Śabda Brahman and the Ḍamaru: A Mytho-Linguistic Exploration of Word Origin

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Śabda Brahman and the Ḍamaru: A Mytho-Linguistic Exploration of Word Origin

Chandrani Chakraborty

Abstract

The legend of Śiva’s Ḍamaru, a small hourglass-shaped drum whose twenty-two beats are believed to have generated the Sanskrit alpha syllables, occupies a unique place at the intersection of mythology, phonetics, and the philosophy of language. This paper examines the creation of words through Śiva’s Ḍamaru as a multifaceted phenomenon: a cosmological narrative of sound giving rise to speech, a symbolic template for the evolution of linguistic structures, and a cultural metaphor for the continuity of sacred knowledge. Drawing on primary Sanskrit sources such as the Śiva Purāṇa and traditional commentaries on the Maheshvara Sūtras, as well as modern scholarship in linguistics and religious studies, the paper examines how myth encodes theories of phoneme organization, rhythm, and articulation long before formal linguistic science. It also analyses the concept of Śabda Brahman (sound as ultimate reality) to show how the myth of the Ḍamaru informs both spiritual practice and pedagogical transmission of Vedic chanting. By placing the narrative in dialogue with contemporary theories of sound symbolism and cognitive linguistics, the study argues that the Ḍamaru functions not merely as a ritual instrument but as a cosmological archetype for language creation, bridging metaphysics and semiotics in the Indian intellectual tradition.

Keywords: Śiva’s Ḍamaru, Maheshvara Sūtras, Śabda Brahman, Cosmic rhythm, Phoneme organization.

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