There are two evidences to show that Dharma yuga
classification of Krita, Treta, Dwapara and Kali was in vogue until a few
centuries ago. One is deduced from the commentaries given by Naccinārkkiniyar
and Ilampuranar to the Sangam age Grammar book Tolkāppiyam. Another is found in
the Cholan inscriptions discovered at Tiruvalangadu.
Evidence from Tol Kappiyam.
Taking up the first, two sutras in Porul Adhikaram of
Tol Kappiyam, had been interpreted in terms of Yuga differences. These sutras
speak about the ritual of marriage. Of them verse 142 of Porul Adhikaram says,
“There was a time when the 4th varna
also had marriage rituals like the first three varnas”
Then verse 143 says,
“Once lies and cheating started setting in,
marriage rituals were laid out by Iyer (Brahmins)”
These two verses have been the eye of the storm for
many passionate debates in the past, but what everyone ignored was that there
was reference to Yuga dharma behind these verses which the two ancient
commentators (who lived 1000 years ago) had mentioned. (Others also might have
written, but I am quoting only these two, as I have read only these two)
The first one (V:142) was interpreted to mean that
at some time the past there were no differences between the Varnas and all had the
same kind of marriage customs. The marriage rituals were common for all. Or
perhaps they were absent. The two commentators call that age as the ‘First
oozhi’!
Oozhi means deluge and it is also interpreted as
Yuga in Tamil lexicons. In the 1st Yuga that is., Krita yuga, there
were no differences in terms of varna, no differences between Vedas and people
led a dharmic life without selfish motives. In such scenario, there was no need
for a ritual of marriage as the couple in love with each other were sincere and
honest in their commitment to each other. Such was the Yuga dharma of Krita.
In the 2nd verse (V:143) it is said that
in due course lies and offences started creeping in. The commitment to each
other was breached for reasons of sorts and relationships were not honoured.
This necessitated sages to devise rituals for all the varnas so that the couple
would be forced to make a sort of promise in front of everyone to remain
committed to each other. The commentators say that this happened in 2nd
Oozhi, that is, Treta Yuga.
This idea has a parallel with marriage rituals of
Grihya sutras. This also reminds us of the narrations in old texts on the absence
of restriction in relationship between man and woman, though married to someone
else. The case of Brihaspati desiring Mamata when she was carrying Dhirgatamas
looks like an incident of that yuga or happening at the time of decline of
Krita yuga and becoming Treta Yuga. Dhirgatamas also was found to have done a
breach of the same kind that resulted in the birth of Anga, Vanga, Kalinga,
Pundara etc who went on to found kingdoms in their names.
When transgressions started to take place, rules
were laid down by means of rituals as a kind of agreement between the couple.
The commentary to Tol Kappiyam verses show that this marked the arrival of
Treta yuga. In Treta yuga, Rama stood as an epitome virtue in honouring the
marriage vow. Not only that, he emulated every kind of virtue such that he came
to be known as “Dharmavan vigraha”. Dharma in full form is an identity
of Krita Yuga where Dharma stood in all four feet. Rama was an embodiment of
Krita yuga Dharma but lived in Treta Yuga.
For our discourse, we cannot miss out the fact that
the yuga classification in vogue about 1000 years ago as known from the
commentators of Tol Kappiyam was not in terms of lakhs of years, but only in
terms of Dharma – the dharma spoken in this context was that of honouring a
lifelong commitment of togetherness between a male and a female. In Krita yuga
that commitment existed without any formal promises. In Treta yuga formal
promises were made. In Dwapara Yuga, such formal promises were made to many. In
Kali yuga promises are no guarantee for non- cheating.
Evidence of 4 yugas in Cholan inscription.
Evidence from the Vaishnavite chronicles was cited
earlier on how a brief period of Dwapara yuga was experienced during the reign
of Pallavas when four Azhwars lived. Few centuries after them, the Cholan king Rajendra Chola-I came to power in whose name a
grant was given. The inscription delivering this grant gives the genealogy of
Cholas and also says after whose rule the respective yuga got ended. The genealogy contains a split-up of the four
yugas with the names of kings spread out in those yugas. Interestingly, the
Cholas claim descent from the same ancestry of Rama! So it is possible to
compare the Cholan lineage of Kings with that of Rama given in Valmiki Ramayana
and find out where or after whom the yuga has changed.
