Tag: Jyotir Linga

  • Levitating Shiva Linga Somnath Kazvini Persian Geographer

    There is no end to the skills of the Indians, especially in architecture .

    They use all the principles of Nature.

    One has a Temple where the shadow of the Spire  falls within the Base of the Gopuram.

    Thanjavur Big Temple.

    Shiva Linga ,Somnath,Gujarat,India.Jyotir linga
    Shiva Linga ,Somnath,Gujarat,India.

    Spring water flows the base of the Idol.a,Thiruvanaikkaval.,Tamil Nadu

    Idols in many temples change colors during a day/once in fortnight.

    The composition of the elements that go into the making of the idol is unique and it can not be deciphered even by Atomic analysis-Palani,Tamil Nadu.

    Thirupati Balaji Idol Sweats every morning and His Body temperature is at 110 F.

    Sikkil Singaaravelan Subrahmanya,Sikkil, Tamil Nadu  sweats on Skanda Shashti.

    Cool breeze wafts in the hall while the entrance to the Hall is hot,Thiruvellarai,Tamil Nadu.

    One can go on.

    Now we can  add one more.

    Somnath Shiva Linga at Somnath,Gujarat.

    The Shiva Linga, which is  among the Twelve Jyotir Lingas in India levitated.

    This is recorded , not by an Indian, but by a Persian geographer while describing Ghazini’s invasion and loot of India.

    This is his report.

     

    About 1263 A.D.

    The famous temple at Somnath, with its celebrated idol which was destroyed by Mahmud of Ghazni, “the Image-Breaker,” when he sacked the city in 1025–1026 A.D., has been alluded to several times in the Mohammedan section of this History. An account of the wonders of the temple and the optical delusion in connection with the idol is given by the Persian geographer Zakariyah Kazvini, who wrote, however, in Arabic, about the year 1263 A.D. Kazvini, though not a traveller himself, drew upon the works of travellers for his geographical materials, and he gives the following interesting account of the famous Somnath shrine, over whose destruction, two centuries before, he rejoices with the Moslem joy that hailed the downfall of a house of idols….

     

    ‘Somnath is a celebrated city of India, situated on the shore of the sea and washed by its waves.

    Among the wonders of the place was the temple in which was placed the idol called Somnath. This idol was in the middle of the temple without anything to support it from below, or to suspend it from above. It was regarded with great veneration by the Hindus, and whoever beheld it floating in the air was struck with amazement, whether he was a Mussulman or an infidel. The Hindus used to go on pilgrimage to it whenever there was an eclipse of the moon, and would then assemble there to the number of more than a hundred thousand. They believed that the souls of men used to meet there after separation from the body, and that the idol used, at its pleasure, to incorporate them in other bodies, in accordance with their doctrine of transmigration. The ebb and flow of the tide was considered to be the worship paid to the idol by the sea.

    ‘Everything that was most precious was brought there as offerings, and the temple was endowed with the taxes gathered from more than ten thousand villages. There is a river, the Ganges, which is held sacred, between which and Somnath the distance is two hundred parasangs. They used to bring the water of this river to Somnath every day, and wash the temple with it. A thousand Brahmans were employed in worshipping the idol and attending on the visitors, and five hundred damsels sang and danced at the door – all these were maintained upon the endowments of the temple. The edifice was built upon fifty-six pillars of teak, covered with lead. The shrine of tile idol was dark, but was lighted by jewelled chandeliers of great value.

    .

    it was a chain of gold weighing two hundred mans. When a portion, or watch, of the night closed, this chain used to be shaken like bells to rouse a fresh lot of Brahmans to perform worship.

