The Kapalikas and Kalamukhas: Two Lost Saivite Sects
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The Kapalikas and Kalamukhas - David Lorenzen
The Center for South and Southeast Asia Studies of the University of California is the unifying organization for faculty members and students interested in South and Southeast Asia Studies, bringing together scholars from numerous disciplines. The Center’s major aims are the development and support of research and language study As part of this program the Center sponsors a publication series of books concerned with South and Southeast Asia. Manuscripts are considered from all campuses of the University of California as well as from any other individuals and institutions doing research in these areas.
PUBLICATIONS OF THE CENTER FOR SOUTH AND SOUTHEAST ASIA STUDIES: Angela S Burger
Opposition in a Dominant-Party System A Study of the Jan Sangh, the Praja Socialist Party, and the Socialist Party in Uttar Pradesh, India (1969)
Robert L. Hardgrave, Jr
Nadars of Tamilnad: The Political Culture of a Community in Change (1969) Fugene F Irschick
Political and Social Conflict in South India The Non-Brahman Movement and Tamil Separatism, 1916-1929 (1969)
Briton Martin, Jr
New India, 1885 British Official Policy and the Emergence of the Indian National Congress (1969)
James T Siegel
The Rope of God (1969)
Jyotirmdra Das Gupta
Language Conflict and National Development Group Politics and National Language Policy in India (1970)
Gerald D Berreman
Hindus of the Himalayas (Second Revised Edition, 1971)
Richard G Fox
Kin, Clan, Raja, and Rule State-Hinterland Relations in Preindustrial India (1971) Robert N Kearney
Trade Unions and Politics in Ceylon (1971)
David G Marr
Vietnamese Anticolonialism, 1885-1925 (1971)
Leo E. Rose
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Richard Sisson
The Congress Party in Rajasthan (L971)
Prakash Tandon
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Agrarian Conditions in Northern India. Volume One The United Provinces under British Rule. 1860-1900 (1971)
THE KÄPÄLIKAS AND KÄLÄMUKHAS
THE KÄPÄLIKAS AND KALÄMUKHAS
TWO LOST âAIVITE SECTS
David N. Lorenzen
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS Berkeley and Los Angeles
Published in the United States by The University of California Press Berkeley and Los Angeles, California
© D. N. Lorenzen 1972
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 70-138509 International Standard Book Number 0-520-01842-7
First published in 1972 by Thomson Press (India) Limited, 19 Malcha Marg, New Delhi-21
Printed in India by Aroon Purie at Thomson Press (India) Limited, Faridabad, Haryana.
CONTENTS 1
CONTENTS 1
CHAPTER I
Brahma-sütra Commentaries
Puriqas and Other Sources
CHAPTER II
Early Sources
KAPALIKA SOURCES
Kapalika Epigraphy
Saipkarac&rya and the Kapalikas
Samkara and Ugra-Bhairava
Samkara and Krakaca or Bodholbaça-nityànanda
Samkara and Unmatta-Bhairava
Kapalikas in Sanskrit Drama
Miscellaneous Later Sources
CHAPTER III
The Mahivrata
Somasiddhanta
K&pálika Bhakti
CHAPTER IV
Preliminary
The Muvara-koneya-samtati
KALAMUKHAS OF THE §AKTI-PARI§AD 129
Other Divisions of die ParvatSvaJi
The Bbujafigftvaji
CHAPTER V
The Simha-parisad
Other Kalamukha Inscriptions
Shimoga District
Belgaum District
Bellary District
Bijipur District
Dharwar District
Chikmagalur (Kadur) District
Chitradurga (Chitaldrug) District
Hassan District
Kolar and Tumkur Districts
The Kriya£aktis of Vijayanagar
Andhra Pradesh and Madras
K&lamukhas and Vira&aivas
CHAPTER VI
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX
CHAPTER I
FOUR SAI VITE SECTS
Brahma-sütra Commentaries
Several Sanskrit commentators on Brahma-sütra ii. 2. 37 criticise the doctrines and practices of religious sects which preach devotion to Siva and philosophical dualism, àamkarâcârya (c. 788-820) mentions only the Mâhçsvaras.1 It is clear from his discussion that they are the same as the Pâsupatas. Vacaspati Misra (c. 850) divides these Mâhesvaras into four groups—áaivas, Pááupatas, Kapalikas, and Kârunika-siddhântins.2 Bhâskarâcârya (
The comments of Yâmunâcârya and Râmânuja contain valuable information, but have been accepted too uncritically by modern scholars. In some places Râmânuja’s Srî-bhàsya is ambiguous and his remarks about the Kàlàmukhas tio not always harmonise with what is otherwise known about them.6 Also, he does not maintain consistently clear distinctions between the four sects. Sometimes he seems to describe them collectively, at other times individually. He first identifies the four sects which follow the doctrine of PaSupati and then adds:
All these make an analysis of reality and a hypothesis about the attainment of bliss in this world and the next which are opposed to the Vedas. They make a distinction between the instrumental and material cause (nimittopadanayor bhedam) and designate Pa&upati as the instrumental cause (but not the material cause of the Universe).7
In this respect the four sects appear to be the same. This is, no doubt, an oversimplification, but each may well have propounded a dualistic metaphysics.
