Bījamantra

Monosyllabic mantras in Indian religions From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A bijamantra (Sanskrit: बीजमन्त्र, romanized: bījamantra, lit.'seed-mantra', in modern schwa-deleted Indo-Aryan languages: beej mantra),[1] or a bijakṣara ("seed-syllable"), is a monosyllabic mantra believed to contain the essence of a given deity. They are found in Tantric Hinduism and in Esoteric Buddhism (Vajrayana / Mantrayana).[2][3]

A bijamantra is ritually uttered for the invocation of a deity. It is considered the true name of the deity as well as a manifestation of the deity in sonic form.[4] It is also found in religious art, often standing for a specific deity. A bījamantra can be regarded to be a mystic sound made of the first few characters of a given deity's name, the chanting of which is regarded to allow an adherent to achieve a state of spiritual sanctity.[5] These mantras are also associated with the chakras of the body.[6]

The Romanian scholar Mircea Eliade stated that an adherent who chants the semantically meaningless bījamantra "appropriates its ontological essence, concretely and directly assimilates with the god".[7]

Hindu bijamantras

A few of the major bijamantras in Hinduism include:

More information Devanagari, Transliteration ...
DevanagariTransliterationDeity
औं/ॐauṃParabrahma
श्रींśrīṃLakshmi
लक्ष्मीःlakṣmīḥMahalakshmi
त्व्म्श्रीःtvamśrīḥMahasaraswati
कामलीःkāmalīḥMahakali
लक्ष्मींlakṣmīLakshmi
ऐंaiṃSaraswati
क्लींklīmKali
क्रींkrīṃKali
ह्रौंhrauṃShiva
श्वींśviShiva
गंgaṃGanesha
हूँhūṃShiva
फट्phaṭDestruction
ह्रींhrīṃBhuvaneshvari
क्लींklīṃShakti
दुंduṃDurga
फ्रौंphrauṃHanuman
सौःsauḥparābīja / Parashakti
दंdaṃVishnu
द्रां drāṃ Dattatreya
Close

Other notable bījamantras include

More information Devanagari, Transliteration ...
DevanagariTransliterationDeity
भ्रंbhraṃBhairava
धूंdhūṃDhumavati
ह्लींhlīṃBagalamukhi
त्रींtrīṃTara
क्ष्रौंkṣrauṃNarasimha
हंhaṃAkasha
यंyaṃVayu
रांrāṃAgni
क्षंkṣaṃPrithvi
Close

Buddhist bījākṣaras

Esoteric Buddhism contains numerous seed syllables with varying meanings. Depending on the tantra or on the tradition, they may represent different concepts, deities or forces.

The following are some common Buddhist bījākṣaras:[8][9][10][11]

More information Sanskrit (IAST), Meaning / use ...
Sanskrit (IAST) Meaning / use Deity
A The unborn, emptiness, Dharmakaya Mahāvairocana, or other Adi-Buddha figures
āḥ found in oṃ āḥ hūṃ Amoghasiddhi, Karma Buddha Family
aṃ Samantabhadra bodhisattva
bhai Bhaiṣajyaguru
bhaḥ Shakyamuni
dhīḥ Prajñāpāramita, from the Vedic word meaning to think, or meditate Mañjusri, Prajñaparamita Devi
hrīḥ Compassion Amitabha, Avalokiteshvara, Lotus Family
ha Earth Kṣitigarbha bodhisattva
hūṃ Usually found at the end of a mantra, e.g. oṃ āḥ hūṃ and can also mean the wind element in certain contexts (e.g. in the a vi ra hūṃ khaṃ mantra) Akshobhya
maiṃ Maitreya, Vajra family
maṃ Mañjusri
oṃ Usually found at the beginning of Buddhist mantras, may signify the body, speech and mind of the Buddha in Tibetan Buddhism (when interpreted as A-u-m)
tāṃ Tara
traṃ Ratnasambhava, Jewel Buddha Family
trāḥ Ākāśa (Space) Ākāśagarbha Bodhisattva
phaṭ wrathful / subjugation of demons / forceful shout
vaṃ, for vac, the voice of the Buddha Mahāvairocana (in the Vajradhatu mandala)
vi the water element
ra, raṃ fire element (e.g. in the a vi ra hūṃ khaṃ mantra)
khaṃ the space element
hāṃ Acala (Fudo-Myoo)
Close

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI