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Tantra

Tantra (/ˈtæntrə/; Sanskrit: तन्त्र, lit.'expansion-device, salvation-spreader; loom, weave, warp') refers to an esoteric yogic tradition that developed on the Indian subcontinent from the middle of the 1st millennium CE onwards in both Hinduism and Buddhism.[1] The term tantra, in the Indian traditions, also means any systematic broadly applicable "text, theory, system, method, instrument, technique or practice".[2][3] A key feature of these traditions is the use of mantras, and thus they are commonly referred to as Mantramārga ("Path of Mantra") in Hinduism or Mantrayāna ("Mantra Vehicle") and Guhyamantra ("Secret Mantra") in Buddhism.[4][5]

Tantric art. Clockwise from upper left: Vajrayogini (Buddhist), Sri Yantra (Hindu), Chakra illustration, Kalachakra Mandala, Dakini

Starting in the early centuries of the common era, newly revealed Tantras centering on Vishnu, Shiva or Shakti emerged.[6] There are tantric lineages in all main forms of modern Hinduism, such as the Shaiva Siddhanta tradition, the Shakta sect of Shri Vidya, the Kaula, and Kashmir Shaivism.

In Buddhism, the Vajrayana traditions are known for tantric ideas and practices, which are based on Indian Buddhist Tantras.[7][8] They include Indo-Tibetan Buddhism, Chinese Esoteric Buddhism, Japanese Shingon Buddhism and Nepalese Newar Buddhism. Although Southern Esoteric Buddhism does not directly reference the tantras, its practices and ideas parallel them.

Tantric Hindu and Buddhist traditions have also influenced other Eastern religious traditions such as Jainism, the Tibetan Bön tradition, Daoism, and the Japanese Shintō tradition.[9]

Certain modes of non-Vedic worship such as Puja are considered tantric in their conception and rituals. Hindu temple building also generally conforms to the iconography of tantra.[10][11] Hindu texts describing these topics are called Tantras, Āgamas or Samhitās.[12][13] In Buddhism, tantra has influenced the art and iconography of Tibetan and East Asian Buddhism, as well as historic cave temples of India and the art of Southeast Asia.[14][15][16]

Etymology

Tantra (Sanskrit: तन्त्र) literally means "loom, warp, weave".[17][2][18] According to Padoux, the verbal root Tan means: "to extend", "to spread", "to spin out", "weave", "display", "put forth", and "compose". Therefore, by extension, it can also mean "system", "doctrine", or "work".[19]

The connotation of the word tantra to mean an esoteric practice or religious ritualism is a colonial era European invention.[20][21][22] This term is based on the metaphor of weaving, states Ron Barrett, where the Sanskrit root tan means the warping of threads on a loom.[2] It implies "interweaving of traditions and teachings as threads" into a text, technique or practice.[2][18]

The word appears in the hymns of the Rigveda such as in 10.71, with the meaning of "warp (weaving)".[17][23] It is found in many other Vedic era texts, such as in section 10.7.42 of the Atharvaveda and many Brahmanas.[17][24] In these and post-Vedic texts, the contextual meaning of Tantra is that which is "principal or essential part, main point, model, framework, feature".[17] In the Smritis and epics of Hinduism (and Jainism), the term means "doctrine, rule, theory, method, technique or chapter" and the word appears both as a separate word and as a common suffix, such as atma-tantra meaning "doctrine or theory of Atman (Self)".[17][24]

The term "Tantra" after about 500 BCE, in Buddhism, Hinduism and Jainism is a bibliographic category, just like the word Sutra (which means "sewing together", mirroring the metaphor of "weaving together" in Tantra). The same Buddhist texts are sometimes referred to as tantra or sutra; for example, Vairocabhisambodhi-tantra is also referred to as Vairocabhisambodhi-sutra.[25] The various contextual meanings of the word Tantra vary with the Indian text and are summarized in the appended table.

Appearance of the term "Tantra" in Indian texts
Period[note 1] Text or author Contextual meaning of tantra
1700–1100 BCE Ṛigveda X, 71.9 Loom (or weaving device)[26]
1700-? BCE Sāmaveda, Tandya Brahmana Essence (or "main part", perhaps denoting the quintessence of the Sastras)[26]
1200-900 BCE Atharvaveda X, 7.42 Loom (or weaving)[26]
1400-1000 BCE Yajurveda, Taittiriya Brahmana 11.5.5.3 Loom (or weaving)[26]
600-500 BCE Pāṇini in Aṣṭādhyāyī 1.4.54 and 5.2.70 Warp (weaving), loom[27]
pre-500 BCE Śatapatha Brāhmaṇa Essence (or main part; see above)[26]
350-283 BCE Chanakya on Arthaśāstra Science;[28] system or shastra[29]
300 CE Īśvarakṛṣṇa author of Sānkhya Kārikā (kārikā 70) Doctrine (identifies Sankhya as a tantra)[30]
320 CE Viṣṇu Purāṇa Practices and rituals[31]
320-400 CE Poet Kālidāsa on Abhijñānaśākuntalam Deep understanding or mastery of a topic[note 2]
423 Gangdhar stone inscription in Rajasthan Worship techniques (Tantrodbhuta)[32] Dubious link to Tantric practices.[33]
550 Sabarasvamin's commentary on Mimamsa Sutra 11.1.1, 11.4.1 etc. Thread, text;[34] beneficial action or thing[29]
500-600 Chinese Buddhist canon (Vol. 18–21: Tantra (Vajrayāna) or Tantric Buddhism[note 3] Set of doctrines or practices
600 Kāmikāgama or Kāmikā-tantra Extensive knowledge of principles of reality[35]
606–647 Sanskrit scholar and poet Bāṇabhaṭṭa (in Harṣacarita[37] and in Kādambari), in Bhāsa's Cārudatta and in Śūdraka's Mṛcchakatika Set of sites and worship methods to goddesses or Matrikas.[32][36]
975–1025 Philosopher Abhinavagupta in his Tantrāloka Set of doctrines or practices, teachings, texts, system (sometimes called Agamas)[38][18]
1150–1200 Jayaratha, Abhinavagupta's commentator on Tantrāloka Set of doctrines or practices, teachings
1690–1785 Bhaskararaya (philosopher) System of thought or set of doctrines or practices, a canon[39]

Definition

Ancient and medieval era

The 5th-century BCE scholar Pāṇini in his Sutra 1.4.54–55 of Sanskrit grammar, cryptically explains tantra through the example of "Sva-tantra" (Sanskrit: स्वतन्त्र), which he states means "independent" or a person who is his own "warp, cloth, weaver, promoter, karta (actor)".[27] Patanjali in his Mahābhāṣya quotes and accepts Panini's definition, then discusses or mentions it at a greater length, in 18 instances, stating that its metaphorical definition of "warp (weaving), extended cloth" is relevant to many contexts.[40] The word tantra, states Patanjali, means "principal, main".

He uses the same example of svatantra as a composite word of "sva" (self) and tantra, then stating "svatantra" means "one who is self-dependent, one who is his own master, the principal thing for whom is himself", thereby interpreting the definition of tantra.[27] Patanjali also offers a semantic definition of Tantra, stating that it is structural rules, standard procedures, centralized guide or knowledge in any field that applies to many elements.[40]

The ancient Mimamsa school of Hinduism uses the term tantra extensively, and its scholars offer various definitions. For example:

When an action or a thing, once complete, becomes beneficial in several matters to one person, or to many people, that is known as Tantra. For example, a lamp placed amidst many priests. In contrast, that which benefits by its repetition is called Āvāpa, such as massaging with oil. (...)

— Sabara, 6th century, [29][41]

Medieval texts present their own definitions of Tantra. Kāmikā-tantra, for example, gives the following explanation of the term tantra:

Because it elaborates (tan) copious and profound matters, especially relating to the principles of reality (tattva) and sacred mantras, and because it provides liberation (tra), it is called a tantra.[35]

Modern era

The occultist and businessman Pierre Bernard (1875–1955) is widely credited with introducing the philosophy and practices of tantra to the American people, at the same time creating a somewhat misleading impression of its connection to sex.[42] That popular sexualization is more accurately regarded as the western Neo-Tantra movement.

In modern scholarship, Tantra has been studied as an esoteric practice and ritualistic religion, sometimes referred to as Tantrism. There is a wide gap between what Tantra means to its followers, and the way Tantra has been represented or perceived since colonial era writers began commenting on it.[43] Many definitions of Tantra have been proposed since, and there is no universally accepted definition.[44] André Padoux, in his review of Tantra definitions offers two, then rejects both. One definition, due to Padoux, is found among Tantra practitioners – it is any "system of observances" about the vision of man and the cosmos where correspondences between the inner world of the person and the macrocosmic reality play an essential role. Another definition, more common among observers and non-practitioners, is some "set of mechanistic rituals, omitting entirely the ideological side".[45]

Tantric traditions have been studied mostly from textual and historical perspectives. Anthropological work on living Tantric tradition is scarce, and ethnography has rarely engaged with the study of Tantra. This is arguably a result of the modern construction of Tantrism as occult, esoteric and secret. Some scholars have tried to demystify the myth of secrecy in contemporary Tantric traditions, suggesting new methodological avenues to overcome the ethical and epistemological problems in the study of living Tantric traditions.[46]

According to David N. Lorenzen, two different kinds of definitions of Tantra exist, narrow and broad.[13] According to the narrow definition, Tantrism, or "Tantric religion", is the elite traditions directly based on the Sanskrit texts called the Tantras, Samhitas, and Agamas.[13][47] Lorenzen's "broad definition" extends this by including a broad range of "magical beliefs and practices" such as Yoga and Shaktism.[47][48] However, "yoga" itself is a term broadly attributed to many traditions and practices, including the western assumption that yoga is synonymous with physical stretching, and little more. Defined in the Patanjali Yoga Sutras: "Yoga is stilling the nature of the mind." In all reality, a third definition also exists—sexual abuse in the name of spirituality and the sacred. Even a Buddhist Rinpoche is driven to breach the fundamental fiduciary duties owed to students and disciples, not to mention numerous self-proclaimed "guru" figures in USA.[49][50] Western neo-tantra has been popularized most notably by, Chandra Mohan / Rajneesh / Osho, and followers such as Margo Anand as "The World's Leading Expert on Tantra."[51]

Richard Payne states that Tantra has been commonly but incorrectly associated with sex, given popular culture's prurient obsession with intimacy. Tantra has been labelled as the "yoga of ecstasy", driven by senseless ritualistic libertinism.[25] This is far from the diverse and complex understanding of what Tantra means to those Buddhists, Hindu and Jains who practice it.[25]

David Gray disagrees with broad generalizations and states that defining Tantra is a difficult task because "Tantra traditions are manifold, spanning several religious traditions and cultural worlds. As a result they are also diverse, which makes it a significant challenge to come up with an adequate definition".[52] The challenge of defining Tantra is compounded by the fact that it has been a historically significant part of major Indian religions, including Buddhism, Hinduism and Jainism, both in and outside South Asia and East Asia.[53] To its practitioners, Tantra is defined as a combination of texts, techniques, rituals, monastic practices, meditation, yoga, and ideology.[54]

According to Georg Feuerstein, "The scope of topics discussed in the Tantras is considerable. They deal with the creation and history of the world; the names and functions of a great variety of male and female deities and other higher beings; the types of ritual worship (especially of Goddesses); magic, sorcery, and divination; esoteric "physiology" (the mapping of the subtle or psychic body); the awakening of the mysterious serpent power (kundalinî-shakti); techniques of bodily and mental purification; the nature of enlightenment; and not least, sacred sexuality."[55] Hindu puja, temples and iconography all show tantric influence.[10] These texts, states Gavin Flood, contain representation of "the body in philosophy, in ritual and in art", which are linked to "techniques of the body, methods or technologies developed within the tantric traditions intended to transform body and self".[56]

Tantrism

The term tantrism is a 19th-century European invention not present in any Asian language; [21] compare "Sufism", of similar Orientalist origin. According to Padoux, Tantrism is a Western term and notion, not a category that is used by Tantrikas themselves.[20][note 4] The term was introduced by 19th-century Indologists, with limited knowledge of India and in whose view Tantrism was a particular, unusual and minority practice in contrast to Indian traditions they believed to be mainstream.[20]

 
 
 
 
 
 
Elements of Tantrism. Clockwise from upper left: Mantra (Buddhist), Mandala (Hindu), Yantra (of Kali), Skull cup (Kapala), Nadis and Chakras (Tibetan), Deities depicted in sexual union. These are neither compulsory nor universal in Tantrism.[57]

Robert Brown similarly notes that "tantrism" is a construct of Western scholarship, not a concept of the religious system itself.[58] He defines Tantrism as an apologetic label of Westerners for a system that they little understand that is "not coherent" and which is "an accumulated set of practices and ideas from various sources, that has varied between its practitioners within a group, varied across groups, across geography and over its history". It is a system, adds Brown, that gives each follower the freedom to mix Tantric elements with non-Tantric aspects, to challenge and transgress any and all norms, experiment with "the mundane to reach the supramundane".[44]

Teun Goudriaan in his 1981 review of Hindu Tantrism, states that Tantrism usually means a "systematic quest for salvation or spiritual excellence" by realizing and fostering the divine within one's own body, one that is simultaneous union of the masculine-feminine and spirit-matter, and has the ultimate goal of realizing the "primal blissful state of non-duality".[59] It is typically a methodically striven system, consisting of voluntarily chosen specific practices which may include Tantric items such as mantras (bijas), geometric patterns and symbols (mandala), gestures (mudra), mapping of the microcosm within one's body to the macrocosmic elements outside as the subtle body (kundalini yoga), assignments of icons and sounds (nyasa), meditation (dhyana), ritual worship (puja), initiation (diksha) and others.[60] Tantrism, adds Goudriaan, is a living system that is decidedly monistic, but with wide variations, and it is impossible to be dogmatic about a simple or fixed definition.[61]

Tantrism is an overarching term for "Tantric traditions", states David Gray in a 2016 review, that combine Vedic, yogic and meditative traditions from ancient Hinduism as well as rival Buddhist and Jain traditions.[43] it is a neologism of western scholars and does not reflect the self-understanding of any particular tantric tradition. While Goudriaan's description is useful, adds Gray, there is no single defining universal characteristic common to all Tantra traditions, being an open evolving system.[22] Tantrism, whether Buddhist or Hindu, can best be characterized as practices, a set of techniques, with a strong focus on rituals and meditation, by those who believe that it is a path to liberation that is characterized by both knowledge and freedom.[62]

Tantrika

According to Padoux, the term "Tantrika" is based on a comment by Kulluka Bhatta on Manava Dharmasastra 2.1, who contrasted vaidika and tantrika forms of Sruti (canonical texts). The Tantrika, to Bhatta, is that literature which forms a parallel part of the Hindu tradition, independent of the Vedic corpus. The Vedic and non-Vedic (Tantric) paths are seen as two different approaches to ultimate reality, the Vedic approach based on Brahman, and Tantrika being based on the non-Vedic Āgama texts.[63] Despite Bhatta attempt to clarify, states Padoux, in reality Hindus and Buddhists have historically felt free to borrow and blend ideas from all sources, Vedic, non-Vedic and in the case of Buddhism, its own canonical works.[64] Trika or Kashmir Shaivism may also be referred to as Tantrika.[65]

One of the key differences between the Tantric and non-Tantric traditions – whether it be orthodox Buddhism, Hinduism or Jainism – is their assumptions about the need for monastic or ascetic life.[66] Non-Tantrika, or orthodox traditions in all three major ancient Indian religions, hold that the worldly life of a householder is one driven by desires and greeds which are a serious impediment to spiritual liberation (moksha, nirvana, kaivalya). These orthodox traditions teach renunciation of householder life, a mendicant's life of simplicity and leaving all attachments to become a monk or nun. In contrast, the Tantrika traditions hold, states Robert Brown, that "both enlightenment and worldly success" are achievable, and that "this world need not be shunned to achieve enlightenment".[66][67] Yet, even this supposed categorical divergence is debatable, e.g. Bhagavad Gita v.2:48-53, including: "Yoga is skill in [the performance of] actions."[68]

History

Proto-Tantric elements in Vedic religion

The Keśin hymn of the Rig Veda (10.136) describes the "wild loner" who, states Karel Werner, "carrying within oneself fire and poison, heaven and earth, ranging from enthusiasm and creativity to depression and agony, from the heights of spiritual bliss to the heaviness of earth-bound labor".[69] The Rigveda uses words of admiration for these loners,[69] and whether it is related to Tantra or not, has been variously interpreted. According to David Lorenzen, it describes munis (sages) experiencing Tantra-like "ecstatic, altered states of consciousness" and gaining the ability "to fly on the wind".[70] In contrast, Werner suggests that these are early Yoga pioneers and accomplished yogis of the ancient pre-Buddhist Indian tradition, and that this Vedic hymn is speaking of those "lost in thoughts" whose "personalities are not bound to earth, for they follow the path of the mysterious wind".[69]

The two oldest Upanishadic scriptures of Hinduism, the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad in section 4.2 and Chandogya Upanishad in section 8.6, refer to nadis (hati) in presenting their theory on how the Atman (Self) and the body are connected and interdependent through energy carrying arteries when one is awake or sleeping, but they do not mention anything related to Tantric practices.[71] The Shvetashvatara Upanishad describes breath control that became a standard part of Yoga, but Tantric practices do not appear in it.[70][72] Likewise, the Taittiriya Upanishad discusses a central channel running through the body and various Vedic texts mention the bodily pranas (vital breaths) that move around in the body and animate it. However, the idea of consciously moving the bodily pranas through yoga is not found in these sources.[73] According to Lorenzen, Vedic ideas related to the body later diversified into the "mystical anatomy" of nadis and chakras found in Tantra.[74] The yogic component of Tantrism appears clearly in Bāṇabhaṭṭa's Harshacharita and Daṇḍin's Dashakumaracharita.[75] In contrast to this theory of Lorenzen, other scholars such as Mircea Eliade consider Yoga and the evolution of Yogic practices to be separate and distinct from the evolution of Tantra and Tantric practices.[76]

According to Geoffrey Samuel, the inner development of a spiritual energy called tapas becomes a central element of Vedic religion in the Brahmanas and Srauta texts. In these texts, ascetic practices allow a holy man to build up tapas, a kind of magical inner heat, which allows them to perform all sorts of magical feats as well as granting visions and divine revelations.[77] Samuel also notes that in the Mahabharata, one of the commonest use of the term "yoga" refers to "a dying warrior transferring himself at death to the sphere of the sun through yoga, a practice that links up with Upanisadic references to the channel to the crown of the head as the pathway by which one can travel through the solar orb to the World of Brahman." This practice of transferring one's consciousness at death is still an important practice in Tibetan Buddhism.[78] Samuel also notes that sexual rituals and a spiritualized sexuality are mentioned in the late Upanishads. According to Samuel, "late Vedic texts treat sexual intercourse as symbolically equivalent to the Vedic sacrifice, and ejaculation of semen as the offering." This theme can be found in the Jaiminiya Brahmana, the Chandogya Upanisad, and the Brhadaranyaka Upanisad. The Brhadaranyaka contains various sexual rituals and practices which are mostly aimed at obtaining a child which are concerned with the loss of male virility and power.[79]

David Gordon White views Yogini cults as foundational to early tantra but disagrees with scholars who maintain that the roots of such cults lie in an "autochthonous non-Vedic source" such as indigenous tribes or the Indus Valley civilization.[80] Instead, White suggests Vedic Srauta texts mention offerings to goddesses Rākā, Sinīvālī, and Kuhū in a manner similar to a tantric ritual.[81] Frederick Smith – a professor of Sanskrit and Classical Indian Religions, considers Tantra to be a religious movement parallel to the Bhakti movement of the 1st millennium AD.[82] Tantra along with Ayurveda, states Smith, has traditionally been attributed to Atharvaveda, but this attribution is one of respect not of historicity. Ayurveda has primarily been an empirical practice with Vedic roots, but Tantra has been an esoteric, folk movement without grounding that can be traced to anything in Atharvaveda or any other vedic text.[82]

Proto-Tantric elements in Buddhism

 
A Buddhist dhāraṇī (incantation), the Nilaṇṭhanāmahṛdaya dhāraṇī, in Siddham Script with Chinese transliteration
 
Kushan sculpture of a yakṣiṇī (2nd century), Mathura region

Pre-tantric Buddhism contains elements which could be seen as proto-tantric, and which may have influenced the development of the Buddhist Tantric tradition. The use of magical chants or incantations can be found in the early Buddhist texts as well as in some Mahayana sutras.[83] These magical spells or chants were used for various reasons, such as for protection, and for the generation of auspiciousness.[84] In the Pali tradition, protection chants are called parittas, and include texts such as the Ratana Sutta which are widely recited today in the Theravada tradition.[85][86] Mahayana incantations are called dhāraṇīs. Some Mahayana sutras incorporate the use of mantras, a central feature of tantric practice.

According to Geoffrey Samuel, sramana groups like the Buddhists and Jains were associated with the dead. Samuel notes that they "frequently settled at sites associated with the dead and seem to have taken over a significant role in relation to the spirits of the dead." To step into this realm required entering a dangerous and impure supernatural realm from the Indian perspective. This association with death remains a feature of modern Buddhism, and in Buddhist countries today, Buddhist monks and other ritual specialists are in charge of the dead.[87] Thus, the association of tantric practitioners with charnel grounds and death imagery is preceded by early Buddhist contact with these sites of the dead.

Some scholars think that the development of tantra may have been influenced by the cults of nature spirit-deities like Yakṣas and Nagas.[88] Yakṣa cults were an important part of early Buddhism. Yakṣas are powerful nature spirits which were sometimes seen as guardians or protectors.[89] Yakṣas like Kubera are also associated with magical incantations. Kubera is said to have provided the Buddhist sangha with protection spells in the Āṭānāṭiya Sutta.[90] These spirit deities also included numerous female deities (yakṣiṇī) that can be found depicted in major Buddhist sites like Sanchi and Bharhut. In early Buddhist texts there is also mention of fierce demon like deities called rākṣasa and rākṣasī, like the children eating Hārītī.[91] They are also present in Mahayana texts, such as in Chapter 26 of the Lotus Sutra which includes a dialogue between the Buddha and a group of rākṣasīs, who swear to uphold and protect the sutra. These figures also teach magical dhāraṇīs to protect followers of the Lotus Sutra.[92]

A key element of Buddhist Tantric practice is the visualization of deities in meditation. This practice is actually found in pre-tantric Buddhist texts as well. In Mahayana sutras like the Pratyutpanna Samādhi and the three Amitabha Pure land sutras.[93] There are other Mahāyāna sutras which contain what may be called "proto-tantric" material such as the Gandavyuha and the Dasabhumika which might have served as a source for the imagery found in later Tantric texts.[94] According to Samuel, the Golden Light Sutra (c. 5th century at the latest) contains what could be seen as a proto-mandala. In the second chapter, a bodhisattva has a vision of "a vast building made of beryl and with divine jewels and celestial perfumes. Four lotus-seats appear in the four directions, with four Buddhas seated upon them: Aksobhya in the East, Ratnaketu in the South, Amitayus in the West and Dundubhīśvara in the North."[95]

A series of artwork discovered in Gandhara, in modern-day Pakistan, dating from about the 1st century CE, show Buddhist and Hindu monks holding skulls.[96] The legend corresponding to these artworks is found in Buddhist texts, and describes monks "who tap skulls and forecast the future rebirths of the person to whom that skull belonged".[96][97] According to Robert Brown, these Buddhist skull-tapping reliefs suggest that tantric practices may have been in vogue by the 1st century CE.[96]

Proto-Tantric elements in Shaktism and Shaivism

 
A modern aghori with a skull-cup (Kapala). Their predecessors, the medieval Kapalikas ("Skull-men") were influential figures in the development of transgressive or "left hand" Shaiva tantra.

The Mahabharata, the Harivamsa, and the Devi Mahatmya in the Markandeya Purana all mention the fierce, demon-killing manifestations of the Great Goddess, Mahishamardini, identified with Durga-Parvati.[98] These suggest that Shaktism, reverence and worship for the Goddess in Indian culture, was an established tradition by the early centuries of the 1st millennium.[99] Padoux mentions an inscription from 423 to 424 CE which mentions the founding of a temple to terrifying deities called "the mothers".[100] However, this does not mean Tantric rituals and practices were as yet a part of either Hindu or Buddhist traditions. "Apart from the somewhat dubious reference to Tantra in the Gangadhar inscription of 423 CE", states David Lorenzen, it is only 7th-century Banabhatta's Kadambari which provide convincing proof of Tantra and Tantric texts.[33]

Shaivite ascetics seem to have been involved in the initial development of Tantra, particularly the transgressive elements dealing with the charnel ground. According to Samuel, one group of Shaiva ascetics, the Pasupatas, practiced a form of spirituality that made use of shocking and disreputable behavior later found in a tantric context, such as dancing, singing, and smearing themselves with ashes.[101]

Early Tantric practices are sometimes attributed to Shaiva ascetics associated with Bhairava, the Kapalikas ("skull men", also called Somasiddhatins or Mahavartins).[102][103][104] Besides the shocking fact that they frequented cremation grounds and carried human skulls, little is known about them, and there is a paucity of primary sources on the Kapalikas.[105][104] Samuel also states that the sources depict them as using alcohol and sex freely, that they were associated with terrfying female spirit-deities called yoginis and dakinis, and that they were believed to possess magical powers, such as flight.[106]

Kapalikas are depicted in fictional works and also widely disparaged in Buddhist, Hindu and Jain texts of the 1st millennium CE.[105][107] In Hāla's Gatha-saptasati (composed by the 5th century AD), for example, the story calls a female character Kapalika, whose lover dies, he is cremated, she takes his cremation ashes and smears her body with it.[103] The 6th-century Varāhamihira mentions Kapalikas in his literary works.[107] Some of the Kāpālika practices mentioned in these texts are those found in Shaiva Hinduism and Vajrayana Buddhism, and scholars disagree on who influenced whom.[108][109]

These early historical mentions are in passing and appear to be Tantra-like practices, they are not detailed nor comprehensive presentation of Tantric beliefs and practices. Epigraphic references to the Kaulas Tantric practices are rare. Reference is made in the early 9th century to vama (left-hand) Tantras of the Kaulas.[110] Literary evidence suggests Tantric Buddhism was probably flourishing by the 7th century.[70] Matrikas, or fierce mother goddesses that later are closely linked to Tantra practices, appear both in Buddhist and Hindu arts and literature between the 7th and 10th centuries.[111]

Rise and development

 
Dancing Bhairava in the Indian Museum, Kolkata
 
Dancing Vajravārāhī, a Buddhist tantric deity, Nepal, 11th–12th century
 
Illustration of a yogi and their chakras
 
Buddhist Mahasiddhas practicing the sexual yoga of karmamudrā ("action seal")

According to Gavin Flood, the earliest date for the Tantra texts related to Tantric practices is 600 CE, though most of them were probably composed after the 8th century onwards.[112] According to Flood, very little is known about who created the Tantras, nor much is known about the social status of these and medieval era Tantrikas.[113]

Flood states that the pioneers of Tantra may have been ascetics who lived at the cremation grounds, possibly from "above low-caste groups", and were probably non-Brahmanical and possibly part of an ancient tradition.[114][115][116] By the early medieval times, their practices may have included the imitation of deities such as Kali and Bhairava, with offerings of non-vegetarian food, alcohol and sexual substances. According to this theory, these practitioners would have invited their deities to enter them, then reverted the role in order to control that deity and gain its power.[113] These ascetics would have been supported by low castes living at the cremation places.[113]

Samuel states that transgressive and antinomian tantric practices developed in both Buddhist and Brahmanical (mainly Śaiva ascetics like the Kapalikas) contexts and that "Śaivas and Buddhists borrowed extensively from each other, with varying degrees of acknowledgement." According to Samuel, these deliberately transgressive practices included, "night time orgies in charnel grounds, involving the eating of human flesh, the use of ornaments, bowls and musical instruments made from human bones, sexual relations while seated on corpses, and the like."[117]

According to Samuel, another key element of in the development of tantra was "the gradual transformation of local and regional deity cults through which fierce male and, particularly, female deities came to take a leading role in the place of the yaksa deities." Samuel states that this took place between the fifth to eighth centuries CE.[118] According to Samuel, there are two main scholarly opinions on these terrifying goddesses which became incorporated into Śaiva and Buddhist Tantra. The first view is that they originate out of a pan-Indian religious substrate that was not Vedic. Another opinion is to see these fierce goddesses as developing out of the Vedic religion.[119]

Alexis Sanderson has argued that tantric practices originally developed in a Śaiva milieu and was later adopted by Buddhists. He cites numerous elements that are found in the Śaiva Vidyapitha literature, including whole passages and lists of pithas, that seem to have been directly borrowed by Vajrayana texts.[120] This has been criticized by Ronald M. Davidson however, due to the uncertain date of the Vidyapitha texts.[121] Davidson argues that the pithas seem to have been neither uniquely Buddhist nor Śaiva, but frequented by both groups. He also states that the Śaiva tradition was also involved in the appropriation of local deities and that tantra may have been influenced by tribal Indian religions and their deities.[122] Samuel writes that "the female divinities may well best be understood in terms of a distinct Śākta milieu from which both Śaivas and Buddhists were borrowing," but that other elements, like the Kapalika style practices, are more clearly derived from a Śaiva tradition.[123]

Samuel writes that the Saiva Tantra tradition appears to have originated as ritual sorcery carried out by hereditary caste groups (kulas) and associated with sex, death and fierce goddesses. The initiation rituals involved the consumption of the mixed sexual secretions (the clan essence) of a male guru and his consort. These practices were adopted by Kapalika styled ascetics and influenced the early Nath siddhas. Overtime, the more extreme external elements were replaced by internalized yogas that make use of the subtle body. Sexual ritual became a way to reach the liberating wisdom taught in the tradition.[124]

The Buddhists developed their own corpus of Tantras, which also drew on various Mahayana doctrines and practices, as well as on elements of the fierce goddess tradition and also on elements from the Śaiva traditions (such as deities like Bhairava, which were seen as having been subjugated and converted to Buddhism).[112][125] Some Buddhist tantras (sometimes called "lower" or "outer" tantras) which are earlier works, do not make use of transgression, sex and fierce deities. These earlier Buddhist tantras mainly reflect a development of Mahayana theory and practice (like deity visualization) and a focus on ritual and purity.[126] Between the eighth and tenth centuries, new tantras emerged which included fierce deities, kula style sexual initiations, subtle body practices and sexual yoga. The later Buddhist tantras are known as the "inner" or "unsurpassed yoga" (Anuttarayoga or "Yogini") tantras. According to Samuel, it seems that these sexual practices were not initially practiced by Buddhist monastics and instead developed outside of the monastic establishments among traveling siddhas.[127]

Tantric practices also included secret initiation ceremonies in which individuals would enter the tantric family (kula) and receive the secret mantras of the tantric deities. These initiations included the consumption of the sexual substances (semen and female sexual secretions) produced through ritual sex between the guru and his consort. These substances were seen as spiritually powerful and were also used as offerings for tantric deities.[128] For both Śaivas and Buddhists, tantric practices often took place at important sacred sites (pithas) associated with fierce goddesses.[129] Samuel writes that "we do not have a clear picture of how this network of pilgrimage sites arose." Whatever the case, it seems that it was in these ritual spaces visited by both Buddhists and Śaivas that the practice of Kaula and Anuttarayoga Tantra developed during the eighth and ninth centuries.[130] Besides the practices outlined above, these sites also saw the practice of animal sacrifice as blood offerings to Śākta goddesses like Kamakhya. This practice is mentioned in Śākta texts like the Kālikāpurāṇa and the Yoginītantra. In some of these sites, such as Kamakhya Pitha, animal sacrifice is still widely practiced by Śāktas.[131] [132]

Another key and innovative feature of medieval tantric systems was the development of internal yogas based on elements of the subtle body (sūkṣma śarīra). This subtle anatomy held that there were channels in the body (nadis) through which certain substances or energies (such as vayu, prana, kundalini, and shakti) flowed. These yogas involved moving these energies through the body to clear out certain knots or blockages (granthi) and to direct the energies to the central channel (avadhuti, sushumna). These yogic practices are also closely related to the practice of sexual yoga, since sexual intercourse was seen as being involved in the stimulation of the flow of these energies.[133] Samuel thinks that these subtle body practices may have been influenced by Chinese Daoist practices.[134]

One of the earliest mentions of sexual yoga practice is in the Buddhist Mahāyānasūtrālamkāra of Asanga (c. 5th century), which states "Supreme self-control is achieved in the reversal of sexual intercourse in the blissful Buddha-poise and the untrammelled vision of one's spouse."[135] According to David Snellgrove, the text's mention of a 'reversal of sexual intercourse' might indicate the practice of withholding ejaculation. Snellgrove states that it is possible that sexual yoga was already being practiced in Buddhist circles at this time, and that Asanga saw it as a valid practice.[136] Likewise, Samuel thinks that there is a possibility that sexual yoga existed in the fourth or fifth centuries (though not in the same transgressive tantric contexts where it was later practiced).[137]

It is only in the seventh and eighth centuries however that we find substantial evidence for these sexual yogas. Unlike previous Upanishadic sexual rituals however, which seem to have been associated with Vedic sacrifice and mundane ends like childbirth, these sexual yogas were associated with the movement of subtle body energies (like Kundalini and Chandali, which were also seen as goddesses), and also with spiritual ends.[138] These practices seemed to have developed at around the same time in both Saiva and Buddhist circles, and are associated with figures such as Tirumülar, Gorakhnath, Virupa, Naropa. The tantric mahasiddhas developed yogic systems with subtle body and sexual elements which could lead to magical powers (siddhis), immortality, as well as spiritual liberation (moksha, nirvana). Sexual yoga was seen as one way of producing a blissful expansion of consciousness that could lead to liberation.[137]

According to Jacob Dalton, ritualized sexual yoga (along with the sexual elements of the tantric initiation ritual, like the consumption of sexual fluids) first appears in Buddhist works called Mahayoga tantras (which include the Guhyagarbha and Guhyasamaja).[139][140] These texts "focused on the body's interior, on the anatomical details of the male and female sexual organs and the pleasure generated through sexual union." In these texts, sexual energy was also seen as a powerful force that could be harnessed for spiritual practice and according to Samuel "perhaps create the state of bliss and loss of personal identity which is homologised with liberating insight."[139] These sexual yogas continued to develop further into more complex systems which are found in texts dating from about the ninth or tenth century, including the Saiva Kaulajñānanirṇaya and Kubjikātantra as well as the Buddhist Hevajra, and Cakrasamvara tantras which make use of charnel ground symbolism and fierce goddesses.[141] Samuel writes that these later texts also combine the sexual yoga with a system of controlling the energies of the subtle body.[134]

There is considerable evidence that the Hevajra and Cakrasamvara tantras borrow significant portions from Saiva sources. The text Cakrasamvara and its commentaries have revealed numerous attempts by the Buddhists to enlarge and modify it, both to remove references to Saiva deities and to add more Buddhist technical terminology.[142]

Tantric Age

 
Twelve-Armed Chakrasamvara and His Consort Vajravarahi, ca. 12th century, India (Bengal) or Bangladesh
 
Yogini, East India, 11th-12th century CE. Matsuoka Museum of Art, Tokyo, Japan
 
A stone Kālacakra Mandala at the Hiraṇyavarṇa Mahāvihāra, a Buddhist temple in Patan, Nepal built in the 12th century

From the 8th to the 14th century, Tantric traditions rose to prominence and flourished throughout India and beyond.[143][144][21][145] By the 10th century, the main elements of tantric practice had reached maturity and were being practiced in Saiva and Buddhist contexts. This period has been referred to as the 'Tantric Age' by some scholars due to prevalence of Tantra.[146] Also by the 10th century, numerous tantric texts (variously called Agamas, Samhitas and Tantras) had been written, particularly in Kashmir, Nepal and Bengal.[147] By this time, Tantric texts had also been translated into regional languages such as Tamil, and Tantric practices had spread across South Asia.[148] Tantra also spread into Tibet, Indonesia and China. Gavin Flood describes the Tantric age as follows:

Tantrism has been so pervasive that all of Hinduism after the eleventh century, perhaps with the exception of the vedic Srauta tradition, is influenced by it. All forms of Saiva, Vaisnava and Smarta religion, even those forms which wanted to distance themselves from Tantrism, absorbed elements derived from the Tantras. [148]

Though the whole northern and Himalayan part of India was involved in the development of tantra, Kashmir was a particularly important center, both Saiva and Buddhist and numerous key tantric texts were written there according to Padoux.[149] According to Alexis Sanderson, the Śaiva Tantra traditions of medieval Kashmir were mainly divided between the dualistic Śaiva Siddhanta and the non-dualist theology found in Śakta lineages like the Trika, Krama and Kaula. The non-dualists generally accepted and made use of sexual and transgressive practices, while the dualists mostly rejected them.[150] Saiva tantra was especially successful because it managed to forge strong ties with South Asian kings who valued the power (shakti) of fierce deities like the warrior goddess Durga as a way to increase their own royal power. These kings took part in royal rituals led by Saiva "royal gurus" in which they were symbolically married to tantric deities and thus became the earthly representative of male gods like Shiva. Saiva tantra could also employ a variety of protection and destruction rituals which could be used for the benefit of the kingdom and the king.[151] Tantric Shaivism was adopted by the kings of Kashmir, as well as by the Somavamshis of Odisha, the Kalachuris, and the Chandelas of Jejakabhukti (in Bundelkhand).[152] There is also evidence of state support from the Cambodian Khmer Empire.[153] As noted by Samuel, in spite of the increased depiction of female goddesses, these tantric traditions all seemed to have been mostly "male-directed and male-controlled."[154]

During the Tantric Age, Buddhist Tantra was embraced by the Mahayana Buddhist mainstream and was studied at the great universities such as Nalanda and Vikramashila, from which it spread to Tibet and to the East Asian states of China, Korea, and Japan. This new Tantric Buddhism was supported by the Pala Dynasty (8th–12th century) which supported these centers of learning.[155] The later Khmer kings and the Indonesian Srivijaya kingdom also supported tantric Buddhism. According to Samuel, while the sexual and transgressive practices were mostly undertaken in symbolic form (or through visualization) in later Tibetan Buddhist monastic contexts, it seems that in the eighth to tenth century Indian context, they were actually performed.[156]

In the 10th and 11th centuries, both Shaiva and Buddhist tantra evolved into more tame, philosophical, and liberation-oriented religions. This transformation saw a move from external and transgressive rituals towards a more internalized yogic practice focused on attaining spiritual insight. This recasting also made tantric religions much less open to attack by other groups. In Shaivism, this development is often associated with the Kashmiri master Abhinavagupta (c. 950 – 1016 CE) and his followers, as well the movements which were influenced by their work, like the Sri Vidya tradition (which spread as far as South India, and has been referred to as "high" tantra).[157]

In Buddhism, this taming of tantra is associated with the adoption of tantra by Buddhist monastics who sought to incorporate it within the Buddhist Mahayana scholastic framework. Buddhist tantras were written down and scholars like Abhayakaragupta wrote commentaries on them. Another important figure, the Bengali teacher Atisha, wrote a treatise which placed tantra as the culmination of a graduated Mahayana path to awakening, the Bodhipathapradīpa. In his view, one needed to first begin practicing non-tantric Mahayana, and then later one might be ready for tantra. This system became the model for tantric practice among some Tibetan Buddhist schools, like the Gelug. In Tibet, the transgressive and sexual practices of tantra became much less central and tantric practice was seen as suitable only for a small elite group.[158] New tantras continued to be composed during this later period as well, such as the Kalachakra (c. 11th century), which seems to be concerned with converting Buddhists and non-Buddhists alike, and uniting them together against Islam. The Kalachakra teaches sexual yoga, but also warns not to introduce the practice of ingesting impure substances to beginners, since this is only for advanced yogis. This tantra also seems to want to minimize the impact of the transgressive practices, since it advises tantrikas to outwardly follow the customs of their country.[159]

