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South India's 75 Apostles of Bhakti are the twelve Alvars (also, Aazhvaars, Aazhwaars) and sixty-three Nayanmars (also Nayanars, Naayanars, Naayanmaars). They were all great devotees of the Lord most of whom came from the Tamil region. The last of them lived in the 9th century A.D. The Alvars are Hindu saints, followers of Lord Vishnu. ...
The Nayanars were the sincere and ardent devotees of Lord Siva. ...
Tamil may refer to: The Tamil language, which is one of the Dravidian languages spoken in the Indian subcontinent. ...
God-intoxicated devotees and singers
For all these, religion was a poignant human experience of togetherness with either Lord Vishnu (in the first case) or Lord Shiva (in the second case). Some of them were superlatively gifted singers as well. They have left behind them an imperishable legacy of devotional poetry rarely parallelled in quantity or quality before or after. They revered the Vedic texts, knew the principal Puranas, avocated the recitation of God’s varied names, strongly recommended meditation on his different forms and the Mantras associated with Him and literally lived by worshipping Him in the temples all over the land of the Tamils. They give expression to the purest love of God and are most reverently recited in all Hindu temples that have a Tamil origin and by all Tamil Hindu families who believe in worship as an important daily routine. The Puranas (Sanskrit purÄá¹Ã¡ ancient, since they focus on ancient history of the universe) are part of Hindu Smriti; these religious scriptures discuss varied topics like devotion to God in his various aspects, traditional sciences like Ayurveda, Jyotish, cosmology, concepts like dharma, karma, reincarnation and many others. ...
In Tibet, many Buddhists carve mantras into rocks as a form of devotion. ...
This article needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of quality. ...
Literary Value of the hymns In addition the literary value of all this poetry is great as is shown by the fact that this massive collection of 20000 Tamil verses (4000 Vaishnava hymns and 16000 Shaiva hymns) outweighs all other literature produced during this period so much that historians of Tamil literature have taken the liberty of designating this period (6th to 10th century A.D.) the age of Devotional Literature. Tamil literature is literature in the Tamil language which most prominently includes the contributions of the Tamil country (or Tamizhagam) history, a large part of which constitutes the modern state of Tamil Nadu in India. ...
Massive Resurgence of Bhakti In addition to the attractive poetry that this literature contains, the content, which is at the same time impassioned and philosophical, cuts across all barriers of caste and class, and therefore attracts one and all to the faith. This Bhakti literature has in no small measure contributed to the establishment and sustenance of a culture that broke away from the ritual-oriented Vedic and elitistic religion and transformed it into a religion of the masses rooted in Devotion as the only path for salvation. This resurgence of Bhakti came in such a massive way that it may be compared to the European Renaissance of the sixteenth century. It challenged the orthodoxy in its strongest sphere, namely the cognitive, by demystifying the myths associated with the rigidities of caste system, domination of priestly hierarchy and mindless proliferation of rituals. Bhakti is a Tamil or Sanskrit term from Hinduism that means devotion expressed by action (service). ...
By Region: Italian Renaissance Northern Renaissance -French Renaissance -German Renaissance -English Renaissance The Renaissance was an influential cultural movement which brought about a period of scientific revolution and artistic transformation, at the dawn of modern European history. ...
Icons of Temple Worship While north India produced Saints who wrote poetry and sang devotional music like Mirabai, Kabir and Surdas, they were not immortalised in art to be worshipped in temples. Saints of the western world are frequently portrayed in art, but their presence in churches and cathedrals does not seem to be universal . By contrast, icons of these 12 Vaishnava and 63 Shaiva south Indian saints were invariably commissioned by the Vishnu and Shiva temples respectively. They were placed in prominent positions and were accorded ritual worship. To this day these saints remain a living tradition. Their images are carried in processions during festivals along with the main deities of the temples. Sometimes there are festivals exclusively for them. Their hymns are chanted in homes and at a variety of ceremonial gatherings including secular performances of dance and music. Mirabai (मीराबाई) (c. ...
Kabir (à¤à¤¬à¥à¤°) (1440 - 1518) was an Indian Mystic who preached an ideal of seeing all of humanity as one. ...
Surdas was a Hindu poet, saint and musician of India. ...
--Profvk 20:57, 22 July 2005 (UTC) |