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Saundarya Laharī Of Śrī Śaṃkarācārya: With Commentaries, Saubhāgyavardhanī Of Kaivalyāśrama, Laksmidharā Of Lakṣmīdharācārya, Aruṇāmodinī Of Kāmeśvarasūrin

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The Soundarya-Lahari occupies a unique place among the works associated with the Tantric systems of philosophy and Sakti worship.

Adi Sankara studied Kundalini from Gurupadacharya the author of a very important work,"Subhayodaya". Having studied,practiced and internalised the principles contained in this work,Sri Sankaracharya received special instructions based upon the personal experience of his guru. And adding his own personal experience to the above,he composed this famous work, consiting of hundred slokas - the first forty one of these form "Ananda Lahari" and the rest forming the "Soundarya Lahari".

In this work,commentaries of several great scholars have been compiled and translated into English. All the "Prayogas" are illustrated with yantras.

158 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 800

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About the author

Adi Shankaracharya

246 books232 followers
Adi Shankara(788 CE - 820 CE), also known as Śaṅkara Bhagavatpādācārya and Ādi Śaṅkarācārya was an Indian guru from Kalady of present day Kerala who consolidated the doctrine of advaita vedānta. His teachings are based on the unity of the ātman and brahman— non-dual brahman, in which brahman is viewed as nirguna brahman, brahman without attributes.

Shankara travelled across India and other parts of South Asia to propagate his philosophy through discourses and debates with other thinkers. He is reputed to have founded four mathas ("monasteries"), which helped in the historical development, revival and spread of Advaita Vedanta. Adi Shankara is believed to be the organizer of the Dashanami monastic order and the founder of the Shanmata tradition of worship.

His works in Sanskrit concern themselves with establishing the doctrine of advaita (nondualism). He also established the importance of monastic life as sanctioned in the Upanishads and Brahma Sutra, in a time when the Mimamsa school established strict ritualism and ridiculed monasticism. Shankara represented his works as elaborating on ideas found in the Upanishads, and he wrote copious commentaries on the Vedic canon (Brahma Sutra, principal upanishads and Bhagavad Gita) in support of his thesis. The main opponent in his work is the Mimamsa school of thought, though he also offers arguments against the views of some other schools like Samkhya and certain schools of Buddhism.

AKA Śaṅkarācārya; Śaṃkara; Śaṃkarācārya; Ṣaṅkara Āchārya; Shamkaracharya; Çamkara; Śaṃkara-bhagavat-pāda; Shankara; Çankara; Ādi Śaṅkara; Shankarâchârya; Śaṁkarācharya; Sankara; Shang-chieh-lo; Shangjieluo; Śankaracharya; Adi Sankar; Āticaṅkarācārya Svāmikaḷ; Caṅkarācārya Svāmikaḷ; Adi Sankaracharya; Āticaṅkar; Āticaṅkarācāriyar; Āticaṅkarar; Adi Sankaracarya; Adi Shankaracharya; Camkaracarya

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Anand Ganapathy.
271 reviews36 followers
March 10, 2023
Beautiful poetic translation of The Saundarya Lahiri ( in which Adi Shankara has extolled the greatness of the Supreme Mother Goddess in 100 verses... )
Profile Image for Nate.
617 reviews
August 3, 2025
this review applies to the commentary and translation, not the underlying text, which is beyond rating. this has extensively detailed notes on each mantra, often accompanied by a full-page mandala, the original sanskrit and a word-by-word translation, and proper yantras and japa for each are described in the appendix. the introduction is also nearly 100 pages, giving a general history and overview of shakta philosophy, history and metaphysics. i also appreciated the frequent references to modern quantum physics and cosmological theories. i can't imagine a more thorough and detailed edition than this one, at least, not in a single volume, anyways
13 reviews
February 5, 2026
it's a descent translation of a beautiful hymn but hard to read when you know what the institute gets up to 😢
also stop trying to sound more legit by using sciencey words like, it's ok spirituality can stand on its own as a coherent methodical intellectual system w/o putting everything in scientific terms, we got science for that
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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