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Vallabha

Vallabhacharya Mahaprabhu (1479–1531 CE), also known as Vallabha, Mahaprabhuji and Vishnuswami, or Vallabha Acharya, was an Indian saint and philosopher. He founded the Krishna-centered Pushtimarg sect of Vaishnavism in the Braj (Vraja) region of India,[1] and propounded the philosophy of Śuddhādvaita.

Vallabha
Personal
Born27 April 1479
Died26 June 1531 (aged 52)
Banaras (now in Uttar Pradesh, India)
ReligionHinduism
ChildrenGopinātha and Viṭṭhalanātha
OrderVedanta
Founder ofPuṣṭimārga
PhilosophyŚuddhādvaita

Vallabha was born in a Telugu Tailang Brahmin family that was residing in Varanasi. They escaped to Champaran of Chhattisgarh state while expecting a Muslim invasion in Varanasi during the late 15th century.[2]

Vallabha studied the Vedas, Upanishads, Puranas, and Shaddarshana as a child, and then traveled throughout the Indian subcontinent for over 20 years.[2] He became one of the important leaders of the devotional Bhakti movement. He won many philosophical scholarly debates against followers of Adi Shankara, Ramanuja, Madhvacharya, and others.[2]

He rejected asceticism and monastic life, suggested that through loving devotion to the deity Krishna, any householder could achieve salvation – an idea that became influential all over India, held by his 84 Baithakjis (places of worship) in Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Gujarat, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala, Uttaranchal, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, Goa, Sindh, and various other parts of Indian subcontinent.[3][4] He is associated with the Vishnuswami Sampradaya,[5] and is the prominent Jagadguru Acharya of Rudra Sampradaya out of the four traditional Vaishnava Sampradayas.[6]

He authored many texts including but not limited to, the Anubhashya colloquially also called Brahmasutranubhashya (his commentary on Brahma Sutra), Shodash Granth or sixteen 'stotras' (tracts) and several commentaries on the Bhagavata Purana.

Vallabha's writings and kirtan compositions focus on baby Krishna and his childhood pranks with Yashoda (unconditional motherly love), as well as a youthful Krishna's protection of the good (divine grace) and his victory over demons and evils, all with allegory and symbolism.[4]

His legacy is best preserved with the acharyas of his Pushtimarg Vallabh Sampradaya, also in the Braj region, and particularly at Nathdwara and Dwarkadhish Temple in Mewar region of India – are important Krishna pilgrimage center.[4]

He is regarded as an incarnation of Agni (Vaishvanara).[7][8]

Life edit

Childhood edit

 
Birthplace of Vallabhacharya, Prakatya Baithak, Champaran

Vallabha's family were Velanāṭa or Vellanāḍu Telugu Brāhmaṇas who belonged to the Bhārgava gotra and Taittirīya śākhā of the Yajurveda. Their ancestral village was Kāṅkaravāḍa on the southern bank of the Godavari river.[9]

According to devotional accounts, Kr̥ṣṇa commanded his ancestor Yagnanarayana Bhatta that he would take birth in their family after completion of 100 Soma yajña-s. By the time of Yagnanarayana's descendant Lakṣmaṇa Bhaṭṭa and his wife Illammāgāru who migrated to the holy town of Vārāṇasī, the family had completed 100 Somayajñas.[1][10][11][12]

The period surrounding Vallabhacharya's birth was a tumultuous one in Vārāṇasī. Bahlūl Lodi, sultan of Delhi, was battling with Husain Shāh, sultan of Jaunpur, and there was fear that Vārāṇasī would be attacked. Lakṣmaṇa Bhaṭṭa had to urgently move out of Vārāṇasī with his pregnant wife. According to the Śrīvallabhadigvijaya and other hagiographies, due to terror and physical strain of the flight suffered by the mother, there was a two month premature birth in the forests of Campāraṇya in the middle of the night. As the child did not show signs of life, the distressed parents placed Vallabha under a śami tree wrapped in a piece of cloth. That night Kr̥ṣṇa appeared in their dreams to tell them he had taken birth as the child whom they had left under a tree mistaken to not be alive. In the morning the parents rushed to the spot and were amazed to find their son alive and protected by a circle of divine fire. The blessed mother extended her arms into the fire unscathed; she received from the fire the divine baby, and a voice announced in Sanskrit that the baby was the incarnation of the mouth of the supreme being. According to other hagiographies such as Śrī Nāthajī Prākaṭya kī Vārtā, Vallabha appeared in the Agnikuṇḍ in Mathura. Most hagiographies date Vallabha's birth to 1535 Vikrama Era, or 1478-1479 CE.[1][12]

