HINDU DICTIONARY IN ENGLISH AND TAMIL 81; இந்து மத கலைச்சொல் அகராதி-81 (Post.15,990)

True Ramalinga with Vibhuti before Dravidians attack.

Written by London Swaminathan

Post No. 15,990

Date uploaded in London – 17 July 2026

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Pictures are taken from various sources for spreading knowledge.

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Ra beginning Words

Raga – raaga- Rāga (राग), states Monier Monier-Williams, comes from a Sanskrit word for “the act of colouring or dyeing”, or simply a “colour, hue, tint, dye”. The term also connotes an emotional state referring to a “feeling, affection, desire, interest, joy or delight”, particularly related to passion, love, or sympathy for a subject or something

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Raja – raaja-King; from this Sanskrit word English words Regal, Royal, and Tamil word Arasan etc are derived.

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Rajaraja and Rajendra Choza

Rajaraja Choza and Rajendra Choza were great Choza kings who conquered many territories up to South East Asia. Both were famous for the big Siva temples they constructed. Rajaraja built Thanjavur Big Temple (Brihadeeswar) and his son Rajendra built Gangaikonda Chozapuram temple. They supported music and dance which are known from the inscriptions they left on temple walls. They maintained a powerful navy. They controlled many parts of north India, Sri Lanka and South East Asian countries.

Rajaraja ruled from 985 CE to 1014.

Rajendra ruled from 1012 to 1044 CE.

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Raghuvamsa

DR. V. RAGHAVAN on Kalidasa’s Raghuvamsa

The Raghuvamsais the longest work of the poet, in nineteen cantos and over 1500 verses. It served as a model not only for all Mahakavyasproduced up to the recent times, but also of all Rama-kavyas. After Kalidasa, Kumaradasa, a poet of Ceylon, wrote a Rama-kavya called Janaki-harana; and Rajajekhara, the critic, remarked, using double entendre, that when the Raghuvamsastood there, only Kumaradasa and Ravana could have dared to do the Janaki-harana! The RV served also as one of the sources of the famous Tamil Ramayana of Kambar. Numerous commentaries were written on it, including some by Jain writers. The RV is also the earliest reputed evidence for the Bala and Uttara Kandas being authentic parts of Valmiki’s epic, which Western scholars doubt.

The RV. is a complete work of the poet in that all his ideas in his other works are to be met with here. The whole conception of the Indian pattern of life, with its four Asramasand four Purusharthas, and several ideas which are basic to Indian thought and culture, receivea planned treatment here.

After Valmiki’s Ramayana, the RV. is the first Mahakavyato deal with the story of the epic, devoting six cantos to it (X-XV). It is well-known that among Sanskrit poets, he is foremost in treading the path blazed by the Adikavi. He mentions Valmiki as the Purvasuri who had shown him the way (1.4). In the XIV canto where Valmiki becomes a character in the story, he calls him the poet who responded to the cry of the afflicted–of Sita as well as the female bird–(Ruditanusari Kavih) (verse 70) and refers in a pithy manner to the birth of the Sloka (poetic verse) from the Soka or the sympathy of the poet roused at the sight of the bird shot down by a hunter, and speaks of him again as the poet of compassion (Kavih Karunikah, XV. 71).

In Sanskrit literary tradition, Kalidasa is renowned for his brilliant use of upamās (similes), celebrated by the famous saying upamā kālidāsasya. In his epic Raghuvamśa, the poet is widely cited as employing 1,250 similes to chronicle the legends of 29 kings of the Solar Dynasty.

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Rajasuya- raajasuuya-

Rājasūya (राजसूय) is a great sacrifice performed by a universal monarch (in which the tributary princes also take part) at the time of his coronation as a mark of his undisputed sovereignty.

Rājasūya (राजसूय).—A great yajña. Hariścandra and also Dharmaputra performed it. (Sabhā Parva, Chapters 33, 35, 84). Sangam Tamil King Choza Perunarkilli did it and it was attended by Pandya and Chera kings; poetess Avvaiyar participated in it.

After the sacrifice, on the suggestion of Sahadeva, the first honour was given to Kṛṣṇa. Śiśupāla’s protest and vilification of Kṛṣṇa who had his head cut off. In the sacrifice each brother was assigned specific functions—Duryodhana in charge of treasury, Bhīma cooking, Nakula the supply of provisions, etc. The avabhṛta bath at Gangā accompanied by divine music. Every visitor duly honoured, returned back. Jealousy of Duryodhana at the success of the sacrifice.2 The consecration ceremony of a king done by Pṛthu, Vāli and others.

