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Arjuna

Arjuna (Sanskrit: अर्जुन, IAST: Arjuna), also known as Partha and Dhananjaya, is one of the chief protagonists of the Hindu epic Mahabharata. In the epic, he is the third among five Pandava brothers, from the royal line of the Kuru Kingdom. In the Mahabharata War, Arjuna was a key warrior from the Pandava side and slew many warriors including Karna and Bhishma. Before the beginning of the war, his mentor, Krishna, gave him the supreme knowledge of Bhagavad Gita to overcome his moral dilemmas.[1]

Arjuna
A statue of Arjuna in Bali
Personal Information
GenderMale,
Eunuch (for one year)
TitleGandivadhari
Affiliation
WeaponBow and arrow
FamilyParents
Brothers (Kunti) Step-Brothers (Madri)
Spouse
Children
Relatives

Arjuna was born when Indra, the god of heaven, blessed Kunti and Pandu with a son. From childhood, Arjuna was a brilliant student and was favoured by his beloved teacher, Drona. Arjuna is depicted as a skilled archer, winning the hands of Draupadi, who became the common wife of the Pandavas. Arjuna is twice exiled, first for breaking a pact with his brothers; and secondly together with them when his oldest brother was tricked into gambling away the throne.

Some notable incidents during the first exile were Arjuna's marriages with princesses Ulupi, Chitrāngadā and Subhadra. From his four wives, Arjuna had four sons, one from each wife — Shrutakarma, Iravan, Babhruvahana and Abhimanyu. During his second exile, Arjuna gained many celestial weapons. Despite being a warrior, Arjuna was also skilled in music and dance. At the end of the epic, Pandavas, accompanied by Draupadi, retired to the Himalayas.

Etymology and epithets

According to Monier Monier-Williams, the word Arjuna means white, clear or silver.[2] He is known by many other names, such as:[3][4]

  • Dhanañjaya (धनञ्जय) – one who conquered wealth and gold
  • Guḍākesha (गुडाकेश) – one who has conquered sleep (the lord of sleep, Gudaka+isha) or one who has abundant hair (Guda-kesha), like an ascete keshin.
  • Vijaya (विजय) – always victorious, invincible and undefeatable
  • Savyasāchī (सव्यसाची)– one who can shoot arrows using the right and the left hand with equal activity;Ambidextrous.[5]
  • Shvetavāhana (श्वेतवाहन) – one with milky white horses mounted to his pure white chariot
  • Anagha (अनघ) – one who is sinless[6]
  • Bībhatsu (बीभत्सु) – one who always fights wars in a fair, stylish and terrific manner and never does anything horrible in the war
  • Kirīṭī (किरीटी) – one who wears the celestial diadem presented by the King of Gods, Indra[7]
  • Jiṣṇu (जिष्णु) – triumphant, conqueror of enemies[8]
  • Phālguṇa (फाल्गुण) – born under the star Uttara Phalguni (Denebola in Leo)[9]
  • Mahābāhu (महाबाहु) – one with large and strong arms
  • Gāṇḍīvadhārī (गाण्डीवधारी) – holder of a bow named Gandiva
  • Pārtha (पार्थ) – son of Pritha (or Kunti) – after his mother
  • Kaunteya (कौन्तेय) – son of Kunti – after his mother
  • Pāṇḍuputra (पाण्डुपुत्र) – son of Pandu – after his father
  • Pāṇḍava (पाण्डव) – son of Pandu – after his father
  • Kṛṣṇā (कृष्णा) – He who is of dark complexion and conducts great purity.[9]
  • Bṛhannalā (बृहन्नला) – another name assumed by Arjuna for the 13th year in exile

Literary background

The story of Arjuna is told in the Mahabharata, one of the Sanskrit epics from the Indian subcontinent. The work is written in Classical Sanskrit and is a composite work of revisions, editing and interpolations over many centuries. The oldest parts in the surviving version of the text probably date to about 400 BCE.[10]

The Mahabharata manuscripts exist in numerous versions, wherein the specifics and details of major characters and episodes vary, often significantly. Except for the sections containing the Bhagavad Gita which is remarkably consistent between the numerous manuscripts, the rest of the epic exists in many versions.[11] The differences between the Northern and Southern recensions are particularly significant, with the Southern manuscripts more profuse and longer. Scholars have attempted to construct a critical edition, relying mostly on a study of the "Bombay" edition, the "Poona" edition, the "Calcutta" edition and the "south Indian" editions of the manuscripts. The most accepted version is one prepared by scholars led by Vishnu Sukthankar at the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute, preserved at Kyoto University, Cambridge University and various Indian universities.[12]

Life and legends

Birth and early life

 
Indra blesses Kunti with a son.

Arjuna was one of the five Pandava brothers of royal lineage, whose collective name derives from their father and heir to the Lunar dynasty, Pandu. However, Pandu was under a curse whereby he would die if he had sexual relations with a woman and thus his sons were born using a mantra given to Kunti by sage Durvasa during her maiden days. His wives—Madri and Kunti—invoked different gods and were blessed with children.[13] According to the legend, Arjuna was a demigod, who was born as a blessing after his mother Kunti invoked the god Indra on her husband's request.[14][15] Whilst the other epic such as Devi Bhagavata also records Arjuna as a reincarnation of a rishi called Nara.[16][17]

Despite being the younger brother of Dhritarashtra, it was Pandu who succeeded their father as king of Bharata. This was because Dhritarashtra was blind, a disability that caused him to forfeit his right to the royal succession. Dhritarashtra fathered 100 sons, known as the Kaurava brothers, and ascended the throne on the death of Pandu.[18][19] The Pandava brothers were then brought up with their cousins, the Kauravas, and the education of all these boys was supervised by Bhishma.[20] Among their teachers was the brahmin warrior called Drona, who considered Arjuna to be his favourite.[21] According to Swami Parmeshwaranand, Arjuna was Drona's most accomplished pupil. He notes an incident where Drona deemed that out of all his students, none but Arjuna had the steadfast focus to shoot the eye of a toy bird on a tree using a bow and arrow, and that Drona was proven right.[22]

After the princes completed their training, Arjuna defeated Drupada of Panchala, who was impressed by the prince's skills, as the gurudakshina for his beloved teacher Drona.[23] Later, Duryodhana and his maternal uncle Shakuni planned to burn Pandavas alive along with their mother Kunti. They built a palace out of lac in a village named Varanāvata. The Pandavas, though, managed to escape the house of lac with the help of Vidura through a secret tunnel.[24]

Marriages and children

 
Arjuna piercing the eye of the fish as depicted in Chennakesava Temple built by Hoysala Empire

Arjuna is a central character in the Hindu epics and appears in hundreds of situations. Among the most notable is his marriage to Draupadi,[25][26] the fire born daughter of Drupada, who was the king of Panchala.[27]

After the event of Lakshagriha, Arjuna, his mother and brothers decide to hide from Hastinapura. One day, Arjuna learns that Drupada is holding an archery tournament to determine who should marry his daughter. The tournament was to lift and string a bow, and fire arrows to pierce the eye of a golden fish only by looking at its reflection in the water. At the Swayamvara, almost all the assorted monarchs were unable to complete the challenge. In the end, Arjuna, dressed as a Brahmin, wins the tournament.[28] Annoyed by their defeat, the kings attack Arjuna, but he defeats them and runs home to tell his mother of his success, shouting "look what we have found". Commentators vary as to whether Kunti thought he was referring to alms found in the forest or to some great prize unknown to her. She tells him that the find must be shared with his brothers, as they had always shared such things in the past.

