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Matha

A matha (/mʌt/; Sanskrit: मठ, maṭha), also written as math, muth, mutth, mutt, or mut, is a Sanskrit word that means 'institute or college', and it also refers to a monastery in Hinduism.[1][2] An alternative term for such a monastery is adheenam.[3] The earliest epigraphical evidence for mathas related to Hindu-temples comes from the 7th to 10th century CE.[4]

An Advaita Vedanta monastery and Vidyashankara temple at Sringeri Sharada Peetham, Sringeri, Karnataka.

The most famous Advaita Vedanta mathas or peethams, which came to be affiliated with the Advaita tradition in the 14th century, are Govardhanmaṭha Pīṭhaṃ at Puri, Odisha; Śārada Pīṭhaṃ at Sringeri, Karnataka; Kalika Pīṭhaṃ at Dvāraka, Gujarat; Jyotirmaṭha Pīṭhaṃ at Badari, Uttarakhand; and Sri Kanchi Kamakoti Peetham at Kanchi, Tamil Nadu.

The most famous and influential Dvaita Vedanta mathas or peethams are Ashta Mathas at Udupi, Karnataka; Uttaradi Matha at Bangalore, Karnataka; Vyasaraja Matha at Sosale, Karnataka; and Raghavendra Matha at Mantralayam, Andhra Pradesh.[5][6]

Famous mathas or peethams professing the Vishishtadvaita philosophy include Parakala Matha at Mysore, Karnataka; Ahobila Matha at Ahobilam, Andhra Pradesh; and Srimad Andavan Ashramam at Srirangam, Tamil Nadu.

Other major and influential mathas belong to various schools of Hindu philosophy, such as those of Vaishnavism and Shaivism.[7][8] The monastery host and feed students, sannyasis (monks, renouncers, ascetics), gurus and are led by acharyas. These monasteries are sometimes attached to Hindu temples and have their codes of conduct, initiation and election ceremonies.[9][10] The mathas in the Hindu tradition have not been limited to religious studies, and historical evidence suggests that they were centers for diverse studies such as medieval medicine, grammar and music.[11]

The term matha is also used for 'monastery' in Jainism, and the earliest monasteries near Jain temples are dated to be from about the 5th-century CE.[12]

Etymology

Matha (Sanskrit: मठ) refers to 'cloister, institute, or college', and in some contexts refers to 'hut of an ascetic, monk or renunciate' or 'temple for studies'.[13] The root of the word is math, which means 'inhabit' or 'to grind'.[13] The oldest meaning of matha is "hut" or "hovel," "the hut of a nomadic arya." In time, it came to mean "the residence of various ascetics or religious scholars, sometimes attached to a temple."[14]

History

Patrick Olivelle mentions the absence of organized ascetic or monastic institutions within Brahmanism until the early medieval period. According to Olivelle, noticing the Advaita leaning of the Sannyasa Upanishads, the major monastries of the early medieaval period belonged to the Advaita Vedanta tradition, preserving and possibly adapting the Sannyasa Upanishads with their Advaita leaning.[15]

Mathas, as simple huts for wandering ascetics, are mentioned in chapter 12.139 of the Mahabharata and section 3.1 of Baudhayana Dharmasutras.[4] Matha-s were regionally known by other terms, such as Ghatika-s and Khandika-s.[16] The oldest verifiable Ghatika for Vedic studies, from inscription evidence is in Kanchi, from the 4th-century CE.[16]

Historical roles of matha

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Kanchi inscription suggests the existence of a Vedic-Agamic matha in the 4th century CE. Then it was known as a Ghatika.[17][18]

The matha tradition of Hinduism attracted royal patronage, attracting endowments to support studies, and these endowments established, states Hartmut Scharfe, what may be "the earliest case on record of a university scholarship".[11] Some of these medieval era mathas of Hinduism in Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala and Tamil Nadu, were for Vedanta studies, but some mathas from the 700 to 1000 CE period predominantly focussed on Shaivism, Vaishnavism, military, martial arts, music, painting or other fields of knowledge including subjects related to Buddhism and Jainism.[19][20] There is evidence, states Hartmut Scharfe, of mathas in eastern and northern India from 7th century CE onwards, such as those in Kashmir, Uttar Pradesh particularly in the Hindu holy city of Kashi, Madhya Pradesh, Bihar and Odisha, but these are not from ancient temple inscriptions, but implied from traveller records (Chinese) who visited these regions.[21]

Brahmins were likely involved in the education and oral culture of textual transmission in ancient India through the gurukul tradition, but inscription evidence collected by E. Hultzsch suggests that at least some matha attached to temples were dominated by non-Brahmins by the early 2nd millennium CE.[11]

The mathas and attached temples routinely hosted debating, Vedic recital and student competitions, and these were part of community festivals in the history of South Asia.[22] These mathas were also the centers where many new texts were composed,[15] as well as the libraries and repository of ancient and medieval manuscripts, where the old texts were preserved and decaying copies replaced over the centuries.[23][24][25] The Thiruvavaduthurai Adhinam – a Shaiva matha about twenty kilometers northeast of Kumbhakonam, for example, was a major source of preserved palm-leaf manuscripts of ancient Tamil literature for the colonial era scholars trying to rediscover historic Indian literature.[26] The four major Advaita mathas state in their founding documents that the respective responsibility of the mathas was to preserve one Veda each.[27] Some Hindu monasteries offered hospice care for pilgrims and various forms of assistance to their local communities.[25]

 
12th-century Kodiya matha stone inscription.

Hindu mathas and temples – like Buddhist monasteries – had by the 10th-century attached medical care along with their religious and educational roles.[28] This is evidenced by various inscriptions found in Bengal, Andhra Pradesh and elsewhere. An inscription dated to about 930 CE states the provision of a physician to two matha to care for the sick and destitute. Similarly, a stone inscription in Andhra Pradesh dated to about 1262 CE mentions the provision of a prasutishala (maternity house), vaidya (physician), an arogyashala (health house) and a viprasattra (kitchen) with the religious center where people from all social background could be fed and cared for.[28]

The historical role of mathas as knowledge and services repository is attested in early Sanskrit texts, as well as many historical inscriptions found along the ruins of Indian temples and monasteries.[29] For example, several stone inscriptions in Sanskrit and Western Chalukya era Kannada have been found near the Shiva temple and monastery in a village near Dharwad district (northwest Karnataka–Maharashtra border).[30][31] These slabs have been dated to between 1094 and 1215 CE. One of these includes the role of Kodiya–matha – also referred to as the Dakshina Kedarasvera matha. It states:

There is the Kōḍiyamaṭha, the place of Dakṣiṇakēdāra (dakṣiṇakēdārasthāna), location of a beautiful field of crops [which are] like hairs bristling for the worship of the Śivaliṅga; the established place (niṣṭhitasthāna) for the ritual practice of the Śaiva ascetics who are perpetual chaste students; a place for the self-recitation (svādhyāyasthāna) of the four Vedas —the Ṛg, Yajus, Sāma, and Ātharva— along with their ancillary treatises; a place for teaching (byākhyānasthāna) grammar, like the systems of Kumāra, Pāṇini, Śākaṭāyana, and the Śabdānuśasana; a place for teaching the six systems of philosophy—namely the Nyāya, Vaiśeṣika, Mīmāṃsā, Sāṃkhya, Buddhist, etc.; a place for teaching the treatises on Yoga— namely the Lākulasiddhānta, the work of Patañjali, and others; a place for various [branches of] learning (vividhavidyāsthāna), such as the 18 Purāṇas, the Dharmaśāstras, all Kāvya compositions, drama, dance, and so on; a place for the provision of food (annadā- nasthāna) to the poor, the helpless, the crippled, the blind, the deaf, story-tellers, singers, musicians, flute-players, dancers, Vaitāḻikas, the naked, the injured, the mendicants coming from various regions, like Jain mendicants, those bearing a single or triple staff, the haṃsa and paramahaṃsa mendicants; a place for the medical treatment (bhaiṣajyasthāna) of the diseases of the many helpless and sick; a place for offering protection (abhāyapra- dānasthāna) to all living beings.– Stone inscription (1162 CE), Shiva temple and monastery, Sanskrit-Kannada hybrid (Tr: Florinda De Simini)[32]

Organization

The matha is a monastery, often with numerous students, many teachers and an institutionalized structure to help sustain and maintain its daily operations. Their organization is more sophisticated than an Ashrama or Gurukul which is usually boutique and caters to a smaller group of students.[33] A matha, like a college, designates teaching, administrative and community interaction functions, with prefix or suffix to names, with titles such as Guru, Acharya, Swami and others. In Lingayat Shaiva mathas for example, teachers are Gurus, the administrative functions the responsibilities of Acharyas, and the community relations of Swami.[34] A similar organization is found in Vaishnava mathas.[35]

Acharya

The word Acharya in Hindu monastic tradition refers to either a Guru of high rank, or more often to the leader of a monastery and sampradaya (teaching institution, denomination).[36][37] This position typically involves a ceremonial initiation called diksha by the monastery, where the earlier leader anoints the successor as Acharya.[36][38]

In large denominations that ran a collection of historical monasteries, an Acharya may refer to the leader of a regional monastery school operated in that denomination.[36] Alternate titles of the heads of Hindu monasteries are Jeer, Jiyar or Ciyar.[39] The chief of a collection of large Hindu monasteries in a sampradaya has been sometimes referred to as Jagad guru.[40]

Guru

The matha host not only students but many Guru. A Guru, in Hindu tradition, is someone who is a "teacher, guide or master" of certain knowledge.[41] He or she is someone more than a teacher, traditionally a reverential figure to the student, with the guru serving as a "counselor, who helps mold values, shares experiential knowledge as much as literal knowledge, an exemplar in life, an inspirational source and who helps in the spiritual evolution of a student."[42] The term also refers to someone who primarily is one's spiritual guide, who helps one to discover the same potentialities that the guru has already realized.[43] The guru concept is traceable to ancient Vedic times,[42] found in traditional schools as well as a matha.[44]

The oldest references to the concept of guru are found in the earliest Vedic texts of Hinduism.[42] The guru, and gurukul – a school run by guru, were an established tradition in India by the 1st millennium BCE, and these helped compose and transmit the various Vedas, the Upanishads, texts of various schools of Hindu philosophy, and post-Vedic Shastras ranging from spiritual knowledge to various arts.[11][42][45] The mathas hosted these teachers and their students as they pursued their studies.[4]

By about mid 1st millennium CE, archaeological and epigraphical evidence suggest numerous larger institutions of gurus existed in India, some near Hindu temples, where guru-shishya tradition helped preserve, create and transmit various fields of knowledge.[46] The first epigraphical evidence of a Shaiva matha, for example, dates to around 800 CE, which was attached to a temple.[11] It hosted scholars and students for theosophical studies.[11] Another inscription from about 1100 CE, states Hartmut Scharfe, attests that a matha was the center of medieval medical studies (Charaka Samhita) and of Vedic grammar in Tamil Nadu.[11]

Mathas in Hindu traditions

Vaishnavism

 
The Entrance to Udupi Sri Krishna Matha at Udupi, Karnataka.

