Tamil Siddha Medicine Books

Siddha Vaithiya Agarathi (சித்த வைத்திய அகராதி) is a dictionary/glossary of siddha medicinemainly deals with the plant kingdom of Siddha Medicine. The original publication in hard copy (first edition) done on 1928 by the Great Legend 'Raama. They have written many important books on medicine, alchemy, spirituality, etc. 18 Siddhars of South India. Agathiyar-father of Tamil literature; Agathiyar is the most renowned siddhar in the history of Tamil. He was the father of Tamil literature. The compiling of first Tamil grammar Agathiym went to him.

Part of a series on
Shaivism
Paramashiva
(Supreme being)
Shiva
Shakti
  • Kali
  • Upanishads (Svetasvatara)
  • Agamas and Tantras
Three Components
Three bondages
  • Maya
  • Yamas-Niyamas
  • Guru-Linga-Jangam
Adi Margam
Mantra Margam

Saiddhantika

Non - Saiddhantika

  • Kashmir Shaivism
    • Kaula: Trika-Yamala-Kubjika-Netra
Others
  • Veerashaiva (Lingayatism)

Siddha Medicine is one the division of Indian Systems of Medicines. It was developed by 18 Siddhars, with its own philosophical sciencetific methods. Strictly speaking Siddha Medicine is the earliest medicine ever documented in the World. The time period of Siddha Medicine Starts from the Time period of Tamil Language.

Siddha (Sanskrit: सिद्धsiddha; 'perfected one') is a term that is used widely in Indian religions and culture. It means 'one who is accomplished'.[1][2] It refers to perfected masters who have achieved a high degree of physical as well as spiritual perfection or enlightenment. In Jainism, the term is used to refer to the liberated souls. Siddha may also refer to one who has attained a siddhi, paranormal capabilities.

Siddhas may broadly refer to siddhars, naths, ascetics, sadhus, or yogis because they all practice sādhanā.[3]

The Svetasvatara (II.12) presupposes a Siddha body.[4]

  • 2Hinduism
  • 4Siddha Sampradaya

Jainism[edit]

Although the siddhas (the liberated beings) are formless and without a body, this is how the Jain temples often depict them.
Siddhashila (the realm of the liberated beings) according to Jain cosmology

In Jainism, the term siddha is used to refer the liberated souls who have destroyed all karmas and have obtained moksha.[5] They are free from the transmigratory cycle of birth and death (saṃsāra) and are above Arihantas (omniscient beings). Siddhas do not have a body; they are soul in its purest form. They reside in the Siddhashila, which is situated at the top of the Universe.[6] They are formless and have no passions and therefore are free from all temptations. They do not have any karmas and they do not collect any new karmas.

According to Jains, Siddhas have eight specific characteristics or qualities. Ancient Tamil Jain Classic 'Choodamani Nigandu' describes the eight characteristics in a poem, which is given below.[7]

'கடையிலா ஞானத்தோடு காட்சி வீரியமே இன்ப
மிடையுறு நாமமின்மை விதித்த கோத்திரங்களின்மை
அடைவிலா ஆயுஇன்மை அந்தராயங்கள் இன்மை
உடையவன் யாவன் மற்று இவ்வுலகினுக்கு இறைவனாமே'

'The soul that has infinite knowledge (Ananta jnāna, கடையிலா ஞானம்), infinite vision or wisdom (Ananta darshana, கடையிலா காட்சி),infinite power (Ananta labdhi, கடையிலா வீரியம்), infinite bliss (Ananta sukha, கடையிலா இன்பம்),without name (Akshaya sthiti, நாமமின்மை), without association to any caste (Being vitāraga, கோத்திரமின்மை),infinite life span (Being arupa, ஆயுள் இன்மை) and without any change (Aguruladhutaa, அழியா இயல்பு) is God.'

