On Some Tantrik texts studied in Ancient Kambuja

By P.C. BAGCHI


The Indian Historical Quarterly


Vol.VI, No.1, 1930.03 pp. 97-107



p. 97 II The Agamas and their influence--The inscriptions of Kambuja abound in references to the Saivite canon. Various inscriptions refer to Sivasastra, (1) Saivagama,(2) Sarvagama,(3) and Saiva-vyakarana.(4) Agama means the oldest Saivite canon which conformed to the Vedas and had not entirely separated from the Vedic religion like the later Saiva sects. Sastra was a term synonymous with Agama. Agamas are generally believed to be 28 in number but we have already discussed the text of the Nisvasatattva Samhita, itself an Agama, which mentions only 18. We have also pointed out that these 18 Agamic texts must have existed long before the 8th century. The references to Agamas in the inscriptions of Kambuja, the oldest of which go back to the beginning of the 9th century, confirm the same view. One of the four texts mentioned in the inscription of Kambuja, viz. the Nayottara at least belong to the Agama proper while the three other belong to the canon which grew later on under its inspiration. In the inscription of Angkor vat(5) we find another reference to an Agamic text: it is the Paramesvara (tasmin kuru mahadyagam yathokatam paramesvare). It is the Paramesvaratantra also called Paramesvaramatatanntra which is one of the 18 Agamas mentioned in the Nisvasasamhita list. It is the 25th of the 28 Agamas mentioned in later literature.(6) We have already seen that there is a ms. of the Paramesvaratantra copied in 859 A.D. The work was certainly much older, as it is mentioned in the Nisvasasamhita list of which we have a manuscript of about the middle of the 8th century. In my last article I have tried to show that the original Saivite ---------------------- 1. Inscription of Phnom Sandak of about the end of the 9th century A.D. Bergaigne -- Inscription de Campa et du Cambodge, II, P.157. 2. Inscription of Angkor vat, Ibid. p.392. 3. Ibid. p.389. 4. Ibid. p.392. 5. Bergaigne, Inscription etc. p.390; also p.384 with the note of Barth. 6. Gopinath Rao--Hindu Iconography, II, part I, pp. 367-368. p. 98 canon which contained the 18 Agamas was of North--Indian origin as according to them, the best Sivacaryas were the Brahmins of Aryavarta. But the people of the surrounding countries, Kamarupa, Kasmira, Kalinga, Konkana, Kanci, Kosala, Kaveri and Rastra were not eligible to that position for their physical deformities. By physical deformities we have to understand that their statures did not follow the prescribed standard and were either too tall or too short (atidirgha atihrasvaka). Such a conclusion is also substantiated by other evidences. The Tantrasara which is a famous compendium of Bengal Tantrism says an the authority of Kriyasarasamuccaya, Yamala and Vaisampayana-samhita that persons with physical deformities of various description, and persons who are diseased, immoral etc. cannot be gurus (Ibid. p.3)--atha nindyagurumaha-- Kriyasara- samuccaye-- Svitri caiva galatkusthi netrarogi ca vamanah/ kunakhi syavadantas ca strijitas cadhikangakah// hinangah kapati rogi bahvasi bahujalpakah/ etair dosair vihino yah sa guruh sisyasammatah// Yamale--abhisaptam aputran ca kadaryam kitavam tatha/ kriyahinam sathan capi vamanam gurunindakam// jalaraktavikaran ca varjayen matiman sada/ sada matsara-samyuktam gurum tantrena varjayet//. Vaisampayana-samhitayam-- aputro mrtaputras ca kusthi ca vamanas tatha.....// The same compendium again says on the authority of Jabila (quoted by Vidyadharacarya) that the quality of the gurus differ according to the countries in which they are born. According to it the best gurus are found in the countries of Madhyadesa, Kuruksetra, Nata and Konkana (or Nata-Konkana?), Antarvedi, Pratisthana, and Avanti. The Madhyadesa is Aryavarta. The gurus of the second quality are found in Gauda, Salva, Sura(?), Magadha, Kerala, Kosala and Dasarna. The worst gurus are those who belong to the countries of Karnata, Narmada, Rastra,(1) Kaccha, Kalinda Kalamba and Kamboja(2) (Ibid. p.10-11); tatha Vidyadharacaryadhrtam Jabalavacanam-- ---------------------- 1. It's evidently the same name as quoted in the list of the Pingalamata. Through mistake I connected it with Kaveri and took it to mean Kaveri-rastra. It seems to be a different country and probably is meant for Surastra. 