Sadh Vaishnava (Madhva) Mathas

Madhvacharya, the founder of Dvaita Vedanta school of Hindu philosophy, studied in an Advaita Vedanta monastery,[47] but found Advaita unconvincing, and launched theistic Dvaita school of Vedanta interpretation, establishing Mathas (monasteries) by the early 13th century. There are twenty four Madhva mathas set up all over India, including those in Udupi.[48] The twelve Mathas that are descended through Madhvacharya's direct disciples, Adhokshaja Teertha, Hrishikesha Teertha, Narasimha Teertha, Upendra Teertha, Rama Teertha, Vamana Teertha, Janardhana Teertha and Madhva's brother Vishnu Tirtha in Tulu region are the Pejawara Matha, Palimaru Matha, Adamaru Matha, Puttige Matha, Sodhe Matha, Kaniyooru Matha, Shiroor Matha, Krishnapura Matha, Bhandarakeri Matha, Subramanya Matha, Chitrapura Matha, Bhimanakatte Matha.[49] Out of these twelve Madhva Mathas, the first eight are referred to as Ashta Mathas of Udupi.[7] These eight surround the Anantheswara Krishna Hindu temple.[7] These mathas are laid out in a rectangle, the temples on a square grid pattern.[7] The monks in the matha are sannyasis, and the tradition of their studies and succession (Paryaya system) were established by Madhvacharya.[7] Along with twelve mathas, there are ten mathas that are descended through Madhvacharya's direct disciples, Padmanabha Tirtha, Narahari Tirtha, Madhava Tirtha, Akshobya Tirtha and Akshobya Tirtha's disciple Jayatirtha.[50][51][52] They are Uttaradi Matha, Vyasaraja Matha, Raghavendra Matha, Sripadaraja Matha, Kanva Matha, Baligaru Matha, Kudli Matha, Tambehalli Matha (also known as Majjigehalli Maṭha), Kundapur Matha, Sagarakatte Matha.[49] Out of the ten, the first three, the Uttaradi Matha, Vyasaraja Matha and Raghavendra Matha , are considered to be the three premier apostolic institutions of Dvaita Vedanta and are jointly referred as Mathatraya .[53][54][55] It is the pontiffs and pandits of the Mathatraya that have been the principle architects of post-Madhva Dvaita Vedanta through the centuries.[56] As a matter of fact, these have taken the lion's share in the task of developing and propagating the philosophy of Madhva. For this reason they can unhesitatingly be regarded as the intellectual heirs to the legacy of Madhva, Jayatirtha and Vyasatirtha.[51][54]

The main center of Madhva's tradition is in Karnataka.[48] The monastery has a pontiff system, that rotates after a fixed period of time. The pontiff is called Swamiji, and he leads daily Krishna prayers according to Madhva tradition,[48] as well as annual festivals.[10] The process and Vedic mantra rituals for Krishna worship in Dvaita monasteries follow the procedure written by Madhvacharya in Tantrasara.[10]

The succession ceremony in Dvaita school involves the outgoing Swamiji welcoming the incoming one, then walking together to the icon of Madhvacharya at the entrance of Krishna temple in Udupi, offering water to him, expressing reverence then handing over the same vessel with water that Madhvacharya used when he handed over the leadership of the monastery he founded.[48]

The monastery include kitchens, bhojan-shala, run by monks and volunteers.[57] These serve food daily to nearly 3,000 to 4,000 monks, students and visiting pilgrims without social discrimination.[57] During succession ceremonies, over 10,000 people are served a vegetarian meal by Udupi bhojan-shalas.[57]

Other Dvaita Mathas include:[49]

Sri Vaishnava Mathas

 
Parakala Mutt at Mysore, Karnataka.

Ramanuja, the Sri Vaishnavism philosopher, studied at an Advaita Vedanta monastery with Yadava Prakasha before disagreeing with Advaita idealism, and launching his Vishishtadvaita (qualified Advaita) philosophy.[47] Ramanuja was nominated as the leader of the Srirangam matha, after the death of Yamunacharya, though they never met.[58] Along with his philosophy, Ramanuja is famous for his organizational skills and the lasting institutional reforms he introduced at Srirangam paralleling those at Advaita monasteries of his time. He also travelled and founded many Sri Vaishnavism mathas across India.[59] The Sri Vaishnavism tradition believes that Ramanuja started 700 mathas, but historical evidence suggests several of these were started later.[39]

The Sri Vaishnavism mathas over time, subdivided into two, those with Tenkalai (southern) tradition and Vadakalai (northern) tradition of Sri Vaishnavism.[60] The Tenkalai-associated mathas are headquartered at Srirangam, while Vadakalai mathas are associated with Kanchipuram. Both these traditions have from 10th-century onwards considered the function of mathas to include feeding the poor and devotees who visit, hosting marriages and community festivals, farming temple lands and flower gardens as a source for food and worship ingredients, being open to pilgrims as rest houses, and this philanthropic role of these Hindu monasteries continues.[61] In the 15th-century, these monasteries expanded by establishing Ramanuja-kuta in major South Indian Sri Vaishnavism locations.[61][note 1]

Some Srivaishnavism monasteries include:

Nimbarka Vaishnava Mathas

 
 
Left: Ukhra Matha, West Bengal (Nimbarka Vaishnavism).
Right: Belur Math, West Bengal (Ramakrishna Math).

Nimbarka, a scholar variously dated to be from 11th to 13th century, proposed a compromise that was inclusive of all Vedanta schools, stating that everyone is right, that truth is simultaneously Advaita, Vishishtadvaita and Dvaita at the same time, calling his philosophy as Dvaitadvaita or Bhedabheda system.[64] He moved to Vrindavan-Mathura, and launched a matha centered around loving devotion to Radha-Krishna (Radheshyam) worship.[64][65] This group emphasized togetherness of community, public singing and constant bhakti. The Mathas of this group are:

Ramanandi Vaishnava Mathas

Ramananda was a 14th-century Vaishnava devotional poet sant of Bhakti movement, in the Ganges river region of Northern India.[66] He studied in an Advaita Vedanta monastery, joined the Ramanuja's Sri Vaishnavism tradition, then proceeded to start god Rama-based Vaishnavism movement from Hindu holy city of Varanasi.[67][68][69] The Hindu tradition recognizes him as the founder[70] of the Ramanandi Sampradaya, the largest monastic Hindu renunciant community in modern times.[71][72] The monasteries of these ascetics are found particularly in the northern and western states of India, in Nepal, but they are also found as wandering monks.[73][74]

The largest mathas of the Ramanandi tradition are in Ayodhya and Varanasi, and Ramanandi monks are also known as Bairagis or Vairagis (literally, detached ones), their groups called Akharas.[75][76] The Ramanandi mathas are historically notable for being part of warrior ascetics movement in medieval India, where monks metamorphosed into a militant group, trained in arms, rebelled against Islamic rule and at times cooperated with the British colonial officials as mercenaries.[77][78]

Known for his egalitarian views in a time of political uncertainty and Hindu-Islam conflicts, Ramananda and his matha accepted disciples without discriminating anyone by gender, class, caste or religion (he accepted Muslims).[66][79][80] Traditional scholarship holds that his disciples included later Bhakti movement poet-sants such as Kabir, Ravidas, Bhagat Pipa and others,[72][81] however some postmodern scholars have questioned some of this spiritual lineage while others have supported this lineage with historical evidence.[82][83] His ideas also influenced the founding of Sikhism in 15th century, and his teachings are included in the Sikh scripture Guru Granth Sahib.[72][84] Shri Ramcharitmanas is a key text of this matha.[85]

Other Vaishnava Mathas

Advaita Mathas

 
An Advaita Vedanta matha started by Adi Shankara next to the Dwarka temple in Gujarat.

While Shankara is traditionally regarded as the founder of the most famous monasteries in Hinduism,[87] there are no records of those mathas before the 14th century.[88][89] In the 14th century, the founders of the Vijayanagara Empire started to patronize Sringeri matha.[90][91] In the late 15th century, the patronage of the Vijayanagara kings shifted to Vaisnavism. Following this loss of patronage, Sringeri matha had to find others means to propagate its former status, and the story of Shankara establishing the four cardinal mathas, as cast in the wholly legendary digvijaya genre, may have originated in the 16th century.[92]

These Advaita mathas have hosted the Daśanāmi Sampradāya under five Maṭhas, with the headquarters at Kanchi matha. Dwarka in the West, Jagannatha Puri in the East, Sringeri in the South and Badrinath in the North.[44][87] Each math was headed by one of his disciples, called Shankaracharya, who each independently continued the Advaita Vedanta Sampradaya.[87] The ten Shankara-linked Advaita monastic orders are distributed as follows: Bharati, Puri and Saraswati at Sringeri, Aranya and Vana at Puri, Tirtha and Ashrama at Dwarka, and Giri, Parvata and Sagara at Badrinath.[33]

According to tradition, each math was first headed by one of his four main disciples, and the tradition continues since then. Yet, according to Paul Hacker, no mention of the mathas can be found before the 14th century CE.[93] Until the 15th century, the timespan of the directors of Sringeri Math are unrealistically long, spanning 60+ and even 105 years. After 1386, the timespans become much shorter.[94] According to Hacker, these mathas may have originated as late as the 14th century, to propagate Shankara's view of Advaita.[95][note 2][note 3] According to another tradition in Kerala, after Sankara's samadhi at Vadakkunnathan Temple, his disciples founded four mathas in Thrissur, namely Naduvil Madhom, Thekke Madhom, Idayil Madhom and Vadakke Madhom.

Other Advaita Vedanta mathas following Smarta Tradition include:

Shaivism

Shaiva mathas were established at least from the 1st millennium onwards, in Kashmir, Himalayan regions such as Nepal and throughout the subcontinent such as in Tamil Nadu.[99][100] Many of the monasteries and attached temples, particularly in the northwest Indian subcontinent, were destroyed by Islamic armies after the 12th-century,[101] and Shaiva monastic network severely disrupted from the consequent violence.[102] In some cases, the Hindu monasteries were converted into Islamic ribats or madrasa (soldier barracks, schools) during the medieval period.[103] The Shaiva monasteries have been from diverse schools of Shaivism, ranging from nondualist to theistic schools, and regionally went by a range of names such as Jogi (Yogis), Natha, Darshani, Kanphata of Gorakshanath sampradaya.[104][105]

Shaiva Siddhanta

Shaiva Siddhanta is a theistic school of Shaivism based on dualism (human soul and God are different), and it established matha at least from the middle of 1st millennium CE. Archeological evidence dated to 724 CE suggests the existence of an influential Saiva Siddhanta matha named after Mattamayura.[106] Other historical evidence suggests that these Shaiva monks were active in Shaiva theosophical scholarship and the spread of Shaiva ideas in north and west India till about the 12th century.[106]

Other major monasteries include the Golaki matha that existed by the 10th century,[106] famed for its round temple shape, probably near modern Jabalpur in Madhya Pradesh.[107][108] This monastery featured a cluster of Shiva temples, a hospital, college and lodging for students.[107] The Golaki matha was a center for Vedic studies with parallel studies of Buddhist literature.[107] Inscription evidence suggests set up numerous Shaiva monasteries in the Deccan region under Kakatiya dynasty sponsorship, many of which were destroyed in Hindu-Muslim wars that ended the Kakatiya rule.[108][109] The origins of Golaki matha of central India has been traced to more ancient monasteries in Kashmir.[110]

In Karnataka, historical evidence suggests that Queen Alhanadevi established the Shaiva monastery called Kodiya matha which included a temple, monastic lodging and study hall, with scholarship on Vedas, Shastras and Puranas.[107] The Chola dynasty sponsored many influential Shaiva mathas.[111] While many Shaiva monasteries had attached temples, some did not and were entirely dedicated to education and scholarship.[111]

Nath Shaiva Mathas

The Nath tradition is a syncretic Yoga and Vedanta schools of Hindu philosophy based Shaiva tradition, that reveres Shiva and Dattatreya. Its founding is attributed to the ideas of Matsyendranath and Gorakshanath, developed further with an additional seven other Siddha Yoga Gurus called "Naths" (literally, lords).[112] The Nath Yogi sampradaya and monastic organizations grew starting with the 13th century,[112] with its matha headquarters in Gorakhpur, Uttar Pradesh. Many of their mathas are found in the northern, central and western states of India particularly in the Himalayas, but archeological inscriptions suggest their mathas existed in south India as well. The early Nath monks received endowments in Karnataka, for example, between the 10th and 13th century, which later became a temple and Shaiva matha hub for them near Mangalore.[113] The Kadri matha, for instance, is one of the legendary monasteries in the Nath tradition which attracted converts from Buddhism and infusion of Buddhist ideas into Shaivism,[113] and it continues to be a part of the Nath Shaiva tradition, particularly during the Kumbh Mela celebrations in modern times.[114]

 
Gorakhnath temple and matha in Gorakhpur, India is one of the major modern matha of the Nath Shaiva tradition.[115]

The Nath Siddha tradition of Shaivism is credited with establishing numerous Shiva Hindu temples and monasteries, particularly in Gujarat, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh, north Bihar, and Nepal.[116][117] The Gorakhnath matha is an active Shaivism monastery named after the medieval saint, Gorakhnath of the Nath sampradaya.[118] The matha and town of Gorakhpur in Uttar Pradesh is named after him. The monastery and the temple performs various cultural and social activities and serves as the cultural hub of the city. The monastery also publishes texts on the philosophy of Gorakhnath.[118][119]

Nath Shaiva monastic organization was one of those Hindu monk groups that militarized and took up arms following the Muslim conquest of India, to resist persecution.[120][121][122] They were scorned and persecuted by Mughal Empire officials, and by social, cultural and religious elites.[123][124] However, the Nath yogi monks have been very popular with the rural population in South Asia since medieval times.[125]

Veerashaiva Lingayatism

The matha monastic organization has been active since the emergence of Lingayat movement in Karnataka around the 12th century. They have enjoyed community support, and have served as the center for Shaiva studies as well as Lingayat community's educational, cultural and philanthropic activities.[126] There have been six active large Veerashaiva monasteries, one each at Kedaranath, Vairagya Shimhasana (Himalayas), Kashi Jnana Shimhasana(Varanasi, Ganges), Srisaila Surya Shimhasana (Andhra Pradesh), Rambhapuri Veeashimhasana-Balehonnuru and Ujjini Saddharma Shimhasana (all three in Karnataka

There are three other important veerashaiva mathas which are famous for "trividha" dasoha(food,shelter and education)

*taralabalu brihanmatha sirigere

started by jagadguru marulasiddeshwara in twelfth century ,to abolish social discrimination

*siddaganga matha tumkur

*shivaratrishwara matha sattur

There are smaller Vira-Shaiva monasteries, and rural branch monasteries, across India that serve the needs of the local Lingayat communities.[126]

The Lingayat monasteries have associated priestly class who are referred to as the Jangamas, but this class is not part of the monastery and often householders.[127] Anyone, from any social class, can become a Lingayat monk and join its monastery, and the internal organization has allowed social mobility from its earliest days.[127] The Jangamas often officiate rites of passage, such as wedding.[127] The succession in Veerashaiva branch monasteries may be appointed either by the main monastery, or the local chief may name his successor.[127]

Other Shaiva mathas

Matha in Jainism

Jain monasteries, states Paul Dundas, have also been called Matha.[12] Archaeological evidence from Tamil Nadu, which has generally survived better than rest of South Asia, suggest monasteries were being built near Jain temples in south India in about the 5th-century CE, and these hosted naked monks of Jainism.[12] In other parts, Jaina mathas received royal support along with Buddhist and Hindu monasteries. According to Jaina texts of the 13th to 15th century, such as by the historian Srutasagara Gani, Jaina monks in these matha were persecuted by Muslim officials for their way of life, thereby suggesting that the matha tradition had continued in the first half of the 2nd millennium.[131]

The term matha is also used for Jain monasteries. Some Jain Mathas are:[citation needed]

Notes

  1. ^ The two matha traditions differ on their theology on the nature of salvation and the role of God's grace, as well as their differing positions on how goddess Lakshmi and god Vishnu relate to each other while agreeing that both are important.[60]
  2. ^ Nakamura also recognized the influence of these mathas, which he argues contributed to the influence of Shankara, which was "due to institutional factors". The mathas which he established remain active today, and preserve the teachings and influence of Shankara, "while the writings of other scholars before him came to be forgotten with the passage of time".[96]
  3. ^ According to Pandey, these Mathas were not established by Shankara himself, but were originally ashrams established by Vibhāņdaka and his son Ŗșyaśŗnga.[97] Shankara inherited the ashrams at Dvārakā and Sringeri, and shifted the ashram at Śŗngaverapura to Badarikāśrama, and the ashram at Angadeśa to Jagannātha Purī.[98]

References

  1. ^ Tamara I. Sears (2014). Worldly Gurus and Spiritual Kings: Architecture and Asceticism in Medieval India. Yale University Press. pp. 4–9. ISBN 978-0-300-19844-7.
  2. ^ Matha, Encyclopædia Britannica Online 2009
  3. ^ Also transliterated ādīnam, adinam, aadheenam, aadheenm, etc.
  4. ^ a b c Scharfe 2002, p. 172-173.
  5. ^ The Illustrated Weekly of India. Bennett, Coleman & Company, Limited, at the Times of India Press. 1972. p. 21. Apart from the eight maths, three important maths outside Udipi have played a significant part in upholding and spreading the message of Dvaita: the Uttaradi Math (Bangalore) and the Raghavendraswami Math (Nanjangud) and the Vyasaraya Math (Sosale). Particularly mention must be made of the outstanding contribution of the late Satyadhyanatirtha of the Uttaradi Math - a giant intellectual indeed.
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  • Clark, Matthew (2006), The Daśanāmī-saṃnyāsīs. The Integration Of Ascetic Lineages Into An Order, BRILL
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  • Hebbar, B.N (2005). The Sri-Krsna Temple at Udupi: The History and Spiritual Center of the Madhvite Sect of Hinduism. Bharatiya Granth Nikethan. ISBN 81-89211-04-8.
  • Johnston, William M. (2013). Encyclopedia of Monasticism. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-78715-7.
  • Leela Prasad (2007). Poetics of Conduct: Oral Narrative and Moral Being in a South Indian Town. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-13920-5.
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  • Nakamura, Hajime (1950), A History of Early Vedanta Philosophy. Part Two (2004 Reprint), Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Private Limited
  • Pandey, S.L. (2000), Pre-Sankara Advaita. In: Chattopadhyana (gen.ed.), "History of Science, Philosophy and Culture in Indian Civilization. Volume II Part 2: Advaita Vedanta", Delhi: Centre for Studies in Civilizations
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  • AK Shastri (1999), History of Shringeri, 2nd Edition, Karanatak University Press, OCLC 220890841

Further reading

  • Tamara Sears (2014), Worldly Gurus and Spiritual Kings: Architecture and Asceticism in Medieval India, Yale University Press, ISBN 978-0300198447
  • Narayanan, Vasudha (2005). "Gender and Priesthood in the Hindu Traditions". Journal of Hindu-Christian Studies. 18 (1). doi:10.7825/2164-6279.1341.

