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Sankardev

Srimanta Sankardev[8] (শ্ৰীমন্ত শংকৰদেৱ; /ˈsrɪˌmæntəˈsænkərˌdv/, Assamese pronunciation: [sɹimɔntɔ xɔŋkɔɹdew]; 1449–1568) was a 15th–16th century Assamese polymath; a saint-scholar, poet, playwright, dancer, actor, musician, artist social-religious reformer and a figure of importance in the cultural and religious history of Assam, India. He is widely credited with building on past cultural relics and devising new forms of music (Borgeet), theatrical performance (Ankia Naat, Bhaona), dance (Sattriya), literary language (Brajavali). Besides, he has left an extensive literary oeuvre of trans-created scriptures (Bhagavat of Sankardev), poetry and theological works written in Sanskrit, Assamese and Brajavali. The Bhagavatic religious movement he started, Ekasarana Dharma and also called Neo-Vaishnavite movement,[9] influenced two medieval kingdoms – Koch and the Ahom kingdom – and the assembly of devotees he initiated evolved over time into monastic centers called Sattras, which continue to be important socio-religious institutions in Assam and to a lesser extent in North Bengal. Sankardev inspired the Bhakti movement in Assam just as Guru Nanak, Ramananda, Namdev, Kabir, Basava and Chaitanya Mahaprabhu inspired it elsewhere in the Indian subcontinent.

Sankardev
Imaginary portrait of Srimanta Sankardev by Bishnu Prasad Rabha[1]
Personal
Born26 September 1449,
Died7 September 1568[2]
Bheladonga
(Today Cooch Behar, West Bengal, India)
ReligionEkasarana Dharma
Parents
  • Kusumbar Siromani Bhuyan[3] (father)
  • Satyasandhya (mother)
Founder ofEkasarana Dharma
PhilosophyEkasarana
Senior posting
SuccessorMadhavdev
HonorsVenerated as Mahapurusha
Quotation

Do, therefore, regard all and everything as though they were God Himself!? Seek not to know the caste of a Brahmana nor of a Chandala.[7]

His literary and artistic contributions are living traditions in Assam today. The religion he preached is practised by a large population, and Sattras (monasteries) that he and his followers established continue to flourish and sustain his legacy.

Biography Edit

After the death of Sankardev, Madhavdev incorporated narrations of his life in prayer services, a practice that was followed by his apostles, and in due course of time a large body of biographical literature arose.[10] These are generally classed in two groups: early (those by Daityari Thakur, Bhusan Dwija, Ramananda Dwija and Vaikuntha Dwija) and late (Guruvarnana by Aniruddha Das, the more than one anonymous Katha-guru-carits, Bardowa-carit, Sankardev caritra from Barpeta, the Saru-svarga-khanda and Bar-svarga-khanda by Sarvabhauma).[11] The authorship of the biography credited to Ramcaran Thakur, Daityari Thakur's father, is doubted and it is generally dated to the 17th-century and classed with the late biographies.[12]

In general, all biographies consider Sankardev as an incarnation of Vishnu, including that by Daityari Thakur, the earliest. The late biographies differ from the early group on the count that they ascribe supernatural feats to Sankardev, and describe miraculous events; and there is a tendency to read some events of the Bhagavata into his life.[13] The biographies are full of contradictions; even though the earlier ones are considered more accurate, not all they claim are true—Daityari Thakur's biography, the earliest one, claims Sankardev met with Chaitanya, which is now not accepted to be true.[14]

Early life: Alipukhuri and Bordowa Edit

Sankardev's Family Tree
ChandivaraSandhya
RajadharaDevahuti
KhersutiSuryavaraJayantaHalayudhaMadhava
SatyasandhaKusumvaraAnudhritiSatananda
SuryavatiSankardevKalindiHaladharaRamaraya
HariManuRamanandaKamalocanaHaricaranaKamalapriyaChilarai
PurushottamChaturbhuj

Sankardev, then named Sankaravara,[15] was born into the Shiromani (chief) Baro-Bhuyans family at Alipukhuri near Bordowa in present-day Nagaon district in c1449.[16] Though some authors have expressed doubt that Sankardev could have lived that long, considering that he was of robust health 1449 is generally accepted.[17] The Baro-Bhuyans were independent landlords in Assam, and Sankardev belonged to the Kayastha Hindu caste. His family-members, including parents Kusumvar Bhuyan and Satyasandhya Devi, were Saktas. Sankardev lost his father to smallpox when he was about 7 years old,[18] and his mother died either soon after his birth, or soon after his father's death;[19] and he was raised by his grandmother Khersuti.

He began attending Mahendra Kandali's tol or chatrasaal (school) at the age of 12 and soon wrote his first verses karatala-kamala. The complete poem was written before he was taught the vowels except, of course, the first one, and is often cited as an example of the early flowering of his poetic genius. He stayed at the tol during his teens, and studied grammar and Indian scriptures.[20] He practised yoga (which he gave up later) and was physically very able,[21] and according to legend, he could swim across the Brahmaputra while it was in spate. It is generally believed that he wrote his first work, Harishchandra upakhyan, while at the tol.[20] Mahendra Kandali changed his name to 'Sankardev' while he was at school.[20]

Bhuyan shiromaniship Edit

Sankardev soon mastered the major scriptures and thereafter left the tol in his late teens (c1465) to attend to his responsibilities as the Shiromani Bhuyan. He came to be known as the Dekagiri among his subjects and admirers. As Alipukhuri had become crowded, he moved his household from Alipukhuri to Bordowa. He married his first wife Suryavati when he was in his early 20s and a daughter, Manu, was born in about three years, but his wife died about nine months later.[22]

First pilgrimage Edit

It is possible that the death of his wife increased his already existing spiritual inclination and he left for a twelve-year-long pilgrimage, sometime after his daughter was married to Hari, a Bhuyan scion. He handed over the maintenance of his household to his son-in-law Hari; the Bhuyan Shiromaniship to his grand uncles Jayanta and Madhav; and began his journey in 1481. He was accompanied by seventeen others including his friend and associate Ramaram and his teacher Mahendra Kandali.[23] At this point of time, he was 32. The pilgrimage took him to Puri, Mathura, Dwaraka, Vrindavan, Gaya, Rameswaram, Ayodhya, Sitakunda and almost all the other major seats of the Vaishnavite religion in India. He seem to have spent many years at Jagannath-kshetra at Puri, where he read and explained the Brahma Purana to the priests and lay people.[24] At Badrikashram in 1488, he composed his first borgeetmana meri ram charanahi lagu—in Brajavali.[25] According to Katha Gurucharit, the first Borgeet was "Rama meri hridaya pankaje baise" and he composed it in 1481 at the very outset of the pilgrimage at a place called Rowmari.[26] He returned home to Alipukhuri after 12 years (his family had moved back from Bordowa in his absence). During his pilgrimage, he became the part of a pan-Indian Bhakti movement and helped it blossom.

Shiromaniship refusal Edit

On his return from his pilgrimage (c1493), Sankardev refused to take back the Shiromaniship, though on the insistence of his elders, he took responsibility of a hundred families (gomastha) but he soon handed over the responsibility to his son-in-law Hari. On his grandmother's insistence, he married Kalindi at the age of 54. Finally, he moved back to Bordowa and constructed a temple (devagriha) in c1498,[27] possibly a thatched house, built on the original site of his father's house where he could meet with people, discuss religious matters and hold prayers, and preach. He wrote Bhakti pradipa and Rukmini harana. Soon after, he received a copy of the Bhagavata Purana from Jagadisa Mishra of Mithila, with Sridhara Swami's monistic commentary "Bhavartha-dipika". Mishra recited and explained the entire Bhagavata in the presence of Sankardev and this event is considered momentous in the development of Ekasarana.[28] Datyari, an early biographer of Sankardev writes: Sankardev listened with rapt attention to the exposition by Jagadish Mishra and realised that the Bhagavata was a scripture without parallel, a scripture that determined Krishna as the only God, naam as the real dharma, and aikantika-sarana and sat-sanga as the indispensable elements of the faith."[29] He also began composing the Kirtana ghosha.

Cihna-yatra Edit

After his exposure to the detailed Bhagavata Purana and Sridhara Swami's commentary Bhavartha-dipika, Sankardev produced a dance-drama called Cihna yatra, for which he painted the Sapta vaikuntha (seven heavens), guided the making of musical instruments and played the instruments himself.[30][31] According to other biographers, Sankardev produced Maha-nata in the presence of Jagdish Mishra in the temple he had constructed at Alipukhuri.[32]

According to Neog, this was the point when Sankardev decided to preach a new religion. Some of the first to be initiated into this religion was the wife of Jayanta-dalai, a leper named Hariram (later Tulasiram), Ramaram his associate and Mahendra Kandali, his tol teacher.[33] The 13 years at Alipukhuri was the period during which he reflected deeply on Vaishnavism and on the form that would best suit the spiritual and ethical needs of the people. Ananta Kandali, a profound scholar of Sanskrit, became his disciple during this time; he translated the later part of Canto X of the Bhagavata Purana after consulting Sankardev.