Both the lineages are given below in a tabular form
with yuga endings (as given in the inscription) highlighted. The full text of
the inscriptions can be read here.
RAMA
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CHOLA
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||||||||||||||
Brahma
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Mariichi
|
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Kaashyapa
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Sun
|
Sun
|
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Manu
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Manu
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Ikshvaku
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Ikshvaku
|
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Kukshi
|
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Vikukshi
|
Vikukshi
|
||||||||||||||
Baana
|
Puranjaya
(Kakutstha)
|
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Anaranya
|
Kakshivat
|
||||||||||||||
Aryyama
|
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Analapratapa
|
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Vena
|
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Prithu
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Prithu
|
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Trishanku
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Dhundumara
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Dhundumara
|
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Yavanasva
|
Yavanasva
|
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Mandhata
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Mandhatri
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Susandhi
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Muchukunda
|
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Dhruvasandhi
|
|
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Bharata
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Bharata
|
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Asita
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Chola (founded
Chola dynasty)
|
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Sagara
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Rajakesari
|
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Asamanja
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Parakesari
|
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Amshuman
|
Chitraratha
|
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Dilipa
|
Chitrasva
|
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Bhageerata
(brought Ganga)
|
Chitradhanvan
(brought Kavery)
((V. 35.) Having come to know that king Bhagiratha engrossed in penance brought down (from
heaven) the river of gods (i.e., Ganga) (to
earth), this king (also) desirous to fame brought her (i.e., Ganga) to his
dominions under the name Kaverakanyaka (i.e., Kaveri).)
|
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Kakutstha
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Suraguru
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Raghu
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Vyghraketu
|
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Pravriddha
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Shankana
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Sudharshana
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Agnivarsna
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Shiigraga
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Maru
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Prashushruka
|
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Ambariisha
|
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Nahusha
|
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Yayati
|
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Naabhaga
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Aja
|
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Dasaratha
|
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Rama
|
|||||||||||||||
END of TRETA YUGA
|
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Narendrapati
|
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Vasu
(Uparichara)
|
|||||||||||||||
END of DWAPARA YUGA
|
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Perunatkilli
|
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Karikala
|
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Kocchengannan
|
The table shows that Krita yuga was counted from a
decipherable time scale in Bharatavarsha.
Krita Yuga
Manu, Ikshvaku and Prithu belonged to the Krita
Yuga. A narration in Mahabharata (12-29) says that the earth yielded crops
without being tilled in Pritu’s times. That is exactly the nature of Krita
yuga.
In Krita yuga food was available without being
cultivated. As time went by scarcity came up and there arose a need to
cultivate food crops, but even then there was minimal or nil efforts like
breaking the ground. That was Treta yuga.
But when that also failed to satisfy the needs of
the people, efforts like ploughing the ground were done. That marks Dwapara
yuga where Balarama stood as a symbol of ushering
in that culture.
Kali yuga is marked by scarcity of food inspite of
intense cultivation leading to methods not found in Nature to procure food.
Cultivation pattern in Krita and Treta yuga supported by rice genetics.
Currently inputs from archaeo-botanical studies on
rice genetics in India are available. There is scope to deduce when planned cultivation
started and when rice was available in nature. There is evidence of naturally
occurring wild rice since 20,000 before present in the eastern part of Asia
that includes China and Sundaland (includes Malaysia and Indonesia). In India,
South east Tamilnadu with adjoining North West Srilanka and eastern parts of
North India are found to have produced naturally occurring wild rice.
In the figure below, the regions marked as P had
produced wild rice since 20,000 years BP.
Fuller:2011. Map of wild rice zones since 20,000 BP (marked as P) in comparion to expansion since
9,000 BP (marked as H). Recent populations are marked in crosses and circles.
If naturally occurring rice (food) that grows
without effort is an evidence of Krita yuga, its occurrence was very minimal in
Bharatavarsha, and confined to SE Tamilnadu. (Rice is a marker of Vedic culture
as it is offered in yajnas)
It was only from the times of 8th to 6th
millennium BCE we find evidence of domesticated rice Oryza sativa,
showing signs of planned cultivation. Planned cultivation with little effort is
a feature of Treta Yuga.
Regions of domesticated rice
are shown in the figure below.
In the above figure, Lahuradewa in trans-Sarayu
region shows signs of rice cultivation between 6th to 5th
millennium BCE.
