Raghavendra Tirtha

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Template:Short description Template:Redirect Template:Pp-semi-indef Template:EngvarB Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox Hindu leader Template:Vaishnavism Template:DvaitaInfobox

Raghavendra Tirtha (Template:IAST), also referred as Raghavendra Swami, (Template:Circa1595 – Template:Circa1671) was a Vaishnava scholar, theologian, and saint. He was also known as Sudha Parimalacharya (Template:IAST). His diverse oeuvre include commentaries on the works of Madhva, Jayatirtha, and Vyasatirtha, interpretation of the Principal Upanishads from the standpoint of Dvaita and a treatise on Purva Mimamsa. He served as the pontiff of the matha at Kumbakonam from 1621 to 1671.Template:Sfn Raghavendra Tirtha was also an accomplished player of the veena and he composed several songs under the name of Venu Gopala.Template:Sfn His memorial at Mantralayam attracts lakhs (hundreds of thousands) of visitors every year.

Biography

Raghavendra Tirtha was born as Venkatanatha in the town of Bhuvanagiri, present day in Tamil Nadu into a Kannada Madhva Brahmin family of Gautama Gotra of musicians and scholars.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn His great-grandfather Krishna Bhatta was a tutor to the Vijayanagara emperor Krishnadevaraya. His grandfather was Kanakachala Bhatta,Template:Sfn and his father Thimmanna Bhatta (also known as Thimmannacharya) was an accomplished scholar and musician.Template:Sfn After the fall of the Vijayanagara Empire, Thimmanacharya migrated to Kanchi with his wife Gopikamba. Venkatanatha had two siblings—Gururaja and Venkatamba. Venkatanatha's education was taken care of by his brother-in-law Lakshmi Narasimhacharya at Madurai after the early demise of his father, and he subsequently got married.Template:Sfn

In 1624, Raghavendra Tirtha became the pontiff of the Kumbhakonam Matha, which was earlier known as Vijayeendra Matha or Dakshinadi Matha, now known by the name of Mantralaya Sri Raghavendra Swamy Matha. Uttaradi Math along with Vyasaraja Math and Raghavendra Math are considered to be the three premier apostolic institutions of Dvaita Vedanta and are jointly referred as Mathatraya.Template:Sfn<ref name="Rosen-p132">Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Sfn

After a short stay at Kumbakonam, he went on a pilgrimage to Rameswaram, Ramnad, Srirangam, and Mathura. Later, he moved westwards to Udupi and Subramanya, and then to Pandharpur, Kolhapur and Bijapur. At Kolhapur, he is said to have stayed for a long time and at Bijapur, he supposedly defeated many Advaitins and converted them to Dvaita fold.Template:Sfn After that, he returned to Kumbakonam. By 1663 he left for Mysore where he got a grant from Dodda Devaraya Odeyar. Finally, he chose to settle down in Mantralayam.Template:Sfn

Raghavendra Tirtha died in 1671 in Mantralayam, a village on the bank of river Tungabhadra in Adoni taluk in Andhra Pradesh.Template:Sfn

Works

About 45 works written in Sanskrit are attributed to Raghavendra Tirtha.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Sharma notes that his works are characterised by their compactness, simplicity and their ability to explain the abstruse metaphysical concepts of Dvaita in understandable terms.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

His Tantradipika is an interpretation of the Brahma Sutra from the standpoint of Dvaita, incorporating elements from Jayatirtha's Nyaya Sudha, Vyasatirtha's Tatparya Chandrika and the glosses by Vijayendra Tirtha.Template:Sfn Bhavadipa is a commentary on Jayatirtha's Tattva Prakasika which, apart from elucidating the concepts of the source text, criticises the allegations against Madhva raised by Appaya Dikshita and grammarian Bhattoji Dikshita. Raghavendra Tirtha's expertise in Purva Mimamsa and Vyakarana is evident from his works on Vyasatirtha's Tatparya Chandrika, which runs up to 18,000 stanzas. He wrote a commentary on Nyaya Sudha titled Nyaya Sudha Parimala.Template:Sfn Apart from these works, he wrote commentaries on the Upanishads, first three chapters of Rigveda (called Mantramanjari) and Bhagavad Gita. As an independent treatise, he wrote a commentary on Jaimini Sutras called Bhatta Sangraha, which seeks to interpret the Purva Mimamsa doctrines from a Dvaita perspective.Template:Sfn

The Legend of Raghavendra Tirtha and Sir Thomas Munro

A legend about Raghavendra Tirtha and Sir Thomas Munro was recorded by W. Francis, an Indian civil servant to British India, in 1916, more than 100 years after it happened.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The legend as follows: After Sir Thomas Munro was appointed as principal collector for the district of Bellary in 1800,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> he went to collect the taxes on Mantralaya (Mantsala). It was said that Raghavendra Tirtha appeared from the tomb and spoke with Thomas Munroe while the saint was invisible and inaudible to others. Munroe was convinced and went back to his camp and instructed to keep the endowment of Mantralaya Mutt. Direct documentations of this incident are missing. Template:Citation needed

Raghavendra Tirtha has been eulogised by Narayanacharya in his contemporaneous biography Raghavendra Vijaya and a hymn Raghavendra Stotra by Appannacharya. Outside the confines of Dvaita, he is regarded as a saint known for preaching the worship of Vishnu regardless of caste or creed.Template:Sfn

Hebbar notes "By virtue of his spiritual charisma, coupled with the innumerable miracles associated with him, the pontiff saint may very well be said to possess an independent and cosmopolitan cult of his own with his devotees hailing not only from all walks of life but from all castes, sects and even creeds as well".Template:Sfn His humanitarianism is evident in the devotional poems composed in his honour by Vijaya Dasa, Gopala Dasa and Jagannatha Dasa.Template:Sfn

Raghavendra has also seen representation in the popular culture through Indian Cinema:

Year Film Title role Director Language Notes
1966 Mantralaya Mahatme Dr. Rajkumar T. V. Singh Thakur Kannada The song from the film titled "Indu Enage Govinda" was written by Raghavendra himself
1980 Sri Raghavendra Vaibhava Srinath Babu Krishnamurthy Kannada Srinath won Karnataka State Film Award for Best Actor for the film
1981 Mantralaya Sri Raghavendra Vaibhavam Rama Krishna M. R. Nag Telugu Ramakrishna's last film as a Hero in Telugu
1985 Sri Raghavendrar Rajnikanth SP. Muthuraman Tamil The film was Rajnikanth's 100th

References

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Bibliography

Further reading

Template:Madhva Religious Figures