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Varāhamihira

Varāhamihira (6th century CE, possibly c. 505 – c. 587), also called Varāha or Mihira, was an astrologer-astronomer who lived in or around Ujjain in present-day Madhya Pradesh, India.

Varāhamihira
Bornpossibly 505 CE (disputed; see Date section)
possibly Kapitthaka (identified with Kayatha or Sankissa)
Diedpossibly 587 CE (disputed; see Date section)
Occupationastrologer-astronomer
Notable worksPancha-siddhantika, Brhat-samhita, Brihajjataka

Date edit

Unlike other prominent ancient Indian astronomers, Varāhamihira does not mention his date.[1] However, based on hints in his works, modern scholars date him to the 6th century CE; possibly, he also lived during the last years of the 5th century.[2]

In his Pancha-siddhantika, Varāhamihira refers to the year 427 of the Shaka-kala (also Shakendra-kala or Shaka-bhupa-kala). Identifying this calendar era with the Shaka era places Varāhamihira in the 505 CE. Alternative theories identify this calendar era with other eras, placing him before the 5th century CE. However, these theories are inaccurate, as Varāhamihira must have lived after Aryabhata (born 476 CE), whose work he refers to. The particulars of the date mentioned by Varāhamihira - Shukla pratipada of the Chaitra month of the Shaka year 427 - align accurately with 20-21 March 505 CE. Al-Biruni also places Varāhamihira in 505 CE.[3]

In accordance with the contemporary tradition, 505 CE was most probably the year in which Varāhamihira composed Pancha-Siddhantaka or began planning it.[1] However, some scholars believe that it was the year of Varāhamihira's birth or of another important event in his life. This is because according to Amaraja, the author of a commentary on Brahmagupta's Khanda-khadyaka, Varāhamihira died in 587 CE (Shaka year 509). If Varāhamihira wrote his work in 505 CE even at the young age of 25, he must have been over 105 years old at the time of his death, which seems exceptionally high to these scholars.[4] Consequently, these scholars consider date Varāhamihira's lifespan to 505-587 CE.[5] Other scholars doubt the accuracy of Amaraja's statement, since he lived a thousand years after Varāhamihira.[4]

According to a historically inaccurate tradition, Varāhamihira was associated with the first century BCE legendary emperor Vikramaditya.[6][7] This tradition is based on Jyotirvid-abharana, a work attributed to Kalidasa, which states that Varāhamihira (along with Kalidasa) was one of the navaratnas ("nine gems") at Vikramaditya's court. However, this text is a literary forgery, and is dated variously from 12th-18th century.[1][8] Varāhamihira definitely did not live in the same century as some of the purported "Navaratnas", such as the much older Kalidasa.[9]

Early life edit

 
1399 CE manuscript of the Brihajjataka
 
1279 CE manuscript of the Brhat-samhita

Much of the undisputed information about the life of Varāhamihira comes from a stanza in his Brhaj-jataka. According to this stanza, he was a resident of Avanti, was a son of Aditya-dasa, and studied at Kapitthaka through the boon of the sun god.[10]

Ancestry edit

Varāhamihira's father Aditya-dasa likely trained him in jyotisha (Indian astrology and astronomy), as suggested by the Brhaj-jataka stanza and the opening stanza of Pancha-siddhantika.[10]

Varāhamihira's commentator Utpala calls him "Magadha-dvija". According to one interpretation, this means that Varāhamihira was a Brahmin (dvija), whose ancestors belonged to the Magadha region.[11][12]

According to another theory, the word "Magadha" in this context refers to the sun-worshipping Maga cult that Varāhamihira was a part of. In his Brhat-samhita, Varāhamihira mentions that the Magas were the only people suitable for consecrating an image of the Sun god, just like Bhagavatas for Vishnu, the ash-bearing Brahmanas (Pashupatas) for Shambhu, those well-versed in the mandala-krama worship for the mother goddess, the Brahmanas for Brahman, the Shakyas for the Buddha, and the Digambaras (nagnas) for Jina. The Magas, as they came to be known in India, originated from the Magi priests of the Achaemenid Empire. Historian Ajay Mitra Shastri cites a Bhavishya Purana passage according to which the term "Magadha" is a synonym of "Maga" and refers to "those who contemplate on the Maga". According to Shastri, Utpala has used the word "Magadha" to denote the Magas, who had been accepted as Shaka-dvipi (Maga) Brahmins in the Indian society.[13]

Shastri theorizes that "Varaha-mihira" may be a Sanskritized form of the Iranian name "Varaza-Mihr", and may refer to a legend mentioned in the Mihr Yasht of the Avesta. According to this legend, the god Verethraghna, in the form of a boar (varaza), precedes Mihr in his march. Shastri notes that the 5th century Sassanian monarch Bahram V bore the name Mihrvaraza, which is quite similar to Varahamihra. Academic J.E. Sanjana suggests that Varāhamihira was descended from an Iranian Magi priest.[14]

Some scholars, such as M.T. Patwardhan and A.N. Upadhye, have identified Varāhamihira with Bazurjmehr, mentioned in Firishta's writings as a minister of the Sasanian king Khusraw Nushirwan (r. 531-578). However, A.M. Shastri dismisses this theory as unconvincing.[15]

There are several historically inaccurate legends about the ancestry of Varāhamihira:

  • Jain writers Merutunga (14th century) and Rajashekhara-Suri claim that his original name was Varaha, and he was a brother of the Jain patriarch Bhadrabahu. He gained knowledge because of a favour by the Sun, because of which the suffix "Mihira" ("Sun") was added to his name.[16] Jain authors seem to have fabricated this story to prove the pre-eminence of the Jain astrology over the Brahmanical astrology.[17]
  • Another 20th century legend, purportedly based on "some old Gujarati text" claims that Aditya-dasa's wife was called Satya-vati alias Indu-mati: Varāhamihira was born to them in their fifties by the boon of the Sun. He was originally known as Mihira, and was given the prefix "Varaha" by King Vikramaditya when he correctly predicted that a boar (varaha in Sanskrit) would kill the king's son.[18]
  • A tradition associates Varāhamihira with Berachampa in West Bengal, where a mound called "Varāhamihira's house" is located. This seems to be the result of an attempt to associate the locality with a famous figure. A legend from the Bengal region claims that Varaha and Mihira were a father-son duo at Vikramaditya's court, and the poet Khana was Mihira's wife. This legend is of no historical value.[19] "Varaha" and "Mihira" were alternative names for the same person - Varāhamihira, as attested by the later astronomical works.[10]
  • Another legend claims that the Mimamsa teacher Shabara-svamin had four wives, one from each varna, and Varāhamihira was his son from his Brahmin wife. Some scholars, such as S.K. Dikshit, have theorized that Aditya-dasa (or Aditya-deva) was another name of Shabara-svamin, but no historical evidence supports this tradition.[17]

Birthplace edit

Kapitthaka, where Varāhamihira studied, was probably his birthplace.[12][10] While "Kapitthaka" is the most popular reading the place's name, several variants of this name appear in various manuscripts, including Kampilyaka,[a] Kapilaka, Kapishthala, and Kapishkala.[10] Utpala suggests that this village had a sun temple. According to one theory, Kapitthaka is the modern Kayatha, an archaeological site near Ujjain. Statues of the sun deity Surya (whom Varāhamihira worshipped) dated 600-900 CE have been found there, and kapittha trees are abundant in and around Kayatha. However, no historical source suggests that Kapitthaka was another name for Kayatha. According to another theory, Kapitthaka is same as Sankissa (ancient Sankashya) in present-day Uttar Pradesh: according to the 7th-century Chinese traveler Xuanzang, this town was also known as Kah-pi-t'a. Historian Ajay Mitra Shastri notes that Kah-pi-t'a is phonetically similar to Kapittha or Kapitthaka.[21]

Based on the term "Magadha-dvija" (see above), Sudhakara Dvivedi suggests that Varāhamihira was born and brought up in Magadha, and later migrated to Ujjain.[22] Ajay Mitra Shastri disputes this, noting that Utpala describes him as "Avantikacharya" (Acharya of Avanti) and "Madgadha-dvija": these two terms cannot be reconciled if "Magadha-dvija" is interpreted as "Dvija (Brahmana) of Magadha"; instead "Magadha" here means Maga, as attested by the Bhavishya Purana.[11]

Residence edit

Besides the above-mentioned stanza, Varāhamihira's association with Avanti is confirmed by other evidence: in Pancha-siddhantika, he calls himself Avantyaka ("of Avanti"), and the later commentators such as Utpala and Mahidhara describe him as Avantikacharya ("acharya of Avanti").[10] Utpala also describes Varāhamihira's son Prthu-yashas as Avantikacharya, in his commentary on Shat-panchashika.[23]

Historian Ajay Mitra Shastri, relying on Utpala, believes that "Avanti" here refers to the city of Ujjayini in the Avanti region of central India.[10] Scholar Dániel Balogh, however, notes that Avanti here may refer to the city of Ujjayini or the Avanti region in general: there is no concrete evidence that Varāhamihira lived in the city; he may have lived elsewhere in Avanti.[24]

Royal patron edit

Varāhamihira likely lived in the Aulikara kingdom, as the Aulikaras ruled Avanti in the 6th century CE.[25][26] Varāhamihira's Brhat-samhita states that on the topic of omens (shakuna), one of the works he consulted was that of Dravya-vardhana, the king of Avanti.[27] Dravya-vardhana likely belonged to the Aulikara dynasty, several of whose members bore names ending in -vardhana.[25]

Historian Ajay Mitra Shastri notes that Dravya-vardhana is the only person for whom Varāhamihira employs the honorific Shri, although he mentions several other notable people. Moreover, he mentions Dravya-vardhana's work before he mentions reputed authorities such as the Saptarishis and Garga. According to Shastri, this, combined with the fact that both Dravya-vardhana and Varāhamihira lived in Avanti, suggests that Dravya-vardhana was the royal patron of Varāhamihira.[27] Shastri theorizes that Dravya-vardhana was a successor of Yashodharman alias Vishnu-vardhana, who may have also been a patron of Varāhamihira.[28]

Some other historians identify Dravya-vardhana with the earlier Aulikara ruler Drapa-vardhana. Shastri disputes this, arguing that Varāhamihira describes Dravya-vardhana was a maharajadhiraja (emperor), while the Rīsthal inscription describes Drapa-vardhana as a senapati (commander). Balogh disagrees with Shastri, noting that Varāhamihira actually uses the term nrpo maharajadhiraja-kah (nrpa or ruler "connected to the emperor") for the king, which Shastri has misunderstood as maharajadhirajah (emperor). Only one manuscript reads maharajadhirajah, which can be discarded as it doesn't fit the metre; three others have maharajdhiraja-jah. Thus, the actual title of Drapa-vardhana was nrpa, which is much closer to senapati in status. Utpala also interprets the term maharajadhiraja-kah to mean "born in the dynasty of the (or an) emperor".[29] Hans Bakker interprets the term to maharajadhiraja-kah as a governor installed at Ujjayini by the contemporary Gupta emperor.[26] Balogh believes that Dravya-vardhana was probably same as Drapa-vardhana: "Dravya" may be a variant arising from a mistake in a medieval manuscript, which is the source of later manuscripts.[26]

