Tuesday, July 20, 2021

Tuluva D

 

Krishnadevaraya was one of the greatest rulers of South India. He was the third ruler of the Tuluva dynasty and brought almost entire South India under his reign. He was bestowed with various titles such as Andhra Bhoja, Moory Rayara Ganda, Kannada Rajya Rama Ramana.

Krishnadevaraya was a man of many talents and took keen interest in art, literature and architecture. He had keen interest in Telgu and Sanskrit literature and wrote several works in these languages. His most famous work is Amukta Malyada, which is written in Telugu and describes the wedding of Vishnu and AndalHe wrote a drama in Sanskrit ‘Jambavati Kalyana’ and maintained a personal diary written in Kannada ‘ Krishnadevaraya DInachari’ . Apart form Jamabavati Kalyana written in Sanskrit, his works include – Madalasa Charita, Rasamanjari and Satyavadu Parinaya.

The Ashtadiggajas

Krishnadevaraya also patronised poets and scholars with expertise ranging from maths to literature. Ashtadiggajas or Eight poets are known to be a part of his court.

The 8 poets include :
1. Allasani Peddana
2. Madayagiri Mallana
3. Dhurjati
4. Nandi Timmara
5. Ramaraja Bhushana
6. Pingali Surana
7. Tenali Ramakrishna
8. Ayyalaraju Rambhara

He also encouraged women to take up writing. Some of the famous works by women include the Varadambika Parinaya by Tirumalamba Devi in Sanskrit and Madhurvijayam written by Ganaga Devi which describes the conquest of Madurai Sultanate.

Hence, we can see that the Krishnadevaraya was a great patron of literature and learning. His reign is described as the golden age of Telugu literature.

Krishnadevaraya represents a critical transformation from ancient king to modern politician. And in that sense, he was India’s first global leader. He had to confront very modern problems such as building international alliances and negotiating overseas trade deals while grappling with the challenges of globalism and multiculturalism. The Deccan of his time was a place where Hindus and Muslims, north Indians and south Indians, Persians and Portuguese, all intermingled as they made their lives and fortunes.

In the eyes of the world, Vijayanagara was the epitome of oriental opulence. It was a cosmopolitan metropolis, the best provided city of the world, more magnificent than Rome, and so exceedingly rich that diamonds were traded in the streets by the basket load!

Vijayanagara was famed beyond its borders as a cosmopolitan metropolis, a sprawling city expansive in both size and spirit. The capital was truly a place of diversity and inclusion where people of varying faiths, ethnicities and classes would not only intermingle but also cooperate in building what Paes called ‘the best provided city in the world . . . large as Rome, and very beautiful to the sight’. He went on to add that ‘in this city you will find men belonging to every nation and people. . . countless in number, so much so that I do not wish to write it down for fear it should be thought fabulous’. Or as Duarte Barbosa writes in one of the first examples of Portuguese travel literature: ‘There is an endless number of merchants, wealthy men and natives of the city to whom the king allows such freedom that every man may come and go and live according to his own creed . . . great equity and justice is observed to all, not only by the rulers, but by the people one to another.’ Indeed, much of this cosmopolitan ethos was fuelled by international traders who brought goods and ideas from all around the world to the bustling south Indian city. The image of the multicultural city was propagated throughout the subcontinent by court poets who eulogized kings and commemorated their victories. It was the poets of Vijayanagara who truly sang the empire into the people’s imagination and the pages of history.

As the Rayavacakamu records: The king spent the day at court ‘with a full assembly of scholars, poets, and palace officers skilled at telling pleasant stories . . . they all looked at Krishnadevaraya and said, “Just as the fame and glory of the kings who ruled long ago are preserved in the literary works they commissioned, you too should commission works so that your fame and glory will endure forever.”’

The epicentre of Vijayanagara literary production was a great hall called the Bhuvana Vijayam, or World Conquest, designed to host poetry readings and contests of literary wit. According to Paes, the hall was built when the king returned from the war against Orissa. It was a wide open space with lofty walls covered from top to bottom with crimson and green velvet and other handsome cloths. The magnificent structure was metaphorically held up by the king’s ashta-dig-gajas, or Elephants of the Eight Directions, great poets of the land whom Krishnadevaraya had invited to grace his court.

elephants support the entire universe on their backs, and so it was only fitting for the king to bestow this lofty title upon the celebrated poets who sustained the empire by memorializing the king’s fame. To be sure, there was a deep and sustained connection between political power and literary production. The king’s royal poets not only crafted words, but they also helped shape whole empires.

