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Lingam

A lingam (Sanskrit: लिङ्ग IAST: liṅga, lit. "sign, symbol or mark"), sometimes referred to as linga or Shiva linga, is an abstract or aniconic representation of the Hindu god Shiva in Shaivism.[1] It is typically the primary murti or devotional image in Hindu temples dedicated to Shiva, also found in smaller shrines, or as self-manifested natural objects.[2][3] It is often represented within a disc-shaped platform,[1][4] the yoni – its feminine counterpart,[5][6] consisting of a flat element, horizontal compared to the vertical lingam, and designed to allow liquid offerings to drain away for collection. Together, they symbolize the merging of microcosmos and macrocosmos,[6] the divine eternal process of creation and regeneration, and the union of the feminine and the masculine that recreates all of existence.[7][8]

A lingam with tripundra, projected on a yoni base

The original meaning of lingam as "sign" is used in Shvetashvatara Upanishad, which says "Shiva, the Supreme Lord, has no liūga", liuga (Sanskrit: लि‌ऊग IAST: liūga) meaning he is transcendental, beyond any characteristic and, specifically, the sign of gender.[9][10] Lingam is regarded as the "outward symbol" of the "formless Reality", the symbolization of merging of the 'primordial matter' (Prakṛti) with the 'pure consciousness' (Purusha) in transcendental context.[11]

The metaphorical creative principle of lingam-yoni, the union of the feminine and the masculine, the eternal cosmological process of creation is also depicted in Chinese philosophy of Yin and Yang,[12][13] where etymologically and semantically Yin represents the feminine, half-unity of consciousness and Yang denotes the masculine, the other half, together symbolizing the entirety or unity-consciousness in the creation.[12] The lingam is conceptualized both as an emblem of generative and destructive power,[7][14] particularly in the esoteric Kaula and Tantra practices, as well as the Shaivism and Shaktism traditions of Hinduism.[15]

"Lingam" is found in Sanskrit texts, such as Shvetashvatara Upanishad, Samkhya, Vaisheshika and others texts with the meaning of "evidence, proof" of God and God's existence,[20] or existence of formless Brahman.[21] Lingam iconography found at archaeological sites of the Indian subcontinent and southeast Asia includes simple cylinders set inside a yoni; mukhalinga rounded pillars with carvings such as of one or more mukha (faces); and anatomically realistic representations of a phallus such as on the Gudimallam Lingam.[note 1][25] In the Shaiva traditions, the lingam is regarded as a form of spiritual iconography.[26][27][28]

Nomenclature and significance

 
Lingam as interpreted in the Shaiva Siddhanta tradition, a major school of Shaivism. The upper and lower parts represent Parashiva and Parashakti perfections of Lord Shiva.

Lingam, states Monier Monier-Williams, appears in the Upanishads and epic literature, where it means a "mark, sign, emblem, characteristic".[18][27] Other contextual meanings of the term include "evidence, proof, symptom" of God and God's power.[18][19] The term also appears in early Indian texts on logic, where an inference is based on a sign (linga), such as "if there is smoke, there is fire" where the linga is the smoke.[18] It is a religious symbol in Hinduism representing Shiva as the generative power,[27] all of existence, all creativity and fertility at every cosmic level.[5][29]

The lingam of the Shaivism tradition is a short cylindrical pillar-like symbol of Shiva, made of stone, metal, gem, wood, clay or precious stones.[30][1][31] According to Encyclopædia Britannica, the lingam is a votary aniconic object found in the sanctum of Shiva temples and private shrines that symbolizes Shiva and is "revered as an emblem of generative power".[1] It often is found within a lipped, disked structure that is an emblem of goddess Shakti and this is called the yoni. Together they symbolize the union of the feminine and the masculine principles, and "the totality of all existence", states Encyclopædia Britannica.[1]

According to Alex Wayman, given the Shaiva philosophical texts and spiritual interpretations, various works on Shaivism by some Indian authors "deny that the linga is a phallus".[26] To the Shaivites, a linga is neither a phallus nor do they practice the worship of erotic penis-vulva, rather the linga-yoni is a symbol of cosmic mysteries, the creative powers and the metaphor for the spiritual truths of their faith.[32] For example, according to Swami Sivananda, the corelation of the linga and phallus is wrong; the Lingam is only the external symbol of Lord Shiva's formless being. He further states that it is the light or power of consciousness, manifesting from Sadashiva.[33]

The popular belief is that the Siva Lingam represents the phallus or the virile organ, the emblem of the generative power or principle in nature. This is not only a serious mistake but a grave blunder. In the post-Vedic period, the Linga has become symbolic of the generative power of Lord Siva. Linga is the differentiating mark. It is certainly not the sex mark.[34]

According to Sivaya Subramuniyaswami, the lingam signifies three perfections of Shiva.[35] The upper oval part of the Shivalingam represents Parashiva and lower part of the Shivalingam, called the pitha, represents Parashakti.[35] In Parashiva perfection, Shiva is the absolute reality, the timeless, formless and spaceless. In Parashakti perfection, Shiva is all-pervasive, pure consciousness, power and primal substance of all that exists and it has form unlike Parashiva which is formless.[36][9] According to Rohit Dasgupta, the lingam symbolizes Shiva in Hinduism, and it is also a phallic symbol.[5] Since the 19th century, states Dasgupta, the popular literature has represented the lingam as the male sex organ. This view contrasts with the traditional abstract values they represent in Shaivism wherein the lingam-yoni connote the masculine and feminine principles in the entirety of creation and all existence.[5]

According to Sivananda Saraswati, Siva Lingam speaks unmistakable language of silence: "I am one without a second, I am formless".[37] Siva Lingam is only the outward symbol of formless being, Lord Siva, who is eternal, ever-pure, immortal essence of this vast universe, who is your innermost Self or Atman, and who is identical with the Supreme Brahman, states Sivananda Saraswati.[37]

Scholars, such as Wendy Doniger and Rohit Dasgupta, view linga as extrapolations of what was originally a phallic symbol.[38][39][40][41] This interpretation is criticized by Stella Kramrisch[42] and Moriz Winternitz who opines that the linga in the Shiva tradition is "only a symbol of the productive and creative principle of nature as embodied in Shiva", and it has no historical trace in any obscene phallic cult.[43]

History

Archeological finds from Indus Valley civilisation

 
Stone lingam and yoni pedestal found in Cát Tiên, Vietnam, circa 8th century. At 2.1 meter tall, this is the largest lingam ever found in Southeast Asia

According to Chakrabarti, "some of the stones found in Mohenjodaro are unmistakably phallic stones". These are dated to some time before 2300 BCE. Similarly, states Chakrabarti, the Kalibangan site of Harappa has a small terracotta representation that "would undoubtedly be considered the replica of a modern Shivlinga [a tubular stone]."[44] According to Encyclopædia Britannica, while Harappan discoveries include "short cylindrical pillars with rounded tops", there is no evidence that the people of Indus Valley Civilization worshipped these artifacts as lingams.[1] According to Srinivasan, in the Harappan sites, objects that resemble "lingam" have been found.[45] That includes "a seated trident-headed ithyphallic figure", which was found on Indus seals, "has been compared to Shiva as meditating ascetic", states Srinivasan.[45][46]

 
A Buddhist stupa (above) may have influenced the later iconography of the Hindu Shiva-linga, according to Swami Vivekananda.[47][note 2]

The colonial-era archaeologists John Marshall and Ernest Mackay proposed that certain artifacts found at Harappan sites may be evidence of yoni-linga worship in Indus Valley Civilization.[49] Scholars such as Arthur Llewellyn Basham dispute whether such artifacts discovered at the archaeological sites of Indus Valley sites are yoni.[49][50] For example, Jones and Ryan state that lingam/yoni shapes have been recovered from the archaeological sites at Harappa and Mohenjo-daro, part of the Indus Valley civilisation.[51][52] In contrast, Indologist Wendy Doniger states that this relatively rare artifact can be interpreted in many ways and has unduly been used for wild speculations such as being a linga. Another Indus stamp seal often called the Pashupati seal, states Doniger, has an image with a general resemblance with Shiva and "the Indus people may well have created the symbolism of the divine phallus", but given the available evidence we cannot be certain, nor do we know that it had the same meaning as some currently project them to might have meant.[53]

According to the Indologist Asko Parpola, "it is true that Marshall's and Mackay's hypotheses of linga and yoni worship by the Harappans has rested on rather slender grounds, and that for instance, the interpretation of the so-called ring-stones as yonis seems untenable".[49] He quotes Dales 1984 paper, which states "with the single exception of the unidentified photography of a realistic phallic object in Marshall's report, there is no archaeological evidence to support claims of special sexually-oriented aspects of Harappan religion".[49] However, adds Parpola, a re-examination at Indus Valley sites suggest that the Mackay's hypothesis cannot be ruled out because erotic and sexual scenes such as ithyphallic males, naked females, a human couple having intercourse and trefoil imprints have now been identified at the Harappan sites.[49] The "finely polished circular stand" found by Mackay may be yoni although it was found without the linga. The absence of linga, states Parpola, maybe because it was made from wood which did not survive.[49]

Shvetashvatara Upanishad

Shvetashvatara Upanishad states that, of the three significations of Lingam, the primary one is "the imperishable Purusha", the absolute reality,[10] whereby the linga is "sign", a mark that provides the existence of Brahman,[9][54] which is itself formless.[21] Furthermore, it mentioned that Shiva is transcendent, beyond any characteristic or liūga, specifically the sign of gender.[9] Linga, "sign", not only signifies the existence of perceptible "things" but also denotes the imperceptible essence of "a thing" or pieces of Brahman called Atma[54] even before that thing has come to exist in any concrete form.[note 3] The imperceptible essence of "a thing", in its potentiality, is the liūga of the thing.[9]

The insight of the Shvetashvatara Upanishad conveyed through the word liūga is formulated explicitly in Samkhya and schools of Yoga or ways of looking at things, that is, looking at their appearance and at Ultimate Reality.[9] Liriga here denotes the subtle body, (liṇga śarīra) underlying and ontologically preceding anything perceptible.[9] The perceptible state, in this context, is the gross body (sthūla śarīra), or concrete reality as it appears to the sense organs. In between the Ultimate and concrete reality is Prakṛti, also called Pradhana[9] which is the imperceptible substratum of the manifest world or pre-matter.[55] Out of this imperceptible cosmic substance, all things have come out, and to which they will return ultimately.[9]

The three Gunas are Sattva, Rajas, and Tamas. The function as tendencies through the principles and powers of cosmic substance cohere are Buddhi, "cosmic intelligence or revelation"; Ahamkara, "individuation"; and Manas, "Mind". From these evolve the power (Indriya) of cognition that enables hearing, feeling, seeing, tasting, and smelling and their corresponding subtle elements to exist.[9] From these supersensible (Tanmatras), the sense particulars (Mahābhūta) come into being.[9] They are Ether or space (Akasha), air (Vayu), fire (Agni), water (Ap), and earth (Bhumi), the Pancha Bhootas.[56][57] They are the vehicles of the Tanmatras, and constitute the gross body of concrete, perceptible, and particularized reality. The Subtle body (liṇga śarīra) is the subtle prototype of the gross body, the imperceptible stuff of energy by which all phenomena are projected into concrete reality, like fire from its latency.[56] The subtle body, itself changeless, accompanies the life-of-the-individual (Jiva) through the cycles of birth and deaths and is finally reabsorbed into the principles and powers of which it was composed of.[56]

Linga Purana

The Linga Purana states, "Shiva is signless, without color, taste, smell, that is beyond word or touch, without quality, motionless and changeless".[58] The source of the universe is the signless, and all of the universe is the manifested Linga, a union of unchanging principle and the ever changing nature.[58] The Linga Purana and Siva Gita texts builds on this foundation.[59][60] Linga, states Alain Daniélou, means sign.[58] It is an important concept in Hindu texts, wherein Linga is a manifested sign and nature of someone or something. It accompanies the concept of Brahman, which as invisible signless and existent Principle, is formless or linga-less.[58]

Vedic literature

The word lingam is not found in the Rigveda,[61] or the other Vedas.[62] However, Rudra (proto-Shiva) is found in the Vedic literature.[61][63] Worship of the lingam was not a part of the Vedic religion. The worship of the lingam originated from the famous hymn in the Atharva Veda Samhita sung in praise of the Yupa-Stambha, the sacrificial post. In that hymn, a description is found of the beginningless and endless Stambha or Skambha, and it is shown that the said Skambha is put in place of the eternal Brahman. Just as the Yajna (sacrificial) fire, its smoke, ashes, and flames, the Soma plant, and the ox that used to carry on its back the wood for the Vedic sacrifice gave place to the conceptions of the brightness of Shiva's body, his tawny matted hair, his blue throat, and the riding on the bull of the Shiva, the Yupa-Skambha gave place in time to the Shiva-Linga.[64][65] In the text Linga Purana, the same hymn is expanded in the shape of stories, meant to establish the glory of the great Stambha and the superiority of Shiva as Mahadeva.[65]

There is a hymn in the Atharvaveda that praises a pillar (stambha), and this is one possible origin of linga worship.[66] According to Swami Vivekananda, the Shiva-linga had origins in the idea of Yupa-Stambha or Skambha of the Vedic rituals, where the term meant the sacrificial post which was then idealized as the eternal Brahman. The Yupa-Skambha gave place in time to the Shiva-Linga, quite possibly with influence from Buddhism's stupa shaped like the top of a stone linga, according to Vivekananda.[47][65]

Early iconography and temples

The Gudimallam Lingam, one of the oldest examples of a lingam, is still in worship in the Parashurameshwara temple, Gudimallam, in a hilly forest about 20 kilometres (12 mi) east of Tirupati in Andhra Pradesh.[67] It has been dated to the 3rd-century BCE,[1] or to the 2nd century BCE,[23] and is mostly accepted to be from the 3rd- to 1st-century BCE,[68] though some later dates have been proposed. The stone lingam is clearly a representation of an anatomically accurate phallus, with a figure of Lakulisha, the ascetic manifestation of Shiva,[45] carved on the front, holding an antelope and axe in his hands.[68][69] He stands on top of a Apasmara (demon) dwarf, who symbolizes spiritual ignorance, greed, sensual desires or Kama and nonsensical speech on the spiritual path, hence must be subdued in spiritual pursuits.[70][71][72]

In this earliest representation, the phallic representation illustrates of the centrality of the energetic principle of Urdhva Retas (Sanskrit: ऊर्ध्वरेतस् IAST: Ūrdhvaretas, lit. "ascent of vital energies or fluid") the upward flow of energy in spiritual pursuits and practice of celibacy (Brahmacarya),[73] contrary to fertility or release of vital energies.[74][75][76][77][78] Lakulisa as an ascetic manifestation of Shiva is seen in later peninsular Indian scriptures whose ithyphallic aspects connotes asceticism and conserved procreative potentialities (Brahmacarya or celibacy), rather than mere eroticism.[45][79] According to Stella Kramrisch, the pictorial symbol of the Gudimallam lingam should not be mistaken for fertility or sexuality due to incomplete or impure understanding of the underlying refined principles.[note 4][81]

The Bhita linga – now at the Lucknow museum – is also dated to about the 2nd century BCE, and has four directional faces on the pillar and a Brahmi script inscription at the bottom.[82][83][84] Above the four faces, the Bhita linga has the bust of a male with his left hand holding a vase and the right hand in the abhaya (no-fear) mudra.[83][note 5] The pillar itself is, once again, a realistic depiction of phallus but neither symbolizes fertility nor sexuality, but the refined energetic principles of Urdhva Retas[note 6] during Sannyasa or Asceticism.[76][74][77][83][78]

 
Lingam from Angkor period on display at the National Museum of Cambodia. Discovered in Battambang Province (Cambodia), it is made of bronze, quartz and silver.

The Mathura archaeological site has revealed similar lingams, with a standing Shiva in front (2nd century CE) and with one or four faces around the pillar (1st to 3rd century CE).[87][88]

Numerous stone and cave temples from the mid to late 1st millennium feature lingams. The Bhumara Temple near Satna Madhya Pradesh, for example, is generally dated to late 5th-century Gupta Empire era, and it features an Ekamukha Lingam.[89][90]

Mahabharata

According to Wendy Doniger, lingam in the Mahabharata is represented as the phallic form which suggests Sthula sarira of Shiva,[68][91] although not the primary significance,[9] however it connotes much more than that.[56] The anthropomorphic shape, in this specific context, functions as the "subtle body" (Lińga Śarīra)[92] of Shiva in the Mahabharata.[56] It is a superabundant evocation of fierce potency on a cosmic scale, although it states crassly phallic.[56] Doniger further finds that Shiva was called by many names, including Rudra or the Lord of the Mountain.[68] Chapter 10.17 of the Mahabharata also refers to the word sthanu in the sense of an "inanimate pillar" as well as a "name of Shiva, signifying the immobile, ascetic, desexualized form of the lingam", as it recites the legend involving Shiva, Brahma and Prajapati.[68][93] This mythology weaves two polarities, one where the lingam represents the potentially procreative phallus (fertile lingam) and its opposite "a pillar-like renouncer of sexuality" (ascetic lingam), states Doniger.[68]

Puranas

According to Shiva Purana, the legend about the origin of the phallic form of Shiva is that some brahmin devotees of Shiva were highly engrossed in the meditation of Shiva. In the meantime, Shiva came in a hideous naked ascetic form with ashes smeared all over his body holding his phallus, to test the devotion of his devotees. The wives of the sages were scared at this sight but some embraced the holy ascetic. Although Shiva put them to test, the sages and wives did not recognize him.[94] The sages were stupefied and deluded by Śiva's power of illusion, māyā,[94][95] became infuriated at this sight and cursed ascetic form of Shiva[95]

“You are acting pervertedly. This violates the Vedic path. Hence let your penis fall on the ground.”

Although the sages were also ascetics, only because they observed established conventions, they failed when Shiva tested them with his outrageous ways.[94] The purpose of Shiva's visit to the hermitage, the place where the sages were living with their wives, was to enlighten the false sages by allowing them to humiliate him.[96] But the sages were lost in anger, but Shiva allowed himself to be humiliated in the image that met the eye of the sages.[96] Even though Shiva excited some of them as the source of their desire, they were unable to see him as the killer of desires.[97] Although Shiva revealed his true nature by his dance (Tandava), yet so great was his power of illusion (māyā), the deluded sages did not recognize him.[97] That falling phallus burnt everything in front; wherever it went it began to burn everything there. It went to all three Hindu worlds (hell, heaven, earth). All the worlds and the people were distressed. The sages couldn't recognise it as Shiva and sought refuge from Brahma.

Brahma answered that they should pray to Parvati to assume a form of vaginal passage, and perform a procedure reciting vedic mantras and decorating the penis with flowers etc., so that the penis would become steady. As the phallus was held by Parvati in that form, an auspicion arrow formed. The pedestal shaped as the vagina and the phallus fixed therein are symbolic of the eternal creative forces personified as Śivā and Śiva. After the procedure was completed, the penis became static. This phallus was known as "hatesa" and "Siva Siva".[95] In one version of the story found in Vamana Purana, Shiva's visit to the hermitage in Deodar forests was an act of grace at Parvati's request.[94]

 
Lingodbhava is a Shaiva sectarian icon where Shiva is depicted rising from the Lingam (an infinite fiery pillar) that narrates how Shiva is the foremost of the Trimurti; Brahma on the left and Vishnu on the right are depicted bowing to Shiva in the centre.

The Shiva Purana also describes the origin of the lingam, known as Shiva-linga, as the beginning-less and endless cosmic pillar (Stambha) of fire, the cause of all causes. Shiva is pictured as emerging from the lingam – the cosmic pillar of fire – proving his superiority over the gods Brahma and Vishnu. It also describes right way to worship Shiva linga in its 11th chapter in detail [98][99][100] This is known as Lingodbhava. The Linga Purana also supports this interpretation of lingam as a cosmic pillar, symbolizing the infinite nature of Shiva.[100][47][65] According to the Linga Purana, the lingam is a complete symbolic representation of the formless Universe Bearer – the oval-shaped stone is the symbol of the Universe, and the bottom base represents the Supreme Power that holds the entire Universe in it.[37] A similar interpretation is also found in the Skanda Purana: "The endless sky (that great void which contains the entire universe) is the Linga, the Earth is its base. At the end of time the entire universe and all the Gods finally merge in the Linga itself."[101] In the Linga Purana, an Atharvaveda hymn is expanded with stories about the great Stambha and the supreme nature of Mahâdeva (the Great God, Shiva).[65]

Other literature

 
A linga-yoni in Nepal carved with four seated Buddhas.

In early Sanskrit medical texts, linga means "symptom, signs" and plays a key role in the diagnosis of a sickness, the disease.[102][103][104] The author of classical Sanskrit grammar treatise, Panini, states that the verbal root ling which means "paint, variegate", has the sense "that which paints, variegates, characterizes". Panini as well as Patanjali additionally mention lingam with the contextual meaning of the "gender".[105][106]

In the Vaisheshika Sutras, it means "proof or evidence", as a conditionally sufficient mark or sign. This Vaisheshika theory is adopted in the early Sanskrit medical literature.[16] Like the Upanishads, where linga means "mark, sign, characteristic", the texts of the Nyaya school of Hindu philosophy use linga in the same sense.[107][108] In the Samkhya sutras, and in Gaudapada's commentary on Samkhyakarika, the term linga has many contextual meanings such as in verses 1.124.136, 3.9.16 and 5.21.61, as it develops its theory of the nature of Atman (Self) and Sarira (body, prakriti) and its proposed mechanism of rebirth.[17][109] In the Purva Mimamsa Sutra and the Vedanta sutra, as well as the commentaries on them, the term linga appears quite often, particularly in the form of "lingadarsanacca" as a form of citing or referencing prior Hindu literature. This phrase connotes "[we have found an] indicative sign", such as the "indicative sign is in a Vedic passage".[110]

According to Doniger, there is persuasive evidence in later Sanskrit literature that the early Indians associated the lingam icon with the male sexual organ;[111] the 11th-century Kashmir text Narmamala by Kshemendra on satire and fiction writing explains his ideas on parallelism with divine lingam and human lingam in a sexual context. Various Shaiva texts, such as the Skanda Purana in section 1.8 states that all creatures have the signs of Shiva or Shakti through their lingam (male sexual organ) or pindi (female sexual organ).[111][112] According to Doniger, a part of the literature corpus regards lingam to be the phallus of Shiva, while another group of texts does not. Sexuality in the former is inherently sacred and spiritual, while the latter emphasizes the ascetic nature of Shiva and renunciation to be spiritual symbolism of lingam. This tension between the pursuit of spirituality through householder lifestyle and the pursuit of renunciate sannyasi lifestyle is historic, reflects the different interpretations of the lingam and what lingam worship means to its devotees. It remains a continuing debate within Hinduism to this day, states Doniger.[111] To one group, it is a part of Shiva's body and symbolically saguna Shiva (he in a physical form with attributes). To the other group, it is an abstract symbol of nirguna Shiva (he in the universal Absolute Reality, formless, without attributes).[111] In Tamil Shaiva tradition, for example, the common term for lingam is kuRi or "sign, mark" which is asexual.[111] Similarly, in Lingayatism tradition, the lingam is a spiritual symbol and "was never said to have any sexual connotations", according to Doniger.[111] To some Shaivites, it symbolizes the axis of the universe.[113]