External links

  •   Media related to Matha (religion) at Wikimedia Commons
  • The Hindu Monastic Code, Rama Ramanuja Achari (2013), Australian council of Hindu Clergy

matha, this, article, about, hindu, monastery, renunciation, sannyasa, other, uses, disambiguation, matha, mʌt, sanskrit, मठ, maṭha, also, written, math, muth, mutth, mutt, sanskrit, word, that, means, institute, college, also, refers, monastery, hinduism, alt. This article is about Hindu monastery For renunciation see Sannyasa For other uses see Matha disambiguation A matha mʌt Sanskrit मठ maṭha also written as math muth mutth mutt or mut is a Sanskrit word that means institute or college and it also refers to a monastery in Hinduism 1 2 An alternative term for such a monastery is adheenam 3 The earliest epigraphical evidence for mathas related to Hindu temples comes from the 7th to 10th century CE 4 An Advaita Vedanta monastery and Vidyashankara temple at Sringeri Sharada Peetham Sringeri Karnataka The most famous Advaita Vedanta mathas or peethams which came to be affiliated with the Advaita tradition in the 14th century are Govardhanmaṭha Piṭhaṃ at Puri Odisha Sarada Piṭhaṃ at Sringeri Karnataka Kalika Piṭhaṃ at Dvaraka Gujarat Jyotirmaṭha Piṭhaṃ at Badari Uttarakhand and Sri Kanchi Kamakoti Peetham at Kanchi Tamil Nadu The most famous and influential Dvaita Vedanta mathas or peethams are Ashta Mathas at Udupi Karnataka Uttaradi Matha at Bangalore Karnataka Vyasaraja Matha at Sosale Karnataka and Raghavendra Matha at Mantralayam Andhra Pradesh 5 6 Famous mathas or peethams professing the Vishishtadvaita philosophy include Parakala Matha at Mysore Karnataka Ahobila Matha at Ahobilam Andhra Pradesh and Srimad Andavan Ashramam at Srirangam Tamil Nadu Other major and influential mathas belong to various schools of Hindu philosophy such as those of Vaishnavism and Shaivism 7 8 The monastery host and feed students sannyasis monks renouncers ascetics gurus and are led by acharyas These monasteries are sometimes attached to Hindu temples and have their codes of conduct initiation and election ceremonies 9 10 The mathas in the Hindu tradition have not been limited to religious studies and historical evidence suggests that they were centers for diverse studies such as medieval medicine grammar and music 11 The term matha is also used for monastery in Jainism and the earliest monasteries near Jain temples are dated to be from about the 5th century CE 12 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Historical roles of matha 3 Organization 3 1 Acharya 3 2 Guru 4 Mathas in Hindu traditions 4 1 Vaishnavism 4 1 1 Sadh Vaishnava Madhva Mathas 4 1 2 Sri Vaishnava Mathas 4 1 3 Nimbarka Vaishnava Mathas 4 1 4 Ramanandi Vaishnava Mathas 4 1 5 Other Vaishnava Mathas 4 2 Advaita Mathas 4 3 Shaivism 4 3 1 Shaiva Siddhanta 4 3 2 Nath Shaiva Mathas 4 3 3 Veerashaiva Lingayatism 4 3 4 Other Shaiva mathas 5 Matha in Jainism 6 Notes 7 References 8 Sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksEtymology EditMatha Sanskrit मठ refers to cloister institute or college and in some contexts refers to hut of an ascetic monk or renunciate or temple for studies 13 The root of the word is math which means inhabit or to grind 13 The oldest meaning of matha is hut or hovel the hut of a nomadic arya In time it came to mean the residence of various ascetics or religious scholars sometimes attached to a temple 14 History EditPatrick Olivelle mentions the absence of organized ascetic or monastic institutions within Brahmanism until the early medieval period According to Olivelle noticing the Advaita leaning of the Sannyasa Upanishads the major monastries of the early medieaval period belonged to the Advaita Vedanta tradition preserving and possibly adapting the Sannyasa Upanishads with their Advaita leaning 15 Mathas as simple huts for wandering ascetics are mentioned in chapter 12 139 of the Mahabharata and section 3 1 of Baudhayana Dharmasutras 4 Matha s were regionally known by other terms such as Ghatika s and Khandika s 16 The oldest verifiable Ghatika for Vedic studies from inscription evidence is in Kanchi from the 4th century CE 16 Historical roles of matha Edit Kanchipuramclass notpageimage Kanchi inscription suggests the existence of a Vedic Agamic matha in the 4th century CE Then it was known as a Ghatika 17 18 The matha tradition of Hinduism attracted royal patronage attracting endowments to support studies and these endowments established states Hartmut Scharfe what may be the earliest case on record of a university scholarship 11 Some of these medieval era mathas of Hinduism in Andhra Pradesh Karnataka Kerala and Tamil Nadu were for Vedanta studies but some mathas from the 700 to 1000 CE period predominantly focussed on Shaivism Vaishnavism military martial arts music painting or other fields of knowledge including subjects related to Buddhism and Jainism 19 20 There is evidence states Hartmut Scharfe of mathas in eastern and northern India from 7th century CE onwards such as those in Kashmir Uttar Pradesh particularly in the Hindu holy city of Kashi Madhya Pradesh Bihar and Odisha but these are not from ancient temple inscriptions but implied from traveller records Chinese who visited these regions 21 Brahmins were likely involved in the education and oral culture of textual transmission in ancient India through the gurukul tradition but inscription evidence collected by E Hultzsch suggests that at least some matha attached to temples were dominated by non Brahmins by the early 2nd millennium CE 11 The mathas and attached temples routinely hosted debating Vedic recital and student competitions and these were part of community festivals in the history of South Asia 22 These mathas were also the centers where many new texts were composed 15 as well as the libraries and repository of ancient and medieval manuscripts where the old texts were preserved and decaying copies replaced over the centuries 23 24 25 The Thiruvavaduthurai Adhinam a Shaiva matha about twenty kilometers northeast of Kumbhakonam for example was a major source of preserved palm leaf manuscripts of ancient Tamil literature for the colonial era scholars trying to rediscover historic Indian literature 26 The four major Advaita mathas state in their founding documents that the respective responsibility of the mathas was to preserve one Veda each 27 Some Hindu monasteries offered hospice care for pilgrims and various forms of assistance to their local communities 25 12th century Kodiya matha stone inscription Hindu mathas and temples like Buddhist monasteries had by the 10th century attached medical care along with their religious and educational roles 28 This is evidenced by various inscriptions found in Bengal Andhra Pradesh and elsewhere An inscription dated to about 930 CE states the provision of a physician to two matha to care for the sick and destitute Similarly a stone inscription in Andhra Pradesh dated to about 1262 CE mentions the provision of a prasutishala maternity house vaidya physician an arogyashala health house and a viprasattra kitchen with the religious center where people from all social background could be fed and cared for 28 The historical role of mathas as knowledge and services repository is attested in early Sanskrit texts as well as many historical inscriptions found along the ruins of Indian temples and monasteries 29 For example several stone inscriptions in Sanskrit and Western Chalukya era Kannada have been found near the Shiva temple and monastery in a village near Dharwad district northwest Karnataka Maharashtra border 30 31 These slabs have been dated to between 1094 and 1215 CE One of these includes the role of Kodiya matha also referred to as the Dakshina Kedarasvera matha It states There is the Kōḍiyamaṭha the place of Dakṣiṇakedara dakṣiṇakedarasthana location of a beautiful field of crops which are like hairs bristling for the worship of the Sivaliṅga the established place niṣṭhitasthana for the ritual practice of the Saiva ascetics who are perpetual chaste students a place for the self recitation svadhyayasthana of the four Vedas the Ṛg Yajus Sama and Atharva along with their ancillary treatises a place for teaching byakhyanasthana grammar like the systems of Kumara Paṇini Sakaṭayana and the Sabdanusasana a place for teaching the six systems of philosophy namely the Nyaya Vaiseṣika Mimaṃsa Saṃkhya Buddhist etc a place for teaching the treatises on Yoga namely the Lakulasiddhanta the work of Patanjali and others a place for various branches of learning vividhavidyasthana such as the 18 Puraṇas the Dharmasastras all Kavya compositions drama dance and so on a place for the provision of food annada nasthana to the poor the helpless the crippled the blind the deaf story tellers singers musicians flute players dancers Vaitaḻikas the naked the injured the mendicants coming from various regions like Jain mendicants those bearing a single or triple staff the haṃsa and paramahaṃsa mendicants a place for the medical treatment bhaiṣajyasthana of the diseases of the many helpless and sick a place for offering protection abhayapra danasthana to all living beings Stone inscription 1162 CE Shiva temple and monastery Sanskrit Kannada hybrid Tr Florinda De Simini 32 Organization EditThe matha is a monastery often with numerous students many teachers and an institutionalized structure to help sustain and maintain its daily operations Their organization is more sophisticated than an Ashrama or Gurukul which is usually boutique and caters to a smaller group of students 33 A matha like a college designates teaching administrative and community interaction functions with prefix or suffix to names with titles such as Guru Acharya Swami and others In Lingayat Shaiva mathas for example teachers are Gurus the administrative functions the responsibilities of