Jabali Upanishad

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Devanagariजबालि
IASTjābāli
Title meansA Vedic sage
TypeShaiva
Jabali
Trinity – Brahma, Maheshwara, Vishnu
Devanagariजबालि
IASTjābāli
Title meansA Vedic sage
TypeShaiva
Linked VedaSamaveda
Chapters1
PhilosophyShaivism

The Jabali Upanishad (Sanskrit: जबालि उपनिषत्), also called Jabalyupanishad (IAST: Jābālyupaniṣad), is a Sanskrit text and one of the minor Upanishads of Hinduism.[1] It is attached to the Samaveda, and classified as is one of the Shaiva Upanishads.[2]

It is a short Upanishad, and structured as a discourse between sage Jabali to sage Pippalada, and is notable for presenting the Pashupata theology.[1] It explains what Pashu and Pata means, and the Vibhuti (ash) on one's forehead as a reminder of transitory nature of life, the unchanging universality of Shiva, and as a means of one's salvation.[1][3]

The title of the text is named after sage Jabali, famous in Hindu mythology, and who features in the Hindu epic Ramayana.[4]

In the Telugu language anthology of 108 Upanishads of the Muktika canon, narrated by Rama to Hanuman, it is listed at number 104.[5]

Contents

References

Bibliography

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI