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Vyasakuta

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4-665: Vyasakuta was one of two divisions (the other being the Dasakuta ) of Haridasas , a group within the Bhakti movement , one of the monotheistic Hindu religious devotional movements focusing on the spiritual practice of loving devotion to a God, called bhakti . This generally means the worship of Lord Vishnu During the 12th and 13th centuries A.D. during the rule of the Vijayanagar Empire in South India ,

8-624: The Haridasa movement spread from the area of modern Karnataka . The Lingayatism movement (the term is derived from Lingavantha in Kannada ), spread the philosophy of Basavanna , a Hindu reformer. The Vyasakuta were required to be proficient in the Vedas , Upanishads and other Darshanas . The role of the Dasakuta was to convey the message of Madhvacharya through the Kannada language to

12-422: The Haridasa movement spread from the area of modern Karnataka . The Lingayatism movement, the term is derived from Lingavantha in Kannada , spread the philosophy of Basavanna , a Hindu reformer. The Vyasakuta were required to be proficient in the Vedas , Upanishads and other Darshanas . This Hinduism-related article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Dasakuta Dasakuta

16-406: Was one of two divisions (along with Vyasakuta ) of Haridasas , a group within the Bhakti movement , one of the monotheistic Hindu religious devotional movements focusing on the spiritual practice of loving devotion to a God, called bhakti . This generally means the worship of Lord Vishnu . During the rule of the Vijayanagar Empire in South India in the 12th and 13th centuries CE,

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