Education edit

Soon after Vallabha's birth his family moved back to Vārāṇasī. His education commenced at the age of eight, and by the age of eleven had mastered Vedas, Vedāntas, six Śāstras, and some Purāṇas, with the Bhāgavata being is favorite.[12][13]

First Pilgrimage edit

Nearing the end of his life, Lakṣmaṇa Bhaṭṭa decided to take his wife and 10-year-old son along on a pilgrimage with him to holy sites of southern India. They first stopped at the Vaiṣṇava shrine of Jagannātha in Purī in 1489. The local ruler was sponsoring a great philosophical debate where four questions were posed to scholars: "What is the foremost scripture? Who is the foremost deity? Which is the most effective mantra? What is the easiest and best action?", to which Vallabha responded with the Bhagavad Gītā, Kr̥ṣṇa, any of Kr̥ṣṇa's names, and sevā (service) to Kr̥ṣṇa, whereupon Jagannātha wrote a śloka in support of his response and condemning the supporters of Advaita Vedanta or Māyāvādis.[14]

In 1490, they reached the temple of Veṅkaṭeśvara at Tirupati, where Lakṣmaṇa Bhaṭṭa died, and Illammāgārū began to live with her brother in Vijayanagara.[15]

Reception of the Brahmasambandha mantra and installation of Śrī Nāthjī edit

 
Vallabhacharya discovers Shrinathji, at Mount Govardhan.

In 1493, Vallabha had a dream where Kr̥ṣṇa ordered him to go to Govardhan Hill and establish proper service (seva) to his divine image (svarupa) which had appeared there years ago. When he arrived in Gokul in 1494, Vallabha had a vision where Kr̥ṣṇa appeared before him and bestowed upon him the Brahmasambandha mantra, which was to be used to clean the flaws of a human soul. The next morning Vallabha administered the mantra to his companion Dāmodaradāsa Harsānī, who became the first member of the Vallabha Sampradāya.[12][16]

When Vallabha came to Govardhan Hill, he went to the house of Saḍḍūpāṇḍe. Saḍḍūpāṇḍe had received a vision from Kr̥ṣṇa years earlier that told him a stone that had appeared on Govardhan Hill was his own svarupa and that he should give offerings to it. The image was known as Devadamana, and Vallabha announced that it was actually the svarupa of Śrī Govardhananāthajī (shortened to Śrī Nāthjī). Vallabha built a small shrine on the hill for Śrī Nāthjī, and initiated an ascetic named Rāmdās Cauhān to perform the regular worship.[12][16]

In 1499 a wealthy merchant from Ambālā named Pūrṇamalla Khatrī had a dream where Kr̥ṣṇa told him to build a temple for Śrī Nāthjī. However when the temple was only half built Pūrṇamalla had exhausted his finances and the temple would only be completed in 1520.[12][16]

Personal life edit

Vallabha may have intended to remain a lifelong celibate brahmacārī, but during his second pilgrimage of India between 1501 and 1503, he had gone to Paṁḍḥarapura to view the god Viṭṭhala or Viṭhobā (called Viṭṭhalanātha in sectarian literature). There he was given an order by Viṭṭhala to marry. Some sectarian sources assert this was because Viṭṭhala wanted to take birth as his son, and others say it was to create a line of descendants to preserve and promote Vallabha's version of bhakti-mārga.[12][17]

Obeying this, following his caste traditions and practices, Vallabha married Mahālakṣmī sometime between 1502 and 1504, a Vārāṇasī girl of his own caste who began living with him upon maturity c. 1510-1512.[18][19][20] Vallabha had two houses, one at Aṛaila on the Yamunā River across Prayagraj, and at Caraṇāṭa near Vārāṇasī. According to Saha, the location of his home provided a central location which allowed him to access to preach and convert throughout northern and central India.[21][22]

His first son, Gopīnātha, was born in 1512 at Aṛaila and according to sectarian tradition was the avatāra of Balarāma, elder brother of Kr̥ṣṇa. His second son, Viṭṭhalanātha, was born in 1516 at Caraṇāṭa, and is considered the avatāra of Viṭṭhala.[12][20]