Acharyas and the community relations of Swami 34 A similar organization is found in Vaishnava mathas 35 Acharya Edit The word Acharya in Hindu monastic tradition refers to either a Guru of high rank or more often to the leader of a monastery and sampradaya teaching institution denomination 36 37 This position typically involves a ceremonial initiation called diksha by the monastery where the earlier leader anoints the successor as Acharya 36 38 In large denominations that ran a collection of historical monasteries an Acharya may refer to the leader of a regional monastery school operated in that denomination 36 Alternate titles of the heads of Hindu monasteries are Jeer Jiyar or Ciyar 39 The chief of a collection of large Hindu monasteries in a sampradaya has been sometimes referred to as Jagad guru 40 Guru Edit Main article Guru The matha host not only students but many Guru A Guru in Hindu tradition is someone who is a teacher guide or master of certain knowledge 41 He or she is someone more than a teacher traditionally a reverential figure to the student with the guru serving as a counselor who helps mold values shares experiential knowledge as much as literal knowledge an exemplar in life an inspirational source and who helps in the spiritual evolution of a student 42 The term also refers to someone who primarily is one s spiritual guide who helps one to discover the same potentialities that the guru has already realized 43 The guru concept is traceable to ancient Vedic times 42 found in traditional schools as well as a matha 44 The oldest references to the concept of guru are found in the earliest Vedic texts of Hinduism 42 The guru and gurukul a school run by guru were an established tradition in India by the 1st millennium BCE and these helped compose and transmit the various Vedas the Upanishads texts of various schools of Hindu philosophy and post Vedic Shastras ranging from spiritual knowledge to various arts 11 42 45 The mathas hosted these teachers and their students as they pursued their studies 4 By about mid 1st millennium CE archaeological and epigraphical evidence suggest numerous larger institutions of gurus existed in India some near Hindu temples where guru shishya tradition helped preserve create and transmit various fields of knowledge 46 The first epigraphical evidence of a Shaiva matha for example dates to around 800 CE which was attached to a temple 11 It hosted scholars and students for theosophical studies 11 Another inscription from about 1100 CE states Hartmut Scharfe attests that a matha was the center of medieval medical studies Charaka Samhita and of Vedic grammar in Tamil Nadu 11 Mathas in Hindu traditions EditVaishnavism Edit The Entrance to Udupi Sri Krishna Matha at Udupi Karnataka Sadh Vaishnava Madhva Mathas Edit See also Brahma Sampradaya Madhva Mathas Haridasa and Ashta Mathas of Udupi Madhvacharya the founder of Dvaita Vedanta school of Hindu philosophy studied in an Advaita Vedanta monastery 47 but found Advaita unconvincing and launched theistic Dvaita school of Vedanta interpretation establishing Mathas monasteries by the early 13th century There are twenty four Madhva mathas set up all over India including those in Udupi 48 The twelve Mathas that are descended through Madhvacharya s direct disciples Adhokshaja Teertha Hrishikesha Teertha Narasimha Teertha Upendra Teertha Rama Teertha Vamana Teertha Janardhana Teertha and Madhva s brother Vishnu Tirtha in Tulu region are the Pejawara Matha Palimaru Matha Adamaru Matha Puttige Matha Sodhe Matha Kaniyooru Matha Shiroor Matha Krishnapura Matha Bhandarakeri Matha Subramanya Matha Chitrapura Matha Bhimanakatte Matha 49 Out of these twelve Madhva Mathas the first eight are referred to as Ashta Mathas of Udupi 7 These eight surround the Anantheswara Krishna Hindu temple 7 These mathas are laid out in a rectangle the temples on a square grid pattern 7 The monks in the matha are sannyasis and the tradition of their studies and succession Paryaya system were established by Madhvacharya 7 Along with twelve mathas there are ten mathas that are descended through Madhvacharya s direct disciples Padmanabha Tirtha Narahari Tirtha Madhava Tirtha Akshobya Tirtha and Akshobya Tirtha s disciple Jayatirtha 50 51 52 They are Uttaradi Matha Vyasaraja Matha Raghavendra Matha Sripadaraja Matha Kanva Matha Baligaru Matha Kudli Matha Tambehalli Matha also known as Majjigehalli Maṭha Kundapur Matha Sagarakatte Matha 49 Out of the ten the first three the Uttaradi Matha Vyasaraja Matha and Raghavendra Matha are considered to be the three premier apostolic institutions of Dvaita Vedanta and are jointly referred as Mathatraya 53 54 55 It is the pontiffs and pandits of the Mathatraya that have been the principle architects of post Madhva Dvaita Vedanta through the centuries 56 As a matter of fact these have taken the lion s share in the task of developing and propagating the philosophy of Madhva For this reason they can unhesitatingly be regarded as the intellectual heirs to the legacy of Madhva Jayatirtha and Vyasatirtha 51 54 The main center of Madhva s tradition is in Karnataka 48 The monastery has a pontiff system that rotates after a fixed period of time The pontiff is called Swamiji and he leads daily Krishna prayers according to Madhva tradition 48 as well as annual festivals 10 The process and Vedic mantra rituals for Krishna worship in Dvaita monasteries follow the procedure written by Madhvacharya in Tantrasara 10 The succession ceremony in Dvaita school involves the outgoing Swamiji welcoming the incoming one then walking together to the icon of Madhvacharya at the entrance of Krishna temple in Udupi offering water to him expressing reverence then handing over the same vessel with water that Madhvacharya used when he handed over the leadership of the monastery he founded 48 The monastery include kitchens bhojan shala run by monks and volunteers 57 These serve food daily to nearly 3 000 to 4 000 monks students and visiting pilgrims without social discrimination 57 During succession ceremonies over 10 000 people are served a vegetarian meal by Udupi bhojan shalas 57 Other Dvaita Mathas include 49 Kashi Math Varanasi Uttar Pradesh Gokarna Math Poinguinim Canacona GoaSri Vaishnava Mathas Edit Parakala Mutt at Mysore Karnataka Ramanuja the Sri Vaishnavism philosopher studied at an Advaita Vedanta monastery with Yadava Prakasha before disagreeing with Advaita idealism and launching his Vishishtadvaita qualified Advaita philosophy 47 Ramanuja was nominated as the leader of the Srirangam matha after the death of Yamunacharya though they never met 58 Along with his philosophy Ramanuja is famous for his organizational skills and the lasting institutional reforms he introduced at Srirangam paralleling those at Advaita monasteries of his time He also travelled and founded many Sri Vaishnavism mathas across India 59 The Sri Vaishnavism tradition believes that Ramanuja started 700 mathas but historical evidence suggests several of these were started later 39 The Sri Vaishnavism mathas over time subdivided into two those with Tenkalai southern tradition and Vadakalai northern tradition of Sri Vaishnavism 60 The Tenkalai associated mathas are headquartered at Srirangam while Vadakalai mathas are associated with Kanchipuram Both these traditions have from 10th century onwards considered the function of mathas to include feeding the poor and devotees who visit hosting marriages and community festivals farming temple lands and flower gardens as a source for food and worship ingredients being open to pilgrims as rest houses and this philanthropic role of these Hindu monasteries continues 61 In the 15th century these monasteries expanded by establishing Ramanuja kuta in major South Indian Sri Vaishnavism locations 61 note 1 Some Srivaishnavism monasteries include Melukote matha founded by Ramanuja 62 Srirangam Tenkalai Srivaishnavism matha 39 Vanamamalai Tenkalai Srivaishnavism matha 39 Tirukkurungudi Tenkalai Srivaishnavism matha 39 Kanchipuram Vadakalai Srivaishnavism matha 63 Ahobila Vadakalai Srivaishnavism matha 39 Parakala Vadakalai Srivaishnavism matha 39 Nimbarka Vaishnava Mathas Edit Left Ukhra Matha West Bengal Nimbarka Vaishnavism Right Belur Math West Bengal Ramakrishna Math Nimbarka a scholar variously dated to be from 11th to 13th century proposed a compromise that was inclusive of all Vedanta schools stating that everyone is right that truth is simultaneously Advaita Vishishtadvaita and Dvaita at the same time calling his philosophy as Dvaitadvaita or Bhedabheda system 64 He moved to Vrindavan Mathura and launched a matha centered around loving devotion to Radha Krishna Radheshyam worship 64 65 This group emphasized togetherness of community public singing and constant bhakti The Mathas of this group are Kathia Baba ka Sthaan at Vrindavan Nimbarkacharya Peeth at Salemabad Rajasthan Ukhra Mahanta Asthal at Ukhra West Bengal Howrah Nimbarka Ashram at HowrahRamanandi Vaishnava Mathas Edit Ramananda was a 14th century Vaishnava devotional poet sant of Bhakti movement in the Ganges river region of Northern India 66 He studied in an Advaita Vedanta monastery joined the Ramanuja s Sri Vaishnavism tradition then proceeded to start god Rama based Vaishnavism movement from Hindu holy city of Varanasi 67 68 69 The Hindu tradition recognizes him as the founder 70 of the Ramanandi Sampradaya the largest monastic Hindu renunciant community in modern times 71 72 The monasteries of these ascetics are found particularly in the northern and western states of India in Nepal but they are also found as wandering monks 73 74 The largest mathas of the Ramanandi tradition are in Ayodhya and Varanasi and Ramanandi monks are also known as Bairagis or Vairagis literally detached ones their groups called Akharas 75 76 The Ramanandi mathas are historically