The following table summarizes the eight supreme qualities of a liberated soul.[8]

QualityMeaningManifestation
Kśāyika samyaktvainfinite faith or belief in the tattvas or essential principles of realitymanifested on the destruction of the faith-deluding (darśana mohanīya) karma
Kevala Jnānainfinite knowledgeon the destruction of the knowledge-obscuring (jnānāvarnīya) karma.
Kevaladarśanainfinite perceptionon the destruction of the perception-obscuring (darśanāvarnīya) karma
Anantavīryainfinite poweron the destruction of the obstructive (antarāya) karma
Sūksmatvafinenessmanifested on the destruction of the life- determining (āyuh) karma
Avagāhaninter-penetrabilitymanifested on the destruction of the name-determining (nāma) karma
Agurulaghutvaliterally, neither heavy nor lightmanifested on the destruction of the status-determining (gotra) karma
Avyābādhaundisturbed, infinite blissmanifested on the destruction of the feeling-producing (vedanīya) karma

Because of the quality of Sūksmatva, the liberated soul is beyond sense-perception and its knowledge of the substances is direct, without the use of the senses and the mind. The quality of avagāhan means that the liberated soul does not hinder the existence of other such souls in the same space.

A soul after attaining Siddhahood goes to the top of the loka (as per jain cosmology) and stays there till infinity. Siddhas are formless and dwell in Siddhashila with the above-mentioned eight qualities.

Thiruvalluvar in his Tamil book Thirukural refers to the eight qualities of God,[9] in one of his couplet poems.

Hinduism[edit]

In Hinduism, the first usage of the term Siddha occurs in the Maitreya Upanishad in chapter Adhya III where the writer of the section declares 'I am Siddha.'

Siddha or siddhar (Tamil tradition)[edit]

Part of a series on
History of Tamil Nadu

In Tamil Nadu, South India, a siddha (see Siddhar) refers to a being who has achieved a high degree of physical as well as spiritual perfection or enlightenment. The ultimate demonstration of this is that siddhas allegedly attained physical immortality. Thus siddha, like siddhar, refers to a person who has realised the goal of a type of sadhana and become a perfected being. In Tamil Nadu, South India, where the siddha tradition is still practiced, special individuals are recognized as and called siddhas (or siddhars or cittars) who are on the path to that assumed perfection after they have taken special secret rasayanas to perfect their bodies, in order to be able to sustain prolonged meditation along with a form of pranayama which considerably reduces the number of breaths they take. Siddha were said to have special powers including flight. These eight powers are collectively known as attamasiddhigal (ashtasiddhi). In Hindu cosmology, Siddhaloka is a subtle world (loka) where perfected beings (siddhas) take birth. They are endowed with the eight primary siddhis at birth.

The 18 siddhars are listed below.

  1. Kamalamuni
  2. Kuthambai
  3. Korakkar
  4. Thanvandri
  5. Konganar
  6. Sattamuni
  7. Vanmeegar
  8. Ramadevar
  9. Nandeeswarar (Nandidevar)
  10. Edaikkadar
  11. Machamuni
  12. Karuvoorar
  13. Sundarandandar

Kashmir Shaivism[edit]

In the Hindu philosophy (of Kashmir Shaivism), siddha refers to a Siddha Guru who can by way of Shaktipat initiate disciples into Yoga. A Siddha, in TamilSiddhar or Chitthar (see Chit/Consciousness), means 'one who is accomplished' and refers to perfected masters who, according to Hindu belief, have transcended the ahamkara (ego or I-maker), have subdued their minds to be subservient to their Awareness, and have transformed their bodies (composed mainly of dense Rajotama gunas) into a different kind of body dominated by sattva. This is usually accomplished only by persistent meditation.

Siddhashrama[edit]

In Hindu theology, Siddhashrama is a secret land deep in the Himalayas, where great yogis, sadhus and sages who are siddhas live. The concept is similar to Tibetan mystical land of Shambhala.

Siddhashrama is referred in many Indian epics and Puranas including Ramayana and Mahabharata. In Valmiki's Ramayana it is said that Viswamitra had his hermitage in Siddhashrama, the erstwhile hermitage of Vishnu, when he appeared as the Vamanaavatar. He takes Rama and Lakshmana to Siddhashrama to exterminate the rakshasas who are disturbing his religious sacrifices (i.28.1-20).[10][11]

Siddha Sampradaya[edit]

The famous mahasiddhaVirūpa, 16th century

Whenever siddha is mentioned, the 84 siddhas and 9 nathas are remembered, and it is this tradition of siddha which is known as the Nath tradition. Siddha is a term used for both mahasiddhas and naths So a siddha may mean a siddha, a mahasiddha or a nath. The three words are used interchangeably.