Grand victory at Vijayanagara edit

When Vallabha was living in his ancestral village of Kāṅkaravāḍa, he heard of a philosophical debate or śāstrārtha being held in at the court of King Kr̥ṣṇadevarāya of Vijayanagara, and that the Vaiṣṇava schools of thought were being beaten by Advaita Vedanta philosophers. Vallabha immediately went to Vijayanagara to join the debate, and entered the Vaiṣṇava camp led by Ācārya Vyāsatīrtha of the Mādhva school. Vallabha through his erudition and debate skills triumphantly defeated the Advaita philosophers, and was rewarded by Kr̥ṣṇadevarāya with large amounts of gold (most of which he distributed among Brahmins).[23]

He was also offered the prestigious title of ācārya from the Mādhva Sampradāya and the Viṣṇusvāmī Sampradāya. Vallabha chose to become ācārya of the Viṣṇusvāmi school. Very little is known of the Viṣṇusvāmī school's, and by Vallabha's time its followers were few. The majority view is that Vallabha chose to become ācārya of that school in order to make his own doctrines more prestigious, and that there is likely no real connection between the ideas of Viṣṇusvāmī and Vallabhācārya.[23]

According to sectarian literature, this debate occurred shortly after Lakṣmaṇa Bhaṭṭa's death in 1490; however, Kr̥ṣṇadevarāya only became king of Vijayanagara in 1509, which is when scholars believed the debate likely occurred historically.[23] The debate is first mentioned in a mid-eighteenth-century text called the Caurāsī Baiṭhak Caritra and is not mentioned in independent historical sources. According to Saha, this story is meant to portray "the image of a victorious Vallabha winning the subcontinent for Kr̥ṣṇa".[24]

Pilgrimages and Preaching Tours of India edit

Vallabha made three pilgrimages throughout India which are documented in later sectarian sources. These pilgrimages are stated to have taken place between 1479 and 1530, although Saha doubts the accuracy of the dates. At pilgrimage sites such as Dvarka, Kannauj, Puri, Mathura, Gokul, and Govardhan, Vallabha had theological debates and attracted followers and devotees. He made extensive conversion campaigns in the Gangetic Plain and Gujarat, where he attracted converts from various castes including Bhumihars, Rajputs, Gurjars, Ahirs, Kurmis, and Vaniyas, Bhatias, Kanbis, and Patidars respectively.[25]

Only scholarly theory for why Vallabha's theology was attractive to these groups was that of social mobility. For agrarian castes, particularly in Gujarat, the emphasis on purity gave higher status. For mercantile castes, purity as well as the emphasis on restraint and frugality in daily life elevated their status, while wealth could then be funnelled toward religiously meritorious sevā to Kr̥ṣṇa.[26]

Another reason was that Vallabha promoted a houshoulder life-affirming, socially conservative view that appealed to castes that depended on social and political stability for their livliehoods, notably in the context of splintering Muslim sultanates in India.[26]

Death edit

In 1530 Vallabha took a vow of renunciation and withdrew to Hanuman Ghat on the Gaṅgā river in Vāṇārasī. After a month he summoned his sons Gopinātha and Viṭṭhalanātha, and designated the 18-19 year old Gopīnātha as his successor. According to sectarian accounts, he walked in the Gaṅgā and vanished in a flash of light.[27]

Works edit

Vallabhacharya composed many philosophical and devotional books during his lifetime which includes:[27]

  1. Subhodinī, a partial commentary on the Bhāgavata Purāṇa
  2. Aṇubhāṣya, a partial commentary on the Brahmasūtra of Bādarāyaṇa
  3. Tattvārthadīpanibandha, a text interpreting existing Hindu scriptures through Vallabha's philosophy of Śuddhādvaita
  4. Tattvārthadīpanibandhaprakāśa, a commentary on the Tattvārthadīpanibandha
  5. Ṣoḍaśagrantha, sixteen treatises on important facets of Śuddhādvaita and theology of the Puṣṭimārga

Philosophy edit

Vallabha formulated the philosophy of Śuddhādvaita, in response to Śaṅkara's Ādvaita Vedānta, which he called Maryādā Mārga or Path of Limitations. Vallabha asserted that religious disciplines that focused on Vedic sacrifices, temple rituals, puja, meditation, and yoga held limited value. Additionally Vallabha rejected the concept of Māyā, stating that the world was a manifestation of the Supreme Absolute and could neither be tainted nor change.[28] The school rejects the ascetic lifestyle and cherishes householder lifestyle, wherein followers see themselves as participants and companions of Krishna, and view their daily lives as an ongoing raslila.[29]

