Shiva
in Initial Vedic Perception
 The
Trinity of Brahma, Vishnu, and Mahesha |
Shiva, the Mahadeva, represents one of the three
visible forms, or the functional aspects of God,
namely, the creation, preservation and dissolution,
that is, bringing the cosmos into existence, sustaining
it and finally withdrawing it from existing. Lord
Shiva represents the last of these three aspects,
that is, dissolution or destruction of the cosmos.
The other two aspects, the creation and the preservation,
are represented respectively by Prajapati or Brahma,
and Vishnu. Prajapati Brahma and Vishnu are Vedic
gods. In the Rigveda, Prajapati and Brahma are
mentioned as two gods, though both almost alike
responsible for the act of Creation. Hence, in
later Vedic literature, they merge into one entity,
and are sometimes alluded to as Prajapati Brahma
and sometimes as two synonymous terms alternating
each other. In Puranic literature, Brahma gets
pre-eminence and the term Prajapati is used only
as the other name of Brahma to avoid monotonous
repetition of the same nomenclature. Initially,
that is, in the Rigveda, Vishnu is a subordinate
type of god, but later by Puranic era, he attains
the status of the Lord of the universe and the
principal Vedic god.
Shiva as such, or as Mahadeva, is not alluded
to in proper Vedas. The Rigveda, however, frequently
mentions a brown complexioned sun-like brilliant
and gold-like glowing animal-skin-wearing entity
by the name of Rudra, or Ishan, who, as per the
Rigvedic description, is synonymous of a violent
non-Aryan jungle or tribal god capable of subduing,
by his mighty arrows, even the most wild of animals.
He did not hesitate even to kill human beings and
sought delight in such destruction. Hence,
the Rigveda is somewhat critical of his wildness
and invokes him for not destroying his devotees,
their ancestors, offspring, relatives and horses.
It is only gradually and somewhat in simultaneity
that the Rigveda softens and sophisticates him
into a civil god of Aryan kind and includes him
into the Vedic pantheon. The later Vedic literature
identifies in Rudra the proto form of the subsequent
Shiva. When Puranas perceived the formless God
manifest in His triple function, which He performed
as the Creator, Sustainer and Destroyer, both initially
and finally, as well as always, they chose Shiva
to represent one of these functional aspects of
Him and elevated him to the status of the Great
Trinity.
Shiva, Brahma and Vishnu, Only the Time-Bound Manifestations
of the Timeless God
Shiva, as well as Brahma and Vishnu, do not represent
God but only His functional aspects, which manifest
in Creation, in sustaining the Creation and, finally,
in withdrawing the Creation, which occurs after
every kalpa, which is the scheduled age of each
Creation. Obviously, after the Creation is withdrawn
and the kalpa comes to an end, God's functional
aspects too disappear and so does the Great Trinity
representing them. Thus, the Trinity, with each
of Shiva, Brahma and Vishnu having a scheduled
life-span, is the time-bound manifestation of the
timeless One, that is, the Trinity disappears after
its allotted life-span to re-appear when the next
kalpa begins, but the Omnipresent God neither appears
nor disappears because He is always there before
the time began and after its scale has exhausted.
In Indian cosmological tabulation, Shiva's life-span
is double of the Vishnu's and Vishnu's double of
the Brahma's. Brahma's life-span comprises of 120
Brahma years, which are equivalent to 300 million,
9 hundred thousand, 17 thousand and 376 years of
human calendar.
Shiva Precedes Trinity-Partners