The king’s poet laureate and close confidant was Allasani Peddana. He was perhaps the most celebrated Telugu poet of his time; Krishnadevaraya even named him the grandsire of Telugu poetry. In one verse from his famed Manu Caritramu, Peddana vividly describes the ambience within the Bhuvana Vijayam, where women with eyes like blue sapphires and faces radiant as the moon fanned the king with yak-tail fans while he joyously sat on the throne in the company of learned people. Scholars discussed the fine points of Paninian grammar, Kanada’s atomistic philosophy, Badarayana’s metaphysics and more.

during such affairs; his prodigious scholarship and literary acumen allowed him not only to oversee but actively engage in philosophical debates and literary discussions. He was creating a court of culture, and a culture for court, by surrounding himself with the finest scholars and poets of the land, and positioning himself at the very centre of it all.

Although the kings of Vijayanagara were inclusive in their patronage of various literatures, including Sanskrit, Tamil and Kannada, the reign of Krishnadevaraya witnessed the ascendancy of Telugu as the pre-eminent language of the empire. We know Krishnadevaraya patronized poets in other languages, like Hariharadasa.

Tamil and Lolla Lakshmidhara in Sanskrit, but this was Telugu’s moment – it was a language of the people. All of the famed poets of the Vijayanagara octet wrote in Telugu, though not exclusively. Most poets then, as the case remains in India even today, were multilingual speakers as well as writers. In addition to expertise in two or three regional languages, any poet worth his salt would be proficient in Sanskrit – it was the sine qua non of scholastic merit and poetic authority. That being said, vernacular literatures were receiving more and more patronage from local kings, and although Sanskrit remained a language of prestige, regional languages now dominated the realm of lyrical poetry. And so it was that Krishnadevaraya presided over not only a vast earthly empire but a vibrant literary one as well.

No wonder his court poets cried, ‘O mighty lord, king of kings, supreme sovereign of heroic splendor! You are united like the Highest God – half the goddess Durga, half the Lord of Dance – an emperor in the fields of war and letters!’ In addition to the daily goings-on at the Bhuvana Vijayam, the Vasantotsavam, or annual Spring Festival, was a favourite occasion to gather poets for a celebration. As Timmana writes in his Parijata Apaharanamu: ‘Every year during the Spring Festival, an enthusiastic crowd of great poets would arrive with their finely crafted poems. Just the thought of it excited the women of the palace, but the king calmed them all down with his charm.’ha ha ha.

Like the legendary King Bhoja before him, Krishnadevaraya delighted in celebrating the annual Spring Festival when aspiring poets from far and wide would arrive at the court for a series of literary events, debates and competitions in which the king bestowed gifts of gold on the most skilled poets. It was at one such festival that the king premiered his Sanskrit play entitled Jambavati Kalyanam. A temple inscription tells us the ‘drama was enacted before the people assembled to witness the Chaitra Spring festival’.

In this way, literature in premodern India was more than a means of entertainment – it functioned as a communal spectacle that celebrated the power and culture of the empire and its king. It would be no exaggeration to say that Krishnadevaraya of Vijayanagara was at the apex of a south Indian cultural renaissance. This was a vibrant period of vernacularization when old Sanskrit texts and traditions were being revived, translated and reformulated for new and broader audiences. Indeed, this remarkable age of cultural production witnessed innovations in everything from literature, music and dance to architecture, sculpture and painting.


Monday, July 19, 2021

S facts.

 When Lord Krishna left the body, he was cremated, his whole body was mixed in the five elements but his heart was beating like a normal living man and he was absolutely safe, his heart is safe till today which is Lord Jagannath that lives inside the wooden idol and beats in the same way, very few people know this.


Mahaprabhu's great secret

Cleaning is done with a gold broom.


Mahaprabhu Jagannath (Shri Krishna) is also called the Lord of Kaliyuga.