In Koldihwa and Mahagara (both in Allahabad
district), rice domestication is found at three different levels between 8th
and 6th Millenium BCE (7505 -7033, 6190 – 5764, 5432- 5051) (sources
here
and here)
From this we can say that the upper limit of Treta
Yuga was 8th millennium BCE and lower limit was 5th millennium
BCE. Within this period Vindhya- Ganga- Ghaghara region was producing rice with
not much effort. Ikshvakus of Sarayu, Kushikas of Vishwamitra, Jamadagni and
his son Parashurama were living in these regions.
Junction of Krita and Treta yuga
In the above table there is a long gap between
Dhruvasandhi and Bharata in Rama’s lineage within which many kings had come up
in Cholan lineage though the first Chola had not yet appeared in this period.
But Krita Yuga ended in this period, that is before Bharata (son of Dushyanta)
and after Dhruvasandhi.
The name Dhruvasandhi
seems to convey some hidden meaning as it occurs before the end of Krita yuga. Does
his name signify a period when the earth’s axis was pointing to a region in the
sky in between two pole stars? Or was there a switch over from one pole star to
another at that time? Or did that mark the end of Krita Yuga? More research is
needed on all these.
Cholan inscription shows that Sibi, Dushyanta and
Bharata belonged to Treta Yuga. Interestingly the Tol Kappiyam’s notion on
marriage rituals applies to all these three.
Sibi was born to Madhavi who was given in marriage
to four different kings for the sake of fulfilling a promise of someone (Gavala)
unconnected with her, to whom Madhavi’s father had given a word. After getting
a child in each marriage she returned to her father, again becoming eligible
for a marriage she liked. Marriage ritual was in place in her times (Treta
Yuga) but travesty has happened. It shows the struggle to come to terms with
adherence to marriage promises.
Dushyanta who was in love with Shakuntala breached
the trust she had in him. The decline from Krita yuga dharma of trust can be
noticed here. Finally Dushyanta realised his mistake and accepted Shakuntala
and his son born to her. He decided to ‘cherish’ the child and hence the child
came to be known as Bharata – the name given to our country, for, our country
is also being cherished by Dharma (of Vedas).
Bharata married three women and got nine children
from them, but he did not accept any of them, for, they were not like him. One
of them was Chola – as known from the genealogy in the inscription. He seemed
to have left home and came far down to South and established a country of his
own in Pumpukar which was known as Sambapati at that time (where Sambu devi /
Jambhu devi of Jambhu Dweepa did her penance in a remote past). The Cholans prided in calling themselves as Sembians –
descendants of Sibi! Perhaps the harsh treatment at the hands of his father Bharata
made Chola shun his memory but cling on to Sibi, an earlier king as a
role-model. For our analysis we find transgression was committed by Bharata
also, in marriage vows.
Ganga and Kavery brought out in
Treta Yuga.
Bhageeratha
brought down Ganga from the Himalayas in Treta Yuga. A reference to him in the
inscription says that the Cholan king Chitadhanvan was inspired by him in
getting Kavery from Kodagu to his land at Pumpukar.
It is in the
same yuga Rama was born. With Rama, Treta Yuga ended. It seems no kings of
great fame were there around the times of Rama in the Cholan dynasty. In a
correlation we find reference to Pandyan king in the narration of Sugreeva in
Valmiki Ramayana and not any king of Cholan dynasty. Perhaps
Cholas were subdued around that time by Pandyans.
Dwapara Yuga
By the time of Rama, decline of Dharma started
setting in as known from the episode involving Sambuka in Uttara khanda. After
Rama, Treta Yuga declined and Dwapara started.
In Cholan geneology not many famous kings were there during that period.
Kali yuga
The name Perunatkilli appearing in Kali yuga
followed by Karikal Chola shows that Kali yuga in Dharmic scale had started
only 2000 years ago. In this context a word on Manu
neeti Cholan must be told here. This king, praised as having followed
the rule of Law of Manu of Krita Yuga, did not find mention in the genealogy of
the above inscription. Even his original name is not told anywhere. We come to
know of him mainly from Silappadhikaram, a post Sangam text.
Dharma of Manu neeti Chola
Looking for reasons why his reign cannot be
considered as Krita in Kali yuga, there are clues to the contrary.