The term linga also appears in Buddhist and Jaina literature, where it means "sign, evidence" in one context, or "subtle body" with sexual connotations in another.[114][note 7]

Muslim rule

In the 11th-century, after conquests of the subcontinent by Muslim rulers, several sultans of Delhi, often iconoclastic, regarded the lingam as sexual and anthropomorphic, and ordered as many be destroyed as possible.[115] In some situations, linga were deliberately laid at the thresholds of mosques for public usage and incorporated into Islamic architecture, notably at a mosque in Banbhore.[116]

Orientalist literature

The colonial era Orientalists and Christian missionaries, raised in the Victorian mold where sex and sexual imagery were a taboo subject, were shocked by and were hostile to the lingam-yoni iconography and reverence they witnessed.[5][117][118] The 19th and early 20th-century colonial and missionary literature described lingam-yoni, and related theology as obscene, corrupt, licentious, hyper-sexualized, puerile, impure, demonic and a culture that had become too feminine and dissolute.[5][119][120] To the Hindus, particularly the Shaivites, these icons and ideas were the abstract, a symbol of the entirety of creation and spirituality.[5] The colonial disparagement in part triggered the opposite reaction from Bengali nationalists, who more explicitly valorised the feminine. Swami Vivekananda called for the revival of the Mother Goddess as a feminine force, inviting his countrymen to "proclaim her to all the world with the voice of peace and benediction".[119]

According to Wendy Doniger, the terms lingam and yoni became explicitly associated with human sexual organs in the western imagination after the widely popular first Kamasutra translation by Sir Richard Burton in 1883.[121] In his translation, even though the original Sanskrit text does not use the words lingam or yoni for sexual organs, and almost always uses other terms, Burton adroitly avoided being viewed as obscene to the Victorian mindset by avoiding the use of words such as penis, vulva, vagina and other direct or indirect sexual terms in the Sanskrit text to discuss sex, sexual relationships and human sexual positions. Burton used the terms lingam and yoni instead throughout the translation.[121] This conscious and incorrect word substitution, states Doniger, thus served as an Orientalist means to "anthropologize sex, distance it, make it safe for English readers by assuring them, or pretending to assure them, that the text was not about real sexual organs, their sexual organs, but merely about the appendages of weird, dark people far away."[121] Similar Orientalist literature of the Christian missionaries and the British era, states Doniger, stripped all spiritual meanings and insisted on the Victorian vulgar interpretation only, which had "a negative effect on the self-perception that Hindus had of their own bodies" and they became "ashamed of the more sensual aspects of their own religious literature".[122] Some contemporary Hindus, states Doniger, in their passion to spiritualize Hinduism and for their Hindutva campaign have sought to sanitize the historic earthly sexual meanings, and insist on the abstract spiritual meaning only.[122]

Iconography and worship

 
 
Linga-yoni worship in different ways; Left: river, Right: temple.

The traditional lingam rituals in major Shiva temples includes offerings of flowers, grass, dried rice, fruits, leaves, water and a milk bath.[1] Priests chant hymns, while the devotees go to the sanctum for a darshana followed by a clockwise circumambulation of the sanctum.[1] On the sanctum walls, typically are reliefs of Dakshinamurti, Brahma and Vishnu. Often, near the sanctum are other shrines, particularly for Shakti (Durga), Ganesha and Murugan (Kartikeya). In the Hindu tradition, special pilgrimage sites include those where natural lingams are found in the form of cylindrical rocks or ice or rocky hill. These are called Svayambhuva lingam, and about 70 of these are known on the Indian subcontinent, the most significant being one in Kashi (Varanasi) followed by Prayaga, Naimisha and Gaya.[1][123]

The historic lingam iconography has included:

  • Mukhalingam, where the lingam has the face of Shiva carved on it.[124][125] An Ekmukha lingam has just one face, Chaturmukha lingam has four faces in the cardinal directions, while a Panchamukha lingam has a total of five (the fifth is on the top) and represents Sadashiva.[126][127] Among the mukha-lingam varieties, the four face version are more common.[128]
  • Ashtottara-sata linga, where 108 miniature lingas are carved on the pujabhaga (main linga) following certain geometric principles.[129]
 
 
Lingam iconography exists in many forms, and their design are described in the Agama texts. Left: a 5th-century Mukha-linga (with face), Right: a Sahasra-linga (with 1001 carvings).
  • Sahasra linga, where 1001 miniature lingas are carved on the pujabhaga (main linga) following certain geometric principles (set in 99 vertical lines, 11 horizontal).[130]
  • Dhara linga, where lingas have five to sixty four fluted facets, with prime numbers and multiples of four particularly favored.[131]
  • Lingodbhavamurti, where Shiva is seen as emerging from within a fiery lingam.[1] On top of this icon is sometimes a relief of a swan or goose representing Brahma, and a boar at the bottom representing the Varaha avatar of Vishnu. This reflects the Shaiva legend describing a competition between Brahma, Shiva and Vishnu, as to who has priority and superiority.[1]

A lingam may be made of clay (mrinmaya), metal (lohaja), precious stone (ratnaja), wood (daruja), stone (sailaja, most common), or a disposal material (kshanika).[31] The construction method, proportions and design is described in Shaiva Agama texts.[31] The lingam is typically set in the center of a pindika (also called yoni or pithas, symbolizing Shakti). A pindika may be circular, square, octagonal, hexagonal, duodecagonal, sixteen sided, elliptical, triangular or another shape.[132] Some lingams are miniaturized and they are carried on one's person, such as by Lingayats in a necklace. These are called chala-lingams.[31] The Hindu temple design manuals recommend geometric ratios for the linga, the sanctum and the various architectural features of the temple according to certain mathematical rules it considers perfect and sacred.[133] Anthropologist Christopher John Fuller states that although most sculpted images (murtis) are anthropomorphic or theriomorphic, the aniconic Shiva Linga is an important exception.[134]

According to Shaiva Siddhanta, the linga is the ideal substrate in which the worshipper should install and worship the five-faced and ten-armed Sadāśiva, the form of Shiva who is the focal divinity of that school of Shaivism.[135]

The various styles of lingam iconography are found on the Indian subcontinent and southeast Asia.[136][137]

Lingayatism

 
A necklace with linga-containing pendant is constantly worn by the Lingayats.[138]

Lingayats, a sect of the Shaivite religious tradition in India, wear a miniaturized linga called the istalinga.[139] Lingayats wear a lingam inside a necklace, called Ishtalinga.[140][141] Initially known as Veerashaivas (heroic worshippers of Shiva), since the 18th century adherents of this faith are known as Lingayats.[142] This tradition originated in Karnataka around the 12th-century.[140][143] Lingayatism is derived from the term linga and suffix ayta.[144] The term Lingayat is based on the practice of both genders of Lingayats wearing an iṣṭaliṅga (also called karasthala-linga) contained inside a box with a necklace all the time. The istalinga is a personalized and miniature oval-shaped linga and an emblem of their faith symbolising Parashiva, the absolute reality and their spirituality.[144][145] It is viewed as a "living, moving" divinity within the Lingayat devotee. Every day, the devotee removes this personal linga from its box, places it in left palm, offers puja and then meditates about becoming one with the linga, in his or her journey towards the atma-linga.[146]

Pilgrimage sites

An ice lingam at Amarnath in the western Himalayas forms every winter from ice dripping on the floor of a cave and freezing like a stalagmite. It is very popular with pilgrims.[147]

 
 
Left: 2 sphatika (quartz) lingams in the Shri Parkasheshwar Mahadev Temple, Dehradun; Right: Ice Lingam in the cave at the Amarnath Temple, Kashmir.

In Kadavul Temple, a 700-pound, 3-foot-tall, naturally formed Sphatika (quartz) lingam is installed. In the future, this crystal lingam will be housed in the Iraivan Temple. It is claimed as among the largest known sphatika self formed (Swayambhu) lingams.[148][149] Hindu scripture rates crystal as the highest form of Shiva lingam.[150]

Shivling, 6,543 metres (21,467 ft), is a mountain in Uttarakhand (the Garhwal region of Himalayas). It arises as a sheer pyramid above the snout of the Gangotri Glacier. The mountain resembles a Shiva lingam when viewed from certain angles, especially when travelling or trekking from Gangotri to Gomukh as part of a traditional Hindu pilgrimage.[citation needed]

A lingam is also the basis for the formation legend (and name) of the Borra Caves in Andhra Pradesh.[citation needed]

Banalinga are the lingam which are found on the bed of the Narmada river.[citation needed]

Lesser known Bhooteshwarnath Mahadeva in Gariaband district of Chhattisgarh is a rock Shivlinga and said to be the Largest Natural Shivlinga in the world.,[151] whose height is increasing with each passing year.[152][153]

The tallest Shiva lingam in the world is located at Chenkal village in Thiruvananthapuram district in the state of Kerala, India.[154]

Gallery

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Kramrisch claims that the representation of the phallic shape in the Gudimallam Lingam does not represent sexuality.[156] It represents "seminal retention" and practice of celibacy (Brahmacarya) (illustration of Urdhva Retas),[76][74][86][157] and represents Shiva as "he stands for complete control of the senses, and for the supreme carnal renunciation".[156]
  2. ^ This view is shared by K.R. Subramanian, who writes that some Buddhist stupas have been worshipped by Tamil Saivites because they believe it is a Shivalinga, and some ancient stupa sculptures from Amaravati and Jaggayyapeta look so much like a linga that anyone would mistake them for one.[48]
  3. ^ The form of fire, which exists in the kindling stick in a latent form, may not be seen, yet its linga is not destroyed but be seized again by another kindling stick.[9] Fire in its latent condition, unkindled, the potential of fire, its imperceptible essence, is the liūga of fire, in contrast with and indispensable to its visible form (Rūpa).[9]
  4. ^ Furthermore, the phallic shape, standing erect, always negates its function as an organ of procreation. Rather, the shape or pictorial representation is conveying that, the seed was channeled upward, not ejected for the sake of generation, but was reversed, retained and absorbed for regeneration as creative energy.[80]
  5. ^ This linga is likely a dedication memorial stone according to the inscription which states, "The Linga of the sons of Khajahuti, was dedicated by Nagasiri, the son of Vasethi. May the deity be pleased."[83] Bloch objected to "Linga of the sons" interpretation, stating it made no sense. Other scholars maintain that to be a cryptic epigraphic reference to "worshipped by", given the mention of "deity" later in the inscription.[84][85]
  6. ^ In the practice of seminal retention through self-discipline and Sādhanā, the mind is stirred, but not by external stimuli, but the result of realisation of true nature of the Self in the path of liberation (moksha). However, due to lack of understanding of the iconography of Lingam, the representation is often misunderstood.[86][74]
  7. ^ Examples of this usage include the Laṅkāvatāra Sūtra in Buddhism, and Sukhlalji's bhasya on Tattvarthasutra in Jainism.[114]

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Bibliography

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  • Chakravarti, Mahadev. The Concept of Rudra-Śiva Through the Ages, Delhi: Motilal Banarasidass (1986), ISBN 8120800532.
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  • Daniélou, Alain (1991). The Myths and Gods of India: The Classic Work on Hindu Polytheism. Inner Traditions / Bear & Company. pp. 222–231. ISBN 0-89281-354-7.
  • Doniger, Wendy (2011), "God's Body, or, The Lingam Made Flesh: Conflicts over the Representation of the Sexual Body of the Hindu God Shiva", Soc. Res. Social Research, 78 (2): 485–508, ISSN 0037-783X, JSTOR 23347187, OCLC 772197753
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  • Śarmā, Rāmakaraṇa (1996). Śivasahasranāmāṣṭakam : eight collections of hymns containing one thousand and eight names of Śiva. Delhi: Nag Publishers. ISBN 9788170813507. OCLC 36990863. Includes Śivasahasranāmakoṣa, a dictionary of names. This work compares eight versions of the Śivasahasranāmāstotra. The preface and introduction (in English) by Ram Karan Sharma provide an analysis of how the eight versions compare with one another. The text of the eight versions is given in Sanskrit.
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  • Srinivasan, Sharada (2004). "Shiva as 'cosmic dancer': On Pallava origins for the Nataraja bronze". World Archaeology. Vol. 36. The Journal of Modern Craft. pp. 432–450. doi:10.1080/1468936042000282726821. S2CID 26503807.
  • Grimes, John A. (1996). A Concise Dictionary of Indian Philosophy: Sanskrit Terms Defined in English. State University of New York Press. ISBN 0791430677.
  • Mahdihassan, S. (1989). "The Five Cosmic Elements as Depicted in Indian and Chinese Cosmologies". The American Journal of Chinese Medicine. 4. 17 (3n04): 245–252. doi:10.1142/S0192415X89000346. PMID 2699158. Retrieved 16 September 2021.

External links

  • Some interesting Linga images from Kalanjara and Ajaigarh, SK Sullerey (1980)
  • O, that Linga!, Alex Wayman (1987)
  • Linga and Yoni worship, Urmila Agrawal (1995)
  • A note on the Linga with Sakti images in Bengal Art, KD Gupta (2011)

lingam, linga, shivling, redirect, here, other, uses, linga, disambiguation, shivling, disambiguation, lingam, sanskrit, iast, liṅga, sign, symbol, mark, sometimes, referred, linga, shiva, linga, abstract, aniconic, representation, hindu, shiva, shaivism, typi. Linga and Shivling redirect here For other uses see Linga disambiguation and Shivling disambiguation A lingam Sanskrit ल ङ ग IAST liṅga lit sign symbol or mark sometimes referred to as linga or Shiva linga is an abstract or aniconic representation of the Hindu god Shiva in Shaivism 1 It is typically the primary murti or devotional image in Hindu temples dedicated to Shiva also found in smaller shrines or as self manifested natural objects 2 3 It is often represented within a disc shaped platform 1 4 the yoni its feminine counterpart 5 6 consisting of a flat element horizontal compared to the vertical lingam and designed to allow liquid offerings to drain away for collection Together they symbolize the merging of microcosmos and macrocosmos 6 the divine eternal process of creation and regeneration and the union of the feminine and the masculine that recreates all of existence 7 8 A lingam with tripundra projected on a yoni baseThe original meaning of lingam as sign is used in Shvetashvatara Upanishad which says Shiva the Supreme Lord has no liuga liuga Sanskrit ल ऊग IAST liuga meaning he is transcendental beyond any characteristic and specifically the sign of gender 9 10 Lingam is regarded as the outward symbol of the formless Reality the symbolization of merging of the primordial matter Prakṛti with the pure consciousness Purusha in transcendental context 11 The metaphorical creative principle of lingam yoni the union of the feminine and the masculine the eternal cosmological process of creation is also depicted in Chinese philosophy of Yin and Yang 12 13 where etymologically and semantically Yin represents the feminine half unity of consciousness and Yang denotes the masculine the other half together symbolizing the entirety or unity consciousness in the creation 12 The lingam is conceptualized both as an emblem of generative and destructive power 7 14 particularly in the esoteric Kaula and Tantra practices as well as the Shaivism and Shaktism traditions of Hinduism 15 Lingam is found in Sanskrit texts such as Shvetashvatara Upanishad Samkhya Vaisheshika and others texts with the meaning of evidence proof of God and God s existence 20 or existence of formless Brahman 21 Lingam iconography found at archaeological sites of the Indian subcontinent and southeast Asia includes simple cylinders set inside a yoni mukhalinga rounded pillars with carvings such as of one or more mukha faces and anatomically realistic representations of a phallus such as on the Gudimallam Lingam note 1 25 In the Shaiva traditions the lingam is regarded as a form of spiritual iconography 26 27 28 Contents 1 Nomenclature and significance 2 History 2 1 Archeological finds from Indus Valley civilisation 2 2 Shvetashvatara Upanishad 2 3 Linga Purana 2 4 Vedic literature 2 5 Early iconography and temples 2 6 Mahabharata 2 7 Puranas 2 8 Other literature 2 9 Muslim rule 2 10 Orientalist literature 3 Iconography and worship 4 Lingayatism 5 Pilgrimage sites 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Bibliography 10 External linksNomenclature and significance Edit Lingam as interpreted in the Shaiva Siddhanta tradition a major school of Shaivism The upper and lower parts represent Parashiva and Parashakti perfections of Lord Shiva Lingam states Monier Monier Williams appears in the Upanishads and epic literature where it means a mark sign emblem characteristic 18 27 Other contextual meanings of the term include evidence proof symptom of God and God s power 18 19 The term also appears in early Indian texts on logic where an inference is based on a sign linga such as if there is smoke there is fire where the linga is the smoke 18 It is a religious symbol in Hinduism representing Shiva as the generative power 27 all of existence all creativity and fertility at every cosmic level 5 29 The lingam of the Shaivism tradition is a short cylindrical pillar like symbol of Shiva made of stone metal gem wood clay or precious stones 30 1 31 According to Encyclopaedia Britannica the lingam is a votary aniconic object found in the sanctum of Shiva temples and private shrines that symbolizes Shiva and is revered as an emblem of generative power 1 It often is found within a lipped disked structure that is an emblem of goddess Shakti and this is called the yoni Together they symbolize the union of the feminine and the masculine principles and the totality of all existence states Encyclopaedia Britannica 1 According to Alex Wayman given the Shaiva philosophical texts and spiritual interpretations various works on Shaivism by some Indian authors deny that the linga is a phallus 26 To the Shaivites a linga is neither a phallus nor do they practice the worship of erotic penis vulva rather the linga yoni is a symbol of cosmic mysteries the creative powers and the metaphor for the spiritual truths of their faith 32 For example according to Swami Sivananda the corelation of the linga and phallus is wrong the Lingam is only the external symbol of Lord Shiva s formless being He further states that it is the light or power of consciousness manifesting from Sadashiva 33 The popular belief is that the Siva Lingam represents the phallus or the virile organ the emblem of the generative power or principle in nature This is not only a serious mistake but a grave blunder In the post Vedic period the Linga has become symbolic of the generative power of Lord Siva Linga is the differentiating mark It is certainly not the sex mark 34 According to Sivaya Subramuniyaswami the lingam signifies three perfections of Shiva 35 The upper oval part of the Shivalingam represents Parashiva and lower part of the Shivalingam called the pitha represents Parashakti 35 In Parashiva perfection Shiva is the absolute reality the timeless formless and spaceless In Parashakti perfection Shiva is all pervasive pure consciousness power and primal substance of all that exists and it has form unlike Parashiva which is formless 36 9 According to Rohit Dasgupta the lingam symbolizes Shiva in Hinduism and it is also a phallic symbol 5 Since the 19th century states Dasgupta the popular literature has represented the lingam as the male sex organ This view contrasts with the traditional abstract values they represent in Shaivism wherein the lingam yoni connote the masculine and feminine principles in the entirety of creation and all existence 5 According to Sivananda Saraswati Siva Lingam speaks unmistakable language of silence I am one without a second I am formless 37 Siva Lingam is only the outward symbol of formless being Lord Siva who is eternal ever pure immortal essence of this vast universe who is your innermost Self or Atman and who is identical with the Supreme Brahman states Sivananda Saraswati 37 Scholars such as Wendy Doniger and Rohit Dasgupta view linga as extrapolations of what was originally a phallic symbol 38 39 40 41 This interpretation is criticized by Stella Kramrisch 42 and Moriz Winternitz who opines that the linga in the Shiva tradition is only a symbol of the productive and creative principle of nature as embodied in Shiva and it has no historical trace in any obscene phallic cult 43 History EditArcheological finds from Indus Valley civilisation Edit Stone lingam and yoni pedestal found in Cat Tien Vietnam circa 8th century At 2 1 meter tall this is the largest lingam ever found in Southeast AsiaAccording to Chakrabarti some of the stones found in Mohenjodaro are unmistakably phallic stones These are dated to some time before 2300 BCE Similarly states Chakrabarti the Kalibangan site of Harappa has a small terracotta representation that would undoubtedly be considered the replica of a modern Shivlinga a tubular stone 44 According to Encyclopaedia Britannica while Harappan discoveries include short cylindrical pillars with rounded tops there is no evidence that the people of Indus Valley Civilization worshipped these artifacts as lingams 1 According to Srinivasan in the Harappan sites objects that resemble lingam have been found 45 That includes a seated trident headed ithyphallic figure which was found on Indus seals has been compared to Shiva as meditating ascetic states Srinivasan 45 46 A Buddhist stupa above may have influenced the later iconography of the Hindu Shiva linga according to Swami Vivekananda 47 note 2 The colonial era archaeologists John Marshall and Ernest Mackay proposed that certain artifacts found at Harappan sites may be evidence of yoni linga worship in Indus Valley Civilization 49 Scholars such as Arthur Llewellyn Basham dispute whether such artifacts discovered at the archaeological sites of Indus Valley sites are yoni 49 50 For example Jones and Ryan state that lingam yoni shapes have been recovered from the archaeological sites at Harappa and Mohenjo daro part of the Indus Valley civilisation 51 52 In contrast Indologist Wendy Doniger states that this relatively rare artifact can be interpreted in many ways and has unduly been used for wild speculations such as being a linga Another Indus stamp seal often called the Pashupati seal states Doniger has an image with a general resemblance with Shiva and the Indus people may well have created the symbolism of the divine phallus but given the available evidence we cannot be certain nor do we know that it had the same meaning as some currently project them to might have meant 53 According to the Indologist Asko Parpola it is true that Marshall s and Mackay s hypotheses of linga and yoni worship by the Harappans has rested on rather slender grounds and that for instance the interpretation of the so called ring stones as yonis seems untenable 49 He quotes Dales 1984 paper which states with the single exception of the unidentified photography of a realistic phallic object in Marshall s report there is no archaeological evidence to support claims of special sexually oriented aspects of Harappan religion 49 However adds Parpola a re examination at Indus Valley sites suggest that the Mackay s hypothesis cannot be ruled out because erotic and sexual scenes such as ithyphallic males naked females a human couple having intercourse and trefoil imprints have now been identified at the Harappan sites 49 The finely polished circular stand found by Mackay may be yoni although it was found without the linga The absence of linga states Parpola maybe because it was made from wood which did not survive 49 Shvetashvatara Upanishad Edit Shvetashvatara Upanishad states that of the three significations of Lingam the primary one is the imperishable Purusha the absolute reality 10 whereby the linga is sign a mark that provides the existence of Brahman 9 54 which is itself formless 21 Furthermore it mentioned that Shiva is transcendent beyond any characteristic or liuga specifically the sign of gender 9 Linga sign not only signifies the existence of perceptible things but also denotes the imperceptible essence of a thing or pieces of Brahman called Atma 54 even before that thing has come to exist in any concrete form note 3 The imperceptible essence of a thing in its potentiality is the liuga of the thing 9 The insight of the Shvetashvatara Upanishad conveyed through the word liuga is formulated explicitly in Samkhya and schools of Yoga or ways of looking at things that is looking at their appearance and at Ultimate Reality 9 Liriga here denotes the subtle body liṇga sarira underlying and ontologically preceding anything perceptible 9 The perceptible state in this context is the gross body sthula sarira or concrete reality as it appears to the sense organs In between the Ultimate and concrete reality is Prakṛti also called Pradhana 9 which is the imperceptible substratum of the manifest world or pre matter 55 Out of this imperceptible cosmic substance all things