Pashupati, the Lord
of Animals
Mohenjo-daro (Indus Valley)
circa 2000 B.C |
Shiva, thus different from what the Puranas proclaim,
is not Brahma's creation. He rather precedes his
Trinity counterparts, Brahma and Vishnu, on time
scale. This pre-eminence of Shiva over others as
much reflects in their related theological chronology
and availability of their iconic representations
in visual arts. Brahma and Vishnu have their roots
in the Vedas, and not before. Shiva has a pre-Vedic
origin, as his worship cult seems to have been
in vogue amongst the Indus dwellers, even around
3000 B. C. The excavations of various archaeological
sites in the Indus valley reveal two sets of archaeological
finds that suggest the prevalence of the cult of
worshipping both, his anthropomorphic as well as
symbolic representations. This excavated material
includes a number of terracotta seals representing
a yogi icon and the phallus type baked clay objects,
obviously the votive lings, suggestive of some
kind of phallus-worship cult of the non-Aryan settlers
of the Indus cities. Seated in meditative posture,
the stern looking Yogi figure wears a typical head-dress
made of buffalo horns and is surrounded by various
animal icons, lion, elephant, buffalo-type bull,
rhinoceros etc. and the bird forms above.
In some seals, this Yogi figure consists of three
heads. That the symbolic phallus icons and the
anthropomorphic representations relate to one and
the same entity becomes obvious from the iconographic
thrust, which defines the Yogi form. One of the
most significant cardinals of this Yogi iconography,
and perhaps more so than others, is its well erect
and emphatically exposed phallus, similar to the
Urddh-ling Shiva icons, a cult of Shiva, which
dominated Shaivite sculptural art for centuries
from around the period of Kushanas. These finds,
datable to the period from 3000 B. C. to 1000 B.
C. or even later, show the continuity of such worship
cult till much after the Vedic era. This is further
affirmed by the Rigveda itself. The Rigveda at
least twice talks of the phallus worshipping non-Aryan
tribes and vehemently condemns the practice.
Shiva in Later Vedic Cult and in The Mahabharata

Bhava Shiva (A
Particularly Beneficent Aspect) |
The Vedas, in their later cult, admit into Vedic
pantheon the jatadhari holy Shiva with all his
manifestations, namely the bow and arrows carrying
archer Sharva, the all pervading Bhava, the benevolent
Shambhu and the animal-skin wearer Krittivasanah,
but do not approve his phallus worship.

Panchanana or Five-Headed
Shiva |
In Brahmanical order, Shvetashvara Upanishad is
perhaps the earliest treatise that refers, though
not directly, to this aspect of Shiva-worship with
some degree of reverence when it calls him the
Lord of all yonis, that is, the commander of genital
faculties of all living ones. It is, however, in
the Mahabharata that his phallus worship has been
directly alluded to. The Mahabharata widely follows
the Indus perception of Shiva. The Mahabharata,
in tune with the Indus Shiva, perceives him as
Trishira, or Chaturmukha, that is, having three
heads, or four, as Digvasas, that is, without cloth,
as Urddh-ling, that is, with upward erect phallus,
and as yogadhyaksha, that is, the Lord of Yoga.
The Mahabharata goes a little ahead and conceived
him also as five headed, four facing the four directions
and fifth looking upwards, that is the guardian
of the entire cosmos. It is from this five headed
Shiva concept that his Sadashiva form seems to
have evolved, as these five heads also symbolize
five powers- para, adi, icchha, jnana and kriya,
that is, all that is perishable, all that is timeless,
and the desire, knowledge and act, of which the
entire creation comprise.

Vrishavahana Shiva
and Parvati |
Mahabharata's epithet of Pashupati for Shiva is
also an adherence to the Indus iconography of Shiva
image. The Mahabharata perceives him further as
Shardularupa, Vyalarupa and in many other animal
forms and as Vrishvaha, or Vrishvahan.

Vishnu as Hayagriva |
The Skand Purana numbers his animal heads as seven,
two of which, namely that of the goat and the horse,
he had given respectively to Brahma and Vishnu.