Ramanuja next discusses the main features of Kapala (Kapalika) worship:
As the Kapalas declare: ‘He who knows the essence of the six insignia (mudrika-satka), who is proficient in the highest mudra, and who meditates on the Self as seated in the vulva (bhagasana-stha), attains nirvana.’ They define the six insignia (mudra) as the kanfhika (necklace),8 the rucaka (another neck ornament), the kuiufala (earring), the sikha- mani (crest-jewel), ashes, and the sacred thread. A person bearing these insignia is not born again in this world.9
Yamunacarya makes the important addition that they have two secondary insignia (upamudra)— the skull (kapala) and the club (khafvanga).n Most Saivite ascetics smear their bodies with ashes and wear sacred threads, but the skull and khatvanga are mostly peculiar to the Kapalikas. The term kundala is used for the earrings of the Kapalikas in a number of sources, and in Bhavabhuti’s Malati-Madhava a female Kapalika bears the name Kapala- kuntfala.10 Large earrings made of rhinoceros horn or other material are a distinguishing feature of a related group of tantric ascetics, the Kanphata Yogins (kan = ear, phata- split). Their earrings are of two basic types—a flat one called darsana and a round one called kundala. Both are known as mudras.n Statues of Lakulisa, the Pasupata-Kalamukha saint, also commonly display large earrings. The other insignia in Ramanuja’s list, the neck ornaments and crest-jewel, are nowhereelse specially connected with the Kapalikas.
The phrase ‘proficient in the highest mudra’ or ‘most skilful in (fhe use of) mudras ’ (para-mudra-visarada) is difficult to interpret. R.G. Bhandarkar explains it as he ‘who is skilful in their [the six insignia’s] use,’11 but it is not easy to see how these insignia can be ‘used’. In tantric literature the term mudra is one of the five Ma-sounds which designate the principal ingredients of the central tantric ritual (panca-makara-sadhana): madya (liquor), mdmsa (meat), matsya (fish), mudra, and maithuna (coition). Here mudra has a variety of meanings. In Hindu tantras it usually denotes parched grain, kidney beans, or any cereal believed to possess aphrodisiac qualities.12 In Buddhist tantric works, on the other hand, it usually refers to the female partner in the ritual. In Buddhist tantric yoga, the four stages in the production of bodhi-citta are also called mudras. They are karma- mudra, dharma-mudrd, maha-mudra, and samaya-mudra.13 In non-tantric religious usage, and often in tantric works as well, mudra denotes various ritual gestures, especially ones made with the hands. More generally it simply means ‘mark’ or ‘insignia’ as in the ‘set of six insignia’ (mudra-safka) mentioned above. Bhandarkar’s interpretation of Ramanuja’s phrase is still the best one, but most of the other meanings of mudra are also possible.
The meditation on the ‘Self as seated in the vulva’14 is reminiscent of the Buddhist tantric maxim: ‘Buddha-hood resides in the woman’s vulva.’15 The term bhaga (vulva) also has a variety of meanings, especially in the Buddhist Tantras. Many of these texts begin with the words: ‘Once upon a time the Lord of all Tathagatas … was dwelling in the vulvae of the va/ra-women.’16 This is an example of what Bharati calls afferent ¿awi/ia-terminology—the use of object words, frequently erotic ones, to ‘intend’ metaphysical or mystical concepts.17 Here the commentators explain bhaga as the ‘void-element’ (kha-dhatu) or the ‘void’ (sunyata), and also as Prajfia, the female personification of enlightenment.18
The use of the term nirvana instead of its Hindu equivalent, moksa or mukti, is again suggestive of a Buddhist or Vajrayana context although nirvana is also used in some Saivite tantric literature such as the famous, though admittedly late, Mahanirvdna- tantra. Another Buddhist connection is found in the vernacular songs (caryds) of the Sahajiya Buddhist saint Kanhapada. He elevates the Kapalika to the rank of perfected yogin.19 Vajrayana literature also refers to ritual paraphernalia typical of Kapalika worship—such as bones, blood, flesh, and skulls—more often than Hindu Tantras do.
Nonetheless, all Sanskrit sources claim that the Kapalika s worship the Hindu deity Bhairava-Siva and his consort. There is little doubt, therefore, that the Kapalikas were a Saivite sect. The Buddhist parallels indicate that they must have also had some connection with Buddhist tantrism, but, in the absence of additional evidence, it is useless to speculate about what this may have been. Yamunacarya and Ramanuja continue their discussion with some comments about the last of the four sects, the Kalamukhas. Both authors should have been acquainted with these ascetics since the sect was influential in South India, particularly in the Mysore region, between the eleventh and thirteenth centuries. Yamunacarya is believed to have spent most of his life in Kancl. His disciple divided most of his time between this city and Srirangam, about ISO miles to the south. He also made pilgrimages to other parts of India. Contemporary Kalamukha monasteries in the Madras region existed at Tiruvanakkpyil in Chingleput District, Venial in North Arcot District, Koyil Tevarayanpettai in Tanjore District, and Ko4uqiba)ur in Tiruchchirappali District—none very far from Kancl or Srirangam.20
Ramanuja’s portrait of the sect, however, is quite different from the one obtained from Kalamukha epigraphs or from the works of their parent sect, the PaSupatas. Sri-btesya ii. 2. 35-37 states:
Likewise, the Kalamukhas designate (the following) as the means of securing all desires in this world and the next: eating from a skullbowl, besmearing the body (snana) with the ashes of a corpse, eating those (ashes), bearing a staff (laguna), keeping a pot of wine (surd), and using that pot for worship of the gods (deva-pùjà), etc.
Much of this description seems more appropriate to the Kàpàlikas. Only two items are associated with the Kàlàmukhas in other sources—the bath in ashes and the staff (laguna). The bath in ashes is one of the central rituals prescribed in the Pàsupata-sùtra.21 The supposed author of this work, Lakulisa, is held in equally high esteem by both the Pàsupatas and Kàlàmukhas. His name indicates that he also carried a staff (lakula).²s The words lakula and laguna are synonymous and etymologically identical. The Kàpàlikas, on the other hand, normally carry a khafvanga or a trident (triàùla). Elsewhere in the Àgama-pràmànya, Yàmunàcàrya speaks of a fourfold division of the tantras: Saiva, Pàsupata, Saumya, and Làgutfa.22 This clearly corresponds to the four sects: Sàiva, Pà&upata, Kàpàla, and Kàlàmukha.
Eating from a skull bowl and worshipping the gods with a pot of wine are items especially associated with the Kàpàlikas, not the Kàlàmukhas. Sanskrit sources usually portray Kàpàlikas as charlatan ascetics who wander about with a skull begging bowl and drink liquor freely for mundane as well as ritual purposes. They also wear the ashes of the dead although no source claims that they eat them.
The seeming confusion in Ràmànuja’s account between the Kàpàlikas and Kàlàmukhas was noticed by R.G. Bhandarkar who concluded (p. 128) that ‘people do not seem to have made a sharp distinction’ between them. G.S. Ghurye has suggested (p. 128) that by the twelfth century, the time of the greatest number of Kàlàmukha epigraphs, the sect ‘had purged itself of, or had at least suppressed, the more objectionable practices.’ Bhandarkar’s theory is the more plausible one, but neither is very satisfactory. There were in fact considerable differences between the two sects, and Yamuna and Ràmànuja must have known how to distinguish them. Ghurye’s theory fails to account for the fact that the earliest Kàlàmukha record, an inscription of a.d. 810, shows no more evidence of religious extremism than any of their later records. One might suggest a more sinister explanation. At the time of Yamuna and Ramanuja the Kalamukhas were rapidly gaining popular and even royal support in South India. The two Vaisnava priests may have purposely confused the two Saivite sects in order to discredit their more important rivals.