have come out and to which they will return ultimately 9 The three Gunas are Sattva Rajas and Tamas The function as tendencies through the principles and powers of cosmic substance cohere are Buddhi cosmic intelligence or revelation Ahamkara individuation and Manas Mind From these evolve the power Indriya of cognition that enables hearing feeling seeing tasting and smelling and their corresponding subtle elements to exist 9 From these supersensible Tanmatras the sense particulars Mahabhuta come into being 9 They are Ether or space Akasha air Vayu fire Agni water Ap and earth Bhumi the Pancha Bhootas 56 57 They are the vehicles of the Tanmatras and constitute the gross body of concrete perceptible and particularized reality The Subtle body liṇga sarira is the subtle prototype of the gross body the imperceptible stuff of energy by which all phenomena are projected into concrete reality like fire from its latency 56 The subtle body itself changeless accompanies the life of the individual Jiva through the cycles of birth and deaths and is finally reabsorbed into the principles and powers of which it was composed of 56 Linga Purana Edit The Linga Purana states Shiva is signless without color taste smell that is beyond word or touch without quality motionless and changeless 58 The source of the universe is the signless and all of the universe is the manifested Linga a union of unchanging principle and the ever changing nature 58 The Linga Purana and Siva Gita texts builds on this foundation 59 60 Linga states Alain Danielou means sign 58 It is an important concept in Hindu texts wherein Linga is a manifested sign and nature of someone or something It accompanies the concept of Brahman which as invisible signless and existent Principle is formless or linga less 58 Vedic literature Edit The word lingam is not found in the Rigveda 61 or the other Vedas 62 However Rudra proto Shiva is found in the Vedic literature 61 63 Worship of the lingam was not a part of the Vedic religion The worship of the lingam originated from the famous hymn in the Atharva Veda Samhita sung in praise of the Yupa Stambha the sacrificial post In that hymn a description is found of the beginningless and endless Stambha or Skambha and it is shown that the said Skambha is put in place of the eternal Brahman Just as the Yajna sacrificial fire its smoke ashes and flames the Soma plant and the ox that used to carry on its back the wood for the Vedic sacrifice gave place to the conceptions of the brightness of Shiva s body his tawny matted hair his blue throat and the riding on the bull of the Shiva the Yupa Skambha gave place in time to the Shiva Linga 64 65 In the text Linga Purana the same hymn is expanded in the shape of stories meant to establish the glory of the great Stambha and the superiority of Shiva as Mahadeva 65 There is a hymn in the Atharvaveda that praises a pillar stambha and this is one possible origin of linga worship 66 According to Swami Vivekananda the Shiva linga had origins in the idea of Yupa Stambha or Skambha of the Vedic rituals where the term meant the sacrificial post which was then idealized as the eternal Brahman The Yupa Skambha gave place in time to the Shiva Linga quite possibly with influence from Buddhism s stupa shaped like the top of a stone linga according to Vivekananda 47 65 Early iconography and temples Edit The Gudimallam Lingam one of the oldest examples of a lingam is still in worship in the Parashurameshwara temple Gudimallam in a hilly forest about 20 kilometres 12 mi east of Tirupati in Andhra Pradesh 67 It has been dated to the 3rd century BCE 1 or to the 2nd century BCE 23 and is mostly accepted to be from the 3rd to 1st century BCE 68 though some later dates have been proposed The stone lingam is clearly a representation of an anatomically accurate phallus with a figure of Lakulisha the ascetic manifestation of Shiva 45 carved on the front holding an antelope and axe in his hands 68 69 He stands on top of a Apasmara demon dwarf who symbolizes spiritual ignorance greed sensual desires or Kama and nonsensical speech on the spiritual path hence must be subdued in spiritual pursuits 70 71 72 In this earliest representation the phallic representation illustrates of the centrality of the energetic principle of Urdhva Retas Sanskrit ऊर ध वर तस IAST urdhvaretas lit ascent of vital energies or fluid the upward flow of energy in spiritual pursuits and practice of celibacy Brahmacarya 73 contrary to fertility or release of vital energies 74 75 76 77 78 Lakulisa as an ascetic manifestation of Shiva is seen in later peninsular Indian scriptures whose ithyphallic aspects connotes asceticism and conserved procreative potentialities Brahmacarya or celibacy rather than mere eroticism 45 79 According to Stella Kramrisch the pictorial symbol of the Gudimallam lingam should not be mistaken for fertility or sexuality due to incomplete or impure understanding of the underlying refined principles note 4 81 The Bhita linga now at the Lucknow museum is also dated to about the 2nd century BCE and has four directional faces on the pillar and a Brahmi script inscription at the bottom 82 83 84 Above the four faces the Bhita linga has the bust of a male with his left hand holding a vase and the right hand in the abhaya no fear mudra 83 note 5 The pillar itself is once again a realistic depiction of phallus but neither symbolizes fertility nor sexuality but the refined energetic principles of Urdhva Retas note 6 during Sannyasa or Asceticism 76 74 77 83 78 Lingam from Angkor period on display at the National Museum of Cambodia Discovered in Battambang Province Cambodia it is made of bronze quartz and silver The Mathura archaeological site has revealed similar lingams with a standing Shiva in front 2nd century CE and with one or four faces around the pillar 1st to 3rd century CE 87 88 Numerous stone and cave temples from the mid to late 1st millennium feature lingams The Bhumara Temple near Satna Madhya Pradesh for example is generally dated to late 5th century Gupta Empire era and it features an Ekamukha Lingam 89 90 Mahabharata Edit According to Wendy Doniger lingam in the Mahabharata is represented as the phallic form which suggests Sthula sarira of Shiva 68 91 although not the primary significance 9 however it connotes much more than that 56 The anthropomorphic shape in this specific context functions as the subtle body Linga Sarira 92 of Shiva in the Mahabharata 56 It is a superabundant evocation of fierce potency on a cosmic scale although it states crassly phallic 56 Doniger further finds that Shiva was called by many names including Rudra or the Lord of the Mountain 68 Chapter 10 17 of the Mahabharata also refers to the word sthanu in the sense of an inanimate pillar as well as a name of Shiva signifying the immobile ascetic desexualized form of the lingam as it recites the legend involving Shiva Brahma and Prajapati 68 93 This mythology weaves two polarities one where the lingam represents the potentially procreative phallus fertile lingam and its opposite a pillar like renouncer of sexuality ascetic lingam states Doniger 68 Puranas Edit According to Shiva Purana the legend about the origin of the phallic form of Shiva is that some brahmin devotees of Shiva were highly engrossed in the meditation of Shiva In the meantime Shiva came in a hideous naked ascetic form with ashes smeared all over his body holding his phallus to test the devotion of his devotees The wives of the sages were scared at this sight but some embraced the holy ascetic Although Shiva put them to test the sages and wives did not recognize him 94 The sages were stupefied and deluded by Siva s power of illusion maya 94 95 became infuriated at this sight and cursed ascetic form of Shiva 95 You are acting pervertedly This violates the Vedic path Hence let your penis fall on the ground Although the sages were also ascetics only because they observed established conventions they failed when Shiva tested them with his outrageous ways 94 The purpose of Shiva s visit to the hermitage the place where the sages were living with their wives was to enlighten the false sages by allowing them to humiliate him 96 But the sages were lost in anger but Shiva allowed himself to be humiliated in the image that met the eye of the sages 96 Even though Shiva excited some of them as the source of their desire they were unable to see him as the killer of desires 97 Although Shiva revealed his true nature by his dance Tandava yet so great was his power of illusion maya the deluded sages did not recognize him 97 That falling phallus burnt everything in front wherever it went it began to burn everything there It went to all three Hindu worlds hell heaven earth All the worlds and the people were distressed The sages couldn t recognise it as Shiva and sought refuge from Brahma Brahma answered that they should pray to Parvati to assume a form of vaginal passage and perform a procedure reciting vedic mantras and decorating the penis with flowers etc so that the penis would become steady As the phallus was held by Parvati in that form an auspicion arrow formed The pedestal shaped as the vagina and the phallus fixed therein are symbolic of the eternal creative forces personified as Siva and Siva After the procedure was completed the penis became static This phallus was known as hatesa and Siva Siva 95 In one version of the story found in Vamana Purana Shiva s visit to the hermitage in Deodar forests was an act of grace at Parvati s request 94 Lingodbhava is a Shaiva sectarian icon where Shiva is depicted rising from the Lingam an infinite fiery pillar that narrates how Shiva is the foremost of the Trimurti Brahma on the left and Vishnu on the right are depicted bowing to Shiva in the centre The Shiva Purana also describes the origin of the lingam known as Shiva linga as the beginning less and endless cosmic pillar Stambha of fire the cause of all causes Shiva is pictured as emerging from the lingam the cosmic pillar of fire proving his superiority over the gods Brahma and Vishnu It also describes right way to worship Shiva linga in its 11th chapter in detail 98 99 100 This is known as Lingodbhava The Linga Purana also supports this interpretation of lingam as a cosmic pillar symbolizing the infinite nature of Shiva 100 47 65 According to the Linga Purana the lingam is a complete symbolic representation of the formless Universe Bearer the oval shaped stone is the symbol of the Universe and the bottom base represents the Supreme Power that holds the entire Universe in it 37 A similar interpretation is also found in the Skanda Purana The endless sky that great void which contains the entire universe is the Linga the Earth is its base At the end of time the entire universe and all the Gods finally merge in the Linga itself 101 In the Linga Purana an Atharvaveda hymn is expanded with stories about the great Stambha and the supreme nature of Mahadeva the Great God Shiva 65 Other literature Edit A linga yoni in Nepal carved with four seated Buddhas In early Sanskrit medical texts linga means symptom signs and plays a key role in the diagnosis of a sickness the disease 102 103 104 The author of classical Sanskrit grammar treatise Panini states that the verbal root ling which means paint variegate has the sense that which paints variegates characterizes Panini as well as Patanjali additionally mention lingam with the contextual meaning of the gender 105 106 In the Vaisheshika Sutras it means proof or evidence as a conditionally sufficient mark or sign This Vaisheshika theory is adopted in the early Sanskrit medical literature 16 Like the Upanishads where linga means mark sign characteristic the texts of the Nyaya school of Hindu philosophy use linga in the same sense 107 108 In the Samkhya sutras and in Gaudapada s commentary on Samkhyakarika the term linga has many contextual meanings such as in verses 1 124 136 3 9 16 and 5 21 61 as it develops its theory of the nature of Atman Self and Sarira body prakriti and its proposed mechanism of rebirth 17 109 In the Purva Mimamsa Sutra and the Vedanta sutra as well as the commentaries on them the term linga appears quite often particularly in the form of lingadarsanacca as a form of citing or referencing prior Hindu literature This phrase connotes we have found an indicative sign such as the indicative sign is in a Vedic passage 110 According to Doniger there is persuasive evidence in later Sanskrit literature that the early Indians associated the lingam icon with the male sexual organ 111 the 11th century Kashmir text Narmamala by Kshemendra on satire and fiction writing explains his ideas on parallelism with divine lingam and human lingam in a sexual context Various Shaiva texts such as the Skanda Purana in section 1 8 states that all creatures have the signs of Shiva or Shakti through their lingam male sexual organ or pindi female sexual organ 111 112 According to Doniger a part of the literature corpus regards lingam to be the phallus of Shiva while another group of texts does not Sexuality in the former is inherently sacred and spiritual while the latter emphasizes the ascetic nature of Shiva and renunciation to be spiritual symbolism of lingam This tension between the pursuit of spirituality through householder lifestyle and the pursuit of renunciate sannyasi lifestyle is historic reflects the different interpretations of the lingam and what lingam worship means to its devotees It remains a continuing debate within Hinduism to this day states Doniger 111 To one group it is a part of Shiva s body and symbolically saguna Shiva he in a physical form with attributes To the other group it is an abstract symbol of nirguna Shiva he in the universal Absolute Reality formless without attributes 111 In Tamil Shaiva tradition for example the common term for lingam is kuRi or sign mark which is asexual 111 Similarly in Lingayatism tradition the lingam is a spiritual symbol and was never said to have any sexual connotations according to Doniger 111 To some Shaivites it symbolizes the axis of the universe 113 The term linga also appears in Buddhist and Jaina literature where it means sign evidence in one context or subtle body with sexual connotations in another 114 note 7 Muslim rule Edit In the 11th century after conquests of the subcontinent by Muslim rulers several sultans of Delhi often iconoclastic regarded the lingam as sexual and anthropomorphic and ordered as many be destroyed as possible 115 In some situations linga were deliberately laid at the thresholds of mosques for public usage and incorporated into Islamic architecture notably at a mosque in Banbhore 116 Orientalist literature Edit The colonial era Orientalists and Christian missionaries raised in the Victorian mold where sex and sexual imagery were a taboo subject were shocked by and were hostile to the lingam yoni iconography and reverence they witnessed 5 117 118 The 19th and early 20th century colonial and missionary literature described lingam yoni and related theology as obscene corrupt licentious hyper sexualized puerile impure demonic and a culture that had become too feminine and dissolute 5 119 120 To the Hindus particularly the Shaivites these icons and ideas were the abstract a symbol of the entirety of creation and spirituality 5 The colonial disparagement in part triggered the opposite reaction from Bengali nationalists who more explicitly valorised the feminine Swami Vivekananda called for the revival of the Mother Goddess as a feminine force inviting his countrymen to proclaim her to all the world with the voice of peace and benediction 119 According to Wendy Doniger the terms lingam and yoni became explicitly associated with human sexual organs in the western imagination after the widely popular first Kamasutra translation by Sir Richard Burton in 1883 121 In his translation even though the original Sanskrit text does not use the words lingam or yoni for sexual organs and almost always uses other terms Burton adroitly avoided being viewed as obscene to the Victorian mindset by avoiding the use of words such as penis vulva vagina and other direct or indirect sexual terms in the Sanskrit text to discuss sex sexual relationships and human sexual positions Burton used the terms lingam and yoni instead throughout the translation 121 This conscious and incorrect word substitution states Doniger thus served as an Orientalist means to anthropologize sex distance it make it safe for English readers by assuring them or pretending to assure them that the text was not about real sexual organs their sexual organs but merely about the appendages of weird dark people far away 121 Similar Orientalist literature of the Christian missionaries and the British era states Doniger stripped all spiritual meanings and insisted on the Victorian vulgar interpretation only which had a negative effect on the self perception that Hindus had of their own bodies and they became ashamed of the more sensual aspects of their own religious literature 122 Some contemporary Hindus states Doniger in their passion to spiritualize Hinduism and for their Hindutva campaign have sought to sanitize the historic earthly sexual meanings and insist on the abstract spiritual meaning only 122 Iconography and worship Edit Linga yoni worship in different ways Left river Right temple The traditional lingam rituals in major Shiva temples includes offerings of flowers grass dried rice fruits leaves water and a milk bath 1 Priests chant hymns while the devotees go to the sanctum for a darshana followed by a clockwise circumambulation of the sanctum 1 On the sanctum walls typically are reliefs of Dakshinamurti Brahma and Vishnu Often near the sanctum are other shrines particularly for Shakti Durga Ganesha and Murugan Kartikeya In the Hindu tradition special pilgrimage sites include those where natural lingams are found in the form of cylindrical rocks or ice or rocky hill These are called Svayambhuva lingam and about 70 of these are known on the Indian subcontinent the most significant being one in Kashi Varanasi followed by Prayaga Naimisha and Gaya 1 123 The historic lingam iconography has included Mukhalingam where the lingam has the face of Shiva carved on it 124 125 An Ekmukha lingam has just one face Chaturmukha lingam has four faces in the cardinal directions while a Panchamukha lingam has a total of five the fifth is on the top and represents Sadashiva 126 127 Among the mukha lingam varieties the four face version are more common 128 Ashtottara sata linga where 108 miniature lingas are carved on the pujabhaga main linga following certain geometric principles 129 Lingam iconography exists in many forms and their design are described in the Agama texts Left a 5th century Mukha linga with face Right a Sahasra linga with 1001 carvings Sahasra linga where 1001 miniature lingas are carved on the pujabhaga main linga following certain geometric principles set in 99 vertical lines 11 horizontal 130 Dhara linga where lingas have five to sixty four fluted facets with prime numbers and multiples of four particularly favored 131 Lingodbhavamurti where Shiva is seen as emerging from within a fiery lingam 1 On top of this icon is sometimes a relief of a swan or goose representing Brahma and a boar at the bottom representing the Varaha avatar of Vishnu This reflects the Shaiva legend describing a competition between Brahma Shiva and Vishnu as to who has priority and superiority 1 A lingam may be made of clay mrinmaya metal lohaja precious stone ratnaja wood daruja stone sailaja most common or a disposal material kshanika 31 The construction method proportions and design is described in Shaiva Agama texts 31 The lingam is typically set in the center of a pindika also called yoni or pithas symbolizing Shakti A pindika may be circular square octagonal hexagonal duodecagonal sixteen sided elliptical triangular or another shape 132 Some lingams are miniaturized and they are carried on one s person such as by Lingayats in a necklace These are called chala lingams 31 The Hindu temple design manuals recommend geometric ratios for the linga the sanctum and the various architectural features of the temple according to certain mathematical rules it considers perfect and sacred 133 Anthropologist Christopher John Fuller states that although most sculpted images murtis are anthropomorphic or theriomorphic the aniconic Shiva Linga is an important exception 134 According to Shaiva Siddhanta the linga is the ideal substrate in which the worshipper should install and worship the five faced and ten armed Sadasiva the form of Shiva who is the focal divinity of that school of Shaivism 135 The various styles of lingam iconography are found on the Indian subcontinent and southeast Asia 136 137 Lingayatism Edit A necklace with linga containing pendant is constantly worn by the Lingayats 138 Lingayats a sect of the Shaivite religious tradition in India wear a miniaturized linga called the istalinga 139 Lingayats wear a lingam inside a necklace called Ishtalinga 140 141 Initially known as Veerashaivas heroic worshippers of Shiva since the 18th century adherents of this faith are known as Lingayats 142 This tradition originated in Karnataka around the 12th century 140 143 Lingayatism is derived from the term linga and suffix ayta 144 The term Lingayat is based on the practice of both genders of Lingayats wearing an iṣṭaliṅga also called karasthala linga contained inside a box with a necklace all the time The istalinga is a personalized and miniature oval shaped linga and an emblem of their faith symbolising Parashiva the absolute reality and their spirituality 144 145 It is viewed as a living moving divinity within the Lingayat devotee Every day the devotee removes this personal linga from its box places it in left palm offers puja and then meditates about becoming one with the linga in his or her journey towards the atma linga 146 Pilgrimage sites EditAn ice lingam at Amarnath in the western Himalayas forms every winter from ice dripping on the floor of a cave and freezing like a stalagmite It is very popular with pilgrims 147 Left 2 sphatika quartz lingams in the Shri Parkasheshwar Mahadev Temple Dehradun Right Ice Lingam in the cave at the Amarnath Temple Kashmir In Kadavul Temple a 700 pound 3 foot tall naturally formed Sphatika quartz lingam is installed In the future this crystal lingam will be housed in the Iraivan Temple It is claimed as among the largest known sphatika self formed Swayambhu lingams 148 149 Hindu scripture rates crystal as the highest form of Shiva lingam 150 Shivling 6 543 metres 21 467 ft is a mountain in Uttarakhand the Garhwal region of Himalayas It arises as a sheer pyramid above the snout of the Gangotri Glacier The mountain resembles a Shiva lingam when viewed from certain angles especially when travelling or trekking from Gangotri to Gomukh as part of a traditional Hindu pilgrimage citation needed A lingam is also the basis for the formation legend and name of the Borra Caves in Andhra Pradesh citation needed Banalinga are the lingam which are found on the bed of the Narmada river citation needed Lesser known Bhooteshwarnath Mahadeva in Gariaband district of Chhattisgarh is a rock Shivlinga and said to be the Largest Natural Shivlinga in the world 151 whose height is increasing with each passing year 152 153 The tallest Shiva lingam in the world is located at Chenkal village in Thiruvananthapuram district in the state of Kerala India 154 Gallery Edit Linga inside a railing left being worshipped by Gandharvas winged creatures Art of Mathura circa 100 BCE 155 Shiva Linga worshipped by Kushan devotees circa 2nd century CE Lingodbhava Chola period Lingodbhava Chola period Badavlinga Hampi Vijayanagara Empire Eight faced Shivlingam in Pashupatinath Temple at Mandsaur Madhya Pradesh Natural rock linga Arunachal Pradesh A 10th century four face Mukhalinga Nepal 64 lingams Nepal An 11th century linga yoni plaque with a worshipper Nepal Lingam from Angkor period Battambang Province Cambodia Linga yoni Java Indonesia Copper lingam at the Cat Tien sanctuary Vietnam A jatalinga with yoni Champa Vietnam A lingam at the Katas Raj Temples in north Pakistan Ganesha and Shiva linga Chiang Rai ThailandSee also EditBanalinga Hindu iconography Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom a Lingam stone plays a central part in the film s plot Jyotirlinga Lingayatism Mukhalingaj Gudimallam Lingam Pancharamas Shaligram Spatika