From Alipukhuri Sankardev moved back to Bordowa in 1509 and built a thaan. Some authors claim that this than had all the major features of a sattra (central kirtanghar, cari-hati etc.),[34] whereas many others assert that these features did not exist during Sankardev's time.[35][36] This than was abandoned and more than a hundred years later in the middle of the 17th-century, Sankardev's granddaughter-in-law, Kanaklata, established it again.[37]

Literary works in the Baro-Bhuyan territories Edit

  1. Non-Bhagavata group
    • Harishcandra-Upakhyana
    • Bhakti-pradip
    • Kirtan-ghosa (Uresa-varnana)
  2. Non-Bhagavata mixed with Bhagavata elements, not influenced by Sridhara Swami
    • Rukmini-harana-kavya
  3. Lyrics
  4. Bhagavata tales, not from Book X
    • Ajamilopakhyan (Book VI)
    • Amrta-manthan (Book VIII)
    • Kirtan-ghosa (Ajamilopakhyan, Prahlada-caritra, Harmohana,
    • Sections ii–vi[38][39]

Ahom kingdom Edit

Gangmau Edit

Biswa Singha, began his activities to remove the Bhuyans from power in the western part of the Brahmaputra valley in 1509. Furthermore, the Bhuyans in the Bordowa area picked up a quarrel with their Kachari neighbours, and when attacked Sankardev advised the Bhuyans to move, which brought to an end the independence of this group of Bhuyans.[40] Sankardev and his associates first crossed the Brahmaputra river in 1516–17 and settled first at Singari and finally at Routa; and when Viswa Singha advanced towards Routa, Sankardev moved to Gangmau in the Ahom kingdom in 1527.[41][40] At Gangmau they stayed for five years where Sankardev's eldest son Ramananda was born. At Gangmau, he wrote the drama Patniprasad. In fact he lived alone at a place named Gajalasuti out of dissatisfaction with some relative. He penned the play there.

Dhuwahat Edit

While at Gangmau, the Koch king Biswa Singha attacked the Ahoms. The Bhuyans fought for the Ahoms and the Koch king was defeated. Due to the unsettled situation at Gangmau Sankardev next moved to Dhuwahat, near Ahatguri in present-day Majuli, washed away by the Brahmaputra in 1913. The Bhuyans were settled here by the Ahoms with land and estate,[42] Hari, Sankardev's son-in-law became a Saikia, and his cousin Jagatananda, grandson of Jayanta received a title 'Ramarai'.[43] At Dhuwahat, he met his spiritual successor Madhavdev. Madhavdev, a sakta, got into a religious altercation with his brother-in-law Ramadas who had recently converted to Vaishnavism. Ramadas took him to Sankardev, who, after a long debate, convinced him of the power and the efficacy of Ekasarana. The acquisition of Madhavdev, with his talent in poetry, singing and dedication to his new-found religion and guru, was a significant event in the Ekasarana history. At Dhuwahat he managed to attract a wider attention and popularity and he initiated many others into his religion.

The popularity of Ekasarana and the conversion of people alarmed the priestly Brahmins,[44] who reacted with anger and hostility. Sankardev tried to diffuse their hostility—by meeting with them at the house of his relative Budha-Khan[45] and asking his Brahmin antagonists to install a wooden idol of Jagannath, called Madan-Mohan, at his religious seat. (Sankardev left this idol hanging on a tree when he took flight from Dhuwahat, and it was rescued years later by Vamshigopaldev and installed at Deberapar-sattra).[46][47] The Brahmins finally complained to the Ahom king, Suhungmung (1497–1539), who summoned Sankardev to his court for a debate with them. Sankardev was able to convince the king that he was not a religious rebel and a threat to the social order, and the charges against him were dropped.[45] The hostility, nevertheless, continued.[48]

Flight from Dhuwahat Edit

Though the positions of the Bhuyans in the Ahom kingdom began comfortably—with Sankardev's son-in-law, Hari, becoming a Paik officer and Ramrai, his cousin, becoming a royal official—the relationship gradually deteriorated. After the death of Viswasingha, who was inimical to the Bhuyans, and the rise of Naranarayan (1540), the Koch-Bhuyan relationship improved somewhat.[49] Sometime in the 1540s during the reign of Suklenmung (1539–1552) a royal officer visited the region for an elephant capturing expedition. Hari did not make himself available and furthermore, an elephant escaped through a barrier managed by the Bhuyans. The officer took grave offence in this dereliction of duty and arrested Hari as well as Madhavdev. At Garhgaon, Hari was executed and Madhavdev interned for about a year.[50] According to Daityari, taking advantage of the Koch advance against the Ahoms (1546–1547), Sankardev and his followers escaped from the Ahom kingdom as they fell behind the vanguard of the Koch army setting up their garrison in Narayanpur further to the east.[51]

Literary works in the Ahom kingdom Edit

  1. Arguments against those antagonistic to bhakti
    • Kirtan-ghosa (Pasanda-mardana, Namaparadha)
    • (Vipra)-patni-prasad (Ankia Naat)
  2. Tales from Krishna's early life
    • Kirtan-ghosa (sisu-lila, rasa-krida, kamsavadha, gopi-uddhava-samvada, kujir vancha-purana, akrurar vancha-purana)
  3. Borgeets

Koch kingdom Edit

Sunpora Edit

Sankardev and his followers reached Kapalabari in Koch kingdom in later part of 1540 and put up there. But the water was very alkaline there. Several members including Madhavdev's mother Manorama died there. So after staying for some time at Kapalabari, Sankardev and his group moved to Sunpora in 1541.[52] At Sunpora Sankardev initiated Bhavananda, a rich trader who had extensive business interest in the Garo Hills and Bhutan Hills besides Kamarupa. The trader, Narayana Das, settled at Janiya near Barpeta and took to agriculture. A man of the world otherwise, he soon flourished and became a provider to Sankardev and his devotees. He came to be known popularly as Thakur Ata.

Patbausi Edit

After a great deal of moving, Sankardev settled at Patbausi near Barpeta in the Koch Kingdom and constructed a Kirtanghar (house of prayer). Some of the people he initiated here are Chakrapani Dwija and Sarvabhaum Bhattacharya, Brahmins; Govinda, a Garo; Jayaram, a Bhutia; Madhai, a Jaintia; Jatiram, an ascetic; and Murari, a Koch. Damodardev, a Brahmin, was initiated by Sankardev. Damodardev was entrusted by Sankardev to initiate Brahmin disciples. A Sattra was also constructed for him at Patbausi itself. Later Damodardev became the founder of the Brahma Sanghati sect of Sankardev's religion.

Among Sankardev's literary works, he completed his rendering of the Bhagavata Purana and wrote other independent works. He continued composing the Kirtan Ghosha, further translated the first canto of the Ramayana (Adi Kanda) and instructed Madhavdev to translate the last canto (Uttara Kanda), portions that were left undone by the 14th century poet Madhav Kandali. He wrote four plays: Rukmini harana, Parijata harana, Keligopala and Kalidamana. Another play written at Patbausi, Kansa Vadha, is lost. At Patbausi, he had lent his Bargeets numbering around 240 to Kamala Gayan. But unfortunately, Gayan's house was gutted and most of the borgeets were lost. Since that incident Sankardev stopped composing Bargeets. Of the 240, 34 remain today.

Second Pilgrimage Edit

Sankardev once again left for a pilgrimage in 1550 with a large party of 117 disciples that included Madhavdev, Ramrai, Ramaram, Thakur Ata and others. Thakur Ata had to return after just one day's journey. Madhavdev had to take entire responsibility of logistics. He on the request of Sankardev's wife Kalindi urged him to return from Puri and not proceed to Vrindavana. Sankardev and the group returned to Patbausi within six months in 1551.

Koch capital and Bheladanga Edit

On receiving repeated complaints that Sankardev was corrupting the minds of the people by spreading a new religion Nara Narayan, the Koch king, ordered Sankardev's arrest, and Sankardev went into hiding.[53] Chilarai—the general of the Koch army, half-brother of the king and married to Kamalapriya the daughter of Sankardev's cousin Ramarai—then convinced the king to give Sankardev a hearing instead.[54]

For the audience with Nara Narayan, as he moved up the steps to the court, Sankardev sang his Sanskrit totaka hymn, composed extempore, to Lord Krishna madhu daanava daarana deva varam and as he sat down, he sang a borgeet, narayana kahe bhakati karu tera, playing on the name of the king. At the debate with the court pundits that followed, Sankardev was able to refute all allegations against him. The king declared him free and furthermore honored him with a seat close to the throne. Sankardev began to attend Naranarayana's court regularly, and received the freedom to propagate his teachings.