Sri-bhasya ii. 2. 35-37 next gives a list of religious paraphernalia prescribed in the Saivagamas: ‘the rosary of rudrdksa seeds in the hand, a single mass of matted hair on the head, the skull-bowl, the besmearing the body with ashes, etc.’ Presumably Ramanuja means to associate these items with the Saiva sect, but with the exception of the skull-bowl, which does not belong with the Saivas anyway, all the items are part of the costume of most types of Saivite ascetics.
This list may be compared with the only significant epigraphic description of a Kalamukha ascetic. A grant of A.D. 1252-53 from Munavalji in Belgaum District praises the Kalamukha rayarajaguru Sarvesvaradeva: ‘whose body was sprinkled with ashes; who wore a small piece of cloth around the loins, and the hairy skin of an antelope; who carried a rosary of Rudraksas…,’23 The loincloth and antelope skin as well as the ashes and rudraksas are standard equipment for most Saivite ascetics. No mention is made of wine pots or skull bowls.
Ramanuja’s Sri-bhasya ii. 2. 35-37 concludes with a disparaging description of the Kapala vow (vrata):
Likewise, they (? = the Saivagamas, the four sects, the Kapalas) state that even men belonging to lower castes can attain the status of Brahmana and the highest dsrama (= samnyasa, mendicancy) by means of certain special rites. (For it is said): ‘One instantly becomes a Brahmana merely by the process of initiation. A man becomes a great ascetic (yati) by undertaking the Kapala vow.’
This may be compared with the following verse from the Kularnava- tantra: ‘Gone is the Sudra-hood of the Sudra and the Brahmana- hood of the Brahmana (vipra); there is no division into castes for one who is consecrated by initiation.’24 Hostility to caste consciousness is a normal feature of tantric worship and is consistently espoused by Kapalikas in Sanskrit literature. From a modern point of view this hostility may be commended, but for orthodox Hindu writers such as Râmânuja an attack on caste was an attack on the whole divinely ordained social order (varriàSrama-dharma).
There are also limitations to this tantric rejection of caste which Râmânuja does not choose to note. In most tantric works the denial of caste occurs only in ritual situations. In day-to-day affairs, caste distinctions are still maintained. Thus Kulârnava- tantra viii.101 says: ‘In this cakra (circle of worship) there is no division into castes. Everyone (in it) is declared to be equal with Siva.’ Elsewhere, however, this text prescribes different lengths of studentship for members of different classes. The Mahànirvàna- tantra seems to accept class divisions without qualification.²⁹ The transcending of caste barriers in a ritual context has little or nothing to do with rational materialist arguments. It is part of a mystical reversal and revaluation of all values, eine Umwertung aller Werte, valid only in the sacred circle of worship. In the supra- mundane universe of the ritual, opposites coalesce and change places—the lowest is highest and the highest lowest.³⁰ In relation to caste, this mystical principle culminates with the apotheosis of the dombl (washerwoman) in Kânhapâda’s tantric Buddhist songs.³¹
1 Brahma-sütra-bhàsya, ed. B. Sàstrï, ii. 2. 37.
2 Bhàmatî, ed. B. Sâstrï, ii. 2. 37.
3 lBrahma-sütra-bhásya, ed. V.P. Dvivedin, ii. 2. 37.
4 R.G. Bhandarkar, Vaisnavism Éaivism and Minor Religious Systems, p. 121. This name is also found in M. Monier-Williams’ Sanskrit-English Dictionary, but we have not found a commentary containing it.
5 Ed. R.D. Karmarkar, ii. 2. 35-37.
6 Since the full text of Yamuna’s Âgama-pràmânya was not available to us, we will follow Ramanuja’s Éñ-bhásya. The translations of this are our own.
7 8ii. 2. 35-37.
8 Yamunacarya reads karnikd in place of kanfhika. Quoted in &rihar§a, p. 644.
9 i<>ii. 2. 35-37.
10 See below, pp. 56-57.
¹³G.S. Ghurye, Indian Sadhus, pp. 135-136.
nQuoted in Srihar§a, p. 644.