LingamNotes Edit Kramrisch claims that the representation of the phallic shape in the Gudimallam Lingam does not represent sexuality 156 It represents seminal retention and practice of celibacy Brahmacarya illustration of Urdhva Retas 76 74 86 157 and represents Shiva as he stands for complete control of the senses and for the supreme carnal renunciation 156 This view is shared by K R Subramanian who writes that some Buddhist stupas have been worshipped by Tamil Saivites because they believe it is a Shivalinga and some ancient stupa sculptures from Amaravati and Jaggayyapeta look so much like a linga that anyone would mistake them for one 48 The form of fire which exists in the kindling stick in a latent form may not be seen yet its linga is not destroyed but be seized again by another kindling stick 9 Fire in its latent condition unkindled the potential of fire its imperceptible essence is the liuga of fire in contrast with and indispensable to its visible form Rupa 9 Furthermore the phallic shape standing erect always negates its function as an organ of procreation Rather the shape or pictorial representation is conveying that the seed was channeled upward not ejected for the sake of generation but was reversed retained and absorbed for regeneration as creative energy 80 This linga is likely a dedication memorial stone according to the inscription which states The Linga of the sons of Khajahuti was dedicated by Nagasiri the son of Vasethi May the deity be pleased 83 Bloch objected to Linga of the sons interpretation stating it made no sense Other scholars maintain that to be a cryptic epigraphic reference to worshipped by given the mention of deity later in the inscription 84 85 In the practice of seminal retention through self discipline and Sadhana the mind is stirred but not by external stimuli but the result of realisation of true nature of the Self in the path of liberation moksha However due to lack of understanding of the iconography of Lingam the representation is often misunderstood 86 74 Examples of this usage include the Laṅkavatara Sutra in Buddhism and Sukhlalji s bhasya on Tattvarthasutra in Jainism 114 References Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m lingam Encyclopaedia Britannica 2010 Johnson W J 2009 A dictionary of Hinduism 1st ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780191726705 Retrieved 5 January 2016 subscription or UK public library membership required Fowler Jeaneane 1997 Hinduism beliefs and practices Brighton u a Sussex Acad Press pp 42 43 ISBN 9781898723608 Dancing with Siva USA 1999 ISBN 9780945497943 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b c d e f g Rohit Dasgupta 26 September 2014 Michael Kimmel Christine Milrod Amanda Kennedy eds Cultural Encyclopedia of the Penis Rowman amp Littlefield p 107 ISBN 9780759123144 a b Beltz Johannes 1 March 2011 The Dancing Shiva South Indian Processional Bronze Museum Artwork and Universal Icon Journal of Religion in Europe Brill Academic Publishers 4 1 204 222 doi 10 1163 187489210x553566 S2CID 143631560 a b Doniger Wendy Stefon Matt 24 December 2014 20 July 1998 Lingam Hinduism Encyclopaedia Britannica Edinburgh Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Retrieved 22 May 2021 James G Lochtefeld 2001 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism Volume 2 The Rosen Publishing Group p 784 ISBN 978 0 8239 3180 4 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Kramrisch 1994 p 221 a b Constance amp James 2006 p 410 Grimes 1996 p 175 176 a b Zijiang Ding John 2009 Indian Yoni Linga and Chinese Yin Yang Journal of Philosophy A Cross Disciplinary Inquiry Vol 4 Society for Philosophy and Literary Studies of Nepal pp 20 26 doi 10 5840 jphilnepal2009483 Mahdihassan 1989 p 248 Constance amp James 2006 p 260 261 Constance amp James 2006 p 515 517 a b Gerrit Jan Meulenbeld D Wujastyk 2001 Studies on Indian Medical History Motilal Banarsidass pp 49 51 with footnotes ISBN 978 81 208 1768 5 a b Gerald James Larson 2001 Classical Saṃkhya An Interpretation of Its History and Meaning Motilal Banarsidass pp 189 192 270 271 ISBN 978 81 208 0503 3 a b c d Linga Monier Monier Williams Harvard University Archives pp 901 902 a b Yves Bonnefoy 1993 Asian Mythologies University of Chicago Press pp 38 39 ISBN 978 0 226 06456 7 9 16 17 1 18 19 a b Mansingh Ajai 2016 Stewards of Creation Covenant Hinduism and the Environment Caribbean Quarterly A Journal of Caribbean Culture 41 1 62 doi 10 1080 00086495 1995 11672075 T A Gopinatha Rao 1993 Elements of Hindu Iconography Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass pp 63 68 72 87 91 98 ISBN 978 81 208 0877 5 a b Klostermaier Klaus K 2007 A Survey of Hinduism 3 ed Albany N Y State University of New York Press p 111 ISBN 978 0 7914 7082 4 Doniger 2011 p 491 22 23 24 a b Alex Wayman 1987 O that Linga Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute 68 1 4 30 Quote That is why today one will read in various works by Indians on Saivism a denial that the linga is a phallus and the late Dr Basham once told the present writer that in all the years of his India contacts he never found any Saivite admitting that the linga is a phallus a b c James G Lochtefeld 2001 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism Volume 1 The Rosen Publishing Group p 390 ISBN 978 0 8239 3179 8 Doniger 2011 p 503 Lewis R Rambo Charles E Farhadian 2014 The Oxford Handbook of Religious Conversion Oxford University Press pp 332 333 ISBN 978 0 19 971354 7 Kramrisch 1994 p 217 a b c d T A Gopinatha Rao 1993 Elements of Hindu Iconography Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass p 76 ISBN 978 81 208 0877 5 Alex Wayman 1987 O that Linga Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute 68 1 4 29 31 Lord Shiva and His Worship by Sri Swami Sivananda 1945 Chapter IX Siva Yoga Sadhna Section 7 Worship of Siva Lingam 2015 edition Allahabad Book World Ltd Lord Shiva and His Worship by Sri Swami Sivananda 1945 Chapter IX Siva Yoga Sadhna Section 7 Worship of Siva Lingam Page 220 2015 edition Allahabad Book World Ltd a b Subramuniyaswami Sivaya 2001 Dancing with Siva USA Himalayan Academy ISBN 0945497970 Dictionary of Dancing with Siva Search for the Parasiva परश व and Parasakti पर शक त a b c Sivananda Swami 1996 Worship of Siva Linga Lord Siva and His Worship The Divine Life Trust Society O Flaherty Wendy Doniger 1981 Siva the erotic ascetic Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 520250 3 O Flaherty Wendy Doniger 2013 On Hinduism Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199360079 O Flaherty Wendy Doniger 2009 The Hindus An Alternative History United States Viking Press ISBN 978 0143116691 Rohit Dasgupta 26 September 2014 Michael Kimmel Christine Milrod Amanda Kennedy eds Cultural Encyclopedia of the Penis Rowman amp Littlefield p 107 ISBN 9780759123144 Kramrisch 1994 p 14 Winternitz Moriz V Srinivasa Sarma 1981 A History of Indian Literature Volume 1 Motilal Banarsidass p 543 footnote 4 ISBN 978 81 208 0264 3 Lipner Julius J 2017 Hindu Images and Their Worship with Special Reference to Vaisnavism A Philosophical theological Inquiry London New York Routledge Taylor amp Francis Group p 39 ISBN 9781351967822 OCLC 985345208 a b c d Srinivasan 2004 p 434 Kenoyer Jonathan Mark 1998 Ancient Cities of the Indus Vally Civilization Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195779400 a b c Harding Elizabeth U 1998 God the Father Kali The Black Goddess of Dakshineswar Motilal Banarsidass pp 156 157 ISBN 978 81 208 1450 9 Subramanian K R 2002 Origin of Saivism and Its History in the Tamil Land Asian Educational Services pp 29 30 ISBN 978 81 206 0144 4 a b c d e f Asko Parpola 1985 The Sky Garment A study of the Harappan religion and its relation to the Mesopotamian and later Indian religions Studia Orientalia The Finnish Oriental Society 57 101 107 Arthur Llewellyn Basham 1967 The Wonder that was India A Survey of the History and Culture of the Indian Subcontinent Before the Coming of the Muslims Sidgwick amp Jackson 1986 Reprint p 24 ISBN 978 0 283 99257 5 Quote It has been suggested that certain large ring shaped stones are formalized representations of the female regenerative organ and were symbols of the Mother Goddess but this is most doubtful Constance amp James 2006 p 516 Jyotsna Chawla 1990 The R gvedic deities and their iconic forms Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers p 185 ISBN 9788121500821 Doniger 2011 pp 485 502 a b DeVito amp DeVito 1994 p 5 Kramrisch 1994 p 122 a b c d e f Kramrisch 1994 p 222 Mahdihassan 1989 p 247 a b c d Alain Danielou 1991 The Myths and Gods of India Princeton Bollingen Series Inner Traditions Bear amp Co pp 222 224 ISBN 978 0 89281 354 4 Kramrisch 1994 pp 171 185 K V Anantharaman Chapter X Omnipotence of Siva Linga Siva Gita A Critical Study hdl 10603 295754 a b Doniger 2011 pp 489 502 Ellwood Austin Welden 1910 The Samkhya Term Linga The American Journal of Philology The Johns Hopkins University Press 31 4 445 459 doi 10 2307 288521 JSTOR 288521 Charles Phillips Michael Kerrigan David Gould 2011 Ancient India Myths and Beliefs The Rosen Publishing Group pp 41 45 ISBN 978 1 4488 5990 0 Harding Elizabeth U 1998 God the Father Kali The Black Goddess of Dakshineswar Motilal Banarsidass pp 156 157 ISBN 978 81 208 1450 9 a b c d e Vivekananda Swami The Paris congress of the history of religions The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda Vol 4 Singh Nagendra Kr 1997 Encyclopaedia of Hinduism 1st ed New Delhi Centre for International Religious Studies p 1567 ISBN 9788174881687 John Guy 2007 Indian Temple Sculpture Harry N Abrams p 35 ISBN 978 1 85177 509 5 a b c d e f Doniger 2011 pp 491 493 Elgood Heather 2000 Hinduism and the Religious Arts London Cassell p 47 ISBN 978 0 8264 9865 6 T A Gopinatha Rao 1997 Elements of Hindu Iconography Motilal Banarsidass pp 223 229 237 ISBN 978 81 208 0877 5 Shiva as Lord of the Dance Nataraja Chola period c 10th 11th century The Art Institute of Chicago United States P Arundhati 2002 Annapurna A Bunch of Flowers of Indian Culture Concept pp 40 45 ISBN 978 81 7022 897 4 Ghurye G S 1952 Ascetic Origins Sociological Bulletin Sociological Bulletin 1 2 1 2 162 184 doi 10 1177 0038022919520206 S2CID 220049343 a b c d Pensa Corrado Some Internal and Comparative Problems in the Field of Indian Religions Problems and Methods of the History of Religions Brill 1972 102 122 Urdhvaretas Urdhvaretas urdhvaretas Urdhva retas 7 definitions www wisdomlib org 9 September 2014 a b c Kramrisch 1994 p 26 a b Swami Agehananda Bharati 1970 The Tantric Tradition Red Wheel Weiser p 294 ISBN 0877282536 a b Devdutt Pattanaik 2018 Shiva to Shankara Giving Form to the Formless HarperCollins pp 13 14 ISBN 9789352641956 O Flaherty Wendy Doniger Asceticism and Sexuality in the Mythology of Siva Part I History of Religions 8 no 4 1969 300 37 Accessed September 7 2021 http www jstor org stable 1062019 Kramrisch 1994 p 555 Kramrisch 1994 p 238 S Kramrisch 1994 The Presence of Siva Princeton University Press p 179 ISBN 0 691 01930 4 a b c d T A Gopinatha Rao 1993 Elements of Hindu Iconography Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass pp 63 67 ISBN 978 81 208 0877 5 a b Mahadev Chakravarti 1986 The Concept of Rudra Siva Through the Ages Motilal Banarsidass pp 131 133 ISBN 978 81 208 0053 3 C Sivaramamurti 1977 L Art en Inde H N Abrams p 77 ISBN 978 0 8109 0630 3 a b Pattanaik Devdutt Shiva to Shankara Decoding the phallic symbol Indus Source 2006 Govind Sadashiv Ghurye 1966 Indian Costume Popular Prakashan pp xvi xlvii ISBN 978 81 7154 403 5 Shashi Asthana 1999 Mathura Kala Catalogue of Mathura Sculptures in National Museum National Museum of India pp 23 28 ISBN 978 81 85832 10 4 Frederick M Asher 1980 The Art of Eastern India 300 800 University of Minnesota Press p 27 ISBN 978 1 4529 1225 7 Michael W Meister 1984 Discourses on Siva University of Pennsylvania Press p 494 ISBN 978 0 8122 7909 2 Kramrisch 1994 p 220 222 Grimes 1996 p 176 Alf Hiltebeitel 2018 Freud s Mahabharata Oxford University Press pp 123 124 footnote 179 ISBN 978 0 19 087834 4 a b c d Kramrisch 1994 p 206 a b c The reason for Siva s assuming the phallic form liṅga Chapter 12 www wisdomlib org 29 October 2018 Retrieved 5 March 