26.04.2016 Views

The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hindusim vol 2

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

Panth<br />

<strong>of</strong> southern India, but with the decline <strong>of</strong><br />

the Cholas the Pandyas became the<br />

dominant regional power, eventually<br />

absorbing the Chola kingdom in 1279. At<br />

their zenith in the thirteenth century the<br />

Pandyas controlled most <strong>of</strong> the southern<br />

part <strong>of</strong> India, but were in turn conquered<br />

and annexed early in the fourteenth century<br />

by the Sangama dynasty, also known<br />

as the Vijayanagar dynasty after their<br />

capital city.<br />

Panguni<br />

Twelfth month in the Tamil solar year,<br />

corresponding to the northern Indian<br />

solar month <strong>of</strong> Mina (the zodiacal sign <strong>of</strong><br />

Pisces), which usually falls within March<br />

and April. This name is a modification <strong>of</strong><br />

Phalgun, the twelfth month <strong>of</strong> the lunar<br />

calendar. <strong>The</strong> existence <strong>of</strong> several different<br />

calendars is one clear sign <strong>of</strong> the continuing<br />

importance <strong>of</strong> regional cultural<br />

patterns. One way that the Tamils retain<br />

their culture is by preserving their traditional<br />

calendar. Tamil is one <strong>of</strong> the few<br />

regional languages in India with an<br />

ancient, well-established literary tradition.<br />

See also Tamil months, Tamil<br />

Nadu, and Tamil language.<br />

Pani<br />

A group <strong>of</strong> northern Indian people mentioned<br />

in a hymn in the Rg Veda (10.108),<br />

the oldest Hindu religious text. This reference<br />

speaks poorly <strong>of</strong> this group, since<br />

it portrays them as cattle thieves. <strong>The</strong><br />

hymn is spoken as a dialogue between<br />

the Panis and Sarama, the divine dog<br />

who is the servant <strong>of</strong> the god Indra and<br />

who has been sent by Indra to recover<br />

the cattle the Panis have stolen. This<br />

hymn may refer to an actual incident<br />

and an actual group <strong>of</strong> people, but it is<br />

impossible to say. Certainly the Vedas<br />

were not written as a strict historical<br />

record, and it is perilous to read them as<br />

such. At the same time, as the earliest<br />

textual records they preserve references<br />

to the culture and to contemporary<br />

times that can be found nowhere else.<br />

Panigrahana<br />

A minor rite, performed in many Hindu<br />

marriages, in which the groom grasps<br />

the bride’s right hand as a symbol <strong>of</strong><br />

their impending marital union. See also<br />

marriage customs.<br />

Panini<br />

(4th c. B.C.E.) <strong>The</strong> greatest Sanskrit<br />

grammarian, whose descriptive account<br />

<strong>of</strong> that language in his Ashtadhyayi<br />

(“Eight Sections”) became the prescriptive<br />

norm for the language in later generations.<br />

Panini was not the earliest<br />

grammarian, since he names several in<br />

his text; his genius lay rather in his skills<br />

as an organizer and systematizer. Each<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Ashtadhyayi’s eight sections is<br />

written as a series <strong>of</strong> brief aphorisms<br />

(sutras), each <strong>of</strong> which provides the<br />

foundation and necessary background<br />

for those that follow. Panini’s use <strong>of</strong> this<br />

form allowed him to provide a complete<br />

account <strong>of</strong> the language in the briefest<br />

possible space, and the text’s condensed<br />

form made it easier to memorize. As<br />

with most sutra texts, the Ashtadhyayi’s<br />

terseness <strong>of</strong> expression presupposes a<br />

commentary, <strong>of</strong> which the most famous<br />

is the Mahabhashya, written by the<br />

grammarian Patanjali in the second<br />

century B.C.E.<br />

Panth<br />

General term used for a particular religious<br />

community, such as the<br />

Dadupanth, Varkari Panth, or the<br />

Nanak Panth—an older name for the<br />

Sikh community, which has simply been<br />

abridged to “Panth” by contemporary<br />

Sikhs. <strong>The</strong> word is derived from the<br />

Sanskrit word for “path” and is here<br />

used metaphorically to indicate a fixed<br />

pattern <strong>of</strong> belief and behavior, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

rooted in a particular individual’s teachings.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re is a certain amount <strong>of</strong><br />

semantic overlap between the words<br />

panth and sampraday, both <strong>of</strong> which<br />

denote religious communities, and<br />

there is no hard-and-fast rule dividing<br />

the two. In general, however, the term<br />

497

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!