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Draupadi

Draupadi (Sanskrit: द्रौपदी, romanizeddraupadī, lit.'Daughter of Drupada'), also referred to as Krishnā, Panchali, and Yajñaseni, is the main female protagonist of the Hindu epic Mahabharata, and the first wife of Arjuna.[1] She is noted for her beauty, courage.[2]

Draupadi
Member of Panchakanya
Nepalese sculpture of Draupadi
Other names
  • Krishnā
  • Yajnaseni
  • Panchali
  • Drupadakanya
Devanagariद्रौपदी
Affiliation
Texts
GenderFemale
Personal information
Born
Died
Parents
Siblings
SpouseArjuna
Children
DynastyKuru dynasty by marriage

In Mahabharata, Draupadi and her brother, Dhrishtadyumna, were born from a yajna (fire sacrifice) organized by King Drupad of Panchal. Arjuna won her hand in marriage. She had five sons from Arjuna.[3]

The most notable incident in Draupadi's life is the game of dice at Hastinapura where Yudhishthira loses his possessions and Arjun's wife, and she is humiliated by the Kaurava brothers and Karna. An attempt is made by Dushasana to disrobe her, but she is saved by the divine intervention of Krishna. Following the subsequent episodes, Draupadi and the Pandavas are exiled for 13 years. Significant events during this period include an attempted kidnapping by Jayadratha and the death of Kichaka. The exile is followed by the Kurukshetra War, where Draupadi loses her father, brothers, and her five children. After the war, she resumes her role as the empress for 36 years, after which she retires to the Himalayas along with her husband, Arjuna.[4]

Draupadi's story has been an inspiration for various arts, performances and secondary literature.[5] In Hinduism, she is extolled as one of the panchakanya (five virgins), archetypes of female chastity whose names are believed to dispel sin when recited.[6] In some parts of the sub-continent, a sect of Draupadi exists, where she is worshipped as a goddess.[7]

Etymology and epithets edit

 
A painting by Raja Ravi Varma depicting the sorrow of Draupadi, who is disguised as Sairandhri

The word Draupadī (lit. 'daughter of Drupada') is a patronymic, derived from the word Drupada, which means 'pillar'.[8][9] Like other epic characters, she is referred to by multiple names in the Mahabharata. Some of her other names and epithets are as follows:

  • Krishnā (Kṛṣṇā) – 'one who has a dark complexion'. It is the birth name of Draupadi.[10][11]
  • Panchali (Pāñcālī) – 'one from Panchala'.[12][13]
  • Yajnaseni (Yajñasenī) – another patronymic derived from Drupada's another name Yajnasena (lit. 'he whose army is sacrificial'); or the name can also mean 'one born from a Yajña (sacrificial fire)'.[14][10]
  • Drupadakanya (Drupadakanyā) – 'the daughter of Drupada'.
  • Sairandhri (Sairandhrī) – 'an expert maid'. This pseudonym was assumed by Draupadi during her incognito life.[15]
  • Parshati (Parṣatī) – 'granddaughter of Prishata', or 'daughter of Prishati'. Both the names—Parshati and Prishati—are derived from Prishata, Drupada's father.[16]
  • Nityayuvani (Nityayuvanī) – 'one who remains young forever and never becomes old'.
  • Mahabharati – the virtuous wife of great descendant of Bharata (Arjuna)
  • Agnisutā – 'Daughter of fire'
  • Kalyani – 'One who brings fortune'. Yudhishthira addressed her by this name.
  • Malini (Mālinī) – fragrant, one who makes garlands.[17]
  • Panchavallabha (Pancavallabhā) – 'Beloved of the five Pandavas'.[18]
  • Pandusharmila (Pāṇḍuśarmilā) – 'Daughter-in-law of Pandu'.[18]

Literary background edit

The story of Draupadi is told in the great indian script 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.[19]

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.[20] 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.[21]

Life and Legends edit

Birth edit

 
A 1940s print depicting the birth of Draupadi from the fire sacrifice

Most Hindu texts state that Draupadi was not born of a woman and thus, she is often described as an ayonija (lit. 'one not born from a woman's womb').[22][23] Her birth is narrated in the Adi Parva of the epic. Drona—the teacher of the Kuru princes—defeats Drupada with the help of his students, and takes half of Panchala. Drupada seeks vengeance but realises that none of his children and allies is capable enough to slay Drona. As a result, he decides to perform a yajna (fire-sacrifice) to obtain a powerful son. With the sages Yaja and Upyaja serving as the head priests, the yajna is conducted. After completion, the priests instruct Prishati—the wife of Drupada—to consume the sacrifice offering, but she refuses and asks them to wait till she washed herself. Unable to wait, Yaja pours the offering into the altar of the sacrifice, from which a youthful man and a woman emerge. The latter's birth is followed by a divine prophecy,