According to Vallabha, Brahman consists of existence, consciousness, and bliss, and when manifested completely, as Kr̥ṣṇa himself. The purpose of this tradition is to perform sevā (selfless service) out of love for Kr̥ṣṇa. According to Vallabhacharya, through single minded religiosity, a devotee would achieve awareness that there is nothing in the world that is not Kr̥ṣṇa.[28]

Postage Stamp

On 14 April 1977, the Indian postal department, Government of India issued in his honor, a commemorative stamp bearing the image of Vallabhacharya.[30][31][citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Shah, J.G. (1969). Shri Vallabhacharya: His Philosophy and Religion. Pushtimargiya Pustakalaya.
  2. ^ a b c Constance Jones; James D. Ryan (2006). Encyclopedia of Hinduism. Infobase. pp. 475–476. ISBN 978-0-8160-7564-5.
  3. ^ "List of 84 Baithakjis".
  4. ^ a b c Catherine B. Asher; Cynthia Talbot (2006). India Before Europe. Cambridge University Press. pp. 111–112. ISBN 978-0-521-80904-7.
  5. ^ Beck, Guy L (2005). "Krishna as Loving Husband of God". Alternative Krishnas: Regional and Vernacular Variations on a Hindu Deity. SUNY Press. ISBN 978-0-7914-6415-1. Retrieved 12 April 2008.
  6. ^ Sharma, V.P. (1998). The Sadhus and Indian Civilisation. Anmol Publications Pvt. Ltd.
  7. ^ Farquhar, John Nicol (1984). An outline of the Religious Literature of India. Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Pvt. Ltd. ISBN 978-8-1208-2086-9. Retrieved 19 May 2020.
  8. ^ "Nathdwara temple". Nathdwara temple. Retrieved 19 May 2020.
  9. ^ Barz 1992, p. 23.
  10. ^ Prasoon, Shrikant (2009). Indian Saints & Sages. Pustak Mahal. ISBN 9788122310627.
  11. ^ Jones, Constance; Ryan, James D. (2006). Encyclopedia of Hinduism. Infobase Publishing. p. 475. ISBN 978-0-8160-7564-5.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h Barz, Richard (2018). "Vallabha". In Jacobsen, Knut A.; Basu, Helene; Malinar, Angelika; Narayanan, Vasudha (eds.). Brill’s Encyclopedia of Hinduism Online. Brill.
  13. ^ Barz, Richard (1992). The Bhakti Sect of Vallabhācārya. Munshiram Manoharlal. pp. 25–26.
  14. ^ Barz 1992, p. 26-27.
  15. ^ Barz 1992, p. 27.
  16. ^ a b c Barz 1992, p. 28-29.
  17. ^ Barz 1992, p. 29.
  18. ^ Edwin Francis Bryant (2007). Krishna: A Sourcebook. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 482. ISBN 978-0-19-803400-1.
  19. ^ Kincaid, C. (January 1933). "Review: Imperial Farmans by K. M. Jhaveri". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland (1): 131–132. doi:10.1017/S0035869X00072543. JSTOR 25194699. S2CID 163921774.(subscription required)
  20. ^ a b Barz 1992, p. 38.
  21. ^ Saha 2004, p. 111-112.
  22. ^ Barz 1992, p. 52.
  23. ^ a b c Barz 1992, p. 43-45.
  24. ^ Saha, Shandip (2004). Creating a Community of Grace: A History of the Puṣṭi Mārga in Northern and Western India (1493-1905) (Thesis). University of Ottawa. p. 107-108.
  25. ^ Saha 2004, p. 107-113.
  26. ^ a b Saha 2004, p. 113-117.
  27. ^ a b Barz 2018.
  28. ^ a b Saha 2004, p. 98-106.
  29. ^ Lochtefeld, James G (2002). The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism: N-Z. Rosen Publishing. pp. 539-540. ISBN 978-0823931804.
  30. ^ "Mahaprabhu Vallabhacharya | 14-04-1977 | Philcent #937 SG #846, MJ No. 720 | Stamps | Mintage World". www.mintageworld.com. Retrieved 20 January 2022.
  31. ^ "Postage Stamps:: Postage Stamps,Stamp issue calendar 2014, Paper postage, Commemorative and definitive stamps, Service Postage Stamps, Philately Offices, Philatelic Bureaux and counters, Mint stamps". postagestamps.gov.in. Retrieved 20 January 2022.