This misunderstanding, combined with the protocol that the oldest of the brothers, Yudhishthira, should marry first, leads to the agreement that all five brothers marry her. This is one of the rare examples of polyandry in Sanskrit literature.[25][29] The brothers agreed that none should intrude if Draupadi was alone with one of the others, the penalty for doing so is a year to be spent in exile during which the culprit must remain celibate.[25]

When Arjuna, his siblings, mother and Draupadi returned to Hastinapura, Dhritarashtra determined to avoid a rivalry developing for control of Hastinapur by splitting the kingdom, with half of it being left to his own eldest son, Duryodhana, and half to the eldest son of Pandu, Yudhishthira.[18][19]

Arjuna inadvertently broke the pact with his brothers, intruding as he sought to collect weapons whilst Yudhishthira, was alone with Draupadi. He felt obliged to go into exile despite Yudhishthira's attempts to dissuade him.[27] It was this event that led to him forming a close relationship with his cousin Krishna[a] because he ignored the celibacy condition of the pact[25] and married three people on his travels, the first of whom was a Naga princess named Ulupi, with whom he had a son called Iravan. His second marriage was with a princess of Manipura, Chitrangada, who bore a son named Babhruvahana. The third was with Subhadra, the sister of Krishna. This last event, which took place in Dvaraka,[27] is not the first meeting between Krishna and the Pandavas in the story but it does mark the start of a bond, sealed with the birth of the couple's child, Abhimanyu, whom Krishna adores.[31]

Burning of Khandava Forest

 
Burning of Khandava forest.

It was while at Indraprastha, the capital city of the Pandavas,[32] for the birth of Abhimanyu that Arjuna and Krishna become involved in what Alf Hiltebeitel describes as "one of the strangest scenes of the epic", this being the burning of the Khandava Forest. This story within a story has been interpreted in various ways.[31]

The essence of this part of the myth is that Arjuna and Krishna are in the forest when they are approached by a hungry person. They agree to help satisfy his hunger, at which point he reveals himself to be Agni, the god of fire. Agni's hunger can only be sated by consuming the entire forest and everything in it but his previous attempts to do this were thwarted by Indra, who is a protector of the forest and sent down rains to quench the fire. The cousins agree to fend off Indra and anyone else who might interfere; to this end, Arjuna armed himself with the Gandiva bow and Krishna with his Sudarshana Chakra, weapons suitable for a fight with the gods. They then begin to destroy the forest, battling against Indra and other gods, as well as demons, animals and snakes. Once the forest has gone, after six days of fire and slaughter, Arjuna and Krishna receive thanks from Indra, who had retreated with the other gods partway through the proceedings on being commanded by a mysterious voice to step back and watch.[33]

The game of dice

 
Draupadi disrobed by Dushasana, while Arjuna and the Pandavas look away (right).

As heir to the lordship of Kurukshetra, Yudhishthira had attracted the unwelcome attention of his Kaurava cousin, Duryodhana, who sought the throne.[34] The royal consecration involved an elaborate Vedic ceremony called rajasuya which extended over several years and included the playing of a ritualised game of dice.[35] This particular game, described as "Indian literature's most notorious dice game" by Williams,[25] was rigged by Duryodhana, causing Yudhishthira to gamble and lose everything, including his kingdom and his shared wife Draupadi.[29][36] He and his brothers only obtained their freedom because Draupadi offered herself to the Kauravas in exchange. She was then humiliated by them so much that revenge for her treatment became a further motivation for the Pandavas in the rivalry with their cousins.[29] During her humiliation, Karna called her a whore for marrying five men. This led Arjuna to take a vow of killing Karna.[37] The brothers, including Arjuna, were forced into a 12-year exile, to be followed by a year living incognito if Yudhishthira was to regain his kingdom.[36]

Exile of the Pandavas

 
Arjuna gains Pashupastra

While in this exile, Arjuna performed twelve labours. He received instruction in the use of weapons from Parashurama, the sixth avatar of Vishnu, and visited the Himalayas to get celestial weapons that he would be able to use against the Kauravas. Thereafter, he honed his battle skills with a visit to Swarga, the heaven of Indra, where he emerged victorious in a battle with the Daityas and also fought for Indra, his spiritual father, with the Gandiva.[14]

After the battle at Khandava, Indra had promised Arjuna to give him all his weapons as a boon for matching him in battle with the requirement that Shiva is pleased with him. During the exile, following the advice of Krishna to go on meditation or tapasya to attain this divine weapon, Arjuna left his brothers for a penance on Indrakeeladri Hill.[38]

When Arjuna was in deep meditation, a wild boar ran towards him. He realized it and took out an arrow and shot it at the boar. But, another arrow had already pierced the boar. Arjuna was furious and he saw a hunter there. He confronted the hunter and they engaged in a fight. After hours of fighting, Arjuna was not able to defeat him and realized that the hunter was Shiva. Shiva was pleased and took his real form. He gave him Pashupatastra and told that the boar was Indra as he wanted to test Arjuna. After gaining the weapon, Indra took him to heaven and gave him many weapons.[38][39]

During his exile, Arjuna was invited to the palace of Indra, his father. An apsara named Urvashi was impressed and attracted to Arjuna's look and talent so she expresses her love in front of him. But Arjuna did not have any intentions of making love to Urvashi. Instead, he called her “mother”. Because once Urvashi was the wife of King Pururavas the ancestor of Kuru dynasty. Urvashi felt insulted and cursed Arjuna that he will be a eunuch for the rest of his life. Later on Indra's request, Urvashi curtailed the curse to a period of one year.[40][41]

At Matsya Kingdom

 
Brihannala teaching dance to Uttarā

Arjuna spent the last year of exile as a eunuch named Brihannala at King Virata’s Matsya Kingdom. He taught song and dance to the princess Uttarā. After Kichaka humiliated and tried to molest Draupadi, Arjuna consoled her and Bhima killed Kichaka. When Duryodhana and his army attacked Matsya, Uttar, Uttarā's brother, with Brihannala as his charioteer went to the army. Later that day, the year of Agyatavasa was over. Arjuna took Uttar away from the army to the forest where he had kept his divine bow, Gandiva and revealed his identity to Uttara. Later when he revealed his identity to everyone in the Matsya, Uttarā was married to Arjuna's son Abhimanyu.[40][42]

Kurukshetra War

Bhagavat Gita

 
Krishna tells Gita to Arjuna

The Bhagavad Gita is a book within the Mahabharata that depicts a dialogue between Arjuna and Krishna immediately prior to the commencement of the Kurukshetra War between the Pandavas and Kauravas. According to Richard H. Davis,

The conversation deals with the moral propriety of the war and much else as well. The Gita begins with Arjuna in confusion and despair, dropping his weapons; it ends with Arjuna picking up his bow, all doubts resolved and ready for battle.[43]

In the war

 
Karna's chariot's wheel is stuck in the earth

Arjuna was a key warrior in Pandava's victory in the Kurukshetra War. He killed many powerful and key warriors of Kaurava's side.

