06 Glossary

T= Tamil; all other terms are Sanskrit

abhayamudra (abhayamudrā) “fear-not” mudra of protection; the open hand faces the viewer with thumb and fingers straight up

abhichara (abhicāra) employment of spells for malevolent purposes

abhigamana cleansing rites performed before sunrise

abhijinmuhurta (abhijinmuhūrta) auspicious midday hour

Abhimanyu Arjuna’s son

abhisheka (abhiṣeka) unction or ceremonial ablution

abhun-nripa (abhun-nṛpa) unborn protector of men

abja born of water

abrahmanye (ahrāhmaṇye) in violation of the duties of a Brahman

achara (ācāra) disciplined behavior

acharya (ācārya) scholar priest

achyuta (acyuta) unfallen

adesha (ādeśa) rules of substitution

adharashakti (ādhāraśakti) the supporter’s potency

Adharma son born of Brahma’s back

adhibhautika (ādhibhautika) caused by demons and animals

adhidaivika (ādhidaivika) caused by the deities

adhipati emperor

Adhivasa-diksha (Adhivāsa-dīkṣā) a Bhagavata ritual

adhvaryu an officiating priest at a sacrifice

adhyatmika (ādhyātmika) caused by oneself

Adikacchapa (T. Ādikaccapa; Skt. Ādikaśyapa) Primordial Tortoise

Adipurana (Ādipurāṇa) ninth-century Jain text by Jinasena

adisarga (ādisarga) primordial emission of the universe

Adishesha (Ādiśeṣa) “First to Escape” and “Primordial Remainder”; Samkarshana

Aditi “Non-restraint” or “Expanson”; mother of Vamana the Dwarf and the asuras

aditya (āditya) deva; offspring of Kashyapa and Aditi

Aditya Chola (Ātitya Cōḻaṉ) (T) defeated Aparajitavarma c. 894, ending Pallava Dynasty

Adivaraha (Ādivarāha) cave-temple in Mamallapuram

adya purusha (ādya puruṣa) Person of the Beginning

agama (āgama) tradition or school of ritual practice, rites that “have come down”

agamika (āgāmika) scholar of agama

Agastya a sage who drank the sea dry

Aggalanimmati (T) wife of Dantivarman

Aghora “without fierceness”; one of the “five faces” of Shiva

Agni Fire

agnichayana (agnicayana) arranging or preparing a sacrificial fireplace

Agnidhra (Agnīdhra) eldest son of Priyavrata, ruler of Jambu

agrahya (agrāhya) ungraspable

ahamkara, ahamkarana (ahaṃkāra, ahaṃkaraṇa) ego, conception of individuality; “This am I”

ahavaniya (āhavanīya) eastern fire in Vedic sacrifice

ahi snake

ahimsa (ahiṃsā) non-injury

Ahirhudhnya-samhita (Ahirhudhnya-samhitā) a samhita of the Pancharatra Agama

ahoratra (ahorātra) a day and night

ahutimudra (āhutimudrā) gesture referring to Vedic sacrifice; the thumb touches the tips of the second and third fingers

Aimpanaiccheri (Aimpaṉaiccēri) (T) a section of Kanchipuram

Aippachi (Aippaci) (T) eleventh Tamil month (October-November)

Airavata (Airāvata) Indra’s elephant

aishvarya (aiśvarya) sovereignty

Aitareya Brahmana (Aitareya Brāhmaṇa) a brahmana associated with the Rig Veda

Aiyanar (Aiyanār) god born to Shiva and to Vishnu in the form of Mohini

Ajanabha (Ajanābha) region later named Bharata

Ajigarta (Ajīgarta) “Nothing to Swallow”; king who sold his son to be a victim in Harishchandra’s rajasuya

Ajita “The Unconquered,” a portion of the “Unobstructed”

ajivika (ājīvika) a type of ascetic

Akalankadeva (Akalahkadeva) “Without Stains”; Digambara acharya (ca. 720–780)

akasha (ākāśa) space

akirti (akīrti) infamy

Akrura (Akrūra) Yadu leader, relative of Krishna

akshara (akṣara) brahma unmanifest brahman

Akshini (Akṣinī) wife of Daksha, mother of sixty daughters

akshita (akṣita) undecaying

Akupara (Akūpāra) “the Unbounded”; Tortoise

Alakananda (Alakanandā) the Ganga River as it flows from Mt. Meru

Alarka a lila avatara; king who rules 66,000 years

Alavay (Ālavāy) (T) “mouth of poison”; Maturai

aloka nondirectional space

Alvar (Āḻvār) (T) Vaishnava Tamil poet; Alvar, like Nayanar, means ruler or master, but Shri Vaishnava acharyas later interpret it to mean “one who drowns in God.”

Amarakosha (Amarakośa) “heavenly treasury”; Sanskrit thesaurus, ca. 380 CE

Amaravati (Amarāvati) River river in Tamil Nadu, also known as the Anporunai

Amardaka (Āmardaka) dualist lineage of the Shaiva Agama

Amarka one of Shukra’s sons, a teacher of Prahlada

amarsha (amarṣa) indignation

ambara sky; garment

Ambarisha (Ambarīṣa) son of Mandhata

Amitabha (Amitābha) the “Protector”; a buddha

Amoghavarsha (Amoghavarṣa) I Rashtrakuta king (ca. 814–880)

amrita (amṛta) “non-death”; the elixir of immortality

Amsha (Aṁśa) “portion, share”; an aditya

amshabhagena (aṃśabhāgena) through a share of glorious wealth

amshakala (aṃśakalā) shares and parts

Amshuman (Aṁśumān) son of Asamanjasa

amurtika (amūrtika) one without material form

ananda (ānanda) joy

anandamaya (ānandamaya) made of joy

Ananta “Endless,” the Snake Samkarshana

Anasuya (Anasūyā) “Benevolence,” wife of Atri

Andaka clan allied with the Satvakas

andhatamisra (andhatāmisra) spiritual ignorance or blindness

Anga (Aṅga) king who established kingship in first Manu Term

Angada (Aṅgada) monkey son of Valin

angamantra (aṅgamantra) subsidiary mantras

angastra (aṅgāstra) subsidiary weapons

Angirasa (Aṅgirasa) a prajapati, born of Brahma’s mouth; father of Krishna’s teacher

Ani (Āṉi) third Tamil month (June-July)

animan (aṇiman) the power of becoming minute

Aniruddha “the Unobstructed,” one of the vyuhas of God; son of Pradyumna

anjalimudra (añjalimudrā) the two hollowed hands placed together at chest level in salutation or entreaty

ankushamudra (aṅkuśamudrā) mudra of the pointed elephant prod; the forefinger and thumb curl to form the shape of a hook, the remaining fingers curl toward the palm

anmula (anmūla) uprooted

anna food

annarasa the taste or essence of food

Anporunai (Ānporuṇai) River river in Tamil Nadu, also known as the Amaravati

Antal (Āṇṭāḷ) (T) Alvar also known as Kotai

anrita (anṛta) not true, false

antariksha (antarikṣa) “the space between”; the atmosphere

antarvyuha (antarvyūha) interior formation

antyaja born into the lowest caste

anubhava (anubhāva) personal experience

anugraha grace

Anumati “Goodwill”; fourth daughter of Angiras and Shraddha

anupura subcapital

anushravikakarma (anuśravikakarma) gross body engaged in activies enjoined by the Vedas

anushtubh (anuṣṭubh) a metrical system of four times eight syllables

anusvara (anusvāra) vowel nasality (indicated by a superscript dot)

Apah (Āpah) Water

apana (apāna) breath expelled down and out through the anus

Apantaratamas (Apāntaratamas) sage who taught the three Vedas

Aparajitavarma (Aparājitavarma) Nandivarman’s great-great grandson (ca. 875–889)

apipasa (apipāsa) without craving or thirst

apsaras a dancer in Indra’s heavenly court

apyayayoga “unification of consciousness by dissolving”

Aranyaka (Āraṇyaka) “forest-related”; class of texts closely tied to Brahmana ritual texts

archa (arcā) icon

Archi (Arci) “Luster”; part of Lakshmi, created from Vena’s arms

ardhamandapa (ardhamaṇḍapa) porch

arghya hospitality

Arhana (Arhaṇa) “Honor”; a personal attendant of Bhagavan

arhat “foe destroyer”; enlightened being, one who has escaped samsara; (cap.) a king of southern Karnataka

Arishta (Ariṣṭa) asura in the shape of a bull

Arishtishena (Ariṣṭiśena) a royal rishi

artha prosperity; meaning

Arthashastra (Arthaśāstra) treatise by Kautilya on the art of ruling

Aryama (Aryamā) leader of the ancestors (pitri)

Aryavarta (Āryāvarta) “Nobles’ Realm”; north and central India

Asamanjasa (Asamañjasa) son of Sagara and Keshini

asamchaya (asaṃcaya) not hoarding

asana (āsana) disciplined posture

asanga (asaṅga) without clinging

asatkrita (asatkṛta) performed untruly

asharira (aśarīra) without a body

Ashoka (Aśoka) Maurya (r. ca. 274–236 BCE), emperor who supported Buddhism after he had conquered his empire

Ashoka stupa (Aśoka stūpa) Buddhist relic shrine supposedly built by King Ashoka

ashokavadana (aśokāvadāna) “legend of Ashoka”

ashrama (āśrama) stage of life of a Brahman; abode of ascetics

ashraya (āśraya) place of refuge

Ashtabhujasvamin (Aṣṭabhujasvāmin) the Lord with Eight Arms

ashtanga (aṣṭāṅga) “eight-limbed”; eight miraculous powers

ashubha (aśubha) polluting, impure, inauspicious

ashunya (aśūnya) not empty

Ashva (Aśva) Krishna as Horse

ashvamedha (aśvamedha) horse sacrifice

Ashvatara (Aśvatara) naga ruling in Patala, father of Madalasa

ashvattha (aśvattha) sacred fig tree; pipal tree

Ashvatthaman (Aśvatthāman) Drona’s son, who had the power of Shiva

Ashvin (Aśvin) a class of agricultural deities

Asikni (Asiknī) wife of Daksha, mother of sixty daughters

Asita sage who taught the Pancharatra Upanishad to the Ancestors

asteya absence of theft

astikya (āstikya) affirmation of Veda

astra arrow; weapon

asura anti-deva, demon

Atala (Atāla) world below Earth

Atharva-angirasa (Atharva-aṅgirasa) tradition descending from Atharva and Aṅgirasa, founders of worship with fire and the soma sacrifice

Atharva Veda sometimes called the “fourth Veda”

Ati (Āṭi) (T) fourth Tamil month (July-August)

atikal (aṭikaḷ) (T) feet

atman (ātman) the Self, the true self

atma sharirin (ātma śarīrin) “the Self of the body”; corporeal body

atmavat (ātmavat) prudent or judicious

Atri “Devourer”; one of the Seven Seers, born from Brahma’s eye

Attiyur (Attiyūr) hamlet southeast of Kanchipuram

Aurva “Underwater Fire that Will Destroy the World”; disciple of Shandilya

avadhuta (avadhūta) a radical renunciant freed of all desire

Avalokiteshvara (Avalokiteśvara) a bodhisattva

Avani (Āvaṇi) (T) fifth Tamil month (August-September)

Avantipura home of Sandipani, guru of Krishna and Balarama

Avashyaka-niruti (Avaśyaka-niruti) of Bhadrabahu (Bhadrabāhu) II sixth-century Jain commentary

avatara (avatāra) descent, manifestation of God in the universe

avidya mistaken knowledge; misperception

avikalpa “not distinguished or particularized”; completely passive object of perception

Ay (Āy) Dynasty rulers of Kerala, ca. 300 BCE-600 CE

ayana path; resting place

Ayodhya (Ayodhyā) capital of the Kosala region

ayudhapurusha (āyudhapuruṣa) a weapon in the shape of a person

ayurveda (āyurveda) “knowledge of longevity,” traditional Indian medical science

Badari ashram of Narada on the mountain Gandhamadana

Bahlika region ruled by Kardama

bala indefatigable or transforming power; strength

Balarama (Balarāma) Krishna’s elder brother

bali offering; (cap.) asura king, ruler of Patala, tricked by Vamana into giving him heaven and earth

balimudra (balimudrā) mudra of power or of offering; the fingers bend to the palm and the thumb curls over the forefinger

balin powerful

Bana (Bāṇa) asura ally of King Kamsa, eldest son of Bali

bappa bhattaraka (bappa bhaṭṭāraka) “venerable father”; used of some Buddhist teachers and Shaiva monks

Barhishmati (Barhiṣmatī) wife of Priyavrata

Baudhayana Shrautasutra (Baudhayāna Śrautasūtra) contains methods of constructing Vedic altars

Bhadra (Bhadrā) seventh wife of Krishna

Bhadrapada (Bhādrapada) sixth Sanskrit month, August-September

bhadra pitha (bhadra pīṭha) holy seat

Bhadrashravas (Bhadraśravas) “He of Gracious Fame”; ruler of Bhadrashvas

Bhadrashvas (Bhadrāśvas) “Auspicious Horse”; region of Jambu east of Ilavrita

bhaga wealth, honor, virtue

Bhagadatta ruler allied with Jarasandha though at heart loyal to Yudhisthira

Bhagavad-gita (Bhagavad-gītā) “Song of God,” dialogue between Krishna and Arjuna in book 6 of the Mahabharata

Bhagavan (Bhagavān) “the possessor of bhaga”; used as an honorific, e.g., Bhagavan Shiva, but in Bhagavata Dharma, “the Bhagavan” denotes Narayana Vasudeva’s four vyuha formations.

bhagavan svayam (bhagavān svayam) the Bhagavan himself

Bhagavata (Bhāgavata) “āwho belong to the Bhagavan”

Bhagavatam condensed version of Krishna’s teaching, BP 3.8.7

**Bhagavata Purana (**Bhāgavata Purāāaāthe primary textual source of Vaishnavism

Bhagiratha (Bhagīratha) Amshuman’s grandson

Bhairavi (Bhairavī) fierce form of the Goddess

bhajan devotional song

bhakta devotee, participant in bhakti

bhakti “devout sharing”; devotional worship

bhaktiyoga discipline of devotion

bhalla a kind of arrow

Bharadvaja (Bharadvāja) one of theāeers

Bharata son of Rishabha; also a brother of Rama

Bhārata India; poā Jambu continent, south of the Himalayas

**bhava (bhāva)**āce; feeling

Bhava “Coming into Being”; one of the Maruts

Bhavani (Bhavānī) conāBhava; also identified with Uma

bhaya anxiety, fear

bhikshu (bhikṣu) Buddhist monk

Bhima (Bhīma) younger brother of Simhavishnuvarman, who founded lineage from which Nandivarman Pallavamalla descended in the sixth generation; also one of the Rudras; also Bhimasena

