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Sannyasa

Sannyasa (Sanskrit: संन्यास; IAST: Saṃnyāsa), sometimes spelled Sanyasa or Sanyasi (for the person), is life of renunciation and the fourth stage within the Hindu system of four life stages known as Ashramas, with the first three being Brahmacharya (bachelor student), Grihastha (householder) and Vanaprastha (forest dweller, retired).[1] Sannyasa is traditionally conceptualized for men or women in late years of their life, but young brahmacharis have had the choice to skip the householder and retirement stages, renounce worldly and materialistic pursuits and dedicate their lives to spiritual pursuits.

Adi Shankara (788-820), founder of Advaita Vedanta, with disciples, by Raja Ravi Varma (1904)

Sannyasa is a form of asceticism, is marked by renunciation of material desires and prejudices, represented by a state of disinterest and detachment from material life, and has the purpose of spending one's life in peaceful, spiritual pursuits.[2][3] An individual in Sanyasa is known as a Sannyasi (male) or Sannyasini (female) in Hinduism,[note 1] which in many ways parallel to the Sadhu and Sadhvi traditions of Jain monasticism, the bhikkhus and bhikkhunis of Buddhism.[5]

Sannyasa has historically been a stage of renunciation, ahimsa (non-violence) peaceful and simple life and spiritual pursuit in Indian traditions. However, this has not always been the case. After the invasions and establishment of Muslim rule in India, from the 12th century through the British Raj, parts of the Shaiva (Gossain) and Vaishnava (Bairagi) ascetics metamorphosed into a military order, where they developed martial arts, created military strategies, and engaged in guerrilla warfare.[6] These warrior sanyasi (ascetics) played an important role in helping European colonial powers establish themselves in the Indian subcontinent.[7]

Etymology and synonyms

Saṃnyāsa in Sanskrit nyasa means purification, sannyasa means "Purification of Everything".[8] It is a composite word of saṃ- which means "together, all", ni- which means "down" and āsa from the root as, meaning "to throw" or "to put".[9] A literal translation of Sannyāsa is thus "to put down everything, all of it". Sannyasa is sometimes spelled as Sanyasa.[9]

The term Saṃnyasa makes appearance in the Samhitas, Aranyakas and Brahmanas, the earliest layers of Vedic literature (2nd millennium BCE), but it is rare.[10] It is not found in ancient Buddhist or Jaina vocabularies, and only appears in Hindu texts of the 1st millennium BCE, in the context of those who have given up ritual activity and taken up non-ritualistic spiritual pursuits discussed in the Upanishads.[10] The term Sannyasa evolves into a rite of renunciation in ancient Sutra texts, and thereafter became a recognized, well discussed stage of life (Ashrama) by about the 3rd and 4th century CE.[10]

Sanyasis are also known as Bhiksu, Pravrajita/Pravrajitā,[11] Yati,[12] Sramana and Parivrajaka in Hindu texts.[10]

History

Jamison and Witzel state[13] early Vedic texts make no mention of Sannyasa, or Ashrama system, unlike the concepts of Brahmacharin and Grihastha which they do mention.[14] Instead, Rig Veda uses the term Antigriha (अन्तिगृह) in hymn 10.95.4, still part of extended family, where older people lived in ancient India, with an outwardly role.[13] It is in later Vedic era and over time, Sannyasa and other new concepts emerged, while older ideas evolved and expanded. A three-stage Ashrama concept along with Vanaprastha emerged about or after 7th Century BC, when sages such as Yājñavalkya left their homes and roamed around as spiritual recluses and pursued their Pravrajika (wanderer) lifestyle.[15] The explicit use of the four stage Ashrama concept, appeared a few centuries later.[13][16]

However, early Vedic literature from 2nd millennium BC, mentions Muni (मुनि, monks, mendicants, holy man), with characteristics that mirror those found in later Sannyasins and Sannyasinis. Rig Veda, for example, in Book 10 Chapter 136, mentions munis as those with Kesin (केशिन्, long haired) and Mala clothes (मल, soil-colored, yellow, orange, saffron) engaged in the affairs of Mananat (mind, meditation).[17] Rigveda, however, refers to these people as Muni and Vati (वति, monks who beg).

केश्यग्निं केशी विषं केशी बिभर्ति रोदसी । केशी विश्वं स्वर्दृशे केशीदं ज्योतिरुच्यते ॥१॥ मुनयो वातरशनाः पिशङ्गा वसते मला । वातस्यानु ध्राजिं यन्ति यद्देवासो अविक्षत ॥२॥

He with the long loose locks (of hair) supports Agni, and moisture, heaven, and earth; He is all sky to look upon: he with long hair is called this light. The Munis, girdled with the wind, wear garments of soil hue; They, following the wind's swift course, go where the Gods have gone before.

— Rig Veda, Hymn 10.CXXXVI.1-2[17]

These Munis, their lifestyle and spiritual pursuit, likely influenced the Sannyasa concept, as well as the ideas behind the ancient concept of Brahmacharya (bachelor student). One class of Munis were associated with Rudra.[18] Another were Vratyas.[citation needed]

Lifestyle and goals

 
A Hindu Sannyasi. In ancient and medieval literature, they are usually associated with forests and remote hermitages in their spiritual, literary and philosophical pursuits.
 
A Hindu monk walking during sunrise in a mango garden in Dinajpur, Bangladesh

Hinduism has no formal demands nor requirements on the lifestyle or spiritual discipline, method or deity a Sanyasin or Sanyasini must pursue – it is left to the choice and preferences of the individual.[19] This freedom has led to diversity and significant differences in the lifestyle and goals of those who adopt Sannyasa. There are, however, some common themes. A person in Sannyasa lives a simple life, typically detached, itinerant, drifting from place to place, with no material possessions or emotional attachments. They may have a walking stick, a book, a container or vessel for food and drink, often wearing yellow, saffron, orange, ochre or soil colored clothes. They may have long hair and appear disheveled, and are usually vegetarians.[19] Some minor Upanishads as well as monastic orders consider women, children, students, fallen men (those with a criminal record) and others as not qualified to become Sannyasa; while other texts place no restrictions.[20] The dress, the equipage and lifestyle varies between groups. For example, Sannyasa Upanishad in verses 2.23 to 2.29, identifies six lifestyles for six types of renunciates.[21] One of them is described as living with the following possessions,[22]

Pot, drinking cup and flask – the three supports, a pair of shoes,
a patched robe giving protection – in heat and cold, a loin cloth,
bathing drawers and straining cloth, triple staff and coverlet.

— Sannyasa Upanishad, 1.4[22]

Those who enter Sannyasa may choose whether they join a group (similar to christian mendicant orders). Some are anchorites, homeless mendicants preferring solitude and seclusion in remote parts, without affiliation.[23] Others are cenobites, living and traveling with kindred fellow-Sannyasi in the pursuit of their spiritual journey, sometimes in Ashramas or Matha/Sangha (a Hermitage, the practice of seclusion known generally as monasticism).[23]

Most Hindu ascetics adopt celibacy when they begin Sannyasa. However, there are exceptions, such as the Saiva Tantra school of asceticism where ritual sex is considered part of liberation process.[24] Sex is viewed by them as a transcendence from a personal, intimate act to something impersonal and ascetic.[24]

The goal

The goal of the Hindu Sannyasin is moksha (liberation).[25][26] The idea of what that means varies from tradition to tradition.

Who am I, and in what really do I consist? What is this cage of suffering?