notable for being part of warrior ascetics movement in medieval India where monks metamorphosed into a militant group trained in arms rebelled against Islamic rule and at times cooperated with the British colonial officials as mercenaries 77 78 Known for his egalitarian views in a time of political uncertainty and Hindu Islam conflicts Ramananda and his matha accepted disciples without discriminating anyone by gender class caste or religion he accepted Muslims 66 79 80 Traditional scholarship holds that his disciples included later Bhakti movement poet sants such as Kabir Ravidas Bhagat Pipa and others 72 81 however some postmodern scholars have questioned some of this spiritual lineage while others have supported this lineage with historical evidence 82 83 His ideas also influenced the founding of Sikhism in 15th century and his teachings are included in the Sikh scripture Guru Granth Sahib 72 84 Shri Ramcharitmanas is a key text of this matha 85 Other Vaishnava Mathas Edit Sri Devananda Gaudiya Math at Nabadwip West Bengal Yadugiri Yathiraja Mutt Gaudiya Matha Narasingha Chaitanya Matha Sree Rama Dasa Matha Chenkottukonam Thiruvananthapuram Bhubaneswar matha 86 Advaita Mathas Edit An Advaita Vedanta matha started by Adi Shankara next to the Dwarka temple in Gujarat See also Dashanami Sampradaya While Shankara is traditionally regarded as the founder of the most famous monasteries in Hinduism 87 there are no records of those mathas before the 14th century 88 89 In the 14th century the founders of the Vijayanagara Empire started to patronize Sringeri matha 90 91 In the late 15th century the patronage of the Vijayanagara kings shifted to Vaisnavism Following this loss of patronage Sringeri matha had to find others means to propagate its former status and the story of Shankara establishing the four cardinal mathas as cast in the wholly legendary digvijaya genre may have originated in the 16th century 92 These Advaita mathas have hosted the Dasanami Sampradaya under five Maṭhas with the headquarters at Kanchi matha Dwarka in the West Jagannatha Puri in the East Sringeri in the South and Badrinath in the North 44 87 Each math was headed by one of his disciples called Shankaracharya who each independently continued the Advaita Vedanta Sampradaya 87 The ten Shankara linked Advaita monastic orders are distributed as follows Bharati Puri and Saraswati at Sringeri Aranya and Vana at Puri Tirtha and Ashrama at Dwarka and Giri Parvata and Sagara at Badrinath 33 According to tradition each math was first headed by one of his four main disciples and the tradition continues since then Yet according to Paul Hacker no mention of the mathas can be found before the 14th century CE 93 Until the 15th century the timespan of the directors of Sringeri Math are unrealistically long spanning 60 and even 105 years After 1386 the timespans become much shorter 94 According to Hacker these mathas may have originated as late as the 14th century to propagate Shankara s view of Advaita 95 note 2 note 3 According to another tradition in Kerala after Sankara s samadhi at Vadakkunnathan Temple his disciples founded four mathas in Thrissur namely Naduvil Madhom Thekke Madhom Idayil Madhom and Vadakke Madhom Other Advaita Vedanta mathas following Smarta Tradition include Svarnavalli Matha at Swarnavalli near Sodhe Sirsi Karnataka Ramachandrapura Math at Haniya Hosanagara Karnataka Chitrapur Math Shirali Karnataka Shri Gaudapadacharya Math Kavale Ponda Goa Sri Samsthan Dabholi Math Dabholi Goa Ramakrishna Math and Ramakrishna Mission Bharat Sevashram SanghaShaivism Edit Shaiva mathas were established at least from the 1st millennium onwards in Kashmir Himalayan regions such as Nepal and throughout the subcontinent such as in Tamil Nadu 99 100 Many of the monasteries and attached temples particularly in the northwest Indian subcontinent were destroyed by Islamic armies after the 12th century 101 and Shaiva monastic network severely disrupted from the consequent violence 102 In some cases the Hindu monasteries were converted into Islamic ribats or madrasa soldier barracks schools during the medieval period 103 The Shaiva monasteries have been from diverse schools of Shaivism ranging from nondualist to theistic schools and regionally went by a range of names such as Jogi Yogis Natha Darshani Kanphata of Gorakshanath sampradaya 104 105 Shaiva Siddhanta Edit Shaiva Siddhanta is a theistic school of Shaivism based on dualism human soul and God are different and it established matha at least from the middle of 1st millennium CE Archeological evidence dated to 724 CE suggests the existence of an influential Saiva Siddhanta matha named after Mattamayura 106 Other historical evidence suggests that these Shaiva monks were active in Shaiva theosophical scholarship and the spread of Shaiva ideas in north and west India till about the 12th century 106 Other major monasteries include the Golaki matha that existed by the 10th century 106 famed for its round temple shape probably near modern Jabalpur in Madhya Pradesh 107 108 This monastery featured a cluster of Shiva temples a hospital college and lodging for students 107 The Golaki matha was a center for Vedic studies with parallel studies of Buddhist literature 107 Inscription evidence suggests set up numerous Shaiva monasteries in the Deccan region under Kakatiya dynasty sponsorship many of which were destroyed in Hindu Muslim wars that ended the Kakatiya rule 108 109 The origins of Golaki matha of central India has been traced to more ancient monasteries in Kashmir 110 In Karnataka historical evidence suggests that Queen Alhanadevi established the Shaiva monastery called Kodiya matha which included a temple monastic lodging and study hall with scholarship on Vedas Shastras and Puranas 107 The Chola dynasty sponsored many influential Shaiva mathas 111 While many Shaiva monasteries had attached temples some did not and were entirely dedicated to education and scholarship 111 Nath Shaiva Mathas Edit The Nath tradition is a syncretic Yoga and Vedanta schools of Hindu philosophy based Shaiva tradition that reveres Shiva and Dattatreya Its founding is attributed to the ideas of Matsyendranath and Gorakshanath developed further with an additional seven other Siddha Yoga Gurus called Naths literally lords 112 The Nath Yogi sampradaya and monastic organizations grew starting with the 13th century 112 with its matha headquarters in Gorakhpur Uttar Pradesh Many of their mathas are found in the northern central and western states of India particularly in the Himalayas but archeological inscriptions suggest their mathas existed in south India as well The early Nath monks received endowments in Karnataka for example between the 10th and 13th century which later became a temple and Shaiva matha hub for them near Mangalore 113 The Kadri matha for instance is one of the legendary monasteries in the Nath tradition which attracted converts from Buddhism and infusion of Buddhist ideas into Shaivism 113 and it continues to be a part of the Nath Shaiva tradition particularly during the Kumbh Mela celebrations in modern times 114 Gorakhnath temple and matha in Gorakhpur India is one of the major modern matha of the Nath Shaiva tradition 115 The Nath Siddha tradition of Shaivism is credited with establishing numerous Shiva Hindu temples and monasteries particularly in Gujarat Maharashtra Madhya Pradesh Rajasthan Uttar Pradesh Himachal Pradesh north Bihar and Nepal 116 117 The Gorakhnath matha is an active Shaivism monastery named after the medieval saint Gorakhnath of the Nath sampradaya 118 The matha and town of Gorakhpur in Uttar Pradesh is named after him The monastery and the temple performs various cultural and social activities and serves as the cultural hub of the city The monastery also publishes texts on the philosophy of Gorakhnath 118 119 Nath Shaiva monastic organization was one of those Hindu monk groups that militarized and took up arms following the Muslim conquest of India to resist persecution 120 121 122 They were scorned and persecuted by Mughal Empire officials and by social cultural and religious elites 123 124 However the Nath yogi monks have been very popular with the rural population in South Asia since medieval times 125 Veerashaiva Lingayatism Edit The matha monastic organization has been active since the emergence of Lingayat movement in Karnataka around the 12th century They have enjoyed community support and have served as the center for Shaiva studies as well as Lingayat community s educational cultural and philanthropic activities 126 There have been six active large Veerashaiva monasteries one each at Kedaranath Vairagya Shimhasana Himalayas Kashi Jnana Shimhasana Varanasi Ganges Srisaila Surya Shimhasana Andhra Pradesh Rambhapuri Veeashimhasana Balehonnuru and Ujjini Saddharma Shimhasana all three in KarnatakaThere are three other important veerashaiva mathas which are famous for trividha dasoha food shelter and education taralabalu brihanmatha sirigerestarted by jagadguru marulasiddeshwara in twelfth century to abolish social discrimination siddaganga matha tumkur shivaratrishwara matha satturThere are smaller Vira Shaiva monasteries and rural branch monasteries across India that serve the needs of the local Lingayat communities 126 The Lingayat monasteries have associated priestly class who are referred to as the Jangamas but this class is not part of the monastery and often householders 127 Anyone from any social class can become a Lingayat monk and join its monastery and the internal organization has allowed social mobility from its earliest days 127 The Jangamas often officiate rites of passage such as wedding 127 The succession in Veerashaiva branch monasteries may be appointed either by the main monastery or the local chief may name his successor 127 Other Shaiva mathas