The eighty-four Siddhas in the Varna(na)ratnakara[edit]

A list of eighty-four siddhas is found in a manuscript (manuscript no 48/34 of the Asiatic Society of Bengal) dated Lakshmana Samvat 388 (1506) of a medieval Maithili work, the Varna(na)ratnākara written by Jyotirishwar Thakur, the court poet of King Harisimhadeva of Mithila (reigned 1300–1321). An interesting feature of this list is that the names of the most revered naths are incorporated in this list along with Buddhist siddhācāryas. The names of the siddhas found in this list are:[12][13]

Tamil
  1. Minanātha
  2. Gorakshanātha
  3. Chauranginātha
  4. Chāmarinātha
  5. Tantipā
  6. Hālipā
  7. Kedāripā
  8. Dhongapā
  9. Dāripā
  10. Kapāli
  11. Kamāri
  12. Kānha
  13. Unmana
  14. Kāndali
  15. Dhovi
  16. Jālandhara
  17. Tongi
  18. Mavaha
  19. Nāgārjuna
  20. Dauli
  21. Bhishāla
  22. Achiti
  23. Champaka
  24. Dhentasa
  25. Bhumbhari
  26. Bākali
  27. Tuji
  28. Charpati
  29. Bhāde
  30. Chāndana
  31. Kāmari
  32. Karavat
  33. Dharmapāpatanga
  34. Bhadra
  35. Pātalibhadra
  36. Palihiha
  37. Bhānu
  38. Mina
  39. Nirdaya
  40. Savara
  41. Sānti
  42. Bhartrihari
  43. Bhishana
  44. Bhati
  45. Gaganapā
  46. Gamāra
  47. Menurā
  48. Kumāri
  49. Jivana
  50. Aghosādhava
  51. Girivara
  52. Siyāri
  53. Nāgavāli
  54. Bibhavat
  55. Sāranga
  56. Vivikadhaja
  57. Magaradhaja
  58. Achita
  59. Bichita
  60. Nechaka
  61. Chātala
  62. Nāchana
  63. Bhilo
  64. Pāhila
  65. Pāsala
  66. Kamalakangāri
  67. Chipila
  68. Govinda
  69. Bhima
  70. Bhairava
  71. Bhadra
  72. Bhamari
  73. Bhurukuti

The Siddhas in the Hatha Yoga Pradipika[edit]

In the first upadeśa (chapter) of the Hatha Yoga Pradipika, a 15th-century text, a list of yogis is found, who are described as the Mahasiddhas. This list has a number of names common with those found in the list of the Varna(na)ratnākara:[12][14]

  1. Ādinātha
  2. Matsyendra
  3. Śāvara
  4. Ānandabhairava
  5. Chaurangi
  6. Minanātha
  7. Gorakṣanātha
  8. Virupākṣa
  9. Bileśaya
  10. Manthāna
  11. Bhairava
  12. Siddhibuddha
  13. Kanthaḍi
  14. Koraṃṭaka
  15. Surānanda
  16. Siddhapāda
  17. Charpaṭi
  18. Kānerī
  19. Pūjyapāda
  20. Nityanātha
  21. Nirañjana
  22. Kapālī
  23. Bindunātha
  24. Kākachaṇḍīśvarā
  25. Allāma
  26. Prabhudeva
  27. Ghoḍā
  28. Chholī
  29. Ṭiṃṭiṇi
  30. Bhānukī
  31. Nāradeva
  32. Khaṇḍakāpālika

See also[edit]

  • Cit 'absolute consciousness'

References[edit]