Bibliography edit

  • Sri Subodhini, first time English Translation, 25 Vols./ Delhi
  • Barz, Richard K. The Bhakti Sect of Vallabhacarya. Delhi: Thomson Press. 1976

External links edit

  • Works by or about Vallabha at Internet Archive
  • Vallabha at Encyclopædia Britannica
  • The Philosophy of Vallabha, Surendranath Dasgupta, 1940
  • Pushtipedia.com at Encyclopedia on Pushtimarga

vallabha, charya, mahaprabhu, 1479, 1531, also, known, mahaprabhuji, vishnuswami, acharya, indian, saint, philosopher, founded, krishna, centered, pushtimarg, sect, vaishnavism, braj, vraja, region, india, propounded, philosophy, Śuddhādvaita, personalborn27, . Vallabhacharya Mahaprabhu 1479 1531 CE also known as Vallabha Mahaprabhuji and Vishnuswami or Vallabha Acharya was an Indian saint and philosopher He founded the Krishna centered Pushtimarg sect of Vaishnavism in the Braj Vraja region of India 1 and propounded the philosophy of Suddhadvaita VallabhaPersonalBorn27 April 1479Champaran now in Raipur district Chhattisgarh India Died26 June 1531 aged 52 Banaras now in Uttar Pradesh India ReligionHinduismChildrenGopinatha and ViṭṭhalanathaOrderVedantaFounder ofPuṣṭimargaPhilosophySuddhadvaitaVallabha was born in a Telugu Tailang Brahmin family that was residing in Varanasi They escaped to Champaran of Chhattisgarh state while expecting a Muslim invasion in Varanasi during the late 15th century 2 Vallabha studied the Vedas Upanishads Puranas and Shaddarshana as a child and then traveled throughout the Indian subcontinent for over 20 years 2 He became one of the important leaders of the devotional Bhakti movement He won many philosophical scholarly debates against followers of Adi Shankara Ramanuja Madhvacharya and others 2 He rejected asceticism and monastic life suggested that through loving devotion to the deity Krishna any householder could achieve salvation an idea that became influential all over India held by his 84 Baithakjis places of worship in Uttar Pradesh Rajasthan Gujarat Maharashtra Tamil Nadu Andhra Pradesh Karnataka Kerala Uttaranchal Madhya Pradesh Orissa Goa Sindh and various other parts of Indian subcontinent 3 4 He is associated with the Vishnuswami Sampradaya 5 and is the prominent Jagadguru Acharya of Rudra Sampradaya out of the four traditional Vaishnava Sampradayas 6 He authored many texts including but not limited to the Anubhashya colloquially also called Brahmasutranubhashya his commentary on Brahma Sutra Shodash Granth or sixteen stotras tracts and several commentaries on the Bhagavata Purana Vallabha s writings and kirtan compositions focus on baby Krishna and his childhood pranks with Yashoda unconditional motherly love as well as a youthful Krishna s protection of the good divine grace and his victory over demons and evils all with allegory and symbolism 4 His legacy is best preserved with the acharyas of his Pushtimarg Vallabh Sampradaya also in the Braj region and particularly at Nathdwara and Dwarkadhish Temple in Mewar region of India are important Krishna pilgrimage center 4 He is regarded as an incarnation of Agni Vaishvanara 7 8 Contents 1 Life 1 1 Childhood 1 2 Education 1 3 First Pilgrimage 1 4 Reception of the Brahmasambandha mantra and installation of Sri Nathji 1 5 Personal life 1 6 Grand victory at Vijayanagara 1 7 Pilgrimages and Preaching Tours of India 1 8 Death 2 Works 2 1 Philosophy 3 See also 4 References 5 Bibliography 6 External linksLife editChildhood edit nbsp Birthplace of Vallabhacharya Prakatya Baithak ChamparanVallabha s family were Velanaṭa or Vellanaḍu Telugu Brahmaṇas who belonged to the Bhargava gotra and Taittiriya sakha of the Yajurveda Their ancestral village was Kaṅkaravaḍa on the southern bank of the Godavari river 9 According to devotional accounts Kr ṣṇa commanded his ancestor Yagnanarayana Bhatta that he would take birth in their family after completion of 100 Soma yajna s By the time of Yagnanarayana s descendant Lakṣmaṇa Bhaṭṭa and his wife Illammagaru who migrated to the holy town of Varaṇasi the family had completed 100 Somayajnas 1 10 11 12 The period surrounding Vallabhacharya s birth was a tumultuous one in Varaṇasi Bahlul Lodi sultan of Delhi was battling with Husain Shah sultan of Jaunpur and there was fear that Varaṇasi would be attacked Lakṣmaṇa Bhaṭṭa had to urgently move out of Varaṇasi with his