The idol of Mahaprabhu is changed every 12 years, at that time the entire city of Puri is blacked out i.e. the lights of the entire city are switched off. After the lights are turned off, the crpf army surrounds the temple premises from all sides... at that time no one can enter the temple...


There is a thick darkness inside the temple... the priest's eyes are bandaged... the priest has gloves in his hand.. He takes out the "Brahma substance" from the old idol and puts it in the new idol... Till date no one knows what is this brahma substance... no one has seen it till date. ..For thousands of years it is being transferred from one idol to another...


This is a supernatural substance, just by touching it, the rags of a person's body fly away.. This brahma substance is related to Lord Shri Krishna.. But what is it, no one knows... this whole process every 12 years  at that time the security is very high...


But till date no priest has been able to tell what is there in the idol of Mahaprabhu Jagannath???


Some priests say that when we took him in his hand, he was jumping like a rabbit...there was a blindfold...we were only able to feel if we had gloves in hand...


Even today, on the occasion of Jagannath Yatra, the king of Puri himself comes to sweep with a gold broom.


The sound of ocean waves is not heard inside as soon as you take the first step inside from the lion gate of Lord Jagannath temple, while the surprising thing is that as soon as you take a step out of the temple, the sound of the ocean will be heard.


You must have seen birds sitting and flying on the summit of most of the temples, but no bird passes over the Jagannath temple.


The flag always flies in the opposite direction of the wind


The main peak of Lord Jagannath Temple does not cast a shadow at any time of the day.


The flag situated on the 45-storey peak of Lord Jagannath temple is changed daily, it is believed that if the flag is not changed even for a day, the temple will be closed for 18 years.


Similarly, there is also a Sudarshan Chakra on the top of Lord Jagannath Temple, which, when viewed from every direction, faces towards you.


In the kitchen of Lord Jagannath temple, 7 earthen pots are placed on top of each other to cook the prasad, which is cooked by a wood fire, during which the dish of the pot placed on the top is cooked first.


The Prasad made every day in Lord Jagannath temple never diminishes for the devotees, but the surprising thing is that as soon as the doors of the temple are closed, the prasad also ends.


All these are surprising.

     Jai Shree Jagannatha

Dost.

 The Beauty of Friendship ! 

    Why do I have a variety of friends who are all so different in character?

        How is it possible that I       I think that each one helps to bring out a "different" part of me. 

        With one of them I am polite.

        With another I joke. 

    With another I can be a bit naughty.

        I can sit down and talk about serious matters with one,

       

        I listen to one friend's problems.

        Then I listen to another one's advice for me.

        My friends are like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle.

        When completed, they form a treasure box.

        A treasure of friends! They are my friends who understand me better than I understand myself.

        They're friends who support me through good days and bad. 

        Real Age doctors tell us that friends are good for our health. 

        Dr. Oz calls them Vitamin F (for Friends) and counts the benefits of friends as essential to our well being.

        Research shows that people in strong social circles have less risk of depression and terminal strokes.

        If you enjoy Vitamin F constantly you can be up to 30 years younger than your real age.

        The warmth of friendship stops stress and even in your most intense moments, it decreases the chance of a cardiac arrest or stroke by 50%.

        I'm so happy that I have a stock of Vitamin F (Friendship)!

        In summary, we should value our friends and keep in touch with them.


         We should try to see the funny side of things and laugh together and pray for each other in the tough moments.


      I know I am part of their lives because their names appear on my mobile screen every day and I feel blessed that they care as much for me as I care for them.



Without the 3 gunas.

 The name Atri means the one who is free from the predominance of the triple impurities namely Sattva, Rajas and Tamas or one in whom the triple entities are in perfect equilibrium. Since the triple gunas are represented by Vishnu, Brahma and Shiva respectively, it also means Atri contains within himself the powers and attributes of the three gods. The name also refers to the triple aspects of the earth (bhu), the middle heaven (bhuva) and the highest heaven (suva), to the triple letters in AUM and to the triple strands in the sacred thread worn by the Brahmanas.

According to some accounts Atri was the last of the seven sages to have manifested from the mind of Brahma. The organ tongue is associated with his origin, which points to his erudition or the power of speech, which is considered the key to the knowledge of the Vedas and the chanting of the sacred mantras in Vedic rituals.