  1. ^'Definition: Mahasiddha (Indian Adept) & Siddha Appearance'. himalayanart.org.
  2. ^'Siddha-asana The accomplished or adept pose'. santosha.com.
  3. ^Zimmermann, Marion (2003). A short introduction: The Tamil Siddhas and the Siddha medicine of Tamil Nadu. GRIN Verlag. p. 4. ISBN9783638187411.
  4. ^P. 156 Buddhist sects and sectarianism By Bibhuti Baruah
  5. ^'The purpose of life in Jainism'. religionfacts.com.
  6. ^'Jainism Cosmology'. hinduwebsite.com.
  7. ^J. Srichandran(1981),ஜைன தத்துவமும் பஞ்ச பரமேஷ்டிகளும், Vardhamanan Padhipakam, Chennai, Page 18
  8. ^Jain, Vijay K (26 March 2014). Acarya Pujyapada's Istopadesa – the Golden Discourse. p. 5. ISBN9788190363969.
  9. ^Ashraf, N.V.K. Tirukkural: Getting close to the original In Spirit, Content and Style, https://web.archive.org/web/20080630190537/http://www.geocities.com/nvashraf/kureng/close01.htm, accessed on 22 March 2008
  10. ^Vyas, R.T. (ed.) (1992). Vālmīki Rāmāyaṇa, Text as Constituted in its Critical Edition. Vadodara: Oriental Institute, Vadodara. p. 40.CS1 maint: Extra text: authors list (link)
  11. ^Hanumanta Rao, Desiraju (1998). 'Valmiki Ramayana, Bala Kanda, Chapter 29'. valmikiramayan.net website. Retrieved 21 October 2009.
  12. ^ abDasgupta, Sashibhusan (1995). Obscure Religious Cults, Firma K.L.M., Calcutta, ISBN81-7102-020-8, pp.203ff, 204
  13. ^Shastri Haraprasad (ed.) (1916, 3rd edition 2006). Hajar Bacharer Purano Bangala Bhasay Bauddhagan O Doha (in Bengali), Kolkata: Vangiya Sahitya Parishad, pp.xxxv-vi
  14. ^Sinh, Pancham (tr.) (1914). 'Hatha Yoga Pradipika, Chapter 1'. sacred-texts.com website. Retrieved 12 November 2009.

External links[edit]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Siddha.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Siddha&oldid=907153918'
(Redirected from Solar therapy)
This article is part of a series on
Alternative and pseudo‑medicine
  • Quackery (Health fraud)
  • Cancer treatments
  • Chiropractic
  • Colon cleansing
  • Energy medicine
  • Homeopathy
  • Orthomolecular medicine
  • HIV/AIDS denialism
  • Vaccine hesitancy
  • African
  • Ayurveda
  • Chinese
Part of a series on
Tamils
  • Tamilakam
Tamil Australians, French Tamils, British Tamils, Tamil Italians, Tamil Indonesians, Tamil Canadians, Tamil Americans, Tamil South Africans, Myanmar Tamils, Tamil Mauritians, Tamil Germans, Tamil Pakistanis, Tamil Seychellois, Tamil New Zealanders, Swiss Tamils, Dutch Tamils

Siddha medicine (Tamil: சித்த மருத்துவம், citta maruttuvam?) is a pseudoscientific system of traditional medicine originating in ancient Tamilakam (Tamil Nadu) in South India and Sri Lanka.[1][2]

Traditionally, it is taught that the siddhars laid the foundation for this system of medication. Siddhars were spiritual adepts who possessed the ashta siddhis, or the eight supernatural powers. Nandhisar is considered the first siddha and the guru of all siddhars; the siddha system is believed to have been handed over to him by Shiva.[3]

Nissan Datascan Ii Keygen Mac. Nissan DataScan II is an application developed by NissanDataScan, L.L.C. We know of versions 2.5, 1.5, 1.2. Version 2.53 is available for download at our site. Download: Nissan Datascan 2 Full Version, Downloads Found: 12, Includes: Crack Serial Keygen, Date Added: Today. NISSAN DATA SCAN. Nissan datascan ii keygen generator corel. Nissan Datascan Ii Keygen Generator. NISSAN DATA SCAN. Nissan DataScan I. Functions; Supported. The Nissan DataScan II for Android is intended for newer Nissan and Infiniti cars equipped with a grey. This video shows the use of Nissan DataScan II software to program new transponder keys. Most new Nissan cars have a build in immobiliser and any.

The Ministry of Ayurveda, Yoga and Naturopathy, Unani, Siddha and Homoeopathy of the Government of India coordinates and promotes research in the fields of ayurveda and Siddha medicine.[4] The Central Council of Indian Medicine (CCIM), a statutory body established in 1971 under AYUSH, monitors higher education in areas of Indian medicine, including Siddha medicine.[5] To fight bioprospecting and unethical patents, India set up the Traditional Knowledge Digital Library in 2001 as a repository of 223,000 formulations of various systems of medicine common in India, such as ayurveda, unani, Siddha medicine and homeopathy.[6][7]

History[edit]

