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Tulabhara

Tulabhara, also known as Tula-purusha (IAST: Tulāpuruṣa) or Tula-dana, is an ancient Hindu practice in which a person is weighed against a commodity (such as gold, grain, fruits or other objects), and the equivalent weight of that commodity is offered as donation. The Tulabhara is mentioned as one of the sixteen great gifts in the ancient texts, and is performed in several parts of India.

A tula-dana balance at the Ettumanoor Mahadevar Temple in Kerala, India
A tulabhara donation of bananas in progress at the Chottanikkara Temple in Kerala

Names

The Atharvaveda-parishishta uses the name "tula-purusha-vidhi" to describe the ceremony. The Matsya Purana calls it "tula-purusha-dana", while the Linga Purana calls it by various names such as "tula-purusha-dana", "tuladhirohana", "tularoha", and "tulabhara".[1]

Majority of the ancient inscriptions that record the ceremony are written in Sanskrit language; some of them are in Tamil and Kannada, and some later inscriptions also feature Telugu language.[2]

The early Sanskrit-Tamil inscriptions from Tamil Nadu and Sinhala-Tamil inscriptions from Sri Lanka used the name "tula-bhara" (literally "weighing on the scales") to describe the ceremony.[3]

The Sanskrit inscriptions from other regions, the Kannada inscriptions, and the Puranas generally use the name "tula-purusha" and its variants.[1] "Tula-purusha" is the most common name for the ceremony in the historical records. The longer forms are "tula-purusha-dana" or "tula-purusha-mahadana", which are sometimes abbreviated as "tula-dana" (the words "dana" and "mahadana" mean "donation" and "great donation" respectively).[2]

The 13th century inscriptions from Tamil Nadu also use the terms "tularohana" (or "tularoha") and "tuladhiroha-vidhi" (or "tuladhirohana") for the ceremony.[1]

Description

 

The Matsya Purana provides several requirements for a tula-purusha ceremony, including directions for constructing the mandapa (pavilion) required for the ceremony. It states that the weighing scale (tula) should have two posts and a crossbeam, made from the same wood, and should be ornamented with gold.[4]

The text further states that the ceremony should be officiated by eight priests (rtvij), two for each of the four Vedas. A man knolwedgable about the Vedanta, the Puranas, and the Shastras, should be appointed as the preceptor (guru). Four homas should be offered to the deities, accompanied by the recital of Vedic hymns.[4] After the homa ceremony, the guru should invoke the Lokapalas (deities associated with directions) with flowers, incense, and recital of mantras. Next, the brahmanas should bathe the donor, and have him wear a white garment. The donor should wear garlands made of white flowers, and circumambulate the weighing scale with flowers in his folded hands.[5]

Finally, the text states, the donor should step into one of the pans of the weighing scale, and the brahmanas should place pure gold pieces of equal weight in the other pan. After invoking the Goddess Earth, the donor should give half the gold to the guru, and the rest to the brahmanas. The donor may also grant villages to the priests. The donor should "honour the brahmanas, other respectable people, and the poor and the helpless with gifts".[5]

The Linga Purana gives a similar description, and adds that the gold pieces should be dedicated to the god Shiva.[5]

History

The Atharvaveda-parishishta, composed in the 1st millennium BCE, describes tula-purusha, besides other sacrifices such as the hiranya-garbha (the donation of a golden vessel) and gosahasra (the donation of a thousand cows).[4] A section of the later text Matsya Purana mentions the tula-purusha ceremony as the first and the best among the sixteen great gifts (maha-danas).[6] According to scholar R. C. Hazara, this particular section was composed during 550-650 CE.[4]

The Linga Purana also mentions the sixteen great donations; according to R. C. Hazara, the relevant portion of the text was composed during c. 600-1000 CE, most probably after 800 CE. These donations are also described in the later digests devoted to the topic of charity (dāna), such as Ballala's Dana-sagara, and the Danakhanda section of Hemadri's Chaturvarga-chintamani (13th century).[4]