2. Konkana which is amongst the forbidden countries in the Agama list here is placed in the first rank. Nata Konkana may however p. 99 Madhyadesa-Kuruksetra-Natakonkanasamb Antarvedi-Pratisthana Avantyas ca guruittamah// Madhyadesa Aryavartah/ Gaudah Salvah Suras caiva Magadhah Keralas tatha/ Kosalas ca Dasarnas ca guravah sapta madhyamah// Karnata-Naramda-Rastra- Kacchatirodbhavas tatha/ Kalindas ca Kalambas ca Kambojas cadhama matah// This list was certainly drawn up at a time when the authority of the orthodox Agamas was a little undermined by the rise of the heterodox schools. But it still shows the old tendency according to which the acaryas of North Indian origin were given the first place. This throws some unexpected light on the recruitment of Sivacaryas in different countries including ancient Kambuja. We have seen that Hiranyadama came with the new Sastras from a janapada, which was most probably a janapada in India. The family of Sivakaivalya, who was initiated to these Sastras, was long established in Kambuja. The history of this family, recorded in the inscription of Sdok kak Thom is of great interest The members of this family enjoyed the priesthood of the king through succession since the time of Bhavavarman (middle of the 6th century A.D.). They were Sivacaryas and were guardians of linga established in different places, The succession of the priests was determined according to the matrvamsa "i.e. maternal lineage" (tanmatrvamse yatayas striyo va jata vidya-vikrama-yukta- bhavah/ tad-yajakas syuh........ BEFEO, 1915, p.62) which implied that the succession was to go to the children of the sisters (bhagineya) or to those of the daughter of the sisters, or the elder brother. There are several cases of such succession recorded in the inscriptions (Ibid, , p.54). It is difficult to explain the necessity of such an arrangement. Barth in 1901 thought that such an arrangement was necessary because the royal priests used to take the vow of celebacy and therefore they had to choose their successor from the line of their sisters. But M. Finot (Ibid., p.56) says that it is difficult to admit this explanation as ---------------------- be a mistake for some other country. The countries of Kalinda and Kalamba are not known. Kalinda (certainly not Kalindi) seems to be a mistake for Kulinda. Kamboja does not seem to be the ancient country of the Kamboja-Gandhara group. It may be the country of the people called Kam-po-tsa in the Tibetan sources and located in Assam. These people seem to have been the predecessors of the modern Koch. p. 100 we hear of priests (though of very late times--IIth century A.D.) who were married. It is however clear that the intention was to avoid difficulty in finding a successor because when the branch lines are counted the family has an unlimited scope. But what was the necessity of sticking to a particular family for the selection of priests? The only explanation that occurs to my mind is that according to the Agamas the Sivacaryas had to be chosen preferably from the Brahmanical families of North Indian origin. Such families were not numerous in Kambuja. The family of Sivakaivalya was probably a rare one and priests had to be chosen from that family and its branch lines, as the members of them alone were fit to be Sivacaryas. In the inscriptions of Kambuja we have several other references to the families of North Indian origin, of which the members attained the position of royal chaplain. Thus we hear of the royal chaplain Bhatta Divakara who came from the banks of the Kalindi (Yamuna) and was thus an expert in the Vedic sacrifices (Bergaigne --Inscription I, p.81ff.) In an inscription of Angkor vat we are told that the royal priest Sarvajnamuni who was a special adept in the Saivite rites came from the Aryadesa. (Bergaigne-- Inscriptions etc. 1xv. 9. p.388. Aryyadese samutpannas Sivaradhanatatparah/ yo yogenagatah Kamvudese...). In the same inscription we hear that a descendant of Sarvajnamuni filled the country called Madhyadesa (here a part of the ancient Kambuja) with Brahmins versed in the Veda and Vedanga (Ixv. 22. cakara desam namnemam, madhyadesam janakulam/ vedavedangavidvipram....). There seems to be a reference here to the immigration of Brahmins from India. In the inscription of Prah vat we find mention of a Brahmin, named Agastya related to the royal family, who originally came from the Aryadesa. (Bergaigne--Inscriptions etc. xliv.5; p.184--atha dvijo' gastya iti pratito, yo vedavedangavid aryyadese...). Such practices were known in