Akhara
अखाडा
akhāḍā
Definition
Order of warrior-ascetics. 13 traditional akharas at Kumbh Mela (7 Shaiva, 3 Vaishnava, 2 Udasin, 1 Nirmal). Naga sadhus belong to Shaiva akharas.
हिन्दी अर्थ
अखाडा; संन्यास-संगठन।
Sources Cited
- · Tradition
Composing…
अखाडा
akhāḍā
Order of warrior-ascetics. 13 traditional akharas at Kumbh Mela (7 Shaiva, 3 Vaishnava, 2 Udasin, 1 Nirmal). Naga sadhus belong to Shaiva akharas.
अखाडा; संन्यास-संगठन।
Hindu thought is built from a vocabulary of carefully-distinguished terms. Words like akhara are not loose translations — each has a precise scriptural genealogy, a specific role in ritual or philosophy, and often a counterpart that completes its meaning. Many of the major Hindu darśanas (Sāṅkhya, Yoga, Vedānta, Mīmāṃsā, Nyāya, Vaiśeṣika) refined their vocabulary over centuries; the same Sanskrit term can carry different shades in different schools.
Akhara sits within a cluster of related concepts — naga-sadhu, kumbh-mela, sadhu. Reading these together gives you the actual texture of the idea, rather than treating it as an isolated definition. Each Sanskrit term in this glossary is cross-linked to the others it presupposes.
Where useful we cite the primary scriptural source — the Upaniṣad, sūtra, or smṛti passage where the term is given its classical sense — alongside trusted modern dictionaries (Monier-Williams, V.S. Apte, Sanskrit Heritage). For practical questions about usage in pūjā or daily life, ask a paṇḍita in your tradition.
Warrior-ascetic of Shaiva akharas; goes naked, smeared with bhasma. Founded as a martial order by Adi Shankara to defend dharma. Most visible at Kumbh Mela's first shahi-snan.
A holy person; broadly any renunciant or wandering ascetic. Includes sannyasis, jogis, akhada members, naga babas. 'Sadhvi' is the female form.
A traditional spiritual master who not only teaches but also exemplifies (acharati = he conducts). The founding figures of sampradayas (Adi Shankaracharya, Ramanujacharya, Madhvacharya).
Authoritative ritual scripture, distinct from Veda (Nigama). Three streams: Shaiva (28 + 207), Vaishnava (Pancharatra/Vaikhanasa), Shakta (Tantras). Govern temple architecture, idol-making, and consecration.
Devotee; one engaged in bhakti. Many lists of paradigmatic bhaktas: Prahlada, Dhruva, Hanuman, Vibhishana, Narada, Akrura, Uddhava, Shabari.
Ten orders of Advaita sannyasis founded by Adi Shankara: Saraswati, Tirtha, Ashrama, Vana, Aranya, Giri, Parvata, Sagara, Bharati, Puri. Each pitha (Sringeri/Puri/Dwarka/Jyotirmath) is associated with specific names.
Bengal Vaishnavism, founded by Chaitanya Mahaprabhu (1486–1534). Worships Radha-Krishna; emphasizes nama-sankirtan (especially the Hare Krishna mantra) and madhurya-bhakti. ISKCON is a modern global expression.
Spiritual teacher; one who removes darkness (gu = darkness, ru = remover). Distinct from shiksha-guru (instruction-teacher) and diksha-guru (initiating teacher). 'Sadguru' refers to a self-realized guru.
'Guru's family'; the residential school where shishyas lived with their guru. Traditional Vedic education model.
The personal chosen deity. The form of God to whom a sadhaka feels personal devotion and offers daily worship — Krishna, Shiva, Devi, Hanuman, etc.
Awaiting paṇḍita verification before final publication. If you spot an inaccuracy in the Sanskrit, IAST, or interpretation, please write to us.