Another influential development during this period was the codification of tantric yogic techniques that would later become the separate movement known as Hatha Yoga. According to James Mallinson, the original "source text" for Hatha Yoga is the Vajrayana Buddhist Amṛtasiddhi (11th century CE) attributed to the mahasiddha Virupa. This text was later adopted by Saiva yogic traditions (such as the Naths) and is quoted in their texts.[160][161]

Another tradition of Hindu Tantra developed among the Vaishnavas, this was called the Pāñcarātra Agama tradition. This tradition avoided the transgressive and sexual elements that were embraced by the Saivas and the Buddhists.[124] There is also a smaller tantric tradition associated with Surya, the sun god. Jainism also seems to have developed a substantial Tantra corpus based on the Saura tradition, with rituals based on yakshas and yakshinis. However, this Jain tantrism was mainly used for pragmatic purposes like protection, and was not used to attain liberation. Complete manuscripts of these Jain tantras have not survived.[162][163] The Jains also seem to have adopted some of the subtle body practices of tantra, but not sexual yoga.[134] The Svetambara thinker Hemacandra (c. 1089–1172) discusses tantric practices extensively, such as internal meditations on chakras, which betray Kaula and Nath influences.[164]

Reception and later developments

 
A depiction of the Goddess Bhairavi and Shiva in a charnel ground, from a 17th-century manuscript

There seems to have been some debate regarding the appropriateness of tantra. Among the Hindus, those belonging to the more orthodox Vedic traditions rejected the Tantras. Meanwhile, tantrikas incorporated Vedic ideas within their own systems, while considering the Tantras as the higher, more refined understanding.[162] Meanwhile, some Tantrikas considered the Tantras to be superior to the Vedas, while others considered them complementary such as Umapati, who is quoted as stating: "The Veda is the cow, the true Agama its milk."[165]

According to Samuel, the great Advaita philosopher Shankara (9th century) "is portrayed in his biography, the Sankaravijaya, as condemning the approaches of various kinds of Tantric practitioners and defeating them through argument or spiritual power." He also is said to have encouraged the replacement of fierce goddesses with benign female deities, and thus to have promoted the Sri Vidya tradition (which worships a peaceful and sweet goddess, Tripura Sundari). Though it is far from certain that Shankara actually campaigned against tantra, he is traditionally seen as someone who purified Hinduism from transgressive and antinomian tantric practices.[166]

The 14th-century Indian scholar Mādhavācārya (in Sarva-Darsana-Sangraha) wrote copious commentaries on then existing major schools of Indian philosophies and practices, and cited the works of the 10th century Abhinavagupta, who was considered a major and influential Tantra scholar.[167] However, Madhavacarya does not mention Tantra as a separate, distinct religious or ritual-driven practice. The early 20th-century Indian scholar Pandurang Vaman Kane conjectured that Madhavacharya ignored Tantra because it may have been considered scandalous. In contrast, Padoux suggests that Tantra may have been so pervasive by the 13th century that "it was not regarded as being a distinct system."[167]

Hindu tantra, while practiced by some of the general lay population, was eventually overshadowed by the more popular Bhakti movements that swept throughout India from the 15th century onwards. According to Samuel, "these new devotional styles of religion, with their emphasis on emotional submission to a supreme saviour-deity, whether Saivite or Vaisnavite, were better adapted, perhaps, to the subaltern role of non-Muslim groups under Muslim rule."[168] Saiva tantra did remain an important practice among most Saiva ascetics however.[169] Tantric traditions also survived in certain regions, such as among the Naths of Rajasthan, in the Sri Vidya tradition of South India and in the Bengali Bauls.[168]

In Buddhism, while tantra became accepted in the great Mahayana establishments of Nalanda and Vikramashila and spread to the Himalayan regions, it also experienced serious setbacks in other regions, particularly Southeast Asia. In Burma, for example, King Anawratha (1044–1077) is said to have disbanded tantric "Ari" monks. As Theravada Buddhism became dominant in South East Asian states, tantric religions became marginalised in those regions.[170] In Sri Lanka, tantric Buddhism also suffered debilitating setbacks. Initially the large Abhayagiri Monastery was a place where the practice of Vajrayana seems to have flourished during the 8th century. However, Abhayagiri was disbanded and forced to convert to the orthodox Mahāvihāra sect during the reign of Parakramabahu I (1153–1186).[171]

Regarding the reception of tantra during the period of Hindu modernism in the 19th and 20th centuries, Samuel writes that this period saw "a radical reframing of yogic practices away from the Tantric context." Samuel notes that while Hindu Hatha yoga had its origins in a Saiva tantric context,

Given the extremely negative views of Tantra and its sexual and magical practices which prevailed in middle-class India in the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and still largely prevail today, this was an embarrassing heritage. Much effort was given by people such as Swami Vivekananda into reconstructing yoga, generally in terms of a selective Vedantic reading of Patañjali's Yogasutra (de Michelis 2004). The effort was largely successful, and many modern Western practitioners of yoga for health and relaxation have little or no knowledge of its original function as a preparation for the internal sexual practices of the Nath tradition.[169]

Buddhist tantra has survived in modern Indo-Tibetan Buddhism, in various Japanese traditions such as Shingon, and in the Newar Buddhism of the Kathmandu Valley.[172] There are also magical quasi-tantric traditions in Southeast Asia, sometimes termed Esoteric Southern Buddhism, though they are not called "tantric" and have been marginalised by state supported modernist forms of Theravada Buddhism.[173]

Tantric traditions

Hindu tantra

Within Hinduism, the word tantra often refers to a text, which may or may not be "tantric." Conversely, various tantric texts are actually not always called tantras (instead they may be called āgama, jñāna, saṃhitā, siddhānta, vidyā).[88][174] There are also tantric Upanishads, which are late Upanishads as well as tantric Puranas (and Puranas influenced by tantric ideas).[175] Besides these types of texts, there are also various types of tantric "sastras" (treatises) which may be "commentaries, digests, compilations, monographs, collections of hymns or of names of deities, and mantras and works on mantras." Though much of this vast body of tantric literature is in Sanskrit, others have also been written in Indian vernacular languages. As noted by Padoux, the largest portion of these tantric works are Shaiva texts.[176]

Tantric texts and practitioners ("tantrikas" & "tantrinis") are often contrasted with Vedic texts and those who practice Vedic religion ("Vaidikas"). This non-Vedic path was often termed Mantramarga ("The way of mantras") or Tantrasastra ("Tantra teaching"). One of the most well known comments on this dichotomy is Kulluka Bhatta's statement in his 15th-century commentary to the Manusmriti which states that revelation (sruti) is twofold – Vedic and Tantric.[174] Hindu tantric teachings are generally seen as revelations from a divine being (such as Śiva, or the Goddess) which are considered by tantrikas to be superior to the Vedas in leading beings to liberation. They are also considered to be more effective during the Kali Yuga, a time of much passion (kama). However, tantric thinkers like Abhinavagupta, while considering tantra as superior, do not totally reject Vedic teachings, and instead consider them valid on a lower level since they also derive from the same source, the supreme Godhead.[88][177]

There are various Hindu tantric traditions within Shaivism, Shaktism and Vaishnavism.[178] There are numerous tantric texts for these different traditions with different philosophical point of views, ranging from theistic dualism to absolute monism.[179][180] According to David B. Gray, "one of the most important tropes in the history of the dissemination of tantric traditions is that of lineage, the transmission of teachings along an uninterrupted lineage, from master to disciple, the so-called guruparaṃparā."[88] These various traditions also differ among themselves on how heterodox and transgressive they are (vis a vis the Vedic tradition). Since tantric rituals became so widespread, certain forms of tantra were eventually accepted by many orthodox Vedic thinkers such as Jayanta Bhatta and Yamunacarya as long as they did not contradict Vedic teaching and social rules.[181] Tantric scriptures such as the Kali centered Jayadrathayamala also state that tantrikas can follow the Vedic social rules out of convenience and for the benefit of their clan and guru.[182] However, not all Vedic thinkers accepted tantra. For example, Kumarila Bhatta wrote that one should have no contact with tantrikas nor speak to them.[183]

Śaiva and Śākta tantra

 
The Brihadishvara Temple, a Śaiva Siddhānta temple in Tamil Nadu
 
Nepalese depiction of the goddess Kali
 
Śrī, also known as Lalitā Tripurasundarī ("beautiful in three worlds"), Adi Parashakti (the highest supreme energy), Kāmeśvarī (goddess of desire) and other names

Śaiva Tantra is called the Mantramārga, and is often seen as being a separate teaching than the ascetic "Atimārga" tradition (which includes the Pāśupatas and Kāpālikas).[88][184] There are various doctrines, textual classes and schools of Shaiva Tantra, which often overlap with the Shakta tradition in different ways.

The Śaiva Siddhānta tradition is the earliest Śaiva Tantra school and was characterized by public rituals performed by priests. Some of their texts, like the Niśvāsatattvasaṃhitā have been dated to the fifth century.[88] Their scriptures (the Śaiva Agamas) and basic doctrines are also shared by the other traditions as a common Śaiva doctrine and many of their rites are also used in other schools of Shaiva Tantra.[184] The prescriptions and rituals of the Śaiva Siddhānta Agamas are generally followed by Śaiva temples in South India and they are mostly compatible with orthodox Brahmanism, lacking terrifying deities and animal sacrifice.[185]

The Mantrapīṭha tradition on the other hand, worships Svacchanda Bhairava, a terrifying form of Shiva also known as "Aghora" ("not fearsome"). This tradition promotes the Skull observance (Kapalavrata), that is, carrying a skull, a skull staff (khatavanga) and worshipping in cremation grounds.[186] One contemporary group of Kapalika ascetics are the Aghoris.

There are also various traditions who are classified as "Vidyāpīṭha". The texts of this tradition focus on worshipping goddesses known as Yoginīs or Ḍākinīs and include antinomian practices dealing with charnel grounds and sexuality.[88] These goddess centered traditions of the Śākta tantras are mostly of the "left" current (vamachara) and are thus considered more heterodox.[187]

There are various Vidyāpīṭha traditions, which focus on a bipolar, bisexual divinity that is equal parts male and female, Śaiva and Śākta.[88][187] The Yamalatantras worship Bhairava along with Kapalini, the goddess of the skull. The Goddess centered traditions are known as the Kulamārga (Path of the Clans), referring to the clans of the goddesses and their Shakti tantras, which may have been established around the 9th century. It includes sexual rituals, sanguinary practices, the ritual consumption of liquor and the importance of spirit possession. It includes various sub-traditions the developed in different regions of India, such as the Trika lineage (which worships a trio of deities: Parā, Parāparā, and Aparā), the tradition of the fierce goddess Guhyakālī, Krama tradition, focusing on the goddess Kālī, the Kubjikā cult, and the southern tradition which worships the beautiful goddess Kāmeśvarī or Tripurasundarī.[88][187]

During the 10th century, the syncretic Nondual School of Kashmir Śaivism developed. According to Alexis Sanderson, this tradition arose out of the confrontation between the dualistic and more orthodox Śaiva Siddhānta and the nondual transgressive traditions of the Trika and Krama. According to David B. Gray, this school integrated elements from both of these traditions, "the end result was a nondualistic system in which the transgressive elements were internalized and hence rendered less offensive to the orthodox."[88]

The philosophers of Kashmir Śaivism, especially Abhinavagupta (c. 975–1025 ce) and his student Jayaratha, are some of the most influential philosophers who wrote on Hindu tantra.[188] These thinkers synthesized the various goddess and Śaiva lineages and philosophies into a comprehensive and influential religious system. According to David White, Abhinavagupta "sublimates, cosmeticizes, and semanticizes many of its practices into a type of meditative asceticism whose aim is to realize a transcendent subjectivity".[88] Thus, his work domesticated the radically antinomian practices of Vidyāpīṭha lineages into meditative exercises.[88]

The last major Śaiva tantric tradition is that of the Nāth or "Split-Ear" Kānphaṭa tradition, which emerged in the 12th or 13th century. They produced various Haṭhayoga texts which draw on tantric yogas.[88][189]

While the Śākta traditions continued to develop in different ways, sometimes in a more popular and devotional direction, many of them retain various tantric elements today. The two most important and popular Śākta tantra traditions today are the Southern Kaula transmission, which focus on the beautiful goddess Śrī (śrīkula) or Lalitā Tripurasundarī and the Northern and Eastern transmission, focusing on the ferocious goddess Kālī (kālīkula).[88] The southern transmission gave rise to the Śrī Vidyā tradition, an important tantric religion in South India. Though it takes much of its philosophical and doctrinal system from Kashmir Shaivism, it generally avoids the transgressive elements and is orthodox or "right handed". Bhaskararaya (18th century) is considered a key thinker of this tradition.[88][188] The Kālīkula tradition is particularly important in East and South India and Kālī remains a popular goddess in India, a focus of much devotion.[88]

Vaiṣṇava

The main Vaiṣṇava tradition that is associated with tantra is the Pañcharatra. This tradition produced a number of tantric texts, most of which are lost. However, this sect does not identify itself as "tantric".[88] The worship and ritual of most of the Vaiṣṇava temples in South India follow this tradition, which is ritually similar to the Shaiva Siddhanta. According to Padoux, "from the doctrinal point of view, they are nearer to brahmanical orthodoxy (proudly asserted by some of their affiliates) and their mantras are indeed often Vedic."[190]

According to David B. Gray,

During the medieval period another tantric Vaiṣṇava tradition emerged in Bengal. Known as the Sahajiyā tradition, it flourished in Bengal around the 16th through 19th centuries. It taught that each individual is a divinity, embodying the divine couple Kṛṣṇa and his consort Rādhā. This tradition integrated earlier Hindu and Buddhist tantric practices within a Vaiṣṇava theological framework.[88]

Buddhist tantra

There are various Buddhist tantric traditions throughout Asia which are called by different names such as Vajrayana, Secret Mantra, Mantrayana and so on.[191][192][193] The Indo-Tibetan Buddhist tradition has been dominant in Tibet and the Himalayan regions.[191] It first spread to Tibet in the 8th century and quickly rose to prominence.[88] The Tibetan Buddhist tantric teachings have recently been spread to the Western world by the Tibetan diaspora. Nepalese Newar Buddhism meanwhile is still practiced in the Kathmandu Valley by the Newar people. The tradition maintains a canon of Sanskrit texts, the only Buddhist tantric tradition to still do so.

Buddhist Tantric practices and texts which developed from the 5th to the 8th centuries were translated into Chinese and are preserved in the Chinese Buddhist canon as well as in the Dunhuang manuscripts.[191][194] Tantric materials involving the use of mantras and dharanis began to appear in China during the fifth century period, and Buddhist masters such as Zhiyi developed proto-tantric rituals based on esoteric texts.[195] Chinese Esoteric Buddhism became especially influential in China in the Tang dynasty period with the arrival of esoteric masters such as Vajrabodhi and Amoghavajra to the capital city of Chang'an.[196] The succeeding Song dynasty saw an influx of new esoteric texts being transmitted by monks from Central Asia.[197] Chinese Esoteric Buddhist rituals were also noted to be particularly popular in the Liao dynasty, which contended with the Song for control of northern China.[198] Due to the highly eclectic nature of Chinese Buddhism where sectarian denominations were not strictly drawn between the various Buddhist schools (even during the Tang dynasty), and where most Buddhist masters mixed practices from the different traditions, Chinese Esoteric Buddhist practices were absorbed by lineages from the other Buddhist traditions such as Chan and Tiantai.[199][200] For example, the Northern School of Chan even became known for its esoteric practices of dhāraṇīs and mantras.[201] During the Yuan and Ming dynasty periods, certain esoteric elements from Tibetan Buddhism were also adapted and incorporated into general Chinese Buddhist practices and rituals. In modern Chinese Buddhism, the esoteric traditions continue to be passed on and practiced through numerous tantric rituals such as the Liberation Rite of Water and Land and the Universal Crossing (普渡 Pǔdù) rites for Hungry Ghosts which involve practices like deity yoga and mandala offerings, as well as the recitation of tantric mantras such as the Cundī Dhāraṇī, the Hundred Syllable Mantra of Vajrasattva, the Mahācakravidyārāja Dhāraṇī and the Shurangama Mantra.[199][202] Esoteric practices also spread to Korea and to Japan, where it exists as an independent tradition called Shingon.[88]

Other religions

The Hindu and Buddhist Tantric traditions significantly influenced many other religions such Jainism, Sikhism, the Tibetan Bön tradition, Daoism, Shintō, Sufi Islam, and the Western "New Age" movement.[203][204][205]

In the Sikh literature, the ideas related to Shakti and goddess reverence attributed to Guru Gobind Singh, particularly in the Dasam Granth, are related to tantra ideas found in Buddhism and Hinduism.[206]

The Jain worship methods, states Ellen Gough, were likely influenced by Shaktism ideas, and this is attested by the tantric diagrams of the Rishi-mandala where the Tirthankaras are portrayed.[207] The Tantric traditions within Jainism use verbal spells or mantra, and rituals that are believed to accrue merit for rebirth realms.[208]

Practices

One of the main elements of the Tantric literature is ritual[209][note 5] Rather than one coherent system, Tantra is an accumulation of practices and ideas from different sources. As Samuel writes, the tantric traditions are "a confluence of a variety of different factors and components." These elements include: mandalas, mantras, internal sexual yogic practices, fierce male and female deities, cremation ground symbolism, as well as concepts from Indian Philosophy.[210]

André Padoux notes that there is no consensus among scholars as to which elements are characteristic for Tantra, nor is there any text that contains all those elements.[211] Also, most of those elements can also be found in non-Tantric traditions.[211] Because of the wide range of communities covered by the term, it is problematic to describe tantric practices definitively. However, there are sets of practices and elements which are shared by numerous tantric traditions, and thus a family resemblance relationship can be established among them.

Different scholars give different main features of tantra. For example, David N. Lorenzen writes that tantra shares various "shamanic and yogic" practices, worship of goddesses, association with specific schools like the Kaulas and Kapalikas, as well as tantric texts.[70] Christopher Wallis meanwhile, basing himself on the definition given the tantric scholar Rāmakaṇṭha, gives four main features of tantra: "1) concern with ritual modes of manipulation (of the environment or one's own awareness), 2) requirement for esoteric initiation (to receive access to the scriptural teachings and practices), 3) a twofold goal of practice: the soteriological and supramundane one of liberation (variously conceived) and/or the mundane one of extraordinary power over other beings and one's environment, and 4) the claim that these three are explicated in scriptures that are the word of God (āgama) or the Buddha (buddhavacana)."[212]

According to Anthony Tribe, a scholar of Buddhist Tantra, Tantra has the following defining features:[213]

  1. Centrality of ritual, especially the worship of deities
  2. Centrality of mantras
  3. Visualisation of and identification with a deity
  4. Need for initiation, esotericism and secrecy
  5. Importance of a teacher (guru, acharya)
  6. Ritual use of mandalas (maṇḍala)
  7. Transgressive or antinomian acts
  8. Revaluation of the body
  9. Revaluation of the status and role of women
  10. Analogical thinking (including microcosmic or macrocosmic correlation)
  11. Revaluation of negative mental states

There are a wide array of Tantric techniques or spiritual practices (sadhana) such as:[214]

  • Dakshina: Donation or gift to one's teacher
  • Diksha or Abhiseka: Initiation ritual which may include shaktipat
  • Ganachakra: A ritual feast during which a sacramental meal is offered
  • Guru yoga and Guru devotion (bhakti)
  • Mandalas and Yantras, symbolic diagrams of forces at work in the universe
  • Mantras: reciting syllables, words, and phrases
  • Mudras, or hand gestures
  • Nyasa, installing mantras on the body
  • Prāyaścitta - an expiation ritual performed if a puja has been performed wrongly
  • Puja (worship ritual) and other forms of bhakti
  • Ritual music and dance
  • Ritual purification (of idols, of one's body, etc.)
  • Ritual sacrifice, including animal sacrifice
  • Singing of hymns of praise (stava)
  • Sexual yoga: ritual sexual union (with an actual physical consort or an imagined deity)
  • The acquisition and use of siddhis or supernormal powers. Associated with vamachara ('left-hand path')
  • Use of taboo substances such as alcohol, cannabis, meat and other entheogens.
  • Visualization of deities and Identification these deities in meditation (deity yoga)
  • Vrata and Samaya: vows or pledges, sometimes to do ascetic practices like fasting
  • Yatra: pilgrimage, processions
  • Yoga, including breathing techniques (pranayama) and postures (asana), is employed to balance the energies in the body/mind.