"This dark-complexioned girl will be the first of all women, and she will be the cause of the destruction of many Kshatriyas. This slender-waisted one will, in time, accomplish the purpose of the gods, and along with her many a danger will overtake the Kauravas."[24]

The youth and the maiden are named Dhrishtadyumna and Krishnaa, but the latter one is better known by the patronymic "Draupadi". They accept Drupada and Prishati as their parents and are raised in Drupada's palace.[24][16]

Draupadi is described to be extremely beautiful. Vyasa—the author of the Mahabharata—describes her having a dark complexion, lotus-like eyes, beautiful copper nails, dark curly hair and an enchanting fragrance like that of a blue lotus.[24][22]

Mahabharata includes an exceedingly flattering description of Draupadi as she arose from the fire,

"The fire-born woman was extremely beautiful. Her eyes were black and large as lotus-petals, her complexion was dark, and her locks were blue and curly. Her nails were beautifully convex and bright as burnished copper; her eyebrows were fair, and her bosom was deep. Indeed, she resembled the veritable daughter of a celestial born among men. Her body gave out fragrance like that of a blue lotus, perceivable from a distance of full two miles. Her beauty was such that she had no equal on earth. Like a celestial herself, she could be desired (in marriage) by a celestial, a Danava, or a Yaksha (Mahabharata. Adi Parva. Chapter 169:3)".[25]

Marriage and children edit

Drupada intended to wed Draupadi to Arjuna, who had previously defeated him in a battle. Upon hearing of the Pandavas' supposed death at Varnavata, he set up a Swayamvara contest for Draupadi to choose her husband from the competitive contest.[26] The test 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. The news of Draupadi's svayamvara spread far and wide, and numerous princes, as well as the general public including brahmanas, began proceeding towards Panchala. It so happened that the Pandavas also began their journey toward Panchala at this time along with their mother, Kunti. As they were on their way toward Panchala they were met by a large group of brahmanas on their way to Panchala, who invited Pandavas to join them.[27] At the Swayamvara, almost all the assorted monarchs were unable to complete the challenge. There are some variations regarding Karna's participation. Some renditions show Draupadi refusing to marry Karna on account of being a Suta, while some other versions describe him failing to string the bow by the "breadth of a hair".[28][29][30][note 1]

In the end, Arjuna succeeds in the task, dressed as a Brahmin. The other attendees, including the Kauravas and Karna protest at a Brahmin winning the competition and attack Draupadi and Arjuna. Arjuna and Bhima together protect Draupadi by defeating all attendees and are able to retreat. [31][3] [31][32]

Later Draupadi becomes a mother of five sons, from Arjuna. They were Prativindhya, Sutasoma, Shrutakarma, Shrutakirti, Satanika and Shrutasena.[33] Ashwatthama killed the Draupadi and Arjuna's sons during his surprise raid on Pandava camp on the eighteenth day of the war to avenge the death of his father Drona.[34]

Draupadi as the empress edit

With the Pandavas' survival revealed, a succession crisis was started. Upon the news of Pandavas' death at Varnavrat, the title of 'the crown prince' had fallen to Duryodhana. Dhritrashtra invites the Pandavas to Hastinapura and proposes that the kingdom be divided. The Pandavas are assigned the wasteland Khandavaprastha, referred to as unreclaimed desert. With the help of Krishna, Pandavas rebuilt Khandavprastha into the glorious Indraprastha. The crown jewel of the kingdom was built at the Khandava forest, where Draupadi resided in the "Palace of Illusions".[35] Yudhishthira performed the rajasuya yajna with his wife, Devika by his side; the Pandavas gained lordship over many regions.[36] Draupadi was trained in economy and was responsible for the treasury of the Empire. Additionally, she also ran a citizen liaison. Her duties as a busy Empress are mentioned in her famous conversation with Satyabhama, Krishna's third wife, during their exile.[37][22]