Performances

Legendary

 
The Tulabhara of Shibi

Several legendary performances of Tulabhara are mentioned in the ancient Indian texts. For example, in the Mahabharata, King Shibi, a descendant of King Bharata of the Lunar dynasty, was tested by Indra and Agni. They approached Shibi in the forms of an eagle and a dove. The dove sought Shibi's protection from the eagle, who asked Shibi to give his flesh measure for measure in exchange for the dove's life. Shibi, ready to offer anything to save the dove, began slice off bits of himself. Even after much cutting, the balance scales did not move, and when at last when Shibi himself stood on the scale of the balance, the gods appeared to him and blessed him.[7]

Another tale of Tulabhara relates to Krishna and his queen-consorts Rukmini and Satyabhama.

Historical

 
18th century king Marthanda Varma participating in a tulabhara ceremony

Several inscriptions of India mention the historical performances of the tula-purusha.[5] The earliest of these inscriptions are from the present-day Tamil Nadu (7th-8th century) and Maharashtra-Karnataka region (8th-9th century).[8] It is possible that the tula-purusha ceremony traveled from the southern Pandya kingdom of Tamil Nadu to Maharashtra-Karnataka, which was ruled by the Rashtrakutas. It may have subsequently spread to other neighbouring areas, such as Madhya Pradesh (from Maharashtra), Andhra Pradesh (from Karnataka), and Sri Lanka (from Tamil Nadu).[2]

Notable performers include:

  • Pandya kings (7th-8th century), in Tamil Nadu
    • Jayantavarman alias Cendan (c. 7th century), according to one of his inscriptions, performed tulabhara along with hiranyagarbha and gosahasra.[9]
    • An inscription of the Pandya king Varaguna I (r. c. 768-811) states that his father and grandfather made these three donations many times.[9]
    • It is stated in the Tamil work Koyilolugu that Jatavarman Sundara Pandya (r. c. 1250–1268) constructed several tulapurusha mandapas in Srirangam temple and performed tulabhara there.[10]
  • Rashtrakuta kings (8th-10th century), in Maharashtra-Karnataka region[2]
    • Dantidurga donated a village to a brahmana on the occasion of a tulabhara performance according to an inscription discovered in the Kolhapur district.[9]
    • Govinda III (c. 800) performed a tulabhara ceremony at Mayurakhandi on the occasion of a solar eclipse.[9]
    • Amoghavarsha I (c. 862) also performed a tulabhara ceremony during a solar eclipse.[11]
    • Indra III (c. 915) performed tulabhara on the occasion of his coronation, and granted villages to brahmanas and Jain monasteries.[11]
    • Govinda IV performed at least three tulabharas during c. 929-930, to mark his coronation and that of his queen.[11]
    • A vassal of Amoghavarsha III celebrated tulabhara in 937.[11]
  • Pallava kings (9th century), in Tamil Nadu[2]
    • Viramahadevi (c. 891), a queen of the Pallava ruler Nrpatungavarman performed tulapurusha and hiranyagarbha ceremony in a Mahadeva temple.[9]
  • Chola kings (10th-11th century), in Tamil Nadu[2]
    • Parantaka I (r. c. 907-955) made tulabhara, hemagarbha and other donations according to an inscription of his Ganga vassal Prithvipati II.[9]
    • During the ruler of Rajaraja I (r. c. 985-1016) a temple for performing tulabhara (tulavara-shri-koyil) existed at Uttiramerur. Around 1013, Rajaraja held a tulabhara ceremony at the Mahadeva temple of Tiruvishalur, where his consort Lokamahadevi simultaneously performed a hiranyagarbha donation.[9]
  • Amma I of the Vengi Chalukya dynasty performed a tulabhara annually during his seven-year-long reign.[12]
  • Dhanga (r. c. 950-999 CE) of Chandela dynasty claimed to have performed hundreds of tulapurusha rituals, in his Khajuraho inscription.[12]
  • The Gwalior inscription of the Kachchhapaghata king Mahipala states that one of his ancestors celebrated tulapurusha in the 10th century.[12]
  • Yashahkarna (r. c. 1073-1123 CE) of Kalachuri dynasty, according to his inscriptions.[12]
  • Chalukyas of Kalyani
 