Many Vedic hymns are credited to Atri, especially those of fifth mandala (divison) of the Rigveda which goes by the name Atrimandala. It contains 87 hymns which are addressed to various gods such as Indra, Agni, Visvadevas, Maruts, etc., and which were probably composed by Atri and his sons, descendants and disciples.

Due to his popularity and status as a great sage (maha rish), Atri is also associated with many ancient legends and stories which are found in the Puranas and epics. According to them, Atri was married to Sati Anasuya and had three children through her namely Dattatreya, Durvasas and Chandra. The birth of the three sons is ascribed to the triple Gods (Trimurthis).

Maunam

 Austerity of the mind is higher than the austerity of body and speech, for if we learn to master the mind, the body and speech automatically get mastered, while the reverse is not necessarily true. Factually, the state of the mind determines the state of an individual’s consciousness. Shree Krishna had stated in verse 6.5, “Elevate yourself through the power of your mind and not degrade yourself, for the mind can be the friend and also the enemy of the self.”

The mind may be likened to a garden, which can either be intelligently cultivated or allowed to run wild. Gardeners cultivate their plot, growing fruits, flowers, and vegetables in it. At the same time, they also ensure that it remains free from weeds. Similarly, we must cultivate our own mind with rich and noble thoughts, while weeding out the negative and debilitating thoughts. If we allow resentful, hateful, blaming, unforgiving, critical, and condemning thoughts to reside in our mind, they will have a debilitating effect on our personality. We can never get a fair amount of constructive action out of the mind until we have learned to control it and keep it from becoming stimulated by anger, hatred, dislike, etc. These are the weeds that choke out the manifestation of divine grace within our hearts.

People imagine that their thoughts are secret and have no external consequences because they dwell within the mind, away from the sight of others. They do not realize that thoughts not only forge their inner character but also their external personality. That is why we look upon someone and say, “He seems like a very simple and trustworthy person.” For another person, we say, “She seems to be very cunning and deceitful. Stay away from her.” In each case, it was the thoughts people harbored that sculpted their appearance. Ralph Waldo Emerson said: “There is full confession in the glances of our eyes, in our smiles, in salutations, in the grasp of the hands. Our sin bedaubs us, mars all the good impressions. Men do not know why they do not trust us. The vice glasses the eyes, demeans the cheek, pinches the nose, and writes, ‘O fool, fool!’ on the forehead of a king.” Another powerful saying linking thoughts to character states:

“Watch your thoughts, for they become words.

Watch your words, for they become actions.

Watch your actions, for they become habits.

Watch your habits, for they become character.

Watch your character, for it becomes your destiny.”

It is important to realize that we harm ourselves with every negative thought that we harbor in our mind. At the same time, we uplift ourselves with every positive thought that we dwell upon. Henry Van Dyke expressed this very vividly, in his poem “Thoughts are things.”

I hold it true that thoughts are things;

They’re endowed with bodies and breath and wings

That which we call our secret thought

Speeds forth to earth’s remotest spot,

Leaving its blessings or its woes,

Like tracks behind as it goes.

We build our future, thought by thought.

For good or ill, yet know it not,

Choose, then, thy destiny and wait,

For love brings love, and hate brings hate.

Each thought we dwell upon has consequences, and thought-by-thought, we forge our destiny. For this reason, to veer the mind from negative emotions and make it dwell upon the positive sentiments is considered austerity of the mind.


Maunam

Maunam is the attribute of a Muni. But the ordinary meaning of this word is silence. Our Dharma Sastras have prescribed the observance of maunam (मौनम्) on various occasions. We are asked to observe maunam when taking food. In this context, maunam means only non-speaking (silence). Controlling the urge to speak is one among the many steps leading us to our spiritual goal.


Those in charge of the administration of education in this State are having under consideration the question of commencing the day’s work in schools with prayer. As the students are drawn from different denominations, one difficulty confronting the authorities is to find a prayer acceptable to all denominations. Besides that in the higher rungs of the administrative hierarchy, there are some who have no faith in God, and to whom prayer is something which goes against their conscience. So, it has become difficult to take any decision in the matter. As the propaganda of certain parties is beginning to poison young minds, the Government is anxious to do something to retrieve the situation. So, it appears to have hit upon a compromise, and there is a proposal to assemble all the children and make them observe silent prayer for two or three minutes before the commencement of the day’s work.