  • Fall of Bhishma: On the 10th day of battle, Shikhandi accompanied Arjuna on the latter's chariot and they faced Bhishma who did not fire arrows at Shikhandi. He was then felled in battle by Arjuna, pierced by innumerable arrows. With Sikhandi in front, Bhishma did not even look in that direction, Arjuna shot arrows at Bhishma, piercing his entire body.[40]
  • Death of Bhagadatta: On the 12th day of the war, Arjuna killed powerful king of Pragjyotisha Bhagadatta, along with his mighty elephant Supratika.[44]
  • Death of Jayadratha: Arjuna learns that Jayadratha blocked the other four Pandavas, at the entrance of Chakravyuha, due to which Abhimanyu entered alone and was killed unfairly by multiple Kaurava warriors on the 13th day of the war. Arjuna vowed to kill him the very next day before sunset, failing which he would kill himself by jumping in a fire. Arjuna pierced into the Kaurava army on the 14th day, killing 7 aukshohinis (1.5 million) of their army, and finally beheaded Jayadratha on 14th day of the war.
  • Death of Sudakshina : He killed Sudakshina the king of Kambojas on the 14th day using Indrastra killing him and a large part of his army.
  • Death of Susharma: Arjuna on the 13th day, killed king Susharma of Trigarta Kingdom, the main Kaurava ally.
  • Death of Karna: The much anticipated battle between Arjuna and Karna took place on the 17th day of war. The battle continued fiercely and Arjuna killed Karna by using Anjalikastra.[40]

Later life and death

After the Kurukshetra War, Yudhishthira appointed Arjuna as the Prime Minister of Hastinapur. Yudhishthira performed Ashvamedha. Arjuna followed the horse to the land of Manipura and encountered Babhruvahana, one of his sons. None of them knew one another. Babhruvahana asked Arjuna to fight and killed his father during the battle. Chitrāngadā came to the battlefield and revealed that Arjuna was her husband and Babhruvahana's father. Ulupi, the second wife of Arjuna, revived Arjuna using a celestial gem called Nagamani.[45]

After Krishna left his mortal body, Arjuna took the citizens of Dwaraka, including 16,100 wives of Krishna, to Indraprastha. On the way, they were attacked by a group of bandits. Arjuna desisted fighting seeing the law of time.

Upon the onset of the Kali Yuga and acting on the advice of Vyasa, Arjuna and other Pandavas retired, leaving the throne to Parikshit (Arjuna's grandson and Abhimanyu's son). Giving up all their belongings and ties, the Pandavas, accompanied by a dog, made their final journey of pilgrimage to the Himalayas. The listener of the Mahabharata is Janamejaya, Parikshit's son and Arjunaś great-grandson.[46]

Outside Indian subcontinent

Indonesia

 
Krishna and Arjuna statue in Bali, Indonesia.

In the Indonesian archipelago, the figure of Arjuna is also known and has been famous for a long time. Arjuna especially became popular in the areas of Java, Bali, Madura and Lombok. In Java and later in Bali, Arjuna became the main character in several kakawin, such as Kakawin Arjunawiwāha, Kakawin Pārthayajña, and Kakawin Pārthāyana (also known as Kakawin Subhadrawiwāha. In addition, Arjuna is also found in several temple reliefs on the island of Java, for example the Surawana temple.

Wayang story

 
Arjuna wayang (puppetry) in Indonesian culture, especially Java.

Arjuna is a well-known figure in the world of wayang (Indonesian Puppetry) in Javanese culture. Some of the characteristics of the wayang version of Arjuna may be different from that of Arjuna in the Indian version of the Mahābhārata book in Sanskrit. In the world of puppetry, Arjuna is described as a knight who likes to travel, meditate, and learn. Apart from being a student of Resi Drona at Padepokan Sukalima, he is also a student of Resi Padmanaba from the Untarayana Hermitage. Arjuna was a brahman in Goa Mintaraga, with the title Bagawan Ciptaning. He was made the superior knight of the gods to destroy Prabu Niwatakawaca, the giant king of the Manimantaka country. For his services, Arjuna was crowned king in Dewa Indra's heaven, with the title King Karitin and get the gift of magical heirlooms from the gods, including: Gendewa (from Bhatara Indra), Ardadadali Arrow (from Bhatara Kuwera), Cundamanik Arrow (from Bhatara Narada). After the Bharatayuddha war, Arjuna became king in Banakeling State, the former Jayadrata kingdom.

 
Painting of Bharatayudha war.

Arjuna has a smart and clever nature, is quiet, conscientious, polite, brave and likes to protect the weak. He leads the Madukara Duchy, within the territory of the state of Amarta. He is an unmatched fighter on the battlefield, even though he is slender, handsome as a virgin, soft-hearted despite the will of steel, a knight with a myriad of wives and lovers despite being able to do the toughest asceticism, a knight with deep family loyalty but then able to force himself to kill his half brother. For the older generation of Java, he was the embodiment of a whole man. Very different from Yudhisthira, he really enjoyed life in the world. His love adventures always amaze the Javanese, but he is strangely different from Don Juan who always chases women. It is said that Arjuna was so refined and handsome that such princesses, as well as the ladies-in-waiting, would immediately offer themselves. They are the ones who get the honor, not Arjuna. He is very different from Wrekudara. He displayed a graceful body and a gentleness that was appreciated by the Javanese of all generations.

Arjuna also has other powerful heirlooms, among others: The Kiai Kalanadah Keris was given to Gatotkaca when he married Dewi Gowa (Arjuna's son), Sangkali Arrow (from Resi Drona), Candranila Arrow, Sirsha Arrow, Sarotama Kiai Arrow, Pasupati Arrow (from Batara Guru), Panah Naracabala, Arrow Ardhadhedhali, Keris Kiai Baruna, Keris Pulanggeni (given to Abhimanyu), Terompet Dewanata, Cupu filled with Jayengkaton oil (given by Bagawan Wilawuk from Pringcendani hermitage) and Ciptawilaha Horse with Kiai Pamuk's whip. Meanwhile, Arjuna's spell includes: Panglimunan, Tunggengmaya, Sepiangin, Mayabumi, Pengasih and Asmaragama. Arjuna also has clothes that symbolize greatness, namely Kampuh or Limarsawo Cloth, Limarkatanggi Belt, Minangkara Gelung, Candrakanta Necklace and Mustika Ampal Ring (formerly belonging to King Ekalaya, the king of the Paranggelung state).[47][48]

Depictions in popular culture

 
Arjuna Wijaya monument in Jakarta, Indonesia

Arjuna's extraordinary talents and skills have made him a common name in popular culture.

In television and films

There have been serials and films based on Arjuna's life and exploits.

Television

Films

References

Notes

  1. ^ The cousin relationship existing between Arjuna and Krishna was through Arjuna's mother, Kunti, and her brother, Vasudeva, the father of Krishna. Both parents were children of the king Shurasena.[30]

