The Cross-Cultural Kingship in Early Medieval Kāmarūpa: Blood, Desire and Magic
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Kāmākhyā: Myth, Religion, and History
[o]ne who, in the days of yore, in the form of a boar out of compassion recovered the lost Earth for the stability of the people and put the same in his mouth, begot a superior son, Naraka by name, who was powerful enough even to torment the ambrosia-drinking gods and who was all powerful on earth being the king of kings.22
[T]he story has here been made a caricature of its older and real Epico-Purāṇic type and is weaker than most legends of this class. In any case, no serious student can expect any trace of political history in the above legends about Naraka and his descendants.
On the contrary, Jae-Eun Shin has argued that
[K]ing Naraka […] the most important figure in a fabricated genealogy and the consistent source of political authority of every ruling family from the Varmans to Pālas […] [S]uitable genealogy […] was probably fabricated when regional state formation reached a crucial phase around the seventh century in the Brahmaputra Valley.
[m]yth is everything and nothing at the same time. It is the true story or a false one, revelation or deception, sacred or vulgar, real or fictional, symbol or tool, archetype or stereotype. It is either strongly structured and logical or emotional and pre-logical, traditional and primitive or part of contemporary ideology. Myth is about the gods, but often also the ancestors and sometimes certain men.
[t]he legendary accounts, with which we begin the political history of the land, are as varied and conflicting as doubtful in their authenticity. Much will depend on the tracing of a connection between the legendary proto-historical period and the historical one. The genealogy given in the epigraphs, as far as it goes, is, however, unchallenged.
3. Death and Life at Nīlācala–Kāmākhyā
The theological basis of this incorporation was sought in the brahmanical Śākta model which was postulated in the Devīmāhātmya around the seventh century. In this text the concept of Mūla Prakṛiti or Ādi Śakti from which all the goddesses emanated as her manifestations was already constructed and promulgated. It gives theological ground to accommodate any individual goddess and bring these diverse goddesses under a unifying umbrella. Hence, even though it contains many strands of non-Vedic, non-brahmanical, tribal, and local traditions, these strands appear to have been appropriated by brahmanas and reworked and re-cast within the brahmanical framework—especially in terms of theme, narrative structure, and conceptualization. The later Purāṇas of the eastern region often repeat, confirm, elaborate, or expand this model.
The cremation ground at that place [Nīlācala], named Heruka, is being of red colour, bearing a knife and its hide looks extremely terrible; (Heruka) is consuming human flesh, is resplendent by three wreaths of severed human heads from which bloods are dripping down, is crowded by ghosts, stands on a corpse, whose teeth have been bared because of being burnt by the fire, is adorned with ornaments, provided with weapons, and has a mount; the worshipper should worship Heruka (cremation ground) by meditation only.
…fluid essence is one of the most archaic and universal features of the sacred, closely linked to Mother Earth, whose very nature is arid and dry because through her monthly menstruation she loses her generative power and so needs to reintegrate it constantly by absorbing liquids.
If a human being is sacrificed in the pīṭha (of the goddess), it is to be sacrificed in the cemetery [śmaśāna], called Heruka, which has already been stated.34
4. The Assamese Tantric Kingship and the Supernatural Powers
[t]races of past survive in diverse linguistic and ideological forms, and local people themselves add a new dimension to custom when they creatively appropriate and translate their historical heritage of headhunting into an evocative metaphor of modern practices.
5. The Kings and the Magical Menstrual Blood
- A mythological section (Shastri [1991] 2008, Ch. 1–51), which “includes a number of myths of different levels of narration;
- A ritualistic section (Shastri [1991] 2008, Ch. 52–76) that includes “a number of hymns, descriptions of rituals, of mantras, mudras etc.”;
- A geographical section (Shastri [1991] 2008, Ch. 77–90) that describes “sacred places, hills and rivers,” including “the story of the Brahmaputra connected with that of Paraśurāma/Reṇukā and some dynastical chapters are told”.
Hindu Śākta Tantra has often been closely related to kingship and political rule in various periods of South Asian history. For śakti is not simply a spiritual or transcendent sort of metaphysical energy; it is also the material power that flows through the social body and the state as well as the physical body and the cosmos.
6. Conclusions
…one of the main problems during this period was the relationship of the Hindu rājās—often themselves descendants of tribal chiefs—with the tribes which surrounded the insulated nuclear areas. On the one hand, the rājās depended on their support for the security of the internal communication and borders. On the other, the rājās needed their land for the gradual extension of the peasant agriculture, which alone was able to yield sufficient surplus crop for the maintenance of the increasing court (e.g., the member of the ruling family, Brahmins, officials, and soldiers). Tensions with the tribes were also due to the efforts of the local dominant Hindu castes to extend their economic base at the cost of their tribal neighbours.
