Nila-Sukta
नील सूक्त
nīla sūkta
Definition
Vedic hymn to Nila Devi — third consort of Vishnu (alongside Sri and Bhumi). Recited especially in Sri Vaishnava traditions.
हिन्दी अर्थ
नील सूक्त; नीलादेवी-स्तुति।
Sources Cited
- · Vedic corpus
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नील सूक्त
nīla sūkta
Vedic hymn to Nila Devi — third consort of Vishnu (alongside Sri and Bhumi). Recited especially in Sri Vaishnava traditions.
नील सूक्त; नीलादेवी-स्तुति।
Hindu thought is built from a vocabulary of carefully-distinguished terms. Words like nila-sukta 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.
Nila-Sukta sits within a cluster of related concepts — sri-vaishnava, vishnu. 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.
Tamil Vaishnava tradition tracing to the 12 Alvars and codified by Yamunacharya, Ramanuja. Worships Lakshmi-Narayana. Two sub-sects: Vadakalai (north Tamil), Tenkalai (south Tamil), differing on prapatti and Sanskrit-Tamil priorities.
'The pervader'; supreme being for Vaishnavas; the preserver of the trimurti. Resides in Vaikuntha on Ananta-Shesha; consort Lakshmi. Holds shankha-chakra-gada-padma. Descends as the avataras to restore dharma.
Devotional hymn sung while performing aarti — typically in the local language with chorus. 'Om Jai Jagdish Hare' (Vishnu), 'Jai Ambe Gauri' (Devi), 'Sukhakarta Dukhaharta' (Ganesha).
31-verse hymn to Surya from Valmiki Ramayana (Yuddha Kanda 105), taught to Rama by sage Agastya before the final battle with Ravana. Recited daily at sunrise for victory and energy.
'I am Brahman' — Mahavakya from Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 1.4.10. Realisation of the seer.
Eight-verse hymn — popular literary form. Examples: Madhurashtakam, Achyutashtakam, Lingashtakam, Bilvashtakam, Mahishasura-mardini-stotram (technically Aigiri Nandini, 22 verses but often grouped here), Govindashtakam, Mahalakshmi Ashtakam, Bhavani Ashtakam.
'108' — short for ashtottara-shata-namavali, a litany of 108 names of a deity. Standard for daily archana.
Powerful Hanuman stotra by Tulsidas; commands Hanuman to remove obstacles. Often recited 7 or 11 or 21 times for urgent relief.
Aphorisms on bhakti — two main collections: Narada Bhakti Sutras (84 sutras) and Shandilya Bhakti Sutras (100 sutras). Define and analyse para-bhakti.
Commentary; the most authoritative kind of exegesis. Famous: Shankara Bhashya, Ramanuja's Sri Bhashya, Madhva Bhashya, Vyasa Bhashya (on Yoga Sutras), Sayana Bhashya (on Vedas).
Awaiting paṇḍita verification before final publication. If you spot an inaccuracy in the Sanskrit, IAST, or interpretation, please write to us.