11 Up. 127.
12 A. Bharati, The Tantric Tradition, p. 242.
13 S.B. Dasgupta, An Introduction to Tantric Buddhism, pp. 174-75.
14 Bhagâsana-stham âtmànam dhyàtvâ.
15 Cited by L. de la Vallée Poussin, ‘Tântrism (Buddhist),’ ERE, XII, 196.
16 ‘ekasmin samaye bhagavân sarva-tathàgata-kâya-vâk-citta-hfdaya-vajra-yoçit- bhageçu vijahàra.’ Trans. Bharati, p. 170.
17 20lbid., p. 173.
18 Dasgupta, pp. 105, 120-21.
19 22S.B. Dasgupta, Obscure Religious Cults, pp. 57-58, 90, 103-104.
20 See below, pp. 165-67.
21 «Ed. R.A. Sastri, i. 2.
22 Quoted in Srihar§a, p. 643.
²⁵See below, p. 108.
23 J.F. Fleet (ed. and trans.), ‘Sanskrit and Old Canarese Inscriptions Relating to Yadava Kings of Devagin,’ JBBRAS, XII (1876), 40.
24 Ed. T. Vidyaratna, xiv. 91.
Puriqas and Other Sources
Several Purânas and a few other works contain lists incorporating some or all of the sects in the fourfold classification of the Brahma- sutra) commentators. The following table compares the commentaries with these other sources:
Ed. and trans. J. Woodroffe, chap. viii.
See Bharati, p. 234, and M. Eliade, Yoga: Immortality and Freedom, p. 261.
See Dasgupta, Obscure…, pp. 57, 99, 102-106.
llBrahma-sutra-bhd§ya ii. 2. 37.
Bhamati ii. 2. 37.
Ed. V.S. PapaSikara, YajHavaibhavakharufa. 22. 3.
Quoted in foana-Sivaguru-paddhati, Pt. Ill, Kriyapada, chap. i, cited by V.S. Pathak, History of Saiva Cults in Northern India from Inscriptions, p. 3.
VenkateSvara Press edition, vi. 87.
lxvii. 10-20.
In a verse attributed to these two Purapas by the Tantradhikdrinirnaya, cited by C. Chakravarti, Tantras: Studies on their Religion and Literature, p. 51.
Sarpkara-vijaya, cited by Pathak, p. 4.
A9$a4dar$ana-samuccaya, cited by Pathak, p. 21. On p. 2. Pathak incorrectly attributes this verse to Haribhadra’s §addar$ana-samuccaya.
5°Ed. B. Bb&ttacharya, i. 5. 92-93.
It is evident from this table that the sects had several alternate names. The most important variants are: Lakula, Nakula and Laguna for Kalamukha; Soma and Saumya for Kapala; and Mahavrata-dhara for both Kapala and Kalamukha. The term $ivasasana from the Malkapuram inscription does not necessarily refer to the Kapalikas since this identification is based merely on an analogy with the standard fourfold division.⁵⁴ The term Kankdla (skeleton) from the Skanda Purana almost certainly refers to the Kapalika sect, but the fifth item of this list, Mahavrata, often denotes this sect also. Kalanana (blackfaced) from the Malkapuram inscription is merely a synonym for Kalamukha. A tenth century grant to a Kalamukha priest at Kotfumbajur (Tiruchchirappali District) similarly mentions fifty Asitavaktra (black-faced) ascetics residing at his monastery.⁵⁵ Although the literal meaning of Kaladamana (time-subduing) from the Vdmana Purana is considerably different, it is evidently another variant of Kalamukha and Kalanana. The originator of the Kaladamana doctrine was named Kalasya (black-faced).⁵⁶
Most of these sources merely enumerate the sects or say that their doctrines were revealed by Siva. A few works openly condemn
Cited by Pathak, p. 26.
Cited by Pathak, p. 3.
Journal of the Andhra Historical Research Society, IV, 147, cited by Pathak, p. 3.
The verse reads: ‘upeyu$am Saiva-tapodhananaip Kalanananaip Siva§asana- nam/ vidyarthinaqi Pa&upata-vratanam apy anna-vastradi-samarpanaya//. ’ Cited by Pathak, p. 3. Some of the four terms in this verse may be adjectives rather than nouns.
55K.A.N. Sastri, ‘The Koumbalur Inscription of Vikrama-Kesari,’ JORM, VII (1933), 9.