Emperor Jahangir weighing his son Prince Khurram (the future Shah Jahan) on a weighing scale, by artist Manohar (AD 1615).
  • Chandradeva (r. c. 1089–1103 CE) of Gahadavala dynasty. According to his inscriptions, "the earth was discoloured hundreds of times by the scales" when he donated gold worth his own weight to the brahmanas. His Chandravati inscription records a village grant after the performance of tulapurusha and gosahasra before an image of the god Adi-keshava (Vishnu).[14]
  • The Shilahara king Gandaraditya celebrated tulapurusha, according to the inscriptions of his grandson Bhoja II.[12]
  • Vilasadevi, the queen of king Vijaya Sena (r. c. 1098-1160) of Sena dynasty, during the king's 32nd regnal year.[2]
  • Jayachandra (r. c. 1170-1194 CE) of Gahadavala dynasty: his Kamauli grant inscription states that he performed a tula-purusha before the god Krittivasa (Shiva).[14]
  • Chandeshvara, a minister of the king of Mithila: according to his own writings, he conquered Nepal and performed a tula-purusha in c. 1314 CE (Shaka year 1236).[8]
  • Tulabhara mandapas are two small four pillared found in temples like Sri Varadharajaswami temple, Kanchi where Vijayanagar king Achyutaraya performed Muladhara in 1532.[15]
  • The rulers of Travancore, until as late as the 19th century, performed tula-purusha and hiranya-garbha immediately ascending the throne to legitimize their claim to power.[8]

The Islamic Mughal rulers also appear to have borrowed the tula-dana practice from the Hindu rulers. According to emperor Akbar's courtier Abu'l-Fazl, Akbar was weighed against gold and other valuable items twice every year. English visitors such as Thomas Coryat and Thomas Roe mention that the custom was followed by his son Jahangir as well. Jahangir's successor Aurangzeb discontinued the practice for himself, but his sons were apparently weighed against objects to be donated, upon recovery from illness. This is suggested by the writings of the European travelers Niccolao Manucci, Jean-Baptiste Tavernier, and François Bernier.[16]

In 2015, the Sri Lankan prime minister Ranil Wickramasinghe participated in a tulabharam ceremony at the Guruvayur Temple, and offered 77 kg of sandalwood worth approximately 850,000 to the temple.[17]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Annette Schmiedchen 2006, p. 151.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Annette Schmiedchen 2006, p. 150.
  3. ^ Annette Schmiedchen 2006, pp. 150–151.
  4. ^ a b c d e Annette Schmiedchen 2006, p. 146.
  5. ^ a b c d Annette Schmiedchen 2006, p. 147.
  6. ^ Annette Schmiedchen 2006, p. 145.
  7. ^ Book 2: The Book of Assembly, Book 3: The Book of the Forest (2014). The Mahabharata, Volume 2. London: University of Chicago Press. p. 470. ISBN 9780226223681.
  8. ^ a b c Annette Schmiedchen 2006, p. 149.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g Annette Schmiedchen 2006, p. 173.
  10. ^ Illustrated (1982). South Indian Shrines. New Delhi: Asian Educational Services. p. 19.
  11. ^ a b c d e Annette Schmiedchen 2006, p. 174.
  12. ^ a b c d e Annette Schmiedchen 2006, p. 175.
  13. ^ a b Annette Schmiedchen 2006, p. 153.
  14. ^ a b V. B. Mishra 1973, p. 70.
  15. ^ A Study of Its History, Art and Architecture, Kanchi (2003). Sri Varadarajaswami Temple. New Delhi: Abhinav Publications. p. 50.
  16. ^ S. M. Edwardes; H. L. O. Garrett, eds. (1995) [1930]. Mughal Rule in India. Atlantic. pp. 220–221. ISBN 978-81-7156-551-1.
  17. ^ "Lankan PM Ranil Wickramasinghe offers worship at Guruvayur temple". The Economic Times. 2015-04-18.

