suryag wrote:Based on Ramay garu's advice i started uttering "om mahapaathaka nashaniya namaha" with goddess Saraswati in mind and sometimes in the sleep i feel i am standing before her and suddenly she takes the veena and hits me on my head with that

so am not sure what to make of it(btw havent done any maha paap until now) it is amusing how our subconscious brain works at times
I don't know anything about this, but I heard a puranic story: a king starts chanting(Japa) of pancha-akshari mahamantra. He stands in river while doing so. He practices it for sometime. After a while, he starts witnessing black crows coming out of his body in droves and then burning to ashes and falling down on ground. The king is frightened and goes to his guru. His guru tells him that those crows symbolize his sins(accumulated over various lives). By chanting the mantra, all his sins of many lives are being cleansed, according to his guru.
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Agnimitra wrote:
Thus we have:
1. Purusha
2. Prakriti
3. The Organism - a particular degree of disorderly or harmonious interaction between Purusha and Prakriti
4. Laws and Formulas in relation to the Organism in any time-based Condition - Maya
Agnimitra(Pavan?

) saar,
I am afraid that what you are saying is completely different. In sankhya, there are only two entities:
Purusha and Prakriti.
Prakriti comprises of:
01-05) Pancha-indriya(ears, eyes, nose, tongue, skin)
05-10) Pancha-tanmatra(sound, sight, smell, taste, touch)
10-15) Pancha-karmendriya(legs, hands, anus, genitals, mouth)
15-20) Pancha-bhutas(Akasha/Ether, Vayu/Air, Tejas/Energy, Apas/Liquid, Bhumi/earth)
21) Manas/Mind
22) Ahamkara/Ego
23) Mahat or Buddhi/Intellect
24) Mula Prakriti.
Mula Prakriti is made up of 3 gunas: Sattva, Rajas, and Tamas. Everything manifests from Mula Prakriti. But, Mula Prakriti itself is considered inert on its own.
Purusha is devoid of Gunas. He is devoid of all the other 23 aspects(that have been listed above) also. So, Purusha is Self/Atma/Brahman. Purusha is not inert. But, it does not act by itself. Prakriti is inert, but has the ability to act. The combination of Purusha and Prakriti leads to the manifestation of the world. The world cannot exist only due to Prakriti or only due to Purusha.
The goal is to experience this Purusha. The method is to filter out all aspects of Prakriti until only the Purusha is left. This is neti(not this) neti(not this) method.
To give an example, one is trying to find a small diamond in a sand. So, each particle of sand is picked and is checked whether it is diamond or not. If it is not the diamond(i.e., if it does not have the qualities of a diamond), then it is discarded. Then, one goes to the next particle and repeats the procedure. This goes on until the diamond is found or all the sand particles have been exhausted.
The same procedure occurs here. Once the Purusha is found(i.e., experienced), it is Moksha(liberation). A Purusha which is under the bondage of Prakriti is called Jeeva. A Purusha with is not in such bondage is called Mukta.
In Yoga, the concept of Ishwara is brought. In Sankhya, due to its procedure(Gyana Marga) there is no scope for the concept of Ishwara. But, in Yoga, there is concept of Ishwara. Why bring Ishwara into the equation?
johneeG wrote:Yoga is based on the same philosophy as Sankhya but with a major digression. Yoga accepts Ishwara. Why is there a need to accept Ishwara?
Prakriti is inert(jada). It cannot act by itself. Purusha is under bondage. So, who created the Prakriti and Purusha? Prakriti cannot be the creator because it is inert. So, the creator must be Purusha only. But, the Purusha is under bondage. So, Yoga brings in Ishwara to explain this point.
Yoga says that it is Ishwara who created the Purusha and Prakriti. Who is this Ishwara?
Ishwara is defined in Yoga(Patanjali) as a Special Purusha who is devoid of
a) kleshas
b) karma
c) vipaka
d) Ashaya
So, Yoga defines Ishwara as a special case in Purusha within the Sankhya scheme.
In Vedhantha, Prakriti is called Maya(not the relationship between Prakriti and Purusha). Infact, it is Mula Prakriti which is called Maya.
Maayam Tu prakrithim vidyaat,maayinam tu maheswarah-Svestasvatara Upanishad.
Maya is Prakriti and Mayina(Purusha) is Shiva. Shiva-Shakti, Prakriti-Purusha, Brahman-Maya. Same concepts. One could even add, Sri Rama-Sita Amma to the list.
The basic point about Adhvaitha Vedhantha is:
Brahma Sathyam Jagath mithya, jeevo brahma eva na aparah
What does Jagath mithya mean?(This is where Vedhantha seemingly diverges from Sankhya and Yoga)
There are two levels of understanding:
a) Mithya means one which cannot be called either Sathya or Asathya.
Sathya means eternal. Asathya means non-existent. Eg: horn of a rabbit.
Mithya means one which is neither eternal nor non-existent. That means it exists but is temporary. And keeps changing. So, in this level of understanding Mithya means temporary and changing. The world is called Mithya.
b) At a higher level of understanding in Adhvaitha Vedhantha(not acceptable or understandable to all), Mithya means illusory. Eg: dream. In this view, the world is seen as real as a dream.
By calling Prakriti as Maya, Adhvaitha Vedhantha is not insulting Prakriti. In fact, Prakriti is also worshiped as Shakti of Purusha/Brahman/Ishwara.