Worship and ritual

 
A Pujari in front of a Ganesha statue, Brihadishwara Shiva Temple

Worship or puja in Hindu Tantra differs from Vedic forms somewhat. While in the Vedic practice of yajna there are no idols, shrines, and symbolic art, in tantra they are important means of worship.[215]

Rituals are particularly important in the dualistic Śaiva Siddhānta which according to Padoux "is typically characterized by an overabundance of rituals, which are necessarily accompanied by mantras. These rituals are not so much a succession of actions as a play of mentally visualized and experienced images, a situation common to all Tantric traditions, where rites, meditation, and yoga are exercises in creative identifying imagination." The theory behind these rituals is the idea that all humans have a fundamental impurity (mala) that binds them to rebirth. This impurity can be removed by ritual action (along with proper knowledge). The initial step in this path is the ritual of initiation (diksa), which opens to door to future liberation at death.[216]

In the non-dualistic and transgressive (or "left hand") traditions like the Kali cults and the Trika school, rituals and pujas can include certain left hand path elements that are not found in the more orthodox traditions. These transgressive elements include the use of skulls and other human bone implements (as part of the Kapalika vow), fierce deities like Bhairava, Kubjika and Kali which were used as part of meditative visualizations, ritual possession by the deities (avesa), sexual rites and offering the deity (as well as consuming) certain impure substances like meat, alcohol and sexual fluids.[217] Padoux explains the transgressive practices as follows:

On the ritual and mental plane, transgression was an essential trait by which the nondualistic Tantric traditions set themselves apart from other traditions – so much so that they used the term "nondualistic practice" (advaitacara) to refer to the Kaula transgressive practices as a rejection of the duality (dvaita) of pure and impure in brahmanical society. Let us also note that for the nondualistic Saiva systems, the Yoginis were not active merely in the world of spirits; they were also powers present in humans – mistresses of their senses, governing their affects, which acquired an intensity and super-natural dimension through this divinization. This led adepts to an identification of their individual consciousness with the infinite divine Consciousness, thus also helping them transcend the sexual plane.[218]

In both the Buddhist and Saiva contexts, the sexual practices are often seen as a way to expand one's consciousness through the use of bliss.[218]

There is also a fundamental philosophical disagreement between Śaiva Siddhānta and the non-dualistic schools like the Trika regarding ritual. In Śaiva Siddhānta, only ritual can do away with "innate impurities" (anavamala) that bind individual Selfs, though the ritual must be performed with an understanding of their nature and purpose as well as with devotion. In the view of the Trika school (especially in the work of Abhinavagupta), only knowledge (jñana) which is a "recognition" (pratyabhijña) of our true nature, leads to liberation. According to Padoux, "this is also, with nuances, the position of the Pñcaratra and of other Vaisnava Tantric traditions."[219]

Yoga, mantra, meditation

 
A meditating Shiva is visited by Parvati

Tantric yoga is first and foremost an embodied practice, which is seen as having a divine esoteric structure. As noted by Padoux, tantric yoga makes use of a "mystic physiology" which includes various psychosomatic elements sometimes called the "subtle body". This imaginary inner structure includes chakras ("wheels"), nadis ("channels"), and energies (like Kundalini, Chandali, different pranas and vital winds, etc.). The tantric body is also held to be a microcosmic reflection of the universe, and is thus seen as containing gods and goddesses.[220] According to Padoux, the "internalized image of the yogic body" is a fundamental element for nearly all meditative and tantric ritual practices.[221]

The use of mantras is one of the most common and widespread elements of tantric practice. They are used in rituals as well as during various meditative and yogic practices. Mantra recitation (japa) is often practiced along with nyasa ("depositing" the mantra), mudras ("seals", i.e. hand gestures) and complex visualizations involving divine symbols, mandalas and deities. Nyasa involves touching various parts of the body while reciting mantra, which is thought to connect the deity with the yogis body and transform the body into that of the deity.[222]

Mantras are also often visualized as being located within the yogi's body as part of tantric meditations. For example, in the "Yogini Heart" tantra, a Śrī Vidyā text, the yogi is instructed to imagine the five syllables (HA SA KA LA HRIM) of the deity's mantra in the muladhara chakra. The next set of five syllables (HA SA KA HA LA HRIM) is visualized in the heart chakra and the third cluster (SA KA LA HRIM) in the cakra between the eyebrows. The yogi is further instructed to lengthen the enunciation of the M sound at the end of the HRIM syllable, a practice called nada (phonic vibration). This practice goes through various increasingly subtle stages until it dissolves into the silence of the Absolute.[223]

Another common element found in tantric yoga is the use of visionary meditations in which tantrikas focus on a vision or image of the deity (or deities), and in some cases imagine themselves as being the deity and their own body as the body of the deity.[224] The practitioner may use visualizations, identifying with a deity to the degree that the aspirant "becomes" the Ishta-deva (or meditational deity). In other meditations, the deities are visualized as being inside the tantrika's body. For example, in Abhinavagupta's Tantraloka (chapter 15), the Trika "trinity" of goddesses (Parā, Parāparā, and Aparā) are visualized on the ends of the three prongs of a trident (located above the head). The rest of the trident is imagined positioned along the central axis of the yogi's body, with the blazing corpse of Shiva visualized in the head.[225]

Mandalas and yantras

 
Sri Yantra diagram with the Ten Mahavidyas. The triangles represent Shiva and Shakti; the snake represents Spanda and Kundalini.

Yantra are mystical diagrams which are used in tantric meditation and ritual. They are usually associated with specific Hindu deities such as Shiva, Shakti, or Kali. Similarly, a puja may involve focusing on a yantra or mandala associated with a deity.[226]

According to David Gordon White, geometrical mandalas are a key element of Tantra.[227] They are used to represent numerous tantric ideas and concepts as well as used for meditative focus. Mandalas symbolically communicate the correspondences between the "transcendent-yet-immanent" macrocosm and the microcosm of mundane human experience.[227] The godhead (or principal Buddha) is often depicted at the center of the mandala, while all other beings, including the practitioner, are located at various distances from this center.[227] Mandalas also reflected the medieval feudal system, with the king at its centre.[228]

Mandalas and Yantras may be depicted in various ways, on paintings, cloth, in three dimensional form, made out of colored sand or powders, etc. Tantric yoga also often involves the mental visualization of a mandala or yantra. This is usually combined with mantra recitation and other ritual actions as part of a tantric sadhana (practice).

Sex and eroticism

While tantra involves a wide range of ideas and practices which are not always of a sexual nature, Flood and Padoux both note that in the West, Tantra is most often thought of as a kind of ritualized sex or a spiritualized yogic sexuality.[229][230][231] According to Padoux, "this is a misunderstanding, for though the place of sex in Tantra is ideologically essential, it is not always so in action and ritual." Padoux further notes that while sexual practices do exist and were used by certain tantric groups, they "lost their prevalence when Tantra spread to other larger social groups."[231]

In the tantric traditions which do use sex as part of spiritual practice (this refers mainly to the Kaulas, and also Tibetan Buddhism), sex and desire are often seen as a means of transcendence that is used to reach the Absolute. Thus, sex and desire are not seen as ends in themselves. Because these practices transgress orthodox Hindu ideas of ritual purity, they have often given tantra a bad image in India, where it is often condemned by the orthodox. According to Padoux, even among the traditions which accept these practices, they are far from prominent and practiced only by a "few initiated and fully qualified adepts".[232]

Western scholarly research

 
The Sri Yantra (shown here in the three-dimensional projection known as Sri Meru or Maha Meru, used primarily by Srividya Shakta sects)

John Woodroffe

The first Western scholar to seriously study Tantra was John Woodroffe (1865–1936), who wrote about Tantra under the pen name Arthur Avalon and is known as the "founding father of Tantric studies".[233] Unlike previous Western scholars Woodroffe advocated for Tantra, defending and presenting it as an ethical and philosophical system in accord with the Vedas and Vedanta.[234] Woodroffe practised Tantra and, while trying to maintain scholastic objectivity, was a student of Hindu Tantra (the Shiva-Shakta tradition).[235][236][237]

Further development

Following Woodroffe, a number of scholars began investigating Tantric teachings, including scholars of comparative religion and Indology such as Agehananda Bharati, Mircea Eliade, Julius Evola, Carl Jung, Alexandra David-Néel, Giuseppe Tucci and Heinrich Zimmer.[238] According to Hugh Urban, Zimmer, Evola and Eliade viewed Tantra as "the culmination of all Indian thought: the most radical form of spirituality and the archaic heart of aboriginal India", regarding it as the ideal religion for the modern era. All three saw Tantra as "the most transgressive and violent path to the sacred".[239]

References

Notes

  1. ^ The dates in the left column of the table are estimates and contested by scholars.
  2. ^ Sures Chandra Banerjee, says [Banerjee, S.C., 1988]: "Tantra is sometimes used to denote governance. Kālidāsa uses the expression prajah tantrayitva (having governed the subjects) in the Abhijñānaśākuntalam (V.5).
  3. ^ Also known as Tantrayāna, Mantrayāna, Esoteric Buddhism and the Diamond Vehicle.
  4. ^ Tantric texts are also often not being called "Tantras."[20]
  5. ^ Compare Joel Andre-Michel Dubois (2013), The Hidden Lives of Brahman, page xvii-xviii, who notes that Adi Shankara provides powerful analogies with the Vedic fire-ritual in his Upanishadic commentaries.

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Further reading

  • Bhattacharyya, N. N. (1999). History of the Tantric Religion. New Delhi: Manohar. ISBN 978-81-7304-025-2. Second Revised Edition
  • Davidson, Ronald M. (2003). Indian Esoteric Buddhism: A Social History of the Tantric Movement. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-81-208-1991-7.
  • Frawley, David (1994). Tantric Yoga and the Wisdom Goddesses: Spiritual Secrets of Ayurveda. Lotus Press. ISBN 978-0910261395.
  • Frawley, David (2008). Inner Tantric Yoga: Working with the Universal Shakti. Twin Lakes, WI: Lotus Press. ISBN 978-0-9406-7650-3.
  • McDaniel, June (2004). Offering Flowers, Feeding Skulls: Popular Goddess Worship in West Bengal. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Mookerji, Ajit (1997). The Tantric Way: Art, Science, Ritual. London: Thames & Hudson.
  • Norbu, Chögyal Namkhai (1999). The Crystal and The Way of Light: Sutra, Tantra and Dzogchen. Snow Lion Publications. ISBN 978-1-55939-135-1.
  • White, David Gordon (1998). The Alchemical Body: Siddha Traditions in Medieval India. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Yeshe, Lama Thubten (1987). Introduction to Tantra:The Transformation of Desire (2001, revised ed.). Boston: Wisdom Publications. ISBN 0-86171-162-9.

External links

  • "Tantra: enlightenment to revolution", British Museum, 2021
  •   Media related to Tantra at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Quotations related to Tantra at Wikiquote

tantra, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, neotantra, sanskrit, तन, expansion, device, salvation, spreader, loom, weave, warp, refers, esoteric, yogic, tradition, that, developed, indian, subcontinent, from, middle, millennium, onwards, both, hinduis. For other uses see Tantra disambiguation Not to be confused with Neotantra Tantra ˈ t ae n t r e Sanskrit तन त र lit expansion device salvation spreader loom weave warp refers to an esoteric yogic tradition that developed on the Indian subcontinent from the middle of the 1st millennium CE onwards in both Hinduism and Buddhism 1 The term tantra in the Indian traditions also means any systematic broadly applicable text theory system method instrument technique or practice 2 3 A key feature of these traditions is the use of mantras and thus they are commonly referred to as Mantramarga Path of Mantra in Hinduism or Mantrayana Mantra Vehicle and Guhyamantra Secret Mantra in Buddhism 4 5 Tantric art Clockwise from upper left Vajrayogini Buddhist Sri Yantra Hindu Chakra illustration Kalachakra Mandala Dakini Starting in the early centuries of the common era newly revealed Tantras centering on Vishnu Shiva or Shakti emerged 6 There are tantric lineages in all main forms of modern Hinduism such as the Shaiva Siddhanta tradition the Shakta sect of Shri Vidya the Kaula and Kashmir Shaivism In Buddhism the Vajrayana traditions are known for tantric ideas and practices which are based on Indian Buddhist Tantras 7 8 They include Indo Tibetan Buddhism Chinese Esoteric Buddhism Japanese Shingon Buddhism and Nepalese Newar Buddhism Although Southern Esoteric Buddhism does not directly reference the tantras its practices and ideas parallel them Tantric Hindu and Buddhist traditions have also influenced other Eastern religious traditions such as Jainism the Tibetan Bon tradition Daoism and the Japanese Shintō tradition 9 Certain modes of non Vedic worship such as Puja are considered tantric in their conception and rituals Hindu temple building also generally conforms to the iconography of tantra 10 11 Hindu texts describing these topics are called Tantras Agamas or Samhitas 12 13 In Buddhism tantra has influenced the art and iconography of Tibetan and East Asian Buddhism as well as historic cave temples of India and the art of Southeast Asia 14 15 16 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Definition 2 1 Ancient and medieval era 2 2 Modern era 2 2 1 Tantrism 2 2 2 Tantrika 3 History 3 1 Proto Tantric elements in Vedic religion 3 2 Proto Tantric elements in Buddhism 3 3 Proto Tantric elements in Shaktism and Shaivism 3 4 Rise and development 3 5 Tantric Age 3 6 Reception and later developments 4 Tantric traditions 4 1 Hindu tantra 4 1 1 Saiva and Sakta tantra 4 1 2 Vaiṣṇava 4 2 Buddhist tantra 4 3 Other religions 5 Practices 5 1 Worship and ritual 5 2 Yoga mantra meditation 5 3 Mandalas and yantras 5 4 Sex and eroticism 6 Western scholarly research 6 1 John Woodroffe 6 2 Further development 7 References 7 1 Notes 7 2 Citations 7 3 Works cited 8 Further reading 9 External linksEtymology EditTantra Sanskrit तन त र literally means loom warp weave 17 2 18 According to Padoux the verbal root Tan means to extend to spread to spin out weave display put forth and compose Therefore by extension it can also mean system doctrine or work 19 The connotation of the word tantra to mean an esoteric practice or religious ritualism is a colonial era European invention 20 21 22 This term is based on the metaphor of weaving states Ron Barrett where the Sanskrit root tan means the warping of threads on a loom 2 It implies interweaving of traditions and teachings as threads into a text technique or practice 2 18 The word appears in the hymns of the Rigveda such as in 10 71 with the meaning of warp weaving 17 23 It is found in many other Vedic era texts such as in section 10 7 42 of the Atharvaveda and many Brahmanas 17 24 In these and post Vedic texts the contextual meaning of Tantra is that which is principal or essential part main point model framework feature 17 In the Smritis and epics of Hinduism and Jainism the term means doctrine rule theory method technique or chapter and the word appears both as a separate word and as a common suffix such as atma tantra meaning doctrine or theory of Atman Self 17 24 The term Tantra after about 500 BCE in Buddhism Hinduism and Jainism is a bibliographic category just like the word Sutra which means sewing together mirroring the metaphor of weaving together in Tantra The same Buddhist texts are sometimes referred to as tantra or sutra for example Vairocabhisambodhi tantra is also referred to as Vairocabhisambodhi sutra 25 The various contextual meanings of the word Tantra vary with the Indian text and are summarized in the appended table Appearance of the term Tantra in Indian texts Period note 1 Text or author Contextual meaning of tantra1700 1100 BCE Ṛigveda X 71 9 Loom or weaving device 26 1700 BCE Samaveda Tandya Brahmana Essence or main part perhaps denoting the quintessence of the Sastras 26 1200 900 BCE Atharvaveda X 7 42 Loom or weaving 26 1400 1000 BCE Yajurveda Taittiriya Brahmana 11 5 5 3 Loom or weaving 26 600 500 BCE Paṇini in Aṣṭadhyayi 1 4 54 and 5 2 70 Warp weaving loom 27 pre 500 BCE Satapatha Brahmaṇa Essence or main part see above 26 350 283 BCE Chanakya on Arthasastra Science 28 system or shastra 29 300 CE isvarakṛṣṇa author of Sankhya Karika karika 70 Doctrine identifies Sankhya as a tantra 30 320 CE Viṣṇu Puraṇa Practices and rituals 31 320 400 CE Poet Kalidasa on Abhijnanasakuntalam Deep understanding or mastery of a topic note 2 423 Gangdhar stone inscription in Rajasthan Worship techniques Tantrodbhuta 32 Dubious link to Tantric practices 33 550 Sabarasvamin s commentary on Mimamsa Sutra 11 1 1 11 4 1 etc Thread text 34 beneficial action or thing 29 500 600 Chinese Buddhist canon Vol 18 21 Tantra Vajrayana or Tantric Buddhism note 3 Set of doctrines or practices600 Kamikagama or Kamika tantra Extensive knowledge of principles of reality 35 606 647 Sanskrit scholar and poet Baṇabhaṭṭa in Harṣacarita 37 and in Kadambari in Bhasa s Carudatta and in Sudraka s Mṛcchakatika Set of sites and worship methods to goddesses or Matrikas 32 36 975 1025 Philosopher Abhinavagupta in his Tantraloka Set of doctrines or practices teachings texts system sometimes called Agamas 38 18 1150 1200 Jayaratha Abhinavagupta s commentator on Tantraloka Set of doctrines or practices teachings1690 1785 Bhaskararaya philosopher System of thought or set of doctrines or practices a canon 39 Definition EditAncient and medieval era Edit The 5th century BCE scholar Paṇini in his Sutra 1 4 54 55 of Sanskrit grammar cryptically explains tantra through the example of Sva tantra Sanskrit स वतन त र which he states means independent or a person who is his own warp cloth weaver promoter karta actor 27 Patanjali in his Mahabhaṣya quotes and accepts Panini s definition then discusses or mentions it at a greater length in 18 instances stating that its metaphorical definition of warp weaving extended cloth is relevant to many contexts 40 The word tantra states Patanjali means principal main He uses the same example of svatantra as a composite word of sva self and tantra then stating svatantra means one who is self dependent one who is his own master the principal thing for whom is himself thereby interpreting the definition of tantra 27 Patanjali also offers a semantic definition of Tantra stating that it is structural rules standard procedures centralized guide or knowledge in any field that applies to many elements 40 The ancient Mimamsa school of Hinduism uses the term tantra extensively and its scholars offer various definitions For example When an action or a thing once complete becomes beneficial in several matters to one person or to many people that is known as Tantra For example a lamp placed amidst many priests In contrast that which benefits by its repetition is called Avapa such as massaging with oil Sabara 6th century 29 41 Medieval texts present their own definitions of Tantra Kamika tantra for example gives the following explanation of the term tantra Because it elaborates tan copious and profound matters especially relating to the principles of reality tattva and sacred mantras and because it provides liberation tra it is called a tantra 35 Modern era Edit The occultist and businessman Pierre Bernard 1875 1955 is widely credited with introducing the philosophy and practices of tantra to the American people at the same time creating a somewhat misleading impression of its connection to sex 42 That popular sexualization is more accurately regarded as the western Neo Tantra movement In modern scholarship Tantra has been studied as an esoteric practice and ritualistic religion sometimes referred to as Tantrism There is a wide gap between what Tantra means to its followers and the way Tantra has been represented or perceived since colonial era writers began commenting on it 43 Many definitions of Tantra have been proposed since and there is no universally accepted definition 44 Andre Padoux in his review of Tantra definitions offers two then rejects both One definition due to Padoux is found among Tantra practitioners it is any system of observances about the vision of man and the cosmos where correspondences between the inner world of the person and the macrocosmic reality play an essential role Another definition more common among observers and non practitioners is some set of mechanistic rituals omitting entirely the ideological side 45 Tantric traditions have been studied mostly from textual and historical perspectives Anthropological work on living Tantric tradition is scarce and ethnography has rarely engaged with the study of Tantra This is arguably a result of the modern construction of Tantrism as occult esoteric and secret Some scholars have tried to demystify the myth of secrecy in contemporary Tantric traditions suggesting new methodological avenues to overcome the ethical and epistemological problems in the study of living Tantric traditions 46 According to David N Lorenzen two different kinds of definitions of Tantra exist narrow and broad 13 According to the narrow definition Tantrism or Tantric religion is the elite traditions directly based on the Sanskrit texts called the Tantras Samhitas and Agamas 13 47 Lorenzen s broad definition extends this by including a broad range of magical beliefs and practices such as Yoga and Shaktism 47 48 However yoga itself is a term broadly attributed to many traditions and practices including the western assumption that yoga is synonymous with physical stretching and little more Defined in the Patanjali Yoga Sutras Yoga is stilling the nature of the mind In all reality a third definition also exists sexual abuse in the name of spirituality and the sacred Even a Buddhist Rinpoche is driven to breach the fundamental fiduciary duties owed to students and disciples not to mention numerous self proclaimed guru figures in USA 49 50 Western neo tantra has been popularized most notably by Chandra Mohan Rajneesh Osho and followers such as Margo Anand as The World s Leading Expert on Tantra 51 Richard Payne states that Tantra has been commonly but incorrectly associated with sex given popular culture s prurient obsession with intimacy Tantra has been labelled as the yoga of ecstasy driven by senseless ritualistic libertinism 25 This is far from the diverse and complex understanding of what Tantra means to those Buddhists Hindu and Jains who practice it 25 David Gray disagrees with broad generalizations and states that defining Tantra is a difficult task because Tantra traditions are manifold spanning several religious traditions and cultural worlds As a result they are also diverse which makes it a significant challenge to come up with an adequate definition 52 The challenge of defining Tantra is compounded by the fact that it has been a historically significant part of major Indian religions including Buddhism Hinduism and Jainism both in and outside South Asia and East Asia 53 To its practitioners Tantra is defined as a combination of texts techniques rituals monastic practices meditation yoga and ideology 54 According to Georg Feuerstein The scope of topics discussed in the Tantras is considerable They deal with the creation and history of the world the names and functions of a great variety of male and female deities and other higher beings the types of ritual worship especially of Goddesses magic sorcery and divination esoteric physiology the mapping of the subtle or psychic body the awakening of the mysterious serpent power kundalini shakti techniques of bodily and mental purification the nature of enlightenment and not least sacred sexuality 55 Hindu puja temples and iconography all show tantric influence 10 These texts states Gavin Flood contain representation of the body in philosophy in ritual and in art which are linked to techniques of the body methods or technologies developed within the tantric traditions intended to transform body and self 56 Tantrism Edit The term tantrism is a 19th century European invention not present in any Asian language 21 compare Sufism of similar Orientalist origin According to Padoux Tantrism is a Western term and notion not a category that is used by Tantrikas themselves 20 note 4 The term was introduced by 19th century Indologists with limited knowledge of India and in whose view Tantrism was a particular unusual and minority practice in contrast to Indian traditions they believed to be mainstream 20 Elements of Tantrism Clockwise from upper left Mantra Buddhist Mandala Hindu Yantra of Kali Skull cup Kapala Nadis and Chakras Tibetan Deities depicted in sexual union These are neither compulsory nor universal in Tantrism 57 Robert Brown similarly notes that tantrism is a construct of Western scholarship not a concept of the religious system itself 58 He defines Tantrism as an apologetic label of Westerners for a system that they little understand that is not coherent and which is an accumulated set of practices and ideas from various sources that has varied between its practitioners within a group varied across groups across geography and over its history It is a system adds Brown that gives each follower the freedom to mix Tantric elements with non Tantric aspects to challenge and transgress any and all norms experiment with the mundane to reach the supramundane 44 Teun Goudriaan in his 1981 review of Hindu Tantrism states that Tantrism usually means a systematic quest for salvation or spiritual excellence by realizing and fostering the divine within one s own body one that is simultaneous union of the masculine feminine and spirit matter and has the ultimate goal of realizing the primal blissful state of non duality 59 It is typically a methodically striven system consisting of voluntarily chosen specific practices which may include Tantric items such as mantras bijas geometric patterns and symbols mandala gestures mudra mapping of the microcosm within one s body to the macrocosmic elements outside as the subtle body kundalini yoga assignments of icons and sounds nyasa meditation dhyana ritual worship puja initiation diksha and others 60 Tantrism adds Goudriaan is a living system that is decidedly monistic but with wide variations and it is impossible to be dogmatic about a simple or fixed definition 61 Tantrism is an overarching term for Tantric traditions states David Gray in a 2016 review that combine Vedic yogic and meditative traditions from ancient Hinduism as well as rival Buddhist and Jain traditions 43 it is a neologism of western scholars and does not reflect the self understanding of any particular tantric tradition While Goudriaan s description is useful adds Gray there is no single defining universal characteristic common to all Tantra traditions being an open evolving system 22 Tantrism whether Buddhist or Hindu can best be characterized as practices a set of techniques with a strong focus on rituals and meditation by those who believe that it is a path to liberation that is characterized by both knowledge and freedom 62 Tantrika Edit According to Padoux the term Tantrika is based on a comment by Kulluka Bhatta on Manava Dharmasastra 2 1 who contrasted vaidika and tantrika forms of Sruti canonical texts The Tantrika to Bhatta is that literature which forms a parallel part of the Hindu tradition independent of the Vedic corpus The Vedic and non Vedic Tantric paths are seen as two different approaches to ultimate reality the Vedic approach based on Brahman and Tantrika being based on the non Vedic Agama texts 63 Despite Bhatta attempt to clarify states Padoux in reality Hindus and Buddhists have historically felt free to borrow and blend ideas from all sources Vedic non Vedic and in the case of Buddhism its own canonical works 64 Trika or Kashmir Shaivism may also be referred to as Tantrika 65 One of the key differences between the Tantric and non Tantric traditions whether it be orthodox Buddhism Hinduism or Jainism is their assumptions about the need for monastic or ascetic life 66 Non Tantrika or orthodox traditions in all three major ancient Indian religions hold that the worldly life of a householder is one driven by desires and greeds which are a serious impediment to spiritual liberation moksha nirvana kaivalya These orthodox traditions teach renunciation of householder life a mendicant s life of simplicity and leaving all attachments to become a monk or nun In contrast the Tantrika traditions hold states Robert Brown that both enlightenment and worldly success are achievable and that this world need not be shunned to achieve enlightenment 66 67 Yet even this supposed categorical divergence is debatable e g Bhagavad Gita v 2 48 53 including Yoga is skill in the performance of actions 68 History EditProto Tantric elements in Vedic religion Edit The Kesin hymn of the Rig Veda 10 136 describes the wild loner who states Karel Werner carrying within oneself fire and poison heaven and earth ranging from enthusiasm and creativity to depression and agony from the heights of spiritual bliss to the heaviness of earth bound labor 69 The Rigveda uses words of admiration for these loners 69 and whether it is related to Tantra or not has been variously interpreted According to David Lorenzen it describes munis sages experiencing Tantra like ecstatic altered states of consciousness and gaining the ability to fly on the wind 70 In contrast Werner suggests that these are early Yoga pioneers and accomplished yogis of the ancient pre Buddhist Indian tradition and that this Vedic hymn is speaking of those lost in thoughts whose personalities are not bound to earth for they follow the path of the mysterious wind 69 The two oldest Upanishadic scriptures of Hinduism the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad in section 4 2 and Chandogya Upanishad in section 8 6 refer to nadis hati in presenting their theory on how the Atman Self and the body are connected and interdependent through energy carrying arteries when one is awake or sleeping but they do not mention anything related to Tantric practices 71 The Shvetashvatara Upanishad describes breath control that became a standard part of Yoga but Tantric practices do not appear in it 70 72 Likewise the Taittiriya Upanishad discusses a central channel running through the body and various Vedic texts mention the bodily pranas vital breaths that move around in the body and animate it However the idea of consciously moving the bodily pranas through yoga is not found in these sources 73 According to Lorenzen Vedic ideas related to the body later diversified into the mystical anatomy of nadis and chakras found in Tantra 74 The yogic component of Tantrism appears clearly in Baṇabhaṭṭa s Harshacharita and Daṇḍin s Dashakumaracharita 75 In contrast to this theory of Lorenzen other scholars such as Mircea Eliade consider Yoga and the evolution of Yogic practices to be separate and distinct from the evolution of Tantra and Tantric practices 76 According to Geoffrey Samuel the inner development of a spiritual energy called tapas becomes a central element of Vedic religion in the Brahmanas and Srauta texts In these texts ascetic practices allow a holy man to build up tapas a kind of magical inner heat which allows them to perform all sorts of magical feats as well as granting visions and divine revelations 77 Samuel also notes that in the Mahabharata one of the commonest use of the term yoga refers to a dying warrior transferring himself at death to the sphere of the sun through yoga a practice that links up with Upanisadic references to the channel to the crown of the head as the pathway by which one can travel through the solar orb to the World of Brahman This practice of transferring one s consciousness at death is still an important practice in Tibetan Buddhism 78 Samuel also notes that sexual rituals and a spiritualized sexuality are mentioned in the late Upanishads According to Samuel late Vedic texts treat sexual intercourse as symbolically equivalent to the Vedic sacrifice and ejaculation of semen as the offering This theme can be found in the Jaiminiya Brahmana the Chandogya Upanisad and the Brhadaranyaka Upanisad The Brhadaranyaka contains various sexual rituals and practices which are mostly aimed at obtaining a child which are concerned with the loss of male virility and power 79 David Gordon White views Yogini cults as foundational to early tantra but disagrees with scholars who maintain that the roots of such cults lie in an autochthonous non Vedic source such as indigenous tribes or the Indus Valley civilization 80 Instead White suggests Vedic Srauta texts mention offerings to goddesses Raka Sinivali and Kuhu in a manner similar to a tantric ritual 81 Frederick Smith a professor of Sanskrit and Classical Indian Religions considers Tantra to be a religious movement parallel to the Bhakti movement of the 1st millennium AD 82 Tantra along with Ayurveda states Smith has traditionally been attributed to Atharvaveda but this attribution is one of respect not of historicity Ayurveda has primarily been an empirical practice with Vedic roots but Tantra has been an esoteric folk movement without grounding that can be traced to anything in Atharvaveda or any other vedic text 82 Proto Tantric elements in Buddhism Edit A Buddhist dharaṇi incantation the Nilaṇṭhanamahṛdaya dharaṇi in Siddham Script with Chinese transliteration Kushan sculpture of a yakṣiṇi 2nd century Mathura region Pre tantric Buddhism contains elements which could be seen as proto tantric and which may have influenced the development of the Buddhist Tantric tradition The use of magical chants or incantations can be found in the early Buddhist texts as well as in some Mahayana sutras 83 These magical spells or chants were used for various reasons such as for protection and for the generation of auspiciousness 84 In the Pali tradition protection chants are called parittas and include texts such as the Ratana Sutta which are widely recited today in the Theravada tradition 85 86 Mahayana incantations are called dharaṇis Some Mahayana sutras incorporate the use of mantras a central feature of tantric practice According to Geoffrey Samuel sramana groups like the Buddhists and Jains were associated with the dead Samuel notes that they frequently settled at sites associated with the dead and seem to have taken over a significant role in relation to the spirits of the dead To step into this realm required entering a dangerous and impure supernatural realm from the Indian perspective This association with death remains a feature of modern Buddhism and in Buddhist countries today Buddhist monks and other ritual specialists are in charge of the dead 87 Thus the association of tantric practitioners with charnel grounds and death imagery is preceded by early Buddhist contact with these sites of the dead Some scholars think that the development of tantra may have been influenced by the cults of nature spirit deities like Yakṣas and Nagas 88 Yakṣa cults were an important part of early Buddhism Yakṣas are powerful nature spirits which were sometimes seen as guardians or protectors 89 Yakṣas like Kubera are also associated with magical incantations Kubera is said to have provided the Buddhist sangha with protection spells in the Aṭanaṭiya Sutta 90 These spirit deities also included numerous female deities yakṣiṇi that can be found depicted in major Buddhist sites like Sanchi and Bharhut In early Buddhist texts there is also mention of fierce demon like deities called rakṣasa and rakṣasi like the children eating Hariti 91 They are also present in Mahayana texts such as in Chapter 26 of the Lotus Sutra which includes a dialogue between the Buddha and a group of rakṣasis who swear to uphold and protect the