Sphinx of the south
  • http://www.swaveda.com/articles.php?action=show&id=51

    interesting read


    I would like to recount to you, dear reader, how the purushamriga
    was brought to earth. The purushamriga is a rishi, a sage with the
    body of a lion and a human face. This composite mythological being
    was called a sphinx in ancient Greece and Egypt.

    Five kings, brothers, known as the Pancha Pandavas, ruled
    Indraprastha. For the prosperity of their kingdom they wished to
    perform the Rajasuya Yajna, the royal Vedic sacrifice. To seek
    divine support for the performance of this ritual, one of the
    brothers, the hero Bhima, went to ask the help of Kubera, the
    guardian deity of the North. In Kubera's garden he met the divine
    being, the purushamriga, or human-beast, whom he invited to guard
    and attend the Rajasuya Yajna. Challenging Bhima, the purushamriga
    agreed to attend. Being a staunch worshipper of Lord Shiva he
    insisted Bhima must go before him without halting, without
    disturbing his meditation. If Bhima failed, the purushamriga would
    eat him. Although Bhima was a great athlete, the purushamriga
    quickly neared him.

    Lord Krishna had given Bhima magical stones which, when thrown over
    his shoulder, became Shiva temples. The purushamriga worshipped
    Shiva before following Bhima. Thus throwing the stones one by one,
    Bhima reached Indraprastha. But just before he could cross into his
    kingdom, the purushamriga caught one of his feet. Dharma, the elder
    brother, judged the purushamriga had the right to eat half of
    Bhima's body. The purushamriga explained he was satisfied with
    Dharma's justice and would not eat Bhima. After the completion of
    the Rajasuya the purushamriga asked Dharma "my task is over, where I
    should go now?" Dharma's answer was that he should go to Tillai-
    Chidambaram, where Shiva would shortly arrive to perform his cosmic
    dance. He should guard the entrance and ward off negative influence.

    On a raised platform, two sphinxes are sitting on either side of a
    grand doorway, guarding the entrance of an ancient temple. It is
    said they ward off evil and remove the sins of those who pass
    between them. A mysterious smile adorns their human faces, which are
    surrounded by full lion manes. One is male, the other is female, and
    as a faithful couple they have been seated in this way side by side
    for many centuries.

    Have we just entered an ancient Egyptian temple, or walked through
    the gate of a Greek shrine from long ago? No, we are in India.
    Visiting the famous temple in Chidambaram where Shiva Nataraja
    dances his cosmic dance for all humanity. These sphinxes are the
    purushamrigas of the legend. They have the body of a lion, and the
    face of a human being.

    In Indian art and culture the existence and presence of the sphinx
    as a mythological being has so far gone unnoticed and unrecognized.
    But through many years of research I have found that the sphinx
    plays a significant role in the arts and traditions of many temples
    in India. And not only in the art, but also in ritual and legend.

    I became aware of the identity between the purushamrigas guarding
    the main entrance of the temple where I spend so much of my life,
    and the mythological being called sphinx from ancient Egypt and
    Greece, as far back as 1986. Since I have been on a quest to uncover
    the mysteries and riddles that surround them. And now I can present
    a comprehensive report to the world.

    In South India, in Tamil Nadu, we find sculptures of the
    purushamriga situated in ritually significant places in many
    temples. Usually near an entrance, often in the passage through the
    gopuram, or on its façade. But also on pillars adjoining the
    sanctum. And in the pavilions used for the festivals. Not all the
    purushamrigas look exactly like the sphinx of Western antiquity. In
    South Indian art we find mainly two types. The type mostly
    resembling the classical image of a sphinx is those that have fully
    lion's bodies with human faces.

    Some, especially sculptures from more recent centuries, are lions
    from the waist down, and fully human from the waist up. Some are
    depicted as rishis or seers, having a beard and with their hair
    knotted on the top of their head. They may be worshipping a Shiva
    Linga with a bell and lamp. Some are virulent warriors, brandishing
    a club or a sword. A beautiful pair of purushamrigas stands to
    welcome the visitors to the mandapa in front of the Subrahmania
    shrine in the Brihadishvara temple in Tanjore, their hands folded in
    the anjalimudra of greeting. They are standing as tall as a man. Two
    pairs of small crouching sphinxes are positioned in the gopuram of
    the Sarangapani temple in Kumbakonam. And depictions of the legend
    of Bhima and the purushamriga are decorating the temples in
    Darasuram, Tribhuvanam, and Tiruvannamalai. The Indian sphinx is
    also found in Vishnu temples. As many as three are found in the
    Varadaraja Perumal temple in Tribhuvanai, near Pondicherry. And I
    understand there are many more waiting to be found.

    Not only are these sphinxes important in art. They also play a role
    in all Shaiva temple ritual. Among the lamps offered during the
    ceremony of the 16 upacaras, one is the purushamriga lamp. While
    presenting the lamp the priest chants a verse from the Krishna
    Yajurveda. And a few temples even have a purushamriga as the vahana
    or vehicle of the deity in the processions of the temple festival.
    So far I have found purushamriga vahanas in the Ekambaranatha temple
    in Kanchipuram, in Tiruvannamalai, in Tirumangalakudi, and Ulsoor in
    Bangalore.

    But the presence of sphinxes in Indian temples is not limited to
    Tamil Nadu only. My research has discovered this mythological being
    is represented in the art of other parts of India as well. The
    earliest examples can be found among Buddhist and Jain art from the
    Kausambi. But also from Jain caves in Orissa. In medieval Orissan
    art we find beings called nara-virala. Beautiful and ferocious they
    too are half lion, half human. They appear among the friezes of the
    Surya temple in Konarak and in many other places as well. Other
    examples have been found in Hampi, Srisailam, Northern Karnataka, on
    the brick temples of Bengal. And they are called nara-simha in the
    art of Sri Lanka.

    This discovery of the role and significance of the sphinx in Indian
    art and civilization contributes to the wealth and beauty of the
    Indian heritage. And it will bring a new understanding of the place
  • hi vijay,

    read ur below article.....

    as said, "kalthonri manthonraa kaalathae mun thonri mootha kudi "

    root of art, architecture is from south india. the thing is we never
    realized until someone says (like hanuman who does'nt know his
    strength )

    is purushamriga - dwarabalagar ?

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