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Shesha

Shesha (Sanskrit: शेष, romanizedŚeṣa, lit.'Remainder'),[2] also known by his epithets Sheshanaga (Sanskrit: शेषनाग, romanizedŚeṣanāga, lit.'The snake Shesha') and Adishesha (Sanskrit: आदिशेष, romanizedĀdiśeṣa, lit.'First Shesha'), is a serpentine demigod (naga) and Nagaraja (King of all serpents), as well as a primordial being of creation in Hinduism. In the Puranas, Shesha is said to hold all the planets of the universe on his hoods and to constantly sing the glories of Vishnu from all his mouths. He is sometimes referred to as Ananta Shesha, "Endless-Shesha", or Adishesha, the "First Shesha". It is said that when Adishesa uncoils, time moves forward and creation takes place; when he coils back, the universe ceases to exist.

Shesha
King of the Serpents[1]
Idol of Shesha, Kathmandu
Other namesSheshanaga, Ananta, Adishesha, Sankarshana
AffiliationVaishnavism
AbodeKshira Sagara
Personal information
Parents
SiblingsMany including Manasa, Vasuki, and Takshaka
ChildrenSulochana and Sunaina

The Narayana form of Vishnu is often depicted as resting on Shesha, accompanied by his consort Lakshmi. Adishesha is considered as one of the two mounts of Vishnu alongside Garuda. He is said to have descended upon Earth in the following human forms or incarnations: Lakshmana, brother of Vishnu's incarnation Rama during the Treta Yuga, and according to some traditions, as Balarama, brother of Vishnu's incarnation Krishna during the Dvapara Yuga. According to the Mahabharata (Adi Parva), his father was Kashyapa and his mother Kadru, though in other accounts, he is usually a primordial being created by Vishnu.

His name means "he who remains", from the Sanskrit root śiṣ, because even as the world is destroyed at the end of each kalpa, Shesha remains as he is.

Form

 
Vishnu sleeps on the coils of Ananta (the World Snake). He will awake for the next cycle of creation which heralds the destruction of all things. Sculpture. From India, c. 14th century CE. National Museum of Scotland, Edinburgh
 
Narayana resting on Adhishesha, with his consort Lakshmi massaging his feet
 
Narayana reclining on Shesha, as Brahma blooms on a lotus from his navel (palace of Bir Singh Dev, Orchha, early 17th c.)

Adishesha is generally depicted with a massive form that floats coiled through space, or upon the Ocean of Milk, to form the bed upon which Vishnu lays. Sometimes, he is depicted as a five-headed or seven-headed or a ten-headed serpent; but more commonly as one thousand-headed, or five thousand-headed, or even as many as a one million-headed serpent; sometimes with each head wearing an ornate crown.

Origin

According to the Mahabharata, Adishesha was born to the sage Kashyapa and his wife Kadru. Kadru gave birth to a thousand snakes, of which Shesha was the eldest. After Shesha, Vasuki, Iravati and Takshaka were born, in that order. A lot of Shesha's brothers were cruel and were bent upon inflicting harm on others. They were even unkind to Garuda, who was Kashyapa's son through Vinata, sister of Kadru. (Kadru and Vinata were daughters of Daksha).

Shesha, disgusted by the cruel acts of his brothers, left his mother and kin, and took to austere penances. He lived on air and meditated in places including Gandhamadhana, Badrikashrama, Gokarna, Pushkara, and the Himalayas. His penances were so severe that his flesh, skin, and muscles dried up and merged with his frame. Brahma, convinced of Shesha's will, asked Shesha to request a boon. Shesha asked that he be able to keep his mind under control so that he could continue to perform ascetic penances. Brahma gladly accepted the request. Brahma then asked a favour of Shesha: to go beneath the precarious earth and stabilise it. Shesha agreed and went to the netherworld and stabilised Bhumi with his hood. He is believed to support her even today, thus making Patala his perennial residence.[3]

Mahavishnu and Sankarshana

Shesha is usually depicted as floating in the ocean of the changing world, forming the bed of Mahavishnu.

In the Bhagavata Purana, Shesha is named Sankarshana, the tamasic energy of Narayana himself, and is said to live deep within the inner layers of Patala, where there are many serpents with gems on their heads and where he reigns as its ruler. He is said to have existed before the creation of the universe. When the universe is towards its end, he creates the 11 Rudras from the serpents to destroy the universe for a new one to be created.

Sankarshana is also one of the four vyuha forms of Vishnu, the other three being Vāsudeva, Pradyumna, and Aniruddha.

In Gaudiya accounts, Sankarshana expands himself as Garbhodakshayi-Vishnu in the beginning of the universe to create Brahma. In other words, Sankarshana is believed to be Narayana himself.

In the first few chapters of the Puranas, it is also said that Sankarshana preached the Bhagavata to the Four Kumaras, who in turn passed on this message. At some point, the message was passed to sage Maitreya, who in turn preached it to Vidura.

Avatars

 
As Lakshmana, Shesha accompanied his lord in his Rama avatar.
 
As Balarama, Shesha accompanied Vishnu in his Krishna Avatar.

Adisesha is believed to have taken 6 incarnations on earth. During the Satya Yuga, he came down in his original form to form a seat for Vishnu's avatar of Narasimha, who had incarnated to slay the impious Hiranyakashipu.

During the Treta Yuga, Sesha took birth as Lakshmana, as Lord Vishnu's (as Rama) brother. Lakshmana is a very prominent character in the Ramayana, along with Hanuman and Sita.

During Dvapara Yuga, he is a stated to have incarnated as Balarama again as a brother to Vishnu (as Krishna). This is often disputed by the original line-ups of the Dasavatara, where Balarama is also considered to be an incarnation of Vishnu.

During the Kali Yuga, according to Sri Vaishnava tradition, he was born as Patanjali Maharishi, Ramanujacharya, and Manavala Mamunigal.[4] He was not accompanied by God during the Kali Yuga. Instead, he incarnated alone to spread devotion among the people, being a peaceful incarnation.

Sri Vaishnavism also states that Balarama is an incarnation of both Vishnu and Adishesha. In the Bhagavad Gita, in the middle of the battlefield Kurukshetra, Krishna, explaining his omnipresence, says: "Of Nāgas, I am Ananta" indicating the importance of Ananta Shesha.

Literature

The Brahma Purana describes the attributes of Ananta:[5]

Daityas and Dānavas are not capable of recountig his good qualities. He is honoured by Devas and celestial sages. He is spoken of as Ananta. He has a thousand hoods, and he is clearly bedecked in Svastika ornaments devoid of impurities. He illuminates all quarters by thousand jewels on his hoods.

For the welfare of the universe, he deprives the Asuras of their prowess. His eyes whirl and rove due to intoxication. He has only one earring at all times.

Wearing a crown and garlands he shines like a white mountain aflame with fire.

He is clad in blue garments. He is intoxicated with pride. He is resplendent with white garlands. He is lofty like the mountain of Kailāsa where the celestial Gaṅgā falls. He has placed his hand on the plough-share; he holds an excellent iron club. He is attended upon by the embodied splendour of Varuṇa.

At the end of the Kalpa, Rudra in the form of Saṅkarṣaṇa comes out of his mouth, blazing like the flame of poisonous fire and devours the three worlds.

He holds the entire sphere of the world rising above like a peak.

— Brahma Purana, Chapter 19

The Brahmanda Purana also described Shesha in Patala:

With his two thousand eyes that have the reddish splendour of the rising sun and with his body that is white and glossy, he appears like the mountain. Kailāsa surrounded by clusters of flames. He has the white complexion like the Moon as well as the Kunda flowers. Hence the cluster of his eyes shines like the cluster of midday suns on the peak of the white Mountain (Śveta Parvata).

He has a huge terrible body. With it (resting) in his reclining pose on his couch, he appears like a thousand-peaked mountain of vast dimensions (resting) over the earth.

This (enormously) huge lord of serpents, himself of great splendour, is being attended upon by extremely wise and noble-souled great serpents of huge physique. He is the king of all serpents. He is Ananta, Śeṣa, of excessive brilliance.

— Brahmanda Purana, Chapter 20
 
Vishnu with Shesha Naga-ancient Bronze artefact in Government Museum Mathura

The Bhagavata Purana equates Shesha and Balarama:

The foremost manifestation of Lord Vishnu is Sankarṣana, who is known as Ananta. He is the origin of all incarnations within this material world. Previous to the appearance of Lord Shri Krishna, this original Sankarsana will appear as Baladeva, just to please the Supreme Lord Shri Krishna in His transcendental pastimes."

— Bhagavata Purana, 10.1.24

In the Bhagavad Gita chapter 10, verse 29, Krishna describes 75 of his common manifestations, and declares, "anantaś ca asmi nāgānāṁ": Among Nāgas (a special class of serpents), I am the serpent-god Ananta.

 
Heads of Shesha at the Kerala Folklore Museum

In popular culture

The Palliyodam, a type of large snake boat built and used by Aranmula Parthasarathy Temple in Kerala for the annual water processions of Uthrattathi Jalamela and Valla Sadhya has the legend that it was designed by Krishna and were made to look like Shesha.[6]

The capital of Kerala, Thiruvananthapuram, is named after the King of the Serpents and is translated as "The Sacred City of Ananta".

On the SCP Foundation wiki, the winning article for the SCP-3000 contest is titled Anantashesha. The article features SCP-3000, a gargantuan serpentine entity swimming in the Bay of Bengal with anomalous abilities, based on the fact that Shesha "would linger past the end".[7]

Other names

  • Sheshanaga (Sesha the serpent)
  • Adishesha (the first Sesha)
  • Anantashesha (Endless Sesha)
  • Ananta (endless/infinite)
  • Alternative spellings: Sesa, Sesha, Śeṣa
  • Shesha Sayana or Nagar Syana means Vishnu who sleeps (Sayana) on Sheshanaga

See also

References

  1. ^ Handa 2004, p. 91.
  2. ^ Haq, Kaiser (12 October 2015). The Triumph of the Snake Goddess. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-91511-4.
  3. ^ Mbh, Adi Parva
  4. ^ "Manavala Mamunigal". acharya.org. Retrieved 7 June 2022.
  5. ^ www.wisdomlib.org (17 March 2018). "The Magnitude of Netherworlds [Chapter 19]". www.wisdomlib.org. Retrieved 13 August 2022.
  6. ^ "Explained: What is a Palliyodam, and why a Kerala actor was arrested for photoshoot on it". thenewsminute. Retrieved 13 September 2021.
  7. ^ A Random Day; Ben "djkaktus" Sisson; Joreth (25 March 2017). "SCP-3000 - Anantashesha". SCP Foundation. Retrieved 25 January 2022.

Bibliography

  • Handa, Om Chanda (2004), Naga Cults and Traditions in the Western Himalaya, Indus Publishing, ISBN 978-8173871610

External links

  • ananta supports the world (from mahAbhArata)
  • Image of ancient Vishnu and Sesha in deity form

shesha, sheshnaag, redirects, here, 1990, bollywood, film, sheshnaag, film, sanskrit, romanized, Śeṣa, remainder, also, known, epithets, naga, sanskrit, षन, romanized, Śeṣanāga, snake, adishesha, sanskrit, आद, romanized, Ādiśeṣa, first, serpentine, demigod, na. Sheshnaag redirects here For the 1990 Bollywood film see Sheshnaag film Shesha Sanskrit श ष romanized Seṣa lit Remainder 2 also known by his epithets Sheshanaga Sanskrit श षन ग romanized Seṣanaga lit The snake Shesha and Adishesha Sanskrit आद श ष romanized Adiseṣa lit First Shesha is a serpentine demigod naga and Nagaraja King of all serpents as well as a primordial being of creation in Hinduism In the Puranas Shesha is said to hold all the planets of the universe on his hoods and to constantly sing the glories of Vishnu from all his mouths He is sometimes referred to as Ananta Shesha Endless Shesha or Adishesha the First Shesha It is said that when Adishesa uncoils time moves forward and creation takes place when he coils back the universe ceases to exist SheshaKing of the Serpents 1 Idol of Shesha KathmanduOther namesSheshanaga Ananta Adishesha SankarshanaAffiliationVaishnavismAbodeKshira SagaraPersonal informationParentsKashyapa father Kadru mother SiblingsMany including Manasa Vasuki and TakshakaChildrenSulochana and SunainaThe Narayana form of Vishnu is often depicted as resting on Shesha accompanied by his consort Lakshmi Adishesha is considered as one of the two mounts of Vishnu alongside Garuda He is said to have descended upon Earth in the following human forms or incarnations Lakshmana brother of Vishnu s incarnation Rama during the Treta Yuga and according to some traditions as Balarama brother of Vishnu s incarnation Krishna during the Dvapara Yuga According to the Mahabharata Adi Parva his father was Kashyapa and his mother Kadru though in other accounts he is usually a primordial being created by Vishnu His name means he who remains from the Sanskrit root siṣ because even as the world is destroyed at the end of each kalpa Shesha remains as he is Contents 1 Form 2 Origin 2 1 Mahavishnu and Sankarshana 3 Avatars 4 Literature 5 In popular culture 6 Other names 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksForm Edit Vishnu sleeps on the coils of Ananta the World Snake He will awake for the next cycle of creation which heralds the destruction of all things Sculpture From India c 14th century CE National Museum of Scotland Edinburgh Narayana resting on Adhishesha with his consort Lakshmi massaging his feet Narayana reclining on Shesha as Brahma blooms on a lotus from his navel palace of Bir Singh Dev Orchha early 17th c Adishesha is generally depicted with a massive form that floats coiled through space or upon the Ocean of Milk to form the bed upon which Vishnu lays Sometimes he is depicted as a five headed or seven headed or a ten headed serpent but more commonly as one thousand headed or five thousand headed or even as many as a one million headed serpent sometimes with each head wearing an ornate crown Origin EditAccording to the Mahabharata Adishesha was born to the sage Kashyapa and his wife Kadru Kadru gave birth to a thousand snakes of which Shesha was the eldest After Shesha Vasuki Iravati and Takshaka were born in that order A lot of Shesha s brothers were cruel and were bent upon inflicting harm on others They were even unkind to Garuda who was Kashyapa s son through Vinata sister of Kadru Kadru and Vinata were daughters of Daksha Shesha disgusted by the cruel acts of his brothers left his mother and kin and took to austere penances He lived on air and meditated in places including Gandhamadhana Badrikashrama Gokarna Pushkara and the Himalayas His penances were so severe that his flesh skin and muscles dried up and merged with his frame Brahma convinced of Shesha s will asked Shesha to request a boon Shesha asked that he be able to keep his mind under control so that he could continue to perform ascetic penances Brahma gladly accepted the request Brahma then asked a favour of Shesha to go beneath the precarious earth and stabilise it Shesha agreed and went to the netherworld and stabilised Bhumi with his hood He is believed to support her even today thus making Patala his perennial residence 3 Mahavishnu and Sankarshana Edit Shesha is usually depicted as floating in the ocean of the changing world forming the bed of Mahavishnu In the Bhagavata Purana Shesha is named Sankarshana the tamasic energy of Narayana himself and is said to live deep within the inner layers of Patala where there are many serpents with gems on their heads and where he reigns as its ruler He is said to have existed before the creation of the universe When the universe is towards its end he creates the 11 Rudras from the serpents to destroy the universe for a new one to be created Sankarshana is also one of the four vyuha forms of Vishnu the other three being Vasudeva Pradyumna and Aniruddha In Gaudiya accounts Sankarshana expands himself as Garbhodakshayi Vishnu in the beginning of the universe to create Brahma In other words Sankarshana is believed to be Narayana himself In the first few chapters of the Puranas it is also said that Sankarshana preached the Bhagavata to the Four Kumaras who in turn passed on this message At some point the message was passed to sage Maitreya who in turn preached it to Vidura Avatars Edit As Lakshmana Shesha accompanied his lord in his Rama avatar As Balarama Shesha accompanied Vishnu in his Krishna Avatar Adisesha is believed to have taken 6 incarnations on earth During the Satya Yuga he came down in his original form to form a seat for Vishnu s avatar of Narasimha who had incarnated to slay the impious Hiranyakashipu During the Treta Yuga Sesha took birth as Lakshmana as Lord Vishnu s as Rama brother Lakshmana is a very prominent character in the Ramayana along with Hanuman and Sita During Dvapara Yuga he is a stated to have incarnated as Balarama again as a brother to Vishnu as Krishna This is often disputed by the original line ups of the Dasavatara where Balarama is also considered to be an incarnation of Vishnu During the Kali Yuga according to Sri Vaishnava tradition he was born as Patanjali Maharishi Ramanujacharya and Manavala Mamunigal 4 He was not accompanied by God during the Kali Yuga Instead he incarnated alone to spread devotion among the people being a peaceful incarnation Sri Vaishnavism also states that Balarama is an incarnation of both Vishnu and Adishesha In the Bhagavad Gita in the middle of the battlefield Kurukshetra Krishna explaining his omnipresence says Of Nagas I am Ananta indicating the importance of Ananta Shesha Literature EditThe Brahma Purana describes the attributes of Ananta 5 Daityas and Danavas are not capable of recountig his good qualities He is honoured by Devas and celestial sages He is spoken of as Ananta He has a thousand hoods and he is clearly bedecked in Svastika ornaments devoid of impurities He illuminates all quarters by thousand jewels on his hoods For the welfare of the universe he deprives the Asuras of their prowess His eyes whirl and rove due to intoxication He has only one earring at all times Wearing a crown and garlands he shines like a white mountain aflame with fire He is clad in blue garments He is intoxicated with pride He is resplendent with white garlands He is lofty like the mountain of Kailasa where the celestial Gaṅga falls He has placed his hand on the plough share he holds an excellent iron club He is attended upon by the embodied splendour of Varuṇa At the end of the Kalpa Rudra in the form of Saṅkarṣaṇa comes out of his mouth blazing like the flame of poisonous fire and devours the three worlds He holds the entire sphere of the world rising above like a peak Brahma Purana Chapter 19 The Brahmanda Purana also described Shesha in Patala With his two thousand eyes that have the reddish splendour of the rising sun and with his body that is white and glossy he appears like the mountain Kailasa surrounded by clusters of flames He has the white complexion like the Moon as well as the Kunda flowers Hence the cluster of his eyes shines like the cluster of midday suns on the peak of the white Mountain Sveta Parvata He has a huge terrible body With it resting in his reclining pose on his couch he appears like a thousand peaked mountain of vast dimensions resting over the earth This enormously huge lord of serpents himself of great splendour is being attended upon by extremely wise and noble souled great serpents of huge physique He is the king of all serpents He is Ananta Seṣa of excessive brilliance Brahmanda Purana Chapter 20 Vishnu with Shesha Naga ancient Bronze artefact in Government Museum MathuraThe Bhagavata Purana equates Shesha and Balarama The foremost manifestation of Lord Vishnu is Sankarṣana who is known as Ananta He is the origin of all incarnations within this material world Previous to the appearance of Lord Shri Krishna this original Sankarsana will appear as Baladeva just to please the Supreme Lord Shri Krishna in His transcendental pastimes Bhagavata Purana 10 1 24In the Bhagavad Gita chapter 10 verse 29 Krishna describes 75 of his common manifestations and declares anantas ca asmi naganaṁ Among Nagas a special class of serpents I am the serpent god Ananta Heads of Shesha at the Kerala Folklore Museum Narasimha the man lion incarnation of Vishnu seated on the coils of Shesha with seven heads of Shesha forming a canopy statue at Vijayanagara Maha Vishnu sheltered by the five headed Shesha Parsurameswar Temple Bhubaneswar Brahma gives a boon to Shesha and orders to bear the Prithvi or EarthIn popular culture EditThe Palliyodam a type of large snake boat built and used by Aranmula Parthasarathy Temple in Kerala for the annual water processions of Uthrattathi Jalamela and Valla Sadhya has the legend that it was designed by Krishna and were made to look like Shesha 6 The capital of Kerala Thiruvananthapuram is named after the King of the Serpents and is translated as The Sacred City of Ananta On the SCP Foundation wiki the winning article for the SCP 3000 contest is titled Anantashesha The article features SCP 3000 a gargantuan serpentine entity swimming in the Bay of Bengal with anomalous abilities based on the fact that Shesha would linger past the end 7 Other names EditSheshanaga Sesha the serpent Adishesha the first Sesha Anantashesha Endless Sesha Ananta endless infinite Alternative spellings Sesa Sesha Seṣa Shesha Sayana or Nagar Syana means Vishnu who sleeps Sayana on SheshanagaSee also EditVasuki Ouroboros Jormungandr Manasa Naga Snake worship Nagaradhane Padmanabhaswamy TempleReferences Edit Handa 2004 p 91 Haq Kaiser 12 October 2015 The Triumph of the Snake Goddess Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 91511 4 Mbh Adi Parva Manavala Mamunigal acharya org Retrieved 7 June 2022 www wisdomlib org 17 March 2018 The Magnitude of Netherworlds Chapter 19 www wisdomlib org Retrieved 13 August 2022 Explained What is a Palliyodam and why a Kerala actor was arrested for photoshoot on it thenewsminute Retrieved 13 September 2021 A Random Day Ben djkaktus Sisson Joreth 25 March 2017 SCP 3000 Anantashesha SCP Foundation Retrieved 25 January 2022 Bibliography EditHanda Om Chanda 2004 Naga Cults and Traditions in the Western Himalaya Indus Publishing ISBN 978 8173871610External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Shesha ananta supports the world from mahAbhArata The Glories of Lord Ananta from Srimad Bhagavatam Ananta Sesha The Legendary Serpent Maha Vishnu amp Ananta Sesha Image of ancient Vishnu and Sesha in deity form Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shesha amp oldid 1131896793, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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