Raghavendra Swami

"Raghavendra" redirects here. For other uses, see Raghavendra (disambiguation).
Rāghavēndra
Born Venkata Natha
1595 or 1598 or 1601 CE
Bhuvanagiri (now in Tamil Nadu)
Died 1671
Mantralayam (now in Andhra Pradesh)
Spouse(s) Sarasvati
Children Lakshminarayanacharya
Titles/honours Parimalacharya, Jagadguru
Guru Sudheendra Theertha
Philosophy Dvaita

Rāghavēndra Swami (1595–1671 CE), born Venkata Natha, was a renowned Madhwa saint, philosopher and proponent of Dvaita philosophy established by Sri Madhvacharya. He is worshiped as a Guru. He served as the head of the matha in Kumbakonam from 1621 to 1671 and established the Brindavan in Mantralayam in the present-day Andhra Pradesh as an important place of pilgrimage.

Birth and early life

Raghavendra was born as Venkatanatha in the town of Bhuvanagiri, Tamil Nadu in a Kannada Madhva Brahmin family to Thimanna Bhatta and Gopikamba in 1595.[1][2] He was also called Venkatacharya in honor of Venkateswara.[3] After his initial education under his brother-in-law Lakshmi Narasimhachar in Madurai, Venkatanatha was admitted to the Sri Mutt in Kumbakonam. He married Sarasvati Bai and had a son Lakshminarayanacharya, after which the family moved to Kumbakonam.[3]

Life

In the Sri Mutt, Venkatanatha studied under Sudheendra Theertha and emerged as a talented scholar and consistently won debates over scholars older than him. He was also known as a teacher of Sanskrit and the ancient Vedic texts.[3] He was also a skilled musician and an expert in playing the instrument Veena. In 1614, he took sannyasa and adopted the name Raghavendra Theertha. In 1621, Raghavendra Theertha succeeded his guru Sudheendra Theertha as the head of the Sri Mutt and served from 1621 to 1671. He traveled all over South India expounding Madhvacharya's Dvaita philosophy and is attributed with a number of miracles. In 1671, after assuring his disciples in a speech that he will be in spirit with them for the next seven hundred years, Raghavendra attained Samadhi at Mantralayam.

In 1801, while serving as the Collector of Bellary, Thomas Munro is believed to have come across an apparition of Raghavendra Swami.[4][5]

Work and compositions

He wrote a commentary Sudha Parimala on the SrimanNyaya Sudha, an exposition of Dvaita philosophy.[6] His works include Dasha Prakarana, commentaries on six of the ten PrakaraNa-granthas of Madhva, Sutra Prasthaana, works on the brahma-sutra, Rig and Upanishad Prasthaana, Gita Prasthaana, Shri Ramacaritramanjari, Shri Krishnacaritramanjari, Pratah Sankalpa Gadya and Sarvasamarpana Gadya.

In popular culture

Sri Raghavendra Vijaya is a biography on Sri Raghavendra penned by his nephew and devotee Narayanacharya.[7] Sri Raghavendra Stotra is a 32-stanza hymn, sung as a prayer by Appannacharya. Sri Raghavendra Mahatmyam covers the life and devotee experiences with Sri Raghavendra. Sri Raghavendrar was a 1985 Tamil film where Rajnikanth portrays the saint.[8]

References

  1. "Shri Raghavendra Swamigalu : A Great Devotee of Shri Vishnu". hindujagruti.org.
  2. "Life Story of Guru Raghavendra Swamy". gururaghavendra.in.
  3. 1 2 3 "History of Sri Raghavendra Guru". www.SriRagavendra.com. 5 August 2013. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
  4. Proceedings - Indian History Congress. 1945. p. 331.
  5. Giriraj Shah (1999). Saints, gurus and mystics of India, Volume 2. Cosmo Publications. p. 473. ISBN 8170208564, ISBN 978-81-7020-856-3.
  6. "Raghavendra". Retrieved 6 May 2016.
  7. "Sri Raghavendra Vijaya". Raghavendra Mutt. Retrieved 6 May 2016.
  8. "Rediff on the net, Movies: 'Rajini acts in front of the camera, never behind it'". Rediff. Retrieved 8 November 2015.

External links

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