Mahabharata facts for kids
Hindu texts |
Śruti
Smriti |
The Mahabharata, that is, the great Bharata, is one of the two most important ancient epics of India, the other being the Ramayana. The Mahabharata was compiled in Ancient India. One of the Indian sages (rishi) named Vyasa is believed to have composed the work. The legend states that god Ganesh wrote the Mahabharata while Vyasa dictated the same in city of Rourkela in Odisha State. It is possibly one of the longest work of its kind in the world. The epic contain about 110,000 couplets in eighteen sections. There is also a 19th section named Harivamsha. The Bhagavadgita, a dialogue between Krishna and Arjuna, is a part of the Mahabharata.
Sage Vyasa taught this epic to his son Suka and his students Vaisampayana and others. King Janamejaya, son of Parikshit, and the grandson of the heroes of the epic, performed a great sacrifice (yagna). The epic was retold by Vaisampayana to Janamejaya at the advice of Vyasa. Later on, an other sage Suta retold the Mahabharata similar to Vaisampayana to Janamejaya, to Saunaka and others, during a sacrifice performed by Saunaka in Naimisaranya, which is near Sitapur in Uttar Pradesh.
The Mahabharata in its eighteen sections deals with a number of topics. These topics cover a number of aspects of Hinduism, Hindu mythology, ethics, and the Hindu way of life. One more section is called Harvamsha.
Noted below are few words about the eighteen sections of the Mahabharata. In Mahabharata, these sections are called parvan. A parvan means a book. The names of all parvas or books of the Mahabharata are noted below:
Parva | Title | Contents |
1 | Adi-parva | Introduction, birth and upbringing of the princes. |
2 | Sabha-parva | Life at the court, the game of dice, and the exile of the Pandavas. Maya Danava erects the palace and court (sabha), at Indraprastha. |
3 | Aranyaka-parva (also Vanaparva, Aranyaparva) | The twelve years in exile in the forest (aranya). |
4 | Virata-parva | The year in exile spent at the court of Virata. |
5 | Udyoga-parva | Preparations for war. |
6 | Bhishma-parva | The first part of the great battle, with Bhishma as commander for the Kauravas. |
7 | Drona-parva | The battle continues, with Drona as commander. |
8 | Karna-parva | The battle again, with Karna as commander. |
9 | Shalya-parva | The last part of the battle, with Shalya as commander. |
10 | Sauptika-parva | How Ashvattama and the remaining Kauravas killed the Pandava army in their sleep (Sauptika). |
11 | Stri-parva | Gandhari and the other women (stri) lament the dead. |
12 | Shanti-parva | The crowning of Yudhisthira, and his instructions from Bhishma |
13 | Anusasana-parva | The final instructions (anusasana) from Bhishma. |
14 | Ashvamedhika-parva | The royal ceremony of the ashvamedha conducted by Yudhisthira. |
15 | Ashramavasika-parva | Dhritarashtra, Gandhari and Kunti leave for an ashram, and eventual death in the forest. |
16 | Mausala-parva | The infighting between the Yadavas with maces (mausala). |
17 | Mahaprasthanika-parva | The first part of the path to death (mahaprasthana "great journey") of Yudhisthira and his brothers. |
18 | Svargarohana-parva | The Pandavas return to the spiritual world (svarga). |
19 | Harivamsha | Life of Krishna. |
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Contents
The Pandavas
Kunti wants to fulfill her maternal expectations, but she has no man. She recollects the moment when her first son Karna was conceived from an arcane mantra one sage had given her once. Surya, the Sun God, appeared to her then. Thus, Kunti remembers her secret mantra and gives birth to the five sons, which are referred to as the Pandavas.
Yudhisthira's father was god Yama; Bhima's father was Vayu, Arjuna's father was Indra. Then it was Madri who gave birth to two other sons - the twins, whose fathers were Ashwins (divine twins). Madri's sons are Nakula and Sahadeva. These all are the five Pandavas
Images for kids
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Krishna and Arjuna at Kurukshetra, 18th–19th-century painting.
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Modern depiction of Vyasa narrating the Mahābhārata to Ganesha at the Murudeshwara temple, Karnataka.
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Draupadi with her five husbands – the Pandavas. The central figure is Yudhishthira; the two on the bottom are Bhima and Arjuna. Nakula and Sahadeva, the twins, are standing. Painting by Raja Ravi Varma, c. 1900.
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Arjuna piercing the eye of the fish as depicted in Chennakesava Temple built by Hoysala Empire
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A scene from the Mahābhārata war, Angkor Wat: A black stone relief depicting several men wearing a crown and a dhoti, fighting with spears, swords, and bows. A chariot with half the horse out of the frame is seen in the middle.
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Gandhari, blindfolded, supporting Dhrtarashtra and following Kunti when Dhritarashtra became old and infirm and retired to the forest. A miniature painting from a 16th-century manuscript of part of the Razmnama, a Persian translation of the Mahabharata
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The Pandavas and Krishna in an act of the Javanese wayang wong performance
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Krishna as portrayed in Yakshagana from Karnataka which is based largely on stories of Mahabharata
See also
In Spanish: Mahabharata para niños