Bibliography

  • Annette Schmiedchen (2006). "The Ceremony of Tulāpuruṣa: The Purāṇic Concept and the Epigraphical Evidence". In Adalbert J. Gail; Gerd J. R. Mevissen; Richard Salomon (eds.). Script and Image: Papers on Art and Epigraphy. Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 978-81-208-2944-2.
  • V. B. Mishra (1973). Religious Beliefs and Practices of North India During the Early Mediaeval Period. BRILL. ISBN 90-04-03610-5.

tulabhara, also, known, tula, purusha, iast, tulāpuruṣa, tula, dana, ancient, hindu, practice, which, person, weighed, against, commodity, such, gold, grain, fruits, other, objects, equivalent, weight, that, commodity, offered, donation, mentioned, sixteen, gr. Tulabhara also known as Tula purusha IAST Tulapuruṣa or Tula dana is an ancient Hindu practice in which a person is weighed against a commodity such as gold grain fruits or other objects and the equivalent weight of that commodity is offered as donation The Tulabhara is mentioned as one of the sixteen great gifts in the ancient texts and is performed in several parts of India A tula dana balance at the Ettumanoor Mahadevar Temple in Kerala India A tulabhara donation of bananas in progress at the Chottanikkara Temple in Kerala Contents 1 Names 2 Description 3 History 4 Performances 4 1 Legendary 4 2 Historical 5 See also 6 References 6 1 BibliographyNames EditThe Atharvaveda parishishta uses the name tula purusha vidhi to describe the ceremony The Matsya Purana calls it tula purusha dana while the Linga Purana calls it by various names such as tula purusha dana tuladhirohana tularoha and tulabhara 1 Majority of the ancient inscriptions that record the ceremony are written in Sanskrit language some of them are in Tamil and Kannada and some later inscriptions also feature Telugu language 2 The early Sanskrit Tamil inscriptions from Tamil Nadu and Sinhala Tamil inscriptions from Sri Lanka used the name tula bhara literally weighing on the scales to describe the ceremony 3 The Sanskrit inscriptions from other regions the Kannada inscriptions and the Puranas generally use the name tula purusha and its variants 1 Tula purusha is the most common name for the ceremony in the historical records The longer forms are tula purusha dana or tula purusha mahadana which are sometimes abbreviated as tula dana the words dana and mahadana mean donation and great donation respectively 2 The 13th century inscriptions from Tamil Nadu also use the terms tularohana or tularoha and tuladhiroha vidhi or tuladhirohana for the ceremony 1 Description Edit A Tulabhara mandapa at the Bhoga Nandeeshwara Temple The Matsya Purana provides several requirements for a tula purusha ceremony including directions for constructing the mandapa pavilion required for the ceremony It states that the weighing scale tula should have two posts and a crossbeam made from the same wood and should be ornamented with gold 4 The text further states that the ceremony should be officiated by eight priests rtvij two for each of the four Vedas A man knolwedgable about the Vedanta the Puranas and the Shastras should be appointed as the preceptor guru Four homas should be offered to the deities accompanied by the recital of Vedic hymns 4 After the homa ceremony the guru should invoke the Lokapalas deities associated with directions with flowers incense and recital of mantras Next the brahmanas should bathe the donor and have him wear a white garment The donor should wear garlands made of white flowers and circumambulate the weighing scale with flowers in his folded hands 5 Finally the text states the donor should step into one of the pans of the weighing scale and the brahmanas should place pure gold pieces of equal weight in the other pan After invoking the Goddess Earth the donor should give half the gold to the guru and the rest to the brahmanas The donor may also grant villages to the priests The donor should honour the brahmanas other respectable people and the poor and the helpless with gifts 5 The Linga Purana gives a similar description and adds that the gold pieces should be dedicated to the god Shiva 5 History EditThe Atharvaveda parishishta composed in the 1st millennium BCE describes tula purusha besides other sacrifices such as the hiranya garbha