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Rajoguna

Rajōguṇa (रजोगुण).— The second of the three properties of human beings; means PASSION. To this are ascribed sensual desire, worldly coveting, pride, falsehood, and pain. The other two Gunas are Satva and Tamas.

In verse Bhagavad Gita , Lord Krishna details that when Rajo guna is dominant, a person exhibits a surge in greed, intense activity, undertaking selfish enterprises, restlessness, and irrepressible desire

Sattva Guna—a mode of clarity, knowledge, and purity. You feel calm, balanced, and connected to Krishna. In this mode, you naturally seek spiritual wisdom and truth.
Rajo Guna—the mode of desire, ambition, and attachment. It makes you restless, always seeking more. It’s not evil, but it keeps you bound to the cycle of karma.
Tamo Guna—the mode of darkness, laziness, and illusion. It drags you down, making you avoid spiritual life.

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Ramalinga Swamikal

A controversial Tamil saint, also known as Vallalar, was born in Marudhur in 1823. He was a great poet, mystic and saint.

His poems are in his book Tiruvarutpa (tiru arutpaa). His Ashram is in Vadalur. He started Samarasa Sanmaraga Sangam. His Vadalur centre is known for two novel things. Only light/ lamp is worshipped there. And the second remarkable thing is ever burning Oven to feed all the 24 hours. He believed in nature cure and suggested a lot of herbs for a healthy life. His poems are in praise of  Lord Siva and Lord Muruga. Tamil Saivite Mutts (adeenams) don’t recognise him or his poems. Anti God Dravidians are trying to get mileage out of it.

Vallalar advocated only vegetarian food like Valluvar. His compassion towards the living beings is known through his popular saying “I wither away (become sad) whenever I see withering plants”

His followers believed he did many miracles.

Four controversies:

1

When he called his poems Tirumurai which is used for the compositions of great Saivite Saints of the past , Saivites objected to it. The case went upto the court. Famous Saivite scholar of Sri Lanka Thiru Arumuga Navalar led the group against him.

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The second controversy is about his disappearance. He locked himself in a room and asked his followers not to open it. But the officials forced it open after sometime and he was not there. He was said to have become Jyoti (light). His opponents said the he ran away.

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There is a new controversy now; his followers erased Vibhuti from his forehead and showed him as a Tamil Christ. But his poems are in praise of Hindu Gods only.

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Another political controversy is that the previous DMK government supported the vast Vadalur open land changed into a commercial complex.

His Teachings :

He rejected the caste system, religious divisions, and other societal norms that segregated people based on birth, status, or wealth. Instead, he championed the unity of all human beings under a divine principle he called Arutperum Jyothi, or “the Light that bestows Infinite Grace.” Ramalinga advocated the concept of worshipping the flame of a lighted lamp as a symbol of the Eternal Power.

Sathya Gnana Deepam, the Lamp of True Knowledge,lighted by him is placed within the Sathya Gnana Sabhai—Hall of Wisdom—in Vadalur. It was inaugurated in January 1872. Enshrouded by seven veils, it represents the layers of illusion that cloud our Inner Light, each veil a reminder of the barriers to realizing the profound wisdom within.

The Thiru Arutpa, also known as the “Songs of Grace,” is the most significant work of Vallalar, comprising around 6,000 verses.

Vallalar left for Mettukkuppam, a village south of Vadalur. A few sincere devotees went with him. There, in 1874, he entered a room and instructed his devotees to lock the door behind him and keep it locked. After some days, , the officials opened the door themselves. There was no one inside. Saint Ramalinga Swamigal had simply disappeared.

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Ramanujacharya  -raamaanuja

Sri Ramanujacharya (1017–1137 CE) was a prominent Hindu philosopher who championed Vishishtadvaita and advocated for caste inclusion, notably converting many individuals from lower castes into Vaishnavism.

Sri Ramanuja was a Hindu philosopher born in a Tamil Brahmin family in 1017. Considered a great teacher who spread Vishtadvaita, was born in a Vadama family to Kesava Perumal Somayaji Dikshitar and Kanthimathi Ammal at Sri Perumpudur near Chennai. He lived a long life of 120 years and died in 1137. He was a great social reformer and converted a lot of people from lower castes as Vaishnavite Brahmins.

He is known for the episode where he gave the sacred mantra to all.

Sri Ramanujacharya climbed the temple tower (vimanam) of the Sowmya Narayana Perumal Temple in Thirukoshtiyur (located in the Sivaganga district of Tamil Nadu) to give the sacred “Om Namo Narayanaya” mantra to all people regardless of their caste or creed.

Ramanuja had walked to Thirukoshtiyur 18 times to learn this secret mantra from his guru, Thirukoshtiyur Nambi. When Nambi finally taught him the secret, he warned him that sharing it with the masses would result in Ramanuja going to hell. Defying the warning out of compassion, Ramanuja climbed the temple tower and publicly declared the mantra so everyone could attain salvation. He said even if I go to hell, it does not matter; all others will be saved by this mantra.

Ramanuja had to leave Tamil Nadu and travel to different places in Karnataka to escape from his persecutors. Traditional accounts identify the Chola king Krimikanta (often associated with either Kulottunga I or Kulottunga II) as the Chola ruler who persecuted Ramanuja. Demanding Ramanuja sign a declaration that Shiva was the supreme deity, the king forced the philosopher into exile in Hoysala territory until the monarch’s death; he was protected and patronized by the Hoysala King Vishnuvardhana.

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Ramayana

Ramayana written by Adi Kavi Valmiki is one of the two Hindu epics. In Tami Kamban wrote Ramayana in Tamil. There are hundreds of Ramayanas written by various poets in India, Sri Lanka and South East Asian countries.

The Ramayana contains 24,000 Shlokas (metrical verses) roughly equaling to some 48,000 lines or 480,002 words of Sanskrit text. It is divided in seven sections: Adikanda or Balakanda, Ayodhyakanda, Aranyakanda, Kishkindhyakanda, Sundarakanda, Lankakanda and Uttarakanda.

It gives the story of Rama and his brothers.  His aunt Kaikeyi banieshed him to forest for 14 years where his Sita was abducted by Ravana, King of Sri Lanka. With the help of Hanuman, he built a bridge to the country and killed Rabvana. Then he returned to Ayodhya, where he was born and ruled the country called Kosala from there. Valmiki Ramayana is in simple and beautiful Sanskrit. The current version is dated 500 BCE or before.

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Rambha

Rambhā (रम्भा).—General. One of the most beautiful of the apsarā women. Urvaśī, Tilottamā and Rambhā are really reputed for their beauty. Rambha in Ayurveda meant plantain stem.

Rambha in Hindu mythology is the Queen of the Apsarases, the magical and beautiful female beings in Devaloka. She is unrivalled in her accomplishments in the arts of dancing, music and love-making. She is often asked by the king of the Devas, Indra to break the tapasya of sages so that the purity of their penance is tested against temptation, and also that the order of the three worlds remains undisturbed by any one man’s mystical powers. When she tries to disturb the penance of Rishi Vishwamitra (who is doing it to become a Brahmarishi), she is cursed by him to become a rock for 10,000 years till a Brahmin delivers her from the curse.

In the epic Ramayana, Rambha is violated by Ravana, king of Lanka, who is thereby cursed by Brahma that if he violates another woman again, his head will burst. This curse protects the chastity of Sita, the wife of Rama when she is kidnapped by Ravana.

Rambhā (रम्भा) is the name of an Apsaras as mentioned in the Kathāsaritsāgara, chapter 28. Accordingly, “once on a time Rambhā, a fair one of heaven, came that way, wandering at will through the air from the palace of Indra. She beheld the king [Suṣeṇa] roaming in that garden like an incarnation of the Spring in the midst of a garden of full-blown flowers”.

The story of Rambhā and Suṣeṇa was narrated to king Kaliṅgadatta by a certain Brāhman in order to demonstrate that “daughters are better even than sons, and produce happiness in this world and the next”.

Stamp of Rajaraja Choza

To be continued………………………..

Tags- Rama, Ramana, Rambha, Rajaraja, Ramanuja, Ramalinga Swamikal, HINDU DICTIONARY ,part 81; இந்து மத கலைச்சொல் அகராதி-81 ,Raghuvamsa

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