The Siddha science is a traditional treatment system generated from Tamil culture. Palm leaf manuscripts say that the Siddha system was first described by Lord Shiva to his wife Parvati. Parvati explained all this knowledge to her son Lord Muruga. He taught all this knowledge to his disciple sage Agasthya. Agasthya taught 18 Siddhars and they spread this knowledge to human beings.[8]

Siddha is focused on 'Ashtamahasiddhi,' the eight supernatural power. Those who attained or achieved these powers are known as Siddhars. There were 18 important Siddhars in olden days and they developed this system of medicine. Hence, it is called Siddha medicine. The Siddhars wrote their knowledge in palm leaf manuscripts, fragments of which were found in parts of South India. It is believed that some families may possess more fragments but keep them solely for their own use. There is a huge collection of Siddha manuscripts kept by traditional Siddha families.[8]

According to Manikandan, there were 22 principal siddhars. Of these 22, Agasthya is believed to be the father of siddha medicine. Siddhas believed that a healthy soul can only be developed through a healthy body. So they developed methods and medication that are believed to strengthen their physical body and thereby their souls. Men and women who dedicated their lives into developing the system were called Siddhars. They practised intense yogic practices, including years of periodic fasting and meditation, and were believed to have achieved supernatural powers and gained the supreme wisdom and overall immortality. Through this spiritually attained supreme knowledge, they wrote scriptures on all aspects of life, from arts to science and truth of life to miracle cure for diseases.[9]

From the manuscripts, the siddha system of medicine developed into part of Indian medical science. Today there are recognized siddha medical colleges, run under the government universities, where siddha medicine is taught[citation needed].

Feb 01, 2014  Office 2014 Crack, Easy Microsoft Office 2014 Professional Plus Activation Crack, crack office 2014, Office 2013 Patch Activator, Crack + Serial Number Microsoft Office 2013 Preview, Microsoft. Microsoft Office 2014 free. download full Version.,microsoft office 2011 mac,microsoft office 2010 professional plus,microsoft office software,microsoft word 2010 trial,microsoft office email,microsoft excel free,microsoft word for mac free download,free word download,office 2010 home and student,office software,office 365 trial,ms office. AutoCAD 2014 Crack, Keygen Free Product Key Full Version AutoCAD 2014 Crack Latest version is 2D and 3D CAD software which SketchUp Pro 2016 Crack + License Key Free Download May 26, 2018 – by Crack_Software 0. Aug 11, 2014  Office 2013 Product Key Free (2014) Download here: Microsoft office 2013 product key Microsoft office 2013 product key free Microsoft. Free keygen office 2014.

Most Siddha medical practitioners are traditionally trained, usually in families and by gurus (teachers). Pdf. When the guru is a martial arts teacher, he is also known as an ashan. They make a diagnosis after a patient's visit and set about to refer to their manuscripts for the appropriate remedies, which a true blue physician compounds by himself or herself, from thousands of herbal and herbo-mineral resources. The methodology of siddha thought has formulated curious remedies which may sometimes have more than 250 ingredients.

Tamil Maruthuvam Siddha Medicine

World Siddha Day[edit]

After former Chief Minister Karunanidhi's announcement of Tamil New Year's Day as World Siddha Day, the first World Siddha Day was celebrated on 14 April 2009, addressed by his Excellency Shri Surjit Singh Barnala, Governor of Tamil Nadu.[10] The second World Siddha Day was celebrated in a grand manner on 14 April 2010, at Image Auditorium, Adyar, Chennai; more than 2000 students, post graduates, practitioners and traditional vaidyas participated in the celebration.[11] In connection with the celebrations, a website was launched.[12] The third World Siddha day was celebrated at Trivandrum, Kerala, where Siddha doctors met on 14 and 15 April 2011.

Concept of disease and cause[edit]

When the normal equilibrium of the three humors — Vaadham, Pittham and Kapam — is disturbed, disease is caused. The factors assumed to affect this equilibrium are environment, climatic conditions, diet, physical activities, and stress. Under normal conditions, the ratio between Vaadham, Pittham, and Kapam are 4:2:1, respectively.[13]

Tamil Siddha Medicine Bookstore

According to the Siddha medicine system, diet and lifestyle play a major role in health and in curing diseases. This concept of the Siddha medicine is termed as pathiyam and apathiyam, which is essentially a rule based system with a list of 'do's and don'ts'.

