The following is a summary of a paper title "Purnagiri : The Tantrapitha" written by Dr Nagaswamy and published in his book Facets of South Indian Art and Architecture. This was one of the papers which I summarized in my lecture, for the ongoing Tamil Heritage Trust Pecchu Kacheri.
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The Hevajra Tantra, a 7th century
Buddhist book, refers to four important pithas:
Jaalandhara,
Oddiyaana, Purnagiri and Kaamarupa
While the other three have been identified,
Purnagiri was disputed. Such texts as Sadhaanamaala, Rudrayaamala, Abul Fasl’s
Ain-i-Akbari and Hindu texts that refer to Saaktha pithas refer to these.
DC
Sirkar identified Purnagiri near Bijapur.
Agehananda says four pillars are allocated to four
directions, but it is purely theoretical. Oddiyaana is far west, Jaalandhara in
north west, and others in far east, none in the south.
Nagaswamy identifies a Kannagi temple on the Kerala
– Tamilnadu border, whose oldest inscription is of RajaRaja Chola. It also has
inscriptions of Maravarman Sundara Pandya and Kulasekhara Pandya, which
identify the mountain as Purnagiri and the presiding deity as Purnagiri
Aludaiya Naaciyaar. There are no records after 14th century.
Lokesh Chandra said that Oddiyaana is Kanchipuram
Kamakshi temple, citing extensively from Tibetan Buddhist sources. The word
kacchi in Tamil means Oddiyana as a waist-belt. But no Tamil epic like
Silappadikaaram or Manimegalai use the word Oddiyana.
Second, as per Lokesh Chandra, the city of Kanchi
was called WuCha mean Uda (Oddiyana), in a letter by the king of WuCha
addressed to Chinese emperor, by the 8th century Buddhist teacher
Prajnaa. But Kanchi was called Kin-chi by Hwi-Li a contemporary of Prajnaa
A poem in the Rudrayaamala, compares the various impartant sites to parts of the human body. A section of this poem is given below:
Muulaadhaara Kamarupam hrdi Jaalandharam
tathaa
lalaatE Purnagiri-aakhyam ca
Oddiyaanam tad-oordhvakE
Vaaranaasim bhruvOrmadhyE
Jvalanteem lOcana dvayE
(Rudrayaamala, cited in Tantrasaastra)
Third, all texts locate Oddiyana in the east.
Citing such evidence, Nagaswamy concludes that the
Purnagiri is the hill with the Kannagi temple, not Kanchipuram Kamakshi temple.
Siva
in Chidambaram is worshipped with Vedic chants, considered prescribed by
Patanjali, who
is considered same as author of Mahabhaashya and Yoga Sutra. This is mentioned by
Umpathy Sivam in the 14th century.
Nagaswamy
differs. He thinks that Makutaagama is followed. Also peculiarly,
Devi is worshipped with Tantric chants, from Saakta texts. There are no Vedic
chants used in the worship of Parvati. This too points to a strong Saakta
influence, perhaps the reflection of Bengal influence, where the Saakta cult is
very strong.
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