Balogh disputes Shastri's assertion that Varāhamihira shows a particularly reverential attitude to the king, and even if he did, this is no evidence that the two were contemporaries. Varāhamihira consulted the king's work instead of the original work of Bharadvaja that it was based on; according to Balogh, this actually makes it more likely that the king lived at a time earlier than Varāhamihira, who did not have access to the older work of Bharadvaja.[30]

According to Balogh, Varāhamihira likely lived during the reign of the Aulikara kings Prakasha-dharman, Yashodharman, or an unknown successor of Yashodharman. However, unlike Shastri, Balogh believes that Varāhamihira did not have a royal patron.[26]

Religion edit

Several scholars theorize that Varahamihra came from a Brahminized family of the sun-worshipping Magi priests (see see Ancestry above).[31][13] He was a worshipper of the sun god Savitru, and stated that he had received all his knowledge by the grace of this god.[32] For example, in Brhaj-jataka, he states that he was able to compose the text because of a boon by the Sun.[28] While he mentions other deities, he devotes a much larger number of verses to the Sun.[11] His commentator Utpala credits his sharp intellect to a boon by the Sun.[28] Some later writers describe him as an incarnation of the Sun god.[18] Utpala, for example, decares that the Sun descended on the earth in form of Varāhamihira to save the jyotisha-shastra from destruction.[33] The Subhashita-ratna-kosha quotes stanzas that praise Varāhamihira as an incarnation of Vishnu and the Sun, presumably because of two parts of his name (varaha referring to an avatar of Vishnu, and mihira meaning sun).[23]

Sun worship seems to have been his family's religion, as his father Aditya-dasa's name literally means "slave (or servant) of the Sun".[28][34] Kutuhula-manjari, a later text, suggests that Varāhamihira was born to Aditya-dasa by the blessings of the Sun. Varāhamihira's son Prthu-yashas also invokes the Sun in the opening stanza of his work Shatpanchashikha.[28]

Varāhamihira was well-versed with the Vedic tradition.[35] He recommends the performance of several ancient Hindu rituals such as Punyaham and chanting of Vedic hymns.[36]

Varāhamihira praises Vishnu in the chapters 42 and 104 of Brhat-samhita, leading A.N.S. Aiyangar and K.V.R Aiyangar to speculate that he came in contact with the Shrivaishnava saints (Alvars); however, A.M. Shastri dismisses this theory, describing the praise for Vishnu as an example of religious eclecticism.[37]

In Brhat-samhita, Varahamihira discusses the iconography of several Brahmanical deities, including Vishnu, Baladeva, Ekanamsha, Shamba, Pradyumna, consorts of Shamba and Pradyumna, Brahma, Skanda, Indra, Shiva, Surya, the divine mothers (Matrikas), Revanta, Yama, Varuna, and Kubera.[38] These were presumably the popular gods worshipped during his period. He also describes the iconography of two non-Brahmanical faiths, that of the Buddha and the Jinas. He appears to have been religiously liberal, as he reveres the Buddha as "the father of the world" and devotes an entire stanza to Buddha's iconology (compared to shorter descriptions of several Brahmanical deities).[39] A verse in the Brhat-samhita describes the iconography of Ganesha, but this verse appears only in one or two manuscripts, and is likely a later interpolation. Similarly, a Tikanika-yatra verse in which the author reveres Ganesha (among other deities), is likely spurious; this verse appears in only one manuscript.[40]

Works edit

Varāhamihira is credited with writing several authoritative texts on astronomy and astrology. He was also known for his poetic skills, and the 11th-century writer Kshemendra describes him as a great poet.[2]

He apparently wrote a set of two works - detailed and short - in the following areas:[41]

Area Detailed work Short work
Mathematical astronomy (tantra) Pancha-siddhantika Now lost, known from Utpala's commentary
Horoscopy (hora): nativity Brhaj-jataka Laghu-jataka
Horoscopy: marriage Brhad-vivaha-patala Svalpa-vivaha-patala
Horoscopy: journeys Brhad-yatra and Yoga-yatra Svalpa-yatra
General astrology (samhita) Brhat-samhita Samasa-samhita

The chronological order of some of these works can be determined based on the internal evidence and Utpala's commentary. In order or earliest to latest, these works are:[42]

  • Pancha-siddhantika
  • Brhaj-jataka
  • Brhad-yatra
  • Yoga-yatra (according to Utpala, Varaha-mihira wrote this because he was dissatisfied with Brhad-yatra)
  • Brhad-vivaha-patala
  • Brhat-samhita

Laghu-jataka states that it was written after Brhaj-jataka, and Utpala's commentary states that it was written after the abridged version of Pancha-siddhantika. However, its order with respect to the other works is not certain.[42]

Later authors also mention or quote from some other works composed by Varaha-mihira. Manuscripts of some other works attributed to Varaha-mihira exist, but these attributions are of doubtful nature.[42]

Influences edit

The Romaka Siddhanta ("The Doctrine of the Romans") and the Paulisa Siddhanta were two works of Western origin which influenced Varāhamihira's thought. The Pauliṣa Siddhānta is often mistakenly thought to be a single work and attributed to Paul of Alexandria (c. 378 CE).[43] However, this notion has been rejected by other scholars in the field, notably by David Pingree who stated that "...the identification of Paulus Alexandrinus with the author of the Pauliṣa Siddhānta is totally false".[44] A number of his writings share similarities with the earlier texts like Vedanga Jyotisha.[45]

Some scholars consider Varāhamihira to be the strong candidate for the one who understood and introduced the zodiac signs, predictive calculations for auspicious ceremonies and astrological computations in India.[46][47][48]

Varāhamihira's works contain 35 Sanskritized Greek astronomical terms, and he exhibits a good understanding of the Greek astronomy.[49] He praised the Greeks (Yavanas) for being "well trained in the sciences", though impure in ritual order.[50]