Duryodhana's insult edit

There is a popular myth that is believed to be the reason why Duryodhana hated Draupadi. Duryodhana and his entourage were exploring the keep during their visit to Yudhishthira's Rajasuya yajna. While touring the grounds, an unsuspecting Duryodhana fell prey to one of the many illusions that could be seen all around the palace. When he stepped on the apparently solid part of the courtyard, there was a splash and Duryodhana found himself waist-deep in water, drenched from head to foot by the hidden pool. The myth is, Draupadi and her maids saw this from the balcony with amusement, and joked Andhasya Putra Andhaha meaning 'a blind man's son is blind'. This famous story does not feature in Veda Vyasa's Mahabharata but is the figment of the imagination of a much later playwright. It gained immense popularity gradually through repeated depictions in various screen and written adaptations of the epic across the length and breadth of the country. The most popular depictions were by B.R. Chopra's Mahabharata series that aired on Doordarshan in 1988 and famous Telugu film Daana Veera Soora Karna starring Nandamuri Taraka Rama Rao as Duryodhana, where Draupadi's laughter was singled out for dramatic effect.[38]

In Vyasa's Sanskrit epic, the scene is quite different.[39] It was Bhima, Arjuna, and the twin brothers alongside their retinues who had witnessed Duryodhana's fall and laughed along with their servants. In the Sanskrit text, Draupadi is not mentioned in the scene at all, either laughing or insulting Duryodhana. Nonetheless, Duryodhana felt insulted by the behaviour of the four Pandavas, stoking his hatred of them. Later on, he went back to Hastinapura and expressed his immense agony on witnessing the riches of the Pandavas to his blind father, which was the root cause for inviting his cousins for the dice-game. His main wish was to usurp the wealth of his cousins which they had accumulated on account of the Rajasuya Yajna. Known to few, during this conversation, Duryodhan mentions how he had observed Draupadi serving food to everyone, including physically challenged citizens as the Empress. He says to his father, "And, O king, Yajnaseni, without having eaten herself, daily seeth whether everybody, including even the deformed and the dwarfs, hath eaten or not."[40]

He then went on to express his wrath at having fallen into a pool of water and being laughed at mockingly, mainly by Bhima, followed by Arjun, Nakul, Sahadeva and other menials in the palace. It is here, where he fleetingly mentioned Draupadi's name, who accordingly to Duryodhan, had "joined in the laughter with other females." Whether Duryodhana was speaking an untruth or her name was a later addition into this part of the text is debatable.

Draupadi's laughter went on to be singled out and romanticized by writers for centuries as a cause for the dice-game, and the war. In Vyasa's Sanskrit epic, however, her role in the scene is trivial compared to the exaggerated treatment it has received in popular adaptations.[39]

Game of dice and humiliation edit

 
A painting of Krishna saving Draupadi from the humiliation

This key incident is often considered to mark a definitive moment in the story of Mahabharata. It is one of the driving reasons that ultimately led to the Kurukshetra War.

Together with his maternal uncle Shakuni, Duryodhana conspired to call on the Pandavas to Hastinapura and win their kingdoms in a game of gambling. There is famous folklore that the plan's architect, Shakuni had magic dice that would never disobey his will, as they were made from the bones of Shakuni's father. This story, however, is non-existent in the Sanskrit epic. As the game proceeds, Yudhishthira loses everything at first. In the second round, Yudhishthira's brother Nakula is at stake, and Yudhishthira loses him. Yudhisthira subsequently gambles away Sahadeva, Arjuna and Bhima. Finally, Yudhishthira puts himself at stake, and loses again. For Duryodhana, the humiliation of the Pandavas was not complete. He prods Yudhishthira that he has not lost everything yet; Yudhishthira still has Arjuna's wife, Draupadi with him and if he wishes he can win everything back by putting Draupadi at stake. Inebriated by the game, Yudhishthira, to the horror of everybody present, puts Draupadi up as a bet for the next round. Playing the next round, Shakuni wins. Draupadi was horrified after hearing that she was staked in the game and now is a slave for Duryodhana. Duryodhana initially sends his charioteer Pratikamin to bring Draupadi to the court. Pratikamin informs Draupadi about the incidents happened during the dice game. Draupadi questions Yudhishthira's right on her as he had lost himself first and she is Arjuna's wife. Duryodhana, angry with Draupadi's questions, commands his younger brother Dushasana to bring her into the court, forcefully if he must.[41][42] Dushasana drags Draupadi to the court by the hair. Seeing this, Bhima pledges to cut off Dushasana's hands, as they touched Draupadi's hair. Now in an emotional appeal to the elders present in the forum, Draupadi repeatedly questions the legality of the right of Yudhishthira to place her at stake.[43][44]