sutra These figures also teach magical dharaṇis to protect followers of the Lotus Sutra 92 A key element of Buddhist Tantric practice is the visualization of deities in meditation This practice is actually found in pre tantric Buddhist texts as well In Mahayana sutras like the Pratyutpanna Samadhi and the three Amitabha Pure land sutras 93 There are other Mahayana sutras which contain what may be called proto tantric material such as the Gandavyuha and the Dasabhumika which might have served as a source for the imagery found in later Tantric texts 94 According to Samuel the Golden Light Sutra c 5th century at the latest contains what could be seen as a proto mandala In the second chapter a bodhisattva has a vision of a vast building made of beryl and with divine jewels and celestial perfumes Four lotus seats appear in the four directions with four Buddhas seated upon them Aksobhya in the East Ratnaketu in the South Amitayus in the West and Dundubhisvara in the North 95 A series of artwork discovered in Gandhara in modern day Pakistan dating from about the 1st century CE show Buddhist and Hindu monks holding skulls 96 The legend corresponding to these artworks is found in Buddhist texts and describes monks who tap skulls and forecast the future rebirths of the person to whom that skull belonged 96 97 According to Robert Brown these Buddhist skull tapping reliefs suggest that tantric practices may have been in vogue by the 1st century CE 96 Proto Tantric elements in Shaktism and Shaivism Edit A modern aghori with a skull cup Kapala Their predecessors the medieval Kapalikas Skull men were influential figures in the development of transgressive or left hand Shaiva tantra The Mahabharata the Harivamsa and the Devi Mahatmya in the Markandeya Purana all mention the fierce demon killing manifestations of the Great Goddess Mahishamardini identified with Durga Parvati 98 These suggest that Shaktism reverence and worship for the Goddess in Indian culture was an established tradition by the early centuries of the 1st millennium 99 Padoux mentions an inscription from 423 to 424 CE which mentions the founding of a temple to terrifying deities called the mothers 100 However this does not mean Tantric rituals and practices were as yet a part of either Hindu or Buddhist traditions Apart from the somewhat dubious reference to Tantra in the Gangadhar inscription of 423 CE states David Lorenzen it is only 7th century Banabhatta s Kadambari which provide convincing proof of Tantra and Tantric texts 33 Shaivite ascetics seem to have been involved in the initial development of Tantra particularly the transgressive elements dealing with the charnel ground According to Samuel one group of Shaiva ascetics the Pasupatas practiced a form of spirituality that made use of shocking and disreputable behavior later found in a tantric context such as dancing singing and smearing themselves with ashes 101 Early Tantric practices are sometimes attributed to Shaiva ascetics associated with Bhairava the Kapalikas skull men also called Somasiddhatins or Mahavartins 102 103 104 Besides the shocking fact that they frequented cremation grounds and carried human skulls little is known about them and there is a paucity of primary sources on the Kapalikas 105 104 Samuel also states that the sources depict them as using alcohol and sex freely that they were associated with terrfying female spirit deities called yoginis and dakinis and that they were believed to possess magical powers such as flight 106 Kapalikas are depicted in fictional works and also widely disparaged in Buddhist Hindu and Jain texts of the 1st millennium CE 105 107 In Hala s Gatha saptasati composed by the 5th century AD for example the story calls a female character Kapalika whose lover dies he is cremated she takes his cremation ashes and smears her body with it 103 The 6th century Varahamihira mentions Kapalikas in his literary works 107 Some of the Kapalika practices mentioned in these texts are those found in Shaiva Hinduism and Vajrayana Buddhism and scholars disagree on who influenced whom 108 109 These early historical mentions are in passing and appear to be Tantra like practices they are not detailed nor comprehensive presentation of Tantric beliefs and practices Epigraphic references to the Kaulas Tantric practices are rare Reference is made in the early 9th century to vama left hand Tantras of the Kaulas 110 Literary evidence suggests Tantric Buddhism was probably flourishing by the 7th century 70 Matrikas or fierce mother goddesses that later are closely linked to Tantra practices appear both in Buddhist and Hindu arts and literature between the 7th and 10th centuries 111 Rise and development Edit Main articles Tantras Hinduism and Tantras Buddhism Dancing Bhairava in the Indian Museum Kolkata Dancing Vajravarahi a Buddhist tantric deity Nepal 11th 12th century Illustration of a yogi and their chakras Buddhist Mahasiddhas practicing the sexual yoga of karmamudra action seal According to Gavin Flood the earliest date for the Tantra texts related to Tantric practices is 600 CE though most of them were probably composed after the 8th century onwards 112 According to Flood very little is known about who created the Tantras nor much is known about the social status of these and medieval era Tantrikas 113 Flood states that the pioneers of Tantra may have been ascetics who lived at the cremation grounds possibly from above low caste groups and were probably non Brahmanical and possibly part of an ancient tradition 114 115 116 By the early medieval times their practices may have included the imitation of deities such as Kali and Bhairava with offerings of non vegetarian food alcohol and sexual substances According to this theory these practitioners would have invited their deities to enter them then reverted the role in order to control that deity and gain its power 113 These ascetics would have been supported by low castes living at the cremation places 113 Samuel states that transgressive and antinomian tantric practices developed in both Buddhist and Brahmanical mainly Saiva ascetics like the Kapalikas contexts and that Saivas and Buddhists borrowed extensively from each other with varying degrees of acknowledgement According to Samuel these deliberately transgressive practices included night time orgies in charnel grounds involving the eating of human flesh the use of ornaments bowls and musical instruments made from human bones sexual relations while seated on corpses and the like 117 According to Samuel another key element of in the development of tantra was the gradual transformation of local and regional deity cults through which fierce male and particularly female deities came to take a leading role in the place of the yaksa deities Samuel states that this took place between the fifth to eighth centuries CE 118 According to Samuel there are two main scholarly opinions on these terrifying goddesses which became incorporated into Saiva and Buddhist Tantra The first view is that they originate out of a pan Indian religious substrate that was not Vedic Another opinion is to see these fierce goddesses as developing out of the Vedic religion 119 Alexis Sanderson has argued that tantric practices originally developed in a Saiva milieu and was later adopted by Buddhists He cites numerous elements that are found in the Saiva Vidyapitha literature including whole passages and lists of pithas that seem to have been directly borrowed by Vajrayana texts 120 This has been criticized by Ronald M Davidson however due to the uncertain date of the Vidyapitha texts 121 Davidson argues that the pithas seem to have been neither uniquely Buddhist nor Saiva but frequented by both groups He also states that the Saiva tradition was also involved in the appropriation of local deities and that tantra may have been influenced by tribal Indian religions and their deities 122 Samuel writes that the female divinities may well best be understood in terms of a distinct Sakta milieu from which both Saivas and Buddhists were borrowing but that other elements like the Kapalika style practices are more clearly derived from a Saiva tradition 123 Samuel writes that the Saiva Tantra tradition appears to have originated as ritual sorcery carried out by hereditary caste groups kulas and associated with sex death and fierce goddesses The initiation rituals involved the consumption of the mixed sexual secretions the clan essence of a male guru and his consort These practices were adopted by Kapalika styled ascetics and influenced the early Nath siddhas Overtime the more extreme external elements were replaced by internalized yogas that make use of the subtle body Sexual ritual became a way to reach the liberating wisdom taught in the tradition 124 The Buddhists developed their own corpus of Tantras which also drew on various Mahayana doctrines and practices as well as on elements of the fierce goddess tradition and also on elements from the Saiva traditions such as deities like Bhairava which were seen as having been subjugated and converted to Buddhism 112 125 Some Buddhist tantras sometimes called lower or outer tantras which are earlier works do not make use of transgression sex and fierce deities These earlier Buddhist tantras mainly reflect a development of Mahayana theory and practice like deity visualization and a focus on ritual and purity 126 Between the eighth and tenth centuries new tantras emerged which included fierce deities kula style sexual initiations subtle body practices and sexual yoga The later Buddhist tantras are known as the inner or unsurpassed yoga Anuttarayoga or Yogini tantras According to Samuel it seems that these sexual practices were not initially practiced by Buddhist monastics and instead developed outside of the monastic establishments among traveling siddhas 127 Tantric practices also included secret initiation ceremonies in which individuals would enter the tantric family kula and receive the secret mantras of the tantric deities These initiations included the consumption of the sexual substances semen and female sexual secretions produced through ritual sex between the guru and his consort These substances were seen as spiritually powerful and were also used as offerings for tantric deities 128 For both Saivas and Buddhists tantric practices often took place at important sacred sites pithas associated with fierce goddesses 129 Samuel writes that we do not have a clear picture of how this network of pilgrimage sites arose Whatever the case it seems that it was in these ritual spaces visited by both Buddhists and Saivas that the practice of Kaula and Anuttarayoga Tantra developed during the eighth and ninth centuries 130 Besides the practices outlined above these sites also saw the practice of animal sacrifice as blood offerings to Sakta goddesses like Kamakhya This practice is mentioned in Sakta texts like the Kalikapuraṇa and the Yoginitantra In some of these sites such as Kamakhya Pitha animal sacrifice is still widely practiced by Saktas 131 132 Another key and innovative feature of medieval tantric systems was the development of internal yogas based on elements of the subtle body sukṣma sarira This subtle anatomy held that there were channels in the body nadis through which certain substances or energies such as vayu prana kundalini and shakti flowed These yogas involved moving these energies through the body to clear out certain knots or blockages granthi and to direct the energies to the central channel avadhuti sushumna These yogic practices are also closely related to the practice of sexual yoga since sexual intercourse was seen as being involved in the stimulation of the flow of these energies 133 Samuel thinks that these subtle body practices may have been influenced by Chinese Daoist practices 134 One of the earliest mentions of sexual yoga practice is in the Buddhist Mahayanasutralamkara of Asanga c 5th century which states Supreme self control is achieved in the reversal of sexual intercourse in the blissful Buddha poise and the untrammelled vision of one s spouse 135 According to David Snellgrove the text s mention of a reversal of sexual intercourse might indicate the practice of withholding ejaculation Snellgrove states that it is possible that sexual yoga was already being practiced in Buddhist circles at this time and that Asanga saw it as a valid practice 136 Likewise Samuel thinks that there is a possibility that sexual yoga existed in the fourth or fifth centuries though not in the same transgressive tantric contexts where it was later practiced 137 It is only in the seventh and eighth centuries however that we find substantial evidence for these sexual yogas Unlike previous Upanishadic sexual rituals however which seem to have been associated with Vedic sacrifice and mundane ends like childbirth these sexual yogas were associated with the movement of subtle body energies like Kundalini and Chandali which were also seen as goddesses and also with spiritual ends 138 These practices seemed to have developed at around the same time in both Saiva and Buddhist circles and are associated with figures such as Tirumular Gorakhnath Virupa Naropa The tantric mahasiddhas developed yogic systems with subtle body and sexual elements which could lead to magical powers siddhis immortality as well as spiritual liberation moksha nirvana Sexual yoga was seen as one way of producing a blissful expansion of consciousness that could lead to liberation 137 According to Jacob Dalton ritualized sexual yoga along with the sexual elements of the tantric initiation ritual like the consumption of sexual fluids first appears in Buddhist works called Mahayoga tantras which include the Guhyagarbha and Guhyasamaja 139 140 These texts focused on the body s interior on the anatomical details of the male and female sexual organs and the pleasure generated through sexual union In these texts sexual energy was also seen as a powerful force that could be harnessed for spiritual practice and according to Samuel perhaps create the state of bliss and loss of personal identity which is homologised with liberating insight 139 These sexual yogas continued to develop further into more complex systems which are found in texts dating from about the ninth or tenth century including the Saiva Kaulajnananirṇaya and Kubjikatantra as well as the Buddhist Hevajra and Cakrasamvara tantras which make use of charnel ground symbolism and fierce goddesses 141 Samuel writes that these later texts also combine the sexual yoga with a system of controlling the energies of the subtle body 134 There is considerable evidence that the Hevajra and Cakrasamvara tantras borrow significant portions from Saiva sources The text Cakrasamvara and its commentaries have revealed numerous attempts by the Buddhists to enlarge and modify it both to remove references to Saiva deities and to add more Buddhist technical terminology 142 Tantric Age Edit Twelve Armed Chakrasamvara and His Consort Vajravarahi ca 12th century India Bengal or Bangladesh Yogini East India 11th 12th century CE Matsuoka Museum of Art Tokyo Japan A stone Kalacakra Mandala at the Hiraṇyavarṇa Mahavihara a Buddhist temple in Patan Nepal built in the 12th centuryFrom the 8th to the 14th century Tantric traditions rose to prominence and flourished throughout India and beyond 143 144 21 145 By the 10th century the main elements of tantric practice had reached maturity and were being practiced in Saiva and Buddhist contexts This period has been referred to as the Tantric Age by some scholars due to prevalence of Tantra 146 Also by the 10th century numerous tantric texts variously called Agamas Samhitas and Tantras had been written particularly in Kashmir Nepal and Bengal 147 By this time Tantric texts had also been translated into regional languages such as Tamil and Tantric practices had spread across South Asia 148 Tantra also spread into Tibet Indonesia and China Gavin Flood describes the Tantric age as follows Tantrism has been so pervasive that all of Hinduism after the eleventh century perhaps with the exception of the vedic Srauta tradition is influenced by it All forms of Saiva Vaisnava and Smarta religion even those forms which wanted to distance themselves from Tantrism absorbed elements derived from the Tantras 148 Though the whole northern and Himalayan part of India was involved in the development of tantra Kashmir was a particularly important center both Saiva and Buddhist and numerous key tantric texts were written there according to Padoux 149 According to Alexis Sanderson the Saiva Tantra traditions of medieval Kashmir were mainly divided between the dualistic Saiva Siddhanta and the non dualist theology found in Sakta lineages like the Trika Krama and Kaula The non dualists generally accepted and made use of sexual and transgressive practices while the dualists mostly rejected them 150 Saiva tantra was especially successful because it managed to forge strong ties with South Asian kings who valued the power shakti of fierce deities like the warrior goddess Durga as a way to increase their own royal power These kings took part in royal rituals led by Saiva royal gurus in which they were symbolically married to tantric deities and thus became the earthly representative of male gods like Shiva Saiva tantra could also employ a variety of protection and destruction rituals which could be used for the benefit of the kingdom and the king 151 Tantric Shaivism was adopted by the kings of Kashmir as well as by the Somavamshis of Odisha the Kalachuris and the Chandelas of Jejakabhukti in Bundelkhand 152 There is also evidence of state support from the Cambodian Khmer Empire 153 As noted by Samuel in spite of the increased depiction of female goddesses these tantric traditions all seemed to have been mostly male directed and male controlled 154 During the Tantric Age Buddhist Tantra was embraced by the Mahayana Buddhist mainstream and was studied at the great universities such as Nalanda and Vikramashila from which it spread to Tibet and to the East Asian states of China Korea and Japan This new Tantric Buddhism was supported by the Pala Dynasty 8th 12th century which supported these centers of learning 155 The later Khmer kings and the Indonesian Srivijaya kingdom also supported tantric Buddhism According to Samuel while the sexual and transgressive practices were mostly undertaken in symbolic form or through visualization in later Tibetan Buddhist monastic contexts it seems that in the eighth to tenth century Indian context they were actually performed 156 In the 10th and 11th centuries both Shaiva and Buddhist tantra evolved into more tame philosophical and liberation oriented religions This transformation saw a move from external and transgressive rituals towards a more internalized yogic practice focused on attaining spiritual insight This recasting also made tantric religions much less open to attack by other groups In Shaivism this development is often associated with the Kashmiri master Abhinavagupta c 950 1016 CE and his followers as well the movements which were influenced by their work like the Sri Vidya tradition which spread as far as South India and has been referred to as high tantra 157 In Buddhism this taming of tantra is associated with the adoption of tantra by Buddhist monastics who sought to incorporate it within the Buddhist Mahayana scholastic framework Buddhist tantras were written down and scholars like Abhayakaragupta wrote commentaries on them Another important figure the Bengali teacher Atisha wrote a treatise which placed tantra as the culmination of a graduated Mahayana path to awakening the Bodhipathapradipa In his view one needed to first begin practicing non tantric Mahayana and then later one might be ready for tantra This system became the model for tantric practice among some Tibetan Buddhist schools like the Gelug In Tibet the transgressive and sexual practices of tantra became much less central and tantric practice was seen as suitable only for a small elite group 158 New tantras continued to be composed during this later period as well such as the Kalachakra c 11th century which seems to be concerned with converting Buddhists and non Buddhists alike and uniting them together against Islam The Kalachakra teaches sexual yoga but also warns not to introduce the practice of ingesting impure substances to beginners since this is only for advanced yogis This tantra also seems to want to minimize the impact of the transgressive practices since it advises tantrikas to outwardly follow the customs of their country 159 Another influential development during this period was the codification of tantric yogic techniques that would later become the separate movement known as Hatha Yoga According to James Mallinson the original source text for Hatha Yoga is the Vajrayana Buddhist Amṛtasiddhi 11th century CE attributed to the mahasiddha Virupa This text was later adopted by Saiva yogic traditions such as the Naths and is quoted in their texts 160 161 Another tradition of Hindu Tantra developed among the Vaishnavas this was called the Pancaratra Agama tradition This tradition avoided the transgressive and sexual elements that were embraced by the Saivas and the Buddhists 124 There is also a smaller tantric tradition associated with Surya the sun god Jainism also seems to have developed a substantial Tantra corpus based on the Saura tradition with rituals based on yakshas and yakshinis However this Jain tantrism was mainly used for pragmatic purposes like protection and was not used to attain liberation Complete manuscripts of these Jain tantras have not survived 162 163 The Jains also seem to have adopted some of the subtle body practices of tantra but not sexual yoga 134 The Svetambara thinker Hemacandra c 1089 1172 discusses tantric practices extensively such as internal meditations on chakras which betray Kaula and Nath influences 164 Reception and later developments Edit A depiction of the Goddess Bhairavi and Shiva in a charnel ground from a 17th century manuscript There seems to have been some debate regarding the appropriateness of tantra Among the Hindus those belonging to the more orthodox Vedic traditions rejected the Tantras Meanwhile tantrikas incorporated Vedic ideas within their own systems while considering the Tantras as the higher more refined understanding 162 Meanwhile some Tantrikas considered the Tantras to be superior to the Vedas while others considered them complementary such as Umapati who is quoted as stating The Veda is the cow the true Agama its milk 165 According to Samuel the great Advaita philosopher Shankara 9th century is portrayed in his biography the Sankaravijaya as condemning the approaches of various kinds of Tantric practitioners and defeating them through argument or spiritual power He also is said to have encouraged the replacement of fierce goddesses with benign female deities and thus to have promoted the Sri Vidya tradition which worships a peaceful and sweet goddess Tripura Sundari Though it is far from certain that Shankara actually campaigned against tantra he is traditionally seen as someone who purified Hinduism from transgressive and antinomian tantric practices 166 The 14th century Indian scholar Madhavacarya in Sarva Darsana Sangraha wrote copious commentaries on then existing major schools of Indian philosophies and practices and cited the works of the 10th century Abhinavagupta who was considered a major and influential Tantra scholar 167 However Madhavacarya does not mention Tantra as a separate distinct religious or ritual driven practice The early 20th century Indian scholar Pandurang Vaman Kane conjectured that Madhavacharya ignored Tantra because it may have been considered scandalous In contrast Padoux suggests that Tantra may have been so pervasive by the 13th century that it was not regarded as being a distinct system 167 Hindu tantra while practiced by some of the general lay population was eventually overshadowed by the more popular Bhakti movements that swept throughout India from the 15th century onwards According to Samuel these new devotional styles of religion with their emphasis on emotional submission to a supreme saviour deity whether Saivite or Vaisnavite were better adapted perhaps to the subaltern role of non Muslim groups under Muslim rule 168 Saiva tantra did remain an important practice among most Saiva ascetics however 169 Tantric traditions also survived in certain regions such as among the Naths of Rajasthan in the Sri Vidya tradition of South India and in the Bengali Bauls 168 In Buddhism while tantra became accepted in the great Mahayana establishments of Nalanda and Vikramashila and spread to the Himalayan regions it also experienced serious setbacks in other regions particularly Southeast Asia In