Vdmana Purana vi. 90.
the sects. In the Kurma Purana Siva says: ‘I have declared other sastras which are a source of confusion in this world and are opposed to the words of the Vedas. The Vama, Pasupata, Soma, Langala, and Bhairava (sastras) are declared to be outside the Vedas and are not to be served.’10 Yamunacarya is equally critical: ‘Saiva, Pasupata, Saumya, and Laguda are designated as the fourfold division of the Tantras. One should not make a mixture (of these with Vedib rites).’11 The Skanda Puraria, however, at one point declares that only five of the twenty-eight agamas lead to the path of liberation: the Kalamukha, Karikala, Saiva, Pasupata, and Mahavrata.12
The remarks of the Vamana Purana vi. 86-92 are the most interesting. It states that Brahma created four groups which worshipped Hara (Siva) and gave them each a Mstra: ‘The first is known as Saiva, then Pasupata…, then the third Kaladamana, and the fourth Kapalika.’ The text then gives a pseudo-historical account of the origin of each:
Siva himself was Sakti, the beloved son of Vasistha. Gopayana then became his pupil…
Mahapasupata was the ascetic Bharadvaja. His pupil was the king Somake§vara…
Lord Kalasya was the ascetic Apastamba. His pupil was named Krathesvara…
Mahavratin was Dhanada. His pupil was the powerful Arnodara, a great ascetic and a Sudra by birth.
The apparent associations of teachers and doctrines are Sakti and Saiva, Bharadvaja and Pa&upata, Apastamba and Kaladamana (Kalamukha), and Dhanada and Kapalika. The reasons behind this choice of religious founders are obscure. Sakti, Bharadvaja and Apastamba are famous sages and Dhanada is the god of wealth. None are elsewhere connected with these sects with the possible exception of Apastamba. An incomplete record from Vedal in North Arcot District, Madras, mentions a Kalamukha Dasapuriyan of the Harita gotra and the Apastamba sutra.13 The attribution of the Kapalika Mstra to Dhanada and his powerful §udra disciple, Amodara, emphasizes the worldliness and debased status of this doctrine. The four disciples—Amodara, Gopayana, Somakesvara, and Krathe&vara—cannot be identified. Siva, Maha- pasupata, Kalasya, and Mahavratin are evidently forms of Siva.
Vamana Purana lxvii. 1-40 tells of a war between Siva, aided by his ganas and pramathas, and the asuras. Siva’s allies included the Saivas, Pasupatas, Kalamukhas, Mahavratins, Nirasrayas, and Mahapasupatas. Siva extended a special welcome to the last group because they did not recognize a distinction between him and Vi§nu. Here the Pasupatas and Mahapasupatas seem to be separate groups.
1 Agama-prdmanya, quoted in £rihar§a, p. 643.
2 SrT-bhaya ii. 35-37.
3 Quoted in §rihar$a, p. 643.
4 Ed. N. Mukhopadhyaya, i. 16 (p. 184).
5 »ii. 12 (p. 740). Lakura is probably a mistake for Lakula.
6 Uparibhaga. 37. 147, cited by Handiqui, p. 463. We do not know from which edition of the PuraQa this reference comes. Commenting on this verse, Appaya Dik$ita (cited ibid.) reads Laguna (holding a staff) for LSngala (a plough). Laguna is a better reading.
7 Uttarakhana. 31. 103, cited by A.P. Karmarkar, The Vratya or Dravidian Systems, p. 220.
8 Ed. Mallikarjuna&astri, ii. 24. 177.
9 VArunacala-Ma. 10. 65, cited by Karmarkar, p. 220.
10 ⁵¹Uparibhaga. 37. 146-47, cited by Handiqui, p. 463 (my translation).
11 Cited ibid.
12 Arundcala-Md. 10. 65, cited by Karmarkar, p. 220.
13 See V. Rangacharya, Inscriptions of the Madras Presidency, II, 1162.
CHAPTER II
KÀPÀLIKA SOURCES
Early Sources
The earliest occurrence of the word kapalin (one who bears a skull) is probably that in the Yajnavalkya-smrti iii. 243 (c. a.d. 100—300). This sutra prescribes the penance for one who has killed a Brahmana, a Brahmahan: ‘With a skull (Sirah-kapali) and a staff (in his hands), living on alms, announcing his deed (as he