the donation of a golden vessel and gosahasra the donation of a thousand cows 4 A section of the later text Matsya Purana mentions the tula purusha ceremony as the first and the best among the sixteen great gifts maha danas 6 According to scholar R C Hazara this particular section was composed during 550 650 CE 4 The Linga Purana also mentions the sixteen great donations according to R C Hazara the relevant portion of the text was composed during c 600 1000 CE most probably after 800 CE These donations are also described in the later digests devoted to the topic of charity dana such as Ballala s Dana sagara and the Danakhanda section of Hemadri s Chaturvarga chintamani 13th century 4 Performances EditLegendary Edit The Tulabhara of Shibi Several legendary performances of Tulabhara are mentioned in the ancient Indian texts For example in the Mahabharata King Shibi a descendant of King Bharata of the Lunar dynasty was tested by Indra and Agni They approached Shibi in the forms of an eagle and a dove The dove sought Shibi s protection from the eagle who asked Shibi to give his flesh measure for measure in exchange for the dove s life Shibi ready to offer anything to save the dove began slice off bits of himself Even after much cutting the balance scales did not move and when at last when Shibi himself stood on the scale of the balance the gods appeared to him and blessed him 7 Another tale of Tulabhara relates to Krishna and his queen consorts Rukmini and Satyabhama Historical Edit 18th century king Marthanda Varma participating in a tulabhara ceremony Several inscriptions of India mention the historical performances of the tula purusha 5 The earliest of these inscriptions are from the present day Tamil Nadu 7th 8th century and Maharashtra Karnataka region 8th 9th century 8 It is possible that the tula purusha ceremony traveled from the southern Pandya kingdom of Tamil Nadu to Maharashtra Karnataka which was ruled by the Rashtrakutas It may have subsequently spread to other neighbouring areas such as Madhya Pradesh from Maharashtra Andhra Pradesh from Karnataka and Sri Lanka from Tamil Nadu 2 Notable performers include Pandya kings 7th 8th century in Tamil Nadu Jayantavarman alias Cendan c 7th century according to one of his inscriptions performed tulabhara along with hiranyagarbha and gosahasra 9 An inscription of the Pandya king Varaguna I r c 768 811 states that his father and grandfather made these three donations many times 9 It is stated in the Tamil work Koyilolugu that Jatavarman Sundara Pandya r c 1250 1268 constructed several tulapurusha mandapas in Srirangam temple and performed tulabhara there 10 Rashtrakuta kings 8th 10th century in Maharashtra Karnataka region 2 Dantidurga donated a village to a brahmana on the occasion of a tulabhara performance according to an inscription discovered in the Kolhapur district 9 Govinda III c 800 performed a tulabhara ceremony at Mayurakhandi on the occasion of a solar eclipse 9 Amoghavarsha I c 862 also performed a tulabhara ceremony during a solar eclipse 11 Indra III c 915 performed tulabhara on the occasion of his coronation and granted villages to brahmanas and Jain monasteries 11 Govinda IV performed at least three tulabharas during c 929 930 to mark his coronation and that of his queen 11 A vassal of Amoghavarsha III celebrated tulabhara in 937 11 Pallava kings 9th century in Tamil Nadu 2 Viramahadevi c 891 a queen of the Pallava ruler Nrpatungavarman performed tulapurusha and hiranyagarbha ceremony in a Mahadeva temple 9 Chola kings 10th 11th century in Tamil Nadu 2 Parantaka I r c 907 955 made tulabhara hemagarbha and other donations according to an inscription of his Ganga vassal Prithvipati II 9 During the ruler of Rajaraja I r c 985 1016 a temple for performing tulabhara tulavara shri koyil existed at Uttiramerur Around 1013 Rajaraja held a tulabhara ceremony at the Mahadeva temple of Tiruvishalur where his consort Lokamahadevi simultaneously performed a hiranyagarbha donation 9 Amma I of the Vengi Chalukya dynasty performed a tulabhara annually during his seven year long reign 12 Dhanga r c 950 999 CE of Chandela dynasty claimed to have performed hundreds of tulapurusha rituals in his Khajuraho inscription 12 The Gwalior inscription of the