Citations

  1. ^ Davis, Richard H. (26 October 2014). The Bhagavad Gita. ISBN 978-0-691-13996-8.
  2. ^ Monier-Williams, Sir Monier (1872). A Sanskṛit-English Dictionary Etymologically and Philologically Arranged: With Special Reference to Greek, Latin, Gothic, German, Anglo-Saxon, and Other Cognate Indo-European Languages. Clarendon Press.
  3. ^ "Arjuna's Many Names". The Hindu. 14 August 2018. Retrieved 21 June 2020.
  4. ^ "Reasons for the names". The Hindu. 8 July 2018. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 1 July 2020.
  5. ^ "The Mahabharata, Book 1: Adi Parva: Vaivahika Parva: Section CLXLIX".
  6. ^ "The Mahabharata, Book 3: Vana Parva: Markandeya-Samasya Parva: Section CCXXX".
  7. ^ "The Mahabharata, Book 3: Vana Parva: Tirtha-yatra Parva: Section CLXIV".
  8. ^ "Rig Veda: Rig-Veda, Book 7: HYMN XXXV. Viśvedevas".
  9. ^ a b "The Mahabharata, Book 4: Virata Parva: Go-harana Parva: Section XLIV".
  10. ^ Brockington, J. L. (1998). The Sanskrit Epics. Brill Academic. p. 26. ISBN 978-9-00410-260-6.
  11. ^ Minor, Robert N. (1982). Bhagavad Gita: An Exegetical Commentary. South Asia Books. pp. l–li. ISBN 978-0-8364-0862-1.
  12. ^ McGrath, Kevin (2004). The Sanskrit Hero: Karna in Epic Mahabharata. Brill Academic. pp. 19–26. ISBN 978-9-00413-729-5.
  13. ^ Johnson, W. J. (1 January 2009). "Pandu". A Dictionary of Hinduism. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ACREF/9780198610250.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19861-025-0. OCLC 244416793. OL 23224406M. Wikidata Q55879169.
  14. ^ a b Coulter, Charles Russell; Turner, Patricia (4 July 2013). "Arjuna". Encyclopedia of Ancient Deities. Routledge. p. 69. ISBN 978-1-13596-390-3.
  15. ^ Johnson, W. J. (1 January 2009). "Pandavas". A Dictionary of Hinduism. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ACREF/9780198610250.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19861-025-0. OCLC 244416793. OL 23224406M. Wikidata Q55879169.
  16. ^ "The Devi Bhagavatam: The Fourth Book: Chapter 1". Sacred-texts.com. Retrieved 27 February 2022.
  17. ^ "The Devi Bhagavatam: The Fourth Book: Chapter 5". Sacred-texts.com. Retrieved 27 February 2022.
  18. ^ a b Narlikar, Amrita; Narlikar, Aruna (2014). Bargaining with a Rising India: Lessons from the Mahabharata. Oxford University Press. p. 225. ISBN 978-0-19161-205-3.
  19. ^ a b Flood, Gavin; Martin, Charles (2012). The Bhagavad Gita: A New Translation. W. W. Norton & Company. p. 6. ISBN 978-0-39308-385-9.
  20. ^ Johnson, W. J. (1 January 2009). "Bisma". A Dictionary of Hinduism. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ACREF/9780198610250.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19861-025-0. OCLC 244416793. OL 23224406M. Wikidata Q55879169.
  21. ^ Johnson, W. J. (1 January 2009). "Drona". A Dictionary of Hinduism. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ACREF/9780198610250.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19861-025-0. OCLC 244416793. OL 23224406M. Wikidata Q55879169.
  22. ^ Parmeshwaranand, Swami (2001). Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Purāṇas (1st ed.). New Delhi: Sarup & Sons. pp. 512–513. ISBN 978-8-17625-226-3.
  23. ^ Mani, Vettam (1 January 2015). Puranic Encyclopedia: A Comprehensive Work with Special Reference to the Epic and Puranic Literature. Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 978-81-208-0597-2.
  24. ^ "ASI grants permission to excavate palace Kauravas commissioned to kill Pandavas". India Today. 2 November 2017. Retrieved 8 August 2020.
  25. ^ a b c d e Williams, George M. (2008). "Arjuna". Handbook of Hindu Mythology. Oxford University Press. p. 61. ISBN 978-0-19533-261-2.
  26. ^ Johnson, W. J. (1 January 2009). "Arjuna". A Dictionary of Hinduism. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ACREF/9780198610250.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19861-025-0. OCLC 244416793. OL 23224406M. Wikidata Q55879169.
  27. ^ a b c Dalal, Roshen (2010). Hinduism: An Alphabetical Guide. Penguin Books. p. 38. ISBN 978-0-14-341421-6.
  28. ^ Jones, Constance; Ryan, James D. (2006). Encyclopedia of Hinduism. Infobase Publishing. pp. 136–137. ISBN 9780816075645.
  29. ^ a b c Johnson, W. J. (1 January 2009). "Draupadi". A Dictionary of Hinduism. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ACREF/9780198610250.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19861-025-0. OCLC 244416793. OL 23224406M. Wikidata Q55879169.
  30. ^ Dalal, Roshen (2010). Hinduism: An Alphabetical Guide. Penguin Books. p. 216. ISBN 978-0-14-341421-6.
  31. ^ a b Hiltebeitel, Alf (5 July 1990). The Ritual of Battle: Krishna in the Mahabharata. SUNY Press. p. 86. ISBN 978-0-79140-250-4.
  32. ^ Singh, Upinder, ed. (2006). Delhi: Ancient History. Berghahn Books. pp. xvii–xviii. ISBN 978-8-18735-829-9.
  33. ^ Framarin, Christopher G. (2014). Hinduism and Environmental Ethics: Law, Literature and Philosophy. Routledge. pp. 100–101. ISBN 978-1-31791-894-3.
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  50. ^ . Army Technology. Archived from the original on 10 December 2019. Retrieved 19 June 2020.
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  53. ^ "Mahabharat's Arjun Firoz Khan Says Changing His Name Gave Him Everything He'd Dreamed of". News18. 27 April 2020. Retrieved 19 June 2020.
  54. ^ Keshri, Shweta (1 May 2020). "Shaheer Sheikh on Mahabharat: It was like boys' hostel, made some amazing friends". India Today. Retrieved 19 June 2020.
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Further reading

  • McGrath, Kevin (2016). Arjuna Pandava: The Double Hero in Epic Mahabharata. Orient Blackswan. ISBN 978-8-12506-309-4.

