular in South India it is included at number 34 as Mahanarayana or Brhadnarayana in Bibliothica Indica 21 Even though Adi Shankara did not directly comment on this Upanishad his commentary on Brahmasutras such as at III 3 24 applies to this text since some of the Vedanta sutras are incorporated in this Upanishad 8 Contents EditAll virtues are Tapas Truth is Tapas Study is Tapas Quiet nature is Tapas Self restraint is Tapas Charity is Tapas Sacrifice is Tapas when it said Bhur bhuvah svar Brahman adore this it is also Tapas Mahanarayana Upanishad Chapter 8 22 The text opens with cosmology with a verse describing the Brahman principle as existent before the creation of universe which existed as and in light in the boundless cosmic water 5 23 The style of its opening verses suggest that the metaphysical principle of Brahman was well established by the time this text was composed 5 It is described as that where and from which the world originated and into which it shall disintegrate upon whom all the gods are founded it is that which was past and what will be it is all parts of time it is that which envelops the entire universe which procreates and is present in all creatures mobile and immobile and that which is in Om 24 It is highest of the highest greatest of the greatest 25 it is the law it is the truth it is the Brahman 24 The text calls this metaphysical principle as Agni fire Vayu wind Surya sun Chandrama moon Prajapati Purusha Rudra and Narayana that they are all none other than Brahman 26 27 It is that states verse 10 19 which was already there before the gods appeared 28 The text extracts repeats and integrates the hymns from the Vedic texts For example its first ten chapters reference and include hymn fragments or entire hymns from Rigveda 1 18 1 22 1 164 2 3 4 58 5 82 9 96 and 10 81 29 Yajurveda 32 1 through 32 4 30 31 Atharvaveda 10 8 13 31 section 6 9 of Katha Upanishad 4 2 of Shvetashvatara Upanishad 2 1 of Mundaka Upanishad and others 32 The chapter 2 of the text gives for example an elaborate version of the Rigvedic Gayatri mantra 33 34 35 Axiology in the Upanishad The charity or gift is the armour in the world All beings live on the gift of the other Through gifts strangers become friends Through gifts they ward off difficulties On gifts and giving everything rests That is why charity is the highest Mahanarayana Upanishad 63 6 36 37 Narayana is particularly solemnized in the 11th chapter of the text calling Atman soul as Narayana 38 This description mirrors those found in Yogashikha Upanishad and Yogatattva Upanishad 38 Narayana is described as the highest goal the light beyond the highest self the highest Brahman the highest object of thought 38 16 The chapter 12 and twenty six verses that follow then solemnize Rudra in a manner similar to Narayana as being all the universe the manifest One the right the just the truth and the highest Brahman 39 40 Once again the text references and integrates numerous hymns and their fragments from the Vedas as it solemnizes Narayana and Rudra 41 42 The Upanishad describes its axiology describing the highest principles of human endeavor to be satyam truth tapas penance dama temperance self restraints sama quietude stillness of the forest danam charity dharmam duty prajanam having children agnihotram sacred domestic fire yajna fire ritual manasam mind s contemplation nyasa renunciation sannyasa 43 It then declares renunciation as the exquisite among these possibly because this text is followed by the Sannyasa Upanishads in the Atharvaveda 43 16 The discussion of human virtues and value systems is carried in two parts of the Upanishad once in chapter 8 and then again in chapters 62 and 63 but explained with different details 44 16 The last chapter of the text in different versions of the manuscript is a poem of reverence for those who renounce for their journey of knowledge metrically describing how the life of this sannyasi monk is an act of worship in itself 45 16 He is a man of knowledge asserts the Upanishad whose faith is his wife whose body is the sacred fuel his chest is the sacrificial place his tuft of hair is his