— Jayakhya Samhita, Verse 5.7[24]

For the Bhakti (devotion) traditions, liberation consists of union with the Divine and release from Saṃsāra (rebirth in future life);[27] for Yoga traditions, liberation is the experience of the highest Samādhi (deep awareness in this life);[28] and for the Advaita tradition, liberation is jivanmukti – the awareness of the Supreme Reality (Brahman) and Self-realization in this life.[29][30] Sannyasa is a means and an end in itself. It is a means to decreasing and then ultimately ending all ties of any kind. It is a means to the soul and meaning, but not ego nor personalities. Sannyasa does not abandon the society, it abandons the ritual mores of the social world and one's attachment to all its other manifestations.[31] The end is a liberated, content, free and blissful existence.[32][33]

The behaviors and characteristics

The behavioral state of a person in Sannyasa is described by many ancient and medieval era Indian texts. Bhagavad Gita discusses it in many verses, for example:[34]

ज्ञेयः स नित्यसंन्यासी यो न द्वेष्टि न काङ् क्षति । निर्द्वन्द्वो हि महाबाहो सुखं बन्धात्प्रमुच्यते ॥५-३॥

He is known as a permanent Sannyasin who does not hate, does not desire, is without dualities (opposites). Truly, Mahabaho (Arjuna), he is liberated from bondage.

— Bhagavad Gita, Hymn 5.3[34]

Other behavioral characteristics, in addition to renunciation, during Sannyasa include: ahimsa (non-violence), akrodha (not become angry even if you are abused by others), disarmament (no weapons), chastity, bachelorhood (no marriage), avyati (non-desirous), amati (poverty), self-restraint, truthfulness, sarvabhutahita (kindness to all creatures), asteya (non-stealing), aparigraha (non-acceptance of gifts, non-possessiveness) and shaucha (purity of body speech and mind).[35][36] Some Hindu monastic orders require the above behavior in form of a vow, before a renunciate can enter the order.[35] Tiwari notes that these virtues are not unique to Sannyasa, and other than renunciation, all of these virtues are revered in ancient texts for all four Ashramas (stages) of human life.[37]

Baudhayana Dharmasūtra, completed by about 7th century BC, states the following behavioral vows for a person in Sannyasa[38]

These are the vows a Sannyasi must keep –

Abstention from injuring living beings, truthfulness, abstention from appropriating the property of others, abstention from sex, liberality (kindness, gentleness) are the major vows. There are five minor vows: abstention from anger, obedience towards the guru, avoidance of rashness, cleanliness, and purity in eating. He should beg (for food) without annoying others, any food he gets he must compassionately share a portion with other living beings, sprinkling the remainder with water he should eat it as if it were a medicine.

— Baudhayana, Dharmasūtra, II.10.18.1-10[38]

Types

Ashrama Upanishad identified various types of Sannyasi renouncers based on their different goals:[39] Kutichaka – seeking atmospheric world; Bahudaka – seeking heavenly world; Hamsa – seeking penance world; Paramahamsa – seeking truth world; and Turiyatitas and Avadhutas seeking liberation in this life.

In some texts, such as Sannyasa Upanishad,[21] these were classified by the symbolic items the Sannyasins carried and their lifestyle. For example, Kutichaka sannyasis carried triple staffs, Hamsa sannyasis carried single staffs, while Paramahamsas went without them. This method of classification based on emblematic items became controversial, as anti-thematic to the idea of renunciation. Later texts, such as Naradaparivrajaka Upanishad stated that all renunciation is one, but people enter the state of Sannyasa for different reasons – for detachment and getting away from their routine meaningless world, to seek knowledge and meaning in life, to honor rites of Sannyasa they have undertaken, and because he already has liberating knowledge.[40]

Other classifications

There were many groups of Hindu, Jain and Buddhist Sannyasis co-existing in pre-Maurya Empire era, each classified by their attributes, such as:[41] Achelakas (without clothes), Ajivika, Aviruddhaka, Devadhammika, Eka-satakas, Gotamaka, Jatilaka, Magandika, Mundasavaka, Nigrantha (Jains), Paribbajaka, Tedandikas, Titthiya and others.

Literature

 
Swami Vivekananda (1894) was a sannyasi.

The Dharmasūtras and Dharmaśāstras, composed about mid 1st millennium BC and later, place increasing emphasis on all four stages of Ashrama system including Sannyasa.[42] The Baudhayana Dharmasūtra, in verses 2.11.9 to 2.11.12, describes the four Ashramas as "a fourfold division of Dharma". The older Dharmasūtras, however, are significantly different in their treatment of Ashramas system from the more modern Dharmaśāstras, because they do not limit some of their Ashrama rituals to dvija men, that is, the three varnas – Brahmins, Kshatriyas and Vaishyas.[42] The newer Dharmaśāstra vary widely in their discussion of Ashrama system in the context of classes (castes),[43] with some mentioning it for three, while others such as Vaikhānasa Dharmasūtra including all four.[44]

The Dharmasūtras and Dharmaśāstras give a number of detailed but widely divergent guidelines on renunciation. In all cases, Sannyasa was never mandatory and was one of the choices before an individual. Only a small percentage chose this path. Olivelle[44] posits that the older Dharmasūtras present the Ashramas including Sannyasa as four alternative ways of life and options available, but not as sequential stage that any individual must follow.[42] Olivelle also states that Sannyasa along with the Ashrama system gained mainstream scholarly acceptance about 2nd century BC.[45]

Ancient and medieval era texts of Hinduism consider Grihastha (householder) stage as the most important of all stages in sociological context, as human beings in this stage not only pursue a virtuous life, they produce food and wealth that sustains people in other stages of life, as well as the offspring that continues mankind.[1][46] However, an individual had the choice to renounce any time he or she wanted, including straight after student life.[47]

When can a person renounce?

Baudhayana Dharmasūtra,[48] in verse II.10.17.2 states that anyone who has finished Brahmacharya (student) life stage may become ascetic immediately, in II.10.17.3 that any childless couple may enter Sannyasa anytime they wish, while verse II.10.17.4 states that a widower may choose Sannyasa if desired, but in general, states verse II.10.17.5, Sannyasa is suited after the completion of age 70 and after one's children have been firmly settled.[48] Other texts suggest the age of 75.[49]

The Vasiṣṭha and Āpastamba Dharmasūtras, and the later Manusmṛti describe the āśramas as sequential stages which would allow one to pass from Vedic studentship to householder to forest-dwelling hermit to renouncer.[50] However, these texts differ with each other. Yājñavalkya Smṛti, for example, differs from Manusmṛti and states in verse 3.56 that one may skip Vanaprastha (forest dwelling, retired) stage and go straight from the Grihastha (householder) stage to Sannyasa.

Who may renounce?

The question as to which vaṛṇa may, or may not, renounce is never explicitly stated in ancient or medieval dharma literature, the more modern Dharmaśāstras texts discuss much of renunciation stage in context of dvija men.[51] Nevertheless, Dharmaśāstra texts document people of all castes as well as women, entered Sannyasa in practice.[52]

What happened to renouncers' property and human rights?