External links

Arjuna at the Encyclopædia Britannica

arjuna, this, article, about, character, hindu, epic, mahabharata, other, uses, arjun, disambiguation, sanskrit, अर, iast, also, known, partha, dhananjaya, chief, protagonists, hindu, epic, mahabharata, epic, third, among, five, pandava, brothers, from, royal,. This article is about the character in the Hindu epic Mahabharata For other uses see Arjun disambiguation Arjuna Sanskrit अर ज न IAST Arjuna also known as Partha and Dhananjaya is one of the chief protagonists of the Hindu epic Mahabharata In the epic he is the third among five Pandava brothers from the royal line of the Kuru Kingdom In the Mahabharata War Arjuna was a key warrior from the Pandava side and slew many warriors including Karna and Bhishma Before the beginning of the war his mentor Krishna gave him the supreme knowledge of Bhagavad Gita to overcome his moral dilemmas 1 ArjunaA statue of Arjuna in BaliPersonal InformationGenderMale Eunuch for one year TitleGandivadhariAffiliationPandavasMahabharata kingWeaponBow and arrowFamilyParents Indra Divine Father Kunti Mother Pandu Father Madri Step Mother Brothers Kunti Karna by SuryaYudhishthira by DharmarajaBhima by Vayu Step Brothers Madri Nakula by AshvinsSahadeva by AshvinsSpouseDraupadiUlupiChitrangadaSubhadraChildrenShrutakarma by DraupadiIravan by UlupiBabruvahana by ChitrangadaAbhimanyu by SubhadraRelativesKauravas Paternal Cousins Lord Krishna Maternal cousin Balarama Maternal Cousin Shishupala Maternal cousin Arjuna was born when Indra the god of heaven blessed Kunti and Pandu with a son From childhood Arjuna was a brilliant student and was favoured by his beloved teacher Drona Arjuna is depicted as a skilled archer winning the hands of Draupadi who became the common wife of the Pandavas Arjuna is twice exiled first for breaking a pact with his brothers and secondly together with them when his oldest brother was tricked into gambling away the throne Some notable incidents during the first exile were Arjuna s marriages with princesses Ulupi Chitrangada and Subhadra From his four wives Arjuna had four sons one from each wife Shrutakarma Iravan Babhruvahana and Abhimanyu During his second exile Arjuna gained many celestial weapons Despite being a warrior Arjuna was also skilled in music and dance At the end of the epic Pandavas accompanied by Draupadi retired to the Himalayas Contents 1 Etymology and epithets 2 Literary background 3 Life and legends 3 1 Birth and early life 3 2 Marriages and children 3 3 Burning of Khandava Forest 3 4 The game of dice 3 5 Exile of the Pandavas 3 6 At Matsya Kingdom 3 7 Kurukshetra War 3 7 1 Bhagavat Gita 3 7 2 In the war 3 8 Later life and death 4 Outside Indian subcontinent 4 1 Indonesia 4 1 1 Wayang story 5 Depictions in popular culture 5 1 In television and films 5 1 1 Television 5 1 2 Films 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksEtymology and epithets EditAccording to Monier Monier Williams the word Arjuna means white clear or silver 2 He is known by many other names such as 3 4 Dhananjaya धनञ जय one who conquered wealth and gold Guḍakesha ग ड क श one who has conquered sleep the lord of sleep Gudaka isha or one who has abundant hair Guda kesha like an ascete keshin Vijaya व जय always victorious invincible and undefeatable Savyasachi सव यस च one who can shoot arrows using the right and the left hand with equal activity Ambidextrous 5 Shvetavahana श व तव हन one with milky white horses mounted to his pure white chariot Anagha अनघ one who is sinless 6 Bibhatsu ब भत स one who always fights wars in a fair stylish and terrific manner and never does anything horrible in the war Kiriṭi क र ट one who wears the celestial diadem presented by the King of Gods Indra 7 Jiṣṇu ज ष ण triumphant conqueror of enemies 8 Phalguṇa फ ल ग ण born under the star Uttara Phalguni Denebola in Leo 9 Mahabahu मह ब ह one with large and strong arms Gaṇḍivadhari ग ण ड वध र holder of a bow named Gandiva Partha प र थ son of Pritha or Kunti after his mother Kaunteya क न त य son of Kunti after his mother Paṇḍuputra प ण ड प त र son of Pandu after his father Paṇḍava प ण डव son of Pandu after his father Kṛṣṇa क ष ण He who is of dark complexion and conducts great purity 9 Bṛhannala ब हन नल another name assumed by Arjuna for the 13th year in exileLiterary background EditThe story of Arjuna is told in the Mahabharata one of the Sanskrit epics from the Indian subcontinent The work is written in Classical Sanskrit and is a composite work of revisions editing and interpolations over many centuries The oldest parts in the surviving version of the text probably date to about 400 BCE 10 The Mahabharata manuscripts exist in numerous versions wherein the specifics and details of major characters and episodes vary often significantly Except for the sections containing the Bhagavad Gita which is remarkably consistent between the numerous manuscripts the rest of the epic exists in many versions 11 The differences between the Northern and Southern recensions are particularly significant with the Southern manuscripts more profuse and longer Scholars have attempted to construct a critical edition relying mostly on a study of the Bombay edition the Poona edition the Calcutta edition and the south Indian editions of the manuscripts The most accepted version is one prepared by scholars led by Vishnu Sukthankar at the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute preserved at Kyoto University Cambridge University and various Indian universities 12 Life and legends EditBirth and early life Edit Indra blesses Kunti with a son Arjuna was one of the five Pandava brothers of royal lineage whose collective name derives from their father and heir to the Lunar dynasty Pandu However Pandu was under a curse whereby he would die if he had sexual relations with a woman and thus his sons were born using a mantra given to Kunti by sage Durvasa during her maiden days His wives Madri and Kunti invoked different gods and were blessed with children 13 According to the legend Arjuna was a demigod who was born as a blessing after his mother Kunti invoked the god Indra on her husband s request 14 15 Whilst the other epic such as Devi Bhagavata also records Arjuna as a reincarnation of a rishi called Nara 16 17 Despite being the younger brother of Dhritarashtra it was Pandu who succeeded their father as king of Bharata This was because Dhritarashtra was blind a disability that caused him to forfeit his right to the royal succession Dhritarashtra fathered 100 sons known as the Kaurava brothers and ascended the throne on the death of Pandu 18 19 The Pandava brothers were then brought up with their cousins the Kauravas and the education of all these boys was supervised by Bhishma 20 Among their teachers was the brahmin warrior called Drona who considered Arjuna to be his favourite 21 According to Swami Parmeshwaranand Arjuna was Drona s most accomplished pupil He notes an incident where Drona deemed that out of all his students none but Arjuna had the steadfast focus to shoot the eye of a toy bird on a tree using a bow and arrow and that Drona was proven right 22 After the princes completed their training Arjuna defeated Drupada of Panchala who was impressed by the prince s skills as the gurudakshina for his beloved teacher Drona 23 Later Duryodhana and his maternal uncle Shakuni planned to burn Pandavas alive along with their mother Kunti They built a palace out of lac in a village named Varanavata The Pandavas though managed to escape the house of lac with the help of Vidura through a secret tunnel 24 Marriages and children Edit Arjuna piercing the eye of the fish as depicted in Chennakesava Temple built by Hoysala Empire Arjuna is a central character in the Hindu epics and appears in hundreds of situations Among the most notable is his marriage to Draupadi 25 26 the fire born daughter of Drupada who was the king of Panchala 27 After the event of Lakshagriha Arjuna his mother and brothers decide to hide from Hastinapura One day Arjuna learns that Drupada is holding an archery tournament to determine who should marry his daughter The tournament was to lift and string a bow and fire arrows to pierce the eye of a golden fish only by looking at its reflection in the water At the Swayamvara almost all the assorted monarchs were unable to complete the challenge In the end Arjuna dressed as a Brahmin wins the tournament 