Narada Pancharatra — Archive

Later, (c. 1268–1369 CE) wrote a detailed commentary on sections of this work, ensuring its preservation within the Tenkalai tradition.

| Section | Content | | :--- | :--- | | | Metaphysics of the vyūhas (Vāsudeva, Saṅkarṣaṇa, Pradyumna, Aniruddha). | | Yoga-pāda | Mudrās (ritual hand gestures) specific to Vaishnava worship. | | Kriyā-pāda | Construction of śālagrāma altars and installation of temple idols. | | Caryā-pāda | Daily rites ( nitya-karma ) and expiations ( prāyaścitta ). | narada pancharatra archive

To open this archive is to witness a critical turning point in Indian religious history: the moment when temple priests and wandering mystics agreed that Access Note: A critical edition based on all known manuscripts remains unpublished. Scholars must cross-reference the Pāñcarātra Rakṣā (a 14th-century digest) and the Ahirbudhnya Saṃhitā for parallel passages. The Muktabodha Digital Library currently provides the most accessible searchable e-text. Later, (c

A unique archival note: This text prescribes the ( tripuṇḍra ) with gopī-candana (sacred clay from Vrindavan) applied in a specific sequence—a practice still visible among Śrī Vaiṣṇavas today. IV. Historical & Textual Legacy The Narada Pancharatra survived not as a single, monolithic codex but as a fluid archive of quotations. The great theologian Rāmānuja (c. 1017–1137 CE) canonized it by citing its verses as pramāṇa (valid proof) in his Śrī Bhāṣya and Vedārtha Saṅgraha . | | Yoga-pāda | Mudrās (ritual hand gestures)