Burma for example King Anawratha 1044 1077 is said to have disbanded tantric Ari monks As Theravada Buddhism became dominant in South East Asian states tantric religions became marginalised in those regions 170 In Sri Lanka tantric Buddhism also suffered debilitating setbacks Initially the large Abhayagiri Monastery was a place where the practice of Vajrayana seems to have flourished during the 8th century However Abhayagiri was disbanded and forced to convert to the orthodox Mahavihara sect during the reign of Parakramabahu I 1153 1186 171 Regarding the reception of tantra during the period of Hindu modernism in the 19th and 20th centuries Samuel writes that this period saw a radical reframing of yogic practices away from the Tantric context Samuel notes that while Hindu Hatha yoga had its origins in a Saiva tantric context Given the extremely negative views of Tantra and its sexual and magical practices which prevailed in middle class India in the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries and still largely prevail today this was an embarrassing heritage Much effort was given by people such as Swami Vivekananda into reconstructing yoga generally in terms of a selective Vedantic reading of Patanjali s Yogasutra de Michelis 2004 The effort was largely successful and many modern Western practitioners of yoga for health and relaxation have little or no knowledge of its original function as a preparation for the internal sexual practices of the Nath tradition 169 Buddhist tantra has survived in modern Indo Tibetan Buddhism in various Japanese traditions such as Shingon and in the Newar Buddhism of the Kathmandu Valley 172 There are also magical quasi tantric traditions in Southeast Asia sometimes termed Esoteric Southern Buddhism though they are not called tantric and have been marginalised by state supported modernist forms of Theravada Buddhism 173 Tantric traditions EditHindu tantra Edit Within Hinduism the word tantra often refers to a text which may or may not be tantric Conversely various tantric texts are actually not always called tantras instead they may be called agama jnana saṃhita siddhanta vidya 88 174 There are also tantric Upanishads which are late Upanishads as well as tantric Puranas and Puranas influenced by tantric ideas 175 Besides these types of texts there are also various types of tantric sastras treatises which may be commentaries digests compilations monographs collections of hymns or of names of deities and mantras and works on mantras Though much of this vast body of tantric literature is in Sanskrit others have also been written in Indian vernacular languages As noted by Padoux the largest portion of these tantric works are Shaiva texts 176 Tantric texts and practitioners tantrikas amp tantrinis are often contrasted with Vedic texts and those who practice Vedic religion Vaidikas This non Vedic path was often termed Mantramarga The way of mantras or Tantrasastra Tantra teaching One of the most well known comments on this dichotomy is Kulluka Bhatta s statement in his 15th century commentary to the Manusmriti which states that revelation sruti is twofold Vedic and Tantric 174 Hindu tantric teachings are generally seen as revelations from a divine being such as Siva or the Goddess which are considered by tantrikas to be superior to the Vedas in leading beings to liberation They are also considered to be more effective during the Kali Yuga a time of much passion kama However tantric thinkers like Abhinavagupta while considering tantra as superior do not totally reject Vedic teachings and instead consider them valid on a lower level since they also derive from the same source the supreme Godhead 88 177 There are various Hindu tantric traditions within Shaivism Shaktism and Vaishnavism 178 There are numerous tantric texts for these different traditions with different philosophical point of views ranging from theistic dualism to absolute monism 179 180 According to David B Gray one of the most important tropes in the history of the dissemination of tantric traditions is that of lineage the transmission of teachings along an uninterrupted lineage from master to disciple the so called guruparaṃpara 88 These various traditions also differ among themselves on how heterodox and transgressive they are vis a vis the Vedic tradition Since tantric rituals became so widespread certain forms of tantra were eventually accepted by many orthodox Vedic thinkers such as Jayanta Bhatta and Yamunacarya as long as they did not contradict Vedic teaching and social rules 181 Tantric scriptures such as the Kali centered Jayadrathayamala also state that tantrikas can follow the Vedic social rules out of convenience and for the benefit of their clan and guru 182 However not all Vedic thinkers accepted tantra For example Kumarila Bhatta wrote that one should have no contact with tantrikas nor speak to them 183 Saiva and Sakta tantra Edit The Brihadishvara Temple a Saiva Siddhanta temple in Tamil Nadu Nepalese depiction of the goddess Kali Sri also known as Lalita Tripurasundari beautiful in three worlds Adi Parashakti the highest supreme energy Kamesvari goddess of desire and other names Saiva Tantra is called the Mantramarga and is often seen as being a separate teaching than the ascetic Atimarga tradition which includes the Pasupatas and Kapalikas 88 184 There are various doctrines textual classes and schools of Shaiva Tantra which often overlap with the Shakta tradition in different ways The Saiva Siddhanta tradition is the earliest Saiva Tantra school and was characterized by public rituals performed by priests Some of their texts like the Nisvasatattvasaṃhita have been dated to the fifth century 88 Their scriptures the Saiva Agamas and basic doctrines are also shared by the other traditions as a common Saiva doctrine and many of their rites are also used in other schools of Shaiva Tantra 184 The prescriptions and rituals of the Saiva Siddhanta Agamas are generally followed by Saiva temples in South India and they are mostly compatible with orthodox Brahmanism lacking terrifying deities and animal sacrifice 185 The Mantrapiṭha tradition on the other hand worships Svacchanda Bhairava a terrifying form of Shiva also known as Aghora not fearsome This tradition promotes the Skull observance Kapalavrata that is carrying a skull a skull staff khatavanga and worshipping in cremation grounds 186 One contemporary group of Kapalika ascetics are the Aghoris There are also various traditions who are classified as Vidyapiṭha The texts of this tradition focus on worshipping goddesses known as Yoginis or Ḍakinis and include antinomian practices dealing with charnel grounds and sexuality 88 These goddess centered traditions of the Sakta tantras are mostly of the left current vamachara and are thus considered more heterodox 187 There are various Vidyapiṭha traditions which focus on a bipolar bisexual divinity that is equal parts male and female Saiva and Sakta 88 187 The Yamalatantras worship Bhairava along with Kapalini the goddess of the skull The Goddess centered traditions are known as the Kulamarga Path of the Clans referring to the clans of the goddesses and their Shakti tantras which may have been established around the 9th century It includes sexual rituals sanguinary practices the ritual consumption of liquor and the importance of spirit possession It includes various sub traditions the developed in different regions of India such as the Trika lineage which worships a trio of deities Para Parapara and Apara the tradition of the fierce goddess Guhyakali Krama tradition focusing on the goddess Kali the Kubjika cult and the southern tradition which worships the beautiful goddess Kamesvari or Tripurasundari 88 187 During the 10th century the syncretic Nondual School of Kashmir Saivism developed According to Alexis Sanderson this tradition arose out of the confrontation between the dualistic and more orthodox Saiva Siddhanta and the nondual transgressive traditions of the Trika and Krama According to David B Gray this school integrated elements from both of these traditions the end result was a nondualistic system in which the transgressive elements were internalized and hence rendered less offensive to the orthodox 88 The philosophers of Kashmir Saivism especially Abhinavagupta c 975 1025 ce and his student Jayaratha are some of the most influential philosophers who wrote on Hindu tantra 188 These thinkers synthesized the various goddess and Saiva lineages and philosophies into a comprehensive and influential religious system According to David White Abhinavagupta sublimates cosmeticizes and semanticizes many of its practices into a type of meditative asceticism whose aim is to realize a transcendent subjectivity 88 Thus his work domesticated the radically antinomian practices of Vidyapiṭha lineages into meditative exercises 88 The last major Saiva tantric tradition is that of the Nath or Split Ear Kanphaṭa tradition which emerged in the 12th or 13th century They produced various Haṭhayoga texts which draw on tantric yogas 88 189 While the Sakta traditions continued to develop in different ways sometimes in a more popular and devotional direction many of them retain various tantric elements today The two most important and popular Sakta tantra traditions today are the Southern Kaula transmission which focus on the beautiful goddess Sri srikula or Lalita Tripurasundari and the Northern and Eastern transmission focusing on the ferocious goddess Kali kalikula 88 The southern transmission gave rise to the Sri Vidya tradition an important tantric religion in South India Though it takes much of its philosophical and doctrinal system from Kashmir Shaivism it generally avoids the transgressive elements and is orthodox or right handed Bhaskararaya 18th century is considered a key thinker of this tradition 88 188 The Kalikula tradition is particularly important in East and South India and Kali remains a popular goddess in India a focus of much devotion 88 Vaiṣṇava Edit The main Vaiṣṇava tradition that is associated with tantra is the Pancharatra This tradition produced a number of tantric texts most of which are lost However this sect does not identify itself as tantric 88 The worship and ritual of most of the Vaiṣṇava temples in South India follow this tradition which is ritually similar to the Shaiva Siddhanta According to Padoux from the doctrinal point of view they are nearer to brahmanical orthodoxy proudly asserted by some of their affiliates and their mantras are indeed often Vedic 190 According to David B Gray During the medieval period another tantric Vaiṣṇava tradition emerged in Bengal Known as the Sahajiya tradition it flourished in Bengal around the 16th through 19th centuries It taught that each individual is a divinity embodying the divine couple Kṛṣṇa and his consort Radha This tradition integrated earlier Hindu and Buddhist tantric practices within a Vaiṣṇava theological framework 88 Buddhist tantra Edit Main article Vajrayana There are various Buddhist tantric traditions throughout Asia which are called by different names such as Vajrayana Secret Mantra Mantrayana and so on 191 192 193 The Indo Tibetan Buddhist tradition has been dominant in Tibet and the Himalayan regions 191 It first spread to Tibet in the 8th century and quickly rose to prominence 88 The Tibetan Buddhist tantric teachings have recently been spread to the Western world by the Tibetan diaspora Nepalese Newar Buddhism meanwhile is still practiced in the Kathmandu Valley by the Newar people The tradition maintains a canon of Sanskrit texts the only Buddhist tantric tradition to still do so Buddhist Tantric practices and texts which developed from the 5th to the 8th centuries were translated into Chinese and are preserved in the Chinese Buddhist canon as well as in the Dunhuang manuscripts 191 194 Tantric materials involving the use of mantras and dharanis began to appear in China during the fifth century period and Buddhist masters such as Zhiyi developed proto tantric rituals based on esoteric texts 195 Chinese Esoteric Buddhism became especially influential in China in the Tang dynasty period with the arrival of esoteric masters such as Vajrabodhi and Amoghavajra to the capital city of Chang an 196 The succeeding Song dynasty saw an influx of new esoteric texts being transmitted by monks from Central Asia 197 Chinese Esoteric Buddhist rituals were also noted to be particularly popular in the Liao dynasty which contended with the Song for control of northern China 198 Due to the highly eclectic nature of Chinese Buddhism where sectarian denominations were not strictly drawn between the various Buddhist schools even during the Tang dynasty and where most Buddhist masters mixed practices from the different traditions Chinese Esoteric Buddhist practices were absorbed by lineages from the other Buddhist traditions such as Chan and Tiantai 199 200 For example the Northern School of Chan even became known for its esoteric practices of dharaṇis and mantras 201 During the Yuan and Ming dynasty periods certain esoteric elements from Tibetan Buddhism were also adapted and incorporated into general Chinese Buddhist practices and rituals In modern Chinese Buddhism the esoteric traditions continue to be passed on and practiced through numerous tantric rituals such as the Liberation Rite of Water and Land and the Universal Crossing 普渡 Pǔdu rites for Hungry Ghosts which involve practices like deity yoga and mandala offerings as well as the recitation of tantric mantras such as the Cundi Dharaṇi the Hundred Syllable Mantra of Vajrasattva the Mahacakravidyaraja Dharaṇi and the Shurangama Mantra 199 202 Esoteric practices also spread to Korea and to Japan where it exists as an independent tradition called Shingon 88 Other religions Edit The Hindu and Buddhist Tantric traditions significantly influenced many other religions such Jainism Sikhism the Tibetan Bon tradition Daoism Shintō Sufi Islam and the Western New Age movement 203 204 205 In the Sikh literature the ideas related to Shakti and goddess reverence attributed to Guru Gobind Singh particularly in the Dasam Granth are related to tantra ideas found in Buddhism and Hinduism 206 The Jain worship methods states Ellen Gough were likely influenced by Shaktism ideas and this is attested by the tantric diagrams of the Rishi mandala where the Tirthankaras are portrayed 207 The Tantric traditions within Jainism use verbal spells or mantra and rituals that are believed to accrue merit for rebirth realms 208 Practices EditOne of the main elements of the Tantric literature is ritual 209 note 5 Rather than one coherent system Tantra is an accumulation of practices and ideas from different sources As Samuel writes the tantric traditions are a confluence of a variety of different factors and components These elements include mandalas mantras internal sexual yogic practices fierce male and female deities cremation ground symbolism as well as concepts from Indian Philosophy 210 Andre Padoux notes that there is no consensus among scholars as to which elements are characteristic for Tantra nor is there any text that contains all those elements 211 Also most of those elements can also be found in non Tantric traditions 211 Because of the wide range of communities covered by the term it is problematic to describe tantric practices definitively However there are sets of practices and elements which are shared by numerous tantric traditions and thus a family resemblance relationship can be established among them Different scholars give different main features of tantra For example David N Lorenzen writes that tantra shares various shamanic and yogic practices worship of goddesses association with specific schools like the Kaulas and Kapalikas as well as tantric texts 70 Christopher Wallis meanwhile basing himself on the definition given the tantric scholar Ramakaṇṭha gives four main features of tantra 1 concern with ritual modes of manipulation of the environment or one s own awareness 2 requirement for esoteric initiation to receive access to the scriptural teachings and practices 3 a twofold goal of practice the soteriological and supramundane one of liberation variously conceived and or the mundane one of extraordinary power over other beings and one s environment and 4 the claim that these three are explicated in scriptures that are the word of God agama or the Buddha buddhavacana 212 According to Anthony Tribe a scholar of Buddhist Tantra Tantra has the following defining features 213 Centrality of ritual especially the worship of deities Centrality of mantras Visualisation of and identification with a deity Need for initiation esotericism and secrecy Importance of a teacher guru acharya Ritual use of mandalas maṇḍala Transgressive or antinomian acts Revaluation of the body Revaluation of the status and role of women Analogical thinking including microcosmic or macrocosmic correlation Revaluation of negative mental statesThere are a wide array of Tantric techniques or spiritual practices sadhana such as 214 Dakshina Donation or gift to one s teacher Diksha or Abhiseka Initiation ritual which may include shaktipat Ganachakra A ritual feast during which a sacramental meal is offered Guru yoga and Guru devotion bhakti Mandalas and Yantras symbolic diagrams of forces at work in the universe Mantras reciting syllables words and phrases Mudras or hand gestures Nyasa installing mantras on the body Prayascitta an expiation ritual performed if a puja has been performed wrongly Puja worship ritual and other forms of bhakti Ritual music and dance Ritual purification of idols of one s body etc Ritual sacrifice including animal sacrifice Singing of hymns of praise stava Sexual yoga ritual sexual union with an actual physical consort or an imagined deity The acquisition and use of siddhis or supernormal powers Associated with vamachara left hand path Use of taboo substances such as alcohol cannabis meat and other entheogens Visualization of deities and Identification these deities in meditation deity yoga Vrata and Samaya vows or pledges sometimes to do ascetic practices like fasting Yatra pilgrimage processions Yoga including breathing techniques pranayama and postures asana is employed to balance the energies in the body mind Worship and ritual Edit A Pujari in front of a Ganesha statue Brihadishwara Shiva Temple Worship or puja in Hindu Tantra differs from Vedic forms somewhat While in the Vedic practice of yajna there are no idols shrines and symbolic art in tantra they are important means of worship 215 Rituals are particularly important in the dualistic Saiva Siddhanta which according to Padoux is typically characterized by an overabundance of rituals which are necessarily accompanied by mantras These rituals are not so much a succession of actions as a play of mentally visualized and experienced images a situation common to all Tantric traditions where rites meditation and yoga are exercises in creative identifying imagination The theory behind these rituals is the idea that all humans have a fundamental impurity mala that binds them to rebirth This impurity can be removed by ritual action along with proper knowledge The initial step in this path is the ritual of initiation diksa which opens to door to future liberation at death 216 In the non dualistic and transgressive or left hand traditions like the Kali cults and the Trika school rituals and pujas can include certain left hand path elements that are not found in the more orthodox traditions These transgressive elements include the use of skulls and other human bone implements as part of the Kapalika vow fierce deities like Bhairava Kubjika and Kali which were used as part of meditative visualizations ritual possession by the deities avesa sexual rites and offering the deity as well as consuming certain impure substances like meat alcohol and sexual fluids 217 Padoux explains the transgressive practices as follows On the ritual and mental plane transgression was an essential trait by which the nondualistic Tantric traditions set themselves apart from other traditions so much so that they used the term nondualistic practice advaitacara to refer to the Kaula transgressive practices as a rejection of the duality dvaita of pure and impure in brahmanical society Let us also note that for the nondualistic Saiva systems the Yoginis were not active merely in the world of spirits they were also powers present in humans mistresses of their senses governing their affects which acquired an intensity and super natural dimension through this divinization This led adepts to an identification of their individual consciousness with the infinite divine Consciousness thus also helping them transcend the sexual plane 218 In both the Buddhist and Saiva contexts the sexual practices are often seen as a way to expand one s consciousness through the use of bliss 218 There is also a fundamental philosophical disagreement between Saiva Siddhanta and the non dualistic schools like the Trika regarding ritual In Saiva Siddhanta only ritual can do away with innate impurities anavamala that bind individual Selfs though the ritual must be performed with an understanding of their nature and purpose as well as with devotion In the view of the Trika school especially in the work of Abhinavagupta only knowledge jnana which is a recognition pratyabhijna of our true nature leads to liberation According to Padoux this is also with nuances the position of the Pncaratra and of other Vaisnava Tantric traditions 219 Yoga mantra meditation Edit A meditating Shiva is visited by Parvati Tantric yoga is first and foremost an embodied practice which is seen as having a divine esoteric structure As noted by Padoux tantric yoga makes use of a mystic physiology which includes various psychosomatic elements sometimes called the subtle body This imaginary inner structure includes chakras wheels nadis channels and energies like Kundalini Chandali different pranas and vital winds etc The tantric body is also held to be a microcosmic reflection of the universe and is thus seen as containing gods and goddesses 220 According to Padoux the internalized image of the yogic body is a fundamental element for nearly all meditative and tantric ritual practices 221 The use of mantras is one of the most common and widespread elements of tantric practice They are used in rituals as well as during various meditative and yogic practices Mantra recitation japa is often practiced along with nyasa depositing the mantra mudras seals i e hand gestures and complex visualizations involving divine symbols mandalas and deities Nyasa involves touching various parts of the body while reciting mantra which is thought to connect the deity with the yogis body and transform the body into that of the deity 222 Mantras are also often visualized as being located within the yogi s body as part of tantric meditations For example in the Yogini Heart tantra a Sri Vidya text the yogi is instructed to imagine the five syllables HA SA KA LA HRIM of the deity s mantra in the muladhara chakra The next set of five syllables HA SA KA HA LA HRIM is visualized in the heart chakra and the third cluster SA KA LA HRIM in the cakra between the eyebrows The yogi is further instructed to lengthen the enunciation of the M sound at the end of the HRIM syllable a practice called nada phonic vibration This practice goes through various increasingly subtle stages until it dissolves into the silence of the Absolute 223 Another common element found in tantric yoga is the use of visionary meditations in which tantrikas focus on a vision or image of the deity or deities and in some cases imagine themselves as being the deity and their own body as the body of the deity 224 The practitioner may use visualizations identifying with a deity to the degree that the aspirant becomes the Ishta deva or meditational deity In other meditations the deities are visualized as being inside the tantrika s body For example in Abhinavagupta s Tantraloka chapter 15 the Trika trinity of goddesses Para Parapara and Apara are visualized on the ends of the three prongs of a trident located above the head The rest of the trident is imagined positioned along the central axis of the yogi s body with the blazing corpse of Shiva visualized in the head 225 Mandalas and yantras Edit Sri Yantra diagram with the Ten Mahavidyas The triangles represent Shiva and Shakti the snake represents Spanda and Kundalini Yantra are mystical diagrams which are used in tantric meditation and ritual They are usually associated with specific Hindu deities such as Shiva Shakti or Kali Similarly a puja may involve focusing on a yantra or mandala associated with a deity 226 According to David Gordon White geometrical mandalas are a key element of Tantra 227 They are used to