The story of how Totapuri supposedly insulted Goddess Kali is posted above. But, rest of the story should also be posted, otherwise a wrong idea about Vedhantha is conveyed. What Sri Totapuri said against Prakriti or Goddess Kali is not supported by Vedhantha. Infact, Adi Shankara Himself has penned Saundarya Lahiri in praise of Goddess. Further, Goddess is not just Prakriti. She is the Purusha also. That is the true Adhvaitha Vedhantha. What Adhvaitha Vedhantha says is that there is only one entity(not two) and that is Brahman/Atma. So, Goddess is Brahman/Purusha. Goddess is God. The fact that Goddess and God appear as two distinct entities is Maya.
Totapuri arrived at the Dakshineswar temple garden toward the end of 1864. Perhaps born in the Punjab, he was the head of a monastery in that province of India and claimed leadership of seven hundred sannyasis. Trained from early youth in the disciplines of the Advaita Vedanta, he looked upon the world as an illusion. The gods and goddesses of the dualistic worship were to him mere fantasies of the deluded mind. Prayers, ceremonies, rites, and rituals had nothing to do with true religion, and about these he was utterly indifferent. Exercising self-exertion and unshakable will-power, he had liberated himself from attachment to the sense-objects of the relative universe. For forty years he had practised austere discipline on the bank of the sacred Narmada and had finally realized his identity with the Absolute. Thenceforward he roamed in the world as an unfettered soul, a lion free from the cage. Clad in a loin-cloth, he spent his days under the canopy of the sky alike in storm and sunshine, feeding his body on the slender pittance of alms. He had been visiting the estuary of the Ganges. On his return journey along the bank of the sacred river, led by the inscrutable Divine Will, he stopped at Dakshineswar.
Totapuri, discovering at once that Sri Ramakrishna was prepared to be a student of Vedanta, asked to initiate him into its mysteries. With the permission of the Divine Mother, Sri Ramakrishna agreed to the proposal. But Totapuri explained that only a sannyasi could receive the teaching of Vedanta. Sri Ramakrishna agreed to renounce the world, but with the stipulation that the ceremony of his initiation into the monastic order be performed in secret, to spare the feelings of his old mother, who had been living with him at Dakshineswar.
On the appointed day, in the small hours of the morning, a fire was lighted in the Panchavati. Totapuri and Sri Ramakrishna sat before it. The flame played on their faces. "Ramakrishna was a small brown man with a short beard and beautiful eyes, long dark eyes, full of light, obliquely set and slightly veiled, never very wide open, but seeing half-closed a great distance both outwardly and inwardly. His mouth was open over his white teeth in a bewitching smile, at once affectionate and mischievous. Of medium height, he was thin to emaciation and extremely delicate. His temperament was high-strung, for he was supersensitive to all the winds of joy and sorrow, both moral and physical. He was indeed a living reflection of all that happened before the mirror of his eyes, a two-sided mirror, turned both out and in." (Romain Rolland, Prophets of the New India, pp. 38-9.) Facing him, the other rose like a rock. He was very tall and robust, a sturdy and tough oak. His constitution and mind were of iron. He was the strong leader of men.
In the burning flame before him Sri Ramakrishna performed the rituals of destroying his attachment to relatives, friends, body, mind, sense-organs, ego, and the world. The leaping flame swallowed it all, making the initiate free and pure. The sacred thread and the tuft of hair were consigned to the fire, completing his severance from caste, sex, and society. Last of all he burnt in that fire, with all that is holy as his witness, his desire for enjoyment here and hereafter. He uttered the sacred mantras giving assurance of safety and fearlessness to all beings, who were only manifestations of his own Self. The rites completed, the disciple received from the guru the loin-cloth and ochre robe, the emblems of his new life.
The teacher and the disciple repaired to the meditation room near by. Totapuri began to impart to Sri Ramakrishna the great truths of Vedanta.
"Brahman", he said, "is the only Reality, ever pure, ever illumined, ever free, beyond the limits of time, space, and causation. Though apparently divided by names and forms through the inscrutable power of maya, that enchantress who makes the impossible possible, Brahman is really One and undivided. When a seeker merges in the beatitude of samadhi, he does not perceive time and space or name and form, the offspring of maya. Whatever is within the domain of maya is unreal. Give it up. Destroy the prison-house of name and form and rush out of it with the strength of a lion. Dive deep in search of the Self and realize It through samadhi. You will find the world of name and form vanishing into void, and the puny ego dissolving in Brahman-Consciousness. You will realize your identity with Brahman, Existence-Knowledge-Bliss Absolute." Quoting the Upanishad, Totapuri said: "That knowledge is shallow by which one sees or hears or knows another. What is shallow is worthless and can never give real felicity. But the Knowledge by which one does not see another or hear another or know another, which is beyond duality, is great, and through such Knowledge one attains the Infinite Bliss. How can the mind and senses grasp That which shines in the heart of all as the Eternal Subject?"
Totapuri asked the disciple to withdraw his mind from all objects of the relative world, including the gods and goddesses, and to concentrate on the Absolute. But the task was not easy even for Sri Ramakrishna. He found it impossible to take his mind beyond Kali, the Divine Mother of the Universe. "After the initiation", Sri Ramakrishna once said, describing the event, "Nangta began to teach me the various conclusions of the Advaita Vedanta and asked me to withdraw the mind completely from all objects and dive deep into the Atman. But in spite of all my attempts I could not altogether cross the realm of name and form and bring my mind to the unconditioned state. I had no difficulty in taking the mind from all the objects of the world. But the radiant and too familiar figure of the Blissful Mother, the Embodiment ment of the essence of Pure Consciousness, appeared before me as a living reality. Her bewitching smile prevented me from passing into the Great Beyond. Again and again I tried, but She stood in my way every time. In despair I said to Nangta: 'It is hopeless. I cannot raise my mind to the unconditioned state and come face to face with Atman.' He grew excited and sharply said: 'What? You can't do it? But you have to.' He cast his eyes around. Finding a piece of glass he took it up and stuck it between my eyebrows. 'Concentrate the mind on this point!' he thundered. Then with stern determination I again sat to meditate. As soon as the gracious form of the Divine Mother appeared before me, I used my discrimination as a sword and with it clove Her in two. The last barrier fell. My spirit at once soared beyond the relative plane and I lost myself in samadhi."
Sri Ramakrishna remained completely absorbed in samadhi for three days. "Is it really true?" Totapuri cried out in astonishment. "Is it possible that he has attained in a single day what it took me forty years of strenuous practice to achieve? Great God! It is nothing short of a miracle!" With the help of Totapuri, Sri Ramakrishna's mind finally came down to the relative plane.
Totapuri, a monk of the most orthodox type, never stayed at a place more than three days. But he remained at Dakshineswar eleven months. He too had something to learn.
Totapuri had no idea of the struggles of ordinary men in the toils of passion and desire. Having maintained all through life the guilelessness of a child, he laughed at the idea of a man's being led astray by the senses. He was convinced that the world was maya and had only to be denounced to vanish for ever. A born non-dualist, he had no faith in a Personal God. He did not believe in the terrible aspect of Kali, much less in Her benign aspect. Music and the chanting of God's holy name were to him only so much nonsense. He ridiculed the spending of emotion on the worship of a Personal God.
KALI AND MAYA
Sri Ramakrishna, on the other hand, though fully aware, like his guru, that the world is an illusory appearance, instead of slighting maya, like an orthodox monist, acknowledged its power in the relative life. He was all love and reverence for maya, perceiving in it a mysterious and majestic expression of Divinity. To him maya itself was God, for everything was God. It was one of the faces of Brahman. What he had realized on the heights of the transcendental plane, he also found here below, everywhere about him, under the mysterious garb of names and forms. And this garb was a perfectly transparent sheath, through which he recognized the glory of the Divine Immanence. Maya, the mighty weaver of the garb, is none other than Kali, the Divine Mother. She is the primordial Divine Energy, Sakti, and She can no more be distinguished from the Supreme Brahman than can the power of burning be distinguished from fire. She projects the world and again withdraws it. She spins it as the spider spins its web. She is the Mother of the Universe, identical with the Brahman of Vedanta, and with the Atman of Yoga. As eternal Lawgiver, She makes and unmakes laws; it is by Her imperious will that karma yields its fruit. She ensnares men with illusion and again releases them from bondage with a look of Her benign eyes. She is the supreme Mistress of the cosmic play, and all objects, animate and inanimate, dance by Her will. Even those who realize the Absolute in nirvikalpa samadhi are under Her jurisdiction as long as they still live on the relative plane.
Thus, after nirvikalpa samadhi, Sri Ramakrishna realized maya in an altogether new role. The binding aspect of Kali vanished from before his vision. She no longer obscured his understanding. The world became the glorious manifestation of the Divine Mother. Maya became Brahman. The Transcendental Itself broke through the Immanent. Sri Ramakrishna discovered that maya operates in the relative world in two ways, and he termed these "avidyamaya" and "vidyamaya". Avidyamaya represents the dark forces of creation: sensuous desires, evil passions, greed, lust, cruelty, and so on. It sustains the world system on the lower planes. It is responsible for the round of man's birth and death. It must be fought and vanquished. But vidyamaya is the higherforce of creation: the spiritual virtues, the enlightening qualities, kindness, purity, love, devotion. Vidyamaya elevates man to the higher planes of consciousness. With the help of vidyamaya the devotee rids himself of avidyamaya; he then becomes mayatita, free of maya. The two aspects of maya are the two forces of creation, the two powers of Kali; and She stands beyond them both. She is like the effulgent sun, bringing into existence and shining through and standing behind the clouds of different colours and shapes, conjuring up wonderful forms in the blue autumn heaven.
The Divine Mother asked Sri Ramakrishna not to be lost in the featureless Absolute but to remain, in bhavamukha, on the threshold of relative consciousness, the border line between the Absolute and the Relative. He was to keep himself at the "sixth centre" of Tantra, from which he could see not only the glory of the seventh, but also the divine manifestations of the Kundalini in the lower centres. He gently oscillated back and forth across the dividing line. Ecstatic devotion to the Divine Mother alternated with serene absorption in the Ocean of Absolute Unity. He thus bridged the oulf between the Personal and the Impersonal, the immanent and the transcendent aspects of Reality. This is a unique experience in the recorded spiritual history of the world.
TOTAPURI'S LESSON
From Sri Ramakrishna Totapuri had to learn the significance of Kali, the Great Fact of the relative world, and of maya, Her indescribable Power.
One day, when guru and disciple were engaged in an animated discussion about Vedanta, a servant of the temple garden came there and took a coal from the sacred fire that had been lighted by the great ascetic. He wanted it to light his tobacco. Totapuri flew into a rage and was about to beat the man. Sri Ramakrishna rocked with laughter. "What a shame!" he cried. "You are explaining to me the reality of Brahman and the illusoriness of the world; yet now you have so far forgotten yourself as to be about to beat a man in a fit of passion. The power of maya is indeed inscrutable!" Totapuri was embarrassed.
About this time Totapuri was suddenly laid up with a severe attack of dysentery. On account of this miserable illness he found it impossible to meditate. One night the pain became excruciating. He could no longer concentrate on Brahman. The body stood in the way. He became incensed with its demands. A free soul, he did not at all care for the body. So he determined to drown it in the Ganges. Thereupon he walked into the river. But, lo! He walks to the other bank." (This version of the incident is taken from the biography of Sri Ramakrishna by Swami Saradananda, one of the Master's direct disciples.) Is there not enough water in the Ganges? Standing dumbfounded on the other bank he looks back across the water. The trees, the temples, the houses, are silhouetted against the sky. Suddenly, in one dazzling moment, he sees on all sides the presence of the Divine Mother. She is in everything; She is everything. She is in the water; She is on land. She is the body; She is the mind. She is pain; She is comfort. She is knowledge; She is ignorance. She is life; She is death. She is everything that one sees, hears, or imagines. She turns "yea" into "nay", and "nay" into "yea". Without Her grace no embodied being can go beyond Her realm. Man has no free will. He is not even free to die. Yet, again, beyond the body and mind She resides in Her Transcendental, Absolute aspect. She is the Brahman that Totapuri had been worshipping all his life.
Totapuri returned to Dakshineswar and spent the remaining hours of the night meditating on the Divine Mother. In the morning he went to the Kali temple with Sri Ramakrishna and prostrated himself before the image of the Mother. He now realized why he had spent eleven months at Dakshineswar. Bidding farewell to the disciple, he continued on his way, enlightened.
Sri Ramakrishna later described the significance of Totapuri's lessons:
"When I think of the Supreme Being as inactive — neither creating nor preserving nor destroying —, I call Him Brahman or Purusha, the Impersonal sonal God. When I think of Him as active — creating, preserving, and destroying —, I call Him Sakti or Maya or Prakriti, the Personal God. But the distinction between them does not mean a difference. The Personal and the Impersonal are the same thing, like milk and its whiteness, the diamond and its lustre, the snake and its wriggling motion. It is impossible to conceive of the one without the other. The Divine Mother and Brahman are one."
After the departure of Totapuri, Sri Ramakrishna remained for six months in a state of absolute identity with Brahman. "For six months at a stretch", he said, "I remained in that state from which ordinary men can never return; generally the body falls off, after three weeks, like a sere leaf. I was not conscious of day and night. Flies would enter my mouth and nostrils just as they do a dead body's, but I did not feel them. My hair became matted with dust."
His body would not have survived but for the kindly attention of a monk who happened to be at Dakshineswar at that time and who somehow realized that for the good of humanity Sri Ramakrishna's body must be preserved. He tried various means, even physical violence, to recall the fleeing soul to the prison-house of the body, and during the resultant fleeting moments of consciousness he would push a few morsels of food down Sri Ramakrishna's throat. Presently Sri Ramakrishna received the command of the Divine Mother to remain on the threshold of relative consciousness. Soon there-after after he was afflicted with a serious attack of dysentery. Day and night the pain tortured him, and his mind gradually came down to the physical plane.
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BTW, Puri is one of the titles bestowed on the Sanyasis related to Sringeri Matha, established by Sri Adhi Shankara.
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sudarshan wrote:
Second question is about the Vishnu Sahasranama. Some of the names of Vishnu come from the Dashavatara - like Mahavaraho, or Naarasimha, or Vamanah, or even Rama. Why not Matsya, Kurma, or Parasurama? Parasurama was around in Mahabharata times, he even trained many of the warriors. Was he not recognized as Vishnu incarnate then?
sudarshan wrote:As for the avatara query, I was just surprised that somebody like Parasurama wasn't recognized as Vishnu in the Sahasranama. Even Vyasa is recognized ("Vyasaya Vishnuroopaya," etc.). In the Ramayana, when Parasurama gets furious at Rama for breaking the Shivadhanush, he comes charging into Janaka's assembly with the Vishnudhanush (IIRC) and challenges Rama to string that bow. When Rama is able to easily do it, that's when Parasurama realizes that Rama is the same as he is - i.e., Vishnu. This is recognized in the Ramayana, why not by Bhishma in the MB? That was what I was wondering. I agree that if all the avataras of Vishnu were named in the Sahasranama, it would become more like Kotinama or beyond.
Sudarshan Saar,
Vyasaya Vishnuroopaya, is not part of the the Vishnu Sahasranama. The sahasranama(1000 names) start from 'Vishvam Vishnu Vashatkaro...'
Coming to the query:
Kurma avatara is mentioned in Stanza 19:
mahaabuddhir-mahaa- veeryo mahaa-saktir mahaa-dyutih
anirdesya-vapuh sreemaan ameyaatmaa
mahaadri-dhrik.
(180) Mahaadridhrik -One who supports the great Mountain. In the Puranas, we find two instances, wherein the Lord has been described as the uplifter of or as having lifted and supported the mountains. While churning the milky ocean with the Mandara mountain we are told that the “churning-stick” sunk into the bottom and the Lord had to manifest in the form of the Great Tortoise (Koorma) and support it, while the Gods and Demons continued the churning, until they gathered the nectar (Amritam).
Again, the Supreme, as Lord Krishna, in order to protect the cows had to lift the Govardhana Mountain. Because of these two stories in the Puranas, Lord, the Protector of the mind in Saadhanaa, is called as Mahaadridhrik.
Vishnu is the Divine, that supports the mind-intellect of the Saadhaka while he is churning, through study (sravana) and reflection (manana), his own Milk-like pure heart-of devotion in order to gain the experience of Immortality (Amritam).
Matsya Avatara is mentioned in Stanza 40:
viksharo
rohito maargo hetur daamodarah sahah
maheedharo mahaabhaago vegavaan-amitaasanah.
364. Rohitah -The term ‘Rohita’ means fish, and this name has come to indicate Lord Vishnu because of His first incarnation as the Fish.
There is another meaning: Ro means knowledge(i.e. Gyana, which means Vedha). Hitha means the benefactor. So, Ro-hithah means 'one who is a benefactor of knowledge or Vedha i.e. Matsya Avatara'.
Parashu-Rama Avatara is mentioned in Stanza 61:
sudhanvaa
khandaparasurdaaruno dravinnapradhah
divah-sprik sarvadrik vyaaso vaachaspatirayonijah.
568. Khanda-parasuh -One who has the axe- weapon-called “Parasu.” The Lord used this weapon in His Incarnation as Parasuraama, the son of Jamadagni. It is endowed with terrible prowess in cutting down the unholy enemies of the nobler life and so it is called as the “Khanda-Parasu.” As such it means ‘one who wields the invincible Parasu.’
There is another point here: Khanda-Parashu carried by Parashu-Rama was given to him by Lord Shiva. The original One who carries the Khanda-Parashu is Lord Shiva. So, this name also applies to Lord Shiva. Of course, there are many other names of Lord Shiva which are part of Vishnu Sahasranama: Eg: Shiva, Bhima, Ugra, Rudra, Sthanu, ...etc.
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sudarshan wrote:Two kwik kweschuns - apologize if they're elementary level.
I'm rather familiar with MB, not so much with Ramayan. In the MB, terms like "Rathi," "Athirathi," "Maharathi" keep occurring. Yudhishthir was a Rathi, Bhim & Arjun, Krishna and Satyaki, Ashwatthama etc. were Maharathis. Abhimanyu became recognized as a Maharathi after he passed a test, defeating Kritavarman (I think) in a sword duel (I think). It's a classification system which indicates the warrior's proficiency in battle.
Do these terms occur in the Ramayana also? I'd imagine Ram, Lakshman, Hanuman, Ravan, Indrajit, Kumbhkarn would all be Maharathis. However, I don't recall ever coming across warriors being described in these terms in the Ramayana. Maybe I'm wrong? Or were the terms not extant in Ramayan times?
sudarshan wrote:
Seriously, I was just wondering if the wartime doctrines/terminologies were in a state of evolution between Ramayana and MB times. Kind of like "dynamic civilization" vs. "ossified civilization."
Carl saar, thanks for the explanation. Are there more examples of the usage of these *-Rathi terms in the Ramayana? Just yes or no would do - I'm not asking you to quote verbatim. Also, how about terms like "Akshauhinis," which are used very often in the MB war to refer to troop strengths? Do they also occur in the Ramayana?
Saar,
very interesting questions.
First, we should try to understand the whole system of divisions:
Akshauhini
According to Adi Parva, Section 2, Akshauhini is defined as:
a) 1 Chariot, 1 Elephant, 3 Cavalry and 5 Infantry is the basic unit. It is called Patti.
b) The next unit is called Sena-mukha. 1 Sena-mukha == 3 Patti-s. i.e.
1 Sena-mukha contains 3 Chariots, 3 Elephants, 9 Cavalry and 15 Infantry.
c) The next unit is called Gulma. 1 Gulma == 3 times the Sena-mukha. i.e.
1 Gulma contains 9 Chariots, 9 Elephants, 27 Cavalry and 45 Infantry
d) The next unit is called Gana. 1 Gana == 3 times the Gulma. i.e.
1 Gana contains 27 Chariots, 27 Elephants, 81 Cavalry and 135 Infantry
e) The next unit is called Vaahini. 1 Vaahini == 3 times the Gana i.e.
1 Vaahini contains 81 Chariots, 81 Elephants, 242 Cavalry and 405 Infantry
f)The next unit is called Prutana. 1 Prutana == 3 times the Vaahini i.e.
1 Prutana contains 243 Chariots, 243 Elephants, 729 Cavalry and 1215 Infantry
g) The next unit is called Chamu. 1 Chamu == 3 times Prutana i.e.
1 Chamu contains 729 Chariots, 729 Elephants, 2187 Cavalry and 3645 Infantry
h) The next unit is called Anikini. 1 Ankini == 3 times Chamu i.e.
1 Ankini contains 2187 Chariots, 2187 Elephants, 6561 Cavalry and 10935 Infantry
i) And finally, the next unit called Akshauhini. 1 Akshauhini is 10 times an Anikini i.e.
1 Akshauhini contains 21870 Chariots, 21870 Elephants, 65610 Cavalry and 109350 Infantry.
In MB, 18 Akshauhinis fought the war. That means, 3,93,660 Chariots, 3,93,660 Elephants, 11,80,980 Cavalry and 19,68,300 Infantry.
All these various terms for the army do appear in Valmiki Ramayana. But, they appear as synonyms of Army, and not in their strict technical sense. For example:
Anikini is mentioned in Valmiki Ramayana in Yuddha Kanda 6, Shloka 24, Shloka 26, Shloka 30, Shloka 67.
Vahini and Chamu are mentioned several times in Valmiki Ramayana.
Chamu is mentioned in Valmiki Ramayana in Yuddha Kanda 6, Sarga 26, Shloka 42
Akshauhini is mentioned in Valmiki Ramayana in Bala Kanda 1, Sarga 20 or 19, Shloka 3 (
Agnimitra saar, please check and verify whether it is sarga 20 or 19. According to the only version, it is sarga 20 and not 19...)
Gana is mentioned in Valmiki Ramayana in Yuddha Kanda 6, Sarga 3, Shloka 12
Further, these terms are also mentioned in Vedhas. In Yajur Vedha, Rudhram,
'Pattinaam pathaye namah'(salute to Lord of Patti-s) is found in 2nd Anuvaka. Here Patti is mentioned. Patti is the first basic unit. Patti contains 1 Chariot, 1 Elephant, 3 Cavalry and 5 Infantry is the basic unit.
Then, 'namo Ganebhyo GanaPathibhyah cha namo'(salute to Gana-s and GanaPathi-s) is found in 4th Anuvaka. Here, Gana is mentioned. 1 Gana contains 27 Chariots, 27 Elephants, 81 Cavalry and 135 Infantry.
Entire Rudhram has many things related to war sciences.
Ramayana says that the war of Ramayana was unlike any seen before or after. Infact, Valmiki(who is famous for his similes and metaphors) says that there is no simile or metaphor that can compare with the war of Ramayana. The war was fought in a very unusual manner between monkeys and asuras. It was not a regular war. Monkeys did not use any chariots, or horses or elephants. Even their weapons were not necessarily the regular weapons. Instead, frequently, they resort to fighting with large trees or boulders. They fight in the dark of the night as well with no light. The only light comes from sparks emitted by weapons. In short, it is an unusual war.
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When it is said that 18 Akshauhinis fought in Kurukshetra, some people are incredulous.
For example:
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I have tried to critique his views. I am posting the critique:
Mahabharatha Army
Kurukeshtra
The name Kurukshetra applies to a circuit of about 128 kms. (This is the first mistake. Kurukshetra applies to a much larger field. The entire area between Hastinapura and Saraswati river is called Kurukshetra. Some of this area was filled Kurujangala i.e. forests of Kuru. Some of these forests were cleared by Arjuna and Sri Krishna to expand Indraprastha. So, it is not known how large the area was exactly. But it was quite large, infact very very large. )
These plains of Haryana have provided a battle ground for ages. 21 battles were fought between Parashurama and the Kashtriya kings at Kurukeshtra. (@5,000 BCE)(No, it is not 5000 BCE. It is 5000 years ago. That means about 3000 BCE. To be exact: 3102 BCE) Then it was named Samanta-panchaka, as 5 lakes at battle field were filled with the blood of the slain warriors. The MB war (@ 3,000 BCE) that killed thousands of soldiers was fought on the same soil. 60 kms to the South is Panipat(As far as I understand, even Panipat is part of Kurukshetra.). Three battles that changed the history of India were fought at Panipat. These battles claimed lives of thousands of soldiers and civilians.
Dhruturashtra calls Kurukeshtra the Dharma-keshtra(Not just Dhrutarashtra, but throughout MB, Kurukshetra is described as a holy place. But again, one should not assume that Kurukshetra is a tiny region. It is a vast territory starting from Saraswati river to Hastinapura. Infact, while MB war is being fought, Balarama goes on pilgrimage in this region.). Where the Paandav and the Kaurav had assembled with an army of 18 Akshauhini.
About 2,000,000 infantry had gathered from India, Pakistan, and Afghanistan.(And central asia, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Myanmar, Bhutan, and many more . Perhaps, Greece and Rome also participated. Many of the various kingdom names mentioned in the MB are still open to interpretation.) Let's see the army maintained in the same area in later times. In 300 BCE Chandragupta Maurya's army was an incredibly large force of 700,000 men, 9,000 elephants, and 10,000 chariots. In Ashoka's time, the army consisted of 600,000 infantry, 130,000 cavalry, thousands of chariots and elephants. Still later in 16th century, Ibrahim Lodi, the sultan of Delhi, maintained an army of 100,000. (That means, Chandragupta Maurya supposedly maintained a greater army in BCE than Lodhi in CE! What was the population of India during Chandragupta Maurya period and Lodhi period? Also, one cannot simply equate the numbers given in MB with the later day wars or kingdoms. MB was not just another war. MB itself mentions several wars and conquests before and after the MB. BUT, MB stands out as the most extensive and complete and dangerous war. It was the world war of those times. So, comparing the numbers is nonsensical. Further, it is not enough to compare the numbers just like that. One has to see the extent of the kingdom, to know the prowess of the kingdom. Or one has to look at the number of kingdoms that participated in the war. MB war is comparable only to world wars. It is not even comparable to Panipat. Dilli Sultanate was vulnerable to attack from north-west and was consistently being attacked and raided by the Mongols, from the time of Timur. Timur even looted and sacked Dilli during the time of Khilji. Babar, the grandson of Timur, happened to not only raid the Sultanate but also defeat them and take over Dilli. Remember, Sultanate was facing powerful enemies within India itself like Vijayanagara and . Further, Sultanate were seen as alien invaders out to destroy the culture by natives. Even the sultanate was keen on destroying the local culture, civilization, and religions. So, there was constant conflict between the rulers i.e. sultanate and their subjects i.e. natives. Given these various factors, example of Panipat is not at all comparable to MB. Further, Lodhi was not ruling entire India, so his low numbers are consequence of that. On the other hand, Chandragupta Maurya was supposedly ruling the entire India, so his higher numbers reflect that. Now imagine, a world war, the numbers would be still higher. And MB is showcasing that event. So, comparisons are silly and nonsense. It is like comparing the local lake and trying to understand the Indian ocean. )
First battle of Panipat left 20,000 dead. Considering that as 10% of the fighting force, an army of about 200,000 was present in Panipat. Almost 100,000 people died in the third battle of Panipat. Considering that as 20% (high cause many died in this battle.) died in the battle, almost 500,000 people were present in Panipat.
About 700,000 to 100,000 infantry is seen in later times when the population in India was considerably more than the MB times. Thus a figure of 2,000,000 infantry (not including about 2 people per chariot, 3 people per elephant, 1 rider per horse, and supporting people like cooks, scouts, suppliers, care takers, doctors etc.) seems far fetched. (This is a subjective view. Each one can come up with what seems farfetched or not. 5 husbands may seem farfetched. Bhishma not fighting Shikhandi may seem farfetched. People going to forest for 12 years just for losing a game of dice may seem farfetched…)
If we consider, akshauhiNi, anikini and chamu to be one and the same then the army size comes to: (Why go this far? Maybe the one should consider Akshauhini to be same as Patti i.e. 3 horses, 1 chariot, 1 elephant and 5 foot-soldiers. That’s all. Maybe the whole war was fought between 11 pattis and 7 pattis. 18 pattis. Done and dusted, no?)
1 chamu / anikini / akshauhini = 729 chariots; 729 elephants; 3,645 soldiers; 2,187 horses
Paandav army (7 akshauhini) = 5,103 chariots; 5,103 elephants; 25,515 soldiers; 15309 horses
Kaurav army (11 akshauhini) = 8,019 chariots; 8,019 elephants; 40,095 soldiers; 24,057 horses
Total (18 akshauhini) would have about 170,000 people. (including 2 people per chariot, 3 people per elephant, and 1 rider per horse). Considering another 1000 people per akshauhini as support staff; there were about 180,000 people in Kurukeshtra. Considering that about 5% of the force was killed in the war, about 9,000 people must have been killed in the war.
These figures seem realistic. (What is 'realistic' is dependent on one’s own bias. Nothing more. The population at the time of Mahabharata war is not known to anyone. Any speculation is just that: speculation. Further, during massive wars, entire population is converted into armed forces. MB was certainly the world war of those times. So, even if the population is small, it is still possible that even the regular citizens were used to augment and swell the numbers. This would be especially true in terms of footsoldiers. The same thing had happened in Vietnam and the samething is happening in Afghanistan. The distinction between the regular soldiers and normal citizens vanishes in war times. The same thing had happened in different societies during WW1 and WW2. )
(Mahabharat in Adi Parva, Section 2, clearly mentions the number of cavalry, infantry, elephants and chariots. So, given such a clear mention, how can one start to obfuscate the numbers to suit one’s own bias or ideas of what is realistic? )
Many kings had sent 1 akshauhini force to help the Pandav / Kaurav. Kings of Sindh / Punjab / Bengal / Gujarat sending an infantary of about 3,000 is a possiblility that can be considered. (As against 10,000 infantry.)
MB mentions that ALL people died in the great war except: Ashwathama, Krupacharya, Krutavarma, Yuyutsu, Krishna, and the 5 Pandaav. I would rather take this to mean that ALL commanders, chiefs, and princes who had participated in the war died. Need not mean that EVERY soldier died. It has been seen in the Indian wars, that when ever the leader was killed, his soldiers would run helter skelter. Such scenes are described in the MB war too. Thus killing the leader would probably be the same as death of his whole team. And maybe hence the description. Even the references such as Bheeshma, Bheem, Arjun, Abhimanyu etc. killed x akshauhini on nth day, seems to mean the same. It could mean that they killed the leaders of those many units on the particular days. (Maybe, maybe not. This is just idle speculation. Mahabharata clearly describes large number of casualities. And clearly mentions that all the people who participated in the war died. It is possible that some of the soldiers may have run away. But to imagine that 95% of the army would simply run away is nonsense. If such a thing happened, that would be clearly described given that many minor incidents are mentioned. Further, even after the entire army of Kauravas is killed, Ashwatthama does not give up and goes and makes stealth attack in the night. Given such life-and-death situation, one would hardly let the soldiers, especially 95% run away. It is more probable the other way around: that means maybe 5% ran away and the rest of the 95% were killed.)
There is a reference to the Naraayaniya army that had vowed to kill or die in the war. This explicitly means that they did not have the option to leave the battlefield. Implying that all others had the option. (I haven’t seen this reference. As far as I know, it was the army of Trigarthas that had vowed to lure Arjuna away even if it cost their own death. The idea is that it was suicide mission like Kamikazi. That does not mean that other battalions are allowed to retreat. Such a thing is nonsense. But there may have been a custom of not killing the retreating armies. But again, in MB many of these rules get flouted as the war proceeds… For example, Duryodhana is not allowed to retreat, he is forced to fight.)
The weapons used in the war were not mass destructive. Irrespective of the fact that many people put forth, and MB mentions, that tens of thousands of people were killed by the single use of a weapon. (If one wants to depend on one’s own bias or imagination, then one can imagine whatever one wants to. But if one wants to take the text of the MB as proof, then MB clearly mentions the casualties and it also clearly mentions how many weapons and what kind of weapons were used when inflicting those casualties.)Weapons such as arrows, spears, swords, maces etc, can kill only one person at a time. That too, only if the weapon hits fatally. (But these are not ordinary arrows, spears, swords or maces according to the text of MB!! If these were ordinary arrows, spears, swords or maces, then the description in the MB would be completely off the mark. In that case, MB would be unreliable. Infact, one would be accusing Vyasa of lying. BTW, Itihaasa means ‘it happened indeed like this’. And MB is supposed to be an Itihaasa. So, the main war events are supposed to have been described the way they actually happened.
The reason people speculate on mass destructive weapons is because of the description of the impact of the weapons closely resembles the impact of the modern day mass destructive weapons. MB itself mentions clearly that the weapons used by many of them are special and have mantric abilities. Of course, one can choose to ignore these parts. But then, if one wants to pick and choose what one wants to believe in a text, then each to his own. One’s imagination is the limit. One could even argue that perhaps it was Duryodhana who won the war but MB mentions Yuddhishtira… IF MB is lying on one issue, it may as well be lying about another issue, no?
Even if one is insistent that Mantras be ignored, one cannot ignore the mention of Yantras/Machines. MB and Ramayana mention many kinds of weapons and Yantras. Shathaghnis are mentioned in Valmiki Ramayana in Kishkindha Kanda, while Hanuman describes Lanka to Sri Rama. They are also mentioned several times in MB, for example Bhishma is injured by several kinds of weapons including Shathaghnis. Shathaghni seems to be a kind of cannon. Shathaghni means ‘one that can kill 100s’. So, a weapon that could kill 100s, probably at one fire was available. Perhaps, it could even be reloaded. Nalikas are mentioned. Nalika means tube. Iron balls are mentioned. Tube and iron balls reminds one of guns and cannons. So, it is clear that there were weapons available to cause large number of casualties, even if one insists on disregarding the descriptions of usage of Mantric weapons i.e. Astras.)Thus after ALL the leaders of one side were killed, the war was over. We can assume that the number of people killed in the war was say around 5% of the force.(Nonsense) All these people belonged to different geographical areas and thus these areas were not severely affected by the war or the loss of people in the war.(This is an amateurish and shallow conclusion. First and foremost most of these, if not all, regions did belong to the Bharatvarsha. Remember that Bharatavarsha of those times was much bigger. It extended from parts that about Oxus river in the north to Sri Lanka in the south. It extended from certain parts of modern day Iran to Myanmar. Perhaps, even parts of Indo-China were part of sphere of Bharatvarsha. Kambhoja is situated in Modern day Iran. Kekaya is situated between borders of modern day Afghanistan and Pakistan. Sinhala are in modern day Sri Lanka. All these various kingdoms were considered part of Bharatavarsha or within the sphere of Bharatavarsha. So, their societies were interconnected and as such they could not escape the affects of war.
Further the Kingdoms that participated in the wars with men and resources would experience direct impact of the war regardless of the physical or geographical distance. When people directly participated in the event, then the geographical distance is irrelevant. Regardless of the farness or nearness, the people who participated in the event would be impacted. Victory or defeat could have far-reaching implications for the participant kingdoms.) The most affected regions remained the Kuru and the Panchal. (Actually, Kuru was the one kingdom that came out victorious. So, the negative impact on Kuru was least. Yadava Kingdom was not affected because most of the Yadava kingdom did not participate in the war. Manipur, of Babruvahana, was also not affected because he did not participate in the war.)
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Sudarshan saar,
your query led me to an interesting points:
Guns and Cannons in Ancient India during the Vedic and Mahabharata Period
Details about guns used in ancient India are found in Shukra Niti. About weapons used in Vedic age are found in Atharva Veda. Information regarding cannons are found in Vana Parva of Mahabharata and also in Naishadham text of Sriharsha. The name given by ancient Indians to cannon was Shatagni.
Shatagni had the capacity to kill nearly 100 soldiers of the enemies. Puranas also give information about Shatagni.
Shatagni was a large gun which used to fire iron balls fitted with spikes. Shatagni gun was mounted on a vehicle which had eight wheels. This was far more superior to the first versions of modern cannons.
Guns were known as Bhushundi in ancient India. Small guns were known as Lagu Naliyam and those with bigger holes were known as Briha Naliyam.
There are archeological evidences that bullets were made using various metals in ancient India.
Treatise dealing with various weapons used in ancient India is found in Dhanur Veda. It mentions about machine operated weapons.
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