Chilarai was instrumental in keeping Sankardev safe and supporting his work. Many of Sankardev's literary and dramatic works were completed in his domain with his patronage and protection. Sankardev acknowledged his appreciation in his play 'Ram Vijaya'.

Sankardev shuttled between Koch Behar the capital and Patbausi his seat. He was often hosted by Chilarai, and on his request agreed to have the images of the childhood days of krishna at Vrindavan woven on cloth. He engaged the weavers of Tantikuchi, near Barpeta, to weave a forty-yard long tapestry panel. Sankaradeva provided the designs to be woven, chose the various colours of thread to be used, and supervised the weaving. It took about a year to complete and, deriving its name from its theme, came to be known as the Vrindavani vastra. It was presented to Chilarai and Naranarayan. A section of this cloth is preserved now in the Victoria and Albert museum in London.

Chandsai, a Muslim tailor serving the Koch king became a disciple of Sankardev at Kochbehar. When Sankardev returned to Patbausi some time later, Chandsai too came with the saint. Sankardev frequented the capital for more than 20 years and enjoyed unstinted royal patronage for the first time.

End Edit

He made arrangements with Madhavdev and Thakur Ata and gave them various instructions at Patbausi and left the place for the last time. He set up his home at Bheladonga in Kochbehar. During his stay at Kochbehar, Maharaja Naranarayana expressed his wish to be initiated. Sankardev was reluctant to convert a king and declined to do so. (According to one of the biographers Ramcharan Thakur) A painful boil; a visha phohara – had appeared in some part of his body and this led to the passing away of the Saint. Thus, in 1568, after leading a most eventful life dedicated to enlightening humanity; the Mahapurusha breathed his last – after four months of his last stay at Bheladonga– aged 120.

Literary works in the Koch kingdom Edit

  1. Bhagavata tales, not from Book X
    • Bali-chalana (Book VIII)
    • Anadi-patana (Book III, Vamana-purana)
  2. Bhagavata tales from Books X, XI, XIII
    • Kirtan-ghosa (Jarasandha yudha, Kalayavana badha, Mucukunda-stuti, Syamanta-haran, Naradar-krishna-darsan, Vipra-putra-anayana, Daivakir-putra-anayana, Veda-stuti, Lilamala, Rukminir-prem-kalah, Bhrigu-pariksha, srikrishnar-vaikuntha-prayana, Chaturvimsati-avatar-varnana, Tatparya)
  3. Gunamala
  4. Renderings of Bhagavata Purana
    • Bhagavata X (Adi)
    • Bhagavata XI (with material from Books I and III)
    • Bhagavata XII
    • Bhagavata I
    • Bhagavata II
    • Bhagavata IX (lost)
    • Kurukshetra (Book X, Uttarardha)
    • Nimi-nava-siddha-samvada
  5. From Ramayana
    • Ramayana, Uttara-kanda
  6. Lyrics
    • Borgeets
    • Totaya
    • Bhatima
  7. Doctrinal treatise
    • Bhakti-ratnakar
  8. Drama (Ankia Naat)
    • Kali-daman
    • Keli-gopal
    • Rukmini-haran
    • Parijat-haran
    • Ram-vijay
  9. Visual Art
Birth
Parents die
Weds Suryavati
Manu born
Manu weds Hari
Weds Kalindi
Initiates Madhabdev
Hari executed
2nd pilgrimage
Bheladonga
Alipukhuri
Borduwa
Pilgrimage
Alipukhuri
Borduwa
Gangmau
Dhuwahat
Patbausi
Kusumvara
Jayanta/Madhava
Sankardev
Jayanta/Madhava
Niladhwaj
Chakradhwaj
Nilambar
Kabir born
Guru Nanak born
Chaitanya born
Meera Bai born
Tulsidas born
Chaitainya Mahaprabhu died
1440
1468
1496
1524
1552
1580

Ekasarana Edit

Sankardev preached pure devotion (bhakti) to Krishna consisting primarily in the singing (kirtan) and listening to (sravan) of his deeds and activities. Ekasarana follows the dasya attitude (bhava) of worship in which the devotee considers himself to be a servant of God. In contrast to other Vaishnava schools, Radha is not worshiped along with Krishna.

The people who practice his religion are referred to variously as Mahapurushia, Sarania and Sankari.

Srimanta Sankardev started a system of initiation (Sarana) into his religion. He caused a huge social revolution by fighting against the caste discrimination prevailing at that time. He initiated people of all castes and religions, including Muslims. After initiation, the devotee is expected to adhere to the religious tenets of Ekasarana consisting in worship to one God, Krishna, and offering devotion to him, forsaking completely all forms of Vedic rites.

Though he himself married twice, had children and led the life of a householder, his disciple Madhavdev did not. Some of his followers today follow celibate life (kevaliya bhakat) in the Vaishnavite monasteries – the sattras.

Sankardev's famous debate with Madhavdev, who was a staunch sakta (devotee of Shakti) earlier, and Madhavdev's subsequent induction into Ekasarana, is often cited as the single most epoch-making event in the history of the neo-Vaishnavite movement in Assam. Madhavdev, an equally multi-talented person, became his most celebrated disciple.

Literary works Edit

Sankardev produced a large body of work. Though there were others before him who wrote in the language of the common man – Madhav Kandali who translated the Ramayana into Assamese in the 14th century – This was the first ramayana to be written in a modern Indian language – Harivara Vipra and Hema Saraswati, it was Sankardev who opened the floodgates and inspired others like Madhavdev to carry on where he left off.

His language is lucid, his verses lilting, and he infused bhakti into everything he wrote. His magnum opus is his Kirtana-ghosha, a work so popular that even today it is found in many household in Assam. It contains narrative verses glorifying Krishna meant for community singing. It is a bhakti kayva par excellence, written in a lively and simple language, it has "stories and songs for amusement [for children], it delights the young with true poetic beauty and elderly people find here religious instruction and wisdom".

For most of his works, he used the Assamese language of the period so the lay person could read and understand them. But for dramatic effect in his songs and dramas he used Brajavali.

Other literary works include the rendering of eight books of the Bhagavata Purana including the Adi Dasama (Book X), Harishchandra-upakhyana (his first work), Bhakti-pradip, the Nimi-navasiddha-samvada (conversation between King Nimi and the nine Siddhas), Bhakti-ratnakara (Sanskrit verses, mostly from the Bhagavata, compiled into a book), Anadi-patana (having as its theme the creation of the universe and allied cosmological matters), Gunamala and many plays like Rukmini haran, Patni prasad, Keli gopal, Kurukshetra yatra and Srirama vijaya. There was thus a flowering of great Bhakti literature during his long life of 120 years.

Poetic works (kavya) Edit

  • Kirtana-ghosha
  • Harischandra-upakhyana
  • Rukmini-harana
  • Parijat-haran
  • Kaliya-daman
  • Ram-vijay
  • Ajamilopakhyana
  • Bali-chalana
  • Kurukshetra-yatra
  • Gopi-uddhava-samvada
  • Amrita-manthana
  • Krishna-prayana-pandava-niryana
  • Kamajaya

Bhakti Theory Edit

  • Bhakati-pradipa
  • Anadi-patana
  • Nimi-navasiddha-samvada
  • Bhakti Ratnakara (in Sanskrit)
  • Gunamala

Transliteration Edit

His translation of the Bhagavata is actually a transcreation, because he translates not just the words but the idiom and the physiognomy too. He has adapted the original text to the local land and people and most importantly for the purpose of bhakti. Portions of the original were left out or elaborated where appropriate. For example, he suppressed the portions that revile the lowers caste of sudra and kaivartas, and extols them elsewhere.

Drama (Ankia Nat) Edit

  • Cihna Yatra (lost)
  • Patni-prasada
  • Janma-jatra (lost)
  • Kangsa-badha (lost)
  • Parijata-harana
  • Kali-damana
  • Rukmini-harana
  • Keli-gopala
  • Srirama-vijaya
 
Vrindavani vastra (fragment), circa 1570, at LACMA

Sankardev was the fountainhead of the Ankiya naat, a form of one-act play. His Cihna Yatra is regarded as one of the first open-air theatrical performances in the world. Cihna yatra was probably a dance drama and no text of that show is available today. Innovations like the presence of a Sutradhara (narrator) on the stage, use of masks etc., were used later in the plays of Bertolt Brecht and other eminent playwrights.

These cultural traditions still form an integral part of the heritage of the Assamese people.

Songs Edit

  • Borgeet (composed 240, but only 34 exist now)
  • Bhatima
    • Deva bhatima – panegyrics to God
    • Naat bhatima – for use in dramas
    • Raja bhatima – panegyrics to king Nara Narayan

He is a musician; All his creations were orienting to the Vishanav religion and one set of them is called 'Holy Songs', which are known as 'Borgeet(Bargit or Bargeet)' till today in Assam.