Maunam is an important method of worshipping God. Maunam in this context does not mean merely silence. It is also the process of keeping the mind free of all thoughts. It implies that we should keep all our senses under perfect control, so that during the period of silence, the limbs may not move even involuntarily. Such a maunam will enable the divine spark within every one of us to become active in its progress towards the realization of the Paramaatma. The waves of thoughts that continuously rise and fall in our minds keep the all-pervading Atma hidden from us. Once the flow of thoughts is checked, the Atma begins to function. This kind of maunam is also an attribute of a muni. That is why we have been enjoined not to think for a while every day – tooshneem kinchit achintayan तूष्णीम् किञ्चिन्तयन्.Therefore, the decision of the Government in favor of observing silent prayer, though a compromise, is really a step in the right direction and a blessing in disguise.


This practice of maunam need not be confined to students alone. All of us are students all our life. If we do not make a conscious effort to practice maunam, to keep all thoughts away, we will regret later for having lived a purposeless life. From “no thought”, we can develop the practice of “God thought”, thinking of God. We can repeat the name of God and also concentrate our mind on the Divine Mother, or Lakshmi Narayana, or Uma-Maheswara. A person who has fallen into bad company has to seek the help of a policeman to free himself from that association. Once he is assured that his former evil associates will no longer trouble him, he can discontinue the police protection. Similarly, we seek the grace of one or the other manifestation of the Supreme Being to purge our hearts of all impurities, so that the Atma within us can easily realize the Formless and All-pervading God. Good association leads to “no association”, which in its turn leads to realization of the Ultimate Truth or the Supreme Bliss. Thereafter the Atma is freed from further births. That is the import of the following Bhaja Govindam verse:


सत्सङ्गत्वे निस्सङ्गत्वम् निस्सङ्गत्वे निर्मोहत्वम् ।

निर्मोहत्वे निश्चलत्वम् निश्चलत्वे जीवन्मुक्ति: ॥


Sat-sangatve nissangatvam, nissangatve nirmohatvam;

Nirmohatve nischala tattvam, nischala tattve jeevan muktih.


When we associate ourselves with the Sat, the identification of the “I” with this human frame will cease, and the “I” in each of us will get identified ultimately with the Brahmam. The “I” feeling will persist only so long as we regard ourselves as something separate from “He”; it will get itself obliterated with the dawn of the consciousness of the Oneness of God.



Sunday, July 18, 2021

50vidya

 *The first school in England opened in Year'1811*. 

*At that time India had 7,32,000 Gurukuls....

Find out how our Gurukuls in India got closed. How did Gurukul learning end....

First will tell you what disciplines were taught in Gurukul culture (in the *Sanatan* culture) !  

Most Gurukuls taught the following subjects :

01) Agni Vidya (Metallurgy)
02) Vayu Vidya (Wind)
03) Jal Vidya (Water)
04) Antriksh Vidya (Space Science)
05) Prithvi Vidya (Environment)
06) Surya Vidya (Solar Study)
07) Chandra and Lok Vidya (Lunar Study)
08) Megh Vidya (Weather Forecast)
09) Dhaatu Urja Vidya (Battery energy)
10) Din aur Raat Vidya.
12) Srishti Vidya (Space Research)
13) Khagol Vigyan (Astronomy)
14) Bhugol Vidya (Geography)
15) Kaal Vidya (Time studies)
16) Bhoogarbh Vidya (Geology & Mining)
17) Gemstones and Metals (Gems & Metals)
18) Aakarshan Vidya (Gravity)
19) Prakash Vidya (Energy)
20) Sanchaar Vidya (Communication)
21) Vimaan Vidya (Plane)
22) Jalayan Vidya (Water Vessels)
23) Agneya Astra Vidya (Arms & Ammunition)
24) Jeeva Vigyaan Vidya (Biology, Zoology, Botany)
25) Yagna Vidya (Material Sic)

This is the talk of scientific education. 

