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ShivaJi, Jai Singh, and Combat Theology In Praxis

Author: Curwen Ares Rolinson Year: 2023 Original file: /CLIPPINGS/ShivaJi, Jai Singh, and Combat Theology In Praxis.md Source type: article (web) Original URL: https://aryaakasha.com/2023/06/05/shivaji-jai-singh-and-combat-theology-in-praxis/

Core Argument

Combat Theology constitutes a genuine parallel battlespace — as intricate and strategically consequential as conventional military operations. Jai Singh's 2-crore-rupee, 400-Brahmin, 3-month ritual preparation against ShivaJi illustrates the principle: the aim was not generic divine favor but the co-option of specific deity-forms (Bagalamukhi, Kalaratri) operative in ShivaJi's success. The operation failed not because the framework was wrong but because ShivaJi's Goddess-connexion was too deep to be severed by "surface" ritual countermeasures — Devi had already given him operative command direction, not merely blessing.

Key Contributions

  • Combat Theology framework: parallel battlespace with four operational layers (bilateral prayer → multilateral contest → co-option of opponent's deity-forms → direct divine intervention and command)
  • Resonancy principle: a deity-form can be operationally relevant through structural correspondence with Her domain without direct invocation by either party
  • Bagalamukhi as the Mahavidya of invocatory paralysis: seizure of the tongue; Vak as capturable resource; SBr III 2 1 19-24 (ritual combat between Gods and Demons over sacred speech) and SBr I 6 3 10 (Vrtra's creation-spell reversed by single syllable) as primary Vedic templates
  • Kalaratri / Death-Night from Sauptika Parva (MBh X §8 Ganguli): night raids, psychological terror, and internal disunity as Her operational domain; soldiers dreaming of Her before Ashvatthama's strike
  • Jai Singh's dual invocation of Bagalamukhi-Kalaratri as unusual theological conjunction without other clear attestation
  • Active integration thesis: operative theology requires perception of which mythic patterns are active + identification of the correct specific deity-forms + functional capacity to act on that identification
  • Devi's direct speech to ShivaJi (Sabhasad Bakhar, Sen trans.): Goddess as operational commander issuing tactical directives, not recipient of petition; 27-generation covenant; "Care for the kingdom is Mine"
  • Non-believer epistemology: one need not be a believer to find oneself swept up within the inherent logic of Myth and Ritual
  • Sun Tzu explicit citation: "Your opponent is choleric. Irritate him." applied to ShivaJi's operational approach against Shaista Khan and the Mecca convoy
  • Baraat infiltration (Lal Mahal) as three-layer intelligence operation: inside asset + layout knowledge + cultural form exploit
  • Diler Khan / Mughal two-commander dynamic: Aurangzeb's distrust of Hindu Jai Singh encoded in the double command structure
  • Vijayanagara Mrgayatra as second Combat Theology case study: Muslim forces disrupted the rite, charged by the RudraGanika

Limitations

  • Practitioner-devotional register throughout; Rolinson writes from within the tradition, not as an external academic observer; theological causal claims are interpretive, not evidential
  • Historical evidence drawn from Marathi chronicle sources (Sabhasad Bakhar, Takakhav's Life of ShivaJi Maharaj) via Sen and other translations; these are not independent primary sources read by Rolinson directly
  • Specific verse references (SBr III 2 1 19-24, SBr I 6 3 10, MBh X §8 Ganguli) cited but not quoted at length — [PLAUSIBLE — verify against Eggeling's SBE translation of SBr and Ganguli's MBh before treating as settled Vedic scholarship]
  • "Bagalamukhi-Kalaratri" conjunction is described by Rolinson himself as unusual — "no other attestation for such a conjunction" found; interpretation of why Jai Singh chose this combination is Rolinson's own
  • The Sabhasad Bakhar is a Marathi text written approximately 32 years after the events; Rolinson acknowledges it has a pro-Shivaji framing that glosses over the "surrender" element of Shivaji's agreement with Jai Singh
  • Shivaji-as-Amsha possibility is raised but not advanced; Rolinson explicitly does not seek to argue this position

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