Re: Origin of Iyengar
From the Bhakti List Archives
• February 18, 2002
anEka praNAma to all bhAgavathas. I have heard a different version of the "etymology" of the term Iyengar. "IYYAN" as explained by SrimAn Srinivas in general came to be applicable to all upper caste, particularly the brahmin community. Today still, the villagers will address brahmins as iyer even though he may be an iyengar or Madhva!!! The term IyengAr as per what I heard from scholars refers to brahmins that under go panchasamakAra. They then subscribe to five angAs towards prapatti and hence “iyyangAr”. Incidently, VaikAnasa vaishNavas, who do not adopt panchasamskAra, do not refer to themselves as iyyangArs. Now the question is, can we then call all srivashNavas, irrespective of the caste, that adopt panchasamskAra,as IyyangArs? AdiyEn just felt like airing my views. DAsAnudAsan Suderson --- lsrinivaswrote: > --- In bhakti-list@y..., "nnarsi" > wrote: > > I remember to have read a scholarly article by > Late Sri Navalpakkam > > Ammini Devanatha Tatacharya, a philologist and a > recipient of > > President of India's award for Sanskrit, about the > origin > > of "Iyengar". This word as well as "Iyer" has same > origin in the > > Tamil word "Aiyan" meaning a respectable one. > Iyengar is a Telugu > > variant of Aiyan (Aiyan + Garu). > > -------------------------------------------------------------- - SrImate rAmAnujAya namaH - To Post a message, send it to: bhakti-list@yahoogroups.com Archives: http://ramanuja.org/sv/bhakti/archives/ Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
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