28 Annoyed by their defeat the kings attack Arjuna but he defeats them and runs home to tell his mother of his success shouting look what we have found Commentators vary as to whether Kunti thought he was referring to alms found in the forest or to some great prize unknown to her She tells him that the find must be shared with his brothers as they had always shared such things in the past This misunderstanding combined with the protocol that the oldest of the brothers Yudhishthira should marry first leads to the agreement that all five brothers marry her This is one of the rare examples of polyandry in Sanskrit literature 25 29 The brothers agreed that none should intrude if Draupadi was alone with one of the others the penalty for doing so is a year to be spent in exile during which the culprit must remain celibate 25 When Arjuna his siblings mother and Draupadi returned to Hastinapura Dhritarashtra determined to avoid a rivalry developing for control of Hastinapur by splitting the kingdom with half of it being left to his own eldest son Duryodhana and half to the eldest son of Pandu Yudhishthira 18 19 Arjuna inadvertently broke the pact with his brothers intruding as he sought to collect weapons whilst Yudhishthira was alone with Draupadi He felt obliged to go into exile despite Yudhishthira s attempts to dissuade him 27 It was this event that led to him forming a close relationship with his cousin Krishna a because he ignored the celibacy condition of the pact 25 and married three people on his travels the first of whom was a Naga princess named Ulupi with whom he had a son called Iravan His second marriage was with a princess of Manipura Chitrangada who bore a son named Babhruvahana The third was with Subhadra the sister of Krishna This last event which took place in Dvaraka 27 is not the first meeting between Krishna and the Pandavas in the story but it does mark the start of a bond sealed with the birth of the couple s child Abhimanyu whom Krishna adores 31 Burning of Khandava Forest Edit Burning of Khandava forest It was while at Indraprastha the capital city of the Pandavas 32 for the birth of Abhimanyu that Arjuna and Krishna become involved in what Alf Hiltebeitel describes as one of the strangest scenes of the epic this being the burning of the Khandava Forest This story within a story has been interpreted in various ways 31 The essence of this part of the myth is that Arjuna and Krishna are in the forest when they are approached by a hungry person They agree to help satisfy his hunger at which point he reveals himself to be Agni the god of fire Agni s hunger can only be sated by consuming the entire forest and everything in it but his previous attempts to do this were thwarted by Indra who is a protector of the forest and sent down rains to quench the fire The cousins agree to fend off Indra and anyone else who might interfere to this end Arjuna armed himself with the Gandiva bow and Krishna with his Sudarshana Chakra weapons suitable for a fight with the gods They then begin to destroy the forest battling against Indra and other gods as well as demons animals and snakes Once the forest has gone after six days of fire and slaughter Arjuna and Krishna receive thanks from Indra who had retreated with the other gods partway through the proceedings on being commanded by a mysterious voice to step back and watch 33 The game of dice Edit Draupadi disrobed by Dushasana while Arjuna and the Pandavas look away right As heir to the lordship of Kurukshetra Yudhishthira had attracted the unwelcome attention of his Kaurava cousin Duryodhana who sought the throne 34 The royal consecration involved an elaborate Vedic ceremony called rajasuya which extended over several years and included the playing of a ritualised game of dice 35 This particular game described as Indian literature s most notorious dice game by Williams 25 was rigged by Duryodhana causing Yudhishthira to gamble and lose everything including his kingdom and his shared wife Draupadi 29 36 He and his brothers only obtained their freedom because Draupadi offered herself to the Kauravas in exchange She was then humiliated by them so much that revenge for her treatment became a further motivation for the Pandavas in the rivalry with their cousins 29 During her humiliation Karna called her a whore for marrying five men This led Arjuna to take a vow of killing Karna 37 The brothers including Arjuna were forced into a 12 year exile to be followed by a year living incognito if Yudhishthira was to regain his kingdom 36 Exile of the Pandavas Edit Arjuna gains Pashupastra While in this exile Arjuna performed twelve labours He received instruction in the use of weapons from Parashurama the sixth avatar of Vishnu and visited the Himalayas to get celestial weapons that he would be able to use against the Kauravas Thereafter he honed his battle skills with a visit to Swarga the heaven of Indra where he emerged victorious in a battle with the Daityas and also fought for Indra his spiritual father with the Gandiva 14 After the battle at Khandava Indra had promised Arjuna to give him all his weapons as a boon for matching him in battle with the requirement that Shiva is pleased with him During the exile following the advice of Krishna to go on meditation or tapasya to attain this divine weapon Arjuna left his brothers for a penance on Indrakeeladri Hill 38 When Arjuna was in deep meditation a wild boar ran towards him He realized it and took out an arrow and shot it at the boar But another arrow had already pierced the boar Arjuna was furious and he saw a hunter there He confronted the hunter and they engaged in a fight After hours of fighting Arjuna was not able to defeat him and realized that the hunter was Shiva Shiva was pleased and took his real form He gave him Pashupatastra and told that the boar was Indra as he wanted to test Arjuna After gaining the weapon Indra took him to heaven and gave him many weapons 38 39 During his exile Arjuna was invited to the palace of Indra his father An apsara named Urvashi was impressed and attracted to Arjuna s look and talent so she expresses her love in front of him But Arjuna did not have any intentions of making love to Urvashi Instead he called her mother Because once Urvashi was the wife of King Pururavas the ancestor of Kuru dynasty Urvashi felt insulted and cursed Arjuna that he will be a eunuch for the rest of his life Later on Indra s request Urvashi curtailed the curse to a period of one year 40 41 At Matsya Kingdom Edit Brihannala teaching dance to Uttara Arjuna spent the last year of exile as a eunuch named Brihannala at King Virata s Matsya Kingdom He taught song and dance to the princess Uttara After Kichaka humiliated and tried to molest Draupadi Arjuna consoled her and Bhima killed Kichaka When Duryodhana and his army attacked Matsya Uttar Uttara s brother with Brihannala as his charioteer went to the army Later that day the year of Agyatavasa was over Arjuna took Uttar away from the army to the forest where he had kept his divine bow Gandiva and revealed his identity to Uttara Later when he revealed his identity to everyone in the Matsya Uttara was married to Arjuna s son Abhimanyu 40 42 Kurukshetra War Edit Bhagavat Gita Edit Krishna tells Gita to ArjunaThe Bhagavad Gita is a book within the Mahabharata that depicts a dialogue between Arjuna and Krishna immediately prior to the commencement of the Kurukshetra War between the Pandavas and Kauravas According to Richard H Davis The conversation deals with the moral propriety of the war and much else as well The Gita begins with Arjuna in confusion and despair dropping his weapons it ends with Arjuna picking up his bow all doubts resolved and ready for battle 43 In the war Edit Karna s chariot s wheel is stuck in the earth Main article Kurukshetra War Arjuna was a key warrior in Pandava s victory in the Kurukshetra War He killed many powerful and key warriors of Kaurava s side Fall of Bhishma On the 10th day of battle Shikhandi accompanied Arjuna on the latter s chariot and they faced Bhishma who did not fire arrows at Shikhandi He was then felled in battle by Arjuna pierced by innumerable arrows With Sikhandi in front Bhishma did not even look in that direction Arjuna shot arrows at Bhishma piercing his entire body 40 Death of Bhagadatta On the 12th day of the war Arjuna killed powerful king of Pragjyotisha Bhagadatta along with his mighty elephant Supratika 44 Death of Jayadratha Arjuna learns that Jayadratha blocked the other four Pandavas at the entrance of Chakravyuha due to which Abhimanyu entered alone and was killed unfairly by multiple Kaurava warriors on the 13th day of the war Arjuna vowed to kill him the very next day before sunset failing which he would kill himself by jumping in a fire Arjuna pierced into the Kaurava army on the 14th day killing 7 aukshohinis 1 5 million of their army and finally beheaded Jayadratha on 14th day of the war Death of Sudakshina He killed Sudakshina the king of Kambojas on the 14th day using Indrastra killing him and a large part of his army Death of Susharma Arjuna on the 13th day killed king Susharma of Trigarta Kingdom the main Kaurava ally Death of Karna The much anticipated battle between Arjuna and Karna took place on the 17th day of war The battle continued fiercely and Arjuna killed Karna by using Anjalikastra 40 Later life and death Edit After the Kurukshetra War Yudhishthira appointed Arjuna as the Prime Minister of Hastinapur Yudhishthira performed Ashvamedha Arjuna followed the horse to the land of Manipura and encountered Babhruvahana one of his sons None of them knew one another Babhruvahana asked Arjuna to fight and killed his father during the battle Chitrangada came to the battlefield and revealed that Arjuna was her husband and Babhruvahana s father Ulupi the second wife of Arjuna revived Arjuna using a celestial gem called Nagamani 45 After Krishna left his mortal body Arjuna took the citizens of Dwaraka including 16 100 wives of Krishna to Indraprastha On the way they were attacked by a group of bandits Arjuna desisted fighting seeing the law of time Upon the onset of the Kali Yuga and acting on the advice of Vyasa Arjuna and other Pandavas retired leaving the throne to Parikshit Arjuna s grandson and Abhimanyu s son Giving up all their belongings and ties the Pandavas accompanied by a dog made their final journey of pilgrimage to the Himalayas The listener of the Mahabharata is Janamejaya Parikshit s son and Arjunas great grandson 46 Outside Indian subcontinent EditIndonesia Edit Krishna and Arjuna statue in Bali Indonesia In the Indonesian archipelago the figure of Arjuna is also known and has been famous for a long time Arjuna especially became popular in the areas of Java Bali Madura and Lombok In Java and later in Bali Arjuna became the main character in several kakawin such as Kakawin Arjunawiwaha Kakawin Parthayajna and Kakawin Parthayana also known as Kakawin Subhadrawiwaha In addition Arjuna is also found in several temple reliefs on the island of Java for example the Surawana temple Wayang story Edit Arjuna wayang puppetry in Indonesian culture especially Java Arjuna is a well known figure in the world of wayang Indonesian Puppetry in Javanese culture Some of the characteristics of the wayang version of Arjuna may be different from that of Arjuna in the Indian version of the Mahabharata book in Sanskrit In the world of puppetry Arjuna is described as a knight who likes to travel meditate and learn Apart from being a student of Resi Drona at Padepokan Sukalima he is also a student of Resi Padmanaba from the Untarayana Hermitage Arjuna was a brahman in Goa Mintaraga with the title Bagawan Ciptaning He was made the superior knight of the gods to destroy Prabu Niwatakawaca the giant king of the Manimantaka country For his services Arjuna was crowned king in Dewa Indra s heaven with the title King Karitin and get the gift of magical heirlooms from the gods including Gendewa from Bhatara Indra Ardadadali Arrow from Bhatara Kuwera Cundamanik Arrow from Bhatara Narada After the Bharatayuddha war Arjuna became king in Banakeling State the former Jayadrata kingdom Painting of Bharatayudha war Arjuna has a smart and clever nature is quiet conscientious polite brave and likes to protect the weak He leads the Madukara Duchy within the territory of the state of Amarta He is an unmatched fighter on the battlefield even though he is slender handsome as a virgin soft hearted despite the will of steel a knight with a myriad of wives and lovers despite being able to do the toughest asceticism a knight with deep family loyalty but then able to force himself to kill his half brother For the older generation of Java he was the embodiment of a whole man Very different from Yudhisthira he really enjoyed life in the world His love adventures always amaze the Javanese but he is strangely different from Don Juan who always chases women It is said that Arjuna was so refined and handsome that such princesses as well as the ladies in waiting would immediately offer themselves They are the ones who get the honor not Arjuna He is very different from Wrekudara He displayed a graceful body and a gentleness that was appreciated by the Javanese of all generations Arjuna also has other powerful heirlooms among others The Kiai Kalanadah Keris was given to Gatotkaca when he married Dewi Gowa Arjuna s son Sangkali Arrow from Resi Drona Candranila Arrow Sirsha Arrow Sarotama Kiai Arrow Pasupati Arrow from Batara Guru Panah Naracabala Arrow Ardhadhedhali Keris Kiai Baruna Keris Pulanggeni given to Abhimanyu Terompet Dewanata Cupu filled with Jayengkaton oil given by Bagawan Wilawuk from Pringcendani hermitage and Ciptawilaha Horse with Kiai Pamuk s whip Meanwhile Arjuna s spell includes Panglimunan Tunggengmaya Sepiangin Mayabumi Pengasih and Asmaragama Arjuna also has clothes that symbolize greatness namely Kampuh or Limarsawo Cloth Limarkatanggi Belt Minangkara Gelung Candrakanta Necklace and Mustika Ampal Ring formerly belonging to King Ekalaya the king of the Paranggelung state 47 48 Depictions in popular culture Edit Arjuna Wijaya monument in Jakarta Indonesia Arjuna s extraordinary talents and skills have made him a common name in popular culture The American astronomer Tom Gehrels named a class of asteroids with low inclination low eccentricity and earth like orbital period as Arjuna asteroids 49 The Arjuna Award is presented every year in India to one talented sportsperson in every national sport Arjun is a third generation main battle tank developed for the Indian Army 50 Mayilpeeli Thookkam is a ritual art of dance performed in the temples of Kerala It is also known as Arjuna Nrithyam Arjuna s dance as a tribute to his dancing abilities citation needed Arjuna is also an Archer class Servant in the mobile game Fate Grand Order He is a minor antagonist in the E Pluribus Unum story chapter where he wishes to fight Karna again 51 The protagonist in Steven Pressfield s 1995 book The Legend of Bagger Vance and its 2000 film adaptation Rannulph Junuh is based in part on Arjuna R Junuh 52 In television and films Edit There have been serials and films based on Arjuna s life and exploits Earth Maiden Arjuna is a Japanese animated television series created by Shoji Kawamori This series is based on Arjuna and the Mahabharata Arjuna Into the Another World is the soundtrack produced for the series Arjuna is a character in Orson Scott Card s Earth Afire 2013 and Earth Awakens 2014 Television Edit TV Series Played by Channel CountryMahabharat 1988 TV series Arjun 53 DD National IndiaBharat Ek Khoj Lalit Mohan TiwariShri Krishna 1993 TV series Sandeep MohanMahabharat Katha ArjunEk Aur Mahabharat Narendra Jha Zee TVJai Hanuman 1997 TV series Manish Khanna DD MetroDraupadi 2001 TV series Rajesh Shringarpure Sahara OneDwarkadheesh Bhagwaan Shree Krishn Gautam Sharma NDTV ImagineKahaani Hamaaray Mahaabhaarat Ki Harshad Chopda 9XMahabharat 2013 TV series Shaheer Sheikh 54 Star PlusDharmakshetra Arya Dharmchand Kumar 55 EPICSuryaputra Karn Navi Bhangu Sony TVKarn Sangini Kinshuk Vaidya Star PlusParamavatar Shri Krishna Ankit Bathla amp TVRadha Krishn Kinshuk Vaidya 56 Star BharatFilms Edit Film Played byDraupadi Prithviraj KapoorSri Krishnarjuna Yuddhamu Akkineni Nageswara RaoBhishma Sobhan BabuKarnan MuthuramanMahabharat Pradeep KumarBabruvahana N T Rama RaoVeerabhimanyu Kanta RaoPandava Vanavasam M BalaiahSri Krishna Pandaveeyam Sobhan BabuSri Krishnavataram RamakrishnaDaana Veera Soora Karna Nandamuri HarikrishnaBabruvahana RajkumarKurukshetram KrishnaThe Mahabharata Vittorio MezzogiornoThalapathi Arvind Swami Based on Arjuna s character Arjun The Warrior Prince Yuddvir Bakolia voice Mahabharat Ajay Devgn voice Mahabharat Aur Barbareek ArjunKurukshetra Sonu Sood 57 Memories of My Body Radithya Evandra name of a character Wahyu Juno based on Arjuna References EditNotes The cousin relationship existing between Arjuna and Krishna was through Arjuna s mother Kunti and her brother Vasudeva the father of Krishna Both parents were children of the king Shurasena 30 Citations Davis Richard H 26 October 2014 The Bhagavad Gita ISBN 978 0 691 13996 8 Monier Williams Sir Monier 1872 A Sanskṛit English Dictionary Etymologically and Philologically Arranged With Special Reference to Greek Latin Gothic German Anglo Saxon and Other Cognate Indo European Languages Clarendon Press Arjuna s Many Names The Hindu 14 August 2018 Retrieved 21 June 2020 Reasons for the names The Hindu 8 July 2018 ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 1 July 2020 The Mahabharata Book 1 Adi Parva Vaivahika Parva Section CLXLIX The Mahabharata Book 3 Vana Parva Markandeya Samasya Parva Section CCXXX The Mahabharata Book 3 Vana Parva Tirtha yatra Parva Section CLXIV Rig Veda Rig Veda Book 7 HYMN XXXV Visvedevas a b The Mahabharata Book 4 Virata Parva Go harana Parva Section XLIV Brockington J L 1998 The Sanskrit Epics Brill Academic p 26 ISBN 978 9 00410 260 6 Minor Robert N 1982 Bhagavad Gita An Exegetical Commentary South Asia Books pp l li ISBN 978 0 8364 0862 1 McGrath Kevin 2004 The Sanskrit Hero Karna in Epic Mahabharata Brill Academic pp 19 26 ISBN 978 9 00413 729 5 Johnson W J 1 January 2009 Pandu A Dictionary of Hinduism Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ACREF 9780198610250 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19861 025 0 OCLC 244416793 OL 23224406M Wikidata Q55879169 a b Coulter Charles Russell Turner Patricia 4 July 2013 Arjuna Encyclopedia of Ancient Deities Routledge p 69 ISBN 978 1 13596 390 3 Johnson W J 1 January 2009 Pandavas A Dictionary of Hinduism Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ACREF 9780198610250 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19861 025 0 OCLC 244416793 OL 23224406M Wikidata Q55879169 The Devi Bhagavatam The Fourth Book Chapter 1 Sacred texts com Retrieved 27 February 2022 The Devi Bhagavatam The Fourth Book Chapter 5 Sacred texts com Retrieved 27 February 2022 a b Narlikar Amrita Narlikar Aruna 2014 Bargaining with a Rising India Lessons from the Mahabharata Oxford University Press p 225 ISBN 978 0 19161 205 3 a b Flood Gavin Martin Charles 2012 The Bhagavad Gita A New Translation W W Norton amp Company p 6 ISBN 978 0 39308 385 9 Johnson W J 1 January 2009 Bisma A Dictionary of Hinduism Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ACREF 9780198610250 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19861 025 0 OCLC 244416793 OL 23224406M Wikidata Q55879169 Johnson W J 1 January 2009 Drona A Dictionary of Hinduism Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ACREF 9780198610250 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19861 025 0 OCLC 244416793 OL 23224406M Wikidata Q55879169 Parmeshwaranand Swami 2001 Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Puraṇas 1st ed New Delhi Sarup amp Sons pp 512 513 ISBN 978 8 17625 226 3 Mani Vettam 1 January 2015 Puranic Encyclopedia A Comprehensive Work with Special Reference to the Epic and Puranic Literature Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 0597 2 ASI grants permission to excavate palace Kauravas commissioned to kill Pandavas India Today 2 November 2017 Retrieved 8 August 2020 a b c d e Williams George M 2008 Arjuna Handbook of Hindu Mythology Oxford University Press p 61 ISBN 978 0 19533 261 2 Johnson W J 1 January 2009 Arjuna A Dictionary of Hinduism Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ACREF 9780198610250 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19861 025 0 OCLC 244416793 OL 23224406M Wikidata Q55879169 a b c Dalal Roshen 2010 Hinduism An Alphabetical Guide Penguin Books p 38 ISBN 978 0 14 341421 6 Jones Constance Ryan James D 2006 Encyclopedia of Hinduism Infobase Publishing pp 136 137 ISBN 9780816075645 a b c Johnson W J 1 January 2009 Draupadi A Dictionary of Hinduism Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ACREF 9780198610250 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19861 025 0 OCLC 244416793 OL 23224406M Wikidata Q55879169 Dalal Roshen 2010 Hinduism An Alphabetical Guide Penguin Books p 216 ISBN 978 0 14 341421 6 a b Hiltebeitel Alf 5 July 1990 The Ritual of Battle Krishna in the Mahabharata SUNY Press p 86 ISBN 978 0 79140 250 4 Singh Upinder ed 2006 Delhi Ancient History Berghahn Books pp xvii xviii ISBN 978 8 18735 829 9 Framarin Christopher G 2014 Hinduism and Environmental Ethics Law Literature and Philosophy Routledge pp 100 101 ISBN 978 1 31791 894 3 Johnson W J 1 January 2009 Yudhisthira A Dictionary of Hinduism Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ACREF 9780198610250 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19861 025 0 OCLC 244416793 OL 23224406M Wikidata Q55879169 Johnson W J 1 January 2009 Rajasuya A Dictionary of Hinduism Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ACREF 9780198610250 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19861 025 0 OCLC 244416793 OL 23224406M Wikidata Q55879169 a b Johnson W J 1 January 2009 Mahabharata A Dictionary of Hinduism Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ACREF 9780198610250 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19861 025 0 OCLC 244416793 OL 23224406M Wikidata Q55879169 McGrath Kevin 1 January 2004 The Sanskrit Hero Karṇa in Epic Mahabharata BRILL pp 82 83 ISBN 978 90 04 13729 5 a b Sharma Arvind Khanna Madhu 15 February 2013 Asian Perspectives on the World s Religions after September 11 ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 313 37897 3 Sharma Mahesh Chaturvedi B K 2006 Tales From the Mahabharat Diamond Pocket Books P Ltd ISBN 978 81 288 1228 6 a b c d Chandramouli Anuja 15 December 2012 ARJUNA Saga Of A Pandava Warrior Prince Leadstart Publishing Pvt Ltd ISBN 978 93 81576 39 7 Verma retold amp edited by T R Bhanot artwork by K L 1990 The Mahabharata New Delhi Dreamland Publications p 19 ISBN 9788173010453 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first has generic name help Gopal Madan 1990 K S Gautam ed India through the ages Publication Division Ministry of Information and Broadcasting Government of India p 80 Davis Richard H 2014 The Bhagavad Gita A Biography Princeton University Press p 10 ISBN 978 0 69113 996 8 Barpujari H K 1990 The Comprehensive History of Assam Ancient period Publication Board Assam Krishna amp Human Relations Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan 2001 ISBN 9788172762391 Bowker John 2000 The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780192800947 001 0001 ISBN 9780192800947 clarification needed Ensiklopedia tokoh tokoh wayang dan silsilahnya Penerbit Narasi 2010 ISBN 9789791681896 Retrieved 24 January 2021 Enneagram dalam Wayang Purwa Gramedia Pustaka Utama 27 May 2013 ISBN 9789792293562 Retrieved 21 January 2021 de la Fuente Marcos C de la Fuente Marcos R 12 February 2015 Geometric characterization of the Arjuna orbital domain Astronomische Nachrichten 336 1 5 22 arXiv 1410 4104 Bibcode 2015AN 336 5D doi 10 1002 asna 201412133 Arjun Main Battle Tank Army Technology Archived from the original on 10 December 2019 Retrieved 19 June 2020 Lynn David Archers in the Fate Universe Who ACTUALLY Use Bows Crunchyroll Retrieved 21 June 2020 Rosen Steven 30 May 2002 Gita on the Green The Mystical Tradition Behind Bagger Vance Steven Rosen Google Boeken ISBN 9780826413659 Retrieved 9 August 2013 Mahabharat s Arjun Firoz Khan Says Changing His Name Gave Him Everything He d Dreamed of News18 27 April 2020 Retrieved 19 June 2020 Keshri Shweta 1 May 2020 Shaheer Sheikh on Mahabharat It was like boys hostel made some amazing friends India Today Retrieved 19 June 2020 Dharmakshetra IMDb Kinshuk Vaidya enters RadhaKrishn as Arjun India Today Retrieved 8 July 2020 Sonu Sood to play Arjun in Kannada film Kurukshetra The Indian Express 11 July 2019 Retrieved 19 June 2020 Further reading EditMcGrath Kevin 2016 Arjuna Pandava The Double Hero in Epic Mahabharata Orient Blackswan ISBN 978 8 12506 309 4 External links EditArjuna at the Encyclopaedia Britannica Arjuna at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arjuna amp oldid 1132189645, wikipedia, 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