Establishment Traditional accounts According to tradition, Adi Shankara, the principal exponent of Advaita Vedanta, established four pithams (dioceses) in India to preserve and propagate Sanatana Dharma and Advaita Vedanta. These are Sringeri Sri Sharada Peetham (Karnataka, South),
Dvārakā Śāradā Pītham (Gujarat, West),
Purī Govardhan Pīṭhaṃ (Odisha, East), and
Badri Jyotishpīṭhaṃ (Uttarakhand, North). A hagiographic legend states that Adi Shankara, during His travels across India, witnessed a snake unveiling its hood like an umbrella to shield a pregnant frog from the hot sun on the banks of the river Tunga in Sringeri. Deducing that non-violence amongst natural predators was innate to a holy spot, Adi Shankara decided to establish His first Peetham in Sringeri. Sringeri is independently associated with
Sage Rishyasringa of Ramayana fame, son of Sage Vibhandaka. According to tradition, Shankara also instituted the tradition of appointing a succession of monastic pontifical heads, called the
Jagadgurus, to each of the four monasteries, installing Sri Sureshvaracharya, Sri Hastamalakacharya, Sri Padmapadacharya and Sri Totakacharya as the first Jagadgurus of the Peethams at Sringeri, Dvaraka, Puri and Badri respectively. According to tradition, Adi Shankara installed
Sri Sureshwaracharya, believed by tradition to be the same as
Maṇḍana Miśra, as the first acharya of the Peetham at Sringeri before resuming his tour to establish the three remaining Peethams at Puri, Dwaraka and Badarinath. The math holds one of the four Mahavaakyas,
Aham-Bramhasmi. The math claims to have a lineage of Jagadgurus, stretching back straight to Adi Shankara himself. The present and 36th Jagadguru acharya of this peetham is
Jagadguru Sri Sri
Bharathi Teertha Mahaswami. His guru was
Jagadguru Sri
Abhinava Vidyatirtha Mahaswami. The successor-designate (the 37th Jagadguru acharya) was appointed in 2015, and was given the Yogapatta (monastic name) Sri Vidhushekhara Bharati Mahaswami.
Historical accounts While tradition attributes the establishment of the Sringeri Sharada Peetham to Adi Shankara, the early history of the Sringeri Peetham from Shankara (8th century CE) to about the 14th century is unknown. This may be because the sources are contradictory about the dates and events, in part because of the loss of records, and also because the pontiffs of the monastery adopted the same name which has created confusion in understanding the surviving records. The early inscriptions that mention Sringeri, in the regional Kannada language, are donative or commemorative. Though useful in establishing the significance of the matha, they lack details to help establish the early history. According to Hermann Kulke, the early history of Sringeri is unknown and the earliest epigraphical evidence in the region is from the 12th century and belongs to the Jain tradition. According to Paul Hacker, no mention of the
mathas can be found before the 14th century CE. Until the 15th century, the timespan of the directors of Sringeri Math are unrealistically long, spanning 60+ or even 105 years. After 1386, these timespans become much shorter. According to Hacker, these mathas were probably established in the 14th century, to propagate Shankara's view of Advaita., However most of the other scholars like Goodding concur with Hacker on the prominence of Sringeri
matha in the Vijayanagara Empire, but argue that Sringeri matha already existed, but rapidly gained prominence in the second half of the 14th century.
Vijayanagara Empire - Vidyaranya The history of Sringeri Peetha is recorded in the matha's literature as well as in
kadatas (ledger records and inscriptions of various forms) and
sanads (charters) from the 14th century onwards. A pivotal figure in the history of the matha is
Vidyaranya (sometimes referred to as Madhava Vidyaranya) who was an ideological support and the intellectual inspiration for the founders of the
Vijayanagara Empire. He helped Harihara I and his brother Bukka to build a Hindu army to overthrow the Muslim rule in the Deccan region, and re-establish a powerful Hindu kingdom from
Hampi. In his counsel, the Vijayanagara founders lead an expansive conquest of much of the southern Indian peninsula, taking over lands from the Sultanates that had formed after several invasions by the
Delhi Sultanate. According to tradition, the monk's efforts were supported by the 10th and 11th pontiff of Sringeri peetham. Vidyaranya later became the 12th acharya of the Sringeri peetham in 1375 CE. Shortly after the start of the Vijayanagara empire in 1336 CE, the rulers began building the Vidyashankara temple at the Sringeri peetham site. This temple was completed in 1338. The Vijayanagara rulers repaired and built numerous more Hindu and Jain temples in and around the Sringeri matha and elsewhere in their empire. This is a period where numerous inscriptions help establish the existence of the Sringeri peetham from the 14th century onwards. The Vijayanagara rulers Harihara and Bukka gave a
sarvamanya (tax-exempt) gift of land in and around Sringeri in 1346 CE to the Sringeri matha guru Bharati Tirtha, in a manner common in the Indian tradition for centuries, to help defray the costs of operating the monastery and temples. The grant is evidenced by a stone inscription by the king who reverentially refers to the 10th pontiff of Sringeri matha as a
guru (counsellor, teacher). This grant became a six-century tradition that ended in the 1960s and 1970s when the Indian central government introduced and enforced a land-reform law that redistributed the land. The Vijayanagara empire gift also began a regional philanthropic tradition of endowments by the wealthy and the elderly population to the Sringeri matha. The
matha managed the land and therefore operated as a sociopolitical network and land-grant institution for over 600 years beyond its religious role and spiritual scholarship. This relationship between the monastery and the regional population has been guided by a mutual
upcara (hospitality, appropriate conduct) guideline between the
matha and the populace. According to Leela Prasad, this
upcara has been guided by the Hindu Dharmasutras and Dharmasastras texts preserved and interpreted by the
matha, one composed by a range of authors and generally dated to be from the second half of the 1st-millennium BCE through about 400 CE. In the late 15th century, the patronage of the Vijayanagara kings shifted to Vaisnavism. Following this loss of patronage, Sringeri matha had to find other means to propagate its former status, and the story of Shankara establishing the four cardinal
mathas may have originated in the 16th century. However, this does not apply to sringeri matha since the madhaviya Sankaravijaya and other earliest biographies give a general description of the establishment of mathas, at Sringeri and other places, but they do not specifically mention the number 'four'. According to Shastri, following the traditional accounts, the Vijayanagara kings visited the Sringeri monastery many times over some 200 years and left inscriptions praising the monks, revering their knowledge of the Vedas and their scholarship. The monastery also provided the Vijayanagara empire administration with guidance on governance. The descendant rulers of the Vijayanagara empire regularly visited the monastery and made a series of endowments to the Sringeri matha as evidenced by various inscriptions. They also established the
agrahara of Vidyaranyapuram with a land grant for the Brahmins, and in the 15th century established the earliest version of the Saradamba temple found at the Sringeri peetham site. The tradition of establishing satellite institutions under the supervision of the Sringeri peetham started in the Vijayanagara empire period. For example, Vidyaranya organized a
matha in Hampi.
