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Latest revision as of 11:52, 21 April 2017
Shiva Samhita śivasaṁhitā (also Siva Samhitā) is a Sanskrit text on yoga, written by an unknown author.[1] The text is addressed by the Hindu god Shiva to his consort Parvati ("Shiva Samhita" means "Shiva's Compendium"). It is one of three major surviving classical treatises on hatha yoga, the other two being Gheranda Samhita and Hatha Yoga Pradipika.[2] The Shiva Samhita is considered the most comprehensive and the most democratic treatise on hatha yoga.
Contents
About
Mallinson says Shiva Samhita exposes a yoga teaching yet also calls itself a tantra; he also describes it as an eclectic collection of yoga lore. Shiva Samhita talks about the complex physiology, names 84 different asanas (only four of which are described in detail), describes five specific types of prana, and provides techniques to regulate them. It also deals with abstract yogic philosophy, mudras, tantric practices, and meditation. It emphasizes that even a common householder can practice yoga and benefit from it.
Period
Many believe that Shiva Samhita was written in the 17th or 18th century, but in a 2007 translation D.Phil. in Sanskrit and Oriental Studies James Mallinson explains that he has dated the text before 1,500 CE since it has been cited in many works believed to have been composed in the 17th century. Based on clues in the text, Mallinson also believes that the Shiva Samhita was composed in or around Varanasi.
Chapter
- Various methods of liberation and philosophical standpoints.
- Nadis, the internal fire, and the working of the jiva.
- Describes the winds in the body, the importance of the guru.
- The eleven mudras that can result in yogic attainments.
- Describes obstacles to the liberation, the four types of aspirants, the technique of shadow gazing, the internal sound, the esoteric centers and energies in the body (such as the kundalini), the seven lotuses, the "king of kings of yogas", and a global mantra.