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  1.  3
    The Tiruttoṇṭar Tiruvantāti of Nampi Āṇṭār Nampi.Alastair R. McGlashan - 2009 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 37 (3):291-310.
    This paper presents an English translation from the original Tamil of the canonical Saivite hagiographical work, the Tiruttoṇṭar Tiruvantāti of Nampi Āṇṭār Nampi. The date of this work is disputed, but it was probably composed at some point between 870 and 1118 CE. This classical Tamil poem gives in summary form the lives of the sixty three Saivite saints of the sixth to ninth centuries known as the Nāyaṉmār, or Tiruttoṇṭar (“holy servants”, sc. of the Lord Siva). The paper also (...)
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  2.  29
    The tiruttoṇṭar tiruvantāti of nampi āṇṭār nampi.Alastair R. McGlashan - 2009 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 37 (3):291-310.
    This paper presents an English translation from the original Tamil of the canonical Saivite hagiographical work, the Tiruttoṇṭar Tiruvantāti of Nampi Āṇṭār Nampi. The date of this work is disputed, but it was probably composed at some point between 870 and 1118 CE. This classical Tamil poem gives in summary form the lives of the sixty three Saivite saints of the sixth to ninth centuries known as the Nāyaṉmār, or Tiruttoṇṭar (“holy servants”, sc. of the Lord Siva). The paper also (...)
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  3.  4
    The Tiruttoṇṭar Tiruvantāti of Nampi Āṇṭār Nampi.Alastair R. McGlashan - 2009 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 37 (3):291-310.
    This paper presents an English translation from the original Tamil of the canonical Saivite hagiographical work, the Tiruttoṇṭar Tiruvantāti of Nampi Āṇṭār Nampi. The date of this work is disputed, but it was probably composed at some point between 870 and 1118 CE. This classical Tamil poem gives in summary form the lives of the sixty three Saivite saints of the sixth to ninth centuries known as the Nāyaṉmār, or Tiruttoṇṭar (“holy servants”, sc. of the Lord Siva). The paper also (...)
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  4.  16
    Violent Devotion and Depth Psychology.Alastair R. McGlashan - 2010 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 32 (3):249-276.
    The purpose of this article is to test how far the concepts of depth psychology can be used to further understanding of religiously motivated acts of violence that occurred in another age and another cultural environment. The particular behaviour studied is the violence exhibited in the lives of the Tamil Saiva saints of Southern India who lived in the sixth to eighth centuries CE. The relevant historical evidence is the account of their lives recorded in the hagiographical epic known as (...)
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