Two Important Texts on Hathayoga (Amaraugha and Amaraughprabodh of Gorakshanath & Amrtasiddhi and Amrtasiddhimula)

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Item Code: HAX264
Author: JAMES MALLINSON, PETER DANIEL SZANTO, Jason Birch
Publisher: Institut Francais De Pondichery
Language: Sanskrit and English
Edition: 2021
ISBN: 9788184702507, 9782855392455
Pages: 392
Cover: PAPERBACK
Weight 800 gm
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Book Description
Two Important Texts on Hathayoga

Amaraugha and Amaraughprabodh of Gorakshanath (The Genesis of Hatha and Rajayoga)
The Amrtasiddhi and Amrtasiddhimula- The Earliest Texts of the Hathayoga Tradition
Amaraugha and Amaraughprabodh of Gorakshanath (The Genesis of Hatha and Rajayoga)
About the Book

The Lineage of Immortals (Sanskrit Amaraugha) is the earliest account of a fourfold system of yoga in which a physical practice called Hatha is taught as the means to a deep state of meditation known as Rajayoga. The Amaraugha was composed in Sanskrit during the twelfth century and attributed to the author Gorakşanātha. The physical yoga practices have a pre-history in a tantric Buddhist milieu but were here adapted for a Saiva audience. The treatise explains how Saiva yogis move kundalini, unite Sakti with Siva, and achieve Rajayoga. Three hundred years later, the author of the Hatha- pradipika incorporated almost all the Amaraugha's verses on Hathayoga into his own work, which became a definitive exposition of physical yoga. The study of the Amaraugha reveals not only the genesis of Hatha and Rajayoga but also the creation of the most influential model of Hathayoga in the early modern period. This book presents the first critical edition and annotated translation of the Amaraugha, as well as a later recension, called the Amaraughaprabodha, with an introduction that explores the profound significance of both works for the history of yoga.

About the Author

Jason Birch was awarded his doctorate at the University of Oxford and is a Senior Research Fellow of the Light on Hatba project, hosted at SOAS University of London and the University of Marburg. He is co-Director of the Yoga- cintamani project at the University of Massa- chusetts Boston and an Associate Researcher of the Sufruta project at the University of Alberta. He has published articles on the history of Hatha and Rajayoga, and co-authored a book on plastic surgery in the Nepalese version of the Suirutasambită. From 2015 to 2020, he was a Post-doctoral Research Fellow of the ERC- funded Hatha Yoga Project. He is a founding member of the SOAS Centre of Yoga Studies and the peer-reviewed Journal of Yoga Studies.

Acknowledgements

MY INTEREST IN THE AMARAUGHAPRABODHA arose in 2004 when I noticed one of its verses in a text on Rajayoga called the Amanaska, which I studied for my honours thesis at the University of Sydney under the super- vision of Peter Oldmeadow. With the financial support of the Clarendon and Boden Funds at the University of Oxford (2008-2013), I undertook extensive fieldwork in India with Jacqueline Hargreaves and obtained copies of five manuscripts of the Amaraughaprabodha. I read the text with Alexis Sanderson and, with his guidance, edited and translated several of its verses for my doctoral thesis (Birch 2013). Having written about the historical importance of the Amaraughaprabodha in my thesis, I suggested to James Mallinson that we include it as one of the texts to be studied by the Hatha Yoga Project.

**Contents and Sample Pages**






The Amrtasiddhi and Amrtasiddhimula- The Earliest Texts of the Hathayoga Tradition
About the Book
This book introduces, edits, and translates the two earliest texts of the hathayoga tradition, the Amrtasiddhi and the Amrtasiddhimala (which survives only in Tibetan translation). Basing their study on a bilingual manuscript, an extremely rare phenomenon, the authors argue that the origins of hathayoga are found in an eclectic tantric Buddhist milieu, probably active in the second half of the 11th century CE. The texts provide fundamental and later very influential teachings on the nature of the yogic body, psycho-physical practices centered on manipulating bindu, the types of practitioners, and much more. The book is addressed primarily to scholars, but will also be of interest to students and practitioners of yoga.

About the Authors
James Mallinson studied Sanskrit at Oxford and is Reader in Indology and Yoga Studies at SOAS University of London and chair of the SOAS Centre of Yoga Studies. From 2015 to 2020 he was Principal Investigator of the ERC-funded Hatha Yoga Project and from 2021 to 2024 he will be Principal Investigator of the AHRC/ DFG-funded Light on Hatha project, which will produce a critical edition of the Hathapradipika.

Peter-Daniel Szanto started his studies in Tibetology and Indology at Eotvos Lorand University, Budapest. He defended his doctorate in Oxford, prepared under the supervision of Alexis Sanderson, and then held several post-doctoral positions (Merton College, University Hamburg, and All Souls College). He is currently working at the University of Leiden. His research focuses mainly on the history and literature of tantric Buddhism in South Asia.

Introduction
The Amrtasiddhi The Amrtasiddhi is a Sanskrit manual of yoga teachings which was composed by Madhavacandra' probably no later than the second half of the nth century CE, 2 most likely in the Deccan region of India.3 It is the first text to teach a system of yoga whose primary method is physical and it introduces many practices and principles fundamental to the yoga method often categorized in subsequent Sanskrit texts as hatha. The Amrtasiddhi opens and closes with invocations to the Vajrayana Siddha Virjapa. This and other features of the text indicate that it was composed within a Vajrayana milieu4 but it is unorthodox insofar as its yoga method is for in-dividable celibate maleyogins and is deemed to be superior to the practices of ritual sex taught in mainstream Vajrayana traditions. Its teachings were drawn upon by commentators and composers of texts on yoga across India up to the modern era. The Amrtasiddhi also flourished in Tibet, where it formed the basis of a textual cycle known as 'Chi med grub pa (*Amarasiddhi in some back translations into Sanskrit).

The text is edited here from twelve manuscripts and a variety of testimonial including citations and unacknowledged recycling. The Amrtasiddhi was first brought to modern scholarly attention by Kurtis Schaeffer in an article published in 2002, whose observations were based upon the bilingual (Sanskrit and Tibetan) manu-script we identify with the signup C, which in the 199os was in the Library of the Cultural Palace of Nationalities in Beijing.

In zoo8 James Mallinson read the text of the Amrtasiddhi for the first time in one of its two c. 19th-century manuscripts in the collection of the Man Singh Pustak Prakash library in Jodhpur. The originality and coherence of its teachings in comparison with those of other texts on hathayoga alerted him to its importance for understanding hath yoga’s history and he decided to collate all available manuscripts of the text in order to edit it critically. A preliminary edition, based on the Jodhpur manuscript together with one of four manuscripts digitized by the Nepal-German Manuscript Preservation Project, was read in Oxford in zone with Alexis Sanderson, Peter-Daniel Szanto, Jason Birch and Paul Gerstmayi.

Book's Contents and Sample Pages











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