India too. The great Cola king Rajendra Cola who built the Rajarajesvara temple at Tanjore is stated to have ''appointed Sarvasiva Pandita-Sivacarya as the priest of that temple and have ordered that thenceforth the Sisyas and their Sisyas alone, belonging to the Aryadesa, the Madhyadesa and the Gaudadesa shall be eligible for the office of chief priest,'' (South Indian Inscription II, I. p.105, wrongly referred to as II, 2. p.153 in Hindu Iconography II, I. pp.5-6). We also know that the Malla kings of Bhatgaon (Nepal) had Brahmins from Bengal as their priests. These Brahmin families used to come to Bengal from time to time to contract their marriages in order to p. 101 maintain the purity of their family tradition. This was however the custom most probably in the pure Sivasadhana i.e. Agamanta Saivism. For the heterodox Saiva sects like the Pasupatas and others the practice was different. Thus in Nepal the priests of Pasupatinatha were recruited only from amongst the South Indian Brahmins (S.Levi, Le Nepal I, p.364-365). The influence of the Agamas can also be traced in the Saivite cult practised in Kambuja and Campa. There are ample evidences in the ancient inscriptions to prove that the constructions of the Sivalingas were made according to the prescription of the canon. According to the Agamas the Iingas can be of two kinds, the cala i.e. moveable and the acala, i.e, immoveable. The cala lingas are again of different types: mrnmaya, earthen; lohaja, metallic; ratnaja, of precious stones; daruja, wooden; sailaja, of stone; and Ksanika, those made for temporary worship. The lohaja i.e. metallic lingas are made of 8 metals: gold, silver, copper, bell-metal, iron, lead, brass and tin and the ratnaja ones are made of pearls, coral, vaidurya, topaz, emerald and bluestone.(1) The acala or sthavara lingas are of 10 kinds, Svayambhuva, Purva, Daivata, Ganapatya, Asura, Sura, Arsa Raksasa, Manusa and Bana. The Makutagama calls them Sthira lingas and divide them into four classes: Daivika, Arsaka, Ganapa and Manusa. In ancient Campa Saivism was the predominant religion and Siva was worshipped mostly in the form of a linga. A linga established by king Bhadravarman towards the close of the 4th or the beginning of the 5th century A.D. became a sort of national deity for the people of Catnpa. This linga is differently called in the inscriptions--Bhadresvara, Sambhu-Bhadresvara, and most probably also as Srisana-Bhadresvara (see R.C. Majumdar--Campa, pp.177ff.). The inscriptions do not generally speak of the materials used for the construction of the lingas. Many of them, specially the mukhalingas were certainly curved from stone. But we have some references to other types of lingas too. An inscription of Po-nagar, dated 965 A.D. (Majumder II, n" 47), speaks of the gold and stone images of the goddess i.e. Bhagavati (haimi and sailamayi pratima; inscr. ---------------------- 1. See Gopinath Rao, Hindu Iconography II, (I) pp.75ff: The Agamas from which he derives the information are: Suprabhedagama Karanagama, Kamikagama, Makutagama and the Kirannagama. See Ibird. II(2) App. B. p.3 ff. p. 102 n" 45 kaladhautadeha), erected by king Indravarman. This shows that both gold and stone was used in the construction of the images of deities in Campa. Another inscription is more explicit on the point. The Yang Tikuh Inscription of Indravarman I (dated 721 saka =799 A.D.) contains two stanzas which have not been correctly iuterpreted till now. The stanzas in question are (See Majumdar, II, n" 23, viii and ix):- [VIII] [ IX ] Dr. Majumdar translates the stanzas thus: "Indravarman also installed an earthen linga of the God, which therefore came to be known as Indrabhadresvara. He also established in the year of the Sakas Sasi yam adri(721), two treasures for the god, the one composed of moveable and immoveable property, and the other moveable and with a mouth (priests?)."