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Annamayya Keerthanas Vinaro Bhagyamu

Annamayya Keerthanas Vinaro Bhagyamu

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अन्नमय्य कीर्तन विनरो भाग्यमु

रागं: शुद्ध धन्यासि

आ: ग2 म1 प नि2 प स

अव: स नि2 प म1 ग2 स

तालं: आदि

पल्लवि

विनरो भाग्यमु विष्णुकथ

वॆनुबलमिदिवो विष्णुकथ ॥ (2.5)

चरणं 1

आदि नुण्डि सन्ध्यादि विधुललो

वेदम्बयिनदि विष्णुकथ । (2)

नादिञ्चीनिदॆ नारदादुलचे

वीथि वीथुलने विष्णुकथ । (2.5)

विनरो भाग्यमु... (1.5)

चरणं 2

वदलक वेदव्यासुलु नुडिविन

विदित पावनमु विष्णुकथ । (2)

सदनम्बैनदि सङ्कीर्तनयै (2)

वॆदकिनचोटने विष्णुकथ ॥ (1)

विनरो भाग्यमु... (1.5)

चरणं 3

गॊल्लॆतलु चल्ललु गॊनकॊनि चिलुकग

वॆल्लि विरियायॆ विष्णुकथ । (2)

इल्लिदॆ श्री वेङ्कटेश्वरु नाममु

वॆल्लगॊलिपॆ नी विष्णुकथ ॥ (2.5)

विनरो भाग्यमु विष्णुकथ

वॆनुबलमिदिवो विष्णुकथ ॥ (2.5)

About This Stotram

Overview

Vinaro Bhagyamu is a Telugu keerthana by Tallapaka Annamacharya (1408–1503 CE) dedicated to Lord Vishnu. The title means "Listen, what good fortune" and the composition emphasizes the spiritual merit of hearing Vishnu's stories and glories. The text references Vishnu's omnipresence in creation and the teachings of sages such as Narada. The composition belongs to the Vaishnava devotional tradition of South India.

What are the benefits of chanting Vinaro Bhagyamu?

  • Emphasizes the act of listening (shravana) to Vishnu's glories as a form of bhakti.
  • Associated with purification of the mind through devotional hearing.
  • Recited during morning and evening worship and Vaishnava festivals.
  • Supports understanding of Vishnu's omnipresence as described in Puranic tradition.
  • Part of the Annamayya Keerthanalu corpus used in temple and home devotion.

When is the best time to recite this?

Morning and evening devotional periods are appropriate. The keerthana is also suited to festivals dedicated to Lord Vishnu. No single prescriptive occasion is specified in tradition beyond general devotional use.

What is the historical and traditional background?

Tallapaka Annamacharya (1408–1503 CE) composed this keerthana during the Vijayanagara Empire as part of his corpus of over 32,000 sankirtanas. His works were largely lost for centuries before being rediscovered inscribed on copper plates at the Tirumala temple in the 20th century. Vinaro Bhagyamu is among the more widely known of his compositions and is frequently sung in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana. It belongs to the Vaishnava Bhakti tradition, which includes shravana (hearing) among the nine modes of devotion described in Puranic texts.

Available scripts

This text is available in 14 scripts: devanagari, tamil, telugu, kannada, malayalam, gujarati, bengali, iast, gurmukhi, oriya, assamese, sinhala, itrans, hk. Use the script selector above to switch between them.

Related Texts

  • Annamayya Keerthanas Enta Matramuna — a keerthana by Annamacharya examining how various traditions perceive the Supreme.
  • Annamayya Keerthanas Tandanana Ahi — a keerthana by Annamacharya on the nature of the Supreme through philosophical devotional verse.