The Borgeets (literally: great songs) are devotional songs, set to music and sung in various raga styles. These styles are slightly different from either the Hindustani or the Carnatic styles.[56] The songs themselves are written in the 'Brajavali' language.

Dance Edit

Sattriya dance, that Sankardev first conceived and developed and which was later preserved for centuries by the sattras, is now among the classical dance forms of India. Although certain devout Sankarite calls this form as Sankari dance

Visual Art Edit

  • Sapta vaikuntha – part of the Cihna yatra production, does not exist today.
  • Vrindavani vastra – parts of this work are preserved in London.

The famous Vrindavani Vastra—the cloth of Vrindavan—a 120 x 60 cubits tapestry depicted the lilas of Lord Krishna at Vrindavan through richly woven and embroidered designs on silk.[57] A specimen, believed to be a part of this work, is at the Association pour l'Etude et la Documentation des Textiles d'Asie collection at Paris (inv. no. 3222). The vastra, commissioned by Koch king Naranarayana, was woven by 12 master weavers in Barpeta under the supervision of Sankardev over a period of six-month and completed towards the end of 1554.[58] This textile art depicted the life and deeds of lord Krishna, who is worshipped in Eka Sarana Nama Dharma. The cloth was housed in the royal court of Kochbehar after the saint presented it to the king; but it disappeared at some point. It is believed that parts of this cloth made its way to Tibet and from there to its present place.

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ This portrait, created by Bishnu Rabha in the 20th-century, is generally accepted as the "official" portrait of Sankardev, whose likeness in pictorial form is not available from any extant form A Staff Reporter (14 October 2003). . The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 1 November 2003. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  2. ^ "His eventful career came to an end on Thursday, the 7th or the 21st Bhadra (September), the 2nd day of the bright half of the lunar month, 1490 Saka/1569 AD; and his last physical remains were consigned to fire on the banks of the small river, Toroca." (Neog 1980:120–121)
  3. ^ "Golap Saikia, Srimanta Sankardev, the Pioneer of the Socio-Religious Reform Movement of Medieval Assam" (PDF): 44. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. ^ "639 Identifier Documentation: aho – ISO 639-3". SIL International (formerly known as the Summer Institute of Linguistics). SIL International. Retrieved 29 June 2019. Ahom [aho]
  5. ^ "Population by Religious Communities". Census India – 2001. Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India. Retrieved 1 July 2019. Census Data Finder/C Series/Population by Religious Communities
  6. ^ . Census of India, 2011. The Registrar General & Census Commissioner, India. Archived from the original on 25 August 2015. 2011census/C-01/DDW00C-01 MDDS.XLS
  7. ^ "Kirttana Ghosa – Translations". Retrieved 27 October 2012.
  8. ^ The name is spelt variously as Sankardev, Sankardeva and Sankaradeva. Further discussion may be seen at relevant talk page.
  9. ^ "Sankardev's Religion – Mahāpurusism". Retrieved 27 October 2012.
  10. ^ (Neog 1980, p. 2)
  11. ^ (Neog 1980, p. 3)
  12. ^ (Neog 1980, pp. 22–24)
  13. ^ (Neog 1980, p. 4)
  14. ^ (Sarma 1990, p. 38)
  15. ^ (Neog 1980, p. 101)
  16. ^ The traditional date of Sankardev's birth, generally considered correct, is in the month of Ashwin-Kartika (October) 1449 (Neog 1980, p. 98). Assuming the middle of October as his birthdate in that year, his life span was 118 years, 10 months and a few days (Neog 1980, p. 100).
  17. ^ (Neog 1980, p. 101)
  18. ^ (Neog 1980, p. 101f)
  19. ^ (Neog 1980, p. 67)
  20. ^ a b c (Neog 1980, p. 102)
  21. ^ (Neog 1980, pp. 102–103)
  22. ^ (Barman 1999, p. 19)
  23. ^ (Neog 1980, p. 103)
  24. ^ (Neog 1980, p. 104)
  25. ^ (Neog 1980, p. 179)
  26. ^ (Borkakoti 2006, p. 92)
  27. ^ After five years, Sankara had a temple built for him a little away from the abode of householder" (Neog 1980, p. 69)
  28. ^ (Neog 1980, p. 107)
  29. ^ (Sarma 1999, p. 12)
  30. ^ The early biographers are silent on Cihna-yatra. Katha-guru-carita and Borduwa-carita, both late biographies, say Cihna-yatra was performed after Sankardev's first pilgrimage; only Ramcaran says Sankardev arranged it when he was 19 years old, which is unlikely according to Maheswar Neog. (Neog 1980, p. 107)
  31. ^ But Bhuban Chandra Bhuyan, Dr. Sanjib Kumar Borkakoti etc have opined that Cihna yatra was enacted before the pilgrimage, to be precise in 1468 AD.(Borkakoti 2005, p. 17)
  32. ^ (Neog 1980, p. 108)
  33. ^ (Neog 1980, pp. 108–109)
  34. ^ (Borkakoti 2006, p. 23)
  35. ^ "It is not known from biographical or contemporary literature of the period whether the sattra of Sankardev besides containing the prayer-hall and the shrine did really contain the system of cari-hati like that of later-day sattras". (Sarma 1966, p. 105)
  36. ^ "It may be recalled (Daityari, Katha-guru-carit) that in Sankardev's days, the daily sittings...were held in the open or under shades of trees" (Neog 1980, p. 312)
  37. ^ (Sarma 1966, p. 93)
  38. ^ (Noeg 1980, p. 160)
  39. ^ (Barman 1999, p. 120)
  40. ^ a b (Neog 1980, p. 69)
  41. ^ [Neog, Maheswar, Śaṅkaradeva and his times, p. 68]
  42. ^ "Ere long, the inroads of the Bhutanese and the Koches compelled them to shift their residence to Dhuwahat-Belaguri, where the Ahom monarch settled them with land and estate." (Sarma 1966, p. 13)
  43. ^ (Barman 1999, p. 37)
  44. ^ (Sarma 1966, p. 13)
  45. ^ a b (Neog 1980, p. 111)
  46. ^ (Neog 1980, p. 376)
  47. ^ The wooden idol was carved by one Korola Bhadai, and his invitation to the priests were conveyed by his brahmin associate Ramaram (Barman 1999, p. 37)
  48. ^ (Neog 1980, p. 112)
  49. ^ "Prataprai Gabharu-Khan, who had escaped to Gauda when Viswasingha attacked them, returned to Kamrup and made a sort of alliance with Naranarayan" (Neog 1980, p. 112)
  50. ^ (Barman 1999, p. 38)
  51. ^ The year of Sankardev's escape is generally taken as 1546, first suggested by Bezbaroa (Neog 1980, p. 113). Others suggest 1540 (Borkakoti 2012, p. 26).
  52. ^ (Borkakoti 2012, p. 27)
  53. ^ (Barman 1999, p. 49) The complainant was Vidyvagisha Chakravarty, though Kanthabhushan, the royal priest who was Ramarama's son-in-law, protested. Not finding Sankardev, Thakur Ata and Gokulcand were arrested instead and tortured.
  54. ^ (Barman 1999, p. 50)
  55. ^ "The Bardowa-carit and, depending on it, Lakshminath Bezbaroa (in his Sankaradeva) hold that five sections of the work (that is the whole book, without the first section) were composed much earlier, and that it was presented to one Satananda or Devidas at Gangmau" (Neog 1980, p. 182)
  56. ^ Bipuljyoti Saikia. "Sangeet – Songs of Devotion". Bipuljyoti.in. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  57. ^ (Crill 1992)
  58. ^ (Borkakoti 2005, pp. 222–224)

References Edit

  • Barman, Sivnath (1999), "Introduction", An Unsung Colossus: An Introduction to the Life and Works of Sankardev, Guwahati: Forum for Sankaradeva Studies / North Eastern Hill University Institutional Repository
  • Bhuyan, Abhijit (15 May 2008), "Sankardev and Neo-Vaishnavism in Assam", Ishani, II(3)
  • Borkakoti, Sanjib Kumar (2007), Purnanga Katha Gurucharita, Guwahati: Bani Mandir
  • Borkakoti, Sanjib Kumar (2006), Unique Contributions of Srimanta Sankaradeva in Religion and Culture, Nagaon: Srimanta Sankaradeva Sangha
  • Vaishnav Santa Srimanta Sankaradeva – translation: Rajibaksha Rakshit. Kaziranga. The only Bengali book available in market on Sankaradeva
  • Crill, Rosemary (1992), "Vrindavani Vastra: Figured Silks from Assam", Hali, 14 (2): 76–83
  • Neog, Maheswar (1980). Early History of the Vaiṣṇava Faith and Movement in Assam: Śaṅkaradeva and His Times. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass.
  • Sarma, S N (1966). The Neo-Vaishnavite Movement and the Satra Institution of Assam. Gauhati University.
  • Sarma, Anjali (1990). Among the Luminaries in Assam: A Study of Assamese Biography. Mittal Publications.