2021 a b Kramrisch 1994 p 207 a b Kramrisch 1994 p 207 208 Mode of worshiping the phallic form of Siva and making gifts Chapter 11 www wisdomlib org 19 August 2018 Retrieved 5 March 2021 Chaturvedi 2004 Shiv Purana 2006 ed Diamond Pocket Books p 11 ISBN 978 81 7182 721 3 a b Blurton T R 1992 Stone statue of Shiva as Lingodbhava Extract from Hindu art London The British Museum Press British Museum site Retrieved 2 July 2010 Reading the Vedic Literature in Sanskrit is1 mum edu Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 2 June 2017 Wadher Rupesh Dwivedi RambabuR 2012 Applicability and importance of Caraka s concept of Aaturaparijnana Hetawah in understanding a patient AYU 33 2 188 192 doi 10 4103 0974 8520 105236 PMC 3611657 PMID 23559788 Quote Linga or Symptomatology Linga acquires the second position in the Tri Sutra It includes entire signs and symptoms of the diseases and health also Only the knowledge of Hetu is not sufficient for the diagnosis of Aaturavastha Hence Linga or the symptomatology is very useful tool in the diagnosis of a disease Thakar VJ 1982 Diagnostic methods in ayurveda Anc Sci Life 1 3 139 45 PMC 3336683 PMID 22556480 Junjarwad Ashwini Savalgi Pavan Vyas Mahesh 2013 Critical review on Bhaishajya Kaala time of drug administration in Ayurveda AYU 34 1 6 10 doi 10 4103 0974 8520 115436 PMC 3764882 PMID 24049398 Peter M Scharf 1996 The Denotation of Generic Terms in Ancient Indian Philosophy Grammar Nyaya and Mimaṃsa American Philosophical Society pp 66 136 with footnotes ISBN 978 0 87169 863 6 Hartmut Scharfe 1977 Grammatical Literature Otto Harrassowitz Verlag pp 105 106 ISBN 978 3 447 01706 0 Satis Chandra Vidyabhusana 1988 A History of Indian Logic Ancient Mediaeval and Modern Schools Motilal Banarsidass pp 377 510 511 ISBN 978 81 208 0565 1 Wilhelm Halbfass 1991 Tradition and Reflection Explorations in Indian Thought State University of New York Press pp 159 161 ISBN 978 1 4384 0546 9 James W Haag Gregory R Peterson Michael L Spezio 2012 The Routledge Companion to Religion and Science Routledge pp 503 504 ISBN 978 1 136 63417 8 Alex Wayman 1987 O that Linga Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute 68 1 4 19 20 a b c d e f Doniger 2011 pp 493 498 J L Brockington 2016 Hinduism and Christianity Springer p 33 ISBN 978 1 349 22280 3 Susan Bayly 2003 Saints Goddesses and Kings Muslims and Christians in South Indian Society 1700 1900 Cambridge University Press pp 129 130 with footnote 55 ISBN 978 0 521 89103 5 a b Alex Wayman 1987 O that Linga Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute 68 1 4 17 22 25 Doniger 2011 pp 498 499 But several of the Delhi sultans those who were particularly devout and iconoclast Muslims regarded the lingam as sexual and anthropomorphic and took pride in destroying as many lingams as they could In 1026 Mahmud of Ghazni attacked the temple of Somnath which held a famous Shiva lingam this much at least seems to be historical fact But then comes the mythologizing According to some versions of the story including early Turko Persian triumphalist sources Mahmud stripped the great gilded lingam of its gold and hacked it to bits with his sword sending the bits back to Ghazni where they were incorporated into the steps of the new mosque Keay 2000 207 209 Medieval Hindu epics of resistance created a countermythology in which the stolen image came to life another bit of evidence that it was regarded as a living thing a body in itself and eventually like a horse trotting back to the stable returned to the temple to be reconsecrated Davis 1997 90 112 Mehrdad Shokoohy 2013 Muslim Architecture of South India Routledge pp 17 18 ISBN 978 1 136 49984 5 Douglas T McGetchin 2009 Indology Indomania and Orientalism Ancient India s Rebirth in Modern Germany Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press p 34 ISBN 978 0 8386 4208 5 Doniger 2011 p 500 Quote The British missionaries most despised what they regarded as the obscene idolatry of the lingam The British in general who were of course Victorian in every sense of the word regarded the Hindus as they regarded most colonized people of color as simultaneously oversexed and impotent and the British presence had a negative effect on the self perception that Hindus had of their own bodies Nandy 1983 For still reeling from the onslaught of the Muslim campaigns against lingams the Hindus who worked with and for the British internalized their colonizers scorn a b Imma Ramos 2017 Pilgrimage and Politics in Colonial Bengal The Myth of the Goddess Sati Taylor amp Francis pp 56 58 ISBN 978 1 351 84000 2 Hugh B Urban 2009 The Power of Tantra Religion Sexuality and the Politics of South Asian Studies I B Tauris pp 8 10 ISBN 978 0 85773 158 6 a b c Doniger 2011 pp 500 502 a b Doniger 2011 pp 499 505 T A Gopinatha Rao 1993 Elements of Hindu Iconography Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass pp 81 84 ISBN 978 81 208 0877 5 Stella Kramrisch 1994 Exploring India S Sacred Art Selected Writings of Stella Kramrisch Ed amp With A Biographical Essay Motilal Banarsidass pp 141 147 ISBN 978 81 208 1208 6 T A Gopinatha Rao 1993 Elements of Hindu Iconography Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass pp 97 99 ISBN 978 81 208 0877 5 N S Ramaswami 1976 Monograph on temples of Mukhalingam Government of Andhra Pradesh pp 1 9 Mahadev Chakravarti 1986 The Concept of Rudra Siva Through the Ages Motilal Banarsidass pp 159 161 ISBN 978 81 208 0053 3 S Kramrisch 1994 The Presence of Siva Princeton University Press pp 178 183 ISBN 0 691 01930 4 T A Gopinatha Rao 1993 Elements of Hindu Iconography Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass pp 95 96 ISBN 978 81 208 0877 5 T A Gopinatha Rao 1993 Elements of Hindu Iconography Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass pp 96 97 ISBN 978 81 208 0877 5 T A Gopinatha Rao 1993 Elements of Hindu Iconography Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass pp 96 98 ISBN 978 81 208 0877 5 T A Gopinatha Rao 1993 Elements of Hindu Iconography Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass pp 99 100 ISBN 978 81 208 0877 5 T A Gopinatha Rao 1993 Elements of Hindu Iconography Volume 2 Motilal Banarsidass pp 87 94 ISBN 978 81 208 0877 5 Christopher John Fuller 2004 The Camphor Flame Popular Hinduism and Society in India Princeton University Press p 58 ISBN 9780691120485 Dominic Goodall Nibedita Rout R Sathyanarayanan S A S Sarma T Ganesan and S Sambandhasivacarya The Pancavaraṇastava of Aghorasivacarya A twelfth century South Indian prescription for the visualisation of Sadasiva and his retinue Pondicherry French Institute of Pondicherry and Ecole francaise d Extreme Orient 2005 p 12 Andrew David Hardy Mauro Cucarzi Patrizia Zolese 2009 Champa and the Archaeology of Mỹ Sơn Vietnam p NUS Press pp 138 159 ISBN 978 9971 69 451 7 Pratapaditya Pal 1985 Art of Nepal A Catalogue of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art Collection University of California Press p 109 ISBN 978 0 520 05407 3 Olson 2007 p 244 McCormack 1963 pp 59 62 a b Dalal 2010 p 208 209 Olson 2007 p 239 240 Schouten 1995 pp 71 72 Schouten 1995 p 6 a b L K A Iyer 1965 The Mysore Mittal Publications pp 81 82 Blake Michael 1992 pp 22 82 83 Joanne Punzo Waghorne Norman Cutler Vasudha Narayanan 1996 Gods of Flesh Gods of Stone The Embodiment of Divinity in India Columbia University Press pp 184 note 15 ISBN 978 0 231 10777 8 Amarnath Journey to the shrine of a Hindu god Boston com 13 July 2012 under the section General Introduction Kadavul Hindu Temple Himalayanacademy Iraivan Temple in the News Rare Crystal Siva Lingam Arrives at Hawaii Temple hinduismtoday यह ह व श व क सबस बड प र क त क श वल ग 16 January 2015 Bhuteshwar Shivling news yahoo com Archived from the original on 30 June 2018 Shivling in Chhattisgarh 18 December 2015 Tallest Shiva lingam in country enters India book of records Thiruvananthapuram News Times of India The Times of India TNN 10 January 2019 Retrieved 27 June 2021 Singh Upinder 2008 A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India From the Stone Age to the 12th Century Pearson Education India p 435 ISBN 978 81 317 1120 0 a b Kramrisch 1994 p 218 Ghurye G S 1952 Ascetic Origins Sociological Bulletin 1 2 pp 162 184 Bibliography Edit Basham A L The Wonder That Was India A survey of the culture of the Indian Sub Continent before the coming of the Muslims Grove Press Inc New York 1954 Evergreen Edition 1959 Blake Michael R 1992 The Origins of Virasaiva Sects A Typological Analysis of Ritual and Associational Patterns in the Sunyasaṃpadane Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 0776 1 Chakravarti Mahadev The Concept of Rudra Siva Through the Ages Delhi Motilal Banarasidass 1986 ISBN 8120800532 Dalal Roshen 2010 The Religions of India A Concise Guide to Nine Major Faiths Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 341517 6 Davis Richard H 1992 Ritual in an Oscillating Universe Worshipping Siva in Medieval India Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691073866 Danielou Alain 1991 The Myths and Gods of India The Classic Work on Hindu Polytheism Inner Traditions Bear amp Company pp 222 231 ISBN 0 89281 354 7 Doniger Wendy 2011 God s Body or The Lingam Made Flesh Conflicts over the Representation of the Sexual Body of the Hindu God Shiva Soc Res Social Research 78 2 485 508 ISSN 0037 783X JSTOR 23347187 OCLC 772197753 Drabu V N Saivagamas A Study in the Socio economic Ideas and Institutions of Kashmir 200 B C to A D 700 New Delhi Indus Publishing 1990 ISBN 8185182388 Kramrisch Stella 1988 The Presence of Siva Delhi Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 9788120804913 McCormack William 1963 Lingayats as a Sect The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 93 1 59 71 doi 10 2307 2844333 JSTOR 2844333 Olson Carl 2007 The Many Colors of Hinduism A Thematic historical Introduction Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0813540689 Sarma Ramakaraṇa 1996 Sivasahasranamaṣṭakam eight collections of hymns containing one thousand and eight names of Siva Delhi Nag Publishers ISBN 9788170813507 OCLC 36990863 Includes Sivasahasranamakoṣa a dictionary of names This work compares eight versions of the Sivasahasranamastotra The preface and introduction in English by Ram Karan Sharma provide an analysis of how the eight versions compare with one another The text of the eight versions is given in Sanskrit Schumacher Stephan and Woerner Gert The Encyclopedia of Eastern Philosophy and Religion Buddhism Taoism Zen Hinduism Shambhala Boston 1994 ISBN 0 87773 980 3 Schouten Jan Peter 1995 Revolution of the Mystics On the Social Aspects of Virasaivism Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120812383 Kramrisch Stella 1994 The Presence of Siva Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691019307 Chakravarti Mahadev 1986 The concept of Rudra Siva through the ages Motilal Banarsidass Publ ISBN 81 208 0053 2 Constance Jones James Ryan 2006 Encyclopedia of Hinduism Facts On File ISBN 0816054584 DeVito Carole DeVito Pasquale 1994 India Mahabharata Fulbright Hays Summer Seminar Abroad 1994 India United States Educational Foundation in India Srinivasan Sharada 2004 Shiva as cosmic dancer On Pallava origins for the Nataraja bronze World Archaeology Vol 36 The Journal of Modern Craft pp 432 450 doi 10 1080 1468936042000282726821 S2CID 26503807 Grimes John A 1996 A Concise Dictionary of Indian Philosophy Sanskrit Terms Defined in English State University of New York Press ISBN 0791430677 Mahdihassan S 1989 The Five Cosmic Elements as Depicted in Indian and Chinese Cosmologies The American Journal of Chinese Medicine 4 17 3n04 245 252 doi 10 1142 S0192415X89000346 PMID 2699158 Retrieved 16 September 2021 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Lingam Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lingam Some interesting Linga images from Kalanjara and Ajaigarh SK Sullerey 1980 O that Linga Alex Wayman 1987 Linga and Yoni worship Urmila Agrawal 1995 A note on the Linga with Sakti images in Bengal Art KD Gupta 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lingam amp oldid 1170707237, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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