Five Headed Hanuman |
Thus again
the number of heads comes to the same five as
perceived in the Mahabharata. In visual
arts, this Mahabharata iconic vision of Shiva
has been widely followed. Shiva's Trishira, Chaturmukha,
Yogi, Pashupati, Vrishvaha and Urddh-ling images,
whatever their medium, the stone, canvas, metals
and so on, are quite in vogue in Indian arts.
The
animal headed Shiva is a rarity. However, in
visual arts, which allow greater scope for imagination
to operate, such as painting, Shiva has been
depicted
sometimes with multiple animal heads, although
to avoid inclusion of his human face these heads
are planted on the form of Hanuman, who is Shiva's
incarnation. Such Hanuman forms have heads of
animals that have attained mythical heights, say,
the horse-headed
god Hayagriva, the boar-headed Varah, the great
eagle Garuda, and the jungle monarch lion or
Simha. Such five-headed and ten-armed figures not
only
carry most of Shiva's attributes in these hands
but such figures also stand upon the form of
Apasamara, one of the most characteristic features
of Shiva
iconography. This iconographic perception defines,
on one hand, Shiva as Pashupati, the lord of
animals, and on the other as containing within
him the entire
animal world.

Shiva Linga Assembly
with Dripping Vase for Milk |
Shiva's Pre-Aryan Origin Obviously, Shiva had a pre-Aryan origin but where,
when and how he came into being, or say into human
perception, is not known. This much is, however,
certain that a god like him was the presiding deity
of the Indus inhabitants and he was worshipped
as both, iconically as well as symbolically, that
is, as Pashupati and Mahayogi and as Ling.
This in all certainties seems to the initial form
of Shiva. May be, the Indus inhabitants shared
their god with West Asian settlers who worshipped
a similar god Teshav. Teshav, too, was a bull riding
deity like Vrishvaha Shiva. He also carried, like
Shiva, a trident, pinakin, the bow, arrows, which
shot as lightening, danda, the rod, parashu, the
axe, and so on. Incidentally, Teshav's consort
was also named Maa and was worshipped as Jaganmata,
that is, the world mother. Her name so much corresponds
with Shiva's consort Uma who too is worshipped
as Jagat-janani, the mother of the world. Jaganmata
sounds so much like Indus Mother Goddess. Both,
Shiva's consort Uma and Teshav's consort Maa rode
a lion. Images of Jaganmata, recovered in excavations,
have honeybees hovering around her face. One of
the Uma's forms so closely resembles with this
honeybee hovering image of Maa. Markandeya Purana
alludes to Uma's relation with honeybees, or bhramaris,
when it calls her as Bhramaridevi. May be Shiva's
consort had some prior tradition of her association
with honeybees. It is for such reasons that the
known historian Roy Chowdhari, in his Studies in
Indian Antiquities, emphatically holds that Rudra-Shiva
had some kind of genetic relationship with various
gods whose images have been recovered from Anatolia,
Mesopotamia and Indus Valley.
Shiva in Vedic Pantheon

Panchamukha Shiva |
Whatever Shiva's origin, the pre-Aryan or from
Brahma's frown, as claims the subsequent Puranic
tradition, the all assimilating Aryan culture and
Vedic religious cult elevated him into its own
Order and placed him always on par with its other
two great gods, Vishnu and Brahma, and sometimes
even above them.
Later Vedic literature invested him with various
attributes and details of his person. He has been
conceived as thousand eyed, animal skin clad and
as possessed of long hair braided into a crown-like
shape, the jatamukuta, blue neck, black abdomen,
blood-red back and as containing in him all medicinal
herbs and drugs, that is, possessed of the power
to redeem every one of all kinds of ailments and
the cycle of birth and death. Thus, Vedas perceived
him initially as the violent jungle god of non-Aryan
kind but later they discovered the other aspect
of his being, that is, the well meaning benevolent
Shiva. It was this perception of Shiva that seems
to have prevailed all after and defined his all
subsequent forms, manifestations and visions. Brahmans
and Upanishads identify this Vedic perception as
Shiva's two aspects, one that of the destroyer
and the other of the auspicious benevolent divinity.
The Mahabharata identified these two aspects as
Ghora and Shiva. Of these Ghora has been equated
with fire and Shiva, also mentioned as Maheshvara,
has been vested with the deeply spiritual and auspicious
saumyarupa, that is, serene and sublime divine
being.
Shiva in Myths and Legends
In the course of time, the tradition of faith,
both oral and scriptural, and the folk and urbanized,
wove around Shiva hundreds of myths and legends
and invested his image and visual forms with numerous
new dimensions and meaning. The violent jungle
god of Vedas and the grim looking horn wearing
Yogi of Indus emerges upon the altar of the believing
ones, on painter's canvas, in metal casters' mould
and in the strokes of hammer and chisel, as the
harmless Bholanath, the innocence Lord and the
good incarnate, as the supreme auspice, the most
formidable of divine powers, the paramount lover
and the holiest model of the Vedic family cult.
The term Shiva becomes synonymous of the 'auspicious',
good and well being and in him alone, India's all-time
maxim, 'Satyam, Shivam, Sundaram', that is, he
alone is truthful, benevolent and beautiful, finds
its true meaning. In his context, love becomes
a divine phenomenon and family the holiest institution.
He never codifies his conduct nor sets it to any
established rule, but he is all the way the most
devoted husband, who passionately loves his consort,
and a unique father. He marries Sati, the daughter
of Brahma's son Daksha-Prajapati against her father's
wishes. Daksha organizes a great yajna and to slight
Shiva does not invite him.