(1) The last part of the translation is evidently unintelligible. There is no question of "property" in the text and "a moveable treasure with a mouth(?)" does not convey any meaning. Kosa here, as in many other cases in these inscriptions, should be taken in the sense of linga-kosa. Kosa was apparently an outer covering of the linga, and was used probably for decorative purposes. The inscriptions of Campa very often record the gifts of kosa made by the kings to the lingas. These Kosas were often golden and decorated with costly gems. The kosas had sometimes faces and Kasa with six faces are twice spoken of. We find mention of Urddhvakosa which was most probably a detachable one (See Majumdar, Campa I, p.182). If in the present case we take kosa in the sense of linga-kosa, the text becomes clear. It should then be translated: "Indravarman also installed an earthen-parthiva-linga of him (the god which therefore came to be known as Indrabhadresvara. He ---------------------- 1. Bergaigne --Inscriptions etc. II, p. 33 et 37-- VIII-IX "Sri-Indra varman a erige aussi un linga terrestre de ce dieu, qui a ete appele desormais d' un antre nom Indrabhadresvara. II a aussi constitue pour lui deux tresors: l'un compose de biens meubles et doue d'elo-quence" (les pretres du temple--Barth). 2. Cf. Ibid. I, Inscr. Il. 10, XV. B- 26, XVII. B.26, XVIII.D. 27, B. 24 and II, Inscr. LXI. C. II. p. 103 also established, in the saka year sasi-yama-adri (721), two kosas, one cara i.e. moveable and the other sthira i.e. immoveable. The moveable (cara) Kosa had a face (or faces)." The linga was an earthen one (parthiva) which corresponds to the minmaya-linga mentioned by the Agamas and it had two kosas, of which one was moveable and the other, probably a simple cylindrical one was a fixed one. The cara kosa, had a face (or faces) and thus when fixed to the lingas used to convert them into mukhalingas. The two words cara and sthira naturally remind us of the two types of linga, cala, moveable acala, immoveable, also called sthira or sthavara in the Agamas. In ancient Kambuja the lingas used to be made of metal as well as precious stones. We have references to lingam haimasobham, suvarna mayalinga, svarnalinga, kaladhauta-linga, sphatikalinga and manilinga. The materials used for the construction of these lingas therefore were chosen in accordance with the prescription of the Agamas. They all were of the type known as calalinga and fell under its subdivisions: sailaja, lohaja and ratnaja. The four faces of Tumburu--I have already tried to establish that the four Tantrik texts sirascheda, vinasikha, sammohana and nayottara mentioned in the inscription of Sdok Kak Thom were authentic Saivasastras being studied in India in the 7th and 8th centuries A.D. if not earlier. These texts constituted the "vaktracatuskam"(1) of the god ---------------------- 1. We have now a definite text before us which supports the. identification of Tumburu with Siva. In the Yogavasisttha-Ramayana (Nirvana-prakarana, I. xviii 23-26), compiled before the 9th century A.D., we find the following verses: ity astaisvarya-yuktas ta mataro raudra-cesthitah/ kadacinmilita vyomni sarvah kenapi hetuna// utsavam paramam cakruh paramarthaprakasakam/ vamasrotogata etas Tumburum Rudram asritah// pujayitva jagatpujyau devau Tumburu-Bhairavau/ vicitrarthah kathas cakrur-madira-madatositah// These things are spoken of the eight matrkas who were one day out for amusement. They are here characterised as the followers of the left current (vamasrotogata) and related to Rudra who is Tumburu i.e. the Tumburu aspect of Rudra (Tumburum Rudram). The eight-matrkas are here made to worship the two gods Tumburu and Bhairava. This passage clearly mentions Tumburu as an aspect of Rudra. It should also be noted that Siva is often referred to in the inscrip- p. 104 Tumburu and were introduced in Kambuja for establishing the mystic rites known as devaraja (siddhih........ devarajabhikhya). Tumburu evidently had some sort of connection with the Devaraja cult. Devaraja was a phallic representation (lingaraja) of Siva--and we have already seen that Tumburu was an emanation of Siva himself. The inscription of Sdok Kak Them tells us that the first temple of Devaraja was built by Jayavarman II (802 A.D.) in his new capital Mahendraparvata (Phnom Kulen), and the royal chaplain Sivakaivalya was appointed priest. The deity was subsequently taken to Hariharalaya where the capital was shifted. Afterwards when the king Paramasivaloka (i.e., Yacovarman 889-910 A.D.) built his capital at Yosodharapur (Angkor Thom) he brought the deity to the new capital and placed him in the temple of Vnam Kantal (lit. the central mount) which was built in the centre of the city for receiving the deity. This central edifice erected by Yasovarman was for a long time believed to be the Bayon which is situated just in the centre of Angkor. But M.Finot in his recent studies (Etudes Asiatiques, vol.I p.245ff.) has tried to show that the inscription of Sdok Kak