represent numerous tantric ideas and concepts as well as used for meditative focus Mandalas symbolically communicate the correspondences between the transcendent yet immanent macrocosm and the microcosm of mundane human experience 227 The godhead or principal Buddha is often depicted at the center of the mandala while all other beings including the practitioner are located at various distances from this center 227 Mandalas also reflected the medieval feudal system with the king at its centre 228 Mandalas and Yantras may be depicted in various ways on paintings cloth in three dimensional form made out of colored sand or powders etc Tantric yoga also often involves the mental visualization of a mandala or yantra This is usually combined with mantra recitation and other ritual actions as part of a tantric sadhana practice Sex and eroticism Edit See also Tantric sexWhile tantra involves a wide range of ideas and practices which are not always of a sexual nature Flood and Padoux both note that in the West Tantra is most often thought of as a kind of ritualized sex or a spiritualized yogic sexuality 229 230 231 According to Padoux this is a misunderstanding for though the place of sex in Tantra is ideologically essential it is not always so in action and ritual Padoux further notes that while sexual practices do exist and were used by certain tantric groups they lost their prevalence when Tantra spread to other larger social groups 231 In the tantric traditions which do use sex as part of spiritual practice this refers mainly to the Kaulas and also Tibetan Buddhism sex and desire are often seen as a means of transcendence that is used to reach the Absolute Thus sex and desire are not seen as ends in themselves Because these practices transgress orthodox Hindu ideas of ritual purity they have often given tantra a bad image in India where it is often condemned by the orthodox According to Padoux even among the traditions which accept these practices they are far from prominent and practiced only by a few initiated and fully qualified adepts 232 Western scholarly research Edit The Sri Yantra shown here in the three dimensional projection known as Sri Meru or Maha Meru used primarily by Srividya Shakta sects John Woodroffe Edit The first Western scholar to seriously study Tantra was John Woodroffe 1865 1936 who wrote about Tantra under the pen name Arthur Avalon and is known as the founding father of Tantric studies 233 Unlike previous Western scholars Woodroffe advocated for Tantra defending and presenting it as an ethical and philosophical system in accord with the Vedas and Vedanta 234 Woodroffe practised Tantra and while trying to maintain scholastic objectivity was a student of Hindu Tantra the Shiva Shakta tradition 235 236 237 Further development Edit Following Woodroffe a number of scholars began investigating Tantric teachings including scholars of comparative religion and Indology such as Agehananda Bharati Mircea Eliade Julius Evola Carl Jung Alexandra David Neel Giuseppe Tucci and Heinrich Zimmer 238 According to Hugh Urban Zimmer Evola and Eliade viewed Tantra as the culmination of all Indian thought the most radical form of spirituality and the archaic heart of aboriginal India regarding it as the ideal religion for the modern era All three saw Tantra as the most transgressive and violent path to the sacred 239 References EditNotes Edit The dates in the left column of the table are estimates and contested by scholars Sures Chandra Banerjee says Banerjee S C 1988 Tantra is sometimes used to denote governance Kalidasa uses the expression prajah tantrayitva having governed the subjects in the Abhijnanasakuntalam V 5 Also known as Tantrayana Mantrayana Esoteric Buddhism and the Diamond Vehicle Tantric texts are also often not being called Tantras 20 Compare Joel Andre Michel Dubois 2013 The Hidden Lives of Brahman page xvii xviii who notes that Adi Shankara provides powerful analogies with the Vedic fire ritual in his Upanishadic commentaries Citations Edit This article has an unclear citation style The references used may be made clearer with a different or consistent style of citation and footnoting January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Gray 2016 pp 1 3 a b c d Barrett 2008 p 12 Flood 2006 pp 9 14 Bisschop 2020 Chapter 1 Kongtrul 2005 p 74 Flood 2006 p 7 8 Flood 2006 pp 9 107 Gyatso 2000 pp x 5 7 Gray 2016 pp 1 2 17 19 a b Padoux 2013 p 2 The Hindu worship the puja for instance is Tantric in its conception and ritual process the principles of Hindu temple building and iconography are Tantric and so on Flood 2006 p 53 73 75 79 81 3 99 132 3 177 Padoux 2013 p 1 a b c Lorenzen 2002 p 25 Beer 2003 pp xi xiv Berkson 1986 pp 11 12 Fraser Lu amp Stadtner 2015 p 59 a b c d e Monier Williams Leumann amp Cappeller 2002 p 436 a b c Flood 2006 p 9 Padoux 2017 p 7 a b c d Padoux 2002 p 17 a b c White 2005 p 8984 a b Gray 2016 pp 3 4 ऋग व द स क त १० ७१ Wikisource इम य न र व ङ न परश चरन त न ब र ह मण स न स त कर स त एत व चमभ पद य प पय स र स तन त र तन वत अप रजज ञय ९ a b Urban 2008 pp 26 27 a b c Felch 2016 pp 174 175 a b c d e Banerjee 1988 a b c Pontillo amp Candotti 2014 pp 47 48 with footnotes Kangle 1986 p 512 with footnote a b c Joshi 1977 p 409 Bagchi 1989 p 6 Banerjee 1988 p 8 a b Joshi 2012 pp 48 50 a b Lorenzen 2002 pp 31 32 Scharfe 1977 p 87 with footnote 50 a b Wallis 2012 p 26 a b Banerjee 2002 p 34 Banabhatta the Sanskrit author of the 7th century refers in the Harshacharita to the propitiation of Matrikas by a tantric ascetic 36 Dyczkowski 1989 pp 4 5 Brooks 1990 pp 16 17 a b Pontillo amp Candotti 2014 pp 48 61 with footnotes Pontillo amp Candotti 2014 pp 89 90 with footnotes Stirling 2006 p 7 a b Gray 2016 pp 1 2 a b Brown 2002 pp 1 2 Brown 2002 pp 5 6 Lorea Carola Erika 25 May 2018 I Am Afraid of Telling You This Lest You d Be Scared Shitless The Myth of Secrecy and the Study of the Esoteric Traditions of Bengal Religions 9 6 172 doi 10 3390 rel9060172 a b Brown 2002 p 6 Lorenzen 2002 p 25 26 Campbell June 2002 Traveller in Space Gender Identity and Tibetan Buddhism A amp C Black ISBN 9780826457196 Vallely Paul 10 February 1999 I Was A Tantric Sex Slave The Independent Archived from the original on 26 May 2022 Retrieved 9 July 2021 Margot Anand The World s Leading Expert on Tantra Margot Anand Retrieved 9 July 2021 Gray 2016 p 3 Gray 2016 pp 1 5 Gray 2016 pp 1 8 Feuerstein 2001 pp parts 11501 11505 Flood 2006 p 4 21 22 172 173 Goudriaan 1981 pp 1 8 Brown 2002 p 1 Goudriaan 1981 pp 1 2 39 40 Goudriaan 1981 pp 1 2 198 200 Goudriaan 1981 pp 2 7 8 Gray 2016 pp 4 5 Padoux 2002 pp 18 19 Padoux 2002 pp 18 21 Abhinava The Trika Shaivism of Kashmir Retrieved 9 July 2021 a b Brown 2002 pp 3 4 Samuel amp Johnston 2013 pp 35 38 Georg Feurstein 2011 The Bhagavad Gita A New Translation Boston amp London Shambhala pp 108 09 ISBN 978 1 59030 893 6 a b c Werner 1977 pp 289 302 a b c d Lorenzen 2002 p 27 Phillips 2009 p 295 with note 23 Deussen 1980 pp 301 304 310 311 Samuel 2010 pp 284 285 Lorenzen 2002 p 27 28 Lorenzen 2002 p 28 White 2014 p 188 Samuel 2010 pp 157 158 Samuel 2010 p 221 Samuel 2010 p 283 White 2003 pp 28 29 White 2003 pp 30 280 a b Smith 2012 pp 363 364 Snellgrove 1987 p 122 Samuel 2010 p 131 Piyadassi Thera ed trans 1999 The Book of Protection Paritta Kandy Buddhist Publication Society Pranshu Samdarshi 2019 Buddhist Tantra Methodology and Historiography SABHI Students for the Awareness of Buddhist Heritage of India Delhi India page needed Samuel 2010 pp 128 129 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Gray 2016 Samuel 2010 pp 142 145 146 Samuel 2010 pp 144 145 Samuel 2010 p 248 Watson 1994 Chapter 26 Dharani Samuel 2010 pp 219 220 Osto Douglas Proto Tantric Elements in The Gandavyuha sutra Journal of Religious History Vol 33 No 2 June 2009 Samuel 2010 pp 226 227 a b c Brown 2002 pp 11 13 Maurizio Taddei 1979 The Story of the Buddha and the Skull Tapper A Note in Gandharan Iconography Annali Istituto Orientale di Napoli Roma Volume 39 Number 3 pages 395 420 Lorenzen 2002 pp 28 30 Lorenzen 2002 pp 28 29 Padoux 2017 p 21 Samuel 2010 p 242 Lorenzen 2002 p 30 a b Dyczkowski 1988 pp 26 27 a b Samuel 2010 p 243 a b Lorenzen 1972 pp xii 1 4 Samuel 2010 p 246 a b Lorenzen 2002 pp 30 31 Davidson 2002 pp 202 218 Sanderson 2012 2013 pp 4 5 11 57 Lorenzen 2002 p 31 Lorenzen 2002 pp 27 31 a b Flood 1996 p 158 a b c Flood 1996 p 161 Flood 1996 pp 161 162 Olivelle 1992 pp 5 9 17 18 Olivelle 2011 Samuel 2010 pp 232 233 Samuel 2010 pp 247 249 Samuel 2010 p 255 Sanderson Alexis Vajrayana Origin and Function In Buddhism into the Year 2000 International Conference Proceedings Bangkok and Los Angeles Dhammakaya Foundation 1995 pp 89 102 Davidson 2004 p 204 Davidson 2004 p 214 228 231 Samuel 2010 p 265 a b Samuel 2010 p 291 Samuel 2010 pp 266 267 Samuel 2010 pp 259 260 287 292 Samuel 2010 p 264 291 292 Samuel 2010 pp 252 254 Samuel 2010 p 254 Samuel 2010 pp 257 258 Sravana Borkataky Varma Red An Ethnographic Study of Cross Pollination Between the Vedic and the Tantric 2019 International Journal of Hindu Studies Special Issue Borkataky Varma Sravana Red An Ethnographic Study of Cross Pollination Between the Vedic and the Tantric Academia International Journal of Hindu Studies Retrieved 10 August 2022 Samuel 2010 pp 255 271 a b c Samuel 2010 p 289 Samuel 2010 p 274 Snellgrove 1987 p 127 a b Samuel 2010 p 276 Samuel 2010 pp 283 286 a b Samuel 2010 pp 287 289 Dalton J 2004 The Development of Perfection The Interiorization of Buddhist Ritual in the Eight and Ninth Centuries Journal of Indian Philosophy 32 1 30 Samuel 2010 pp 285 289 Gray amp Overbey 2016 p 294 Smith 2005 p 8989 Einoo 2009 p 45 Padoux 2017 p 22 Wedemeyer 2013 pp 155 252 Flood 1996 p 158 159 a b Flood 1996 p 159 Padoux 2017 pp 22 23 Samuel 2010 p 253 Samuel 2010 pp 293 299 Samuel 2010 p 299 Samuel 2010 p 304 Samuel 2010 p 303 Samuel 2010 pp 293 307 309 Samuel 2010 p 292 Samuel 2010 pp 324 328 Samuel 2010 pp 329 330 Samuel 2010 pp 330 332 Mallinson 2016 Mallinson 2019 pp 1 33 a b Flood 1996 pp 158 159 Samuel 2010 pp 267 268 Samuel 2010 p 333 Smith 1996 p 116 Samuel 2010 p 322 a b Padoux 2002 pp 17 18 a b Samuel 2010 p 335 a b Samuel 2010 p 336 Samuel 2010 pp 322 323 Hirakawa amp Groner 2007 pp 125 126 Samuel 2010 p 337 Samuel 2010 pp 337 338 a b Padoux 2017 p 8 Padoux 2017 p 29 Padoux 2017 pp 29 30 Padoux 2017 pp 8 10 Sanderson 2012 2013 pp 4 5 11 35 57 Richard Davis 2014 Ritual in an Oscillating Universe Worshipping Siva in Medieval India Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 60308 7 page 167 note 21 Quote page 13 Some agamas argue a monist metaphysics while others are decidedly dualist Some claim ritual is the most efficacious means of religious attainment while others assert that knowledge is more important Sharma 1990 pp 9 14 Padoux 2017 p 9 Padoux 2017 p 10 Padoux 2017 p 11 a b Padoux 2017 p 31 Padoux 2017 p 32 Padoux 2017 p 33 a b c Padoux 2017 pp 33 34 a b Padoux 2017 p 36 Padoux 2017 p 39 Padoux 2017 p 37 a b c Gray amp Overbey 2016 pp 5 7 199 216 Todd Lewis Gary deAngelis 2016 Teaching Buddhism New Insights on Understanding and Presenting the Traditions Oxford University Press pp 73 77 ISBN 978 0 19 937309 3 Quote The Tantric Buddhist traditions have been given several labels but there is no single label that is accepted by all of these traditions It is important to note the use of this term in a plural form Tantric or esoteric Buddhist traditions are multiple and also originated as multiple distinct traditions of both text and practice Richard K Payne 2006 Tantric Buddhism in East Asia Simon and Schuster pp 1 3 ISBN 978 0 86171 487 2 Gray amp Overbey 2016 pp 7 257 264 Orzech 2011 p 263 sfnp error no target CITEREFOrzech2011 help Goble Geoffrey C 2019 Chinese esoteric Buddhism Amoghavajra the ruling elite and the emergence of a tradition New York ISBN 978 0 231 55064 2 OCLC 1099543349 Charles Willemen 2004 The Chinese Hevajratantra the scriptural text of the Ritual of the Great King of the Teaching the Adamantine One with Great Compassion and Knowledge of the Void Delhi Motilal Banarsidass Publishers ISBN 81 208 1945 4 OCLC 60383600 Solonin K J 2013 Buddhist Connections between the Liao and Xixia Preliminary Considerations Journal of Song Yuan Studies 43 171 219 ISSN 1059 3152 JSTOR 43855194 a b Orzech Charles D 1989 Seeing Chen Yen Buddhism Traditional Scholarship and the Vajrayana in China History of Religions 29 2 87 114 doi 10 1086 463182 ISSN 0018 2710 JSTOR 1062679 S2CID 162235701 Lye Hun Yeow 2003 Feeding Ghosts A Study of the Yuqie Yankou Rite Thesis University of Virginia doi 10 18130 v3s82z Sharf Robert H 2002 Coming to terms with Chinese Buddhism a reading of the treasure store treatise Honolulu University of Hawai i Press ISBN 0 585 47161 4 OCLC 53119548 Lye Hun Yeow 2003 Feeding Ghosts A Study of the Yuqie Yankou Rite Thesis University of Virginia doi 10 18130 v3s82z Gray 2016 pp 1 7 17 18 Keul 2012 pp 13 373 374 399 408 Orzech Sorensen amp Payne 2011 pp 307 314 Rinehart 2011 pp 13 140 147 166 170 Ellen Gough 2012 Shades of Enlightenment A Jain Tantric Diagram and the Colours of the Tirthankaras International Journal of Jaina Studies Volume 8 Number 1 pages 1 47 Summary Archive Studying Jainism and its Tantric Ritual Diagrams in India Ellen Gough Cort 2001 pp 417 419 Feuerstein 1998 p 124 Samuel 2010 pp 289 290 a b Padoux 2002 p 18 Wallis Christopher 2016 The Tantric Age A comparison of Shaiva and Buddhist Tantra Williams amp Tribe 2000 p 197 202 Feuerstein 1998 p 127 130 Ghose 1996 p 141 Padoux 2017 p 52 Padoux 2017 pp 53 54 a b Padoux 2017 p 55 Padoux 2017 p 126 Padoux 2017 pp 73 75 Padoux 2017 p 75 Padoux 2017 pp 76 77 80 Padoux 2017 p 78 Cavendish 1980 Padoux 2017 pp 77 79 Magee Michael The Kali Yantra a b c White 2000 p 9 White 2000 p 25 28 Flood 1996 pp 159 160 Flood 2006 pp i ii a b Padoux 2017 p 86 Padoux 2017 pp 87 88 Urban 2003 p 22 Urban 2003 p 135 Avalon 1913 p 1ff Avalon 1914 p 1ff Avalon 1918 p 1ff Urban 2003 pp 165 166 Urban 2003 pp 166 167 Works cited Edit Avalon Arthur 1913 Tantra of the great liberation Mahanirvana Tantra London Luzac amp Co Avalon Arthur 1914 Principles of Tantra the Tantratattva of Shriyukta Shiva Chandra Vidyarnava Bhattacharyya Mahodaya London Luzac amp Co Avalon Arthur 1918 Sakti and Sakta Essays and Addresses on the Tantra Shastra London Luzac and Co Bagchi P C 1989 Evolution of the Tantras Studies on the Tantras Kolkata Ramakrishna Mission Institute of Culture ISBN 978 81 85843 36 0 Second Revised Edition Banerjee Sures Chandra 1988 A Brief History of Tantra Literature Kolkata Naya Prokash Banerjee Sures Chandra 2002 Companion to Tantra Abhinav Publications ISBN 978 1 70174 022 8 Barrett Ron 2008 Aghor Medicin University of California Press p 12 ISBN 978 0 520 25218 9 Beer Robert 2003 The Handbook of Tibetan Buddhist Symbols Serindia Publications ISBN 978 1 932476 03 3 Berkson Carmel 1986 The caves at Aurangabad early Buddhist Tantric art in India Mapin ISBN 9780295964621 Bisschop Peter C 2020 1 From Mantramarga Back to Atimarga Atimarga as a Self referential Term In Goodall at al ed Saivism and the Tantric Traditions Essays in Honour of Alexis G J S Sanderson Indological Studies vol 22 Gonda ISBN 978 9004432666 Brooks Douglas Renfrew 1990 The Secret of the Three Cities An Introduction to Hindu Sakta Tantrism University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 07569 3 Brown Robert Introduction In Harper amp Brown 2002 pp 1 15 Cavendish Richard 1980 The Great Religions Arco Publishing Cort John E 2001 David Gordon White ed Tantra in Practice Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 1778 4 Davidson Ronald M 2002 Indian Esoteric Buddhism Columbia University Press Davidson Ronald M 2004 Indian Esoteric Buddhism A Social History of the Tantric Movement Deussen Paul 1980 Sixty Upanishads of the Veda Volume 1 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120814684 Dyczkowski Mark S G 1989 The Doctrine of Vibration An Analysis of the Doctrines and Practices of Kashmir Shaivism Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 0596 5 Dyczkowski Mark S G 1988 The Canon of the Saivagama and the Kubjika Tantras of the Western Kaula Tradition State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 88706 494 4 Einoo Shingo ed 2009 Genesis and Development of Tantrism University of Tokyo Felch Susan M 2016 The Cambridge Companion to Literature and Religion Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 316 75726 0 Feuerstein Georg 1998 Tantra The Path of Ecstasy Shambhala Publications Feuerstein Georg 2001 The Yoga Tradition Its History Literature Philosophy and Practice Kindle ed Hohm Press ISBN 978 1890772185 Flood Gavin D 1996 An Introduction to Hinduism Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 43878 0 Flood Gavin 2006 The Tantric Body The Secret Tradition of Hindu Religion I B Taurus ISBN 978 1 84511 011 6 Fraser Lu Sylvia Stadtner Donald M 2015 Buddhist Art of Myanmar Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 20945 7 Ghose Rajeshwari 1996 The Tyagaraja Cult in Tamilnaḍu A Study in Conflict and Accommodation Motilal Banarsidass Publications ISBN 81 208 1391 X Goudriaan Teun 1981 Teun Goudriaan Sanjukta Gupta eds Hindu Tantric and Sakta Literature Otto Harrassowitz Verlag ISBN 978 3 447 02091 6 Gray David B 5 April 2016 Tantra and the Tantric Traditions of Hinduism and Buddhism Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Religion Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199340378 013 59 ISBN 9780199340378 Archived from the original on 8 December 2018 Retrieved 30 May 2021 Gray David B Overbey Ryan Richard 2016 Tantric Traditions in Transmission and Translation Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 990952 0 Gyatso Geshe Kelsang 2000 Essence of Vajrayana The Highest Yoga Tantra Practice of Heruka Body Mandala Motilal Banarsidass pp x 5 7 ISBN 978 81 208 1729 6 Harper Katherine Anne Brown Robert L eds 2002 The Roots of Tantra State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 7914 5306 3 Harper Katherine Anne Brown Robert L eds 2012 The Roots of Tantra State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 7914 8890 4 Hirakawa Akira Groner Paul 2007 A History of Indian Buddhism From Sakyamuni to Early Mahayana pp 125 126 Joshi M C Historical and Iconographic Aspects of Sakta Tantrism In Harper amp Brown 2012 pp 39 56 Joshi Lal Mani 1977 Studies in the Buddhistic Culture of India During the 7th and 8th Centuries A D Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 0281 0 Kangle R P 1986 The Kautiliya Arthasastra Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 0042 7 Keul Istvan 2012 Transformations and Transfer of Tantra in Asia and Beyond Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 025811 0 Kongtrul Jamgon 2005 The Treasury of Knowledge Book Six Part Four Systems of Buddhist Tantra Translated by Guarisco Elio McLeod Ingrid Snow Lion Publications p 74 Lorenzen David N 1972 The Kapalikas and Kalamukhas Two Lost Saivite Sects University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 01842 6 Lorenzen David N Early Evidence for Tantric Religion In Harper amp Brown 2002 Mallinson James 2016 The Amrtasiddhi Hathayoga s tantric Buddhist source text Saivism and the Tantric Traditions SOAS University of London 409 Mallinson James 2019 Kalavancana in the Konkan How a Vajrayana Hathayoga Tradition Cheated Buddhism s Death in India Religions 10 4 1 33 doi 10 3390 rel10040273 Monier Williams Sir Monier Leumann Ernst Cappeller Carl 2002 1899 A Sanskrit English Dictionary Etymologically and Philologically Arranged with Special Reference to Cognate Indo European Languages reprint of OUP ed Motilal Banarsidass p 436 ISBN 978 81 208 3105 6 Olivelle Patrick 1992 The Samnyasa Upanisads Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 507045 3 Olivelle Patrick 2011 Ascetics and Brahmins studies in ideologies and institutions London New York Anthem Press ISBN 978 0 85728 432 7 Orzech Charles Sorensen Henrik Payne Richard 2011 Esoteric Buddhism and the Tantras in East Asia Brill Academic ISBN 978 90 04 18491 6 Padoux Andre What Do We Mean by Tantrism In Harper amp Brown 2002 Padoux Andre 2013 The Heart of the Yogini Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 1 2999 4016 1 Padoux Andre 2017 The Hindu Tantric World An Overview Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226424095 Phillips Stephen 2009 Yoga Karma and Rebirth A Brief History and Philosophy Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 14485 8 Pontillo Tiziana Candotti Maria Piera 2014 Signless Signification in Ancient India and Beyond Anthem Press ISBN 978 1 78308 332 9 Rinehart Robin 2011 Debating the Dasam Granth Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 975506 6 Samuel Geoffrey 2010 The Origins of Yoga and Tantra Indic Religions to the Thirteenth Century Cambridge University Press Samuel Geoffrey Johnston Jay eds 2013 Religion and the Subtle Body in Asia and the West Between Mind and Body Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 76640 4 Sanderson Alexis 2012 2013 The Saiva Literature PDF Journal of Indological Studies Kyoto No 24 amp 25 pp 1 113 Archived from the original PDF on 2 October 2015 Scharfe Hartmut 1977 Grammatical Literature Otto Harrassowitz ISBN 978 3 447 01706 0 Sharma D S 1990 The Philosophy of Sadhana State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 7914 0347 1 Smith Brian K 2005 Tantrism Hindu Tantrism In Jones Lindsay ed MacMillan Encyclopedia of Religion MacMillan Smith David 1996 The Dance of Siva Religion Art and Poetry in South India Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 48234 9 Smith Frederick M 2012 The Self Possessed Deity and Spirit Possession in South Asian Literature and Civilization Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 51065 3 Snellgrove David 1987 Indo Tibetan Buddhism Indian Buddhists and their Tibetan successors Orchid Press ISBN 978 9745240131 Stirling Isabel 2006 Zen Pioneer The Life amp Works of Ruth Fuller Sasaki Counterpoint ISBN 978 1593761707 Urban Hugh B 2003 Tantra Sex Secrecy Politics and Power in the Study of Religions University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 23656 1 Urban Hugh B Urban 2008 2003 Tantra Sex Secrecy Politics and Power in the Study of Religion Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 2932 9 Wallis Christopher 2012 Tantra Illuminated Anusara Press ISBN 978 1937104016 Watson Burton trans 1994 Chapter Twenty six Dharani Lotus Sutra Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0231081610 Archived from the original on 25 March 2003 Wedemeyer Christian K 2013 Making Sense of Tantric Buddhism History Semiology and Transgression in the Indian Traditions Columbia University Press pp 155 252 Werner Karel 1977 Yoga and the Ṛg Veda An Interpretation of the Kesin Hymn RV 10 136 Religious Studies 13 3 289 302 doi 10 1017 S0034412500010076 S2CID 170592174 White David Gordon ed 2000 Tantra in Practice Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 05779 8 White David Gordon 2003 Kiss of the Yogini Tantric Sex in its South Asian Contexts University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 02783 8 White David Gordon 2005 Tantrism An Overview In Jones Lindsay ed MacMillan Encyclopedia of Religion MacMillan White David Gordon 2014 The Yoga Sutra of Patanjali A Biography Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 4008 5005 1 Williams Paul Tribe Anthony 2000 Buddhist Thought Routledge Further reading EditBhattacharyya N N 1999 History of the Tantric Religion New Delhi Manohar ISBN 978 81 7304 025 2 Second Revised Edition Davidson Ronald M 2003 Indian Esoteric Buddhism A Social History of the Tantric Movement New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 81 208 1991 7 Frawley David 1994 Tantric Yoga and the Wisdom Goddesses Spiritual Secrets of Ayurveda Lotus Press ISBN 978 0910261395 Frawley David 2008 Inner Tantric Yoga Working with the Universal Shakti Twin Lakes WI Lotus Press ISBN 978 0 9406 7650 3 McDaniel June 2004 Offering Flowers Feeding Skulls Popular Goddess Worship in West Bengal New York Oxford University Press Mookerji Ajit 1997 The Tantric Way Art Science Ritual London Thames amp Hudson Norbu Chogyal Namkhai 1999 The Crystal and The Way of Light Sutra Tantra and Dzogchen Snow Lion Publications ISBN 978 1 55939 135 1 White David Gordon 1998 The Alchemical Body Siddha Traditions in Medieval India Chicago University of Chicago Press Yeshe Lama Thubten 1987 Introduction to Tantra The Transformation of Desire 2001 revised ed Boston Wisdom Publications ISBN 0 86171 162 9 External links Edit Tantra enlightenment to revolution British Museum 2021 Media related to Tantra at Wikimedia Commons Quotations related to Tantra at Wikiquote Portals Hinduism Religion India Retrieved from 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