After renouncing the world, the ascetic's financial obligations and property were adjudicated by the state, in the manner of a decedent's estate.[53] Viṣṇu Smriti in verse 6.27, for example, states that if a debtor takes Sannyasa, his sons or grandsons should settle his debts.[54] As to the little property a Sannyasin may collect or possess after renunciation, Book III Chapter XVI of Kautiliya's Arthashastra states that the property of hermits (vánaprastha), ascetics (yati, sannyasa), and student bachelors (Brahmachári) shall on their death be taken by their guru, disciples, their dharmabhratri (brother in the monastic order), or classmates in succession.[55]

Although a renouncer's practitioner's obligations and property rights were reassigned, he or she continued to enjoy basic human rights such as the protection from injury by others and the freedom to travel. Likewise, someone practicing Sannyasa was subject to the same laws as common citizens; stealing, harming, or killing a human being by a Sannyasi were all serious crimes in Kautiliya's Arthashastra.[56]

Renunciation in daily life

Later Indian literature debates whether the benefit of renunciation can be achieved (moksha, or liberation) without asceticism in the earlier stages of one's life. For example, Bhagavad Gita, Vidyaranya's Jivanmukti Viveka, and others believed that various alternate forms of yoga and the importance of yogic discipline could serve as paths to spirituality, and ultimately moksha.[57][58] Over time, four paths to liberating spirituality have emerged in Hinduism: Jñāna yoga, Bhakti yoga, Karma yoga and Rāja yoga.[59] Acting without greed or craving for results, in Karma yoga for example, is considered a form of detachment in daily life similar to Sannyasa. Sharma[60] states that, "the basic principle of Karma yoga is that it is not what one does, but how one does it that counts and if one has the know-how in this sense, one can become liberated by doing whatever it is one does", and "(one must do) whatever one does without attachment to the results, with efficiency and to the best of one's ability".[60]

Warrior ascetics

 
The Mughal Army commanded by Akbar attack members of the Sannyasa during the Battle of Thanesar, 1567

Ascetic life was historically a life of renunciation, non-violence and spiritual pursuit. However, in India, this has not always been the case. For example, after the Mongol and Persian Islamic invasions in the 12th century, and the establishment of Delhi Sultanate, the ensuing Hindu-Muslim conflicts provoked the creation of a military order of Hindu ascetics in India.[6][7] These warrior ascetics formed paramilitary groups called ‘‘Akharas'’ and they invented a range of martial arts.[6]

Nath Siddhas of the 12th century AD, may have been the earliest Hindu monks to resort to a military response after the Muslim conquest.[61] Ascetics, by tradition, led a nomadic and unattached lifestyle. As these ascetics dedicated themselves to rebellion, their groups sought stallions, developed techniques for spying and targeting, and they adopted strategies of war against Muslim nobles and the Sultanate state. Many of these groups were devotees of Hindu deity Mahadeva, and were called Mahants.[6] Other popular names for them was Sannyasis, Yogis, Nagas (followers of Shiva), Bairagis (followers of Vishnu) and Gosains from the 16th to the 19th centuries; in some cases, these Hindu monks cooperated with Muslim fakirs who were Sufi and also persecuted.[7]

Warrior monks continued their rebellion through the Mughal Empire, and became a political force during the early years of British Raj. In some cases, these regiments of soldier monks shifted from guerrilla campaigns to war alliances, and these Hindu warrior monks played a key role in helping British establish themselves in India.[62] The significance of warrior ascetics rapidly declined with the consolidation of British Raj in late 19th century, and with the rise in non-violence movement by Mahatma Gandhi.[6]

Novetzke states that some of these Hindu warrior ascetics were treated as folk heroes, aided by villagers and townspeople, because they targeted figures of political and economic power in a discriminatory state, and some of these warriors paralleled Robin Hood's lifestyle.[63]

Sannyasa Upanishads

Of the 108 Upanishads of the Muktika, the largest corpus is dedicated to Sannyasa and to Yoga, or about 20 each, with some overlap. The renunciation-related texts are called the Sannyasa Upanishads.[64] These are as follows:

Among the thirteen major or Principal Upanishads, all from the ancient era, many include sections related to Sannyasa.[67] For example, the motivations and state of a Sannyasi are mentioned in Maitrāyaṇi Upanishad, a classical major Upanishad that Robert Hume included among his list of "Thirteen Principal Upanishads" of Hinduism.[68] Maitrāyaṇi starts with the question, "given the nature of life, how is joy possible?" and "how can one achieve moksha (liberation)?"; in later sections it offers a debate on possible answers and its views on Sannyasa.[69]

In this body infected with passions, anger, greed, delusion, fright, despondency, grudge, separation from what is dear and desirable, attachment to what is not desirable, hunger, thirst, old age, death, illness, sorrow and the rest - how can one experience only joy? – Hymn I.3

The drying up of great oceans, the crumbling down of the mountains, the instability of the pole-star, the tearing of the wind-chords, the sinking down, the submergence of the earth, the tumbling down of the gods from their place - in a world in which such things occur, how can one experience only joy ?! – Hymn I.4

— Maitrayaniya Upanishad, Translated by Paul Deussen[70]

Dragged away and polluted by the river of the Gunas (personality), one becomes rootless, tottering, broken down, greedy, uncomposed and falling in the delusion of I-consciousness, he imagines: "I am this, this is mine" and binds himself, like a bird in the net. – Hymn VI.30

Just as the fire without fuel comes to rest in its place,
so also the passive mind comes to rest in its source;
When it (mind) is infatuated by the objects of sense, he falls away from truth and acts;
Mind alone is the Samsara, one should purify it with diligence;
You are what your mind is, a mystery, a perpetual one;
The mind which is serene, cancels all actions good and bad;
He, who, himself, serene, remains steadfast in himself - he attains imperishable happiness. – Hymn VI.34

— Maitrayaniya Upanishad, Translated by Paul Deussen[71]

Six of the Sannyasa Upanishads – Aruni, Kundika, Kathashruti, Paramahamsa, Jabala and Brahma – were composed before the 3rd-century CE, likely in the centuries before or after the start of the common era, states Sprockhoff; the Asrama Upanishad is dated to the 3rd-century, the Naradaparivrajaka and Satyayaniya Upanishads to around the 12th-century, and about ten of the remaining Sannyasa Upanishads are dated to have been composed in the 14th- to 15th-century CE well after the start of Islamic Sultanates period of South Asia in late 12th-century.[72][73]

The oldest Sannyasa Upanishads have a strong Advaita Vedanta outlook, and these pre-date Adi Shankara.[74] Most of the Sannyasa Upanishads present a Yoga and nondualism (Advaita) Vedanta philosophy.[75] This may be, states Patrick Olivelle, because major Hindu monasteries of early medieval period (1st millennium CE) belonged to the Advaita Vedanta tradition.[76] The 12th-century Shatyayaniya Upanishad is a significant exception, which presents qualified dualistic and Vaishnavism (Vishishtadvaita Vedanta) philosophy.[76][77]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ An alternate term for either is sannyasin.[4]

