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Harihara putra needs a separate article, he is not same
Harihara, the combined form of Vishnu-Shiva. Harihara-putra as a Sanskrit compound (samaas) means "son of Vishnu and Hara" and has no relation to Harihara. --
RedtigerxyzTalk16:15, 7 January 2009 (UTC)reply
Very poor grammar
The grammar, especially in the "Worship" section, is far below acceptable levels for an encyclopedic or even casual read. Whole paragraphs are nearly unreadable. — Preceding
unsigned comment added by
71.197.7.208 (
talk)
22:01, 23 October 2012 (UTC)reply
Shasta (deity)
The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section.A summary of the conclusions reached follows.
Shasta is the sanskritized form of Tamil சாத்தன் (Cāttaṉ). There are no any significant differences between Shasta and Aiyanar since their iconographies and myths are exactly the same. Even
Ayyappan, the Keralite god, who is non other than one form (according to the faith 'avatar') of Aiyanar, can be merged with this page. But, he can also be categorized as an unique deity predominantly resides in
Sabarimala. I recommend to merge
Shasta (deity) with this page,
Aiyanar. --
5anan27 (
talk)
08:00, 19 August 2017 (UTC)reply
Oppose Shasta is identified with various regional deities the Tamil Aiyanar, Ayyappa of Kerala and even
Murugan. The iconography as well as the mythology of Aiyanar and Ayyappa is distinct.--
RedtigerxyzTalk13:59, 19 August 2017 (UTC)reply
Could you please explain with references in which aspects Aiyanar differs from Sashta and Aiyappan? Kindly note that all three wiki articles already have the proofs to conclude that Ayyappan, Aiyanar and Shasta (Dharmasashta) are synonyms of the same deity. Please google. It provides hundreds of temples of this deity with the substitutes Ayyanar, Ayyappan, Sastha, Dharmasastha and Aiyan. For your information,
Strong Oppose - The deities Shasta, Ayyapan and Aiyanar have different mythologies and are all notable in their own right. Unless there is a strong reference to link these 3 deities, this is
WP:OR and has no chance of even a single mention in any of these articles. Most of the references you raised above are blogspots and references that are not reliable.
King Prithviraj II (
talk)
19:00, 23 August 2017 (UTC)reply
So, is it enough to conclude
WP:OR just by saying :"have different mythologies" and "blogspots and references are not reliable"? Yes. I selected comparable clear depictions from blogspots for specifying the similarities. Please argue with references. Don't ignore everything by just telling this is reliable and that is not reliable. And dear IP number
2.51.18.247, this discussion is on Shasta, Aiyanar and Ayyappan and nothing to do with either Shiva or Rudra. Separate wiki articles will never determine whether these deities are same or not.
Has no chance of even a single mention in any of these articles? Did you read them actually? Ok. Check these.
I.
present Ayyappan article has this
image of Aiyanar and following passage is extracted from the same article.:
“
Ayyappan, also known as ...Shasta or Dharma Shasta....the son of Shiva and Mohini......Other important temples are Kulathupuzha Sastha Temple, Aryankavu Sastha Temple, Achankovil Sree Dharmasastha Temple...
Another name for the deity is Ayyānar-Śāstā or Śāstā. The Śāstā cult is particularly well developed in the state of Kerala....Dharma-Śāstā is used to describe Ayyappan. Śāstā also has a sanskritising legend that makes him the son of a union between Shiva and the female form of Vishnu.
...Aiyanar is used as another name of the deity Shasta. The earliest reference to Aiynar-Shasta is from the Arcot district.... dated to the 3rd century C.E. They read "Ayanappa; a shrine to Cattan....Brahmanda Purana mentions Shasta as harihara suta or son of Siva and Narayana (Vishnu).... Legends indicate that Shasta is the son of a union between Shiva and the female form of Vishnu, namely Mohini.
”
IV. Shasta and Aiyappan pages had same images until I asked for a merging request.
Check this version of Ayyappan and present
Shasta page.
V. Huge number of
edits appear from an IP number converting all sources which claim the similarities of Ayyappan with Aiyanar as well as Shasta.
VI. And there is a problem with blogspot references. No? Check wikimedia
category of Aiyanar and
category of Sashta. Please compare the iconographies.
