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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › VallabhaVallabha - Wikipedia

    Vallabha, Vallabha Acharya or Vallabhācārya (1479–1531 CE) was an Indian saint and philosopher. He founded the Krishna -centered Pushtimarg sect of Vaishnavism in the Braj (Vraja) region of India , and propounded the philosophy of Shuddhadvaita .

  2. Vallabha Acharia (Champaran, Chhattisgarh-actual distrito de Raipur-, 4 de abril de 1479 − 1531) fue un pensador religioso indio. Etimología. Vāllabha: ‘querido’, y āchārya: ‘maestro [que enseña con su conducta, achara]’. Historia. Los ancestros de Vallabha vivían en Andhra Pradesh.

  3. 12 de abr. de 2024 · Vallabha was a Hindu philosopher and founder of the important Vallabhacharya (or Vallabha Sampradaya) devotional sect, also known as the Pushtimarg (from Sanskrit pushtimarga, “way of flourishing”). Born to a Telegu Brahman family, Vallabha showed precocity in spiritual and intellectual matters.

  4. academia-lab.com › enciclopedia › vallabhaVallabha _ AcademiaLab

    El nombre Vallabha significa amado o amante, y es un nombre de Vishnu y Krishna. Vallabhacharya estudió los Vedas, Upanishads, Puranas, Shat Darshan cuando era niño, luego viajó por todo el subcontinente indio durante 20 años. Se convirtió en uno de los líderes importantes del movimiento devocional Bhakti.

  5. Vallabha, or Sri Vallabhacharya (1479 - 1531), was a devotional philosopher, who founded the Pushti sect in India and the philosophy of Shuddha advaita (pure non-dualism). [1] Vallabha is regarded as an acharya (embodiment of a divine personality) and guru within the Vaishnava traditions.

  6. 30 de nov. de 2015 · Vallabha or Vallabhācārya (b. 1479–d. 1531) was the founder of the theistic school of Vedānta known as Pure Non-Dualism or Śuddhādvaita Vedānta. Vallabhas philosophy proclaimed Kṛṣṇa as the fullest manifestation of Ultimate Reality ( brahman) and became the philosophical basis for a devotional ( bhakti) community ...

  7. Vallabha is said to have married on Kṛṣṇa's instructions, producing two sons to act as his spiritual successors, Gopīnātha (who died young) and Viṭṭalanātha. Shortly before his death in Vārāṇasī, Vallabha became a saṃnyāsin.