Suntaranāthar, as the saint was known, was a
yogi originally from then Madurai. According to legend, he is believed to have travelled to
Mount Kailash, where he was initiated by the deity
Shiva. After spending 5 years at Mount Kailash, he undertook a journey under the order of Shiva to
Tamilakam to meet his contemporary, the sage
Agastya in
Pothigai Hills. After meeting Agastya, he went to
Chidambaram, and after worshiping Shiva at the
Nataraja Temple, he was about to return to Mount Kailash. During his journey, near Sathanur village (a village near
Aaduthurai), he saw a group of cows crying. He discovered that their cowherd, Mulan, was dead, having been bitten by a snake. Touched by the sight of the cows, he decided to use his yogic powers and move his soul from his body to that of the dead cowherd's, leaving his own body inside a log. On waking up in the body of the cowherd, the cows became happy; he then motioned them towards the village. When the saint wished to return to his own body, he was surprised to find that it was nowhere to be found. At this moment, he heard a divine voice from the sky, that of Shiva, who told him that he had been behind the disappearance of the body. The deity told him that he wished the saint to spread his teachings through the body of Mulan, allowing him to preach to the common folk in the vernacular Tamil spoken by the cowherd, as opposed to the literary Tamil in which the saint was well-versed. Suntaranāthar was henceforth called
Tirumular,
tiru meaning an epithet indicating respect. The saint is regarded to have engaged in meditation under a
peepal tree in
Thiruvavaduthurai, receiving holy hymns in Tamil. These three thousand holy hymns were compiled to become the book called the
Tirumantiram. == See also ==