- Campantar
Tirugnana Campantar (also Champantar, Sambandar etc.) was a young
Saiva poet-saint ofChola Tamil Nadu during the reign of Ninrasir Nedumaran (c.7th century CE).cite web|url=http://tamilartsacademy.com/articles/article08.xml|title=A New Pandya Record and the Dates of Nayanmars and Alvars|publisher=Tamil Arts Academy|author=Dr. R. Nagasamy|accessdate=2007-07-09] He is one of the most prominent of the sixty-threeNayanars , Tamil Saiva Bhakti saints who lived between the sixth and the tenth centuries CE. Campantar's hymns toShiva were later collected to form the first three volumes of the "Tirumurai ", the religious canon of TamilSaiva Siddhanta . He was a contemporary ofAppar , another Saiva saint.Life
Information about Campantar come to us mainly from the "
Periya Puranam ", the eleventh-century Tamil book on the Nayanars that forms the last volume of the "Tirumurai", along with the earlier "Tiruttondartokai", poetry byCuntarar andNambiyandar Nambi 's "Tiru Tondar Tiruvandadi".Campantar was born to Sivapada Hridayar and his wife Bhagavathiar who lived in the town of
Sirkazhi in Tamil Nadu. According to legend, when he was three years old his parents took him to the Shiva temple where Shiva and his consortParvati appeared before the child. The goddess nursed the child at her breast. His father saw drops of milk on the child's mouth and asked who had fed him, whereupon the boy pointed to the sky and responded with the song "Thodudaya Seviyan" - the first verse of the "Tevaram". This legend may be referred byAdi Shankara a century later: in his "Sundaria Lahari" he speaks of the goddess having fed the "Tamil child" ("dravida sisu", probably Campantar) with the milk of gnosis.At his investiture with the sacred thread, at the age of seven, he is said to have expounded the
Veda s with great clarity. As a wandering minstrel Campantar sang hymns opposingJain andBuddhist thought and is credited with the conversion of aPandya king from Jainism.Sambandar ]The first volumes of the Tirumurai contain three hundred and eighty-four poems of Campantar. Reputedly he sang more than 10,000 decads but only 4,232 have survived. Campantar attained liberation (mukti) in "Visaka Nakshtara" in the Tamil month of "Visakam" at the age of sixteen soon after his marriage. He is regarded as an incarnation of Lord Murugan or Kartikeya.
References
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*cite web|title=SIXTY-THREE NAYANAR SAINTS|author=SRI SWAMI SIVANANDA|publisher=The Divine Life Trust Society|url=http://www.dlshq.org/download/nayanar.htm|accessdate=2007-07-08
[http://www.thevaaram.org/thirumurai_1/nayanmar_view.php?nayan_idField=1] Life of Thirugnanasambandar
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