Thom has told a lie. A detailed examination of the sculpture of Bayon has led M.Finot to believe that Bayon could not have been originally a Saiva temple. He thinks that the newly built capital of Yasovarman was not placed under the protection of the linga Devaraja, the national deity of Kambuja, but under that of the Bodhisattva Avalokitesvara. Necessarily he was led to conclude that Angkor Thom and Bayon were not built by king Yasovarman, as the inscription would have us believe, because he was a Saiva, but by his predecessor Jayavarman II who was a Mahayanist. Yasovarman according to him played the part of a vandal and changed Bayon into a sanctuary of the linga. The principal reason for starting this theory was that the sculpture of Bayon is almost entirely Buddhist. But it might be argued that the temple was begun as a Buddhist one and finished as a Saiva one. But to this objection M. Finot answers that even in several niches of the towers the central figures were originally those of Buddha. They were later on deliberately destroyed and replaced by linga. Another serious difficulty remained to be explained away. Each tower of Bayon is decorated with four colossal faces turning towards the four cardinal points. In 1911 M.Finot interpreted them ---------------------- tions of Kambuja as Caturanana, Caturmukha etc. Cf. Bergaigne Inscriptions etc. II, n" LXIV (P.377); n XLIV (P.183); n LV (P.213). p. 105 as the architectural translation of a caturmukhalinga, He, however, gives up that explanation in the light of later researches and now thinks that they represent the faces of the Avalokitesvara. He is aware of the fact that no such architectural representation of Avalokitesvara is at present available but he still supposes that the architect wanted to represent Avalokitesvara as looking in the four directions and thus protecting the city on all sides. M.Finot would therefore conclude that the inscription of Sdok Kak Thom has distorted the facts. Bayon was not originally a Saiva temple and Yasovarman, who was a staunch Saiva, could not be its founder. It was founded in the time of Jayavarman II (802-869 A.D.) who was a Buddhist king. But M. Phillip Stern in his study on the evolution of the Khmer Art (Le Bayon d'Angkor et l'Evolution de l'Art Khmer, 1927) has questioned the hitherto admitted chronology of the monuments of Angkor on grounds of style. According to him, Bayon did not exist in the time of Yasovarman. Therefore, the central mount (Vnam kankal) of Yasovarman has to be searched for elsewhere. He thinks that it should be identified with the Phimanakas, which in all appear ance, occupied the central position in the old city. The city developed in course of subsequent centuries and its centre was naturally removed. According to the chronology proposed by him, Bayon could not have been built before the time of Udayadityavarman II (1049-1052 A.D.) or that of his predecessor Suryavarman I (1002- 1049 A.D.). The outer walls of the city would belong to this period. But M. Coedes in a recent study(BEFEO, XXVIII, pp.81 ff.) has tried to prove that Bayon was built still later during the reign of Jayavarman VII (1182-1201 A.D.). According to him the outer walls of Angkor Thom and some other buildings, which is of the style of Bayon, were constructed in the same period. Thus both M. Stern and Coedes agree in placing Bayon and the outer walls of the city in the same epoch though they do not assign the same date to their construction. Both of them disbelieve in the testimony of the inscription of Sdok Kak Thom which clearly attributes the foundation of Yasodharapura (i.e. Angkor Thom) and Vnam Kantal, "the central mount," to Yasovarman. This inscription, we have already seen, was composed in Saka 974(= 1052 A.D.) The date of its composition therefore falls in the period to which M. Stern would attribute the construction of Bayon. It seems strange that a contemporary inscription would mean by Vnam p. 106 Kantal any other edifice except the Bayon. What is possible is that the traditional history of religious foundations, which it records, is confused. Its attribution of the foundation of Bayon to Yasovarman may therefore be easily questioned but Bayon was certainly considered as a sufficiently old edifice in the middle of the IIth century for affording scope for confusion about its real founder to the author of the inscription. According to M. Coedes and M. Stern, the construction of Bayon and the outer