Conflicts of Interest
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1 | The kingdom of Kāmarūpa roughly corresponded to the modern states of Assam, Meghalaya, the district of Koch Bihar (West Bengal), and parts of Arunachal Pradesh. Sometimes in this essay, the modern term Assam is used in order to describe the whole kingdom of Kāmarūpa. |
2 | In Assam still today, many are the cases reported of women murdered or beaten because they were suspected of practicing witchcraft and black magic (e.g., see (Anand 2017)). This popular superstition regarding witchcraft is closely linked to contention over the ownership of fields (e.g., see (Singh 2016; Bhonde 2016)), although its origin can be traced back to the early medieval belief that all of the Assamese women were yoginīs (Bagchi [1948] 1986, 22.9–11). |
3 | Ethnographically speaking, the word tribe is inaccurate because it is used to describe groups that differ in socio-cultural and political organization, although the term is used “by the Constitution of India without consideration of any anthropological definition of tribe” (Kumar 2005, p. 195). Historically speaking, tribe is a term applied “to those groups whom others wish to control” (Blackburn 2003, n. 4). Despite these conceptual and empirical problems, the term tribe here is applied to ethno-linguistic groups which cannot be comprised within the Indo-Aryan language family. |
4 | The Indo-Aryan speaking groups who arrived in the northwestern offshoot of the Indian sub-continent around the middle of the second millennium BCE, bringing the Vedic tradition, were distinct from the Indo-Aryan speaking people who began to influence the Assamese cultures more than one millennium later. In fact, “at this time [they] introduced the Prakrit which was to evolve into Assamese” (Hazarika 2017, p. 234). |
5 | The arrival of Indo-Aryan speaking people in northeastern India is related to the rise of Kāmarūpa as a political entity (Hazarika 2017, p. 234). |
6 | This term is considered to describe the combination of two opposite processes: the “identification brahmanica” of the local deities and the “identification deshika” of the Brahmanic deities (Doniger [2009] 2010, p. 6). These socio-cultural processes may be roughly described also as Sanskritization processes (see Srinivas 1952, p. 30) and tribalization processes (Rosati 2017a, p. 140). |
7 | The adjective Hindu in this context is used to underscore a discontinuity with the Vedic ideology. Indeed, the Assamese Hindu culture was strongly influenced by local and non-Indo-Aryan traditions, thus marking a distinction between Brahmanism and the Hindu cultures (see Sahu 2001, pp. 5–6). |
8 | According to Nicholas Allen (Allen 2007, p. 204n1), the wild archer of the Vedic hymns was the ancestor of the god called in other Vedic hymns Rudra and “who in the classical text has a great variety of name”, such as Śiva, “Mahādeva, Śaṅkara and so on”. |
9 | Conventionally, upaniṣads, Epics, purāṇas, and the commentary to the six darśanas (systems) were recognized as a “single whole of mainstream Hindu philosophy” (Nicholson 2010, p. 2). In the medieval period, the use of āstika (roughly orthodox, or better affirmer) and nāstika (roughly heterodox, or better denier) emerged; these terms were used to divide Hindus and non-Hindus (Buddhists, Jains, etc.) (Nicholson 2010, p. 176), though in the late medieval period nāstika was also used to classify the mlecchas, “allowing foreigners together with Buddhists and Jains” (Nicholson 2010, p. 200). In this essay, orthodox and heterodox are used as categories that roughly describe what is pure Vedic doctrine and ritual against what is perceived by the orthodox Brahmanic priesthood as anti-Vedic; hence, the śaiva and śākta Tantric sects are described as heterodox sects. |
10 | It is supposed that the śaiva groups who arrived in Assam were distinct from the orthodox Vedic-Brahmanic traditions associating their cult with impure symbols and practices. However they also displayed a connection to the Vedic paradigm. Thus, the ancient and medieval patriarchal tribes of Assam and the local cult of the liṅga (phallus) developed a proto-śaiva religion that was not explicitly aware of the Vedic roots that can be identified with Śiva (Rudra, Śambhu, etc.). |
11 | The three sacred sites were located on the Himalayan range, although their identification is still uncertain (see Sircar [1948] 1998, p. 9; Bhattacharyya 1974, p. 55; Bhardwaj 1973, pp. 47–48). |
12 | It might be argued that mutually influential ritual performances were practiced; a more detailed explanation, in contrast with Van Buitenen’s translation, will appear in my Ph.D. dissertation, “The Yoni Cult at Kāmākhyā: Cross-Cultural Implications in Myth, Ritual and Symbol” (Rosati 2017b, pp. 71–72). |