Bhimasena (Bhīmasena) Arjuna’s brother, son of Kunti, who kills Jarasandha

Bhishma (Bhīṣma) warrior who fought on side of Kauravas

bhoga success in the material world; enjoyment

Bhoja clan ruled by Kamsa

bhojana food

Bhrami wife of Dhruva

Bhrigu (Bhṛgu) a prajapati, born of B/b> a prajapati, born of Brahma’s skin; a clan led by Shukra

**bhu, bhumi (**bhū, bhūmi) the material realm; the earth

bhujamgatrasa (bhujaṅgatrāsa) “snake-fright” posture

bhukti worldly prosperity

bhuloka (bhūloka) Earth

Bhumi, Bhumidevi (Bhūmi, Bhūmidevī) Goddess Earth

bhupati (bhūpati) “Master of Earth”

Bhurloka (Bhūrloka) Earth and the seven realms of Rasa beneath

bhuta (bhūta) ghost

bhutagrama (bhūtagrāma) the assembly of living beings

Bhutam (Bhūtam) poet from the Kanchipuram region

bhutani (bhūtāni) material beings

bhutapati (bhūtapati) “Master of Ghosts”

bhuti (bhūti) “material cause”; to bring into being

bhutishakti (bhūtiśakti) the power to bring an act into being

Bhuvana father of Vishvakarma

bhuvarloka (bhuvarloka) the atmosphere, the sphere of Surya

bija (bīja) seed

bimba icon, image

Bindumati (Bindumatī) wife of Mandhata

bodha consciousness, perception

bodhi wakefulness

Brahma (Brahmā) great god, from whom emerges spacetime

brahmacharin (brahmacārin) celibate student

brahmakhya dhama (brahmakhyā dhāma) the “home” called brahman

brahmahatya (brahmahatyā) the sin of slaying a brahmin

brahmamuhurta (brahmamuhūrta) Brahma’s hour, the hour before sunrise

brahman primordial being, leading to the derivative meanings of “growth,” “expansion,” or “evolution”

brahmana (brāhmaṇa) one of the portions of the Veda

brahmanda (brahmāṇḍa) “Brahma sphere” or “egg of Brahma”; spacetime

Brahmanda Purana (Brahmāṇḍa Purāṇa) one of the major puranas

brahmanirvana (brahmanirvāṇa) “extinction in brahman”; dissolurion into brahman

brahmapura fort of brahman

brahmarandhra “suture of Brahma”; aperture (or chakra) at crown of the head

brahma sanatana (brahma sanātana) ancient or eternal prayer

Brahmavada (Brahmavāda) “Doctrine of Brahman

Brahmavadasya-samgraha (Brahmavādasya-saṃgraha) “Summary of the Doctrine of Brahman

Brahmavadin (Brahamavādin) Jaina sect

Brahmavalli (Brahmavallī) section of the Taittiriya Upanishad

Brahmavarta (Brahmāvarta) land of Svayambhuva Manu

Brihacchloka (Bṛhachchloka) “He of Great Renown” or “of the Great Stanza”; son of Vamana and Kirti

Brihadaranyaka Upanishad (Bṛhadāraṇyaka Upaniṣad) one of the oldest upanishads, contained within the Shatapatha Brahmana

Brihadratha (Bṛhadratha) ruler of Magadha, father of Jarasandha

Brihaspati (Bṛhaspati) Jupiter; “Master of Prayer”; teacher of the gods

Brihaspatisava (bṛhaspatisava) sacrifice to Brihaspati performed by Daksha

brihat (bṛhat) great

Brihatkathasaritsagara (Bṛhatkathāsaritsāgara) “Ocean of the Rivers of the Great Romance” by Somadeva

Budha the planet Mercury; Moon’s son

Chaitra, Chitra (Caitra, Citra) first Sanskrit month (March-April)

chakra (cakra) wheel

chakrabjamandala (cakrāhjamaṇḍala) “Wheel and Lotus” mandala

Chakranadi (Cakranadī) river also called Gandaki, source of shalagramas

chakravartin (cakravartin) emperor

chalamotu (calamoṭu) (T) “with water”

Chalukya (Calukya) Dynasty rulers of southest and central India from their capital at Badami, 6th-8th century

chamara (camara) fly-whisk

chamiyati (cāmiyāṭi) (T) a medium through whom a being speaks to others

Chamunda (Cāmuṇḍā) terrifying emanation of Durga

Chanda (Caṇḍa) asura slain by Durga

Chandika Durga (Caṇḍikā Durgā) fear-inspiring aspect of Durga

Chandogya Upanishad (Chāndogya Upaniṣad) one of the oldest upanishada, associated with the Sama Veda

Chandrapada (Candrapada) mountain that connects earth with Patala

Chandravaloka (Candrāvaloka) king, father of Taravaloka

Chanura (Cāṇūra) wrestler killed by Krishna in Mathura

charana (cāraṇa) celestial panegyrist

Chatakopan (Caṭakōpan) (T) Alvar better known as Nammalvar

Chattanar (Cāttaṉār) (T) Tamil poet, fl. 550 CE

Chatuhshloki Bhagavatam (Catuhślokī Bhāgavatam)Bhagavatam in Four Stanzas”

Chatur Yuga (Catur Yuga) the set of four ages (yuga), measured by chronological time in deva years

chatvala (catvāla) open pit outside a vedi, providing dirt for altars

Chedi (Cedi) region ruled by Shishupala, ally of Jarasandha

Chelvan Apimanatunkan (Celvaṉ Apimanatuṅkaṉ) (T) “the prosperous man who is dear”; equivalent to Shri Vallabha

Chera (Cēraṉ) Dynasty (T) early rulers in Kerala

cheri (cēri) (T) section

Chermadevi (Cēraṉmātāvī) (T) town in the Pandya realm

chetas (cetas) consciousness

chid, chit, chitta (cid, cit, citta) consciousness

chihnamakhilam (cihnamalchilam) (T) complete insignia

Chilappatikaram (Cilappatikāram) (T) Tamil epic by Ilankovatikal

chintamani (cintāmaṇi) “gem of thought”; wish-fulfilling jewel

chitra (citra) picture

Chitraketu (Citrakētu) (T) ruler of the Surasenas

Chitramaya Pallavaraja (Citramāya Pallavarāja) Nandivarman’s enemy defeated by Udayachandra

Chitraratha (Citrarāthra) gandharva king

Chitrasikhandin (Citrasikhandin) the Seven Seers who composed the Satvata Shastra

chittah (cittah) those who are “reflective”

Chittrai (Cittirai) (T) first Tamil month (April-May)

chivikai (civikai) (T) balcony; palanquin

Chola (Cōḻaṉ) Dynasty (T) early Tamil rulers displaced by Pallavas and Pandyas

Dadapuram town in the Chola realm

Dadhichi (Dadhīci) sage who gave his body to create Indra’s vajra

daitya asura; descendent of Kashyapa and Diti

daiva fate; depending on fate

Daksha (Dakṣa) “Dextrous in Sacrifice”; a prajapati born of Brahma’s thumb

dakshina (dakṣiṇa) right (side); south

dakshina (dakṣiṇā) gifts made to a priest for performance of a sacrifice, or to a guru at completion of studies

Dakshinagni (Dakṣiṇāgni) “Southern Fire”; a deity

Dakshinakalika (Dakṣiṇakālikā) Kalika of the South, or Kalika Facing South

Dakshinamurti (Dakṣiṇāmūrti) “The South-Facing Material Form”

dakshinayana (dakṣiṇāyaṇa) the darkening half of the year

dakshinya-drishti-padavi (dākṣiṇya-dṛṣti-padaī) the “Path of the Southern Doctrine”

dama discipline of the breath or body; self-restraint, subduing of passions

dama (dāma) flower garland, necklace of beads

Damodara (Dāmodara) vyuha of Vasudeva

dana (dāna) ritual gift

danava (dānava) asura sons of Danu

**danda (**daṇḍa) staff; righteous punishment

Dantavaktra “Crooked Tusk”; arrogant king killed by Krishna with his mace

Dantidurga (T) also known as Sahastunga Dantidurga Khadgavaloka; mid-eighth-century ruler who aided Nandivarman Pallavamalla

Dantivarnam son of Nandivarman and Reva

Danu wife of Kashyapa, mother of Panis

darbha a sacred grass

**darshana (**darśana) vision of God or His representation

Daruka (Dāruka) Krishna’s charioteer

Dasharatha (Daśaratha) father of Rama

Dasharha (Dāśārha) clan allied with Satvatas

dasyayoga (dāsyayoga) yoga of the servant

Dattatreya (Dattātreya) emanation of Vishnu through Atri and Anasuya Devadatta; Kalki’s swift white horse

daya (dayā) compassion

deha physical body

dehin embodied being

deva god; the “bright” or “shining” inhabitants of heaven

devadasi (devadāsī) female temple dancer

Devadhani (Devadhānī) Indra’s capital, in the east

Devahuti (Devahūti) invocation of the gods

Devaka Kamsa’s brother, father of Devaki

Devaki (Devakī) Krishna’s birth mother in Mathura

Devakiputra (Devakīputra) Krishna as the son of Devaki

Devanathan Bhattachari, S. present priest of the Vaikuntha Perumal Temple

Devapi (Devāpi) survivor of the Lunar Dynasty in Kali Yuga

Devi (Devī; T: Dēvi) the Goddess

Devi Mahatmyam (Devī Māhātmyam; T: Dēvi Mahātmyam) the “Glorification of the Goddess,” a portion of the Markandeya Purana

dhama (dhāma) abode

dhama parama (dhāma parama) supreme home, Highest Home (of Krishna)

Dhanuryajna (Dhanuryajña) Bow Sacrifice

Dhanvantari “He Moves in a Curve”; a portion of Hari, teacher of ayurveda

dhara bearer, one who holds up

dhara (dhārā) stream

dharana (dhāraṇā) holding in memory; fixed concentration

Dharani (Dharaṇī) Earth

dharani (dharaṇī) a spell

dharma righteousness; the true or right order of the moving universe, in which (according to the Veda) each being plays an arranged role, which changes according to place and time

Dharma “true teaching” or “right doctrine”; a system of thought and practice

Dharmaraja Ratha (Dharmarāja Ratha) temple at Mamallapuram

Dharmashastra (Dharmaśāstra) “system of right order”; law texts

Dhataki (Dhātaki) a ruler of Pushkara

dhriti (dhṛti) satisfaction

Dhruva the pole star; Brahma’s great-grandson

dhyana (dhyāna) inner vision; meditation, visualization as a mode of discipline

dhyanamudra (dhyānamudrā) the hand bends down toward the viewer, the thumb extends sideways, and the fingers curl inward

Digambara Jaina sect, “clothed by the four directions of space”

digdevata (digdevatā) directional deva

digvijaya conquering the four directions

diksha (dīkṣa) consecration

dinmurti (diṅmūrti) material forms of the eight directions

dipamudra (dīpamudrā) mudra of light; the hand bends its fingers inward with the forefinger slightly elevated

Dirghatamas (Dīrghatamas) seer in the Rig Veda

Diti “Restraint,” mother of the daityas

dosha (doṣa) harm, error

doshadaridra (doṣadaridra) “poor in faults”

Draupadi (Draupadī) wife of the Pandava brothers

drava (drāva) melting

Dravida (Draviḍa) region modern Tamil Nadu

dravya substance perceived by the sense organs

Drigishvara (Dṛgīśvara) Surya, the “Ruler of Sight”

drishti (dṛṣṭi) insight

Drona (Droṇa) acharya of the Pandavas

Drumakulya a northern region, in the Ramayana

durga fortress

Durga (Durgā) “Beyond Reach”; the warrior Goddess

durgapala (durgapāla) protector of the fort

Durvasas (Durvāsas) sage, part aspect of Shiva, who cursed Indra

dushana (dūṣaṇa) bad inclination, violation, corruption

Dushyanta (Duṣyanta) husband of Shakuntala

Dvapara Yuga (Dvāpara Yuga) the third age in the great cycle

Dvaraka (Dvarakā) “Doorway”; city founded by Krishna in the western sea

dvarapala (dvārapāla) guardian of the doorway

dvesha (dveṣa) antagonism, hatred

dvija-samskriti (dvija-saṁskṛti) “twice-born”

dvijiha-amgini (dvijiha amginī) (T) “a woman with a double tongue”

dvipa (dvīpa) one of seven concentric continents separated by oceans

Dvivida monkey chief, friend of Kamsa

dyaus heaven

Ekadasharudra (Ekadaśarudra) the eleven Rudras

Ekamreshvara (Ekamrēśvara) (T) Pashupati temple to Shiva in Kanchipuram

ekamurti (ekamūrti) single material form

ekaneka (ekāneka) single-yet-many

ekantikabhakta (ekāntikabhakta) strict monotheist

Emusha (Emūṣa) “the Terrible”; Boar who rescued Earth

Gada (Gadā) Krishna’s mace

gahana depths

gana (gaṇa) assembly

ganadhipati (gaṇādhipati) overlord

Ganapati (Gaṇapati) “Master of Hosts,” Ganesha

Gandhamadana mountain location of Badari ashram in Kimpurusha

gandharva celestial musician

Ganesha (Gaṇeśa) “Ruler of Hosts,” elephant-headed son of Shiva and Parvati

Ganga (Gaṅgā) Ganges River; also its goddess

Ganga (Gaṅgā)Dynasty Western Gangas: rulers based in south Karnataka, 3rd-10th centuries

Gangadvara (Gaṅgādvāra) modern Haridvara

Gangaikondacholapuram (Gaṅgaikondacōḻapuram; T: Kaṅkai koṉṭacōḻapuram) Chola capital 11th—13th centuries

Gangavadi (Gaṅgavadi) capital of the Ganga Dynasty in Karnataka

garbha embryo; womb

garbhagriha (garbhagṛha) inner sanctum, lit. “womb-room”