Legacy edit

Varāhamihira gained reputation as the most eminent writer on jyotisha after his death, and his works superseded nearly all the earlier Indian texts in this area. Several later Indian astrologer-astronomers speak highly of him, and acknowledge his works among their main sources.[51] The 11th-century writer Al-Biruni also greatly admires him, describing him as an excellent astronomer.[52]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Sudhakara Dvivedi, following the reading "Kampilyaka", identified Varahamihira's birthplace as present-day Kalpi in Uttar Pradesh. However, this identification is incorrect: the ancient name of Kalpi was Kalapriya, not Kampilyaka.[20]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c A.M. Shastri 1991, p. 3.
  2. ^ a b A.M. Shastri 1991, p. 1.
  3. ^ A.M. Shastri 1991, pp. 3–4.
  4. ^ a b A.M. Shastri 1991, p. 4.
  5. ^ Evans, Brian (24 February 2014). The Development of Mathematics Throughout the Centuries: A Brief History in a Cultural Context. John Wiley & Sons. p. 61. ISBN 978-1118853979. Varāhamihira, a mathematician born around 505 CE and died 587 CE, who was also known for innovation with Pascal's triangle.
  6. ^ History of Indian Literature. Motilal Banarsidass Publications. 2008. p. 46.
  7. ^ Gopal, Ram (1984). Kālidāsa: His Art and Culture. Concept Publishing Company. p. 15.
  8. ^ M. Srinivasachariar (1974). History of Classical Sanskrit Literature. Motilal Banarsidass. pp. 94–111. ISBN 9788120802841.
  9. ^ Winternitz, Moriz (1985). History of Indian Literature. Motilal Banarsidass. pp. 45–47. ISBN 978-81-208-0056-4.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g A.M. Shastri 1991, p. 5.
  11. ^ a b c A.M. Shastri 1991, p. 10.
  12. ^ a b T.K Puttaswamy (2012). Mathematical Achievements of Pre-modern Indian Mathematicians. p. 141. ISBN 9780123979131.
  13. ^ a b A.M. Shastri 1991, pp. 10–11.
  14. ^ A.M. Shastri 1991, p. 13.
  15. ^ A.M. Shastri 1991, pp. 17–18.
  16. ^ A.M. Shastri 1991, pp. 8–9.
  17. ^ a b A.M. Shastri 1991, p. 17.
  18. ^ a b A.M. Shastri 1991, p. 9.
  19. ^ A.M. Shastri 1991, p. 248.
  20. ^ A.M. Shastri 1969, p. 15.
  21. ^ A.M. Shastri 1991, p. 6.
  22. ^ A.M. Shastri 1991, p. 27.
  23. ^ a b A.M. Shastri 1991, p. 24.
  24. ^ Dániel Balogh 2019, p. 142-143.
  25. ^ a b A.M. Shastri 1991, p. 51.
  26. ^ a b c d Dániel Balogh 2019, p. 143.
  27. ^ a b A.M. Shastri 1991, pp. 43–45.
  28. ^ a b c d e A.M. Shastri 1991, p. 8.
  29. ^ Dániel Balogh 2019, pp. 141–142.
  30. ^ Dániel Balogh 2019, p. 142.
  31. ^ Abraham Eraly (2014). "Pearls and Pebbles". The First Spring Part 2: Culture in the Golden Age of India. Penguin. ISBN 9789351186465. He belonged, as his name indicates, to a Brahminized family of the Magi, sun-worshipping Zoroastrian priests, and he himself came to be regarded in later times as an incarnation of the sun god.
  32. ^ B. Suryanarain Rao, ed. (1986). Sree Varaha Mihira's Brihat Jataka. Motilal Banarsidass. p. 612. ISBN 9788120813953.
  33. ^ A.M. Shastri 1969, p. 1.
  34. ^ M.R. Bhatt 1996, p. 572.
  35. ^ M.R. Bhatt 1996, p. 638.
  36. ^ M.R. Bhatt 1996, p. 570.
  37. ^ A.M. Shastri 1969, p. 21.
  38. ^ A.M. Shastri 1991, pp. 100–120.
  39. ^ A.M. Shastri 1991, pp. 120–121.
  40. ^ A.M. Shastri 1991, p. 121.
  41. ^ A.M. Shastri 1991, pp. 19–20.
  42. ^ a b c A.M. Shastri 1991, p. 20.
  43. ^ McEvilley, Thomas (November 2001). The Shape of Ancient Thought: Comparative Studies in Greek and Indian Philosophies. Allworth Press. p. 385. ISBN 978-1-58115-203-6.
  44. ^ Pingree, David (1978). The Yavanajātaka of Sphujidhvaja. Harvard Oriental Series. Vol. 2. pp. 437–438.
    Pingree, David (1969). The Later Pauliśa Siddhānta. Centaurus 14. pp. 172–241.
  45. ^ Velandai Gopala Aiyer. The chronology of ancient India: beginning of the Sat Yuga, Dwaper, Treta, and Kali Yuga with date of Mahabharata. Sanjay Prakashan. p. 63.
  46. ^ Winternitz, Moriz (1985). History of Indian Literature. Motilal Banarsidass. pp. 685–697. ISBN 978-81-208-0056-4.
  47. ^ Pingree, David (1963). "Astronomy and Astrology in India and Iran". Isis. University of Chicago Press. 54 (2): 229–246. doi:10.1086/349703. JSTOR 228540. S2CID 128083594.
  48. ^ Sarma, K. V. (2008). "Varahamihira". In Helaine Selin (ed.). Encyclopaedia of the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine in Non-Western Cultures. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands. pp. 2184–2185. doi:10.1007/978-1-4020-4425-0_9604. ISBN 978-1-4020-4559-2.
  49. ^ A.M. Shastri 1991, p. 18.
  50. ^ Chaudhuri, Kirti Narayan (1990). Asia Before Europe Economy and Civilisation of the Indian Ocean from the Rise of Islam to 1750. Cambridge University Press. p. 54. ISBN 0521316812.
  51. ^ A.M. Shastri 1969, pp. 1–3.
  52. ^ A.M. Shastri 1969, p. 4.

Bibliography edit

  • A.M. Shastri (1991). Varāhamihira and His Times. Kusumanjali. OCLC 28644897.
  • A.M. Shastri (1969). India as Seen in the Bṛhatsaṁhitā of Varāhamihira. Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 9780896842212.
  • Dániel Balogh (2019). Inscriptions of the Aulikaras and Their Associates. De Gruyter. ISBN 9783110649789.
  • M. Ramakrishna Bhat, ed. (1996) [1982]. Brhat Samhita of Varahamihira (Second ed.). Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 9788120810600.

External links edit

  • The Brihat-samhita; complete translation by N. Chidambaram Iyer Online edition with glossary
  • Pancasiddhantika, Brihat Jataka, Brihat Samhita and Hora Shastra Various editions in English and Sanskrit. (PDF)
  • The Brihat Jataka (1905) (PDF) – archived from Wayback Machine

varāhamihira, century, possibly, also, called, varāha, mihira, astrologer, astronomer, lived, around, ujjain, present, madhya, pradesh, india, bornpossibly, disputed, date, section, possibly, kapitthaka, identified, with, kayatha, sankissa, diedpossibly, dispu. Varahamihira 6th century CE possibly c 505 c 587 also called Varaha or Mihira was an astrologer astronomer who lived in or around Ujjain in present day Madhya Pradesh India VarahamihiraBornpossibly 505 CE disputed see Date section possibly Kapitthaka identified with Kayatha or Sankissa Diedpossibly 587 CE disputed see Date section Occupationastrologer astronomerNotable worksPancha siddhantika Brhat samhita Brihajjataka Contents 1 Date 2 Early life 2 1 Ancestry 2 2 Birthplace 3 Residence 3 1 Royal patron 4 Religion 5 Works 6 Influences 7 Legacy 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Bibliography 11 External linksDate editUnlike other prominent ancient Indian astronomers Varahamihira does not mention his date 1 However based on hints in his works modern scholars date him to the 6th century CE possibly he also lived during the last years of the 5th century 2 In his Pancha siddhantika Varahamihira refers to the year 427 of the Shaka kala also Shakendra kala or Shaka bhupa kala Identifying this calendar era with the Shaka era places Varahamihira in the 505 CE Alternative theories identify this calendar era with other eras placing him before the 5th century CE However these theories are inaccurate as Varahamihira must have lived after Aryabhata born 476 CE whose work he refers to The particulars of the date mentioned by Varahamihira Shukla pratipada of the Chaitra month of the Shaka year 427 align accurately with 20 21 March 505 CE Al Biruni also places Varahamihira in 505 CE 3 In accordance with the contemporary tradition 505 CE was most probably the year in which Varahamihira composed Pancha Siddhantaka or began planning it 1 However some scholars believe that it was the year of Varahamihira s birth or of another important event in his life This is because according to Amaraja the author of a commentary on Brahmagupta s Khanda khadyaka Varahamihira died in 587 CE Shaka year 509 If Varahamihira wrote his work in 505 CE even at the young age of 25 he must have been over 105 years old at the time of his death which seems exceptionally high to these scholars 4 Consequently these scholars consider date Varahamihira s lifespan to 505 587 CE 5 Other scholars doubt the accuracy of Amaraja s statement since he lived a thousand years after Varahamihira 4 According to a historically inaccurate tradition Varahamihira was associated with the first century BCE legendary emperor Vikramaditya 6 7 This tradition is based on Jyotirvid abharana a work attributed to Kalidasa which states that Varahamihira along with Kalidasa was one of the navaratnas nine gems at Vikramaditya s court However this text is a literary forgery and is dated variously from 12th 18th century 1 8 Varahamihira definitely did not live in the same century as some of the purported Navaratnas such as the much older Kalidasa 9 Early life edit nbsp 1399 CE manuscript of the Brihajjataka nbsp 1279 CE manuscript of the Brhat samhitaMuch of the undisputed information about the life of Varahamihira comes from a stanza in his Brhaj jataka According to this stanza he was a resident of Avanti was a son of Aditya dasa and studied at Kapitthaka through the boon of the sun god 10 Ancestry edit Varahamihira s father Aditya dasa likely trained him in jyotisha Indian astrology and astronomy as suggested by the Brhaj jataka stanza and the opening stanza of Pancha siddhantika 10 Varahamihira s commentator Utpala calls him Magadha dvija According to one interpretation this means that Varahamihira was a Brahmin dvija whose ancestors belonged to the Magadha region 11 12 According to another theory the word Magadha in this context refers to the sun worshipping Maga cult that Varahamihira was a part of In his Brhat samhita Varahamihira mentions that the Magas were the only people suitable for consecrating an image of the Sun god just like Bhagavatas for Vishnu the ash bearing Brahmanas Pashupatas for Shambhu those well versed in the mandala krama worship for the mother goddess the Brahmanas for Brahman the Shakyas for the Buddha and the Digambaras nagnas for Jina The Magas as they came to be known in India originated from the Magi priests of the Achaemenid Empire Historian Ajay Mitra Shastri cites a Bhavishya Purana passage according to which the term Magadha is a synonym of Maga and refers to those who contemplate on the Maga According to Shastri Utpala has used the word Magadha to denote the Magas who had been accepted as Shaka dvipi Maga Brahmins in the Indian society 13 Shastri theorizes that Varaha mihira may be a Sanskritized form of the Iranian name Varaza Mihr and may refer to a legend mentioned in the Mihr Yasht of the Avesta According to this legend the god Verethraghna in the form of a boar varaza precedes Mihr in his march Shastri notes that the 5th century Sassanian monarch Bahram V bore the name Mihrvaraza which is quite similar to Varahamihra Academic J E Sanjana suggests that Varahamihira was descended from an Iranian Magi priest 14 Some scholars such as M T Patwardhan and A N Upadhye have identified Varahamihira with Bazurjmehr mentioned in Firishta s writings as a minister of the Sasanian king Khusraw Nushirwan r 531 578 However A M Shastri dismisses this theory as unconvincing 15 There are several historically inaccurate legends about the ancestry of Varahamihira Jain writers Merutunga 14th century and Rajashekhara Suri claim that his original name was Varaha and he was a brother of the Jain patriarch Bhadrabahu He gained knowledge because of a favour by the Sun because of which the suffix Mihira Sun was added to his name 16 Jain authors seem to have fabricated this story to prove the pre eminence of the Jain astrology over the Brahmanical astrology 17 Another 20th century legend purportedly based on some old Gujarati text claims that Aditya dasa s wife was called Satya vati alias Indu mati Varahamihira was born to them in their fifties by the boon of the Sun He was originally known as Mihira and was given the prefix Varaha by King Vikramaditya when he correctly predicted that a boar varaha in Sanskrit would kill the king s son 18 A tradition associates Varahamihira with Berachampa in West Bengal where a mound called Varahamihira s house is located This seems to be the result of an attempt to associate the locality with a famous figure A legend from the Bengal region claims that Varaha and Mihira were a father son duo at Vikramaditya s court and the poet Khana was Mihira s wife This legend is of no historical value 19 Varaha and Mihira were alternative names for the same person Varahamihira as attested by the later astronomical works 10 Another legend claims that the Mimamsa teacher Shabara svamin had four wives one from each varna and Varahamihira was his son from his Brahmin wife Some scholars such as S K Dikshit have theorized that Aditya dasa or Aditya deva was another name of Shabara svamin but no historical evidence supports this tradition 17 Birthplace edit Kapitthaka where Varahamihira studied was probably his birthplace 12 10 While Kapitthaka is the most popular reading the place s name several variants of this name appear in various manuscripts including Kampilyaka a Kapilaka Kapishthala and Kapishkala 10 Utpala suggests that this village had a sun temple According to one theory Kapitthaka is the modern Kayatha an archaeological site near Ujjain Statues of the sun deity Surya whom Varahamihira worshipped dated 600 900 CE have been found there and kapittha trees are abundant in and around Kayatha However no historical source suggests that Kapitthaka was another name for Kayatha According to another theory Kapitthaka is same as Sankissa ancient Sankashya in present day Uttar Pradesh according to the 7th century Chinese traveler Xuanzang this town was also known as Kah pi t a Historian Ajay Mitra Shastri notes that Kah pi t a is phonetically similar to Kapittha or Kapitthaka 21 Based on the term Magadha dvija see above Sudhakara Dvivedi suggests that Varahamihira was born and brought up in Magadha and later migrated to Ujjain 22 Ajay Mitra Shastri disputes this noting that Utpala describes him as Avantikacharya Acharya of Avanti and Madgadha dvija these two terms cannot be reconciled if Magadha dvija is interpreted as Dvija Brahmana of Magadha instead Magadha here means Maga as attested by the Bhavishya Purana 11 Residence editBesides the above mentioned stanza Varahamihira s association with Avanti is confirmed by other evidence in Pancha siddhantika he calls himself Avantyaka of Avanti and the later commentators such as Utpala and Mahidhara describe him as Avantikacharya acharya of Avanti 10 Utpala also describes Varahamihira s son Prthu yashas as Avantikacharya in his commentary on Shat panchashika 23 Historian Ajay Mitra Shastri relying on Utpala believes that Avanti here refers to the city of Ujjayini in the Avanti region of central India 10 Scholar Daniel Balogh however notes that Avanti here may refer to the city of Ujjayini or the Avanti region in general there is no concrete evidence that Varahamihira lived in the city he may have lived elsewhere in Avanti 24 Royal patron edit Varahamihira likely lived in the Aulikara kingdom as the Aulikaras ruled Avanti in the 6th century CE 25 26 Varahamihira s Brhat samhita states that on the topic of omens shakuna one of the works he consulted was that of Dravya vardhana the king of Avanti 27 Dravya vardhana likely belonged to the Aulikara dynasty several of whose members bore names ending in vardhana 25 Historian Ajay Mitra Shastri notes that Dravya vardhana is the only person for whom Varahamihira employs the honorific Shri although he mentions several other notable people Moreover he mentions Dravya vardhana s work before he mentions reputed authorities such as the Saptarishis and Garga According to Shastri this combined with the fact that both Dravya vardhana and Varahamihira lived in Avanti suggests that Dravya vardhana was the royal patron of Varahamihira 27 Shastri theorizes that Dravya vardhana was a successor of Yashodharman alias Vishnu vardhana who may have also been a patron of Varahamihira 28 Some other historians identify Dravya vardhana with the earlier Aulikara ruler Drapa vardhana Shastri disputes this arguing that Varahamihira describes Dravya vardhana was a maharajadhiraja emperor while the Risthal inscription describes Drapa vardhana as a senapati commander Balogh disagrees with Shastri noting that Varahamihira actually uses the term