This king finds mention in Mahavamsa (Ch 21), a Buddhist text. This
king’s history is recounted in that text in the context of a fight with King
Dutthagamini of Anuradhapura. The episode on execution of his son for giving
justice to a cow is also mentioned in this text.
Bell and cow of Manu Neeti Cholan
Other episodes of such extraordinary action, not
known to Tamils are also found mentioned in that chapter of Mahavamsa. The name
of the king is given as “Elara” belonging to 3rd / 2nd
century BCE. In local folklore in Srilanka he is known as “Ellalan”. This
sounds like Ellavan (a Tamil word) which is another name for Sun. This name
looks plausible as the Cholas belonged to Solar dynasty.
The main part of his life that remains unknown in
Tamil lands is that this king lost a war with Dutthagamini by whom he was
killed in the war field near Anuradhapura. The 25th chapter of Mahavamsa
gives details of this war and on how this king was cremated with honours as a
mark of respect for his sense of justice. A stupa also was erected at the place
of cremation and he was worshiped at the time Mahavamsa was written.
Till mid-1800s the above stupa known as Dakshina Stupa was
considered as Elara’s tomb.
On coming to know of the demise of the king, the
king’s nephew, the heir-apparent to the throne went to Anuradhapura. He spurned
calls for truce but died on the war front. In this backdrop, one can imagine
the gloom and turmoil in the Cholan lands at that time, which means
difficulties in establishing Dharma in all spheres.
Though he followed Manu neeti in punishing his son,
the fact remains that the land lost a legitimate heir to the throne. The
next-in-line was also lost in a war in foreign land. There was a crisis to the throne
and danger from external aggression. Under such conditions, only Kali yuga
dharma could have prevailed. The absence of this king’s name in the genealogy
could perhaps be due to troubled times that followed his tenure. It is
unfortunate this king didn’t live long to give a Dharmic rule.
Start of Kali yuga in Bharatavarsha.
After the decline of Indus- Saraswathi civilization,
many people of Dvaraka region along with Vel, Velir etc (ploughing community
inspired by Balarama of Dwapara yuga) had migrated to Tamil lands. The Dharma
they followed formed the focus of many poems of Purananauru (Sangam text). The
last of them were Adyaman, Paari etc. Once they
were eliminated, no more kings were there to establish the rule of higher yuga.
Kali Yuga had set in around that time.
Using the same scale one can analyse the dynasties
of north India in pre-Common Era to know the level of Yuga dharma. But Kali
settled down in full force in Bharatavarsha during invasions in the last 1000
years. It seems to have reached the breaking limit of 3/4th Adharma
in the present times.
It cannot grow any further, as 1/4th of
Dharma is still firm in this land. At this stage we find a gradual awakening
among people of all sides desiring the rule of Dharma in this land and willing
to push out Adharma. As this happens gradually, 1/4th Dharma of Kali
would start growing more and more until it reaches its full strength.
Recalling the words of Vishnu Purana (4-24),
“.. the minds of those who live at the end of the
Kali age shall be awakened, and shall be as pellucid as crystal. The men who
are thus changed by virtue of that peculiar time shall be as the seeds of human
beings, and shall give birth to a race who shall follow the laws of the Krita
age, or age of purity.”
There is hope at the end of the tunnel. It is Time
that makes Yugas. It is time that makes Kali. More and more people becoming
aware is also the play of Kali. Time and Dharma cannot be separated.
Conclusion.
In any
reference to a yuga, one must look at its context, whether referring to Divya
yuga or Dharma Yuga and make a rational and realistic assessment of span of
life and span of yuga under consideration. The Dharma yuga also follows the
same order like Divya yuga from Krita to Kali, though there is absolutely no
specific time limit given by any sages anywhere in the texts for the duration
of each of the Yuga in Dharma scale. The incidents of overlap of other yugas
within a yuga shows that such rigid span of a yuga was not supported by the
sages. The rigid span is only applicable to Divya yugas.
The Yuga
is only assessed by the measure of Dharma for human beings. Though one can
experience yugas of higher Dharma even in this Kali yuga by means of thought,
word, action and satsang, it is for those fortunate few to enjoy the higher
Dharma. For, the decider of the Yuga is the king – in today’s conditions, the
rule of Law. That has an overpowering effect on our lives in this Bharata
varsha.
Salutations
to our sages for the knowledge of yugas given to us through which we strive to
shed darkness to attain Light.
