Dvadasha stotra

Dvadasha stotra is a series of 12 Stotras composed by Sri Madhvacharya, the 13th-century founder of the Tattvavada or Dvaita school of philosophy. 'Dvadasha' in Sanskrit means 12 and all the 12 stotras are in praise of Lord Vishnu.[1][2] It is believed that the stotras were composed in connection with the installation of the idol of Lord Krishna at Udupi. While most of the 12 stotras are praises of the Lord, the third stotra is actually a summary of Madhvacharya's philosophy.[3]

Dvadasha Stotra
AuthorMadhvacharya
LanguageSanskrit

There have been numerous musical compositions of Dvadasha stotras over the years. It is also a ritual to recite the Dvadasha stotras at the time of "naivedya"[4] or offering of food to God at Madhva temples.

Commentaries and translations

There are eight known commentaries on the Dvadasha stotras.[5] They are by,

  • Gangodamishra
  • GĂ»dhakartrka
  • Chalari Narasimhacharya
  • Channapattana Thimmannacharya
  • Umarji Tirumalacharya
  • C M Padmanabhacharya
  • Punyashravana Bhikshu
  • Sri Vishwapati TĂ®rtha
gollark: Don't think so, sorry.
gollark: If it's two dimensional you'd just need 3, though the maths would still be a bit hard.
gollark: Which is a shame, since this sounds cool. I think if you had the volumes and some way to convert them into distances, and several computers/hypothetical listener things of known position, you could probably trilaterate the lighting's source pretty easily.
gollark: I do not believe there is a way for computers to detect sounds.
gollark: You probably *can't* run it in practical-CC, given limited RAM.

See also

References

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