Now let's talk about professional and technical disciplines that were covered :

26) Vyapaar Vidya (Commerce)
27) Krishi Vidya (Agriculture)
28) Pashu Paalan Vidya (Animal Husbandry)
29) Pakshi Paalan (Bird Keeping)
30) Yaan Vidya (Mechanics)
32) Vehicle Designing
33) Ratankar (Gems & Jewellery Designing)
36) Kumhaar vidya (Pottery)
37) Laghu (Metallurgy & Blacksmith)
38) Takkas
39) Rang Vidya (Dyeing)
40) Khatwakar
41) Rajjukar (Logistics)
42) Vaastukaar Vidya (Architecture)
43) Khaana Banane ki Vidya (Cooking)
44) Vaahan Vidya (Driving)
45) Waterways Management
46) Indicators (Data Entry)
47) Gaushala Manager (Animal Husbandry)
48 Baag vaani (Horticulture)
49) Vann Vidya (Forestry)
50) Sahyogee (Covering Paramedics)

All this education was taught in Gurukul, but with time, when Gurukul disappeared, this knowledge was made to disappear by the Britishers ! It started with Macaulay. 

Today, the future of the youth of our country is being destroyed by the Macaulay method. 

How did Gurukul culture end in India ....?

The introduction of Convent education ruined Gurukuls. Indian Education Act was formed in 1835 (revised in 1858). It was drafted by ' *Lord Macaulay* '. 

Macaulay conducted a survey of education system here while many Britishers had given their reports about India's education system. One of the British officer was G.W. Luther and the other was Thomas Munro!

Both of them had surveyed different areas at different times. Luther, who surveyed North India (Uttar Bhaarat), wrote that there is 97 % literacy here and Munro, who surveyed South India (Dakshin Bhaarat), wrote that here there is 100% literacy.

Macaulay had clearly said that if India (Bhaarat) is to be enslaved forever, its′′ *indigenous and cultural education system* ′′ must be completely demolished and replaced with ′′ English education system ′′ and only then will Indians be physically Indians, but mentally become English.  When they leave the convent schools or English Universities, they will work in the interest of British.

Macaulay is using an idiom - ′′ Just as a farm is thoroughly ploughed before a crop is planted, so must it be ploughed and brought in the English education system. ′′ 

That's why he first declared Gurukuls as illegal. Then he declared Sanskrit illegal and set the Gurukuls on fire, beat the teachers in it and put them in jail.

Till Year'1850 there were @ 7 lakh 32 thousand ' Gurukuls & 7,50,000 villages in India. That means almost every village had a Gurukul and all these Gurukuls used to be ' *Higher Learning Institutes* ' in today's language. 18 subjects were taught in all of them and these people of Gurukul Samaj used to run these together, not by the King. Education was imparted free.

Gurukuls were abolished and English education was legalized and the first convent school opened in Calcutta. That time it was called ' *free school* '. Under this law, Calcutta University, Bombay University & Madras  University were created. These three slavery-era universities are still in the country !

Macaulay had written a letter to his father. It is a very famous letter, in it he writes: ′′ These convent schools will bring out children who will look like Indians but are English by brain and they don't know anything about their country. They won't know anything about their culture, they won't have any idea about their traditions, they will not know their idioms, when such children are there in this country, even if the British go away, English will not leave this country.

′′The truth of the letter written at that time is clearly visible in our country even today ..... 

See the misery created by this act. We feel inferior of ourselves who are ashamed to speak our own language, mother tongue & recognise our own culture.

A society that is cut off from its mother tongue never flourishes and this was Macaulay’s strategy! 

Today's youth here knows more about Europe than India and considers Indian culture not so cool, but imitates Western country ... !?

What a pity.... It's high time we all awaken & reclaim our great culture & heritage.

Saturday, July 17, 2021

L sahasram

 Sri VenkatAdhvari also called as Sri VenkatAcarya Deekshidar and Aparadesikan composed Sri LakshmI sahasram. He was born at arasaaNipAlai near Kaancipuram and lived between 1590-1660 A.D. His family lived near YatoktakAri sannadhi in Kaanchi. His forefathers had performed many yAgAs and earned the title “Deekshitar”. There is still a place in arasaaNipAlai that is referred to as “YaagasAlai”. Till date one can see a stone pillar there that is called “Yoopastambham”. Sri VenkatAdhvari was an expert in tarka, vyAkarNam, mImAmsai, vedAntam, astrology and mantra sAstram. He used to offer the fruits of all his yAga, yaj~nam to Lord Venkateswara and hence was called VenkatAdhvari.