13 | According to Anncharlott Eschmann (Eschmann [1978] 1986, pp. 79–80) the term “Hinduization” is used to emphasize its general character in contrast to Brahmanization, since not only the brāhmaṇas influenced the Sanskritization processes but also other castes, such as the kṣatriya (military order) (see also Kulke 1976, pp. 399–400). |
14 | In this context “anti-Vedic” is considered as every ritual practice and theological conception which does not follow the Vedic prescriptions. More precisely, blood offerings, the ritualization of sexual acts, consumption of meat and alcoholic beverages, and the association of secret rituals with cremation grounds are all considered anti-Vedic points, although they are a consistent part of the Hindu-Tantric ritual system in Assam. |
15 | How Śālastambhas succeeded to the Varmans is obscure; however, the Hāyuṅthal Copper Plates of Harjaravarman (vv. 2–3) (middle of the ninth century) describes its founder, Śālastambha, as a mleccha (Sharma 1978, p. 91). |
16 | See, e.g., the Dubi Copper Plates of Bhāskaravarman (vv. 5–6) and their attached seal (seventh century) (Sharma 1978, p. 33), the Tezpur grant of Vanamāla (vv. 1–19) (middle of the ninth century) (Sharma 1978, pp. 100–2), and the Bargāon Copper Plate of Ratnapāla (vv. 10–11) (1035 CE) (Sharma 1978, pp. 161–62). |
17 | Because of his prohibited act, Śiva was considered a kapālin (skull bearer); see Kālikāpurāṇa (Shastri [1991] 2008, 16.29–30), Śivapurāṇa (Shastri [1969] 2000, 2.2.27.22–23), cf. Brahmapurāṇa (Shastri 1985, 32.10–13, 37.29–33). |
18 | Regarding the symbolism of the skull that related Naraka to the Tantric ritual and the non-Aryan cultures, see (Dobia 2008, pp. 146–47). |
19 | There the Ambuvācī Melā is the main festival, which, during the month of āṣāḍha (June–July), celebrates the annual menstrual period of the goddess Kāmākhyā. During the first three days of the festival, when the Goddess is believed to menstruate, the temple’s doors are closed and no pilgrims are allowed inside the sacred complex because of the inherent impurity connected to the menstrual blood. The fourth day the temple’s doors are opened and the celebrations begin. The festival is supposed to be a development of an ancient agricultural festival described in the Devībhāgavatapurāṇa (Pandey 1956, 9.9.27–34) which celebrated the sexual union between the Earth goddess and varāha (see Mishra 2004, pp. 51–54). |
20 | This mythology and its śākta developments are analyzed in my forthcoming study (Rosati 2016). “The Yoni Cult at Kāmākhyā: Its Cross-Cultural Roots”. Briefly, two shorter versions of the myth are also preserved in the Kālikāpurāṇa (Shastri [1991] 2008, 61.6–11, 62.51–57); a similar story is preserved in the Śivapurāṇa, although it omits the particular of the dismemberment of the corpse of Satī (Shastri [1969] 2000, 2.2.26–27). Other variants of the myth are preserved in the Bṛhaddharmapurāṇa (Shin 2010, 2.40), in the Devībhāgavatapurāṇa (Pandey 1956, 7.30), in the Brahmapurāṇa (Shastri 1985, Ch. 32, 37), in the Liṅgapurāṇa (Shastri [1951] 1998, 1.99–100), in the Mahābhāgavatapurāṇa (Kumar 1983, Ch. 11), in the Matsyapurāṇa (Basu 1916, Ch. 13), in the Skandapurāṇa (Tagare 1992, 1.1.1–4), in the Vāyupurāṇa (Bhatt 1987, 1.30), etc. Antecedents of the Puranic story may be traced in the Mahābhārata (see Allen 2007, p. 199; Belvalkar 1954, 12.274.34–59). |
21 | The śākta purāṇas are a group of texts compiled in northeastern India throughout the early medieval and medieval period, such as the Devīpurāṇa (Kumar 1976) (which is the only text that did not narrate the dakṣayajña), the Bṛhaddharmapurāṇa (Shastri 1888), the Devībhāgavatapurāṇa (Pandey 1956), the Kālikāpurāṇa (Shastri [1991] 2008), the Mahābhāgavatapurāṇa (Kumar 1983). However, the Matsyapurāṇa (Basu 1916, 13.23–25) already mentioned 110 seats connected to the Goddess’s power, although the source describes neither the dismemberment of the Goddess nor her limbs as source of the Goddess’s seats. |
22 | Although Naraka was born from Viṣṇu and the Earth goddess, he will challenge the devas or the true Brahmanic gods (i.e., “the ambrosia-drinking gods”, a term that recalls the battle between devas and asuras to obtain the ambrosia after the churning of the milk ocean). |