walls of the city would fall in the same period. The towers of Bayon and those of the five city-gates are all decorated with four colossal faces. What do these four colossal faces represent? Are they the representations of the faces of Avalokitesvara, as M. Finot is thinks? Even admitting that Jayavarman II, if not directly but through his tradition, influenced the construction of Bayon, it is difficult to believe with M. Finot that he was a Buddhist king. M. Finot takes him to be a Buddhist--firstly, because he came from Java or from Srivijaya which was a great centre of Mahayana Buddhism in this period and-secondly, because he founded the city of Amarendrapura, formerly identified with the ruins of Bantay Chmar which is completely a Buddhist city to judge from the sculptures. But the identification of Amarendrapura with Bantay Chmar has been reasonably doubted by M. Stern (loc. cit.). We should also bear in mind that the posthumous name of Jayavarman II is Paramesvara (the Supreme Lord=Siva). The cities which he built--Mahendra- parvata, Hariharalaya and Amarendrapura are all connected with the names of Siva. The last name seems to be only a different form of Devaraja. The priest whom he chose as his chaplain, Sivakaivalya was a Saiva and came from a Saiva family. It was again he who authorised Hiranyadama to introduce the texts of Saivagama along with the Saiva cult of Devaraja into Kambuja. He really made it the religion of the state, erected its temples and granted lands to the priestly family for its maintenance. Besides it would be wrong to say that the sculptures of Bayon have no trace of Saivism. An important bas-relief of the first gallery of Bayon (See Comaille, Guides aux Ruines d'Angkor P.135, n.36) represents three temples in one row, of which the towers bear tridents (trisula) and the deity in the centre is a Sivalinga. In the face of these facts it is difficult to admit that Jayavarman II was a Buddhist king and that he introduced Mahayana from Srivijaya into Kambuja. There is no reason to suppose that the four Tantrik texts brought by Hirayadama had p. 107 anything to do with Mahayana. Jayavarman II was a Saiva. If any of the edifices (for example Bantay Chmar, Bayon, etc.) containing some Buddhist sculptures can even be proved to have been constructed in the time of Jayavarman II, the only possible explanation is either that he was a tolerant king and allowed Mahayana to flourish in the country, or that he had employed artists who had come from the neighbouring territory of Srivijaya and had Mahayanist training. It will be wrong to suppose that Mahayana Buddhism of the 8th-9th century A.D. was very much antagonistic to Tantrik Saivism. Though the sculpture of the temples partly seem to be Mahayanist, the indwelling deity was no doubt Siva. It seems difficult to admit that Bayon was not originally a Saiva temple. The state religion of Kambuja was always the cult of Devaraja. A temple like Bayon, which is situated just in the centre of the city, could not therefore have been meant for any other deity except Devaraja. If in some of the niches of the towers of Bayon the figures of Buddha have been deliberately destroyed and substituted by linga we must attribute that work of vandalism to a period when the king was a very orthodox one and did not even tolerate the sculptural representation of Buddha in the temple of Devaraja as his predecessors used to do. It is therefore necessary to go back to the older theory of M. Finot that the four faces of the towers of Bayon (as well as those of the towers of the city gates) are the sculptural representation of the four faces of Siva. Devaraja was in all probability a mukhalinga and it was quite natural that the towers of its temple and those of the city-gates constructed in the same period would bear the mukhalinga symbol. This explanation seems to have a strong support in the inscription of Sdok Kak Thom which says that the four sastras which prescribed the cult of Devaraja constituted the four faces of the Tumburu. It may not be therefore improbable that the four colossal faces on the towers are architectural translation of the four faces of Tumburu, Tumvuror vaktracatuskam, mentioned in the inscription, because, it is through those four faces that the god originally communicated the four fundamental texts which prescribed the religious rites of the king and his people. They are the symbol of the different amnayas of the Saivite Canon.