References

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  3. ^ DP Bhawuk (2011), The Paths of Bondage and Liberation, in Spirituality and Indian Psychology, Springer, ISBN 978-1-4419-8109-7, pages 93-110
  4. ^ Alessandro Monti (2002). Hindu Masculinities Across the Ages: Updating the Past. L'Harmattan Italia. pp. 41, 101–111. ISBN 978-88-88684-03-1. from the original on 1 March 2017. Retrieved 28 February 2017.
  5. ^ Harvey J. Sindima (2009), Introduction to Religious Studies, University Press of America, ISBN 978-0761847618, pages 93-94, 99-100
  6. ^ a b c d e David N. Lorenzen (1978), Warrior Ascetics in Indian History 5 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine, Journal of the American Oriental Society, 98(1): 61-75
  7. ^ a b c William Pinch (2012), Warrior Ascetics and Indian Empires, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-1107406377
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  12. ^ yatin 1 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine Sanskrit-English Dictionary, Koeln University, Germany
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  17. ^ a b GS Ghurye (1952), Ascetic Origins, Sociological Bulletin, Vol. 1, No. 2, pages 162-184;
    For Sanskrit original: Rigveda Archived 14 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine Wikisource;
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  20. ^ In practice, women for example, entered Sannyasa in enough numbers that Chanakya's Arthashastra in 3rd century BC, mentions women ascetics (प्रव्रजिता, pravrajitā) in several chapters; see for example, R. Shamasastry (Translator) Chapter 23 page 160; also page 551
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    English Translation 2: Edwin Arnold, Bhagavad Gita Chapter 5, Wikisource
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  38. ^ a b Max Muller (Translator), Baudhayana Dharmasūtra Prasna II, Adhyaya 10, Kandika 18, The Sacred Books of the East, Vol. XIV, Oxford University Press, pages 279-281
  39. ^ The Samnyasa Upanisads: Hindu Scriptures on Asceticism and Renunciation. 13 February 1992. pp. 98–99. ISBN 9780195361377. from the original on 27 December 2021. Retrieved 18 September 2014.
  40. ^ The Samnyasa Upanisads: Hindu Scriptures on Asceticism and Renunciation. 13 February 1992. p. 99. ISBN 9780195361377. from the original on 27 December 2021. Retrieved 18 September 2014.
  41. ^ MM Singh (1967), Life in North-Eastern India in Pre-Mauryan Times at Google Books, Motilal Banarsidass, pages 131-139
  42. ^ a b c Barbara Holdrege (2004), Dharma, in The Hindu World (Editors: Sushil Mittal and Gene Thursby), Routledge, ISBN 0 41521527-7, page 231
  43. ^ (Olivelle 1993, pp. 25–34) translates them as classes, e.g. see footnote 70; while other authors translate them as castes
  44. ^ a b Patrick Olivelle (1993), The Ashrama System: The History and Hermeneutics of a Religious Institution, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0195344783
  45. ^ Patrick Olivelle (1993), The Ashrama System: The History and Hermeneutics of a Religious Institution, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0195344783, page 94
  46. ^ Alban Widgery (1930), The Principles of Hindu Ethics 3 October 2022 at the Wayback Machine, International Journal of Ethics, 40(2): 232-245
  47. ^ What is Hinduism? (Editors of Hinduism Today), Two noble paths of Dharma, p. 101, at Google Books, Family Life and Monastic Life, Chapter 10 with page 101 in particular
  48. ^ a b Max Muller (Translator), Baudhayana Dharmasūtra Prasna II, Adhyaya 10, Kandika 17, The Sacred Books of the East, Vol. XIV, Oxford University Press
  49. ^ Dharm Bhawuk (2011), Spirituality and Indian Psychology: Lessons from the Bhagavad-Gita, Springer Science, ISBN 978-1441981097, page 66
  50. ^ See (Olivelle 1993, pp. 84–106) discussion of the development of the āśrama system in "Renouncer and Renunciation in the Dharmaśāstras."
  51. ^ See (Olivelle 1993, p. 111), "Renouncer and Renunciation in the Dharmaśāstras." p. 111
  52. ^ For more references to renunciation by Śūdras and women, see (Olivelle 1993, pp. 111–115), "Renouncer and Renunciation in the Dharmaśāstras."
  53. ^ See (Olivelle 1993, pp. 89–91), Saṃnyāsa Upaniṣads
  54. ^ Law of Debt Vishnu Smriti, Julius Jolly (Translator), page 45
  55. ^ Arthashastra - CHAPTER XVI: RESUMPTION OF GIFTS, SALE WITHOUT OWNERSHIP AND OWNERSHIP Book III, Wikisource
  56. ^ See for example, Arthasastra - CHAPTER X: Fines in Lieu of Mutilation of Limbs Book IV, Wikisource; see also Book IV, Chapter XI which declared murder of an ascetic as a capital crime.
  57. ^ Andrew O. Fort and Patricia Y. Mumme (1996), Living Liberation in Hindu Thought, State University of New York Press, ISBN 978-0791427057, pages 8-12
  58. ^ Gavin Flood (2005), The Ascetic Self: Subjectivity, Memory and Tradition, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0521604017, pages 60-74
  59. ^ Thor Johansen (2009), Religion and Spirituality in Psychotherapy: An Individual Psychology Perspective, Springer, ISBN 978-0826103857, pages 148-154
  60. ^ a b A Sharma (2000), Classical Hindu Thought: An Introduction, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0195644418, pages 24-28
  61. ^ Alf Hiltebeitel, Their name is Legion, in Rethinking India's Oral and Classical Epics, University of Chicago Press, ISBN 978-0226340500, page 332-334 and footnote 104 on page 333
  62. ^ P van der Veer (2007), Book Review, The American Historical Review, 112(1): 177-178,doi:10.1086/ahr.112.1.177
  63. ^ Christian Novetzke (2011), Religion and Public Memory: A Cultural History of Saint Namdev in India, Columbia University Press, ISBN 978-0231141857, pages 173-175
  64. ^ Patrick Olivelle (1998), Upaniṣhads. Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0199540259
  65. ^ Note: This exists in two manuscripts, Brihat and Laghu. Olivelle, Patrick (1992). The Samnyasa Upanisads. Oxford University Press. pp. x–xi. ISBN 978-0195070453.
  66. ^ Paul Deussen (Translator), Sixty Upanisads of the Veda, Vol 2, Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 978-8120814684, pages 568, 763-767
  67. ^ Olivelle, Patrick (1992). The Samnyasa Upanisads. Oxford University Press. pp. x–xi, 4–9. ISBN 978-0195070453.
  68. ^ Hume, Robert Ernest (1921), The Thirteen Principal Upanishads, Oxford University Press
  69. ^ Paul Deussen (Translator), Sixty Upanisads of the Veda, Vol 1, Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 978-8120814684, pages 327-386
  70. ^ Paul Deussen (Translator), Sixty Upanisads of the Veda, Vol 1, Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 978-8120814684, pages 332-333
  71. ^ Paul Deussen (Translator), Sixty Upanisads of the Veda, Vol 1, Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 978-8120814684, pages 367, 373
  72. ^ Olivelle, Patrick (1992). The Samnyasa Upanisads. Oxford University Press. pp. x–xi, 8–18. ISBN 978-0195070453.
  73. ^ Sprockhoff, Joachim F (1976). Samnyasa: Quellenstudien zur Askese im Hinduismus (in German). Wiesbaden: Kommissionsverlag Franz Steiner. pp. 277–294, 319–377. ISBN 978-3515019057.
  74. ^ Stephen H Phillips (1995), Classical Indian Metaphysics, Columbia University Press, ISBN 978-0812692983, page 332 with note 68
  75. ^ Antonio Rigopoulos (1998), Dattatreya: The Immortal Guru, Yogin, and Avatara, State University of New York Press, ISBN 978-0791436967, pages 62-63
  76. ^ a b Olivelle, Patrick (1992). The Samnyasa Upanisads. Oxford University Press. pp. 17–18. ISBN 978-0195070453.
  77. ^ Antonio Rigopoulos (1998), Dattatreya: The Immortal Guru, Yogin, and Avatara, State University of New York Press, ISBN 978-0791436967, page 81 note 27

Cited books:

  • Olivelle, Patrick (1993). The Ashrama System: The History and Hermeneutics of a Religious Institution. Oxford University Press. OCLC 466428084.

External links

  • Articles on aspects of Sannyasa, Vairagya, and Brahmacharya
  • 'The Song of the Sannyasin', poem by Swami Vivekananda
  • Vows Of Sannyasa Saiva Siddhanta - Example covenant between a Hindu Sannyasin and a Hindu Monastic Order (PDF download)

sannyasa, sanyasi, redirects, here, films, sanyasi, 1945, film, sanyasi, 1975, film, sanskrit, iast, saṃnyāsa, sometimes, spelled, sanyasa, sanyasi, person, life, renunciation, fourth, stage, within, hindu, system, four, life, stages, known, ashramas, with, fi. Sanyasi redirects here For the films see Sanyasi 1945 film and Sanyasi 1975 film Sannyasa Sanskrit स न य स IAST Saṃnyasa sometimes spelled Sanyasa or Sanyasi for the person is life of renunciation and the fourth stage within the Hindu system of four life stages known as Ashramas with the first three being Brahmacharya bachelor student Grihastha householder and Vanaprastha forest dweller retired 1 Sannyasa is traditionally conceptualized for men or women in late years of their life but young brahmacharis have had the choice to skip the householder and retirement stages renounce worldly and materialistic pursuits and dedicate their lives to spiritual pursuits Adi Shankara 788 820 founder of Advaita Vedanta with disciples by Raja Ravi Varma 1904 Sannyasa is a form of asceticism is marked by renunciation of material desires and prejudices represented by a state of disinterest and detachment from material life and has the purpose of spending one s life in peaceful spiritual pursuits 2 3 An individual in Sanyasa is known as a Sannyasi male or Sannyasini female in Hinduism note 1 which in many ways parallel to the Sadhu and Sadhvi traditions of Jain monasticism the bhikkhus and bhikkhunis of Buddhism 5 Sannyasa has historically been a stage of renunciation ahimsa non violence peaceful and simple life and spiritual pursuit in Indian traditions However this has not always been the case After the invasions and establishment of Muslim rule in India from the 12th century through the British Raj parts of the Shaiva Gossain and Vaishnava Bairagi ascetics metamorphosed into a military order where they developed martial arts created military strategies and engaged in guerrilla warfare 6 These warrior sanyasi ascetics played an important role in helping European colonial powers establish themselves in the Indian subcontinent 7 Contents 1 Etymology and synonyms 2 History 3 Lifestyle and goals 3 1 The goal 3 2 The behaviors and characteristics 3 3 Types 4 Literature 4 1 When can a person renounce 4 2 Who may renounce 4 3 What happened to renouncers property and human rights 4 4 Renunciation in daily life 5 Warrior ascetics 6 Sannyasa Upanishads 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksEtymology and synonyms EditSaṃnyasa in Sanskrit nyasa means purification sannyasa means Purification of Everything 8 It is a composite word of saṃ which means together all ni which means down and asa from the root as meaning to throw or to put 9 A literal translation of Sannyasa is thus to put down everything all of it Sannyasa is sometimes spelled as Sanyasa 9 The term Saṃnyasa makes appearance in the Samhitas Aranyakas and Brahmanas the earliest layers of Vedic literature 2nd millennium BCE but it is rare 10 It is not found in ancient Buddhist or Jaina vocabularies and only appears in Hindu texts of the 1st millennium BCE in the context of those who have given up ritual activity and taken up non ritualistic spiritual pursuits discussed in the Upanishads 10 The term Sannyasa evolves into a rite of renunciation in ancient Sutra texts and thereafter became a recognized well discussed stage of life Ashrama by about the 3rd and 4th century CE 10 Sanyasis are also known as Bhiksu Pravrajita Pravrajita 11 Yati 12 Sramana and Parivrajaka in Hindu texts 10 History EditJamison and Witzel state 13 early Vedic texts make no mention of Sannyasa or Ashrama system unlike the concepts of Brahmacharin and Grihastha which they do mention 14 Instead Rig Veda uses the term Antigriha अन त ग ह in hymn 10 95 4 still part of extended family where older people lived in ancient India with an outwardly role 13 It is in later Vedic era and over time Sannyasa and other new concepts emerged while older ideas evolved and expanded A three stage Ashrama concept along with Vanaprastha emerged about or after 7th Century BC when sages such as Yajnavalkya left their homes and roamed around as spiritual recluses and pursued their Pravrajika wanderer lifestyle 15 The explicit use of the four stage Ashrama concept appeared a few centuries later 13 16 However early Vedic literature from 2nd millennium BC mentions Muni म न monks mendicants holy man with characteristics that mirror those found in later Sannyasins and Sannyasinis Rig Veda for example in Book 10 Chapter 136 mentions munis as those with Kesin क श न long haired and Mala clothes मल soil colored yellow orange saffron engaged in the affairs of Mananat mind meditation 17 Rigveda however refers to these people as Muni and Vati वत monks who beg क श यग न क श व ष क श ब भर त र दस क श व श व स वर द श क श द ज य त र च यत १ म नय व तरशन प शङ ग वसत मल व तस य न ध र ज यन त यद द व स अव क षत २ He with the long loose locks of hair supports Agni and moisture heaven and earth He is all sky to look upon he with long hair is called this light The Munis girdled with the wind wear garments of soil hue They following the wind s swift course go where the Gods have gone before Rig Veda Hymn 10 CXXXVI 1 2 17 These Munis their lifestyle and spiritual pursuit likely influenced the Sannyasa concept as well as the ideas behind the ancient concept of Brahmacharya bachelor student One class of Munis were associated with Rudra 18 Another were Vratyas citation needed Lifestyle and goals Edit A Hindu Sannyasi In ancient and medieval literature they are usually associated with forests and remote hermitages in their spiritual literary and philosophical pursuits A Hindu monk walking during sunrise in a mango garden in Dinajpur Bangladesh Hinduism has no formal demands nor requirements on the lifestyle or spiritual discipline method or deity a Sanyasin or Sanyasini must pursue it is left to the choice and preferences of the individual 19 This freedom has led to diversity and significant differences in the lifestyle and goals of those who adopt Sannyasa There are however some common themes A person in Sannyasa lives a simple life typically detached itinerant drifting from place to place with no material possessions or emotional attachments They may have a walking stick a book a container or vessel for food and drink often wearing yellow saffron orange ochre or soil colored clothes They may have long hair and appear disheveled and are usually vegetarians 19 Some minor Upanishads as well as monastic orders consider women children students fallen men those with a criminal record and others as not qualified to become Sannyasa while other texts place no restrictions 20 The dress the equipage and lifestyle varies between groups For example Sannyasa Upanishad in verses 2 23 to 2 29 identifies six lifestyles for six types of renunciates 21 One of them is described as living with the following possessions 22 Pot drinking cup and flask the three supports a pair of shoes a patched robe giving protection in heat and cold a loin cloth bathing drawers and straining cloth triple staff and coverlet Sannyasa Upanishad 1 4 22 Those who enter Sannyasa may choose whether they join a group similar to christian mendicant orders Some are anchorites homeless mendicants preferring solitude and seclusion in remote parts without affiliation 23 Others are cenobites living and traveling with kindred fellow Sannyasi in the pursuit of their spiritual journey sometimes in Ashramas or Matha Sangha a Hermitage the practice of seclusion known generally as monasticism 23 Most Hindu ascetics adopt celibacy when they begin Sannyasa However there are exceptions such as the Saiva Tantra school of asceticism where ritual sex is considered part of liberation process 24 Sex is viewed by them as a transcendence from a personal intimate act to something impersonal and ascetic 24 The goal Edit The goal of the Hindu Sannyasin is moksha liberation 25 26 The idea of what that means varies from tradition to tradition Who am I and in what really do I consist What is this cage of suffering Jayakhya Samhita Verse 5 7 24 For the Bhakti devotion traditions liberation consists of union with the Divine and release from Saṃsara rebirth in future life 27 for Yoga traditions liberation is the experience of the highest Samadhi deep awareness in this life 28 and for the Advaita tradition liberation is jivanmukti the awareness of the Supreme Reality Brahman and Self realization in this life 29 30 Sannyasa is a means and an end in itself It is a means to decreasing and then ultimately ending all ties of any kind It is a means to the