Further reading Edit

  • University of Gauhati (1953). Dr. B. Kakati Commemoration Volume. Retrieved 30 May 2013.
  • K.M. George (1 January 1994). Modern Indian Literature: An Anthology. Plays and prose. Sahitya Akademi. pp. 38–. ISBN 978-81-7201-783-5. Retrieved 30 May 2013.
  • Sanjoy Hazarika (1995). Strangers in the Mist. Penguin Books India. pp. 43–. ISBN 978-0-14-024052-8. Retrieved 30 May 2013.
  • Indian Philosophy & Culture. 1965. Retrieved 30 May 2013.
  • Jyoti Prasad Rajkhowa (2003). Sankaradeva, His Life, Preachings, and Practices: A Historical Biography. ISBN 9350674254.

External links Edit

  • Works by or about Sankardev at Internet Archive
  • atributetosankaradeva.org – The Religion, philosophy, Literature, Art, Culture (and more) of Mahapurusha Srimanta Sankardev
  • The Sattras of Assam – By BK Barua and HV Sreenivasa Murthy, pages from hindubooks.org

sankardev, srimanta, মন, কৰদ, assamese, pronunciation, sɹimɔntɔ, xɔŋkɔɹdew, 1449, 1568, 15th, 16th, century, assamese, polymath, saint, scholar, poet, playwright, dancer, actor, musician, artist, social, religious, reformer, figure, importance, cultural, relig. Srimanta Sankardev 8 শ ৰ মন ত শ কৰদ ৱ ˈ s r ɪ ˌ m ae n t e ˈ s ae n k er ˌ d eɪ v Assamese pronunciation sɹimɔntɔ xɔŋkɔɹdew 1449 1568 was a 15th 16th century Assamese polymath a saint scholar poet playwright dancer actor musician artist social religious reformer and a figure of importance in the cultural and religious history of Assam India He is widely credited with building on past cultural relics and devising new forms of music Borgeet theatrical performance Ankia Naat Bhaona dance Sattriya literary language Brajavali Besides he has left an extensive literary oeuvre of trans created scriptures Bhagavat of Sankardev poetry and theological works written in Sanskrit Assamese and Brajavali The Bhagavatic religious movement he started Ekasarana Dharma and also called Neo Vaishnavite movement 9 influenced two medieval kingdoms Koch and the Ahom kingdom and the assembly of devotees he initiated evolved over time into monastic centers called Sattras which continue to be important socio religious institutions in Assam and to a lesser extent in North Bengal Sankardev inspired the Bhakti movement in Assam just as Guru Nanak Ramananda Namdev Kabir Basava and Chaitanya Mahaprabhu inspired it elsewhere in the Indian subcontinent SankardevImaginary portrait of Srimanta Sankardev by Bishnu Prasad Rabha 1 PersonalBorn26 September 1449 Bordowa than Today Nagaon district Assam India Died7 September 1568 2 Bheladonga Today Cooch Behar West Bengal India ReligionEkasarana DharmaParentsKusumbar Siromani Bhuyan 3 father Satyasandhya mother Founder ofEkasarana DharmaPhilosophyEkasaranaSenior postingSuccessorMadhavdevHonorsVenerated as MahapurushaQuotation Do therefore regard all and everything as though they were God Himself Seek not to know the caste of a Brahmana nor of a Chandala 7 His literary and artistic contributions are living traditions in Assam today The religion he preached is practised by a large population and Sattras monasteries that he and his followers established continue to flourish and sustain his legacy Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life Alipukhuri and Bordowa 1 1 1 Bhuyan shiromaniship 1 1 2 First pilgrimage 1 1 3 Shiromaniship refusal 1 1 4 Cihna yatra 1 1 5 Literary works in the Baro Bhuyan territories 1 2 Ahom kingdom 1 2 1 Gangmau 1 2 2 Dhuwahat 1 2 2 1 Flight from Dhuwahat 1 2 3 Literary works in the Ahom kingdom 1 3 Koch kingdom 1 3 1 Sunpora 1 3 2 Patbausi 1 3 3 Second Pilgrimage 1 3 4 Koch capital and Bheladanga 1 3 5 End 1 3 6 Literary works in the Koch kingdom 2 Ekasarana 3 Literary works 3 1 Poetic works kavya 3 2 Bhakti Theory 3 3 Transliteration 3 4 Drama Ankia Nat 3 5 Songs 3 6 Dance 3 7 Visual Art 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksBiography EditAfter the death of Sankardev Madhavdev incorporated narrations of his life in prayer services a practice that was followed by his apostles and in due course of time a large body of biographical literature arose 10 These are generally classed in two groups early those by Daityari Thakur Bhusan Dwija Ramananda Dwija and Vaikuntha Dwija and late Guruvarnana by Aniruddha Das the more than one anonymous Katha guru carits Bardowa carit Sankardev caritra from Barpeta the Saru svarga khanda and Bar svarga khanda by Sarvabhauma 11 The authorship of the biography credited to Ramcaran Thakur Daityari Thakur s father is doubted and it is generally dated to the 17th century and classed with the late biographies 12 In general all biographies consider Sankardev as an incarnation of Vishnu including that by Daityari Thakur the earliest The late biographies differ from the early group on the count that they ascribe supernatural feats to Sankardev and describe miraculous events and there is a tendency to read some events of the Bhagavata into his life 13 The biographies are full of contradictions even though the earlier ones are considered more accurate not all they claim are true Daityari Thakur s biography the earliest one claims Sankardev met with Chaitanya which is now not accepted to be true 14 Early life Alipukhuri and Bordowa Edit Sankardev s Family TreeChandivaraSandhyaRajadharaDevahutiKhersutiSuryavaraJayantaHalayudhaMadhavaSatyasandhaKusumvaraAnudhritiSatanandaSuryavatiSankardevKalindiHaladharaRamarayaHariManuRamanandaKamalocanaHaricaranaKamalapriyaChilaraiPurushottamChaturbhujSankardev then named Sankaravara 15 was born into the Shiromani chief Baro Bhuyans family at Alipukhuri near Bordowa in present day Nagaon district in c1449 16 Though some authors have expressed doubt that Sankardev could have lived that long considering that he was of robust health 1449 is generally accepted 17 The Baro Bhuyans were independent landlords in Assam and Sankardev belonged to the Kayastha Hindu caste His family members including parents Kusumvar Bhuyan and Satyasandhya Devi were Saktas Sankardev lost his father to smallpox when he was about 7 years old 18 and his mother died either soon after his birth or soon after his father s death 19 and he was raised by his grandmother Khersuti He began attending Mahendra Kandali s tol or chatrasaal school at the age of 12 and soon wrote his first verses karatala kamala The complete poem was written before he was taught the vowels except of course the first one and is often cited as an example of the early flowering of his poetic genius He stayed at the tol during his teens and studied grammar and Indian scriptures 20 He practised yoga which he gave up later and was physically very able 21 and according to legend he could swim across the Brahmaputra while it was in spate It is generally believed that he wrote his first work Harishchandra upakhyan while at the tol 20 Mahendra Kandali changed his name to Sankardev while he was at school 20 Bhuyan shiromaniship Edit Sankardev soon mastered the major scriptures and thereafter left the tol in his late teens c1465 to attend to his responsibilities as the Shiromani Bhuyan He came to be known as the Dekagiri among his subjects and admirers As Alipukhuri had become crowded he moved his household from Alipukhuri to Bordowa He married his first wife Suryavati when he was in his early 20s and a daughter Manu was born in about three years but his wife died about nine months later 22 First pilgrimage Edit It is possible that the death of his wife increased his already existing spiritual inclination and he left for a twelve year long pilgrimage sometime after his daughter was married to Hari a Bhuyan scion He handed over the maintenance of his household to his son in law Hari the Bhuyan Shiromaniship to his grand uncles Jayanta and Madhav and began his journey in 1481 He was accompanied by seventeen others including his friend and associate Ramaram and his teacher Mahendra Kandali 23 At this point of time he was 32 The pilgrimage took him to Puri Mathura Dwaraka Vrindavan Gaya Rameswaram Ayodhya Sitakunda and almost all the other major seats of the Vaishnavite religion in India He seem to have spent many years at Jagannath kshetra at Puri where he read and explained the Brahma Purana to the priests and lay people 24 At Badrikashram in 1488 he composed his first borgeet mana meri ram charanahi lagu in Brajavali 25 According to Katha Gurucharit the first Borgeet was Rama meri hridaya pankaje baise and he composed it in 1481 at the very outset of the pilgrimage at a place called Rowmari 26 He returned home to Alipukhuri after 12 years his family had moved back from Bordowa in his absence During his pilgrimage he became the part of a pan Indian Bhakti movement and helped it blossom Shiromaniship refusal Edit On his return from his pilgrimage c1493 Sankardev refused to take back the Shiromaniship though on the insistence of his elders he took responsibility of a hundred families gomastha but he soon handed over the responsibility to his son in law Hari On his grandmother s insistence he married Kalindi at the age of 54 Finally he moved back to Bordowa and constructed a temple devagriha in c1498 27 possibly a thatched house built on the