Nayanars
The Nayanars or Nayanmars (Tamil: நாயன்மார்கள்) were Shaivite devotional poets of Tamil Nadu, active between the fifth and the tenth centuries CE. The Tamil Śaiva hagiography Periya Puranam, a volume of the Tirumurai, written during the thirteenth century CE, narrates the history of each of sixty-three Nayanars and the history of nine Thokai Adiyar.
Sundarar's eighth century work Thiruthoṇdar thogai lists 60 Shaiva saints[1] but gives none of the legends associated with them. In the tenth century CE Nambiyandar Nambi composed the Tirutoṇṭar Antādi, a sequence of interlocking verses the title of which can be rendered as the Necklace of Verses on the Lord's Servants. In this work Nambi and Sundarar, himself and his parents to the sequence, creating what is now the canonical list of sixty-three saints, each with a brief sketch of their legend.
Nayanars were from varied backgrounds, ranging from kings and soldiers to untouchables. The foremost Nayanars are Appar, Sundarar and Sambandar. Together with the twelve Vaishnava Alvars, the Nayanars are sometimes accounted South India's 75 Apostles of Bhakti because of their importance in the rise of the Hindu Bhakti movement.
They praised 275 of this deity's most holy temple abodes as the Paadal Petra Sthalams of the Shiva Sthalams on the continent.
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[edit] The sixty-three Nayanmars
- Anaya Nayanar
- Adipaththar
- Aiyadigal Kaadavarkon, Pallava King Aiyadigal Perumaanaar
- Amaraneedi Nayanar
- Appudhi Adigalar
- Arivattaya Nayanar
- Chandeshvara Nayanar
- DhandiyadigaL
- Enatinatha Nayanar
- Eripaththa Nayanar
- Eyarkon Kalikkaama Nayanar
- Gananatha Nayanar
- Idankazhi Nayanar
- Ilayankudi maranar
- Isaignaniyaar - a woman
- Iyarpagaiar
- Kaari Nayanar
- Kalikkamba Nayanar
- Kaliya Nayanar
- Kanampulla Nayanar
- Kannappa Nayanar
- Karaikkal Ammaiyar a woman
- Kazharchinga Nayanar
- Kazharirtrarivaar, Chera King, also Cheraman Perumal
- Kochengat Chola, A Chola King
- Kootruva Nayanar
- Kotpuli Nayanar
- Kulachchirai Nayanar
- Kungiliyak Kalaya Nayanar
- Manakkanychaara Nayanar
- Mangayarkkarasiyar, a woman
- Meiporul Nayanar
- Murkha Nayanar
- Murti Nayanar
- Munayaduvaar Nayanar
- Muruga Nayanar
- Nami Nandi Adigal
- Narasingha Munayarayar
- Nesa Nayanar
- Ninra Seer Nedumaara Nayanar
- Perumizhalaik Kurumbar
- Pusalar
- Pugal Cholar, A Chola King
- Pugazh Thunai Nayanar
- Saakkiya nayanar
- Sadaiya Nayanar
- Saththi Nayanar
- Seruthtunai Nayanar
- Sirappuli Nayanar
- Siruttonda Nayanar
- Somaachi maara nayanar
- Sundarar
- Sambandar (Tirugnaana Sambandar)
- Tirukkuripputh Thondar
- Tirumoolar
- Thirunalai Povar Nayanar, popularly known as Nandanar
- Tirunavukkarasar, popularly known as Appar
- Thiruneelakandar
- Tirunilakanda Yaazpaanar
- Tiruneela nakkar
- Uruttira Pasupatiyar
- Vaayilaar
- Viranminda nayanar
[edit] See also
[edit] Notes
- ^ Dr R. Nagasamy. Siva Bhakthi. Chapter 2.