Dear Daniel,

 

Thank you very much for your information. The Lohaner Plates information is of 
interest to me. Among the Sāvarṇi gotra instances, this is the earliest (ca. 
630 CE). It is also interesting from the viewpoint of his Vārāhaka sutra and 
the Maitrāyaṇika branch of the Black Yajurveda which is different from the 
sūtra and Vedic affiliation of the Sāvarṇis in the Pallava Plates.

 

Regards,

Palaniappan

 

From: INDOLOGY <[email protected]> on behalf of indology list 
<[email protected]>
Reply-To: Dániel Balogh <[email protected]>
Date: Friday, February 2, 2024 at 3:49 AM
To: indology list <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [INDOLOGY] Sāvarṇi gotra, Sāvarṇa gotra, and Śaiva dīkṣā name

 

This probably does not help Palaniappan, but it may be interesting for Ganesan: 
the sāvarṇi gotra is also mentioned in the Lohaner plates of Pulakeśin II. 
Edition: Khare, Ganesh Hari. 1947. ‘Lohaner Plates of Chalukya Pulikesin II: 
Saka 552’. Epigraphia Indica 27: 37–41.

With best wishes,

Daniel

 

On Fri, 2 Feb 2024 at 10:28, Ganesan T <[email protected]> wrote:

Dear Sri Palaniappan,

It is very interesting to know about the  Sāvaṛṇa/ Sāvaṛṇi gotra mentioned in 
the inscriptions.

I am not sure about the existence of such a gotra.

But, in the  Naṭarājapaddhati, a Śaiva[siddhānta] ritual manual composed in the 
Tamil country in the 11th century CE (one century earlier that the well known 
paddhati composed by Aghoraśivācārya ), which I, along with my colleague  am 
critically editing for the first time based on a single manuscript  (the 1st 
volume will soon be going to the press), its author Rāmanātha  states that he 
was born in the  savarṇakula. 

According to the Suprabhedagama, one of the 28  Śaiva Mūlāgama-s, a person born 
of marriage between a brāhmaṇa man and a kṣatriya woman where the rituals are 
performed by reciting the [appropriate] mantra-s, is known as a ‘savarṇa’ 

It is also stated there that savarṇa is one among the anuloma- varṇa-s.  

I have given these details in my introduction to the edited text.

 

I am not sure how far this information will be useful for you or in any way 
clarify your doubts.

 

I just wanted to share this information with you.

 

Best wishes

Ganesan

 

 

Dr. T. GANESAN
Research Associate
Saiva Agama & Saivasiddhanta
French Institute of Pondicherry
PONDICHERRY-605001
INDIA
E mail: [email protected]
Web: www.ifpindia.org 

On Tue, Jan 23, 2024 at 11:03 PM Sudalaimuthu Palaniappan via INDOLOGY 
<[email protected]> wrote:

The Pullūr plates and Taṇṭantōṭṭam plates of Pallava king Nandivarman II of 8th 
century CE mention a few Brāhmins belonging to Ṣāvarṇi gotra and Chandoga 
sutra. The Kahla plate of Soḍhadeva of 1077 CE mentions a Brahmin belonging to 
Sāvarṇa gotra and Chandoga śākhā. A stone inscription from Ārpākkam of Cōḻa 
Rājādhirāja II of the second half of the 12th century CE mentions a Śaiva 
teacher with the name Umāpatideva alias Jñānaśivadeva who belonged to the 
Dakṣiṇarāḍha of Gauḍadeśa and Gaṃgoḷi Sāvaṛṇa gotra. Do Sāvarṇi and Sāvarṇa 
refer to the same gotra? Given the -deva part of the dīkṣā name of the Śaiva 
teacher, could he still be a Brahmin?

 

Thank you in advance for any clarifications.

 

Regards,

Palaniappan


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