Have there been any philological attempts made to explain the formation and evolution of the phonetic forms of semantic cognates: அறம் aṟam and the R̥gveda form: ध्/अर्मन् 'bearer , supporter , arranger RV.' ???
ReplyDeleteTamil lexicon seeks to link the Tamil semantics of அறம் aṟam with அறு¹-தல் aṟu-, 64 v. intr. [M. aṟu.] 1. To be severed, to break, as a rope; கயிறுமுதலியன இறுதல். சாப நாணறு குமில வோதை (இரகு. யாகப். 87). 2. To cease, become extinct, perish; இல்லாமற்போதல். அல்லலோ டருவினை யறுத லாணையே (தேவா. 52, 11). 3. To be decided, settled; தீர்தல். அற்ற காரியம் (சிலப். 17, முன்னிலைப்பரவல், 2, உரை). 4. To abide, dwell; தங்குதல். மணிமாநிலத் தற்றதோர் கோதையின் (சீவக. 226). 5. To make friends; நட்புச்செய்தல். பேணித் தம்மோ டற்றவருக் கறாதோரும் (உத்தரரா. திக்குவி. 55). 6. To go to ruin; பாழாதல். (பு. வெ. 3, 15, கொளு.)
அறம் aṟam
, n. < அறு¹-. [K. aṟa, M. aṟam.] 1. Moral or religious duty, virtue, performance of good works according to the Šāstras, duties to be practised by each caste; தருமம். (பிங்.) 2. Merit; புண்ணியம். அறம்பாவ மென்னு மருங்கயிற் றாற் கட்டி (திருவாச. 1, 52). 3. That which is fitting, excellent; தகுதியானது. (இறை. 29, பக். 136.) 4. Religious faith; சமயம். (சீவக. 544.) 5. Wisdom; ஞானம். அறத்தின் விருப்புச் சிறப்பொடு நுந்த (ஞானா. பாயி. 5). 6. Feeding house; அறச் சாலை. அறத்துக்குப் புறத்தன் (T.A.S. i, 9). 7. Fasting; நோன்பு. (சீவக. 386.) 8. Letters or words in a verse which cause harm; தீப் பய னுண்டாக்குஞ்சொல். அறம்விழப் பாடினான். 9. Goddess of virtue; தருமதேவதை. (குறள், 77.) 10. Yama; யமன். அறத்தின் மைந்தனுக்கு (பாரத. வாரணா. 112).
அறவன் aṟavaṉ
, n. < id. 1. One who is virtuous; தருமவான். அறவனீ யல்லையோ (திரு விளை. தண்ணீர்ப். 36). 2. God; கடவுள். அறவனை யாழிப் படையந்தணனை (திவ். திருவாய். 1, 7, 1). 3. Buddha; புத்தன். (திவா.) 4. Sage, ascetic; முனிவன். (சூடா.) 5. Brāhman; பிராமணன். அறவ ரடிதொடினும் (பரிபா. 8, 68).
*அறவிலைவாணிகன் aṟa-vilai-vāṇikaṉ
, n. < அறம் +. One who practises virtue, not for virtue's sake, but for the reward it brings here or hereafter; பொருளை விலையாகக் கொடுத்து அறங் கொள்வோன். இம்மைச் செய்தது மறுமைக் காமெனு மறவிலை வாணிகன் (புறநா. 134).
அறவாழி aṟa-v-āḻi
, n. < id. +. 1. Wheel of virtue; தரும சக்கரம். அருளோடெழு மறவாழி யப் பா (திருநூற். 5). 2. Ocean of virtue; தரும சமுத் திரம். அறவாழி யந்தணன் (குறள், 8).
Namaskaram. Thanks for the details on Aram/ Dharma.
DeleteVery interesting. Are there any references from any of the acharyas like Shankara, Ramanuja, Madhva or their descendents where they differentiate Deva & Dharma yuga.
ReplyDelete@Sri
ReplyDeleteDidn't you read the other parts wherein I have given the evidences from Mahabharata? Puranas also give details about Dharma based Yuga calculation.
Follow my YouTube channel too. My 10th episode in Indic Past series, to be uploaded next week covers Dharma yuga.
Thank you for the response. I read through the evidences which you have giving and they are quite appropriate. I will also view your YouTube series.
DeleteI was mainly interested to know any other sampradaya acharyas or scholars in the past had given similar idea.