Garga (Gārga) acharya of the Yadava clan

Garuda (Garuḍa) kite bird that serves Vasudeva as vehicle

Gautama one of the Seven Seers

gayatri-vrata (gāyatrī-vrata) Gayatri vow

ghatakayar (ghāṭakayar) (T) members of a ghatika

gatha (gāthā) long poem or chant

ghatika (ghāṭika) (T) a learned assembly of Brahmins connected to kingship

ghora angirasa (ghora āṅgirasa) “angry son of Angiras,” epithet of Krishna’s teacher

Girisha (Girīśa) Shiva as Ruler of Mountains

Girivraja “Fenced by Mountains,” Jarasandha’s capital

go cow, cattle

Goda (T) Kotai, the Tamil poet Antal

Gokula “cowherd settlement” in Vraja, home of Krishna’s stepfather, Nanda

gomriga (gomṛga) “bovine deer,” a victim at a horse sacrifice

gopi (gopī) cowherd woman; village girl, devotee of Krishna

goshthi (goṣṭhi) learned assembly

gotra lineage through the male line

Govardhana hill in Vraja, held up by Krishna

Govinda vyuha of Vasudeva, Krishna

graha the “grasper”; there are several common meanings, including planet and eclipse

grahamudra (grahamudrā) mudra of the eclipse; the left hand is near or supports the right elbow, and the right hand faces its palm forward with thumb open and fingers bent toward the palm

Guha Skanda, son of Shiva

guha-akasha (guha-ākāśa) space within the cave of the heart

guhavasa (guhāvāsa) hidden place

guhyaka warrior yaksha, attendant of Kubera

guna (guṇa) qualities; thread

Gunabhadra (Guṇabhadra) disciple of Jinasena

guru teacher

hala plow

halahala (hālāhah) plant that produces kalakuta poison

hamsa (haṃsa) goose, signifying acute mental discrimination; (cap.) Krishna as Goose

Hamsa Upanishad (Haṃsa Upaniṣad) a upanishad devoted to practice of meditation

Hanuman (Hanumān) monkey devotee of Rama, a “Supreme Bhagavata”

Hara “Destroyer”; name given to Shiva

hari golden, greenish, or tawny in color; (cap.) name for Bhagavan that refers to the tawny color of the lion

haridasa (haridāsa) “Hari’s slave”; devotee

Harishchandra (Hariścandra) king famous for faithfulness to truth and for giving

Harivarsha (Harivarṣa) region of Jambu just south of Ilavrita

Hastinapura (Hastināpura) the Kuru capital

havirdhan (havirdhān) oblation for daily sacrifice

havya anything offered as an oblation to the gods

Hayagriva (Hayagrīva) horse-headed avatara of Vishnu; also an asura

hayamedha ashvamedha, horse sacrifice

Hehaya a people whose ruler was intoxicated with wealth and power

Himavan “He Who Possesses Snow”; Parvati’s father

himsa (hiṃsā) violence

Hiranmayavarsha (Hiraṇmayavarṣa) “Made of Gold,” region where Bhagavan is the Tortoise

Hiranyagarbha (Hiraṇyagarbha) “Golden Embryo”; Brahma

Hiranyakashipu (Hiraṇyakaśipu) “Golden Clothes,” asura son of Diti

Hiranyaksha (Hiraṇyākṣa) “Golden Eyes,” asura son of Diti

Hiranyavarman (Hiraṇyavarman) father of Nandivarman Pallavamalla

homa poured oblations

hora (horā) hour, the twenty-fourth part of an ahoratra

hotri (hotṛ) the priest offering oblations at a sacrifice

hri (hrī) modesty

hridaya (hṛdaya) heart, seat of consciousness

Hrishikesha (Hṛṣīkeśa) “Ruler of the Senses”; vyuha of Vasudeva

hritstha (hṛtstha) abiding in the center of consciousness

Huhu (Hūhū) foremost gandharva, once the “grasper”

iccha (icchā) wish, intention

Idhmajihva “Fuel’s Tongue”; second son of Priyavrata

ijya the midday liturjical service

Ikshvaku (Ikṣvāku) grandson of Surya, founder of Solar Dynasty

Ila (Ilā) Earth; also son of Kardama

Ilankovatikal (Iḻankōvaṭikaḷ) (T) Tamil writer, 5th-6th centuries CE

Ilavarta-varsha (Ilāvarta-varṣa) “Region that Changes Ila”

Ilavrita (Ilāvṛta) the central region of Jambu

Indivaraprabha (Indīvaraprabhā) daughter of Kanva and Menaka

Indra Vedic god of the atmosphere and rain; a position of benevolent ruler occupied by different beings who are born to it

Indradyumna “Indra’s Strength”; Pandya king cursed by Agastya to be an elephant, who is reborn as Gajendra

Indrani (Indrāṇī) Indra’s wife

Indraprastha Yudhishthira’s capital

indriya the sense organs

intai (iṇṭai) (T) lotus

intaikkulam (iṇṭaikkuḻām) (T) lotus formation

Irantan-tiruvantati (Iranṭām-tiruvantāti) (T) collection of poems by Bhutam

Iravat “Possessing Food,” elephant ancestor of Airavata

Iravati (Irāvatī) wife of Parikshit

isha, ishvara (īśa, īśvara) ruler, lord

Ishana (Īśāna) one of the “five faces” of Shiva

ishita (īśitā) supreme dominion

itam (iṭam) (T) this place

itihasa (itihāsa) history

itihasa puratana (itihāsa purātaṇa) “old legend”

Jada Sumati (Jaḍa Sumati) “Stupid Sumati”; narrator of stories in Markandeya Purana

Jagadishvara (Jagadīśvara) Ruler of the Moving Universe

Jagannatha (Jagannātha) Lord of the Moving Universe

jagat, jagad the moving universe

jagatadiratma (jagatādirātma) the primal atman of the moving universe

jagrat (jāgrat) waking consciousness

Jaimini sage, disciple of Vyasa

jalakalmasha (jalakalmaṣa) liquid of defilement, kalakuta

Jamadagni one of the Seven Seers, father of Parashurama

Jambavat (Jāmbavat) Brahma’s son, advisor to Rama

Jambavati (Jāmbavatī) daughter of Jambavat; mother of Krishna’s son Samba

Jambha asura who defeated Indra

Jambu (Jambū) continent at the center of the earth

Janaloka one of the worlds beyond Dhruva

Janamejaya eldest son of Parikshit

Janardana (Janārdana) “He Who Agitates People” or “Impeller of Men”; aspect of Vishnu

japa repetitive recitation of mantras for devotional purposes

japamala (japamālā) circular garland of beads used for mantra recitation

Jara (Jarā) “Decay,” “Old Age”

Jarasandha (Jarāsandha) “Joined by Decay”; Kamsa’s father-in-law

Jatavedas (Jātavedas) “all-possesing”; the threefold fire, descended from Moon

Jaya “Victory”; guardian in Vaikuntha

Jayakhya-samhita (Jayakhyā-saṁhitā) one of the samhitas of the Pancharatra Agama

Jayanta “Victorious”; also called Prishnigarbha

Jayanti (Jayantī) wife of Rishabha

Jina one of the 24 enlightened beings who taught the Jain tradition

Jinasena Digambara Jain acharya (9th century)

jiva (jīva) the hidden life of the body

jnana (jñāna) knowledge; omniscience

Jnanamritasara-samhita (Jñānāmṛtasara-saṁhitā) a Pancharatra text

jnanamudra (jñānamudrā) sign in which the little finger stands up straight, the other fingers curl into the palm, and the thumb bends over the index finger

jnana guhyatama (jñāna guhyatama) most secret knowledge

jneya (jñeya) “what should be known”

Kacchapa (Kaccapa) (T; Skt. Kaśyapa) Krishna as Tortoise

kacchiyon (kacciyōn) (T) “Kanchi’s owner”

Kadamba Dynasty rulers in Karnataka, late 4th to early 6th centuries

Kadru (Kadrū) Kaliya’s father

Kaikasi (Kaikasī) daughter of Sumali, mother of Ravana

Kaikeyi (Kaikeyī; T: Kaikēyi) co-wife of Dasharatha, mother of Bharata

Kailasa (Kailāsa) mountain where Shiva dwells

Kailasanatha (Kailāsanātha) Temple in Kanchipuram, ca. 720 CE; in Ellora, mid-8th century

Kaitabha (Kaiṭabha) “Of Desire’s Likeness”; asura who stole Veda

kaivalya aloneness; consciousness of the atman as distinct from the material world

kala (kalā) a fraction; a digit of the moon

kala (kāla) time; eternal Time; also black

kalakuta (kālakūṭa) “time’s trap” or “black deception”; poison churned up from the Milk Ocean

Kalanemi (Kālanemi) “portion of time”; asura slain by Vishnu

Kalanjara (Kālañjara) mountain where Bharata is reborn as a deer

Kalapa (Kalāpa) village where Devapi and Maru live

Kali (Kālī; T: Kāḷī) the Goddess as anger

Kalika (Kālikā) Goddess, emanation of Parvati

Kalikanri (Kalikaṉṟi) (T) “One who put down with a strong hand the might of Kali,” Alvar also known as Tirumangai

Kalindi (Kālindī) the river Yamuna as a goddess; Krishna’s fourth wife

kalirinralay (kaḷiṟiṉrala) (T) elephant’s head

Kaliya (Kāliya) serpent defeated by Krishna in the Yamuna River

Kali Yuga the fourth age in the great cycle, in which we live

Kalki (Kalkī) final avatara of Vishnu

kalmasha (kalmaṣa) stain; kalakuta

kalpa a day of Brahma, a great cycle of time containing 1,000 yugas or 432 million mortal years; (cap.) son of Dhruva

kalpataru wish-fulfilling tree

kalyana (kalyāṇa) excellent, beautiful

kama (kāma) pleasure

Kamadeva (Kāmadeva) god of desire, born of Brahma’s heart; the Lord of Senses

Kamadhenu (Kāmadhenu) wish-fulfilling cow

Kamakottam (Kamakkōttam) (T) temple for the Goddess in ancient Kanchipuram

Kamakshi (Kāmākṣī) Goddess

kamanurupam (kāmānurūpam) in whatever form desired

Kamatha (Kāmaṭha) the Tortoise

kamavasayita (kāmāvasāyitā) supressing all desires

kamavriksha (kāmavṛkṣa) wish-granting “tree of desire”

Kampavarman (r. ca. 847–880) son of Nandivarman III

Kamsa (Kaṁsa) demon ruler of Mathura, defeated by Krishna

Kanchipuram (Kāñcīpuram) capital city of the Pallava Dynasty

Kandan Marampavaiyar second wife of Nandivarman III

Kandarpa another name for Kamadeva

Kannan (Kaṇṇaṉ) (T) Krishna

kanni (kaṉṉi) (T) virgin

Kannin chiruttampu (kaṇṇiṉ ciṟutāmpu) (T) “poem of eleven stanzas”

kantakadruma (kaṇṭakadruma) thorn bush wood

Kanva (Kaṇva) seer of the Lunar Dynasty

Kapalika (Kāpālika) a type of Shaiva ascetic who carries a skull

kapi ape

Kapila seer who originated samkhya

Karabhajana (Karabhājana) shramana son of Rishabha

Karana (kāraṇa) causal necessity

karana-sukshma-sharira (kāraṇa-sūkṣma-śarīra) body of causation or causal subtle body

Karansukara (Karaṇsūkara) “Causal Boar”

Kardama “Mud,” husband of Devahuti; born of Brahma’s shadow

karma action performed with intended consequences in mind, e.g., sacrifice, ceremony, vrata

Karna (Karṇa) eldest brother among the Pandavas

Karnataka (Karṇāṭaka) area of central-western India

Kartika, Karttika (Kārtika) the eighth Sanskrit month (October-November)

Karttikai (Kārttikai) (T) eighth Tamil month (November-December)

karuna (karuṇa) compassion

Karur (Karūr) Chera capital, also known as Vanji

Karusha (Karūṣa) region ruled by Paundraka

kashaya (kāṣāya) ochre

Kashi (Kāśī) Banaras, Varanasi

Kashyapa (Kaśyapa) the prajapati “Black-teeth” or Tortoise; “Vision,” one of the Seven Rishis, mind-born son of Marichi

Kataka same as Khatakka; name of Nandivarman’s clan

katavesha (T) Katava ruler

Kathasaritsagara (Kathāsaritsāgara) “Ocean of the Stream of Stories”

Kaumodaki (Kaumodakī) Hari’s mace

kaupina (kaupīna) loincloth

Kaurava clan opposing the Pandavas in the Mahabharata war

Kausalya (Kausalyā) mother of Rama

Kaushambi (Kauśāmbi) capital of the Magadha region

Kaushika (Kauśika) one of Jarasandha’s generals

Kaushiki (Kauśikī) the golden Goddess known as Chandika and Durga

Kaushitaki Upanishad (Kauśītaki Upaniṣad) one of the older upanishads, associated with the Rig Veda

Kaushtubha (Kauṣṭubha) gem that emerged from churning the Milk Ocean

Kaveri (Kāverī; T: Kāvēri) River river in Chola and Muttaraiyar realms

Kavi son of Priyavrata

kavya oblation of food to the ancestors

kavya (kāvya) literary composition, poem

Kaya (Kāya) Body, a form of Brahma

Kena Upanishad (Kena Upaniṣad) one of the oldest upanishads, associated with the Sama Veda

Keshava (Keśava) vyuha of Vasudeva; Krishna as slayer of Keshin

Keshin (Keśin) asura in the shape of a horse

Keshini (Keśiṇī) secondary wife of Sagara

Ketumala (Ketumāla) region of Jambu west of Mt. Meru

khanda (khaṇḍa) fragment

khandava (khāṇḍava) sugarplums

Khatakka Nandivarman’s clan

khatvanga (khaṭvaṅga) one or more skulls on top of a staff; (cap.) king who was progenitor of the Raghu Dynasty

khatvanga-dhvaja (khaṭvaṅga-dhvaja) the khatvanga banner

kimpurusha (kimpuruṣa) class of celestial being with human bodies and horse heads; (cap.) region of Jambu directly north of Bharata

kinnara same as kimpurusha

kinnari (kinnarī) kinnara woman

kirtana (kīrtana) communal singing of Bhagavan’s glories

Kirti (Kīrti) “Glory, Fame,” wife of Vamana

Kirtivarman (Kīrtivarman) II Chalukya ruler defeated by Dantidurga, mid-8th century

kolam (kōlam) (T) ornamental mandala drawn each morning on the doorstep

Konka (Koṅka) territory visited by Rishabha

Kosala region ruled by the Solar Dynasty

kosha (kośa****)** level or layer of Bhagavan’s body; “sheath”

Kotai (Kōtai) poet better known as Antal

kottiyar (kōṭṭiyar) (T) “those in the assembly”

koyil (kōyil) (T) palace

Kratu “Will,” a prajapati, born of Brahma’s hand

Krauncha (Krauñca) the fifth dvipa from the center

Kraushtuki (Krauṣṭuki) Brahmin to whom Markandeya tells the Devi Mahatmyam

krida, kridartha (krīḍa, krīḍārtha) play, sport

Kripa (Kṛpa) “Compassion,” chief priest at Parikshit’s horse sadrifices

Krishna (Kṛṣṇa) Vasudeva

Krishna I son of Amoghavarsha

Krishnakatha (Kṛṣṇkathā) the Krishna Story

krita-avatara (kṛta-avatāra) one who has descended

Kritamala (Kṛtamālā; T: Kirutumāl) River also called Vaigai River, in Pandya realm

Kritavirya (Kṛtavīrya) father of Kartaviryarjuna, defeated by Parashurama

Krita Yuga (Kṛta Yuga) the first age, Satya Yuga

Krittika (Kṛttikā) the third of 27 lunar mansions

kriya ritual performance

kriyashakti (kriyaśakti)** the power to intend an act

kriyayoga “unified consciousness during ritual performance”

Krodha Anger, born of Brahma’s brow

kshama (kṣamā) forbearance

kshatra (kṣatra) dominion, might

Kshatriya (Kṣatriya) member of the second varna, the ruling or military caste

kshetra (kṣetra) field

kshetrajna (kṣetrajña) knower of the field

kshiti mandala (kṣiti maṇḍala) the globe, the earth

kshraum (kṣraum) part of a “seed mantra”

Kubera “Giver of Wealth”; a rakshasa, but leader of the yakshas

Kukura clan allied with Satvakas

kula clan

Kulachala (Kulācala) a mountain ashram

kuladeva clan deity

kulam (kuḻām) (T) an assembled group

kulamallar (T) clan’s wrestlers

kulinga (kuliṅga) shrike

Kumara (Kumāra) “son, prince”; Brahma’s four sons, protectors of the four directions

kumbhabhisheka (kumbhābiṣeka) consecration of a temple

Kumarakottam (Kumarakōttam) (T) temple for Skanda in ancient Kanchipuram

Kumbakarnam (Kumbhakarṇa; T: Kumpakarṇan) Ravana’s half-brother

kunjarapati (kuṅjarapati) “the father of master elephants”

Kunti (Kuntī; T: Kunti) mother of Arjuna

Kuram (Kūram) town north of Kanchipuram

Kurma (Kūrma) Tortoise

Kurma Purana (Kūrma Purāṇa) one of the major upanishads

Kurukurnakar (Kurukūrnakar) home of Maran Chatakopan

kusha (kuśa)** a sacred grass; (cap.) the continent immediately surrounding Shalmala; also son of Rama and Sita

Kushadhvaja (Kuśadhvaja) king who worshiped Sudarshana

Kushavati (Kuśavatī) residence of Kusha, son of Rama

Kutaka (Kuṭaka) territory visited by Rishabha

Kutakachala (Kūṭakācala) mountain where Rishibha’s body was burned up

Kuvalayapida (Kuvalayāpīḍa) “Chaplet of Blue Waterlilies,” Kamsa’s raging elephant

Kuvalayashva (Kuvalayāśva) father of Alarka

laghiman the power of attaining extreme lightness

lakshana (lakṣaṇa) topic, characteristic, mark

Lakshmana (Lakṣmaṇa) Rama’s faithful brother and devotee

Lakshmana (Lakṣmaṇā) Krishna’s eighth wife

Lakshmi (Lakṣmī) the Goddess as goddess of wealth

Lalita-mahatmya (Lalitā-māhātmya) portion of the Brahmanda Purana

lalitasana (lalitāsana) relaxed posture

Lanka (Laṅkā) island realm, south of Bharata, ruled by Ravana

Lava son of Rama and Sita

lila (līlā) play

linga (liṅga) mark, emblem; Shiva’s iconic form; penis; “subtle body”

Linga Purana (Liṅga Purāṇa) one of the major upanishads

Lobha Greed, born of Brahma’s lower lip

loka world, directional space

Lokaloka (Lokāloka) mountainous boundary between directional and nondirectional space

lokanatha (lokanātha) lord of the world

lolupa eager desire

Machi (Māci) (T) eleventh Tamil month (February-March)

Madalasa (Madālasā) wife of Kuvalayashva

madanubhava (madanubhāva) my (i.e., Hari’s) authority

madanugraha my (i.e., Hari’s) grace

Madhava (Mādhava) vyuha of Vasudeva

Madhavi (Mādhavī) goddess to whom Sita appealed

Madhu “Deluded Passion”; “Sweet Intoxicating Drink”; asura who stole Veda; also a clan allied with Satvakas

Madhurakavi see Maran Kari

Madhusudana (Madhusūdana) “Destroyer of Deluded Passion”

Madhuvana area on the Yamuna River where Dhruva practiced tapas

Madhyandina (Madhyaṅdina) a gotra consecrated to the Mantrasiddhanta Path

Madra (Madrā) Lakshmana, Krishna’s eighth wife

Madurai (T: Maturai) capital of the Pandya realm

madya wine

Magadha territory west of Mathura, ruled by Jarasandha

Magha (Māgha) eleventh Sanskrit month (January-February)

mahabala (mahābala) great force

Mahabharata (Mahābhārata) epic tale of the great war between the Pandavas and the Kauravas

mahabhisheka (mahābhiṣeka) “Great Unction,” great consecration

mahad same as mahat

mahakala (mahākāla) “great Time”

Mahamaya (Mahāmāyā) Goddess as transcendent and magical creativity

mahamoha (mahāmoha) great confusion as a mode of consciousness

mahapatakin (mahāpatakin) great sinners

mahaprasthana (mahāprasthāna) great departure

mahapunya (mahāpuṇya) “of great purity,” greatly auspicious

Maharloka one of the worlds beyond Dhruva

mahas performance, festival

mahasamantar (mahāsamantar) (T) superior dependent rulers

mahashantividhana (mahāśantividhāna)** “Great Pacification”; rites to pacify the world

mahasiddhi (mahāsiddhi) the eight occult powers

mahat great; “intellect or the intellectual principle (according to the samkhya philosophy the second of the 23 principles produced from Prakriti, and so called as the great source of Ahamkara and Manas)”—MW 1964: 794b

mahatman (mahātman) insightful sage

Mahavairochana (Mahāvairocana) the “effulgent One”

mahavedi (mahāvedi) sacrificial arena

Mahavira (Mahāvīra) son of Priyavrata; also a Jaina tirthankara

Mahavishnu (Mahāviṣṇu) Transcendent Vishnu

Mahendravarma I (ca. 580–630) third ruler in Pallava line after Nandivarman

Mahendravarma II (ca. 668–669) fifth ruler in Pallava line after Nandivarman

Mahendravarma III yuvaraja, son of Narasimhavarma Rajasimha II

Maheshvara (Māheśvara) “those who belong to Shiva, the Great Ruler”

Mahi Earth

mahiman illimitable bulk

Mahisha (Mahiṣa) the Buffalo Demon

Mahishasuramardini (Mahiṣāsuramardinī) Durga as Slayer of the Buffalo Demon

maithuna sexual union

Maitreya sage who learned the Bhagavatam from Parashara

makara crocodile-like beast; the “grasper”

makara samkranti (makara saṃkrānti) winter solstice as celebrated about 23 days after the actual solstice, because of the precession of the equinoxes

Mai (Māl) (T), “The Dark One” or “The Great One”; Krishna or Vishnu; or Lust, slain by Krishna to gain Pinnai as a bride

mala defilement, impurity

Mali (Mālī) asura slain by Vishnu after churning of the Milk Ocean

Malkhed capital of Amoghavarsha I

Malyavan (Mālyavān; T: Malyavān) asura slain by Vishnu after churning of the Milk Ocean

mamaka (mamaka) “This is mine”

Mamallapuram (Māmallapuram) port city, also called Mahabalipuram

mamsa (māṃsa) meat

manas mind or mental activity

Manasottara (Mānasottara) “Beyond the Mind” or “Boundary of the Mind,” mountain range of Mt. Meru

mandala (maṇḍala) “circle”; schematic map of the sacred universe

mandapa (maṇḍapa) hall

Mandara “Sluggish”; mountain used to churn the Ocean of Milk

Mandara (Mandāra) one of the pancha-vrikshas

Mandhata, Mandhatri (Māndhātā, Māndhātri) “Pious Man”; father-in-law of Saubhari

Mandukya Upanishad (Māṇḍūkya Upaniṣad) 12 sentences long, it explains the syllable Om

Mangalanatalvan (T) ruler of the Mangala Country

Mangalarashtra-bhartri (Maṅgalaraṣṭra-bhartṛ) ruler of the Mangala Country

Manimekelai (Maṇimēkelai) (T) goddess of the trade routes to Southeast Asia

Manimekalai (Maṇimēkelai) (T) Tamil epic by Chattanar

Manipravala (maṇipravāḷa) “jewels and coral,” mixed Sanskrit and Tamil, language of the later Sri Vaishnavas

Mannaikudi (Maṉṉaikudi) (T) site of a battle won by Udayachandra

Mannarkoyil (Maṉṉārkōyil) (T) town in the Pandya realm

mantira (T) mantra

mantra sacred Vedic formula

mantramurti (mantramūrti) the material form of the mantra

Mantrasiddhanta Path (Mantrasiddhānta Mārga) one of four paths taught by Brahma

mantrimandala (mantrimaṇḍala) assembly of ministers

manvantara Manu Term; one-fourteenth of a Brahma year of 4,324,000 mortal years

Maran Chatakopan (Māraṉ Caṭakōpaṉ) (T) Nammalvar, “The Venerable One of Southern Kurukur”

Maran Kari (Māṟaṉ Kāri) (T), minister of Varagunavarman I; also known as Madhura Kavi

Maravarman Rajasimha (Māravarman Rājasimha) (730–765) Shaiva Pandya who supported the opponents of Nandivarman’s rule

marga (mārga) path

Margashirsha (Mārgaśīrṣa) ninth Sanskrit month (November-December)

Marichi (Marīci) “Light Ray”; mind-born son of Brahma, father of Kashyapa

Marisha (Māriṣā) daughter of an apsaras, adopted by the trees, wife of Daksha

Markali (Mārkaḻi) (T) ninth Tamil month (December-January)

Markandeya (Mārkaṇḍeya) rishi who practices severe tapas

Markandeya Upanishad (Mārkaṇḍeya Upaniṣad) one of the major upanishads

Maru survivor of the Solar Dynasty in the Kali Yuga

marukantara desert region, ancient name of Marvara

Maruts storm gods who protect worshipers, give rain and fertility

masa (māsa) month

Matarishvan (Mātariśvan) Fire

Mathura (Mathurā) city on the Yamuna, capital of the Yadus’ land

matsamyata (matsāmyata) equality with one (i.e., with Krishna)

matsya fish; (cap.) Krishna as Fish

Matsya Purana (Matsya Purāṇa) the first and oldest of the puranas

Mattavilasa Prahasana (Mattavilāsa Prahasana) Sanskrit farce by King Mahendravarman

mattrakal (T) dignitary mentioned in first inscription on prakara wall

mauna moderation in speech; taciturnity

Maya “Architect”; asura yogin

Maya (Māyā) God’s delusive creative power; Yogamaya

mayamudra (māyāmudrā) gesture in which the thumb and the ring finger touch

medas fat

Medini (Medinī) Earth “having the fat of fertility”

Menaka (Menakā) apsaras, mother of Parvati; mother of Indivaraprabha

Meru mountain at the center of Jambu, north of Bharata

Merudevi (Merudevī) wife of Nabhi

meshaya (meṣāya) act like a ram

Mimamsaka (Mīmāṁsāka) follower of Mimamsa school of Brahmin ritualists

mina (mīna) fish

mithuna a male and female couple

Mitra bright daytime, worshiped with Varuna

Mitravinda (Mitravindā) Krishna’s fifth wife

mleccha barbarian

moda delight

moha delusion; infatuation as a mode of consciousness

Mohini (Mohiṇī) “She Who Deludes”

mriga (mṛga) mountain lion; wild beast

Mrikanda (Mṛkaṇḍa) father of Markandeya

mrita (mṛta) dead, death

Mrityu (Mṛtyu) Death

Muchukunda (Mucukunda) yogin, son of Mandhatri

Mudgala an exemplar of generosity

mudra (mudrā) a position of the hands; in Tantric rites, a grain preparation

muhurta (muhūrta) “hour,” actually 48 minutes; time of day

mukti emancipation from samsara

Mukunda “He Who Gives Emancipation”; name of Krishna

mukutankal (T) parts of a crown

mula (mūla) root

muladesha (mūladeśa)** “realm of the root”

muladhara, muladharachakra (mūlādhāra, mūlādhāracakra) “root support”; chakra at the base of the spine; in Tantra, the “wheel containing the root that supports [the body]”

Mulaka (Mūlaka) kshatriya who escaped Parashurama and regnerated the Solar Dynasty

mulaprakriti (mūlaprakṛti) sovereign who is the basis of the mandala realm

Munda (Muṇḍa) asura slain by Durga

muni (muṇi) sage

Mura Yavana punished by Bhagadatta; five-headed asura killed by Krishna

murti (mūrti) material form of God; icon; (cap.) wife of Dharma, mother of Nara and Narayana

musala club or pestle

Mushtika (Muṣṭika) wrestler slain by Balarama in Mathura

mushtimudra (muṣṭimudrā) “mudra of the fist”: the four fingers fold tightly into the palm and the thumb wraps over the forefinger

mutarayar (T: muttaraiyar**)** chieftains of agricultural lands

Muyalakan (T) demon on whose head Shiva dances the tandava

Nabhi (Nābhi) eldest son of Agnidhra, ruler of Bharata region of Jambu

Nacchiyar Tirumoli **(**Nācciyār Tirumoḻi) (T) poems by Kotai

naga (nāga) snake, esp. a multiheaded snake; person of low socioritual status

Nagapattinam (T) “Naga’s port city”

nagarattar (nakarattār) (T) “leading citizens”; a group of the Chettiyar caste

Nagnajiti (Nāgnajitī) Satya, Krishna’s sixth wife

Nahusha (Nahuṣa) king intoxicated by wealth and power

Naimisha (Naimiṣa) forest setting of narration of Bhagavata Purana

Naishada (Naiṣāda) tribals; people ceated from Vena’s thigh

Nakaran (Nakarān) of bounteous Kurukur (Kurukūr) epithet of Maran Chatakopan

nakshatra (nakṣatra) star or constellation

Nala monkey son of Vishvakarman; builder of bridge to Lanka

nalayira-divya-prabandha (nālāyira-divya-prahandha) (T) “Four Thousand Divine Stanzas”

nalika (nālika) a period of 24 minutes

nama (nāma) name

namah (namaḥ) veneration

namarupa (nāmarūpa) name-and-form

Nammalvar (Nammāḻvār) Alvar also known as Chatakopan

Namuchi (Namuci) “He Does Not Release Rain”; asura killed by Indra with foam from the Milk Ocean

nanatantravidhanena (nānātantravidhānena) by means of various Tantra rites

Nanda “Pleasing”; personal attendant of Bhagavan; Krishna’s foster-father

Nanda (Nandā, Alakanandā) an aspect of Hari

Nandaka “He Makes Happy”; Krishna’s knife or sword that cuts self-doubt

Nandipuram site of a west-facing temple predating the Vaikuntha Perumal

Nandishvara (Nandīśvara) “Ruler of the Happy”; Rudra’s servant

Nandivarman called the Parama Bhagavata; founder of the ruling lineage of Kanchipuram

Nappinai see Pinnai

nara man; (cap.) the rishi who forgets

Narada (Nārada) a prajapati, born of Brahma’s lap

Naraka Purgatory; also, an asura ally of Kamsa

Narakantaka (Narakāntaka) Krishna as Naraka’s slayer

Narakari (Narakāri) Krishna as Naraka’s foe

Naranan (Nāraṇaṉ) (T) Narayana

Naranarayana (Naranārāyaṇa) “Narayana as Man” or “Nara and Narayana”

Narasimha see Nrisimha

narasimha-diksha see nrisimha-diksha

Narasimhavarman (Narasiṃhavarman) Mamalla (ca. 630–668), fourth ruler in Pallava line after the founder, Nandivarman

Narasimhavarman Rajasimha (Narasiṃhavarman Rājasimha) II (700–728) Shaiva ruler of Kanchipuram

Narayana (Nārāyaṇa) God as Supreme Self; rishi who remembers

narayanakavacha mantra (nārāyaṇakavaca mantra) mantra of protection

narayanaparayanah (nārāyaṇaparāyaṇāḥ) those for whom Narayana is the last, supreme resort

Narayanastra (Nārāyaṇāstra) Narayana’s arrow or mantra

Narayana Upanishad (Nārāyaṇa Upaniṣad) contains many important mantras, including the Gayatri

narendra “Indra of men”

nashana (naśana)** destruction, loss

Nayanar (Nāyaṉār) (T) Tamil Shaiva poet-saint

nenchu (nencu) (T) heart, center

Nenmeli (Neṉmeli) (T) town north of Kuram

Netiyon (Neṭiyōn) (T) Bhagavan as the “long one”

Netumal (T) the “tall Vishnu”

Netuvayil (Neṭuvāyil) (T) site of a battle to win Nandivarman the throne

nih-sparshah (niḥ-sparśaḥ)** free from contact with sensual objects

nih-sprihah (niḥ-spṛhaḥ) not possessing longing

nil (nīḷ) (T) tall, deep

Nimi king of Mithila in Videha

Nimlochani (Nimlocanī) Varuna’s city, in the west

nirodha reclining position; constraint; confined mode

Nirriti (Nirṛti) “Disorder”; born of Brahma’s anus, dwells in the southwest

nirvana (nirvāṇa) “extinction”

nishchayan (niścayan)** conviction

nishada (niṣada) sit down

nishkala (niśkalā)** without parts

nityodita ever-manifest

nivasa (nivāsa) abode

nivritti (nivṛtti) nonprocreation

niyama discipline

Nriga (Nṛga) father of Sumati

Nripatungavarman (Nṛpatungavarman) (ca. 854–880) son of Nandivarman III by Sankha

Nrisimha (Nṛsiṁha) God as Man-lion, Narasimha

nrisimha-diksha (nṛsiṁha-dīkṣā) Man-lion Consecration

nrisimhanushtubh mantra (nṛsiṁhānuṣṭubh mantra) Man-lion mantra in the anushtubh meter

Nrisimha-tapaniya Upanishad (Nṛsiṁha-tāpaniya Upaniṣad) upanishad belonging to the Atharva Veda

nyasa (nyāsa) gesture of the right hand used to place Sudarshana in mantra form on various parts of the body

nyasamudra (nyāsamudrā) mudra of trust; the hand is open, but the middle finger bends downward to the palm

Om (Oṃ) the “High Chant, “the quintessence of all essences”

Om namo narayanaya (Oṃ namo nārāyaṇāya) the “eight-syllable mantra”

oshadhi (oṣadhi) an annual plant, not perennial

pada, padam foot, footstep; realm

Padapadmamakarandanishevana (Padapadmamakarandaniṣevaṇa) “Approaching (lit. Worshiping) the Honey of the (or His) Lotus Feet”

padma lotus

Padmabrahma (Padmabrahmā) Brahma born in a lotus

Padmanabha (Padmanābha) eleventh vyuha of Vasudeva, “He who has a lotus at his navel”

padmanidhimudra (padmanidhimudrā) “lotus treasure mudra”; the left hand faces toward the right, little finger stands up, the remaining fingers curl, and the tips of the forefinger and thumb touch

Padma Kalpa (Pādma Kalpa) a previous cycle in the life of Brahma

Padma-samhita (Pādma-saṁhitā) a samhita of the Pancharatra Agama

Padmavati (Padmāvatī) Vishvasphurji’s capital, Ujjaini

pakhanda (pākhaṇḍa) imposter, heretic

Palar (Pālar) River river in Pallava realm, also called Payasvini River, on which Kanchipuram stands

Pallava Dynasty ruled from Kanchipuram, 4th–9th centuries

Palluvettaraiyar (Paḻuvēṭṭaraiyar) (T) royal family of Nandivarman III’s wife Kandan Marampavaiyar

pampu (pāmpu) (T) cobra, snake

Pampurnatu (Pāmpūrnāṭu) (T) “country of Cobra (or Snake) Village,” region of Nandipuram near Kumbhakonam

panam (pāṉam) liquor, drink

Panchajanya (Pāñcajanya) Krishna’s conch

panchamakara (pañcamakāra) the five “M-words,” the Tantric “sacraments”

panchamukhalinga (pañcamukhaliṅga) Linga of Five Faces

pancharatra (pañcarātra) five nights; (cap.) name of a Vaishnava sect

Pancharatra Agama (Pāñcarātra Āgama) the tradition with Bhagavata Dharma that teaches the four vyuhas and their worship revealed by the Bhagavan Narayana Vasudeva for devotees during the Kali Yuga. Its individual texts, called samhita, tantra, and agama, preserve rites for the worship of God in images (murti), icons (archa), mandalas, temples, and consecrations (diksha) to a disciplined mode of life (sadhana), and the use of mantras, mudras, nyasa, and dhyana in worshiping on behalf of oneself or on behalf of others. Among the Pancharatra texts relevant to this temple are: Padma-samhita, Satvata-samhita, Jayakhya-samhita, Paushkara-samhita, Paramesvara-samhita, and Ahirhudhya-samhita.

panchavarsika (pāñcavarsika) quinquennial

panchavriksha (pāñcavṛkṣa) five (wish-fulfilling) trees

Pandava (Pāṇḍava; T: Pāṇḍavan) five brothers, sons of Yudhisthira, allied with Krishna in the Mahabharata war

Pandavatutar (Pāṇḍavatūtar) (T) temple of Krishna as Messenger of the Pandavas in Kanchipuram

Pandya (Pāṇḍya; T: Pāṇḍyan) Dynasty rulers based in Madurai, 6th century onward

Pani (Paṇi) type of asura who lives in Rasa, or who lives in a hole like a snake

paninta (paṇinta) (T) serves

Pankuni (Parikuṉi) (T) twelfth Tamil month (March-April)

pantaranka white ashes

papa (pāpa) evil, sin

papiyasin (pāpiyasin) worst of sins

papman (pāpman) constituted of sin

para, parama supreme

parabrahmanya (parabrāmaṇya) piously devoted to Brahmins

parama Bhagavata (parama Bhāgavata) Supreme Bhagavata; “Bhagavan’s Supreme Slave”

paramahamsa (paramahaṃsa) “supreme goose”; a radical renouncer

paramaheshvara (paramaheśvara)** supreme Maheshvara

parama mahapurusha (parama mahāpuruṣa) the Supremely Transcendent Person

parama japya (parama jāpya) supreme prayer

paramapada transcendent realm

paramapurusha (paramapuruṣa) Supreme Person

paramatman (paramātman) God as Supreme Self

paramavaishnava (paramavaiṣṇava) supreme devotee of Vishnu

Paramecchuravinnagaram (paramēccuraviṇṇagaram) (T) “Emperor’s Vishnu-house”

parameshvara (parameśvara)** Imperial Architect

Parameshvaravarman (Parameśvaravarman) I (ca. 672–700) first Shaiva ruler of Pallava realm

Parameshvaravarman (Parameśvaravarman) II (ca. 728–731) fourth and last Shaiva ruler of Pallava realm

parameshvara-vishnugriham (parameśvara-viṣṇugṛham)** “Emperor’s Vishnu-house”

parampara (paramparā) tradition

paramtapas (paraṃtapas) “he who possesses the supreme heat that defeats the foe”

parantavan (parantavaṉ) (T) same as paramtapas

pararthapuja (parārthapūjā) worship for the benefit of others

Parashara (Parāśara) sage who learned the Bhagavatam from Sankhyayana

parashu (paraśu)** axe

Parashurama (Paraśurāma) seventh avatara of Vishnu, “Rama with an axe”

Parijata (Pārijāta) coral tree from the Milk Ocean, a granter of all desires

Parikshit (Parīkṣit) king to whom Shuka relates the Bhagavata Purana

parishuddha (pariśuddha**)** thoroughly purified

paroksha (parokṣa**)** “invisible language”; lit. “beyond the range of the senses”

parokshvada (parokṣvāda) “doctrine of the invisible”

Parshvanatha (Pārśvanātha) the twenty-third Jaina tirthankara

partha (pārtha) twelve sacred texts attributed to Prithu

Parthavasekharapuram (T) town near Trivandram

Parvati (Pārvatī) “The Mountain’s Daughter”; Shiva’s consort

pashumarana (paśumarana)** animal victim in a sacrifice

Pashupata (Pāśupata) Shaiva sect

Pashupatam (Pāśupatam) weapon given by Shiva to Arjuna

patakam (pāṭakam) (T) street or section (of a town); (cap.) pre-Pallava Bhagavata temple

Patala (Pātāla) the deepest part of Rasa, naga realm ruled by Vasuki

Paundraka (Pauṇḍraka) ally with Shishupala et al. against Krishna

Paushkara-samhita (Pauṣkara-saṁhitā) a samhita of the Pancharatra Agama

payasa (pāyasa) milk-rice

Payasvini (Payasvinī) River see Palar River

payovrata “milk vow”; “liquids vow”

Periyalvar (Periyāḻvār) (T) Alvar also known as Vishnuchittan

Periyar (Periyār; T: periya-āṛu) River “great river,” in Kerala

Periya Tirumoli (Periya Tirumoḻi) (T) large anthology by Tirumangai Alvar

Perumanatikal (Perumānṭikal) (T) “Venerable Slave of Bhagavan”; Nandivarman’s title as a Bhagavata refugee

peruntaccan (peruntaccaṉ) (T) Master Architect

peti (pēdi) (T) a man with the predominant characteristics of a woman

Pey (Pēy) (T) Alvar connected with the Pallava Dynasty

phala fruit, results

Phalguna (Phālguna) twelfth Sanskrit month (February-March)

pinda (piṇḍa) ball of rice or flour offered to pitris

Pingala (Piṇgalā) a courtesan saved by Krishna

Pinnai (Piṉṉai or Nappiṉṉai) (T) a bride of Krishna

pishacha (piśāca)** ghoul

pitri (pitṛ) “father”; ancestors, ancestral manes

pitriganadhipati (pitṛgaṇādhipati) overlord of the ancestors

pitriraja (pitṛrāja) king of the ancestors

Plaksha (Plakṣa) the first continent beyond Jambhu

Ponkal (Poṅkal) (T) festival of winter solstice, 23 days after the actual solstice

poshana (poṣaṇa) “nourishing”; protection of refugees

Potalaka mountain where Avalokiteshvara sits

Poykai (Poikai) (T) Alvar connected with the Pallava Dynasty

Prabala “Powerful”; asura who gave his body as sacrifice; also a personal attendant of Bhagavan

Prabhasa (Prabhāsa) “Glittering” or “Splendor”; asura who visited Patala to aid Suryaprabha; also the place where Yadavas destroyed themselves, and where the Kali Yuga began

Pracheta “The Attentive”; one of the ten sons of Prachinabarhis

Prachinabarhis (Prācīnabarhis) “Eastern Light”; king who ruled during Daksha’s sacrifice

pradakshina (pradakṣiṇā) moving around an object clockwise in veneration

pradhana (pradhāna) primordial substratum of matter; essence

Pradyumna Pre-eminently Mighty, one of the vyuhas of God; Kama, born to Krishna and Rukmini as their son