Among the many works of Sri VenkatAdhvari only some are available to us. Acarya PancaaSat, SravanAnandam, YadavarAgavEyam, Subhashita Kaustubam, ViSvaguNadarSa Sambu, Uttara Sambu, VaradAbyudaya Sambu, PradyumnAnanda nATakam, LakshmI sahasram are some of his works that have been published so far. He was said to have translated ThiuvAimozhi in to Sanskrit but the translation for only “oru nAyagamAi” pAsuram is available now.



We learn that Sri VenkatAdhvari served as the court poet during the Mogul rule. He mentions it himself when he sings “ Mother! I have spent all my life winning my opponents and enjoying the luxuries of the King’s court. I have never sung your praise nor worshipped you so far”. He traveled extensively in India, visiting many places of pilgrimage and was honored by many Kings en route.

Some popular stories about Sri VenkatAdhvari

Once the Mogul king in Delhi had concealed some gold coins inside a pumpkin and presented the pumpkin to Sri VenkatAdhvari. Without realizing the presence of the gold coins when enquired about the pumpkin Sri VenkatAdhvari said that it is fit to cook and eat as a vegetable or to sell and buy some salt. When the king asked him about the comment Sri VenkatAdhvari said that he commented to the Lord that the emperor at Delhi is the one who fulfills the wishes of the Lord while what the other kings present are fit only to cook and eat as a vegetable or to buy salt. Such was his power of wit.

Sri VenkatAdhvari was an ardent proponent of SaraNaagati as the mokshOpAyam. He suffered innumerable hardships to establish its greatness. Once when some miscreants tied a stone to his neck and tried to kill him in their anger towards him, he prayed to PirAtti that the stone should fall on the heads of those miscreants themselves which PirAtti made it happen.

Once when someone was questioning the authenticity of Arti prapatti, Sri VenkatAdhvari told him to circumambulate ThAyAr sannidhi while he prayed to PirAtti on the man’s behalf. Before the man reached the dvajastambham PirAtti made him shed his body and thus granted him moksham.

Sri LakshmI Sahasram is composed as a part of Sri VenkatAdhvari's work ViSvaguNadarSa Sambu. In this epic, Sri VenkatAdhvari creates two characters KrishAnu and ViSvAvaSu who travel to many places. KrishAnu would only say what is bad about that place while ViSvAvasu would mention only what is good there. While they were at Thiruvenkatam, KrishAnu berates the place following which they both lose their sight. To regain their lost vision they compose LakshmI Sahasram praising Sri PadmAvati ThAyAr, the divine consort of SrinivAsa PerumaaL.

There is also the folklore that Sri VenkatAdhvari himself lost his sight and regained it by composing Sri LakshmI Sahasram. In any case it has been shown on several occasions that chanting LakshmI Sahasram confers many benefits to the seeker.

The thousand slokas of Sri LakshmI Sahasram are subdivided into twenty five “stabakams”. Stabakam means a flower bouquet. Naming the chapters as flower bouquets seems appropriate as these songs are composed as LakshmI worship. There are many similarities between SwAmi Desikan’s works and LakshmI sahasram. Just like SwAmi Desikan, the author has interspersed the letters of the LakshmI mantra throughout the work. Chanting this, is said to confer benefits similar to chanting Sri RanganAtha PaadukA Sahasram. Similar to SwAmi Desikan’s work the songs in the beginning of the stabakam are in “anushTub” chandAs while the songs that follow are in other chandAs. To explain the “dayA” or the compassion of PirAtti, Sri VenkatAdhvari invokes the episodes of KaakAsura and Sita’s stay in aSokavana just as SwAmi Desikan had done before. Among the mangaLa slokAs in the work, the sloka for SwAmi Desikan will explain the author’s bhakthi towards him. It is said that Sri VenkatAdhvari composed twenty five stabakams to correspond to SwAmi Desikan’s Sri stuti that has twenty five slokAs