Diagnosis[edit]

In diagnosis, examination of eight items is required which is commonly known as 'enn vakaith thervu'. These are:

  1. Na (tongue): black in Vaatham, yellow or red in pitham, white in kapam, ulcerated in anaemia.
  2. Varnam (colour): dark in Vaatham, yellow or red in pitham, pale in kapam.
  3. Kural (voice): normal in Vaatham, high-pitched in pitham, low-pitched in kapam, slurred in alcoholism.
  4. Kan (eyes): muddy conjunctiva, yellowish or red in pitham, pale in kapam.
  5. Thodal (touch): dry in Vaatham, warm in pitham, chill in kapam, sweating in different parts of the body.
  6. Malam (stool): black stools indicate Vaatham, yellow pitham, pale in kapam, dark red in ulcer and shiny in terminal illness.
  7. Neer (urine): early morning urine is examined; straw color indicates indigestion, reddish-yellow color in excessive heat, rose in blood pressure, saffron color in jaundice, and looks like meat washed water in renal disease.
  8. Naadi (pulse): the confirmatory method recorded on the radial artery.[14]

Tamil Siddha Medicine Books List

Drugs[edit]

The drugs used by the Siddhars could be classified into three groups: thavaram (herbal product), thadhu (inorganic substances) and jangamam (animal products).[13] The Thadhu drugs are further classified as: uppu (water-soluble inorganic substances or drugs that give out vapour when put into fire), pashanam (drugs not dissolved in water but emit vapour when fired), uparasam (similar to pashanam but differ in action), loham (not dissolved in water but melt when fired), rasam (drugs which are soft), and ghandhagam (drugs which are insoluble in water, like sulphur).[15]

Siddha today[edit]

The Tamil Nadu state runs a 5.5-year course in Siddha medicine (BSMS: Bachelor in Siddha Medicine and Surgery). The Indian Government also gives its focus on Siddha, by starting up medical colleges and research centers like National Institute of Siddha[16] and Central Council for Research in Siddha.[17] Commercially, Siddha medicine is practiced by Siddha referred in Tamil as vaithiyars.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

Siddha Maruthuvam Tips In Tamil

  1. ^Recipes for Immortality : Healing, Religion, and Community in South India: Healing, Religion, and Community in South India, p.93, Wellington Richard S Weiss, Oxford University Press, 22-Jan-2009
  2. ^The Encyclopedia of Ayurvedic Massage, John Douillard, p. 3, North Atlantic Books, 2004
  3. ^'Siddha'. Department of Ayurveda, Yoga and Naturopathy, Unani, Siddha and Homoeopathy, Govt. of India.
  4. ^'About us'. CCRAS.
  5. ^CCIMArchived 26 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^Traditional Knowledge Digital Library website.
  7. ^'Know Instances of Patenting on the UES of Medicinal Plants in India'. PIB, Ministry of Environment and Forests. 6 May 2010.
  8. ^ ab'Siddha - Origin'. CCRAS, Department of AYUSH, Indian Government. Retrieved 10 November 2011.
  9. ^'Ayurveda & Siddha'(PDF). Department of Scientific & Industrial Research, Indian Government. Retrieved 10 November 2011.
  10. ^'World Siddha Day'. The Hindu. Erode, India. 16 April 2009.
  11. ^'Siddha Day to be observed on 14 April'. News Today. Chennai, India. 24 March 2010.
  12. ^[1]
  13. ^ abMaster Murugan, Chillayah (20 October 2012). 'Siddha Therapy, Natural Remedies and Self-Treatment'. Varma Kalai. Retrieved 31 May 2013.
  14. ^'Pulse Reading in Siddha | National Health Portal of India'. www.nhp.gov.in. Retrieved 5 August 2017.
  15. ^'Herbs used in Siddha medicine for arthritis - A review'(PDF). Indian Journal of Traditional Knowledge. October 2007. Retrieved 10 November 2011.
  16. ^'National Institute of Siddha'. Chennai, India: NIS, Chennai. Retrieved 25 December 2010.
  17. ^'Central Council for Research in Ayurveda & Siddha'. India: CCRAS. Retrieved 25 December 2010.

External links[edit]

Siddha medicine list in tamil
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Siddha_medicine&oldid=912348672'