    ‘When Sultan Mahmud, the son of Sabuktagin, went to wage religious war against India, he made great efforts to capture and destroy Somnath, in the hope that the Hindus would then become Mohammedans. He arrived there in the middle of Zu-l-ka’da, 416 A. H. (December, 1025 A.D.). The Indians made a desperate resistance. They kept going in to the temple weeping and crying for help; and then they issued forth to battle and kept fighting till all were killed. The number of the slain exceeded fifty thousand. The king looked upon the idol with wonder, and gave orders for the seizing of the spoil and the appropriation of the treasures. There were many idols of gold and silver, and countless vessels set with jewels, all of which had been sent there by the greatest personages in India. The value of the things found in the temples of the idols exceeded twenty thousand thousand dinars.

    When the king asked his companions what they had to say about the marvel of the idol, and of its staying in the air without prop or support, several maintained that it was upheld by some hidden support. The king directed a person to go and feel all around and above and below it with a spear, which he did, but met with no obstacle. One of the attendants then stated his opinion that the canopy was made of loadstone, and the idol of iron, and that the ingenious builder had skilfully contrived that the magnet should not exercise a greater force on any one side – hence the idol was suspended in the middle. Some inclined toward this explanation, others differed from it. Permission was obtained from the Sultan to remove some stones from the top of the canopy to settle the point. When two stones were removed from the summit, the idol swerved on one side; when more were taken away, it inclined still further, until at last it rested on the ground.’

    By Kazvini Persian Biographer.

    The following is another description by a Persian Traveler about the idol.

    ‘The idol has a human shape and is seated with its legs bent in a quadrangular posture on a throne made of brick and mortar. Its whole body is covered with a red skin like morocco leather, and nothing but its eyes are visible. Some believe that the body is made of wood, some deny this; but the body is not allowed to be uncovered to decide this point. The eyes of the idol are precious gems, and its head is covered with a crown of gold. It sits in a quadrangular position on the throne, its hands resting upon its knees, with the fingers closed, so that only four can be counted.’

    al-Istakhri, who journeyed through India and other Mohammedan countries in the first half of the tenth century.

    Somnath Location.

    The Somnath temple located in Prabhas Patan near Veraval in Saurashtra on the western coast of Gujarat, India, is the first among the twelve Jyotirlinga shrines of Shiva. It is an important pilgrimage and tourist spot. The temple is considered sacred due to the various legends connected to it. Somnath means “Lord of the Soma”, an epithet of Shiva..

    Citation and Reference.

    http://www.ibiblio.org/britishraj/Jackson9/chapter05.html

     

     

     

  • Devi’s Neck Shakti as Lakshmi Srisaila Shakti Peeta

    Srisaiala one of the  Jyotir Linga Khestras of Lord Shiva is the place where the Devi‘s Neck fell and it is a Shakthi Peeta.

    Alampure Jogulamba, Sri shaile Bhramarambika /
    Kolha pure Maha lakshmi, Mahurye Ekaveerika-Asthadasa Stotra of Adi Shankaracharya.

    Oneof the Sakthi Peetas Bramarambha
    Shakti Peeta StisailaiPe

    Appearing as Goddess Mahalakshmi, in what is generally assumed as a part of Shakta and Saivite culture, this is a symbol that the division between Saivites and Vaishnavites is some ting one should, I hold this view,be ashamed of.

    And as a representation of the Hindu principle that the Cosmos is the unification of the Male and the Female Principle(Dynamic and Potential Energy respectively), the temple has Ardhanareeswara’I Lord Shiva and Devi in One Form..

    Bramar means Bees .The humming of the bees , Hreem is the Bhijakshara of Goddess Bhuvaneswari.

    ‘Ome Sreem Hreem Hum Bhuvana mathre Namah’

    The other unique feature of this Shakti Peeta is that a Sri Chakra is found in front of the Garbha Gruha,

    The shrine of Lord Mallikarjuna picturesquely situated on a flat top of Nallamalai Hills, Srisailam is reputed to be one of the most ancient Kshetras in India. It is on the right side of the River Krishna in Kurnool District of Andhra Pradesh. This celebrated mountain is also named as Siridhan, Srigiri, Sirigiri, Sriparvatha and Srinagam. It has been a popular centre of Saivite pilgrimage for centuries.