Pragjyotishpura (Prāgjyotiṣpura) “City of Eastern Light,” Naraka’s capital

Prahlada (Prahlāda) “Delight,” asura son of Hiranyakashipu, devotee of Krishna

prajapati (prajāpati) “master of progeny”

prajna (prajña) wisdom; enstasy of steady insight

prakamya (prākāmya) irresitible will, freedom of will

prakara (prākāra) the wall(s) enclosing a garbhagriha on all four sides

prakasha (prakāśa)** light, splendor

prakriti (prakṛti) matter

pramoda thrill

Pralamba demon in the guise of a cowherd boy

prana (prāṇa) life-breath

pranamaya (prāṇamaya) made of life-breath

pranasanshita (prāṇasaṅśita)** “one whose life breath is sharpened”

pranava (praṇava) Om or Aum

pranayama (prāṇāyama) to “stretch the breath out”; disciplined breath control

prapanna refugee; one who has taken refuge, completely dependent on God

prapatti taking refuge in God

prapti (prāpti) the power of attaining or realizing anything

prasada (prasāda) God’s grace; the “leftovers” of an offering

prasavya “turned to the left”; counterclockwise

prashasti (praśasti)** Sanskrit praise poem

pratichi cha mahanadi (pratīcī ca mahānadī) “great river flowing eastward”

pravritti (pravṛtti) ancient creativity

Prayaga (Prayāga) modern Allahabad

prayaschitta (prayascitta) rites of purification

prayoga “the hurling of missiles”; rites performed for practical goals

preta “the departed”; a disembodied soul

Prishni (Pṛśni) “Ray-of-Light”; the mother of Maruts; cow that gives milk once a year

Prishnigarbha (Pṛśnigarbha) “Embryo of the Dappled One and Ray-of-Light”; son of Brahma and Aditi

Pritha (Pṛthā) Vasudeva’s sister, also called Kunti

Prithu (Pṛthu), “Expansive”; the first king, part of Hari, created from Vena’s arms; also father of Arjuna

prithvi (pṛthvī) earth

Prithvipati (Prithvīpati) I ruler of the Gangas in Karnataka

priti (prīti) love

priya love for God; pleasure; beloved

Priyavrata son of Svayambhuva Manu, brother of Uttanapada

puja (pūjā) worship

Pulaha a prajapati, born of Brahma’s navel

Pulastya a prajapati, born of Brahma’s ear

pulkasa tribals

puman (pumān) man; person

Pumpatakam (Pūmpāṭakam) (T) “the prosperous section,” area of Kanchipuram

pumshchali (puṃścalī)** harlot

pundra (puṇḍra) forehead mark of consecrated Bhagavata

Punyajanalayam (Puṇyajanālayam) Realm of the Meritorious, where Uttama was killed

purana (purāṇa) collection of ancient lore

puranataka (puranāṭaka) victory dance (of Pradyumna)

Purattachi (Puraṭṭāci) (T) sixth Tamil month (September-October)

purnam (pūrṇam) fullness

Purodhasa Brahmin who consecrated Krishna and Balarama as “twice-born”

purohita family priest

Purujit Yudhisthira’s maternal uncle

Purukutsa son of Mandhata

Pururavas (Purūravas) son of Budha and Ila, progenitor of Lunar Dynasty

purusha (puruṣa) person

purushartha (puruṣārtha) aims of human life

purushasukta (puruṣasukta) hymn describing the Supreme Soul of the universe

Purushottama (Puruṣottama) Supreme Person

purva (pūrva) prior

Purvachitti (Pūrvacitti) apsaras wife of Aghnidra

Pushkara (Puṣkara) “Lotus”; the outermost continent

Pushpabhadra (Puṣpabhadra) river by Markandeya’s ashram

Pushya (Puṣya) a constellation or star

Pushya (Pūṣya) tenth Sanskrit month (December-January)

Putam (Pūtam) (T) Alvar connected with the Pallava Dynasty

putra son

Puvanimanikka (Puvaṉimaṇikka) (T) temple named in an inscription of Rajakesarivarman

raga (rāga) passion

Raghava Rama (Rāghava Rāma) the eighth avatara of Vishnu

Rahasyatrayasara (Rahasyatrayasāra) (T) “Essence of the Threefold Secret” by Vedanta Deshika

rahasya uttama, rahasyottama the supreme secret

Rahu (Rāhu) head of the asura Svarbhanu, severed by Sudarshana, said to eat the moon in an eclipse

Raivata son of Priyavrata, ruler of fifth Manu Term

raja (rāja) king, ruler

rajadhirajaparameshvara (rājādhirājaparameśvara)** King of Kings and Supreme Ruler

Rajanya (Rājanya) Krishna as King

rajas passion

rajasika energetic

Rajasimha (Rājasimha) see Narasimhavarman Rajasimha

rajasimheshvara koyil (rājasiṁheśvara kōyil) (T)** “temple of Rajasimha, the Lord”

rajasuya (rājasūya) the “rites of engendering a king”; royal consecration rite

raksha (rakṣa) protection

rakshasa (rākṣasa) night-stalking demon

rakta red

Rama (Rāma) “Pleasing,” exiled king of Ayodhya, hero of the Ramayana

Rama (Ramā) Goddess “Charming”; Lakshmi

rama-krida (rāmā-krīḍā) “dear one,” epithet of Shri

Ramanaka (Ramaṇaka) island home of Kaliya; also one of the rulers of Pushkara

Ramanuja (Rāmānuja) Shri Vaishnava theologian, 11th century

Ramayana (Rāmāyaṇa) epic story of King Rama and his wife Sita

Ramyaka region of Jambu north of Ilavrita

Rantideva Brahmin who always gave away his food

rasa liquid, sap, juice, flavor, taste; aesthetic sentiment

Rasa, Rasatala (Rasātala) “Taste”; the dark waters beneath Earth

rasalila (rāsalīlā) the great circle dance

Rashtrakuta (Rāṣṭrakūṭa) Dynasty ruled in Deccan, 8th-10th centuries

rati intense pleasure

ratra (rātra) night

Ravana (Rāvaṇa) rakshasa ruler of Lanka

retas semen

Reva (Rēvā) wife of Nandivarman Pallavamalla, daughter of Dantidurga

Revati (Revatī) wife of Balarama

Ribhu (Ṛbhu) a class of devas

riddhi (ṛddhi) lordliness

Rig Veda (Ṛg Veda) oldest of the four Vedas

Riksha (Ṛkṣa) mountain range in eastern Vindhyas

Rishabha (Ṛṣabha) avatara of Vasudeva, born as son of Nabhi

rishi (ṛṣi) seer

rita (ṛta) true order

ritu (ṛtu) season; period of a woman’s monthly cycle favorable for conception

Rochana (Rocana) wife of Aniruddha

Rohini (Rohiṇī) Vasudeva’s wife in Gokula, from whom Balarama was born

Rohita son of Harishchandra

romaharsha (romaharṣa) gooseflesh

Romaharshana (Romaharṣaṇa) father of Ugrashrava; suta who heard the Bhagavata Purana

Rudra “Howler”; an early, and continuing, name of Shiva

Rudra(s) sons of Rudra, beings in the atmosphere

rudraksha (rudrākṣa) berries used as beads worn by devotees of Shiva

Rukmavati (Rukmavatī) wife of Pradyumna

Rukmī Rukmini’s brother

Rukmini (Rukmiṇī) Krishna’s first wife

rupa (rūpa) shape, form

rupani divyani (rupāṇi divyāni) divine shapes

Sadashiva (Sadāśiva) Shiva as “Ever-Auspicious”

sad-bheda differentiated

sadhaka (sādhaka) consecrated devotee

sadhana (sādhanā) disciplined way of life

sadhu (sādhu) (n) a holy man, an ascetic; (adj) good

sadhya (sādhya) “means of realization”; accomplished beings

Sadyojata (Sadyojāta) one of the “five faces” of Shiva

Sagara (Sāgara) Ocean; also sponsor of horse sacrifice that results in descent of Ganga

Sahadeva “Mighty Deva”; son of Jarasandha; youngest of the five Pandavas

sahasranama (sahasranāma) the thousand names (of God)

Saka (Sāka) the sixth dvipa from the center

sakala (sakalā) having parts

salokya (sālokya) dwelling with God in His Highest Home, a form of mukti

Salva (Sālva) ally of Shishupala et al.

sama (sāma) discipline of the mind, equanimity

Sama (Sāma)** Veda** the third Veda, containing hymns chanted in the Soma sacrifice

samadhi (samādhi) enstasy; perfect absorption of mind

samagama (samāgama) association (as with sadhus)

sama samana equivalent

Samba (Sāmba) Krishna’s son by Jambavati

sambandha (saṃbandha) kinship

samdhya (saṃdhyā) juncture between yugas; twilight; (cap.) the goddess Twilight

samhita (saṃhitā) collection of hymns or other subject matter of the Vedas

Samkarshana (Saṁkarṣaṇa) the Plower, a vyuha of Bhagavan; also called Ananta

samkarshanamaha (saṁkarṣaṇamaha) drawing the one who sees and the object seen together into the “I”

samkhya (saṃkhya) metaphysical calculation

samraj (saṃrāj) universal sovereignty

samsara (saṃsāra) the world of death and rebirth

samskara (saṃskāra) life-cycle sacrament

samshlesha (saṃśleṣa) copulation

Samtana (Saṃtāna) one of the pancha-vrikshas

Samudra Ocean

samudraghosha (samudraghoṣa) the voice of the sea

Samvarta “Dissolution”; son of Aurva, who teaches him the Jayakhya-samhita

samvatsara (saṃvatsara) solar year

Samyamani (Saṁyamanī) Yama’s city, in the south

Sanaka “Ancient”; mind-born son of Brahma

Sanandana “Joyful”; mind-born son of Brahma

Sanatana (Sanātana) “Eternal”; mind-born son of Brahma; also a part of Vishnu’s realm

Sanatkumara (Sanatkumāra) “Ever Young”; mind-born son of Brahma

sanga (saṅga) clinging; an assembly

Sangam period period of early Tamil literature, from ca. 200 BCE to ca. 200 CE

sankalpa (saṅkalpa) intent

Sankarshana (Saṅkarṣaṇa) Samkarshana

Sankha (Saṅkhā) wife of Nandivarman III

Sankhyayana (Sāṅkhyāyana) sage who learned the Bhagavatam from Sanatkumara

sankirtana (saṅkīrtana) chanting or singing of God in a group

sannyasa (saṁnyāsa) renunciation

sannyasin (saṁnyāsin) renouncer

sant a renouncer who possesses an intellect (buddhi) that perceives Krishna and therefore knows brahman

sapinda (sapiṇḍa) part of the same line of descent or ascent

Sarama (Saramā) female dog who is Indra’s mesenger

Sarasvati (Sarasvatī) knowledge as a goddess; also a river

Sarayu (Sarayū) river into which Asamanjasa threw children

sarga creation; emanation of Brahma

sarpa snake

sarupa (sārūpa) a form of mukti in which one’s shape is God’s shape

sarva-ishvara, sarveshvara (sarva-īśvara, sarveśvara) ruler of everything

sarvamedha sacrifice of everything

sarvasya adhipati (sarvasya adhipati) overlord of all

sat being

sati (satī) a virtuous woman, “truly herself”; (cap.) “True Wife”; daughter of Daksha, wife of Rudra Shiva

satsanga (satsaṅga) “clinging to the true”; association with those who have “true being”; “clinging to sants”

satsankalpa (satsaṅkalpa) true resolve

satshraddhaya (satśraddhāya) through faith in the “true”

sattra (sāttra) thousand-year sacrifice

sattva purity; clarity

Satvatas (Sātvatas) descendants in the Vrishni clan of Satvat, famous for including Krishna and Balarama; also refers to Bhagavatas, specifically those following Pancharatra sadhanas, such as those prescribed in the Satvata-samhita

Satvata-samhita (Sātvata-saṃhitā) a Pancharatra scripture

satya truth; true being

Satya (Satyā) Krishna’s sixth wife

Satyabhama (Satyabhāmā) “True Luster”; wife of Krishna

Satyaloka “Realm of True Being,” Brahma’s abode; one of the worlds beyond Dhruva

Satyavrata “Of True Vows”; name of a wicked prince

Satya Yuga the first of the great ages

Saubha aerial car owned by Shalva

Saubhari sage who cursed Garuda

saucha (sauca) purification

Saunaka seer in Bhagavata Purana

Sautramani (Sautrāmaṇī) sacrifice to regenerate the patron after a Soma sacrifice

Savana son of Priyavrata

Savarni (Sāvarṇi) the eighth and next Manu of this kalpa

sayujya (sāyujya) “yoking with God”

Sendraka Dynasty rulers subordinate to the early Chalukyas from the 6th century

setu boundary; causeway, embankment

sevakan (T; Skt: sevaka) attendant

shabda (śahda) sound

Shabdabrahma (Śabdabrahma) Brahma born of Sound

Shaiva (Śaiva) worshiper of Shiva

Shaiva Agama (Śaiva Āgama) traditions of ritual practices revealed by Shiva for devotees in the Kali Yuga but including different systems. Most relevant to Kanchipuram in the seventh and eighth centuries are Shaiva Agamas or Tantras that teach the worship of brahman as pati (master) and worship of the Shiva linga as Pashupati. Three of these traditions are known as Maheshvara, Pashupati, and Kapalika.

