Krimikantha
From the Bhakti List Archives
• May 14, 2000
Dear Vaishnavas, Our tradition states that a ruler called Krimikantha persecuted Sri Ramanuja and his disciples. He is said to have got the eyes of Shri Kuresha plucked out. Are there any publications which identify this king conclusively? Is his bigotry attested from alternate sources? I ask because recently, I read an account which casts aspersions on the traditional understanding of these events. I am reproducing selected statements from the text (see reference at the end). Any help will be highly appreciated. I hope I am not offending anyone. Vishal _____________________ Persecution of Sri Vaisnavas by Krimikantha The very details of the incident are doubted by Rao [Ref. 1, pg. 59-61]. He says: "Though it is correct to say that the Chola monarchs were ardent patrons of Saivism, it need not be conlcuded from this, nor from the account of the persecution of Ramanuja that there was a general persecution of the Vaisnvavas and the Vaisnava temples in the Chola period. From the Chola inscriptions, we know that they extended their patrongage to both the Saiva and the Vaisnava temples". Rao identifies the king Krimikantha mentioned in Sri Vaisnava hagiographies as Kulottuga I (1070-1120 CE) and then states: "There are several inscriptions of Kulottunga I in the Srirangam temple". Rao then lists all these inscriptions, which make it clear that numerous generals of the king made lavish grants to the temple, which was the center of the Sri Vaisnava community, and then concludes: "It is significant that a number of generals and officers of Kulottuga I figure as the donors of the Srirangam temple. This is unlikely if the king had been a Saiva fanatic." Hari further says: "In the present state of our knowledge and with the tradition account of the Guruparamparai as the basis, we can only conclude that the persecutor of Ramanuja was not Adhirarajendra but Kulottunga I. It was the audacious statement of Kurattalvan, who made a joke of the dictum of the king, viz. 'Sivat parataram nasti' that was perhaps responsible for the blinding order. Ramanuja felt himself unsafe and so he left the Chola territory altogether. For aught we know even the blinding of Kuruttalvan might have been a hagiographical invention, for the Guruparamaparai tells us that Alvan regained his eyesight later through divine beneficence. There is a good reason to believe that the account of persecution is highly exaggerated." Reference: 1. V. N. Hari Rao; History of the Sritangam Temple; Sri Venkateswara Universtity; Tirupati; 1976 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Best friends, most artistic, class clown Find 'em here: http://click.egroups.com/1/4054/4/_/716111/_/958417715/ ------------------------------------------------------------------------ -------------------------------------------------------------- - SrImate rAmAnujAya namaH - To Post a message, send it to: bhakti-list@eGroups.com Visit http://www.ramanuja.org/sv/bhakti/ for more information
- Next message: Ramanbil_at_aol.com: "MOKSHADIKARI 1: "WHO ON EARTH WANTS TO GO TO ETERNITY?""
- Previous message: Kasturi Varadarajan: "nature of the soul and its liberation"
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ] [ attachment ]