Virabhadra, Shiva's
Most Trusted Guard |
Sati, in hope to rectify her father's error, goes
to attend the yajna, though Shiva does not approve
it. Instead of correcting himself, Daksha humiliates
Sati also for marrying a tribal brute. Sati, unable
to bear her husband's insult by her father, ends
her life by immolating herself into yajna-fire.
The outraged Shiva, who madly loved Sati, longed
to avenge Daksha's act and created out of his frowns
Virabhadra, a young warrior endowed with all of
Shiva's powers to destroy Daksha's yajna.

Shiva and Family |
After Virabhadra has destroyed the yajna, entire
yajna-bhumi and the capital of Daksha, Shiva retires
to forest and wanders in wilderness for thousands
of years till Uma, the daughter of Himalaya, and
hence also known as Parvati, that is, one born
of the Parvata, or mountain, is able to win his
love by her long rigorous penance. This time he
has in Uma, or Parvati, not a mere consort he loved
madly but also the most accomplished woman possessed
of paramount beauty, the most caring and devoted
wife and as much loving mother. To complete the
holy family, they have, or have been conceived
with, five sons, two, Karttikeya and Ganesh, the
real ones, and three, Vanasura, Virabhadra and
Nandin, the adopted ones, though none of the five
were born of his consort's womb. Ganesh was born
of Parvati's body elements and Karttikeya those
of Shiva.
Brahma Chastised and Shiva's Repentance

Shiva, the Supreme
Beggar (Bhikshatanamurti)
Malla Dynasty, Nepal. 16th century Copper
(Height 9") |
Indian mythology accounts how Brahma, the creator
of all beings and all things, was fascinated by
the beauty of his own created Sarasvati, and thereby
his daughter. To escape her father's notice, Sarasvati
turned herself into a female deer. But Brahma did
not fail to take note of it and converted himself
into a male deer and began chasing her to have
sex with her. The moral being as Shiva was, he
did not approve a father molesting his own daughter.
He did not fail to notice this immorality of the
deer turned Brahma when he saw him chasing Sarasvati
disguised as she-deer and to chastise him, he,
the great archer as he was, shot at Brahma, the
male deer. To save himself from Shiva's arrows
Brahma returned to his real form but not before
he had incurred some loss. He had lost one of his
five heads. Whatever Brahma's immorality, Shiva's
act amounted to Brahma-hatya, the sin of killing
a Brahmin. As the related legend has it, the sin
of the Brahma-hatya rose from where Brahma's head
fell and stuck to his wrists. Failing to free himself
of it, Shiva sought advice and was suggested to
beg and live on begging as repentance till the
Brahma-hatya fell down and freed him from its clutches.
With the kapal, the skull made of Brahma's dissected
head, in his hand, Shiva moved to the Oak Forest
and wandered there for many thousand years. Ultimately,
the Brahma-hatya separated from his body and fell
down on earth. It was thus that his Mahabhikshuka
and Kapalin forms evolved.