     

    The prominence of this Divya Kshetram is highlighted by the fact that while performing our daily household rituals we specify place of location of our existence with reference to Srisailam.

     

    The presiding Deities of this kshetram Lord Mallikarjuna Swamy is one of the twelve Jyothirlingas and Goddess Bhramaramba Devi is one of the eighteen Mahasakthis and both are self-manifested.

    The unique feature of this kshetram is the combination of Jyothirlingam and Mahasakthi in one campus, which is very rare and only one of its kind.

     

    There is a common belief in vogue that this Holy Kshetram exists from times immemorial.

    The antiquity and origin of God Mallikarjuna Swamy and Goddess Bhramaramba Devi is not known.

    The Mallikarjuna Linga is accessible to each and every devotee and anybody can go into the sanctum sanctorum of Mallikarjuna, touch him and perform Abhishekam and Archana himself to recitation of Mantras by Archakas without caste or creed or religion

    Legend:

    A number of legends have grown round Srisailam and its principal deities. Among them the most significant one is that Parvatha, son of Silada Maharshi is said to have performed penance, pleased Siva and made him agree to live on his body. This Parvatha assumed the shape of big Hill Sriparvatha and Siva lived on its top as Mallikarjuna Swamy.

    According to one story Chandravathi,the ruler of Chandraguptha Patana situated near Srisailam on the opposite bank of the river Krishna ran away from her father who made amorous advances to her went up the hill and settled down there with few servants. One day she found that one of her cows standing above a natural rock formation resembling the Sivalinga and shedding its milk over it. The princess in dream was informed that the piece of the stone was a self-manifested Linga of God Mallikarjuna and took to worshipping it. This story is mentioned in the Skanda Purana. Two sculptures of the Prakara Wall of the temple also represent this story.

    According to another story Sri,the daughter of a Rishi did penance, pleased Siva and got her name associated with the name of the Hill( Sailam ) which thereafter came to be known as Srisailam.

    Once upon a time, a demon named Arunaasura ruled the whole world. Chanting Gayatri mantra, he performed Tapasya for a very long time, and pleased Lord Brahma. Arunaasura, wished that he should not be kílled by two feeted and four feeted creatures. Lord Brahma granted his wish.

    With this wish of Arunaasura, Devathas were worried and prąyed Adi Shakti. She appeared and told that, Arunaasura is her devote and can,t be kílled unless he stops worshiping her.

    As per the plan of Devathas, Brihaspathi(Jupiter), the Deva guru meets Arunaasura. The demon wondered and asked Brihaspathi the reason for his vist. Brihaspathi told him that, as both of them worship the same deity, the Gayatri, there is no wonder if he meets him. Arunaasura felt ashamed of himself for worshiping Gayatri, who is also being worshiped by Devathas and stopped worshiping her. With this Adi Shakti became angry and took the form of Bhramari / Bhramarambika. She created innumerable bees, which have six legs. These bees kílled Arunaasura and his whole army within seconds.

    Darshan Timing: 4.00 AM 10PM

    Every year in the month of Ashviyja, Navaratri festival will be conducted in the Bhramaramba temple.
    A local festival by name Kumbham is held every year in the month of Chaitra (around April).

    1.Vagbeejakshara mantra japa.
    2.Navakshari mantra japa.
    3.Saptashati stotra pathana

    Location of Bhramaramba Shakti peetha:

    INDIA>ANDHRA PRADESH>KURNOOL DISTRICT>SRISAILAM.
    Srisailam is located in the Nallamala hills in a deep forest.

    Nerest Bus station: Srisailam.
    Nearest Railway stations: Markapur road, Ongole, Nandyala.
    Nearest Air ports: Tirupati, Vijayawada.

    The temple of Bhramaramba devi is located back to the Mallikarjuna swamy temple at a higher level, in the same campus.[Map Showing Bramarambha devi temple]

    Source:

    http://srisailamtemple.com/Srisaila_devasthanam/index.html

    http://www.shaktipeethas.org/ashtadasa/topic50.html

     

    Enhanced by Zemanta