Kulasekhara Alvar


Kulasekhara, one of the twelve Vaishnavite alvars, was a bhakti theologian and devotional poet from medieval south India. He was the author of "Perumal Tirumoli" in Tamil and "Mukundamala" in Sanskrit. The Perumal Tirumoli, whose second decade is known as "Tetrarum Tiral", is compiled as a part of Nalayira Divya Prabandham. The Thrikkulasekharapuram Temple in Kodungallur is associated with Kulasekhara Alvar.
Vaishnavite traditions portray Kulasekhara as a ruler from the Chera royal family of the Western Country. Based on these accounts, scholars identify Kulasekhara with the Chera playwright-king Kulasekhara Varma or Sthanu Ravi Kulasekhara, who reigned from 844/45 to c. 870/71 CE and is considered the earliest known Chera ruler of medieval Kerala.''''''

Biography

The following is the traditional biography of king Kulasekhara, based on sources generally dated to the 12th–14th centuries CE.
Kulasekhara was born at Vanchi, in the Western Country, in Kali Era 28 to the Chera ruler "Dridhavrata". When Kulasekhara came of age, his father abdicated the throne and retired from public life, as was customary, allowing Kulasekhara to ascend as the new king.
Young Kulasekhara was a devoted follower of god Vishnu. His devotion was so profound that it is said that, upon hearing the story of how the demon king Ravana abducted princess Sita, he immediately ordered his warriors to prepare for an invasion of Lanka. On another occasion, a jealous minister, envious of the king's favor toward Vaishnavites, falsely accused the devotees of wrongdoing. To prove their innocence, Kulasekhara successfully underwent the Trial by Ordeal, placing his hand into a pot containing snakes.
Later, Kulasekhara renounced his throne and embarked on a pilgrimage to the holy site of Srirangam. He spent several years there worshiping lord Vishnu and arranged the marriage of his daughter, "Cherakula Valli Nachiyar", to the deity of the Srirangam Temple. As part of the dowry, he donated all his royal wealth, constructed the "Chenaivenran Mandapa", and repaired the temple's prakara, which was thereafter known as "Kulasekhara Tiruvidi." He continued his pilgrimage, visiting the sacred temples of Tiruvenkatam, Tiruvayodhya, Tillai-Chitrakutam, Tirukannapuram, Tirumalirunjolai, and Tiruvitruvakkode, before finally settling in Brahmadesam near Tirukkurukur, the birthplace of Namma Alvar. He died there at the age of sixty-seven.
The shrine of Cherakula Valli Nachiyar within the Srirangam Temple Complex commemorates the daughter of king Kulasekhara.

Literary contributions

Kulasekhara was the author of "Perumal Tirumoli" in Tamil and "Mukundamala" in Sanskrit. Kulasekhara Alvar's poems are deeply devotional, dedicated to the principal avataras of VishnuRama and Krishna. He immerses himself in their lives, identifying with various roles in their divine narratives.
As a devotee of Rama, Kulasekhara internalizes the suffering of both Rama and his aged father, Dasaratha, as his own. His devotion is so profound that he regards Vishnu's devotees as manifestations of the god himself. In one composition, he adopts the perspective of Devaki, Krishna's birth mother, from whom Krishna was taken to Gokula to be raised by his foster parents, Nanda and Yasoda. Kulasekhara movingly expresses Devaki's sorrow at being separated from her child and her longing for reunion. In other poems, he sometimes envisions himself as a gopi deeply in love with Krishna, embodying the intense devotion and yearning characteristic of the bhakti tradition.

Kulasekhara Varma

Kulasekhara Alvar is generally identified with "Kulasekhara Varma", the dramatist-king of medieval Kerala. Kulasekhara Varma is credited with authoring two Sanskrit plays, Tapatisamvarana and Subhadradhananjaya, as well as the Sanskrit champu kavya Ascharya Manjari. He is also possibly the author of the Sanskrit play Vicchinnabhiseka. In his works, Kulasekhara Varma refers to himself as Keralakula-chudamani, Keraladhinatha, and Mahodayapura-paramesvara. An inscription from Chembra records a performance of Tapatisamvarana.
The Kerala art-form Kudiyattam is traditionally associated with Kulasekhara Varma and his courtier Tolan. Additionally, "Dhananjaya Samvarana Dhvani", or the "Vyangyavyakhya", makes reference to a king Kulasekhara of Mahodayapuram.
Kulasekhara Varma, the dramatist, is sometimes identified with king Rama Kulashekhara, another medieval Chera ruler of Kerala. This identification, however, is not generally regarded as reliable.

In popular culture