The Curse of Shiva |
Another tradition has it differently. Deer turned
Sarasvati ran to save herself from Brahma and Brahma
to save himself from Shiva's arrows hid in the
sky amidst planets and yet lie hidden as two stars.
Brahma's fifth head was removed, according to this
legend, for a different reason. Brahma and Vishnu
often claimed their relative priority over the
other. Once they set to settle it and decided that
whosoever first discovered the end of Shiva's Jyotirling
would be acknowledged as his superior by the other.
The Jyotirling descended deep
below the earth and rose above into sky and both
ends were unfathomable.
Brahma proceeded upwards and Vishnu downward but
both ends were far from their reach. Brahma, however,
connived with a Champaka or Ketaki flower and using
it as witness claimed to have reached his end of
the Jyotirling. Annoyed by Brahma's falsehood Shiva
appeared bursting the Jyotirling and to chastise
Brahma for his lie removed Brahma's fifth head
by the nail of his thumb.
Shiva, the Bholanath in the
Real Sense of the Term

The Emergence of
the Ganga on the Earth |
As he was a moral being, so he was simple, innocent,
generous, benevolent and easily manageable, and
hence, even the wicked ones often won his favor
and boons of invincible powers and sometimes used
them even against him. He, however, as readily
punished them when he knew their designs and intentions.
Ganga was mad in love for him and wished to unite
with him by whatever mean, fair or fowl. When Bhagiratha
did rigorous penance to bring Ganga from heaven
to the earth for his ancestors' death rituals and
redemption, Ganga designed to fulfill her long
cherished desire of reaching Shiva. She appeared
before Bhagiratha and agreed to emerge on the earth
but warned at the same time that her current, unless
Shiva took her on his head, would cleave the earth.
Bhagiratha underwent another round of penance,
pleased Shiva and got his prayer granted. But,
when Ganga landed on his head and showed her supremacy,
Shaiva kept her arrested into his hair till she
herself prayed him to let her be released. For
long containing Ganga into his hair, Shiva becomes
known as Gangadhara Shiva.

Ravana Shaking
Mount Kailash |
It was the same with Jalandara, who was caused
by Shiva himself. Shiva had opened his third eye
for punishing Indra but on Brahispati's intervention
let the fire emitting from it fall into the ocean.
Out of this fire and from ocean's womb rose a male
child. As he rose from jala, the water, he was
named Jalandara. Later, when he grew into a gold-like
glowing youth, he was married to the daughter of
Kalanemi, the founder-father of demon clans. Jalandara
was now exceptionally powerful and wished to drive
out Indra and his crew from Indraloka. Indra prayed
Brahma for help but he was helpless against his
might. Vishnu declined to act against him, as,
being ocean born, he considered him his brother-in-law.
Finally, the great sage Narad incited Jalandara
to obtain Parvati, the most beautiful woman in
all three worlds, and thus put him against Shiva,
as he knew that Shiva alone could destroy him.
Arrogant Jalandara challenged Shiva to hand him
over his consort and in the process became victim
of Shiva's wrath and got killed. Something of the
similar kind happened in the case of Ravana, the
king of Lanka. Pleased by his penance Shiva blessed
him with the boon of immortality. This bred in
Ravana vanity and arrogance. This vain and arrogant
Lanka ruler wished to have Mount Kailash, the abode
of Shiva, shifted to Lanka. He went to Kailash
and to uproot it began shaking it. His act of uprooting
it sent tremors across the Mountain. Shiva perceived
Ravana's arrogance and was annoyed. To punish Ravana
he pressed the Mountain by the thumb of his foot,
but before it crushed Ravana, he prayed for Lord's
mercy and the compassionate Lord forgave him. Out
of this compassionate nature of Shiva there emerged
his Ravananugraha-murti, that is, the form of him
who was kind to Ravana.
Shiva in Saumya and Raudra-rupas