Shaiva Siddhanta (Śaiva Siddhānta) a school of philosophy

Shakra (Śakra) Buddhist designation for Indra

shakti (śakti) power; the potency to create and delude; maya

Shakuntala (Śakuntalā) mother of Emperor Bharata

Shakyamuni (Śakyamuṇi) the Buddha

Shalmala (Śālmala) the continent immediately surrounding Plaksha

Shambara (Śambara) ally of Kamsa

Shambhala (Śambhala) village where Kalki will be born

Shambhu (Śambhu) “The Benevolent”; Shiva

Shamyaprasa (Śamyāprāsa) hermitage on the Sarasvati River

Shanda (Śaṇḍa) son of Shukra and one of Prahlada’s teachers

Shandilya (Śaṇḍilya) Brahmin to whom Narada tells the Jayakhya-samhita

Shandipani (Śāndīpani) a sage from Kashi living in Avanti, guru of Krishna and Balarama

Shankara (Śaṅkara) founder of Advaita Vedanta, mid-8th century

shankha (śaṅkha) conch

Shankhachuda (Śaṅkhacūḍa) attendant of Kubera slain by Krishna

sharana (śaraṇa) refuge

sharira (śarīra) material body

Shasta (Śāstā) “Punisher,” “Ruler,” or “Teacher”; Kalki

shastra (śāstra) “system”; text of teachings; instrument

Shatadruji (Śatadrujī) daughter of Ocean, mother of the Prachetas

Shatapatha Brahmana (Śatapatha Brāhmaṇa) text describing Vedic ritual, associated with the Yajur Veda

Shatarupa (Śatarūpā) wife of Svayambhuva Manu

Shatrughati (Śatrughāti) son of Shatrughna

Shatrughna (Śatrughna) brother of Rama

Shaunaka (Śaunaka) sage sacrificing in frame story of Bhagavata Purana

Shesha (Śeṣa) “Remainder,” Balarama

Shibi (Śibi) king who gave his body to feed a hawk

shibika (śibikā) palanquin

shila (śīla) virtuous conduct

shila (śilā) stone

shilpin (śilpin) builder, architect

Shishumara (Śiśumāra) the Crocodile Constellation; Dhruva’s father-in-law

Shishupala (Śiśupāla) “Child-protector”; Chedi king killed by Krishna at Yudhisthira’s rajasuya

Shiva (Śiva) “Auspicious”; a great god

shivoktena margena (śivoktena mārgena) by means of the path taught by Shiva

shraddha (śraddhā) faith; rites of the dead; (cap.) wife of Shraddhadeva

Shraddhadeva (Śrāddhadeva) “Faith’s Deva,” ruler of the seventh Manu Term

shramana (śramana) “exertion on oneself”; acetic, esp. Buddhist monk

shramana vatarashana (śrāmanā vātarāśanāḥ) “ascetics clothed in the wind,” nine sons of Rishabha

Shrauta (Śrauta) related to Vedic tradition; rites performed in public

Shravana (Śrāvaṇa) fifth Sanskrit month (July-August)

Shravasta (Śrāvasta) residence of Lava, son of Rama

Shri (Śrī) “Majesty”; goddess of good fortune

Shri Dandi (Śrī Dandi) son of Pallavamalla’s master architect

Shridhara (Śrīdhara) “Bearer of Majesty”; vyuha of Vasudeva

Shri Goshtipuram (Śrī Goṣṭhipuram) Sanskrit name for Tirukottiyur

Shrīmad Bhagavata Purana (Śrīmad Bhāgavata Purāṇa) see Bhagavata Purana

Shrimara Shrivallabha (Śrīmārṟa Śrīvallabha) (r. 815–862) Pandyan ruler, son of Varagunavarman I, ally of Nripatungavarman

shrimat (śrīmat) prosperous and majestic

Shrinatha (Śrinātha) monist-cum-dualist tradition of the Shaiva Agama

shri-parameshvara-mahakashtakaran (śri-parameśvara-mahākāṣṭkāran) “The Majestic Emperor’s Master Woodworker”

Shri Patra (Śrī Patra) conch shell used as amrita pot in Tantric rite

Shrisukta (śrīsukta) one of the hymns of the Rig Veda

Shrivaramangala (Śrīvaramaṅgala) location of copper plates, c. 770

Shrivatsa (Śrīvatsa) “Majesty’s favorite”; Lakshmi’s abode in a curl of hair on Hari’s breast

Shriveli Vishnugriha (Śriveḷi Viṣṇugṛha) temple in Uttaramerur

shruta (śruta) heard

shruti (śruti) “that which is heard”; the Vedas

Shubhra (Śubhra) sage, father of Vaikuntha

shuddhasattva (śuddhasattva) pure clarity, or pure material being

Shudra (Śūdra) the fourth ritual caste, traditionally servants

Shuka (Śuka) “Parrot”; teacher of Bhagavata Purana to Parikshit

shukla (śukla) white

Shukra (Śukra) “Bright,” the planet Venus; Hiranyakashipu’s purohita

Shunahshepa (Śunaḥśepa) victim tied to the stake in Harischandra’s rajasuya

shunya (śūnya) empty

Shurasena (Sūrasena) former chief of Yadus, and his territory

Shurpanakha (Śūrpaṇakhā) sister of Ravana, spurned by Rama

Shvetadvipa (Śvetadvīpa) White Island in the Ocean of Milk

shyama (śyāma) dark, black or dark blue

siddha perfected; being who has achieved release

siddhamritarasa (siddhāmṛtarasa) “magical amrita liquid”

siddhi success

Siddhipada Realm of Success

Simhavarman (Siṃhavarman) II Bhagavata ruler of Kanchipuram (ca. 535–560) son of Nandivarman, the founder of the linege

Simhavishnuvarman (Siṃhaviṣṇuvarman) Bhagavata ruler (ca. 560–580), grandson of Nandivarman, the founder of the lineage

Sindhu Ocean

Sita (Sītā) wife of Rama, abducted by Ravana

Skanda “spurting”; frustrated desire, master of deva warlords; son of Shiva; also Skandasishya Vikramavarman

Skandasishya Vikramavarman Nandivarman Pallavamalla’s rival for the throne

sneha affection

soma sacred drink, central to the Soma Sacrifice; (cap.) the Moon

Sri Vaishnava (Śrī Vaiṣṇava) sect of Vaishnavas, originating in the poems of the

Alvars

sthairya constancy

sthana (sthāna) maintenance of order

sthulasharira (sthūlaśarīra) gross material body

stupa (stūpa) Buddhist reliquary shrine

Subahu (Subāhu) son of Shatrughna; brother of Alarka

Subandhu author of Vasavadatta, mid-7th century

Subhadra (Subhadrā) daughter of Vasudeva and Devaki, married to Arjuna

Sudakshina (Sudakṣiṇa) Excellent Right Hand or Virtuous South

Sudama (Sudāmā) garland-maker in Mathura

Sudarshana (Sudarśana) “beautiful to see”; Krishna’s discus

Sudyumna son of Shraddhadeva, changed from daughter Ila

Sugriva (Sugrīva) king of the monkeys

sukha happiness

sukshma (sūkṣma) subtle

sukshma-diksha (sūkṣma-dīkṣā) “Consecration to the Subtle”

sukshma sharira (sūkṣma śarīra) subtle material body

sukta (sūkta) Vedic hymn of praise

Sumali (Sumāli) asura slain by Vishnu; Ravana’s grandfather

Sumati descendent of Bharata; seventh Jaina tirthankara; see also Jada Sumati

Sumitra (Sumitrā) one of Dasharatha’s three wives

Sunanda “Delighting”; chief of Vamana’s attendants, the eldest Kumara

Sundaravarada Bhattachari, M. R. priest of the Vaikuntha Perumal Temple

Sundaravarada Perumal (Sundaravaradā Perumāḷ) Temple (T) the Shriveli Vishnugriha in Uttaramerur

Sundaravaratha Pattachari (T) see M. R. Sundaravarada Bhattachari

Suniti (Sunīti) mother of Dhruva

sura (surā) liquor

Surabhi “Fragrance”; the mother of all cattle; Kamadhenu

surasava (surāsava) beer or liquor

Surasena (Sūrasena) name of a people ruled by Chitraketu

Suratha son of Surya; as Savarni, ruler of the eighth Manu Term

Suruchi (Suruci) second wife of Uttanapada

Surya (Sūrya) the Sun

Suryaprabha (Sūryaprabha) hero aided by Prabhasa

sushumna (suṣumnā) channel of the subtle body that parallels the spine

**sushupta, sushupti (**suṣupta, suṣupti ) deep dreamless sleep

Suta (Sūta) “Charioteer,” narrator of the Bhāgavata Purana

Sutala the “auspicious level” of Rasa, the underworld, ruled by Bali

Sutapa (Sutapā) a prajapati who lived with Prishni in the last sarga

Suyajna (Suyajña) dead ruler whose wives appeal to Yama

svabhava (svabhāva) essential nature

svadhyaya the rite of study after the main meal of the day

svapna dreaming, a dream

Svarbhanu (Svarbhānu) asura who drank a portion of amrita

svarga heaven

Svarloka (Svārloka) Heaven with the constellations and planets

Svarochisha (Svārociṣa) ruler of the second Manu Term

svarthapuja (svarthapūjā) worship for one’s own benefit

svarupa (svarūpa) one’s own shape

svasukha one’s own pleasure

svayam oneself

Svayambhuva (Svāyambhuva) the previous sarga

Svayambhuva Manu (Svāyambhuva Manu) son of Brahma, father of Priyavrata

Svetambara (Svētāmbara) Jaina sect

Syamantaka jewel stolen from Krishna and regained

Tai (T) tenth Tamil month (January-February)

Taittiriya Upanishad (Taittirīya Upaniṣad) a major upanishad, associated with the Black Yajur Veda

Takshaka (Takṣaka) “Cutter”; deadly snake Parikshit is cursed to be bitten by

tamas darkness; ignorance; delusion as a mode of consciousness

Tamasa (Tāmasa) son of Priyavrata, ruler of fourth Manu Term

tamastivra (tamastīvra) thick darkness

tamisra (tāmisra) darkness as a mode of consciousness

Tamraparni (Tāmiraparaṇi) River river in the Pandya realm, also called Porunal

tandava (tandava, T: tāṇṭavam) dance of victory

Tanjavur, Thanjavur (Tanjavūr, Tañcāvūr) (T) city on the Kaveri River

tanmatra (tanmātra) the five subtle elements; the five senses

tantiram (T) Tantra

Tantra (Tāntra) body of texts, recording non-Vedic revelation; practices based on

these texts

tantrantara (tantrāntara) the essence of Tantra

tantrantariya (tantrāntarīya) samkhyan philosophers who practice tantrantara

tanu (tanū) form, body

tapa branding rite

tapas heat-generating austerity

Tapoloka one of the worlds beyond Dhruva

Tara (Tārā) Bhagavata: wife of Moon, mother of Budha; Buddhist: consort of Avalokiteshvara and “mother” to the Shakyamuni as a buddha.

Tarandikonda Bhojar (T) agamika of Hiranya, Nandivarman Pallavamalla’s father

Taravaloka (Tāravaloka) a prince

Tatpurusha (Tatpuruṣa) one of the “five faces” of Shiva

tattva one of the five traditionally distinguished elementary substances

tattvamudra (tattvamudrā) gesture in which the thumb and index finger touch and three fingers are extended

tattvasrishtimudra (tattvasṛṣṭimudrā) “emanation of the constituents” mudra; the forefinger is raised up and other fingers curl down over the thumb bent to the palm

Tayar (Tāyar) (T) Sri Lakshmi

tejas brilliance; “brilliant conquering power”

tenkurukur nampi (teṉkurukūr nampi) (T) “The Venerable One of Southern Kurukur”; epithet of an Alvar, Maran Chatakopan

**tin chilai (**tiṇ cilai) (T) hard stone image; firm bow

tirtha (tīrtha) place of pilgrimage; also, a sadhaka

tirthankara (tīrthaṅkara) “ford-crosser”; exalted Jain teacher

tirthika (tīrthika) heretic, from Buddhist point of view

tiru (T) majesty; equivalent of Skt. shri

Tirukkottiyur (Tirukkōttiyūr) (T) town east of Madurai

Tirumal (Tirumāl) (T) Vasudeva with Devi, in early Tamil poetry

Tirumangai (Tirumaṅgai) Alvar also known as Kalikanri

Tirumantiram muvayiram (Tirumantiram muvāyiram) (T) Tamil work, 7th–8th centuries

Tiruppallantu (Tiruppallāṇṭu) (T) “Many Years,” poem for Krishna by Vishnuchittan, Kotai’s father

Tiruppavai (Tiruppāvai) (T) Tamil poem by Kotai

tiruvanai (T) oath of majesty

Tiruvantati (Tiruvantāti) (T) collection of poems by Poykai

titiksha (titikṣa) forbearance

totarntu (T) “seek out,” “continue in unbroken succession”

Treta Yuga (Tretā Yuga) the second age of the grat cycle

tribhuvana three worlds of rebirth

triguna (triguṇa) tripartite process (of matter)

Trikuta (Trikūta; T: Tirikūṭa) mountain with “Three Peaks,” known as Sveta Dvipa

trimurti (trimūrti) the Three Material Forms

Tripura “three cities,” invisible vehicle built by Maya for the asuras

tripurantaka (tripurāntaka) destroyer of the Three Cities

Trishanku (Triśaṅku) father of Harishchandra

trishna (ṭṛṣṇa) craving

tritala-vimana (tritala-vimāna) three-storied palace

Trivandram (Tiruvaṉantapuram) city in modern Kerala

Trivakra (Trivakrā) woman who is “bent thrice,” hunchback servant of Kamsa

Trivikrama God as the Dwarf, the “thrice-strider”

Tryambaka monist lineage of the Shaiva Agama

Tumburu a gandharva musician

turiya (turīya), turya the “fourth person”; the person who is aware, who resides in

the heart

turyatita (turīyātita) “beyond the fourth (body)”; Narayana

Tushita (Tuṣita) “Heaven of the Delighted”

Tvashta (Tvaṣṭā) father of Vishvarupa

tyaga (tyāga) forsaking, abandoning

ubhyaganattayar (T) men of the two assemblies

ubhayakula-parishuddhar (ubhayakula-pariśuddhar) (T) purified in both clans

ubhaya “both”; perception of “two”

Ucchaishravas (Uccaiśravas) Indra’s horse “of long ears” or “loud neighing”

udana (udāna) one of the vital breaths, in the throat and rising upward

Udayachandra (Udayacandra) Nandivarman’s general

Uddhava Krishna’s foremost counsellor and devotee

udgatri (udgātṛ) priest chanting Sama Veda verses in sacrifice

udritha (udrītha) the High Chant

Ugrasena rightful king of Mathura, Kamsa’s father

Ugrashravas (Ugraśravas) Suta, the narrator of the Bhagavata Purana

Uma (Umā) Daksha’s daughter, Shiva’s consort on Mount Kailasa

upadana (upādāna) rites to gather materials for worship after sunrise

upadeshamudra (upadeśamudrā)** the teaching mudra

upanishad (upaniṣad) “secret teaching”; texts attached to the Brahmanas and expounding the inner meanings of the Vedas

uparichara (uparicara) moving or walking above or in the air

upasana (upāsanā) worship

upaya (upāya) means; skill in means

Upendra “Younger to Indra”; Vamana, son of Aditi and Kashyapa

urai (T) commentary

Urakam (Ūrakam) (T) pre-Pallava temple to Trivikrama in Kanchipuram

urdhvamula (ūrdhvamūla) the root above (the ashvattham)

urdhvareta (ūrdhvareta**)** keeping the semen “above”; living in chastity

Urvashi (Urvaśī) apsaras born of Narayana’s tapas, consort of Pururavas

Usha (Uṣā) daughter of the asura Bana

Ushanas (Uśanas) Shukra, asura acharya

Ushinara (Uśīnara) territory ruled by Suyajna

uti latent aspects of karma

uttama supreme; (cap.) son of Priyavrata and Suruchi

Uttamashloka (Uttamaśloka) “He of Most Excellent Renown”; “Highest Praise”