nrpo maharajadhiraja kah nrpa or ruler connected to the emperor for the king which Shastri has misunderstood as maharajadhirajah emperor Only one manuscript reads maharajadhirajah which can be discarded as it doesn t fit the metre three others have maharajdhiraja jah Thus the actual title of Drapa vardhana was nrpa which is much closer to senapati in status Utpala also interprets the term maharajadhiraja kah to mean born in the dynasty of the or an emperor 29 Hans Bakker interprets the term to maharajadhiraja kah as a governor installed at Ujjayini by the contemporary Gupta emperor 26 Balogh believes that Dravya vardhana was probably same as Drapa vardhana Dravya may be a variant arising from a mistake in a medieval manuscript which is the source of later manuscripts 26 Balogh disputes Shastri s assertion that Varahamihira shows a particularly reverential attitude to the king and even if he did this is no evidence that the two were contemporaries Varahamihira consulted the king s work instead of the original work of Bharadvaja that it was based on according to Balogh this actually makes it more likely that the king lived at a time earlier than Varahamihira who did not have access to the older work of Bharadvaja 30 According to Balogh Varahamihira likely lived during the reign of the Aulikara kings Prakasha dharman Yashodharman or an unknown successor of Yashodharman However unlike Shastri Balogh believes that Varahamihira did not have a royal patron 26 Religion editSeveral scholars theorize that Varahamihra came from a Brahminized family of the sun worshipping Magi priests see see Ancestry above 31 13 He was a worshipper of the sun god Savitru and stated that he had received all his knowledge by the grace of this god 32 For example in Brhaj jataka he states that he was able to compose the text because of a boon by the Sun 28 While he mentions other deities he devotes a much larger number of verses to the Sun 11 His commentator Utpala credits his sharp intellect to a boon by the Sun 28 Some later writers describe him as an incarnation of the Sun god 18 Utpala for example decares that the Sun descended on the earth in form of Varahamihira to save the jyotisha shastra from destruction 33 The Subhashita ratna kosha quotes stanzas that praise Varahamihira as an incarnation of Vishnu and the Sun presumably because of two parts of his name varaha referring to an avatar of Vishnu and mihira meaning sun 23 Sun worship seems to have been his family s religion as his father Aditya dasa s name literally means slave or servant of the Sun 28 34 Kutuhula manjari a later text suggests that Varahamihira was born to Aditya dasa by the blessings of the Sun Varahamihira s son Prthu yashas also invokes the Sun in the opening stanza of his work Shatpanchashikha 28 Varahamihira was well versed with the Vedic tradition 35 He recommends the performance of several ancient Hindu rituals such as Punyaham and chanting of Vedic hymns 36 Varahamihira praises Vishnu in the chapters 42 and 104 of Brhat samhita leading A N S Aiyangar and K V R Aiyangar to speculate that he came in contact with the Shrivaishnava saints Alvars however A M Shastri dismisses this theory describing the praise for Vishnu as an example of religious eclecticism 37 In Brhat samhita Varahamihira discusses the iconography of several Brahmanical deities including Vishnu Baladeva Ekanamsha Shamba Pradyumna consorts of Shamba and Pradyumna Brahma Skanda Indra Shiva Surya the divine mothers Matrikas Revanta Yama Varuna and Kubera 38 These were presumably the popular gods worshipped during his period He also describes the iconography of two non Brahmanical faiths that of the Buddha and the Jinas He appears to have been religiously liberal as he reveres the Buddha as the father of the world and devotes an entire stanza to Buddha s iconology compared to shorter descriptions of several Brahmanical deities 39 A verse in the Brhat samhita describes the iconography of Ganesha but this verse appears only in one or two manuscripts and is likely a later interpolation Similarly a Tikanika yatra verse in which the author reveres Ganesha among other deities is likely spurious this verse appears in only one manuscript 40 Works editVarahamihira is credited with writing several authoritative texts on astronomy and astrology He was also known for his poetic skills and the 11th century writer Kshemendra describes him as a great poet 2 He apparently wrote a set of two works detailed and short in the following areas 41 Area Detailed work Short workMathematical astronomy tantra Pancha siddhantika Now lost known from Utpala s commentaryHoroscopy hora nativity Brhaj jataka Laghu jatakaHoroscopy marriage Brhad vivaha patala Svalpa vivaha patalaHoroscopy journeys Brhad yatra and Yoga yatra Svalpa yatraGeneral astrology samhita Brhat samhita Samasa samhitaThe chronological order of some of these works can be determined based on the internal evidence and Utpala s commentary In order or earliest to latest these works are 42 Pancha siddhantika Brhaj jataka Brhad yatra Yoga yatra according to Utpala Varaha mihira wrote this because he was dissatisfied with Brhad yatra Brhad vivaha patala Brhat samhitaLaghu jataka states that it was written after Brhaj jataka and Utpala s commentary states that it was written after the abridged version of Pancha siddhantika However its order with respect to the other works is not certain 42 Later authors also mention or quote from some other works composed by Varaha mihira Manuscripts of some other works attributed to Varaha mihira exist but these attributions are of doubtful nature 42 Influences editThe Romaka Siddhanta The Doctrine of the Romans and the Paulisa Siddhanta were two works of Western origin which influenced