soul and meaning but not ego nor personalities Sannyasa does not abandon the society it abandons the ritual mores of the social world and one s attachment to all its other manifestations 31 The end is a liberated content free and blissful existence 32 33 The behaviors and characteristics Edit The behavioral state of a person in Sannyasa is described by many ancient and medieval era Indian texts Bhagavad Gita discusses it in many verses for example 34 ज ञ य स न त यस न य स य न द व ष ट न क ङ क षत न र द वन द व ह मह ब ह स ख बन ध त प रम च यत ५ ३ He is known as a permanent Sannyasin who does not hate does not desire is without dualities opposites Truly Mahabaho Arjuna he is liberated from bondage Bhagavad Gita Hymn 5 3 34 Other behavioral characteristics in addition to renunciation during Sannyasa include ahimsa non violence akrodha not become angry even if you are abused by others disarmament no weapons chastity bachelorhood no marriage avyati non desirous amati poverty self restraint truthfulness sarvabhutahita kindness to all creatures asteya non stealing aparigraha non acceptance of gifts non possessiveness and shaucha purity of body speech and mind 35 36 Some Hindu monastic orders require the above behavior in form of a vow before a renunciate can enter the order 35 Tiwari notes that these virtues are not unique to Sannyasa and other than renunciation all of these virtues are revered in ancient texts for all four Ashramas stages of human life 37 Baudhayana Dharmasutra completed by about 7th century BC states the following behavioral vows for a person in Sannyasa 38 These are the vows a Sannyasi must keep Abstention from injuring living beings truthfulness abstention from appropriating the property of others abstention from sex liberality kindness gentleness are the major vows There are five minor vows abstention from anger obedience towards the guru avoidance of rashness cleanliness and purity in eating He should beg for food without annoying others any food he gets he must compassionately share a portion with other living beings sprinkling the remainder with water he should eat it as if it were a medicine Baudhayana Dharmasutra II 10 18 1 10 38 Types Edit Ashrama Upanishad identified various types of Sannyasi renouncers based on their different goals 39 Kutichaka seeking atmospheric world Bahudaka seeking heavenly world Hamsa seeking penance world Paramahamsa seeking truth world and Turiyatitas and Avadhutas seeking liberation in this life In some texts such as Sannyasa Upanishad 21 these were classified by the symbolic items the Sannyasins carried and their lifestyle For example Kutichaka sannyasis carried triple staffs Hamsa sannyasis carried single staffs while Paramahamsas went without them This method of classification based on emblematic items became controversial as anti thematic to the idea of renunciation Later texts such as Naradaparivrajaka Upanishad stated that all renunciation is one but people enter the state of Sannyasa for different reasons for detachment and getting away from their routine meaningless world to seek knowledge and meaning in life to honor rites of Sannyasa they have undertaken and because he already has liberating knowledge 40 Other classificationsThere were many groups of Hindu Jain and Buddhist Sannyasis co existing in pre Maurya Empire era each classified by their attributes such as 41 Achelakas without clothes Ajivika Aviruddhaka Devadhammika Eka satakas Gotamaka Jatilaka Magandika Mundasavaka Nigrantha Jains Paribbajaka Tedandikas Titthiya and others Literature Edit Swami Vivekananda 1894 was a sannyasi The Dharmasutras and Dharmasastras composed about mid 1st millennium BC and later place increasing emphasis on all four stages of Ashrama system including Sannyasa 42 The Baudhayana Dharmasutra in verses 2 11 9 to 2 11 12 describes the four Ashramas as a fourfold division of Dharma The older Dharmasutras however are significantly different in their treatment of Ashramas system from the more modern Dharmasastras because they do not limit some of their Ashrama rituals to dvija men that is the three varnas Brahmins Kshatriyas and Vaishyas 42 The newer Dharmasastra vary widely in their discussion of Ashrama system in the context of classes castes 43 with some mentioning it for three while others such as Vaikhanasa Dharmasutra including all four 44 The Dharmasutras and Dharmasastras give a number of detailed but widely divergent guidelines on renunciation In all cases Sannyasa was never mandatory and was one of the choices before an individual Only a small percentage chose this path Olivelle 44 posits that the older Dharmasutras present the Ashramas including Sannyasa as four alternative ways of life and options available but not as sequential stage that any individual must follow 42 Olivelle also states that Sannyasa along with the Ashrama system gained mainstream scholarly acceptance about 2nd century BC 45 Ancient and medieval era texts of Hinduism consider Grihastha householder stage as the most important of all stages in sociological context as human beings in this stage not only pursue a virtuous life they produce food and wealth that sustains people in other stages of life as well as the offspring that continues mankind 1 46 However an individual had the choice to renounce any time he or she wanted including straight after student life 47 When can a person renounce Edit Baudhayana Dharmasutra 48 in verse II 10 17 2 states that anyone who has finished Brahmacharya student life stage may become ascetic immediately in II 10 17 3 that any childless couple may enter Sannyasa anytime they wish while verse II 10 17 4 states that a widower may choose Sannyasa if desired but in general states verse II 10 17 5 Sannyasa is suited after the completion of age 70 and after one s children have been firmly settled 48 Other texts suggest the age of 75 49 The Vasiṣṭha and Apastamba Dharmasutras and the later Manusmṛti describe the asramas as sequential stages which would allow one to pass from Vedic studentship to householder to forest dwelling hermit to renouncer 50 However these texts differ with each other Yajnavalkya Smṛti for example differs from Manusmṛti and states in verse 3 56 that one may skip Vanaprastha forest dwelling retired stage and go straight from the Grihastha householder stage to Sannyasa Who may renounce Edit The question as to which vaṛṇa may or may not renounce is never explicitly stated in ancient or medieval dharma literature the more modern Dharmasastras texts discuss much of renunciation stage in context of dvija men 51 Nevertheless Dharmasastra texts document people of all castes as well as women entered Sannyasa in practice 52 What happened to renouncers property and human rights Edit After renouncing the world the ascetic s financial obligations and property were adjudicated by the state in the manner of a decedent s estate 53 Viṣṇu Smriti in verse 6 27 for example states that if a debtor takes Sannyasa his sons or grandsons should settle his debts 54 As to the little property a Sannyasin may collect or possess after renunciation Book III Chapter XVI of Kautiliya s Arthashastra states that the property of hermits vanaprastha ascetics yati sannyasa and student bachelors Brahmachari shall on their death be taken by their guru disciples their dharmabhratri brother in the monastic order or classmates in succession 55 Although a renouncer s practitioner s obligations and property rights were reassigned he or she continued to enjoy basic human rights such as the protection from injury by others and the freedom to travel Likewise someone practicing Sannyasa was subject to the same laws as common citizens stealing harming or killing a human being by a Sannyasi were all serious crimes in Kautiliya s Arthashastra 56 Renunciation in daily life Edit Later Indian literature debates whether the benefit of renunciation can be achieved moksha or liberation without asceticism in the earlier stages of one s life For example Bhagavad Gita Vidyaranya s Jivanmukti Viveka and others believed that various alternate forms of yoga and the importance of yogic discipline could serve as paths to spirituality and ultimately moksha 57 58 Over time four paths to liberating spirituality have emerged in Hinduism Jnana yoga Bhakti yoga Karma yoga and Raja yoga 59 Acting without greed or craving for results in Karma yoga for example is considered a form of detachment in daily life similar to Sannyasa Sharma 60 states that the basic principle of Karma yoga is that it is not what one does but how one does it that counts and if one has the know how in this sense one can