Uttānapāda father of Dhruva, brother of Priyavrata

uttara latter; left (side)

Uttaramerur (Uttaramērūr) (T) town south of Kanchipuram

uttara vedi raised altar at eastern end of a Vedic sacrificial arena

uttarayana (uttarāyaṇa) the light half of the year

Vach (Vāc) Speech, born of Brahma’s mouth

vadha killing

vahana vehicle, deity’s mount

vaidika of or related to Veda

vaidikatantika (vaidikatāntika) of or related to Veda and Tantra

Vaigai River see Kritamala River

Vaihayasa (Vaihāyasa) “Moving through the Air”; Bali’s magical vehicle

Vaikachi (Vaikāci) (T) second Tamil month (May-June)

vaikhanasa (vaikhānasa) forest-dwelling ascetic, vanaprastha

Vaikhanasa Agama (Vaikhānasa Āgama) tradition, parallel to Pancharatra Agama

Vaikuntha (Vaikuṇṭha) Vishnu’s heaven, on a mountain on White Island in the Ocean of Milk; also son of Shubhra, part manifestation of Hari

Vaikuntha Dhama (Vaikuṇṭha Dhāma) God as “home without ignorance” or “the presence penetrating everywhere” or “the invincible realm”

Vaikuntanatha (T: Vaikuntanātha; Skt: Vaikuṇṭhanātha) “Lord of Vaikuntha”; Bhagavan

Vaikuntha Perumal (Vaikuṇṭha Perumāḷ) temple built by Nandivarman Pallavamalla

vairagya (vairāgya) renunciation

vairaja purusha (vairāja puruṣa) “person born of viraj”

Vairochana (Vairocana) attributive founder of Vajrayana (Esoteric Buddhism)

Vaisakha (Vaisākha) second Sanskrit month (April-May)

Vaishampayana (Vaiśampayana) Vyasa Dvaipayana’s disciple; Yajnavalkya is his disciple

Vaishnava (Vaiṣṇava) related to Visnu and his worship

Vaishya (Vaiśya) third varna: tradesmen and other middling occupations

Vaivasvata son of the Sun; patronymic of Shraddhadeva

vajapeya (vājapeya) preparatory sacrifice patronized by Daksha

vajasani (vājasani) recensions of the yajus mantras taught to Yajnavalkya

vajirupa (vajirūpa) shape of a horse with a mane

vajra diamond bolt of lightning, an emblem of Krishna; means to success

vajramudra (vajramudrā) gesture in which the middle finger, the ring finger, and the little finger grasp the thumb, and the tip of the index finger touches the thumb’s knuckle

Valin (Vālin) monkey king, son of Indra, slain by Rama

Valmiki (Vālmīki) attributive author of Ramayana

vamachara (vāmācāra) the “left-hand” way

Vamadeva (Vāmadeva) one of the “five faces” of Shiva

Vamana (Vāmana) God as Dwarf

vamsha (vaṃṣa) lineage

vanaprastha (vānaprastha) “forest dweller,” the third stage of life for a brahman

Vanji (Vañci) Chera capital, also known as Karur

vannam (vaṇṇam) (T) varna: color; nature

varadamudra (varadamudrā) gesture of giving boons

Varadarajaswami (Varadarājaswāmi) hill-like temple for Vishnu

Varagunavarman (Varaguṇavarman) I (765–815) son of Maravaraman Rajasimha

Varagunavarman (Varaguṇavarman) II (ca. 862–885) Pandyan ruler, son of Shrimara Shrivallabha

Varaha (Varāha) Krishna as Boar

Varahagiri (Varāhagiri) western hill area of Tamil Nadu

Varana-indra (Varaṇa-indra) the elephant Airavata, “Indra of the invincible”

Vardhamana (Vardhamāna) Jina for whom a temple existed in Kanchipuram in the 6th century

vardhana prosperous increase

varman shield

varna (varṇa) ritual class; lit., color

varsha (varṣa) region (as of the Jambu continent)

Varuna (Varuṇa) deva emperor of asuras and nagas; dark night, worshiped with Mitra

Varuni (Vāruṇī) daughter of Varuna; sura (liquor)

varuna-pasa (varuṇa-pāsa) “noose of Varuna”; rope of darbha grass used to tie sacrificial victim

Vasavadatta Sanskrit romance, mid-7th century

vashita (vaśitā)** subjugating by magic

Vasishtha (Vasiṣṭha) a prajapati, born of Brahma’s breath

vasodhara (vasodhārā) “stream” or “shower of Vasu”

vastu purusha (vastu puruṣa) “person of the place”

Vasu a set of beneficent deities, including Adityas, Maruts, Ashvins, and others

Vasudeva (Vasudeva) father of Krishna the man, Devaki’s husband (always identified in the text to distinguish from the following)

Vasudeva (Vāsudeva) Krishna as the son of Vasudeva; one of the vyuhas of God

Vasudha (Vasudhā) Goddess Earth, Sita’s mother

Vasuki (Vāsuki) ruler of the nagas

Vasu Uparichara (Vasu Uparicara) king who hears the Satvata Shastra from Brihaspati

vatarashana (vātaraśana)** “clothed in the wind”

Vatsara Year, ruler of Ketumala; son of Dhruva

Vayu (Vāyu) Air, Wind

Vedavada (Vedavāda) Doctrine of Veda

vedi (vedī) sacrificial altar

Vegavati River Kanchipuram was built at its confluence with the Palar River

Vehka (Veḥkā) Vishnu reclining

velvi (vēḷvi) (T) fire sacrifice

Vena “Inordinate Desire,” “Longing,” son of Anga, ruler who fell to purgatory

Venka (Veṅka) territory visited by Rishabha

Venkatam mountain, also called Tirumalai

veshavishishta (veṣaviśiṣṭa)** distinguished in appearance

veshyastri (veśyastrī)** courtesan

Vessantara bodhisattva known for giving

vetala (vetāla) vampire

vibhava transformation of forms; secondary emanation of God

Vibhavari (Vibhāvarī) city of Soma, the Moon, in the north

Vibhishana (Vibhīṣaṇa) Ravana’s virtuous younger brother

vibhu (vibhu) omnipresent

Vibudha Krishna as the Learned One

vibhuti (vibhūti) occult powers; glorious realm

Vichitrachitta (Vicitracitta) king in South Arcot District

vidhi instructions

Vidisha (Vidiśa) region of Kosala, ruled by Shatrughati

Vidura (Vidūra) Kuru devotee who heard the Bhagavatam from Maitreya

Viduratha (Vidūratha) Dantavaktra’s brother, ally of Shishupala et al.

vidyadhara (vidyādhara) “bearer of the knowledge of spells”

vighna obstable

Vighnaraja (Vighnarāja) “King of Obstacles,” Ganesha

Vignesha (Vigneśa) “Ruler of Obstacles,” Ganesha

vihara (vihāra) Buddhist monastery

Vijaya “Conquest”; guardian in Vaikuntha

Vijaya (Vijayā) wife of Kampavarman

vijayadvadashi (vijayadvādaśī)** twelfth day of Shravana, called “victory”

vijayanti flower garland signifying victory

vijayashakti (vijayaśakti)** Shakti in her mode as Victory

Vijitashva (Vijitāśva) title given Prithu’s son when he recovers horse from Indra

vijnana (vijñāna) discriminative or subject-object consciousness

vikrama stride or step

vikritya (vikṛtya) transformation

Vikuntha (Vikuṇṭhā) wife of Shubhra, mother of Vaikuntha

villavan (villavaṉ) (T) “owner of the bow”

Villipputtur (Villipputtūr) (T) “Villi’s New Town,” south of Madurai, in poem by Kotai

vimana (vimāna) palace

vina (vīṇā) plucked string instrument

vinda rescuer

Vindhyavali (Vindhyāvali) the Vindhya mountain range; wife of Bali

vinoda play

vipra sage; (cap.) Krishna as seer

vipula great, extensive; translated by Dennis Hudson as “holy man”

Virabhadra (Vīrabhadra) “Distinguished Hero”; Anger, born of a hair from Shiva’s head

viraj (virāj) “ruling far and wide”; the womb of Purusha

virakti indifference to worldly enjoyments

virat-purusha (virat-puruṣa) Vasudeva’s fully differentiated state

Virochana (Virocana) “Illuminating”; son of Prahlada, father of Bali

virya (vīrya) prowess; ability to act without being affected by that action

visarga voiceless aspiration (in Sanskrit); Brahma’s emanation of the universe

visha (viṣa) poison

Vishakhayupa (Viśakhayūpa) the “Effulgent One”; a place of pilgrimage

vishishta (viśiṣṭa)** differentiated

vishnor dhama parama (viṣnor dhāma parama) “Pervading Actor’s Supreme Home”

Vishnu (Viṣṇu) God as “pervading actor”

Vishnuchittan (Viṣṇucittan) (T) poet better known as Periyalvar

vishnugriha (viṣṇugṛha)** “Emperor’s Vishnu-house”

vishnuhasta (viṣṇuhasta)** Krishna’s (or acharya’s) touch on the head that removes kalmasha

vishnupada (viṣṇupada)** Visnu’s realm

Vishnupada (Viṣṇupada) “Foot of Vishnu”; the four worlds beyond Dhruva

Vishnupaddam (Viṣṇupaddam) (T) the pole star beyond Dhruva

vishnusthala (viṣṇusthala)** location of a Vishnu shrine

Vishnuyashas (Viṣṇuyaśas) Kalki will be born to him at the end of the Kali Yuga

Vishravas (Viśravas) sage, father of Ravana

Vishvadeva (Viśvadeva) one of the Universal Principles

vishvajita (viśvajīta)** all-conquering

Vishvakarma (Viśvakarma) a prajapati, son of Bhuvana

Vishvaksena (Viśvaksena) attendant of Bhagavan, as he protects Lokaloka

vishvam (viśvam)** fullness; the universe

Vishvamitra (Viśvāmitra) “Friend to All”; one of the Seven Seers

Vishvarupa (Viśvarūpa) asura slain by Indra

Vishvasphurji (Viśvasphūrji) ruler of Magadha, probably Chandra Gupta II

Vishveshvara (Viśveśvara) “Ruler of All”; Surya

vishveshvara-ananta (viśveśvara-ananta)** “endless ruler of everything”

vitai (viṭai) (T) bull

vitam (viṭam) (T) poison (Skt. visha)

Vitashoka (Vītaśoka) King Ashoka’s brother

vitavel-koti-verpatai (viṭavēl-koṭi-vēṟpaṭai) (T) “the banner of the khatvanga spine of bones”

vitelvituku (viṭēlviṭuku), vitelvitukennuntiruvanai natavi (viṭēlviṭukeṉṉuntiruvāṇai naṭāvi) (T) oath Pallavamalla took during his unction

Vitelvituku (Viṭelviṭuku) Pallava (T) title of Nandivarman, first Pallava ruler

Vitihotra (Vītihotra) son of Priyavrata, father of Ramanaka and Dhataki

vittam (viṭṭam) (T) crossbeam, anything put across; the body

Vivasvat the Sun, who taught Manu

viveka discrimination

Vraja area near Mathura, Krishna’s home in his childhood and youth

vrata vowed discipline

Vrindavana (Vṛndāvana) “Vrinda’s forest”, area or town along the Yamuna River in Vraja

vrishaba-lanchana (vṛṣaba-lāñcana) bull crest

vrishadhvaja (vṛṣadhvaja) flag with bull emblem

Vrishakapi (Vṛṣākapi), “Virile Ape”; friend of Indra in Rig Veda

vrishanka (vṛṣānka) bull emblem

Vrishni (Vṛṣṇi) one of the set of clans to which Krishna belongs

Vritra (Vṛtra) “Restrainer”; demon-magician battled by Indra

vyana (vyāna) breath inhaled through the mouth to permeate the whole body

Vyasa (Vyāsa) “Compiler”; sage, attributive author of the Bhagavata Purana

Vyasa Dvaipayana (Vyāsa Dvaipayana) first priest at Yudhisthira’s rajasuya

Vyoma asura in the shape of a cowherd boy

vyuha (vyūha) “a collection”; emanation, formation of God

vyuha-antara (vyūha-antara) (material forms) interior to formations (of God)

Yadava (Yādava) one of the set of clans to which Krishna belongs

Yadu king, founder of Yadavas

yaga (yāga) offerings

yajamana (yajamāna) sponsor of a sacrifice

yajanti vedatantrabhyam (yajanti vedatantrābhyām) “They who sacrifice through Veda and Tantra”; rites of Veda and Tantra

yajna (yajña) sacrifice

Yajnapurusha (Yajñapuruṣa) Person of the Sacrfice, Sacrifice as Person

Yajnavalkya (Yājñavalkya) sage

Yajur Veda Veda containing liturgy for rituals and sacrifices

yajus particular mantras uttered in a particular manner at a sacrifice

yaksha (yakṣa) demigod, attendant of Kubera

yama (yāma) restraint; disciplined way of life

Yama ruler of the realm of the dead

Yamuna (Yamunā) a river associated with Krishna, and its goddess

Yapaniya Sangha (Yāpanīya Sangha) Jain sect of the Western Gangas, also called Yavanika Sangha

Yashoda (Yaśodā) Krishna’s mother in Vraja, Nanda’s wife

Yavana “Greeks”; people to the northwest

Yayati (Yayāti) dynasty ruling beyond Aryavarta

yoga unified consciousness; the fifth rite of the day for Vaishnavas

Yogadesha (yogādeśa)** prayer taught by Shiva

yogamaya (yogamāyā) creative power of God’s unified consciousness; (cap.) goddess embodying Krishna’s creative power

yoganidra (yoganidrā) “Sleep of Unified Consciousness”

Yogavid Vishnu as the Knower of Yoga

yogesha (yogeśa) Ruler of Unified Consciousness

Yogeshvaro Harih (Yogeśvaro Hariḥ) Hari as the Ruler of Yoga

yogin practitioner of yoga

yojana distance traversed by an oxcart in a day, about seven to nine miles

yoni womb

Yudhishthira (Yudhiṣṭhira) one of the Pandava brothers

yupa (yūpa) stake to which sacrificial animal is tied

yuvakumara (yuvakumāra) young prince

Yuvanashva (Yuvanāśva) “Young Horse”; father of Mandhata

yuvaraja (yuvarāja) junior ruler