@
5anan27: I did state that unless stated by reliable sources,
they do state there might once had a historical connection, but nothing too solid. Ayyappan is usually shown as celibate, except for a few exceptions with Purṇa and Pushkala, which again only suggests a historical relationship with Aiyanar. Ayyappan is specifically popular for his piligrimage to Sabarimala, one of the largest in the world. You should consider merging
Dharmasasta into Ayyappan, they are the same. However, merging Ayyappan and Aiyanar is out of question, they are notable in different ways, Ayyappan for his piligrimage, Aiyanar as a village deity. Sastha is a generic term, meaning "Teacher." This term is also used to refer to the Buddha. While Dharma Sastha is Ayyappan, Brahma Sastha is Kartikeya, see [this
https://books.google.com/books?id=0AevljBmCRQC&pg=PA244&lpg=PA244&dq=brahma+sastha+kartikeya&source=bl&ots=SwOcOBWCTK&sig=-65uxcviMqyjINWDcOApQ8NJeeQ&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiM9IGPm4bWAhVLPxoKHYLlAkIQ6AEIfDAR#v=onepage&q=brahma%20sastha%20kartikeya&f=false]. Sastha is too generic a term to be merged with Aiyanar, Ayyappan is notable in his own right as a celibate deity. I agree merging Dharmasastha and Ayyappan, they are same. I hence rest my case. Note: Information in this message without references are directly taken from sources statements in the articles Ayyappan and Aiyanar. @
Ms Sarah Welch and
Redtigerxyz: your knowledge will be helpful here.
King Prithviraj II (
talk)
09:50, 2 September 2017 (UTC)reply
Aiyanar is a village deity// Please add that Aiyanar is also an
Agamic deity. Tamil Nadu and
Sri Lanka have hundreds of Aiyanar Temples where daily offerings are conducted according to agamic traditions, praising him "Shasta". For your comparison, I add South Indian goddess,
Mariamman, who is simultaneously a folk deity and Agamic deity. I already indicated that Shasta is also the sanskritized form of
Tamil Cāttaṉ, another name of Aiyanar.
Sastha is too generic a term to be merged with Aiyanar, Ayyappan, meaning "Teacher".// If the name "Shasta" is belongs to more than one deity, we should include this term (or move search term) into all respective articles. For example, Dharma Sasta to Ayyappan, Brahma Sasta to Murugan etc. Alright. Then, who is that
Shasta (deity) titled here? About whom does the given details describes? Are we going to maintain a page which have the descriptions of Ayyappan, Buddha and Murugan who already have distinct articles in wiki? Or do we need a wiki article to tell the world "Shasta means Teacher"? Wiktionary is enough to do that. The explanation given below the title "Shasta (deity)" is obviously belongs to Aiyanar, The earliest reference to Aiyanar-Shasta, Literary references to Aiyanar-Cattan, Harihara suta of Brahmanda Purana, everything! (Please have a look again. Above given wikimedia categories clearly manifest their similarities.)
Ayyappan is notable for his piligrimage// I didn't propose to merge Ayyappan with either Aiyanar or Shasta. Since Ayyappan is considered as the "avatar" of Aiyanar, it is absolutely fine for me to maintain his article separately. My concern is on Shasta and Aiyanar.
Dear @
King Prithviraj II: Including my previous replies, there are so many liturgical, historical, literary sources make clear who these three are. It is why I still couldn't get it what do you mean by //nothing too solid// and //Ayyappan ...except for a few exceptions with Purṇa and Pushkala...only suggests a historical relationship with Aiyanar//
--
5anan27 (
talk)
16:16, 3 September 2017 (UTC)reply
@
5anan27: All that may be fine, but please specify a reliable source which states Shasta and Aiyanar are synonyms, and that Shasta is exclusively used to refer to Aiyanar. Since you are making this claim,
WP:BURDEN is on you to prove it.
No original research,
no blogspots,
no Wikipedia or Wikimedia. We have reliable sources, as shown above, that say there might be a connection, but nothing solid, according to the source not how we interpret it. Since Shasta is a generic term, it cannot be merged with Aiyanar. It is identifiable with Buddha, Kartikeya, Ayyappan and a whole lot of deities. Shasta worship was prevelant in Kerala from 855 AD, with an entire sect (like Vaishnavism and Shaivism) dedicated to it, where Shasta was recognized as a different deity from Aiyanar. Shasta is an umbrella term. Heck, Aiyanar falls under Shasta and this would be a whole lot less controversial if it were merged into Shasta. Sanskrit words do have articles. Have a look at
Simran,
Sat (Sanskrit) etc. I repeat it, Shasta is too generic. If you feel that Shasta should be deleted, consider going to
WP:AFD, not here.
King Prithviraj II (
talk)
20:33, 3 September 2017 (UTC)reply
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
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