23 | In this instance it can be argued that the term kirāta indicates the connection of the Goddess with that world that was considered peripheral by the Brahmanic culture. Further, the goddess Kāmākhyā described in the early medieval Puranic source was a deity that fused together the traits of distinct local goddesses and of the mainstream Hindu goddesses which emerged from the Devīmāhātmya in the sixth century (Rosati 2016). Thus, it can be reasonably supposed that there was not a single local goddess worshipped by the Kirātas before the Indo-Aryan advent in Assam. |
24 | Regarding the ancient association of the Goddess with Viṣṇu, see Victory to the Mother: The Hindu Goddess of Northwest India in Myth, Ritual, and Symbol by K. Erndl (Erndl 1993, pp. 43–44); also cf. N. N. Bhattacharyya (Bhattacharyya 1974, p. 73), and particularly for the Kāmākhyā case-study, cf. (Rosati 2017a). |
25 | The existence, on Nīlācala, of an ancient cave was corroborated through the Umācal Rock Inscription (470–94 CE) (Sharma 1978, pp. 2–3). |
26 | An armed penetration of Indo-Aryan groups in Assam cannot be corroborated by any material evidence, while, on the the account of the earliest Indo-Aryan speaking peoples migrations into northwestern part of the Sub-continent (around 1500 BCE)—the same unarmed pattern (Bryant 2001, pp. 63–67, 141–46, 217–20) might be supposed that affected the northeast of India. In fact, as theorized by Edwin Bryant, “the Aryan invasion theory” was no more than “a linguistic issue” (Bryant 2001, p. 141). |
27 | The yoginīs could have been both supernatural beings and human women—the firsts were considered objects of worship, while the second were part of worship itself (Sherma 2000, pp. 39–42; White [2003] 2006, p. 10). N. N. Bhattacharyya (1974, p. 104) considered them as priestesses possessed by deities, while V. Dehejia (Dehejia 1986, p. 11) supposed they were the female counterpart of yogins. In any case, they emerged into the Yoginī Kaula as female adepts and counterparts of the male Kaula siddhas (Dyczkowski 1988, pp. 63–65). |
28 | They were connected to the lists preserved in the sixth century Agnipurāṇa (Shastri 1967–1968, Ch. 52 and 146), where the yoginīs emerged as descendants of the ancient mātṛs (mātṛkās [mothers]) (White [2003] 2006, pp. 27–29). |
29 | The dānavas were considered a class of asuras, or anti-deva; however, both are conventionally described as demons. |
30 | There are many variants of the story of Kāma, see K. Benton (2005, pp. 23–36), W. Doniger (1973, pp. 141–71) and S. Kramrisch (1981, pp. 216–18). |
31 | At the beginning of the myth, Śiva explained that Kālī was no other than Kāmākhyā (Shastri 1982, 1.15.1–2). |
32 | A longer analysis of the Puranic and Tantric myths will appear in Ch. 4 of my Ph.D. thesis (Rosati 2017b, pp. 216–50). |
33 | The only known images of goddess Kāmākhyā are modern lithographs and a metal calanta mūrti of the goddess, although its production period cannot be stated until metallographic analysis can be done (cf. Deka 2004, pp. 43–44). We have no solid evidence of anthropomorphic representations of Kāmākhyā belonging to the ancient or medieval ages. |
34 | poṭhe ced doyate martyo baliṃ dadyāt śmaśānake | śmaśānaṃ herukākhyaṃ tu tatpūrva pratipāditam ||. |
35 | Heruka was substituted with Kālī as the presiding deity of the main (eastern) cremation ground on Nīlācala, near the bus stand, on the opposite side of the football field (Rosati 2017a, figs. 1–2). |
36 | According to Sravana Borkataki-Varma (Borkataki-Varma 2016, pp. 77–78), the sādhakas were able to obtain minor supernatural powers and the final mokṣa (liberation) through “awakening” their internal cakra centers and “mastering” kuṇḍalinī yoga. |
37 | The Sanskrit passage has to be amended according to the philological interpretation of Antonio M. Sacco (Sacco 2001, p. 121); here is Sacco’s literary translation (in Italian): “Il sādhaka, con la faccia ricoperta di canfora, baci con gioia la sua parte inferior (cioè la yoni) come un’ape sconcertata dal loto, o Propizia”. |
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Rosati, P.E. The Cross-Cultural Kingship in Early Medieval Kāmarūpa: Blood, Desire and Magic. Religions 2017, 8, 212. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel8100212
Rosati PE. The Cross-Cultural Kingship in Early Medieval Kāmarūpa: Blood, Desire and Magic. Religions. 2017; 8(10):212. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel8100212
Chicago/Turabian StyleRosati, Paolo Eugenio. 2017. "The Cross-Cultural Kingship in Early Medieval Kāmarūpa: Blood, Desire and Magic" Religions 8, no. 10: 212. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel8100212
APA StyleRosati, P. E. (2017). The Cross-Cultural Kingship in Early Medieval Kāmarūpa: Blood, Desire and Magic. Religions, 8(10), 212. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel8100212