pregnant wife According to the Srivallabhadigvijaya and other hagiographies due to terror and physical strain of the flight suffered by the mother there was a two month premature birth in the forests of Camparaṇya in the middle of the night As the child did not show signs of life the distressed parents placed Vallabha under a sami tree wrapped in a piece of cloth That night Kr ṣṇa appeared in their dreams to tell them he had taken birth as the child whom they had left under a tree mistaken to not be alive In the morning the parents rushed to the spot and were amazed to find their son alive and protected by a circle of divine fire The blessed mother extended her arms into the fire unscathed she received from the fire the divine baby and a voice announced in Sanskrit that the baby was the incarnation of the mouth of the supreme being According to other hagiographies such as Sri Nathaji Prakaṭya ki Varta Vallabha appeared in the Agnikuṇḍ in Mathura Most hagiographies date Vallabha s birth to 1535 Vikrama Era or 1478 1479 CE 1 12 Education edit Soon after Vallabha s birth his family moved back to Varaṇasi His education commenced at the age of eight and by the age of eleven had mastered Vedas Vedantas six Sastras and some Puraṇas with the Bhagavata being is favorite 12 13 First Pilgrimage edit Nearing the end of his life Lakṣmaṇa Bhaṭṭa decided to take his wife and 10 year old son along on a pilgrimage with him to holy sites of southern India They first stopped at the Vaiṣṇava shrine of Jagannatha in Puri in 1489 The local ruler was sponsoring a great philosophical debate where four questions were posed to scholars What is the foremost scripture Who is the foremost deity Which is the most effective mantra What is the easiest and best action to which Vallabha responded with the Bhagavad Gita Kr ṣṇa any of Kr ṣṇa s names and seva service to Kr ṣṇa whereupon Jagannatha wrote a sloka in support of his response and condemning the supporters of Advaita Vedanta or Mayavadis 14 In 1490 they reached the temple of Veṅkaṭesvara at Tirupati where Lakṣmaṇa Bhaṭṭa died and Illammagaru began to live with her brother in Vijayanagara 15 Reception of the Brahmasambandha mantra and installation of Sri Nathji edit nbsp Vallabhacharya discovers Shrinathji at Mount Govardhan In 1493 Vallabha had a dream where Kr ṣṇa ordered him to go to Govardhan Hill and establish proper service seva to his divine image svarupa which had appeared there years ago When he arrived in Gokul in 1494 Vallabha had a vision where Kr ṣṇa appeared before him and bestowed upon him the Brahmasambandha mantra which was to be used to clean the flaws of a human soul The next morning Vallabha administered the mantra to his companion Damodaradasa Harsani who became the first member of the Vallabha Sampradaya 12 16 When Vallabha came to Govardhan Hill he went to the house of Saḍḍupaṇḍe Saḍḍupaṇḍe had received a vision from Kr ṣṇa years earlier that told him a stone that had appeared on Govardhan Hill was his own svarupa and that he should give offerings to it The image was known as Devadamana and Vallabha announced that it was actually the svarupa of Sri Govardhananathaji shortened to Sri Nathji Vallabha built a small shrine on the hill for Sri Nathji and initiated an ascetic named Ramdas Cauhan to perform the regular worship 12 16 In 1499 a wealthy merchant from Ambala named Purṇamalla Khatri had a dream where Kr ṣṇa told him to build a temple for Sri Nathji However when the temple was only half built Purṇamalla had exhausted his finances and the temple would only be completed in 1520 12 16 Personal life edit Vallabha may have intended to remain a lifelong celibate brahmacari but during his second pilgrimage of India between 1501 and 1503 he had gone to Paṁḍḥarapura to view the god Viṭṭhala or Viṭhoba called Viṭṭhalanatha in sectarian literature There he was given an order by Viṭṭhala to marry Some sectarian sources assert this was because Viṭṭhala wanted to take birth as his son and others say it was to create a line of descendants to preserve and promote Vallabha s version of bhakti marga 12 17 Obeying this following his caste traditions and practices Vallabha married Mahalakṣmi sometime between 1502 and 1504 a Varaṇasi girl of his own caste who began living with him upon maturity c 1510 1512 18 19 20 Vallabha had two