Keladi era After the defeat of the Vijayanagara empire and the destruction of
Hampi by a coalition of Deccan sultanates, the Vijayanagara empire territories faced a political turmoil. The Deccan region was largely divided among five Islamic sultanates. The coastal regions of Karnataka that included the Sringeri matha ultimately came under the control of the Nayakas of Keladi from the
Lingayatism tradition, who has previously served as governors for the Vijayanagara emperors. The Keladi dynasty supported the Sringiri peetham for nearly 250 years, from 1499 to 1763, when the Keladi Nayakas rule was ended by Hyder Ali seeking to create a sultanate from Mysore. The Sringeri matha received gifts and grants from the Keladi Nayakas, as evidenced by ledger records and literature preserved by the monastery, especially during the reign of Sri
Sri Sacchidananda Bharati I as the head of the Math. Unlike the copious epigraphical evidence from the Vijayanagara era, few inscriptions from the Keladi era history are available and the history of this period is mostly discernible from the literary records. The lands held by the monastery and the goods meant for its operation were treated by the Nayakas as tax-exempt and not subject to any tariffs. Additionally, the 17th-century records show that the matha received special gifts from the Lingayat rulers on festive occasions such as
acharavicharas and
Diwali. Some of the Nayaka princes studied at a school run by the monastery.
Maratha era The Sringeri matha was supported by the Maratha rulers when they came to power in the post-Aurangzeb Mughal era. The monastery provided the Marathas with counsel in return as evidenced by over two dozen letters, mostly in the Marathi language and some in Sanskrit using Kannada script. These have been preserved by the monastery. According to the letters and ledger entries, the Maratha rulers delivered gifts and bestowed grants to the monastery between 1738 and 1894. The letters of the Maratha rulers are typically in Marathi, while the replies from the Sringeri pontiff are in Sanskrit. In addition to these records, the monastery literature mention land grants from the Marathas as well as records of the visit by the
jagadguru (pontiff) to Maratha ruled regions and towns such as Pune and Nasik. The religio-political significance of the Sringeri monastery was such that both the Marathas and the Muslim ruler Hyder Ali sought "cordial relations" with it. According to Leela Prasad, after the Maratha ruler Raghunatha Rao invited the Sringeri matha's Jagadguru to visit him and the pontiff accepted the invitation, when Hyder Ali – whose hostility to the Marathas had been legendary – heard about the trip, Hyder Ali sent the Jagadguru gifts and an escort consisting of a palanquin, five horses, an elephant and cash for the travel expenses.
Peshwa Maratha sacking of the temple in 1791 After the Third Anglo–Mysore War in 1791, a group of
Pindaris associated with the Maratha forces passed through Sringeri and looted the monastery temples of their gold and copper, damaged images, and killed some Brahmin priests. The incident became known through a series of letters sent by
Tipu Sultan to the Sringeri Jagadguru. After being aware of the attack, Tipu Sultan sent funds for repairs and restoration, and in one letter requested that the Jagadguru perform rituals for "good showers and crops". Scholars have offered differing interpretations of these events.
Leela Prasad views Tipu Sultan’s correspondence as an instance of religious tolerance and as reflecting the predatory actions of some irregulars in the Maratha army, while A. K. Shastri emphasises the subsequent reconciliation and restoration efforts by the Maratha leadership. Shastri records that the Sringeri pontiff protested by fasting on the banks of the
Tunga River and that, upon learning of the attack, the Maratha Peshwa ordered the recovery of the stolen items and their return to the monastery with compensation. In the following years relations between the Sringeri monastery and the Maratha rulers were restored. Leela Prasad, however, notes that the culprits were never identified and that there is no record of compensation being paid.
British rule The Sringeri monastery has been a historic politico-religious center at least from the 14th century. Along with the Vijayanagara emperors and the Mysore Muslim rulers such as Hyder Ali and Tipu Sultan, the colonial British authorities and their Nayak and Wodeyar dynasty appointees considered the monastery to be a strategically important hub for regional politics. Its operations were a target of surveillance, its collection of Hindu texts on Dharma and its counsel given its regional significance were sought by the British authorities. ==Monastery buildings==