become liberated by doing whatever it is one does and one must do whatever one does without attachment to the results with efficiency and to the best of one s ability 60 Warrior ascetics Edit The Mughal Army commanded by Akbar attack members of the Sannyasa during the Battle of Thanesar 1567 Ascetic life was historically a life of renunciation non violence and spiritual pursuit However in India this has not always been the case For example after the Mongol and Persian Islamic invasions in the 12th century and the establishment of Delhi Sultanate the ensuing Hindu Muslim conflicts provoked the creation of a military order of Hindu ascetics in India 6 7 These warrior ascetics formed paramilitary groups called Akharas and they invented a range of martial arts 6 Nath Siddhas of the 12th century AD may have been the earliest Hindu monks to resort to a military response after the Muslim conquest 61 Ascetics by tradition led a nomadic and unattached lifestyle As these ascetics dedicated themselves to rebellion their groups sought stallions developed techniques for spying and targeting and they adopted strategies of war against Muslim nobles and the Sultanate state Many of these groups were devotees of Hindu deity Mahadeva and were called Mahants 6 Other popular names for them was Sannyasis Yogis Nagas followers of Shiva Bairagis followers of Vishnu and Gosains from the 16th to the 19th centuries in some cases these Hindu monks cooperated with Muslim fakirs who were Sufi and also persecuted 7 Warrior monks continued their rebellion through the Mughal Empire and became a political force during the early years of British Raj In some cases these regiments of soldier monks shifted from guerrilla campaigns to war alliances and these Hindu warrior monks played a key role in helping British establish themselves in India 62 The significance of warrior ascetics rapidly declined with the consolidation of British Raj in late 19th century and with the rise in non violence movement by Mahatma Gandhi 6 Novetzke states that some of these Hindu warrior ascetics were treated as folk heroes aided by villagers and townspeople because they targeted figures of political and economic power in a discriminatory state and some of these warriors paralleled Robin Hood s lifestyle 63 Sannyasa Upanishads EditOf the 108 Upanishads of the Muktika the largest corpus is dedicated to Sannyasa and to Yoga or about 20 each with some overlap The renunciation related texts are called the Sannyasa Upanishads 64 These are as follows Veda SannyasaṚigveda NirvaṇaSamaveda Aruṇeya Maitreya Sannyasa KuṇḍikaKrishna Yajurveda Brahma Avadhuta 65 See KathashrutiShukla Yajurveda Jabala Paramahaṃsa Advayataraka Bhikṣuka Turiyatita Yajnavalkya SaṭyayaniAtharvaveda Ashrama 66 Naradaparivrajaka Parivrat Paramahaṃsa parivrajaka ParabrahmaAmong the thirteen major or Principal Upanishads all from the ancient era many include sections related to Sannyasa 67 For example the motivations and state of a Sannyasi are mentioned in Maitrayaṇi Upanishad a classical major Upanishad that Robert Hume included among his list of Thirteen Principal Upanishads of Hinduism 68 Maitrayaṇi starts with the question given the nature of life how is joy possible and how can one achieve moksha liberation in later sections it offers a debate on possible answers and its views on Sannyasa 69 In this body infected with passions anger greed delusion fright despondency grudge separation from what is dear and desirable attachment to what is not desirable hunger thirst old age death illness sorrow and the rest how can one experience only joy Hymn I 3The drying up of great oceans the crumbling down of the mountains the instability of the pole star the tearing of the wind chords the sinking down the submergence of the earth the tumbling down of the gods from their place in a world in which such things occur how can one experience only joy Hymn I 4 Maitrayaniya Upanishad Translated by Paul Deussen 70 Dragged away and polluted by the river of the Gunas personality one becomes rootless tottering broken down greedy uncomposed and falling in the delusion of I consciousness he imagines I am this this is mine and binds himself like a bird in the net Hymn VI 30Just as the fire without fuel comes to rest in its place so also the passive mind comes to rest in its source When it mind is infatuated by the objects of sense he falls away from truth and acts Mind alone is the Samsara one should purify it with diligence You are what your mind is a mystery a perpetual one The mind which is serene cancels all actions good and bad He who himself serene remains steadfast in himself he attains imperishable happiness Hymn VI 34 Maitrayaniya Upanishad Translated by Paul Deussen 71 Six of the Sannyasa Upanishads Aruni Kundika Kathashruti Paramahamsa Jabala and Brahma were composed before the 3rd century CE likely in the centuries before or after the start of the common era states Sprockhoff the Asrama Upanishad is dated to the 3rd century the Naradaparivrajaka and Satyayaniya Upanishads to around the 12th century and about ten of the remaining Sannyasa Upanishads are dated to have been composed in the 14th to 15th century CE well after the start of Islamic Sultanates period of South Asia in late 12th century 72 73 The oldest Sannyasa Upanishads have a strong Advaita Vedanta outlook and these pre date Adi Shankara 74 Most of the Sannyasa Upanishads present a Yoga and nondualism Advaita Vedanta philosophy 75 This may be states Patrick Olivelle because major Hindu monasteries of early medieval period 1st millennium CE belonged to the Advaita Vedanta tradition 76 The 12th century Shatyayaniya Upanishad is a significant exception which presents qualified dualistic and Vaishnavism Vishishtadvaita Vedanta philosophy 76 77 See also EditBrahmacharya Grihastha Jangam Sannyasi Gymnosophist Monk Neo sannyas Nun Purvashrama Sanyasa yoga Swami Sharnanandji Vairagya Vanaprastha YogiNotes Edit An alternate term for either is sannyasin 4 References Edit a b RK Sharma 1999 Indian Society Institutions and Change ISBN 978 8171566655 page 28 S Radhakrishnan 1922 The Hindu Dharma International Journal of Ethics 33 1 1 22 DP Bhawuk 2011 The Paths of Bondage and Liberation in Spirituality and Indian Psychology Springer ISBN 978 1 4419 8109 7 pages 93 110 Alessandro Monti 2002 Hindu Masculinities Across the Ages Updating the Past L Harmattan Italia pp 41 101 111 ISBN 978 88 88684 03 1 Archived from the original on 1 March 2017 Retrieved 28 February 2017 Harvey J Sindima 2009 Introduction to Religious Studies University Press of America ISBN 978 0761847618 pages 93 94 99 100 a b c d e David N Lorenzen 1978 Warrior Ascetics in Indian History Archived 5 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine Journal of the American Oriental Society 98 1 61 75 a b c William Pinch 2012 Warrior Ascetics and Indian Empires Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1107406377 saMnyAsa Archived 20 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine Monier Williams Sanskrit English Dictionary Cologne Digital Sanskrit Lexicon Germany a b Angus Stevenson and Maurice Wait 2011 Concise Oxford English Dictionary ISBN 978 019 9601080 page 1275 a b c d Patrick Olivelle 1981 Contributions to the Semantic History of Saṃnyasa Journal of the American Oriental Society Vol 101 No 3 pages 265 274 pravrajitA Archived 1 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine Sanskrit English Dictionary Koeln University Germany yatin Archived 1 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine Sanskrit English Dictionary Koeln University Germany a b c Jamison and Witzel 1992 Vedic Hinduism Archived 13 April 2018 at the Wayback Machine Harvard University Archives page 47 JF Sprockhoff 1981 Aranyaka und Vanaprastha in der vedischen Literatur Neue Erwagungen zu einer alten Legende und ihren Problemen Wiener Zeitschrift fur die Kunde Sudasiens und Archiv fur Indische Philosophie Wien 25 pages 19 90 JF Sprockhoff 1976 Sanyasa Quellenstudien zur Askese im Hinduismus I Untersuchungen uber die Sannyasa Upaninshads Wiesbaden OCLC 644380709 Patrick Olivelle 1976 Vasudevasrama Yatidharmaprakasa a treatise on world renunciation Brill Netherlands OCLC 4113269 a b GS Ghurye 1952 Ascetic Origins Sociological Bulletin Vol 1 No 2 pages 162 184 For Sanskrit original Rigveda Archived 14 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine Wikisource For English translation Kesins Rig Veda Hymn CXXXVI Ralph Griffith Translator Arthur Llewellyn Basham The Origins and Development of Classical Hinduism OCLC 19066012 ISBN 978 0807073001 a b M Khandelwal 