In order to provoke the Arjuna further, Duryodhana bares and pats his thigh looking into Draupadi's eyes, implying that she should sit on his thigh. The enraged Bhima vows in front of the entire assembly that he would break Duryodhana's thighs, or else accept being Duryodhana's slave for seven lifetimes. At this time Vikarna, a brother of Duryodhana asks the kings assembled in the court to answer the question of Draupadi. He gives his opinion that Draupadi is not won rightfully as Yudhishthira lost himself first before staking her. Besides, no one has the right to put a woman on bet according to shastras; not a brother, father, or even the gods. Hearing these words, Karna gets angry and says that when Yudhishthira lost all his possession he also lost Arjuna's wife, Draupadi, even specifically staking her.[45] Karna calls Draupadi a "whore", adding that her being to the court is not a surprising act whether she is clothed or naked.[46] He then instructs Dushasana to remove the garments of Draupadi.[47][48] After her husbands fail to assist her, Draupadi prays to Krishna to protect her. Dushasana attempts to disrobe her, but she is miraculously protected by Krishna, and Dushasana finds that as he continues to unwrap the layers of her sari, the amount of fabric covering her never lessens. Dushasana is eventually reduced to exhaustion, as the awed court observes that Draupadi is still chastely dressed. At this point, a furious Bhima vows to drink blood from Dushasana's chest, at the pain of not seeing his ancestors/entering heaven. This vow unsettles the entire court.

 
Udasi fresco from Akhara Bala-Nand in Amritsar, Punjab depicting the scene of the disrobing of Draupadi by the Kauravas and five Pandava brothers sitting, with their heads hanging in shame, in depression

The only Kauravas who object to the disrobing of Draupadi in the court are Vikarna and Yuyutsu. Vidura openly calls Duryodhana a snake and demon after finding no support even from his own brother, Vidura is helpless. Karna further orders Dushasana to take Draupadi to the servants' quarters and derisively asks her to choose another husband who unlike Arjuna would not gamble her away. Just then, jackals call out as a mark of evil omen. Queen Gandhari enters the scene and counsels Dhritarashtra to undo her sons' misdeeds. Fearing the ill-omens, Dhritarashtra intervenes and grants Draupadi a boon. Draupadi asks that her husband's brother, Yudishthira be freed from bondage. In order to pacify her further, Dhritarashtra offers a second boon. Calmly, she asks for the freedom of the Pandavas along with their weapons. When Dhritarashtra asks her for her third wish, she reminds him that a Kshatriya woman can seek only two wishes, three would be a sign of greed. Dhritarashtra gives them back their wealth and grants them permission to go home.[49]

Amused by the sudden turn of events, Karna remarks that they "have never heard of such an act, performed by any of the women noted in this world for their beauty." He taunts the Pandavas by praising their wife, as she had rescued them "like a boat from their ocean of distress".[50]

Having restored their pride and wealth, the Arjuna 66and Draupadi leave for Indraprastha, only to receive another invitation for a game of dice, in which the loser would be given an exile of 12 years followed by a year of Agyatavasa, meaning "living in incognito". Yudhishtira yet again accepts the invitation and loses, and goes on an exile with his brothers and wife Draupadi.[51]

Living in Exile edit

Durvasa's visit edit

 
Krishna saves Draupadi from the wrath of sage Durvasa by B.P. Banerjee

Once, Draupadi and the Pandavas had finished eating their meal cooked from the Akshay Patra. Suddenly, sage Durvasa and his pupils visited them. They were sent by Duryodhana as he wanted the sage to curse the Pandavas. The brothers welcomed the sage along with his pupils and offered them service. Durvasa demanded food to eat as he was hungry. However, Draupadi had nothing left to feed the guests. Frightened that the sage would curse them, Draupadi prayed to god. Krishna then came there and asked her to give him the vessel. Draupadi gave the vessel to Krishna and he ate a single grain of rice left in it. The sage and his pupils suddenly felt that they had eaten a grand feast and left the place with satisfaction. Though a very popular tale, the "Critical Edition" does not include this incident.[30][52][53]