Kachchhapaghata king Mahipala states that one of his ancestors celebrated tulapurusha in the 10th century 12 Yashahkarna r c 1073 1123 CE of Kalachuri dynasty according to his inscriptions 12 Chalukyas of Kalyani Jayasimha III a member of the younger brother and a vassal of the Kalyani Chalukya king Vikramaditya VI r 1076 1126 CE 13 Jayakeshin II of Kadamba family another vassal of Vikramaditya VI 13 Hoysala kings 10th 14th century including Vishnuvardhana and his successors 11 Emperor Jahangir weighing his son Prince Khurram the future Shah Jahan on a weighing scale by artist Manohar AD 1615 Chandradeva r c 1089 1103 CE of Gahadavala dynasty According to his inscriptions the earth was discoloured hundreds of times by the scales when he donated gold worth his own weight to the brahmanas His Chandravati inscription records a village grant after the performance of tulapurusha and gosahasra before an image of the god Adi keshava Vishnu 14 The Shilahara king Gandaraditya celebrated tulapurusha according to the inscriptions of his grandson Bhoja II 12 Vilasadevi the queen of king Vijaya Sena r c 1098 1160 of Sena dynasty during the king s 32nd regnal year 2 Jayachandra r c 1170 1194 CE of Gahadavala dynasty his Kamauli grant inscription states that he performed a tula purusha before the god Krittivasa Shiva 14 Chandeshvara a minister of the king of Mithila according to his own writings he conquered Nepal and performed a tula purusha in c 1314 CE Shaka year 1236 8 Tulabhara mandapas are two small four pillared found in temples like Sri Varadharajaswami temple Kanchi where Vijayanagar king Achyutaraya performed Muladhara in 1532 15 The rulers of Travancore until as late as the 19th century performed tula purusha and hiranya garbha immediately ascending the throne to legitimize their claim to power 8 The Islamic Mughal rulers also appear to have borrowed the tula dana practice from the Hindu rulers According to emperor Akbar s courtier Abu l Fazl Akbar was weighed against gold and other valuable items twice every year English visitors such as Thomas Coryat and Thomas Roe mention that the custom was followed by his son Jahangir as well Jahangir s successor Aurangzeb discontinued the practice for himself but his sons were apparently weighed against objects to be donated upon recovery from illness This is suggested by the writings of the European travelers Niccolao Manucci Jean Baptiste Tavernier and Francois Bernier 16 In 2015 the Sri Lankan prime minister Ranil Wickramasinghe participated in a tulabharam ceremony at the Guruvayur Temple and offered 77 kg of sandalwood worth approximately 850 000 to the temple 17 See also EditDanaReferences Edit a b c Annette Schmiedchen 2006 p 151 a b c d e f g Annette Schmiedchen 2006 p 150 Annette Schmiedchen 2006 pp 150 151 a b c d e Annette Schmiedchen 2006 p 146 a b c d Annette Schmiedchen 2006 p 147 Annette Schmiedchen 2006 p 145 Book 2 The Book of Assembly Book 3 The Book of the Forest 2014 The Mahabharata Volume 2 London University of Chicago Press p 470 ISBN 9780226223681 a b c Annette Schmiedchen 2006 p 149 a b c d e f g Annette Schmiedchen 2006 p 173 Illustrated 1982 South Indian Shrines New Delhi Asian Educational Services p 19 a b c d e Annette Schmiedchen 2006 p 174 a b c d e Annette Schmiedchen 2006 p 175 a b Annette Schmiedchen 2006 p 153 a b V B Mishra 1973 p 70 A Study of Its History Art and Architecture Kanchi 2003 Sri Varadarajaswami Temple New Delhi Abhinav Publications p 50 S M Edwardes H L O Garrett eds 1995 1930 Mughal Rule in India Atlantic pp 220 221 ISBN 978 81 7156 551 1 Lankan PM Ranil Wickramasinghe offers worship at Guruvayur temple The Economic Times 2015 04 18 Bibliography Edit Annette Schmiedchen 2006 The Ceremony of Tulapuruṣa The Puraṇic Concept and the Epigraphical Evidence In Adalbert J Gail Gerd J R Mevissen Richard Salomon eds Script and Image Papers on Art and Epigraphy Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 2944 2 V B Mishra 1973 Religious Beliefs and Practices of North India During the Early Mediaeval Period BRILL ISBN 90 04 03610 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tulabhara amp oldid 1102483624, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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