- [1. Names for the Gosains.] [150]
- [2. The ten orders.] [151]
- [3. Initiation.] [152]
- [4. Dress.] [152]
- [5. Methods of begging and greetings.] [154]
- [6. The Dandis.] [155]
- [7. The Rāwanvansis.] [155]
- [8. Monasteries.] [156]
- [9. The fighting Gosains.] [156]
- [10. Burial.] [158]
- [11. Sexual indulgence.] [158]
- [12. Missionary work.] [159]
- [13. The Gosain caste.] [159]
1. Names for the Gosains.
Gosain, Gusain, Sanniāsi, Dasnāmi.[1]—A name for the orders of religious mendicants of the Sivite sect, from which a caste has now developed. In 1911 the Gosains numbered a little over 40,000 persons in the Central Provinces and Berār, being distributed over all Districts. The name Gosain signifies either gao-swāmi, master of cows, or go-swāmi, master of the senses. Its significance sometimes varies. Thus in Bengal the heads of Bairāgi or Vaishnava monasteries are called Gosain, and the priests of the Vishnuite Vallabhachārya sect are known as Gokulastha Gosain. But over most of India, as in the Central Provinces, Gosain appears to be a name applied to members of the Sivite orders. Sanniāsi means one who abandons the desires of the world and the body. Properly every Brāhman should become a Sanniāsi in the fourth stage or ashrām of his life, when after marrying and begetting a son to celebrate his funeral rites in the second stage, he should retire to the forest, become a hermit and conquer all the appetites and passions of the body in the third stage. Thereafter, when the process of mortification is complete he should beg his bread as a Sanniāsi. But only those who enter the religious orders now become Sanniāsis, and the name is therefore confined to them. Dasnāmi means the ten names, and refers to the ten orders in which the Gosains or Sivite anchorites are commonly classified. Sādhu is a generic term for a religious mendicant. The name Gosain is now more commonly applied to the married members of the caste, who pursue ordinary avocations, while the mendicants are known as Sādhu or Sanniāsi.
Gosain mendicant
2. The ten orders.
The Gosains consider their founder to have been Shankar Achārya, the great apostle of the revival of the worship of Siva in southern India, who lived between the eighth and tenth centuries. He had four disciples from whom the ten orders of Gosains are derived. These are commonly stated as follows:
- 1. Giri (peak or top of a hill).
- 2. Puri (a town).
- 3. Parbat (a mountain).
- 4. Sāgar (the ocean).
- 5. Ban or Van (the forest).
- 6. Tīrtha (a shrine of pilgrimage).
- 7. Bhārthi (the goddess of speech).
- 8. Sāraswati (the goddess of learning).
- 9. Aranya (forest).
- 10. Ashrām (a hermitage).