houses one at Aṛaila on the Yamuna River across Prayagraj and at Caraṇaṭa near Varaṇasi According to Saha the location of his home provided a central location which allowed him to access to preach and convert throughout northern and central India 21 22 His first son Gopinatha was born in 1512 at Aṛaila and according to sectarian tradition was the avatara of Balarama elder brother of Kr ṣṇa His second son Viṭṭhalanatha was born in 1516 at Caraṇaṭa and is considered the avatara of Viṭṭhala 12 20 Grand victory at Vijayanagara edit When Vallabha was living in his ancestral village of Kaṅkaravaḍa he heard of a philosophical debate or sastrartha being held in at the court of King Kr ṣṇadevaraya of Vijayanagara and that the Vaiṣṇava schools of thought were being beaten by Advaita Vedanta philosophers Vallabha immediately went to Vijayanagara to join the debate and entered the Vaiṣṇava camp led by Acarya Vyasatirtha of the Madhva school Vallabha through his erudition and debate skills triumphantly defeated the Advaita philosophers and was rewarded by Kr ṣṇadevaraya with large amounts of gold most of which he distributed among Brahmins 23 He was also offered the prestigious title of acarya from the Madhva Sampradaya and the Viṣṇusvami Sampradaya Vallabha chose to become acarya of the Viṣṇusvami school Very little is known of the Viṣṇusvami school s and by Vallabha s time its followers were few The majority view is that Vallabha chose to become acarya of that school in order to make his own doctrines more prestigious and that there is likely no real connection between the ideas of Viṣṇusvami and Vallabhacarya 23 According to sectarian literature this debate occurred shortly after Lakṣmaṇa Bhaṭṭa s death in 1490 however Kr ṣṇadevaraya only became king of Vijayanagara in 1509 which is when scholars believed the debate likely occurred historically 23 The debate is first mentioned in a mid eighteenth century text called the Caurasi Baiṭhak Caritra and is not mentioned in independent historical sources According to Saha this story is meant to portray the image of a victorious Vallabha winning the subcontinent for Kr ṣṇa 24 Pilgrimages and Preaching Tours of India edit Vallabha made three pilgrimages throughout India which are documented in later sectarian sources These pilgrimages are stated to have taken place between 1479 and 1530 although Saha doubts the accuracy of the dates At pilgrimage sites such as Dvarka Kannauj Puri Mathura Gokul and Govardhan Vallabha had theological debates and attracted followers and devotees He made extensive conversion campaigns in the Gangetic Plain and Gujarat where he attracted converts from various castes including Bhumihars Rajputs Gurjars Ahirs Kurmis and Vaniyas Bhatias Kanbis and Patidars respectively 25 Only scholarly theory for why Vallabha s theology was attractive to these groups was that of social mobility For agrarian castes particularly in Gujarat the emphasis on purity gave higher status For mercantile castes purity as well as the emphasis on restraint and frugality in daily life elevated their status while wealth could then be funnelled toward religiously meritorious seva to Kr ṣṇa 26 Another reason was that Vallabha promoted a houshoulder life affirming socially conservative view that appealed to castes that depended on social and political stability for their livliehoods notably in the context of splintering Muslim sultanates in India 26 Death edit In 1530 Vallabha took a vow of renunciation and withdrew to Hanuman Ghat on the Gaṅga river in Vaṇarasi After a month he summoned his sons Gopinatha and Viṭṭhalanatha and designated the 18 19 year old Gopinatha as his successor According to sectarian accounts he walked in the Gaṅga and vanished in a flash of light 27 Works editVallabhacharya composed many philosophical and devotional books during his lifetime which includes 27 Subhodini a partial commentary on the Bhagavata Puraṇa Aṇubhaṣya a partial commentary on the Brahmasutra of Badarayaṇa Tattvarthadipanibandha a text interpreting existing Hindu scriptures through Vallabha s philosophy of Suddhadvaita Tattvarthadipanibandhaprakasa a commentary on the Tattvarthadipanibandha Ṣoḍasagrantha sixteen treatises on important facets of Suddhadvaita and theology of the PuṣṭimargaPhilosophy edit Vallabha formulated the philosophy of Suddhadvaita in response to Saṅkara s Advaita Vedanta which he called Maryada Marga or Path of Limitations Vallabha asserted that religious disciplines that focused on Vedic sacrifices temple rituals puja meditation and yoga held limited value Additionally Vallabha rejected the concept of Maya stating that the world was a manifestation of the Supreme Absolute and could neither be tainted nor change 28 The school rejects the ascetic lifestyle and cherishes householder lifestyle wherein followers see themselves as participants and companions of Krishna and view their daily lives as an ongoing raslila 29 According to Vallabha Brahman consists of existence consciousness and bliss and when manifested completely as Kr ṣṇa himself The purpose of this tradition is to perform seva selfless service out of love for Kr ṣṇa According to Vallabhacharya through single minded religiosity a devotee would achieve awareness that there is nothing in the world that is not Kr ṣṇa 28 Postage StampOn 14 April 1977 the Indian postal department Government of India issued in his honor a commemorative stamp bearing the image of Vallabhacharya 30 31 citation needed See also editBhagavata Vyasa Champaran Chhattisgarh Krishna Shrinathji Para Brahman Pushtimarg Ramanuja Madhvacharya Nimbarka Shuddhadvaita Brahma SutrasReferences edit a b c Shah J G 1969 Shri Vallabhacharya His Philosophy and Religion Pushtimargiya Pustakalaya a b c Constance Jones James D Ryan 2006 Encyclopedia of Hinduism Infobase pp 475 476 ISBN 978 0 8160 7564 5 List of 84 Baithakjis a b c Catherine B Asher Cynthia Talbot 2006 India Before Europe Cambridge University Press pp 111 112 ISBN 978 0 521 80904 7 Beck Guy L 2005 Krishna as Loving Husband of God Alternative Krishnas Regional and Vernacular Variations on a Hindu Deity SUNY Press ISBN 978 0 7914 6415 1 Retrieved 12 April 2008 Sharma V P 1998 The Sadhus and Indian Civilisation Anmol Publications Pvt Ltd Farquhar John Nicol 1984 An outline of the Religious Literature of India Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Pvt Ltd ISBN 978 8 1208 2086 9 Retrieved 19 May 2020 Nathdwara temple Nathdwara temple Retrieved 19 May 2020 Barz 1992 p 23 Prasoon Shrikant 2009 Indian Saints amp Sages Pustak Mahal ISBN 9788122310627 Jones Constance Ryan James D 2006 Encyclopedia of Hinduism Infobase Publishing p 475 ISBN 978 0 8160 7564 5 a b c d e f g h Barz Richard 2018 Vallabha In Jacobsen Knut A Basu Helene Malinar Angelika Narayanan Vasudha eds Brill s Encyclopedia of Hinduism Online Brill Barz Richard 1992 The Bhakti Sect of Vallabhacarya Munshiram Manoharlal pp 25 26 Barz 1992 p 26 27 Barz 1992 p 27 a b c Barz 1992 p 28 29 Barz 1992 p 29 Edwin Francis Bryant 2007 Krishna A Sourcebook New York Oxford University Press p 482 ISBN 978 0 19 803400 1 Kincaid C January 1933 Review Imperial Farmans by K M Jhaveri Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 1 131 132 doi 10 1017 S0035869X00072543 JSTOR 25194699 S2CID 163921774 subscription required a b Barz 1992 p 38 Saha 2004 p 111 112 Barz 1992 p 52 a b c Barz 1992 p 43 45 Saha Shandip 2004 Creating a Community of Grace A History of the Puṣṭi Marga in Northern and Western India 1493 1905 Thesis University of Ottawa p 107 108 Saha 2004 p 107 113 a b Saha 2004 p 113 117 a b Barz 2018 a b Saha 2004 p 98 106 Lochtefeld James G 2002 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism N Z Rosen Publishing pp 539 540 ISBN 978 0823931804 Mahaprabhu Vallabhacharya 14 04 1977 Philcent 937 SG 846 MJ No 720 Stamps Mintage World www mintageworld com Retrieved 20 January 2022 Postage Stamps Postage Stamps Stamp issue calendar 2014 Paper postage Commemorative and definitive stamps Service Postage Stamps Philately Offices Philatelic Bureaux and counters Mint stamps postagestamps gov in Retrieved 20 January 2022 Bibliography editSri Subodhini first time English Translation 25 Vols Delhi Barz Richard K The Bhakti Sect of Vallabhacarya Delhi Thomson Press 1976External links editWorks by or about Vallabha at Internet Archive Vallabha at Encyclopaedia Britannica The Philosophy of Vallabha Surendranath Dasgupta 1940 Pushtipedia com at Encyclopedia on Pushtimarga Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vallabha amp oldid 1187491549, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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