original site of his father s house where he could meet with people discuss religious matters and hold prayers and preach He wrote Bhakti pradipa and Rukmini harana Soon after he received a copy of the Bhagavata Purana from Jagadisa Mishra of Mithila with Sridhara Swami s monistic commentary Bhavartha dipika Mishra recited and explained the entire Bhagavata in the presence of Sankardev and this event is considered momentous in the development of Ekasarana 28 Datyari an early biographer of Sankardev writes Sankardev listened with rapt attention to the exposition by Jagadish Mishra and realised that the Bhagavata was a scripture without parallel a scripture that determined Krishna as the only God naam as the real dharma and aikantika sarana and sat sanga as the indispensable elements of the faith 29 He also began composing the Kirtana ghosha Cihna yatra Edit After his exposure to the detailed Bhagavata Purana and Sridhara Swami s commentary Bhavartha dipika Sankardev produced a dance drama called Cihna yatra for which he painted the Sapta vaikuntha seven heavens guided the making of musical instruments and played the instruments himself 30 31 According to other biographers Sankardev produced Maha nata in the presence of Jagdish Mishra in the temple he had constructed at Alipukhuri 32 According to Neog this was the point when Sankardev decided to preach a new religion Some of the first to be initiated into this religion was the wife of Jayanta dalai a leper named Hariram later Tulasiram Ramaram his associate and Mahendra Kandali his tol teacher 33 The 13 years at Alipukhuri was the period during which he reflected deeply on Vaishnavism and on the form that would best suit the spiritual and ethical needs of the people Ananta Kandali a profound scholar of Sanskrit became his disciple during this time he translated the later part of Canto X of the Bhagavata Purana after consulting Sankardev From Alipukhuri Sankardev moved back to Bordowa in 1509 and built a thaan Some authors claim that this than had all the major features of a sattra central kirtanghar cari hati etc 34 whereas many others assert that these features did not exist during Sankardev s time 35 36 This than was abandoned and more than a hundred years later in the middle of the 17th century Sankardev s granddaughter in law Kanaklata established it again 37 Literary works in the Baro Bhuyan territories Edit Non Bhagavata group Harishcandra Upakhyana Bhakti pradip Kirtan ghosa Uresa varnana Non Bhagavata mixed with Bhagavata elements not influenced by Sridhara Swami Rukmini harana kavya Lyrics Borgeet Bhagavata tales not from Book X Ajamilopakhyan Book VI Amrta manthan Book VIII Kirtan ghosa Ajamilopakhyan Prahlada caritra Harmohana Sections ii vi 38 39 Ahom kingdom Edit Gangmau Edit Biswa Singha began his activities to remove the Bhuyans from power in the western part of the Brahmaputra valley in 1509 Furthermore the Bhuyans in the Bordowa area picked up a quarrel with their Kachari neighbours and when attacked Sankardev advised the Bhuyans to move which brought to an end the independence of this group of Bhuyans 40 Sankardev and his associates first crossed the Brahmaputra river in 1516 17 and settled first at Singari and finally at Routa and when Viswa Singha advanced towards Routa Sankardev moved to Gangmau in the Ahom kingdom in 1527 41 40 At Gangmau they stayed for five years where Sankardev s eldest son Ramananda was born At Gangmau he wrote the drama Patniprasad In fact he lived alone at a place named Gajalasuti out of dissatisfaction with some relative He penned the play there Dhuwahat Edit While at Gangmau the Koch king Biswa Singha attacked the Ahoms The Bhuyans fought for the Ahoms and the Koch king was defeated Due to the unsettled situation at Gangmau Sankardev next moved to Dhuwahat near Ahatguri in present day Majuli washed away by the Brahmaputra in 1913 The Bhuyans were settled here by the Ahoms with land and estate 42 Hari Sankardev s son in law became a Saikia and his cousin Jagatananda grandson of Jayanta received a title Ramarai 43 At Dhuwahat he met his spiritual successor Madhavdev Madhavdev a sakta got into a religious altercation with his brother in law Ramadas who had recently converted to Vaishnavism Ramadas took him to Sankardev who after a long debate convinced him of the power and the efficacy of Ekasarana The acquisition of Madhavdev with his talent in poetry singing and dedication to his new found religion and guru was a significant event in the Ekasarana history At Dhuwahat he managed to attract a wider attention and popularity and he initiated many others into his religion The popularity of Ekasarana and the conversion of people alarmed the priestly Brahmins 44 who reacted with anger and hostility Sankardev tried to diffuse their hostility by meeting with them at the house of his relative Budha Khan 45 and asking his Brahmin antagonists to install a wooden idol of Jagannath called Madan Mohan at his religious seat Sankardev left this idol hanging on a tree when he took flight from Dhuwahat and it was rescued years later by Vamshigopaldev and installed at Deberapar sattra 46 47 The Brahmins finally complained to the Ahom king Suhungmung 1497 1539 who summoned Sankardev to his court for a debate with them Sankardev was able to convince the king that he was not a religious rebel and a threat to the social order and the charges against him were dropped 45 The hostility nevertheless continued 48 Flight from Dhuwahat Edit Though the positions of the Bhuyans in the Ahom kingdom began comfortably with Sankardev s son in law Hari becoming a Paik officer and Ramrai his cousin becoming a royal official the relationship gradually deteriorated After the death of Viswasingha who was inimical to the Bhuyans and the rise of Naranarayan 1540 the Koch Bhuyan relationship improved somewhat 49 Sometime in the 1540s during the reign of Suklenmung 1539 1552 a royal officer visited the region for an elephant capturing expedition Hari did not make himself available and furthermore an elephant escaped through a barrier managed by the Bhuyans The officer took grave offence in this dereliction of duty and arrested Hari as well as Madhavdev At Garhgaon Hari was executed and Madhavdev interned for about a year 50 According to Daityari taking advantage of the Koch advance against the Ahoms 1546 1547 Sankardev and his followers escaped from the Ahom kingdom as they fell behind the vanguard of the Koch army setting up their garrison in Narayanpur further to the east 51 Literary works in the Ahom kingdom Edit Arguments against those antagonistic to bhakti Kirtan ghosa Pasanda mardana Namaparadha Vipra patni prasad Ankia Naat Tales from Krishna s early life Kirtan ghosa sisu lila rasa krida kamsavadha gopi uddhava samvada kujir vancha purana akrurar vancha purana BorgeetsKoch kingdom Edit Sunpora Edit Sankardev and his followers reached Kapalabari in Koch kingdom in later part of 1540 and put up there But the water was very alkaline there Several members including Madhavdev s mother Manorama died there So after staying for some time at Kapalabari Sankardev and his group moved to Sunpora in 1541 52 At Sunpora Sankardev initiated Bhavananda a rich trader who had extensive business interest in the Garo Hills and Bhutan Hills besides Kamarupa The trader Narayana Das settled at Janiya near Barpeta and took to agriculture A man of the world otherwise he soon flourished and became a provider to Sankardev and his devotees He came to be known popularly as Thakur Ata Patbausi Edit After a great deal of moving Sankardev settled at Patbausi near Barpeta in the Koch Kingdom and constructed a Kirtanghar house of prayer Some of the people he initiated here are Chakrapani Dwija and Sarvabhaum Bhattacharya Brahmins Govinda a Garo Jayaram a Bhutia Madhai a Jaintia Jatiram an ascetic and Murari a Koch Damodardev a Brahmin was initiated by Sankardev Damodardev was entrusted by Sankardev to initiate Brahmin disciples A Sattra was also constructed for him at Patbausi itself Later Damodardev became the founder of the Brahma Sanghati sect of Sankardev s religion Among Sankardev s literary works he completed his rendering of the Bhagavata Purana and wrote other independent works He continued composing the Kirtan Ghosha further translated the first canto of the Ramayana Adi Kanda and instructed Madhavdev to translate the last canto Uttara Kanda portions that were left undone by the 14th century poet Madhav Kandali He wrote four plays Rukmini harana Parijata harana Keligopala and Kalidamana Another play written at Patbausi Kansa Vadha is lost At Patbausi he had lent his Bargeets numbering around 240 to Kamala Gayan But unfortunately Gayan s house was gutted and most of the borgeets were lost Since that incident Sankardev stopped composing Bargeets Of the 240 34 remain today Second Pilgrimage Edit Sankardev once again left for a pilgrimage in 1550 with a large party of 117 disciples that included Madhavdev Ramrai Ramaram Thakur Ata and others Thakur Ata had to return after just one day s journey Madhavdev had to take entire responsibility of logistics He on the request of Sankardev