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The Meaning of haṭha in Early Haṭhayoga

Birch, Jason

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Abstract

This essay was prompted by the question of how Haṭhayoga, literally ‘the Yoga of force’, acquired its name. Many Indian and Western scholars have understood the ‘force’ of Haṭhayoga to refer to the effort required to practice it. Inherent in this understanding is the assumption that Haṭhayoga techniques such as prāṇāyāma (breath control) are strenuous and may even cause pain. Others eschew the notion of force altogether and favor the so-called “esoteric” definition of Haṭhayoga (i.e., the union of the sun (ha) and moon (ṭha) in the body). This essay examines these interpretations in light of definitions of haṭhayoga and the adverbial uses of haṭha (i.e., haṭhāt, haṭhena) in Sanskrit Yoga texts that predate the fifteenth-century Haṭhapradīpikā.

Implicit in the question posed above is the historical question of when the term haṭhayoga arose. There is evidence that it was used in Buddhist tantras, while it remained conspicuously absent from Śaiva tantras until late works such as the Rudrayāmalottaratantra. This is surprising given that the Śaiva tantras are replete with much of the terminology of the Haṭhayoga corpus. In the medieval Vedānta and Yoga literature (written after the eleventh century), haṭhayoga first appeared almost always in conjunction with rājayoga, which, as a system of Yoga, was based more on tantric Yoga rather than Pātañjalayoga. The rivalry between Rāja and Haṭhayoga, which was expressed most vehemently in the second chapter of a text known as the Amanaskayoga (eleventh to twelfth century), was based on the contention that Rājayoga was the superior Yoga because its methods were effortless and most efficacious, whereas Haṭhayoga required exertion and was superfluous. However, the rivalry was reconciled by other medieval Yoga texts, such as the Dattātreyayogaśāstra (twelfth to thirteenth century), into a hierarchy of four Yogas (i.e., Mantra, Laya, Haṭha, and Rājayoga), and a few centuries later Svātmārāma dismantled this hierarchy, in his Haṭhapradīpikā, by melding previous Haṭha and Rājayoga systems together and by asserting that Haṭha and Rājayoga are dependent upon one another. By doing so, he created a complete system of Yoga and called it Haṭhayoga.

Citation

Birch, J. (2011). The Meaning of haṭha in Early Haṭhayoga. Journal of the American Oriental Society, 131(4), 527-554. https://doi.org/10.2307/41440511

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Dec 1, 2010
Publication Date Dec 1, 2011
Deposit Date Nov 5, 2016
Publicly Available Date Nov 5, 2016
Journal Journal of the American Oriental Society
Print ISSN 0003-0279
Electronic ISSN 2169-2289
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 131
Issue 4
Pages 527-554
DOI https://doi.org/10.2307/41440511
Keywords yoga, hatha, raja, india, south asia, haṭha, rāja, meditation, vedānta, vedanta, Buddhism, tantra, śaivism, shaivism, philosophy, history.
Related Public URLs https://www.academia.edu/1539699/Meaning_of_haṭha_in_Early_Haṭhayoga

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