Edit Adichunchanagiri Hills Dharmapuram Adheenam Thiruvaduthurai Adheenam Madurai Adheenam Thiruppanandal Adheenam Sivatirtha matha Hardwar matha Nasik matha 128 Caughera matha Nepal 129 Dhinodara matha 130 Matha in Jainism Edit Mel Sithamur Jain Math the residence of Bhattaraka Laxmisena Arahanthgiri Jain Math Jain monasteries states Paul Dundas have also been called Matha 12 Archaeological evidence from Tamil Nadu which has generally survived better than rest of South Asia suggest monasteries were being built near Jain temples in south India in about the 5th century CE and these hosted naked monks of Jainism 12 In other parts Jaina mathas received royal support along with Buddhist and Hindu monasteries According to Jaina texts of the 13th to 15th century such as by the historian Srutasagara Gani Jaina monks in these matha were persecuted by Muslim officials for their way of life thereby suggesting that the matha tradition had continued in the first half of the 2nd millennium 131 The term matha is also used for Jain monasteries Some Jain Mathas are citation needed Shravana Belgola Moodabidri Mel Sithamur Jain Math Arahanthgiri Jain Math Kumbhoj Kanakagiri Jain Matha Humbaj Karkala Amminabhavi Kambadahalli Sonda Jain Math Lakkavalli Jain Matha Kolhapur Nandani Jain MathaNotes Edit The two matha traditions differ on their theology on the nature of salvation and the role of God s grace as well as their differing positions on how goddess Lakshmi and god Vishnu relate to each other while agreeing that both are important 60 Nakamura also recognized the influence of these mathas which he argues contributed to the influence of Shankara which was due to institutional factors The mathas which he established remain active today and preserve the teachings and influence of Shankara while the writings of other scholars before him came to be forgotten with the passage of time 96 According to Pandey these Mathas were not established by Shankara himself but were originally ashrams established by Vibhandaka and his son Ŗșyasŗnga 97 Shankara inherited the ashrams at Dvaraka and Sringeri and shifted the ashram at Sŗngaverapura to Badarikasrama and the ashram at Angadesa to Jagannatha Puri 98 References Edit Tamara I Sears 2014 Worldly Gurus and Spiritual Kings Architecture and Asceticism in Medieval India Yale University Press pp 4 9 ISBN 978 0 300 19844 7 Matha Encyclopaedia Britannica Online 2009 Also transliterated adinam adinam aadheenam aadheenm etc a b c Scharfe 2002 p 172 173 The Illustrated Weekly of India Bennett Coleman amp Company Limited at the Times of India Press 1972 p 21 Apart from the eight maths three important maths outside Udipi have played a significant part in upholding and spreading the message of Dvaita the Uttaradi Math Bangalore and the Raghavendraswami Math Nanjangud and the Vyasaraya Math Sosale Particularly mention must be made of the outstanding contribution of the late Satyadhyanatirtha of the Uttaradi Math a giant intellectual indeed Steven Rosen 30 November 1994 Vaisnavism Motilal Banarsidass Publishers p 132 ISBN 9788120812352 a b c d e V Rao 2002 Living Traditions in Contemporary Contexts The Madhva Matha of Udupi Orient Blackswan ISBN 978 8125022978 pages 27 32 Sears Tamara I Housing Asceticism Tracing the development of Mattamayura Saiva monastic architecture in Early Medieval Central India c 8th 12th centuries AD PhD Dissertation 2004 p 29 Johnston 2013 p 681 683 a b c V Rao 2002 Living Traditions in Contemporary Contexts The Madhva Matha of Udupi Orient Blackswan ISBN 978 8125022978 page 43 49 a b c d e f g Hartmut Scharfe 2002 From Temple schools to Universities in Education in Ancient India Handbook of Oriental Studies Brill Academic ISBN 978 9004125568 pages 173 174 a b c Paul Dundas 2003 The Jains Routledge pp 123 124 ISBN 978 0415266055 a b Monier Monier Williams 1923 A Sanskrit English Dictionary Oxford University Press p 730 Scharfe 2002 p 172 a b Olivelle Patrick 1992 The Samnyasa Upanisads Oxford University Press pp 14 16 18 ISBN 978 0195070453 a b Hartmut Scharfe 2002 From Temple schools to Universities in Education in Ancient India Handbook of Oriental Studies Brill Academic ISBN 978 9004125568 pages 169 171 with footnotes D Dennis Hudson 2008 The Body of God Oxford University Press pp 69 70 ISBN 978 0 19 970902 1 P V L Narasimha Rao 2008 Kanchipuram Land of Legends Saints and Temples pp 10 11 ISBN 978 81 89973 54 4 Hartmut Scharfe 2002 From Temple schools to Universities in Education in Ancient India Handbook of Oriental Studies Brill Academic ISBN 978 9004125568 pages 174 179 Tamara I Sears 2014 Worldly Gurus and Spiritual Kings Architecture and Asceticism in Medieval India Yale University Press pp 15 19 ISBN 978 0 300 19844 7 Hartmut Scharfe 2002 From Temple schools to Universities in Education in Ancient India Handbook of Oriental Studies Brill Academic ISBN 978 9004125568 pages 181 188 Hartmut Scharfe 2002 From Temple schools to Universities in Education in Ancient India Handbook of Oriental Studies Brill Academic ISBN 978 9004125568 pages 179 180 Benjamin Lewis Rice 1884 Catalogue of Sanskrit Manuscripts in Mysore and Coorg Mysore government Press pp 270 282 Emmie te Nijenhuis 1977 Musicological literature Harrassowitz pp 118 119 ISBN 978 3 447 01831 9 a b Hartmut Scharfe 2002 From Temple schools to Universities in Education in Ancient India Handbook of Oriental Studies Brill Academic ISBN 978 9004125568 pages 183 189 with footnotes Kamil Zvelebil 1975 Jan Gonda ed Handbook of Oriental Studies Tamil Literature BRILL Academic pp 108 109 with footnote 129 ISBN 90 04 04190 7 Friedrich Otto Schrader 1908 A descriptive catalogue of the Sanskrit manuscripts in the Adyar Library Adyar Library p 31 a b Kenneth G Zysk 1998 Asceticism and Healing in Ancient India Medicine in the Buddhist Monastery Motilal Banarsidass pp 45 46 ISBN 978 81 208 1528 5 Florinda De Simini 2016 Michael Friedrich Harunaga Isaacson and Jorg Quenzer ed Of Gods and Books Ritual and Knowledge Transmission in the Manuscript Cultures of Premodern India Studies in Manuscript Cultures Volume 8 De Gruyter pp 166 188 ISBN 978 3 11 047772 6 Florinda De Simini 2016 Michael Friedrich Harunaga Isaacson and Jorg Quenzer ed Of Gods and Books Ritual and Knowledge Transmission in the Manuscript Cultures of Premodern India Studies in Manuscript Cultures Volume 8 De Gruyter pp 179 182 ISBN 978 3 11 047772 6 Epigraphia Indica Vol 5 pages 213 264 Florinda De Simini 2016 Michael Friedrich Harunaga Isaacson and Jorg Quenzer ed Of Gods and Books Ritual and Knowledge Transmission in the Manuscript Cultures of Premodern India Studies in Manuscript Cultures Volume 8 De Gruyter pp 179 180 ISBN 978 3 11 047772 6 For other details and remaining inscription see Epigraphia Indica Vol 5 pages 213 264 a b Gerald James Larson 1995 India s Agony Over Religion State University of New York Press pp 99 100 ISBN 978 1 4384 1014 2 Danesh A Chekki 1997 Religion and Social System of the Virasaiva Community Greenwood pp 53 56 ISBN 978 0 313 30251 0 Vasudeva Rao 2002 Living Traditions in Contemporary Contexts The Madhva Matha of Udupi Orient Blackswan pp 33 45 ISBN 978 81 250 2297 8 a b c Jeffery D Long 2011 Historical Dictionary of Hinduism Scarecrow p 24 ISBN 978 0 8108 7960 7 Vasudha Narayanan 2009 Hinduism The Rosen Publishing Group pp 50 51 ISBN 978 1 4358 5620 2 Tamara I Sears 2014 Worldly Gurus and Spiritual Kings Architecture and Asceticism in Medieval India Yale University Press pp 68 70 121 122 159 160 ISBN 978 0 300 19844 7 a b c d e f g Roshen Dalal 2010 Hinduism An Alphabetical Guide Penguin Books p 385 ISBN 978 0 14 341421 6 Danesh A Chekki 1997 Religion and Social System of the Virasaiva Community Greenwood pp 53 55 ISBN 978 0 313 30251 0 Stefan Pertz 2013 The Guru in Me Critical Perspectives on Management GRIN Verlag ISBN 978 3638749251 pages 2 3 a b c d Joel Mlecko 1982 The Guru in Hindu Tradition Numen Volume 29 Fasc 1 pages 33 61 Guru Encyclopaedia Britannica 2013 a b Karel Werner 2013 Love Divine Routledge pp 148 151 ISBN 978 1 136 77461 4 Tamara Sears 2014 Worldly Gurus and Spiritual Kings Architecture and Asceticism in Medieval India Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300198447 pages 12 23 27 28 73 75 187 230 Hartmut Scharfe 2002 From Temple schools to Universities in Education in Ancient India Handbook of Oriental Studies Brill Academic ISBN 978 9004125568 page 176 182 a b Randall Collins 2009 THE SOCIOLOGY OF PHILOSOPHIES Harvard University Press pp 264 267 ISBN 978 0 674 02977 4 a b c d V Rao 2002 Living Traditions in Contemporary Contexts The Madhva Matha of Udupi Orient Blackswan ISBN 978 8125022978 pages 33 37 a b c Hebbar 2005 p 152 Sharma 2000 p 196 sfn error no target CITEREFSharma2000 help a b Sharma 2000 p 197 sfn error no target CITEREFSharma2000 help Hebbar 2005 p 61 Sharma 2000 p 199 sfn error no target CITEREFSharma2000 help a b Steven Rosen 30 November 1994 Vaisnavism Motilal Banarsidass Publishers p 132 Sharma 2000 p 193 sfn error no target CITEREFSharma2000 help B N Hebbar 2004 Visiṣṭadvaita and Dvaita A Systematic and Comparative Study of the Two Schools of Vedanta with Special Reference to Some Doctrinal Controversies Bharatiya Granth Niketan p 29 a b c K Ray and T Srinivas 2012 Curried Cultures Globalization Food and South Asia University of California Press ISBN 978 0520270121 pages 97 98 Jon Paul Sydnor 2012 Ramanuja and Schleiermacher Toward a Constructive Comparative Theology Casemate pp 20 22 with footnote 32 ISBN 978 0227680247 Jerry L Walls 2010 The Oxford Handbook of Eschatology Oxford University Press pp 182 183 ISBN 978 0 19 974248 6 a b Steven Paul Hopkins 2002 Singing the Body of God Oxford University Press pp 71 74 ISBN 978 0 19 802930 4 a b K V Raman 2003 Sri Varadarajaswami Temple Kanchi A Study of Its History Art and Architecture Abhinav Publications pp 137 138 