s wife Kalindi urged him to return from Puri and not proceed to Vrindavana Sankardev and the group returned to Patbausi within six months in 1551 Koch capital and Bheladanga Edit On receiving repeated complaints that Sankardev was corrupting the minds of the people by spreading a new religion Nara Narayan the Koch king ordered Sankardev s arrest and Sankardev went into hiding 53 Chilarai the general of the Koch army half brother of the king and married to Kamalapriya the daughter of Sankardev s cousin Ramarai then convinced the king to give Sankardev a hearing instead 54 For the audience with Nara Narayan as he moved up the steps to the court Sankardev sang his Sanskrit totaka hymn composed extempore to Lord Krishna madhu daanava daarana deva varam and as he sat down he sang a borgeet narayana kahe bhakati karu tera playing on the name of the king At the debate with the court pundits that followed Sankardev was able to refute all allegations against him The king declared him free and furthermore honored him with a seat close to the throne Sankardev began to attend Naranarayana s court regularly and received the freedom to propagate his teachings Chilarai was instrumental in keeping Sankardev safe and supporting his work Many of Sankardev s literary and dramatic works were completed in his domain with his patronage and protection Sankardev acknowledged his appreciation in his play Ram Vijaya Sankardev shuttled between Koch Behar the capital and Patbausi his seat He was often hosted by Chilarai and on his request agreed to have the images of the childhood days of krishna at Vrindavan woven on cloth He engaged the weavers of Tantikuchi near Barpeta to weave a forty yard long tapestry panel Sankaradeva provided the designs to be woven chose the various colours of thread to be used and supervised the weaving It took about a year to complete and deriving its name from its theme came to be known as the Vrindavani vastra It was presented to Chilarai and Naranarayan A section of this cloth is preserved now in the Victoria and Albert museum in London Chandsai a Muslim tailor serving the Koch king became a disciple of Sankardev at Kochbehar When Sankardev returned to Patbausi some time later Chandsai too came with the saint Sankardev frequented the capital for more than 20 years and enjoyed unstinted royal patronage for the first time End Edit He made arrangements with Madhavdev and Thakur Ata and gave them various instructions at Patbausi and left the place for the last time He set up his home at Bheladonga in Kochbehar During his stay at Kochbehar Maharaja Naranarayana expressed his wish to be initiated Sankardev was reluctant to convert a king and declined to do so According to one of the biographers Ramcharan Thakur A painful boil a visha phohara had appeared in some part of his body and this led to the passing away of the Saint Thus in 1568 after leading a most eventful life dedicated to enlightening humanity the Mahapurusha breathed his last after four months of his last stay at Bheladonga aged 120 Literary works in the Koch kingdom Edit Bhagavata tales not from Book X Bali chalana Book VIII Anadi patana Book III Vamana purana Bhagavata tales from Books X XI XIII Kirtan ghosa Jarasandha yudha Kalayavana badha Mucukunda stuti Syamanta haran Naradar krishna darsan Vipra putra anayana Daivakir putra anayana Veda stuti Lilamala Rukminir prem kalah Bhrigu pariksha srikrishnar vaikuntha prayana Chaturvimsati avatar varnana Tatparya Gunamala Section i 55 Renderings of Bhagavata Purana Bhagavata X Adi Bhagavata XI with material from Books I and III Bhagavata XII Bhagavata I Bhagavata II Bhagavata IX lost Kurukshetra Book X Uttarardha Nimi nava siddha samvada From Ramayana Ramayana Uttara kanda Lyrics Borgeets Totaya Bhatima Doctrinal treatise Bhakti ratnakar Drama Ankia Naat Kali daman Keli gopal Rukmini haran Parijat haran Ram vijay Visual Art Vrindavani vastra parts of this work are preserved in London Timelinevte Birth Parents die Weds Suryavati Manu born Manu weds Hari Weds Kalindi Initiates Madhabdev Hari executed 2nd pilgrimage Bheladonga AlipukhuriBorduwaPilgrimageAlipukhuriBorduwaGangmauDhuwahatPatbausiKusumvaraJayanta MadhavaSankardevJayanta MadhavaSusenphaaSuhungmungSuklenmungSukhaamphaaNiladhwajChakradhwajNilambarViswa SinghaNaranarayan Kabir born Guru Nanak born Martin Luther born Chaitanya born Meera Bai born Tulsidas born Chaitainya Mahaprabhu died 1440 1468 1496 1524 1552 1580Ekasarana EditMain article Ekasarana Dharma Sankardev preached pure devotion bhakti to Krishna consisting primarily in the singing kirtan and listening to sravan of his deeds and activities Ekasarana follows the dasya attitude bhava of worship in which the devotee considers himself to be a servant of God In contrast to other Vaishnava schools Radha is not worshiped along with Krishna The people who practice his religion are referred to variously as Mahapurushia Sarania and Sankari Srimanta Sankardev started a system of initiation Sarana into his religion He caused a huge social revolution by fighting against the caste discrimination prevailing at that time He initiated people of all castes and religions including Muslims After initiation the devotee is expected to adhere to the religious tenets of Ekasarana consisting in worship to one God Krishna and offering devotion to him forsaking completely all forms of Vedic rites Though he himself married twice had children and led the life of a householder his disciple Madhavdev did not Some of his followers today follow celibate life kevaliya bhakat in the Vaishnavite monasteries the sattras Sankardev s famous debate with Madhavdev who was a staunch sakta devotee of Shakti earlier and Madhavdev s subsequent induction into Ekasarana is often cited as the single most epoch making event in the history of the neo Vaishnavite movement in Assam Madhavdev an equally multi talented person became his most celebrated disciple Literary works EditSankardev produced a large body of work Though there were others before him who wrote in the language of the common man Madhav Kandali who translated the Ramayana into Assamese in the 14th century This was the first ramayana to be written in a modern Indian language Harivara Vipra and Hema Saraswati it was Sankardev who opened the floodgates and inspired others like Madhavdev to carry on where he left off His language is lucid his verses lilting and he infused bhakti into everything he wrote His magnum opus is his Kirtana ghosha a work so popular that even today it is found in many household in Assam It contains narrative verses glorifying Krishna meant for community singing It is a bhakti kayva par excellence written in a lively and simple language it has stories and songs for amusement for children it delights the young with true poetic beauty and elderly people find here religious instruction and wisdom For most of his works he used the Assamese language of the period so the lay person could read and understand them But for dramatic effect in his songs and dramas he used Brajavali Other literary works include the rendering of eight books of the Bhagavata Purana including the Adi Dasama Book X Harishchandra upakhyana his first work Bhakti pradip the Nimi navasiddha samvada conversation between King Nimi and the nine Siddhas Bhakti ratnakara Sanskrit verses mostly from the Bhagavata compiled into a book Anadi patana having as its theme the creation of the universe and allied cosmological matters Gunamala and many plays like Rukmini haran Patni prasad Keli gopal Kurukshetra yatra and Srirama vijaya There was thus a flowering of great Bhakti literature during his long life of 120 years Poetic works kavya Edit Kirtana ghosha Harischandra upakhyana Rukmini harana Parijat haran Kaliya daman Ram vijay Ajamilopakhyana Bali chalana Kurukshetra yatra Gopi uddhava samvada Amrita manthana Krishna prayana pandava niryana KamajayaBhakti Theory Edit Bhakati pradipa Anadi patana Nimi navasiddha samvada Bhakti Ratnakara in Sanskrit GunamalaTransliteration Edit Bhagavata Book VI VIII I II VII X XI XII IX X partial XI partial amp XII Ramayana Uttarakanda supplemental to Madhav Kandali s Saptakanda Ramayana His translation of the Bhagavata is actually a transcreation because he translates not just the words but the idiom and the physiognomy too He has adapted the original text to the local land and people and most importantly for the purpose of bhakti Portions of the original were left out or elaborated where appropriate For example he suppressed the portions that revile the lowers caste of sudra and kaivartas and extols them elsewhere Drama Ankia Nat Edit Cihna Yatra lost Patni prasada Janma jatra lost Kangsa badha lost Parijata harana Kali damana Rukmini harana Keli gopala Srirama vijaya nbsp Vrindavani vastra fragment circa 1570 at LACMASankardev was the fountainhead of the Ankiya naat a form of one act play His Cihna Yatra is regarded as one of the first open air theatrical performances in the world Cihna yatra was probably a dance drama and no text of that show is available today Innovations like the presence of a Sutradhara narrator on the stage use of masks etc were used