The
Śambhupuṣpāñjali is a seventeenth-century manual in 824 Sanskrit
verses, with some prose, that describes the worship of Śiva, not in a temple,
but in a South Indian domestic context. It is full of quotations from scriptures
and manuals of the Śaivasiddhānta, notably those of Somaśambhu (C11th),
Aghoraśiva (C12th) and Vedajñāna (C16th). About the author,
Saundaranātha, we can deduce little other than his provenance, for he tells us
that he also wrote a manual, now lost, about the worship of Śivasūrya (Śiva as
the sun) in Maṇipravāḷam, a mixture of Sanskrit vocabulary and Tamil inflections
and syntax, a literary idiom usually associated today with Vaiṣṇava commentarial
works. Several features of his Sanskrit style also reveal the influence of
Tamil. The introduction presents the work and gives a detailed synopsis of its
structure.
The
Śambhupuṣpāñjali is a seventeenth-century manual in 824 Sanskrit
verses, with some prose, that describes the worship of Śiva, not in a temple,
but in a South Indian domestic context. It is full of quotations from scriptures
and manuals of the Śaivasiddhānta, notably those of Somaśambhu (C11th),
Aghoraśiva (C12th) and Vedajñāna (C16th). About the author,
Saundaranātha, we can deduce little other than his provenance, for he tells us
that he also wrote a manual, now lost, about the worship of Śivasūrya (Śiva as
the sun) in Maṇipravāḷam, a mixture of Sanskrit vocabulary and Tamil inflections
and syntax, a literary idiom usually associated today with Vaiṣṇava commentarial
works. Several features of his Sanskrit style also reveal the influence of
Tamil. The introduction presents the work and gives a detailed synopsis of its
structure.