Varahamihira s thought The Pauliṣa Siddhanta is often mistakenly thought to be a single work and attributed to Paul of Alexandria c 378 CE 43 However this notion has been rejected by other scholars in the field notably by David Pingree who stated that the identification of Paulus Alexandrinus with the author of the Pauliṣa Siddhanta is totally false 44 A number of his writings share similarities with the earlier texts like Vedanga Jyotisha 45 Some scholars consider Varahamihira to be the strong candidate for the one who understood and introduced the zodiac signs predictive calculations for auspicious ceremonies and astrological computations in India 46 47 48 Varahamihira s works contain 35 Sanskritized Greek astronomical terms and he exhibits a good understanding of the Greek astronomy 49 He praised the Greeks Yavanas for being well trained in the sciences though impure in ritual order 50 Legacy editVarahamihira gained reputation as the most eminent writer on jyotisha after his death and his works superseded nearly all the earlier Indian texts in this area Several later Indian astrologer astronomers speak highly of him and acknowledge his works among their main sources 51 The 11th century writer Al Biruni also greatly admires him describing him as an excellent astronomer 52 See also editList of Indian mathematiciansNotes edit Sudhakara Dvivedi following the reading Kampilyaka identified Varahamihira s birthplace as present day Kalpi in Uttar Pradesh However this identification is incorrect the ancient name of Kalpi was Kalapriya not Kampilyaka 20 References edit a b c A M Shastri 1991 p 3 a b A M Shastri 1991 p 1 A M Shastri 1991 pp 3 4 a b A M Shastri 1991 p 4 Evans Brian 24 February 2014 The Development of Mathematics Throughout the Centuries A Brief History in a Cultural Context John Wiley amp Sons p 61 ISBN 978 1118853979 Varahamihira a mathematician born around 505 CE and died 587 CE who was also known for innovation with Pascal s triangle History of Indian Literature Motilal Banarsidass Publications 2008 p 46 Gopal Ram 1984 Kalidasa His Art and Culture Concept Publishing Company p 15 M Srinivasachariar 1974 History of Classical Sanskrit Literature Motilal Banarsidass pp 94 111 ISBN 9788120802841 Winternitz Moriz 1985 History of Indian Literature Motilal Banarsidass pp 45 47 ISBN 978 81 208 0056 4 a b c d e f g A M Shastri 1991 p 5 a b c A M Shastri 1991 p 10 a b T K Puttaswamy 2012 Mathematical Achievements of Pre modern Indian Mathematicians p 141 ISBN 9780123979131 a b A M Shastri 1991 pp 10 11 A M Shastri 1991 p 13 A M Shastri 1991 pp 17 18 A M Shastri 1991 pp 8 9 a b A M Shastri 1991 p 17 a b A M Shastri 1991 p 9 A M Shastri 1991 p 248 A M Shastri 1969 p 15 A M Shastri 1991 p 6 A M Shastri 1991 p 27 a b A M Shastri 1991 p 24 Daniel Balogh 2019 p 142 143 a b A M Shastri 1991 p 51 a b c d Daniel Balogh 2019 p 143 a b A M Shastri 1991 pp 43 45 a b c d e A M Shastri 1991 p 8 Daniel Balogh 2019 pp 141 142 Daniel Balogh 2019 p 142 Abraham Eraly 2014 Pearls and Pebbles The First Spring Part 2 Culture in the Golden Age of India Penguin ISBN 9789351186465 He belonged as his name indicates to a Brahminized family of the Magi sun worshipping Zoroastrian priests and he himself came to be regarded in later times as an incarnation of the sun god B Suryanarain Rao ed 1986 Sree Varaha Mihira s Brihat Jataka Motilal Banarsidass p 612 ISBN 9788120813953 A M Shastri 1969 p 1 M R Bhatt 1996 p 572 M R Bhatt 1996 p 638 M R Bhatt 1996 p 570 A M Shastri 1969 p 21 A M Shastri 1991 pp 100 120 A M Shastri 1991 pp 120 121 A M Shastri 1991 p 121 A M Shastri 1991 pp 19 20 a b c A M Shastri 1991 p 20 McEvilley Thomas November 2001 The Shape of Ancient Thought Comparative Studies in Greek and Indian Philosophies Allworth Press p 385 ISBN 978 1 58115 203 6 Pingree David 1978 The Yavanajataka of Sphujidhvaja Harvard Oriental Series Vol 2 pp 437 438 Pingree David 1969 The Later Paulisa Siddhanta Centaurus 14 pp 172 241 Velandai Gopala Aiyer The chronology of ancient India beginning of the Sat Yuga Dwaper Treta and Kali Yuga with date of Mahabharata Sanjay Prakashan p 63 Winternitz Moriz 1985 History of Indian Literature Motilal Banarsidass pp 685 697 ISBN 978 81 208 0056 4 Pingree David 1963 Astronomy and Astrology in India and Iran Isis University of Chicago Press 54 2 229 246 doi 10 1086 349703 JSTOR 228540 S2CID 128083594 Sarma K V 2008 Varahamihira In Helaine Selin ed Encyclopaedia of the History of Science Technology and Medicine in Non Western Cultures Dordrecht Springer Netherlands pp 2184 2185 doi 10 1007 978 1 4020 4425 0 9604 ISBN 978 1 4020 4559 2 A M Shastri 1991 p 18 Chaudhuri Kirti Narayan 1990 Asia Before Europe Economy and Civilisation of the Indian Ocean from the Rise of Islam to 1750 Cambridge University Press p 54 ISBN 0521316812 A M Shastri 1969 pp 1 3 A M Shastri 1969 p 4 Bibliography edit A M Shastri 1991 Varahamihira and His Times Kusumanjali OCLC 28644897 A M Shastri 1969 India as Seen in the Bṛhatsaṁhita of Varahamihira Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 9780896842212 Daniel Balogh 2019 Inscriptions of the Aulikaras and Their Associates De Gruyter ISBN 9783110649789 M Ramakrishna Bhat ed 1996 1982 Brhat Samhita of Varahamihira Second ed Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 9788120810600 External links editThe Brihat samhita complete translation by N Chidambaram Iyer Online edition with glossary Pancasiddhantika Brihat Jataka Brihat Samhita and Hora Shastra Various editions in English and Sanskrit PDF The Brihat Jataka 1905 PDF archived from Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Varahamihira amp oldid 1189637599, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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