The Dance of Shiva |
Thus, Shiva's divine perception as well as iconic
visualization developed into two directions, one
growing out of his serene sublime benevolent Saumyarupa
and the other out of his awe-striking Raudra-rupa.
Even in his Saumyarupa, contrary to his Vaishnava
counterparts, that is, Vishnu, Brahma or even Indra,
whom Puranas define using feudal terms and iconography,
Shiva is a simpler being, an amalgam of both, the
Raudra and the Saumya rupas. In both aspects, jatamukuta
is his crown, elephant hide his cloak, lion skin
his loincloth, snakes his necklace, yajnopavita
and other ornaments, bhang his favored drink and
the shade of a roadside tree his castle. He is
delighted in dance and dances for both, to create
as well as to destroy, and in lasya as well as
in Tandava and his Tandava is the Anand-tandava
as it aims at re-creating and setting the cycle
of creation-destruction-and recreation in motion.

HariHara |
He assists Devas, the gods,
in their exploits and battles against demons
but unlike them and
always differently and in mightier way. Both, the
gods and the demons, wish to be immortalized and
for obtaining the immortalizing nectar join hands
to churn ocean, which contained such nectar. But
before the ocean yields nectar, there emerges from
it the all-annihilating venom. Even by its vapors
it begins to suffocate the entire creation. All,
gods and demons, flee to save their lives leaving
the creation to its destiny. Shiva comes to rescue.
He deposits the venom into his throat and saves
the creation from its devastating effect. Stored
perpetually in the throat, the venom renders it
blue and gives Shiva yet another name of Neelakantha,
that is, the blue throated one. It was in consideration
to such exploits that in subsequent days the Vaishnavites
and Shaivites were seen with daggers-drawn on the
question of the pre-eminence of their respective
gods. Ultimately the wise ones of both sects had
to discover for the votive images the Harihara
form, which combined Hari and Hara, that is, Vishnu
and Shiva, into one sanctum image and inspired
sectarian unity.

Bhairava |
In his purer Raudra-rupa, besides what the Vedas
and Puranas perceived in it, these aspects farther
expand. He is now perceived as Bhairava, Kapalika,
Kalabhairava, Mahakala and in similar other terrific
forms. He is the presiding deity of cremation ground,
which is his loving abode. He rejoices dancing
around a burning pyre and as much upon a dead body.
The dark nights, when howls of jackals, wolves
and other ignominious animals echoed, are his chosen
hours to operate. These jackals and other animals
living on human flesh are, otherwise too, his best
companions. Bhairava wears around his neck the
garland of human skulls and around his waist the
girdle of dismembered human hands. Now, besides
snake ornaments, scorpions make his earrings and
ghostly spirits dance around him. The human skull
is his cup and ashes of a burnt corpse his talc,
with which he smears and adorns his body. In ritual
worship, wine and flesh are his chosen offerings.

Kali |
In these terrific forms of Shiva Kali, Smashan-Kali,
Mahakali, Chhinnamasta, Chamunda, Vagulamukhi etc.
are his female counterparts, perceived in Puranas
often as his consorts.

Raga Bhairava |
Bhairava, howsoever terrific his form, has his
softer aspects when seated under a canopy or riding
his Nandin he represents such beautiful musical
modes as the Raga Bhairava, or Raga Kedara.
References and Further Reading
- Agrawala, Vasudeva
S. Siva Mahadeva: Varanasi, 1984.
- Danielou, Alain. Gods
of Love and Ecstasy (The Traditions of Shiva
and Dionysus): Vermont, 1992.
- Kramrisch, Stella.
Manifestations of Shiva: Philadelphia, 1981.
- Kramrisch, Stella.
The Presence of Shiva: New Delhi, 1988.
- Meister, Michael W.
Discourses on Shiva: Bombay, 1984.
- Rao, S.K. Ramachandra.
Siva-Kosha: Bangalore, 1998.
- Vanamali. Sri Shiva
Lila: New Delhi, 2002.
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