sacrificial broom his love is the sacred ghee clarified butter his speech is the Hotr priest his breath is the Udgatr priest his eyes are the Adhvaryu priest his mind the object of his worship his knowledge is his sacrifice 46 16 This chapter of the Mahanarayana Upanishad has been called by the French Indologist Jean Varenne as a Sannyasa Upanishad by itself 47 The text is notable for using the word Nyasa with states Patrick Olivelle a meaning approximating Sannyasa Yati Bhikshu Hindu Monk 47 See also EditAtharvashiras Upanishad Maha Upanishad Narayana Upanishad Nrisimha Tapaniya UpanishadReferences Edit a b c d Deussen 1997 p 247 a b c Deussen 1997 pp 247 248 a b c d Tinoco 1996 p 88 Narayana Jacob George Adolphus 1888 The Mahanarayana Upanishad of the Atharva Veda with the Dipika of Narayana Edited by G A Jacob Robarts University of Toronto Bombay Government Central Book Depot p 1 a b c d Srinivasan 1997 p 112 Deussen p 248 Also Bloomfield Concordance Preface Both cite Jacob 1888 Deussen 1997 pp 219 247 248 a b Vimalananda 1957 p ix Mahanaraya Sanskrit English Dictionary Koeln University Germany 2012 a b Deussen 1997 p 247 268 Mahanarayana Upanishad PDF Swami Vimalananda 2 ed Sri Ramakrishna Math 1968 a b Parmeshwaranand 2000 pp 458 459 Feuerstein 1989 pp 119 120 Olivelle 1998 pp 11 14 Srinivasan 1997 pp 112 120 a b c d e f Hattangadi 1999 Vedic Literature Volume 1 A Descriptive Catalogue of the Sanskrit Manuscripts p PA495 at Google Books Government of Tamil Nadu Madras India pages 291 495 496 Deussen 1997 pp 556 557 Dalal 2014 p 195 Deussen 1997 pp 558 59 Deussen 1997 pp 561 64 Deussen 1997 p 253 Deussen 1997 p 249 a b Deussen 1997 pp 249 250 Srinivasan 1997 p 114 Deussen 1997 pp 250 251 Srinivasan 1997 p 115 Deussen 1997 p 256 Deussen 1997 pp 249 252 254 255 with footnotes Deussen 1997 pp 249 252 with footnotes a b Srinivasan 1997 p 113 Deussen 1997 pp 249 256 with footnotes Frawley 2006 p 288 Vimalananda 1957 pp 39 50 Hattangadi 1999 pp 4 5 Hattangadi 1999 p 63 6 Quote द न यज ञ न वर थ दक ष ण ल क द त र सर वभ त न य पज वन त द न न र त रप न दन त द न न द व षन त म त र भवन त द न सर व प रत ष ठ त तस म द द न परम वदन त ६ Deussen 1997 p 264 Note This hymn appears in Satapatha Brahmaṇa as well a b c Deussen 1997 p 257 Srinivasan 1997 p 117 Deussen 1997 p 260 Srinivasan 1997 p 118 Deussen 1997 pp 257 260 a b Deussen 1997 pp 262 263 Deussen 1997 pp 253 262 266 Deussen 1997 pp 267 268 Deussen 1997 pp 267 268 see introduction verses 65 1 and 65 2 a b Olivelle 2011 pp 128 129 Bibliography Edit Dalal Roshen 2014 Hinduism An Alphabetical Guide Penguin Publishing ISBN 978 81 8475 277 9 Deussen Paul 1997 Sixty Upanishads of the Veda Volume 1 Motilal Banarsidass Publishers ISBN 978 8120814677 Deussen Paul 2010 The Philosophy of the Upanishads Oxford University Press Reprinted by Cosimo ISBN 978 1 61640 239 6 Frawley David 1 January 2006 Yoga and the Sacred Fire Self Realization and Planetary Transformation Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 2746 2 Farquhar John Nicol 1920 An outline of the religious literature of India H Milford Oxford University Press ISBN 81 208 2086 X Feuerstein George 1989 Yoga The Technology of Ecstasy Tarcher ISBN 978 0874775259 Hattangadi Sunder 1999 मह न र यण पन षत Mahanarayana Upanishad PDF in Sanskrit Retrieved 23 January 2016 Olivelle Patrick 2011 Ascetics and Brahmins Studies in Ideologies and Institutions Anthem Press ISBN 978 0 85728 432 7 Olivelle Patrick 1998 Upaniṣads Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0192835765 Parmeshwaranand S 2000 Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Upanisads Sarup amp Sons ISBN 978 81 7625 148 8 Srinivasan Doris 1997 Many Heads Arms and Eyes BRILL Academic ISBN 978 9004107588 Vimalananda Swami 1957 Mahanarayanopanisad Sri Ramakrishna Math ISBN 978 0702501562 OCLC 851208392 Tinoco Carlos Alberto 1996 Upanishads IBRASA ISBN 978 85 348 0040 2 Jacob G A ed 1888 The Mahanarayaṇa Upaniṣad of the Atharva Veda Bombay Sanskrit Series Vol XXXV Bombay a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mahanarayana Upanishad amp oldid 1177571156, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.