2003 Women in Ochre Robes Gendering Hindu Renunciation State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0791459225 pages 24 29 In practice women for example entered Sannyasa in enough numbers that Chanakya s Arthashastra in 3rd century BC mentions women ascetics प रव रज त pravrajita in several chapters see for example R Shamasastry Translator Chapter 23 page 160 also page 551 a b A A Ramanathan Sannyasa Upanishad Archived 1 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine The Theosophical Publishing House Chennai verses 2 23 2 29 a b Mariasusai Dhavamony 2002 Hindu Christian Dialogue Theological Soundings and Perspectives ISBN 978 9042015104 page 97 a b SS Subramuniyaswami The Two Paths of Dharma p 102 at Google Books in What Is Hinduism Editors of Hinduism Today Jan Mar 2006 ISBN 978 1934145005 page 102 a b c Gavin Flood 2005 The Ascetic Self Subjectivity Memory and Tradition Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521604017 Chapter 4 with pages 105 107 in particular A Bhattacharya 2009 Applied Ethics Center for Applied Ethics and Philosophy Hokkaido University ISBN 978 4990404611 pages 63 64 Andrew Fort and Patricia Mumme 1996 Living Liberation in Hindu Thought ISBN 978 0 7914 2706 4 NE Thomas 1988 Liberation for Life A Hindu Liberation Philosophy Missiology An International Review 16 2 149 162 Knut Jacobsen 2011 in Jessica Frazier Editor The Bloomsbury companion to Hindu studies Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 1472511515 pages 74 83 Klaus Klostermaier 1985 Mokṣa and Critical Theory Philosophy East and West 35 1 61 71 Andrew Fort 1998 Jivanmukti in Transformation State University of New York Press ISBN 0 7914 3904 6 Lynn Denton 2004 Female Ascetics in Hinduism State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0791461808 page 100 M Khandelwal 2003 Women in Ochre Robes Gendering Hindu Renunciation State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0791459225 pages 34 40 173 P Van der Veer 1987 Taming the ascetic Devotionalism in a Hindu monastic order Man 22 4 680 695 a b English Translation 1 Jeaneane D Fowler 2012 The Bhagavad Gita A Text and Commentary for Students Sussex Academic Press ISBN 978 1845193461 page 93 English Translation 2 Edwin Arnold Bhagavad Gita Chapter 5 Wikisource a b Mariasusai Dhavamony 2002 Hindu Christian Dialogue Theological Soundings and Perspectives ISBN 978 9042015104 page 96 97 111 114 Barbara Powell 2010 Windows into the Infinite A Guide to the Hindu Scriptures Asian Humanities Press ISBN 978 0875730714 pages 292 297 KN Tiwari 2009 Comparative Religion Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120802933 pages 33 35 a b Max Muller Translator Baudhayana Dharmasutra Prasna II Adhyaya 10 Kandika 18 The Sacred Books of the East Vol XIV Oxford University Press pages 279 281 The Samnyasa Upanisads Hindu Scriptures on Asceticism and Renunciation 13 February 1992 pp 98 99 ISBN 9780195361377 Archived from the original on 27 December 2021 Retrieved 18 September 2014 The Samnyasa Upanisads Hindu Scriptures on Asceticism and Renunciation 13 February 1992 p 99 ISBN 9780195361377 Archived from the original on 27 December 2021 Retrieved 18 September 2014 MM Singh 1967 Life in North Eastern India in Pre Mauryan Times at Google Books Motilal Banarsidass pages 131 139 a b c Barbara Holdrege 2004 Dharma in The Hindu World Editors Sushil Mittal and Gene Thursby Routledge ISBN 0 41521527 7 page 231 Olivelle 1993 pp 25 34 translates them as classes e g see footnote 70 while other authors translate them as castes a b Patrick Olivelle 1993 The Ashrama System The History and Hermeneutics of a Religious Institution Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195344783 Patrick Olivelle 1993 The Ashrama System The History and Hermeneutics of a Religious Institution Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195344783 page 94 Alban Widgery 1930 The Principles of Hindu Ethics Archived 3 October 2022 at the Wayback Machine International Journal of Ethics 40 2 232 245 What is Hinduism Editors of Hinduism Today Two noble paths of Dharma p 101 at Google Books Family Life and Monastic Life Chapter 10 with page 101 in particular a b Max Muller Translator Baudhayana Dharmasutra Prasna II Adhyaya 10 Kandika 17 The Sacred Books of the East Vol XIV Oxford University Press Dharm Bhawuk 2011 Spirituality and Indian Psychology Lessons from the Bhagavad Gita Springer Science ISBN 978 1441981097 page 66 See Olivelle 1993 pp 84 106 discussion of the development of the asrama system in Renouncer and Renunciation in the Dharmasastras See Olivelle 1993 p 111 Renouncer and Renunciation in the Dharmasastras p 111 For more references to renunciation by Sudras and women see Olivelle 1993 pp 111 115 Renouncer and Renunciation in the Dharmasastras See Olivelle 1993 pp 89 91 Saṃnyasa Upaniṣads Law of Debt Vishnu Smriti Julius Jolly Translator page 45 Arthashastra CHAPTER XVI RESUMPTION OF GIFTS SALE WITHOUT OWNERSHIP AND OWNERSHIP Book III Wikisource See for example Arthasastra CHAPTER X Fines in Lieu of Mutilation of Limbs Book IV Wikisource see also Book IV Chapter XI which declared murder of an ascetic as a capital crime Andrew O Fort and Patricia Y Mumme 1996 Living Liberation in Hindu Thought State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0791427057 pages 8 12 Gavin Flood 2005 The Ascetic Self Subjectivity Memory and Tradition Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521604017 pages 60 74 Thor Johansen 2009 Religion and Spirituality in Psychotherapy An Individual Psychology Perspective Springer ISBN 978 0826103857 pages 148 154 a b A Sharma 2000 Classical Hindu Thought An Introduction Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195644418 pages 24 28 Alf Hiltebeitel Their name is Legion in Rethinking India s Oral and Classical Epics University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226340500 page 332 334 and footnote 104 on page 333 P van der Veer 2007 Book Review The American Historical Review 112 1 177 178 doi 10 1086 ahr 112 1 177 Christian Novetzke 2011 Religion and Public Memory A Cultural History of Saint Namdev in India Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0231141857 pages 173 175 Patrick Olivelle 1998 Upaniṣhads Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199540259 Note This exists in two manuscripts Brihat and Laghu Olivelle Patrick 1992 The Samnyasa Upanisads Oxford University Press pp x xi ISBN 978 0195070453 Paul Deussen Translator Sixty Upanisads of the Veda Vol 2 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120814684 pages 568 763 767 Olivelle Patrick 1992 The Samnyasa Upanisads Oxford University Press pp x xi 4 9 ISBN 978 0195070453 Hume Robert Ernest 1921 The Thirteen Principal Upanishads Oxford University Press Paul Deussen Translator Sixty Upanisads of the Veda Vol 1 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120814684 pages 327 386 Paul Deussen Translator Sixty Upanisads of the Veda Vol 1 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120814684 pages 332 333 Paul Deussen Translator Sixty Upanisads of the Veda Vol 1 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120814684 pages 367 373 Olivelle Patrick 1992 The Samnyasa Upanisads Oxford University Press pp x xi 8 18 ISBN 978 0195070453 Sprockhoff Joachim F 1976 Samnyasa Quellenstudien zur Askese im Hinduismus in German Wiesbaden Kommissionsverlag Franz Steiner pp 277 294 319 377 ISBN 978 3515019057 Stephen H Phillips 1995 Classical Indian Metaphysics Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0812692983 page 332 with note 68 Antonio Rigopoulos 1998 Dattatreya The Immortal Guru Yogin and Avatara State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0791436967 pages 62 63 a b Olivelle Patrick 1992 The Samnyasa Upanisads Oxford University Press pp 17 18 ISBN 978 0195070453 Antonio Rigopoulos 1998 Dattatreya The Immortal Guru Yogin and Avatara State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0791436967 page 81 note 27 Cited books Olivelle Patrick 1993 The Ashrama System The History and Hermeneutics of a Religious Institution Oxford University Press OCLC 466428084 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sannyasa Articles on aspects of Sannyasa Vairagya and Brahmacharya The Song of the Sannyasin poem by Swami Vivekananda Vows Of Sannyasa Saiva Siddhanta Example covenant between a Hindu Sannyasin and a Hindu Monastic Order PDF download Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sannyasa amp oldid 1144093812, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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