ISBN 978 81 7017 026 6 Brian A Hatcher 2015 Hinduism in the Modern World Routledge p 27 ISBN 978 1 135 04631 6 K V Raman 2003 Sri Varadarajaswami Temple Kanchi A Study of Its History Art and Architecture Abhinav Publications p 73 ISBN 978 81 7017 026 6 a b John Martin Sahajananda 2014 Fully Human Fully Divine Partridge pp 49 52 ISBN 978 1 4828 1955 7 Natalia Isaeva 1993 Shankara and Indian Philosophy SUNY Press pp 249 250 ISBN 978 0 7914 1282 4 a b William Pinch 1996 Peasants and Monks in British India University of California Press ISBN 978 0520200616 pages 53 89 David N Lorenzen 2005 Religious Movements in South Asia 600 1800 Oxford University Press pp 230 242 ISBN 978 0 19 567876 5 John Nicol Farquhar 1984 An Outline of the Religious Literature of India Motilal Banarsidass pp 326 327 ISBN 978 0 89581 765 5 Antonio Rigopoulos 1993 The Life And Teachings Of Sai Baba Of Shirdi State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0791412671 page 264 Schomer and McLeod 1987 The Sants Studies in a Devotional Tradition of India Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 9788120802773 pages 4 6 Selva Raj and William Harman 2007 Dealing with Deities The Ritual Vow in South Asia State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0791467084 pages 165 166 a b c James G Lochtefeld 2002 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism N Z Rosen Publishing ISBN 978 0823931804 pages 553 554 Burghart Richard 1983 Wandering Ascetics of the Ramanandi Sect History of Religions 22 4 361 380 doi 10 1086 462930 Michaels Alex 2004 Hinduism Past and Present Princeton University Press pp 254 256 Axel Michaels 2004 Hinduism Past and Present Princeton University Press p 317 ISBN 978 0 691 08953 9 Christopher John Fuller 2004 The Camphor Flame Popular Hinduism and Society in India Princeton University Press pp 163 170 ISBN 978 0691120485 Philip Lutgendorf 1991 The Life of a Text Performing the Ramcaritmanas of Tulsidas University of California Press pp 261 263 ISBN 978 0 520 06690 8 William R Pinch 2006 Warrior Ascetics and Indian Empires Cambridge University Press pp 1 7 255 256 ISBN 978 0 521 85168 8 Gerald James Larson 1995 India s Agony Over Religion State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0791424124 page 116 Edmour J Babineau 2008 Love of God and Social Duty in the Ramcaritmanas Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120823990 pages 65 68 David Lorenzen Who Invented Hinduism Essays on Religion in History ISBN 978 8190227261 pages 104 106 Schomer and McLeod 1987 The Sants Studies in a Devotional Tradition of India Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 9788120802773 page 54 Julia Leslie 1996 Myth and Mythmaking Continuous Evolution in Indian Tradition Routledge ISBN 978 0700703036 pages 117 119 Winnand Callewaert 2015 The Hagiographies of Anantadas The Bhakti Poets of North India Routledge ISBN 978 1138862463 pages 405 407 J N Farquhar 1984 Outline of the Religious Literature of India Motilal Banarsidass p 324 ISBN 978 81 208 2086 9 David M Miller Dorothy C Wertz 1996 Hindu Monastic Life The Monks and Monasteries of Bhubaneswar Manohar pp 1 8 ISBN 978 81 7304 156 3 a b c Constance Jones James D Ryan 2006 Encyclopedia of Hinduism Infobase p 280 ISBN 978 0 8160 7564 5 AK Shastri 1999 pp 1 2 Leela Prasad 2007 pp 7 8 Leela Prasad 2010 pp 175 176 Leela Prasad 2007 pp 67 72 Clark 2006 p 204 Hacker 1995 p 28 Hacker 1995 p 28 29 Hacker 1995 p 29 Nakamura 1950 pp 680 681 Pandey 2000 pp 4 5 Pandey 2000 p 5 Indira Peterson 2014 Poems to Siva The Hymns of the Tamil Saints Princeton University Press pp 17 with footnote 41 ISBN 978 1 4008 6006 7 Cynthia Talbot 2001 Precolonial India in Practice Society Region and Identity in Medieval Andhra Oxford University Press pp 133 134 ISBN 978 0 19 803123 9 Chandra Reedy 1997 Himalayan Bronzes Technology Style and Choices Associated University Presse p 16 ISBN 978 0 87413 570 1 Ronald Inden Jonathan Walters Daud Ali 2000 Querying the Medieval Texts and the History of Practices in South Asia Oxford University Press pp 215 216 ISBN 978 0 19 535243 6 Tamara Sears 2014 Worldly Gurus and Spiritual Kings Architecture and Asceticism in Medieval India Yale University Press pp 241 242 ISBN 978 0 300 19844 7 Gerald James Larson 1995 India s Agony Over Religion State University of New York Press p 114 ISBN 978 0 7914 2411 7 George Weston Briggs 1938 Gorakhnath and the Kanphata Yogis 6th Edition 2009 Reprint Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120805644 pages 1 2 228 230 a b c Vibhuti Bhuṣaṇa Misra 1997 Religious Beliefs and Practices of North India During the Early Mediaeval Period BRILL Academic pp 14 15 ISBN 978 9004036109 a b c d Hartmut Scharfe 2002 Handbook of Oriental Studies BRILL Academic p 183 ISBN 978 9004125568 a b Cynthia Talbot 2001 Precolonial India in Practice Society Region and Identity in Medieval Andhra Oxford University Press pp 89 90 131 134 ISBN 978 0 19 803123 9 Prabhavati C Reddy 2014 Hindu Pilgrimage Shifting Patterns of Worldview of Srisailam in South India Routledge pp 109 114 ISBN 978 1 317 80631 8 Gavin Flood 2006 The Tantric Body The Secret Tradition of Hindu Religion Tauris pp 120 123 ISBN 978 1 84511 012 3 a b Hartmut Scharfe 2002 Handbook of Oriental Studies BRILL Academic p 173 ISBN 978 9004125568 a b Constance Jones James D Ryan 2006 Encyclopedia of Hinduism Infobase p 308 ISBN 978 0 8160 7564 5 a b White David Gordon 2012 The Alchemical Body Siddha Traditions in Medieval India University of Chicago Press pp 94 97 ISBN 9780226149349 Monika Horstmann 2009 Patronage and Popularisation Pilgrimage and Procession Otto Harrassowitz Verlag pp 135 142 ISBN 978 3 447 05723 3 White David Gordon 2012 The Alchemical Body Siddha Traditions in Medieval India University of Chicago Press pp 346 348 ISBN 9780226149349 White David Gordon 2012 The Alchemical Body Siddha Traditions in Medieval India University of Chicago Press pp 94 101 104 105 118 ISBN 9780226149349 Veronique Bouillier 2009 Monika Horstmann ed Patronage and Popularisation Pilgrimage and Procession Otto Harrassowitz Verlag pp 135 136 ISBN 978 3 447 05723 3 a b White David Gordon 2012 The Alchemical Body Siddha Traditions in Medieval India University of Chicago Press pp 346 347 ISBN 9780226149349 AK Banerjea 1983 Philosophy of Gorakhnath with Goraksha Vacana Sangraha ISBN 978 8120805347 David Lorenzen 2006 Who Invented Hinduism Yoda Press ISBN 978 8190227261 pages 51 63 David Gordon White 2011 Sinister Yogis University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226895147 pages 198 207 William Pinch 2012 Warrior Ascetics and Indian Empires Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1107406377 pages 4 9 28 34 61 65 150 151 189 191 194 207 White David Gordon 2012 The Alchemical Body Siddha Traditions in Medieval India University of Chicago Press pp 8 9 ISBN 9780226149349 Shail Mayaram 2003 Against History Against State Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0231127301 pages 40 41 39 David N Lorenzen and Adrian Munoz 2012 Yogi Heroes and Poets Histories and Legends of the Naths SUNY Press ISBN 978 1438438900 pages x xi a b Danesh A Chekki 1997 Religion and Social System of the Virasaiva Community Greenwood p 53 ISBN 978 0 313 30251 0 a b c d Danesh A Chekki 1997 Religion and Social System of the Virasaiva Community Greenwood p 55 ISBN 978 0 313 30251 0 George Weston Briggs 1998 Gorakhnath and the Kanphaṭa Yogis Motilal Banarsidass p 122 ISBN 978 81 208 0564 4 White David Gordon 2012 The Alchemical Body Siddha Traditions in Medieval India University of Chicago Press p xii 118 ISBN 9780226149349 White David Gordon 2012 The Alchemical Body Siddha Traditions in Medieval India University of Chicago Press p 96 ISBN 9780226149349 Paul Dundas 2003 The Jains Routledge pp 123 125 225 226 ISBN 978 0415266055 Sources EditClark Matthew 2006 The Dasanami saṃnyasis The Integration Of Ascetic Lineages Into An Order BRILL Hacker Paul 1995 Philology and Confrontation Paul Hacker on Traditional and Modern Vedanta SUNY Press ISBN 978 0 7914 2582 4 Hebbar B N 2005 The Sri Krsna Temple at Udupi The History and Spiritual Center of the Madhvite Sect of Hinduism Bharatiya Granth Nikethan ISBN 81 89211 04 8 Johnston William M 2013 Encyclopedia of Monasticism Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 78715 7 Leela Prasad 2007 Poetics of Conduct Oral Narrative and Moral Being in a South Indian Town Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 13920 5 Leela Prasad 2010 Anand Pandian Daud Ali eds Ethical Life in South Asia Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 35528 7 Nakamura Hajime 1950 A History of Early Vedanta Philosophy Part Two 2004 Reprint Delhi Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Private Limited Pandey S L 2000 Pre Sankara Advaita In Chattopadhyana gen ed History of Science Philosophy and Culture in Indian Civilization Volume II Part 2 Advaita Vedanta Delhi Centre for Studies in Civilizations Scharfe Hartmut 2002 From Temple schools to Universities Education in Ancient India Handbook of Oriental Studies Brill Academic ISBN 978 9004125568 AK Shastri 1999 History of Shringeri 2nd Edition Karanatak University Press OCLC 220890841Further reading EditTamara Sears 2014 Worldly Gurus and Spiritual Kings Architecture and Asceticism in Medieval India Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300198447 Narayanan Vasudha 2005 Gender and Priesthood in the Hindu Traditions Journal of Hindu Christian Studies 18 1 doi 10 7825 2164 6279 1341 External links Edit Media related to Matha religion at Wikimedia Commons The Hindu Monastic Code Rama Ramanuja Achari 2013 Australian council of Hindu Clergy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Matha amp oldid 1131477016, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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