History, asked by Faisalmuhammed9876, 8 months ago

The________ were devotees of shiva

Answers

Answered by dharanikamadasl
0

The nayanars were devotees of shiva.

Nayanars:

  • The 63 saints that made up the Nayanars lived from the sixth to the eighth centuries CE and were followers of Lord Shiva.
  • The hymns were collected into a set of books known as the Thirumurai by Nambiyandar Nambi, the head priest of Raja Raja Chola I.
  • The Nayanars came from a variety of social classes, including aristocrats, Brahmins, and Harijan.
  • They are recognised as significant Hindu saints from South India, along with the twelve Vaishnava Alvars.
  • The poets Nanachampantar, Appar, and Chuntaramurti (commonly referred to as "the three") are revered as saints by the Nayanars through the representation of their likenesses in South Indian temples.
  • The Alvars, who worshipped Vishnu, were the Nayanars' Vaishnavite (Vishnu-worshiping) equivalents.

Hence, nayanars were the devotees of Shiva.

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Answered by aryansuts01
0

Answer:

Nayanars

The Nayanars believed in Shiva.

The 63 saints that made up the Nayanars lived from the sixth to the eighth centuries CE and were followers of Lord Shiva.

Explanation:

The Nayanars were 63 Tamil Hindu saints who served the Hindu god Shiva and lived in the sixth through eighth centuries CE.

Early mediaeval South India's Bhakti movement was impacted by them and their contemporaries, the Vishnu-devoted Alvars.

Sundarar was the one who originally produced the list of Nayanar names.

Sundarar and his family were added to the list when Nambiyandar Nambi enlarged it as part of his gathering of poetry for the Tirumurai collection.

Sundarar was the one who first created the list of the Nayanars. In his poem Tiruthonda Thogai, he calls himself "the servant of servants" and sings, in 11 verses, the titles of the Nayanar deities up to Karaikkal Ammaiyar.

The saints' lives, which are extensively detailed in books like Tevaram, were not covered in the list.

In their poems of adoration and devotion, the Tamil poet-saints known as the Alwars of South India promoted devotion to Lord Vishnu or his avatar Lord Krishna.

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