later in the plays of Bertolt Brecht and other eminent playwrights These cultural traditions still form an integral part of the heritage of the Assamese people Songs Edit Borgeet composed 240 but only 34 exist now Bhatima Deva bhatima panegyrics to God Naat bhatima for use in dramas Raja bhatima panegyrics to king Nara NarayanHe is a musician All his creations were orienting to the Vishanav religion and one set of them is called Holy Songs which are known as Borgeet Bargit or Bargeet till today in Assam The Borgeets literally great songs are devotional songs set to music and sung in various raga styles These styles are slightly different from either the Hindustani or the Carnatic styles 56 The songs themselves are written in the Brajavali language Dance Edit Sattriya dance that Sankardev first conceived and developed and which was later preserved for centuries by the sattras is now among the classical dance forms of India Although certain devout Sankarite calls this form as Sankari dance Visual Art Edit Sapta vaikuntha part of the Cihna yatra production does not exist today Vrindavani vastra parts of this work are preserved in London The famous Vrindavani Vastra the cloth of Vrindavan a 120 x 60 cubits tapestry depicted the lilas of Lord Krishna at Vrindavan through richly woven and embroidered designs on silk 57 A specimen believed to be a part of this work is at the Association pour l Etude et la Documentation des Textiles d Asie collection at Paris inv no 3222 The vastra commissioned by Koch king Naranarayana was woven by 12 master weavers in Barpeta under the supervision of Sankardev over a period of six month and completed towards the end of 1554 58 This textile art depicted the life and deeds of lord Krishna who is worshipped in Eka Sarana Nama Dharma The cloth was housed in the royal court of Kochbehar after the saint presented it to the king but it disappeared at some point It is believed that parts of this cloth made its way to Tibet and from there to its present place See also EditSattra Borgeet Madhavdev Dihanaam Ankia Naat Vrindavani vastraNotes Edit This portrait created by Bishnu Rabha in the 20th century is generally accepted as the official portrait of Sankardev whose likeness in pictorial form is not available from any extant form A Staff Reporter 14 October 2003 Portrait of a poet as an artist The Telegraph Archived from the original on 1 November 2003 Retrieved 8 May 2013 His eventful career came to an end on Thursday the 7th or the 21st Bhadra September the 2nd day of the bright half of the lunar month 1490 Saka 1569 AD and his last physical remains were consigned to fire on the banks of the small river Toroca Neog 1980 120 121 Golap Saikia Srimanta Sankardev the Pioneer of the Socio Religious Reform Movement of Medieval Assam PDF 44 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help 639 Identifier Documentation aho ISO 639 3 SIL International formerly known as the Summer Institute of Linguistics SIL International Retrieved 29 June 2019 Ahom aho Population by Religious Communities Census India 2001 Ministry of Home Affairs Government of India Retrieved 1 July 2019 Census Data Finder C Series Population by Religious Communities Population by religion community 2011 Census of India 2011 The Registrar General amp Census Commissioner India Archived from the original on 25 August 2015 2011census C 01 DDW00C 01 MDDS XLS Kirttana Ghosa Translations Retrieved 27 October 2012 The name is spelt variously as Sankardev Sankardeva and Sankaradeva Further discussion may be seen at relevant talk page Sankardev s Religion Mahapurusism Retrieved 27 October 2012 Neog 1980 p 2 Neog 1980 p 3 Neog 1980 pp 22 24 Neog 1980 p 4 Sarma 1990 p 38 Neog 1980 p 101 The traditional date of Sankardev s birth generally considered correct is in the month of Ashwin Kartika October 1449 Neog 1980 p 98 Assuming the middle of October as his birthdate in that year his life span was 118 years 10 months and a few days Neog 1980 p 100 Neog 1980 p 101 Neog 1980 p 101f Neog 1980 p 67 a b c Neog 1980 p 102 Neog 1980 pp 102 103 Barman 1999 p 19 Neog 1980 p 103 Neog 1980 p 104 Neog 1980 p 179 Borkakoti 2006 p 92 After five years Sankara had a temple built for him a little away from the abode of householder Neog 1980 p 69 Neog 1980 p 107 Sarma 1999 p 12 harv error no target CITEREFSarma1999 help The early biographers are silent on Cihna yatra Katha guru carita and Borduwa carita both late biographies say Cihna yatra was performed after Sankardev s first pilgrimage only Ramcaran says Sankardev arranged it when he was 19 years old which is unlikely according to Maheswar Neog Neog 1980 p 107 But Bhuban Chandra Bhuyan Dr Sanjib Kumar Borkakoti etc have opined that Cihna yatra was enacted before the pilgrimage to be precise in 1468 AD Borkakoti 2005 p 17 harv error no target CITEREFBorkakoti2005 help Neog 1980 p 108 Neog 1980 pp 108 109 Borkakoti 2006 p 23 It is not known from biographical or contemporary literature of the period whether the sattra of Sankardev besides containing the prayer hall and the shrine did really contain the system of cari hati like that of later day sattras Sarma 1966 p 105 It may be recalled Daityari Katha guru carit that in Sankardev s days the daily sittings were held in the open or under shades of trees Neog 1980 p 312 Sarma 1966 p 93 Noeg 1980 p 160 harv error no target CITEREFNoeg1980 help Barman 1999 p 120 a b Neog 1980 p 69 Neog Maheswar Saṅkaradeva and his times p 68 Ere long the inroads of the Bhutanese and the Koches compelled them to shift their residence to Dhuwahat Belaguri where the Ahom monarch settled them with land and estate Sarma 1966 p 13 Barman 1999 p 37 Sarma 1966 p 13 a b Neog 1980 p 111 Neog 1980 p 376 The wooden idol was carved by one Korola Bhadai and his invitation to the priests were conveyed by his brahmin associate Ramaram Barman 1999 p 37 Neog 1980 p 112 Prataprai Gabharu Khan who had escaped to Gauda when Viswasingha attacked them returned to Kamrup and made a sort of alliance with Naranarayan Neog 1980 p 112 Barman 1999 p 38 The year of Sankardev s escape is generally taken as 1546 first suggested by Bezbaroa Neog 1980 p 113 Others suggest 1540 Borkakoti 2012 p 26 harv error no target CITEREFBorkakoti2012 help Borkakoti 2012 p 27 harv error no target CITEREFBorkakoti2012 help Barman 1999 p 49 The complainant was Vidyvagisha Chakravarty though Kanthabhushan the royal priest who was Ramarama s son in law protested Not finding Sankardev Thakur Ata and Gokulcand were arrested instead and tortured Barman 1999 p 50 The Bardowa carit and depending on it Lakshminath Bezbaroa in his Sankaradeva hold that five sections of the work that is the whole book without the first section were composed much earlier and that it was presented to one Satananda or Devidas at Gangmau Neog 1980 p 182 Bipuljyoti Saikia Sangeet Songs of Devotion Bipuljyoti in Retrieved 29 May 2013 Crill 1992 Borkakoti 2005 pp 222 224 harv error no target CITEREFBorkakoti2005 help References EditBarman Sivnath 1999 Introduction An Unsung Colossus An Introduction to the Life and Works of Sankardev Guwahati Forum for Sankaradeva Studies North Eastern Hill University Institutional Repository Bhuyan Abhijit 15 May 2008 Sankardev and Neo Vaishnavism in Assam Ishani II 3 Borkakoti Sanjib Kumar 2007 Purnanga Katha Gurucharita Guwahati Bani Mandir Borkakoti Sanjib Kumar 2006 Unique Contributions of Srimanta Sankaradeva in Religion and Culture Nagaon Srimanta Sankaradeva Sangha Vaishnav Santa Srimanta Sankaradeva translation Rajibaksha Rakshit Kaziranga The only Bengali book available in market on Sankaradeva Crill Rosemary 1992 Vrindavani Vastra Figured Silks from Assam Hali 14 2 76 83 Neog Maheswar 1980 Early History of the Vaiṣṇava Faith and Movement in Assam Saṅkaradeva and His Times Delhi Motilal Banarsidass Sarma S N 1966 The Neo Vaishnavite Movement and the Satra Institution of Assam Gauhati University Sarma Anjali 1990 Among the Luminaries in Assam A Study of Assamese Biography Mittal Publications Further reading EditUniversity of Gauhati 1953 Dr B Kakati Commemoration Volume Retrieved 30 May 2013 K M George 1 January 1994 Modern Indian Literature An Anthology Plays and prose Sahitya Akademi pp 38 ISBN 978 81 7201 783 5 Retrieved 30 May 2013 Sanjoy Hazarika 1995 Strangers in the Mist Penguin Books India pp 43 ISBN 978 0 14 024052 8 Retrieved 30 May 2013 Indian Philosophy amp Culture 1965 Retrieved 30 May 2013 Jyoti Prasad Rajkhowa 2003 Sankaradeva His Life Preachings and Practices A Historical Biography ISBN 9350674254 External links Edit nbsp Assamese Wikisource has original text related to this article ল খক শ ৰ মন ত শ কৰদ ৱ nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sankardev Works by or about Sankardev at Internet Archive atributetosankaradeva org The Religion philosophy Literature Art Culture and more of Mahapurusha Srimanta Sankardev The Sattras of Assam By BK Barua and HV Sreenivasa Murthy pages from hindubooks org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sankardev amp oldid 1168524789, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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