Abduction by Jayadratha edit

 
A Ravi Varma print depicting Jayadratha abducting Draupadi

While the Pandavas was in the Kamyaka forest, they often went hunting, leaving Draupadi alone. At this time Jayadratha, the son of Vriddhakshatra and the husband of Duryodhana's sister Dussala, passed through Kamyaka forest on the way to Salva Desa. Jayadratha met Draupadi and then started beseeching her to go away with him and desert her husband. Draupadi pointed out the immorality of deserting one's spouses when they were in difficulty and attempted to stall and dissuade Jayadradtha by describing how the Pandavas would punish him. Failing with words, Jayadratha forced her onto his chariot. Meanwhile, the Pandavas finished their hunt and found Draupadi missing. Learning of their wife's abduction by Jayadratha they rushed to save her. On seeing the Pandavas coming after him, Jayadratha left Draupadi on the road, though ultimately the Pandavas managed to arrest him. Arjuna urged Bhima to spare Jayadratha's life for the sake of Dussala and Gandhari, much to the indignation of Draupadi. In some versions of the story, Yudhishthira asks Draupadi to pass the sentence since it was she who was attacked, and she begrudgingly counsels to spare him because of the relations they share. Before freeing him, the Pandavas shaved Jayadratha's head at five places in order to publicly humiliate him.[54]

Agyatvās (Incognito) edit

 
Draupadi in Virata's palace, painting by Raja Ravi Varma

On the thirteenth year of their exile, the Pandavas choose to stay in the Matsya Kingdom. Draupadi becomes the maid of Sudeshna, queen of Matsya, and serves her. One day Kichaka, Sudeshna's brother and the commander of king Virata's forces, happens to see Draupadi. He is filled with lust by looking at her and requests her hand in marriage. Draupadi refuses him, saying that she is already married to Gandharvas. Seeing his persistence, she warns Kichaka that her husbands are very strong and that he will not be able to escape death at their hands. Later, he convinces his sister, the queen Sudeshna, to help him win Draupadi. Sudeshna orders Draupadi to fetch wine from Kichaka's house, overriding Draupadi's protests. When Draupadi goes to get wine, Kichaka tries to molest her. [46]

Draupadi escapes and runs into the court of Virata. Kichaka kicks her in front of all the courtiers, including Yudhishthira. Fearful of losing his most powerful warrior, even Virat does not take any action. Bhima is present, and only a look from Yudhishthira prevents him from attacking Kichaka. Furious, Draupadi asks about the duties of a king and dharma. She then curses Kichaka with death by her husband's hand. Laughing it off, Kichaka only doubts their whereabouts and asks those present where the Gandharvas are. Yudhishthira addresses Draupadi as Sairandhri and orders her to go to the temple, as Kichaka would not do anything to her there (in some versions, he recommends she seeks refuge with the queen). With this, the king asks Kichaka to leave and praises Yudhishthira's reply as he himself could not think of anything.

 
A 17th illustration of Bhima fighting Kichaka (centre), Draupadi watches them.

Later that night, Bhima consoles Draupadi, and they hatch a plan to kill Kichaka. Draupadi meets with Kichaka, pretending to actually love him and agreeing to marry him on the condition that none of his friends or brothers will know about their relationship. Kichaka accepts her condition. Draupadi asks Kichaka to come to the dancing hall at night. Bhima (in the guise of Draupadi), fights with Kichaka and kills him. [46]

Draupadi calls the members of Kichaka's family and shows them the mutilated body of Kichaka. The murder is attributed to her Gandharva husbands. This angers Kichaka's brothers and they decide to burn her along with Kichaka's body to take revenge. After getting permission from Virata, Draupadi is forcefully tied to Kichaka's pyre. Upon her pleading, Bhima runs for her help and kills the brothers of Kichaka, thus saving her from being burnt alive.[55]

Kurukshetra War edit

During the war, Draupadi stays at Ekachakra with other women. On the 16th day, Bhima kills Dushasana, drinking his blood and fulfilling his oath.

A popular myth, often depicted in well-known adaptations of Mahabharata, depicts Draupadi washing her hair with her brother-in-law Dushasana's blood, as a mark of her vengeance against the molestation she had suffered at the dice-game. Though an extremely powerful and symbolic theme, this incident does not appear in Vyasa's Sanskrit Mahabharata. Alf Hiltebeitel in his acclaimed research work, "The Cult of Draupadi" explores the source of this myth as he travels through the rural areas of India. He discovers that the first literary mention of the blood-washing theme appeared in "Venisamhara"[56] or "Braiding The Hair (of Draupadi)", a Sanskrit play written in the Pallava period by eminent playwright Bhatta Narayana. Since then, this powerful theme of vengeance had been used in most retellings and adaptations on Mahabharat, thus mistakenly attributing the authorship to Veda Vyasa.

Ashwatthama's attack edit

Ashwathama, in order to avenge his father's as well as other Kuru warriors' deceitful killing by the Pandavas, attacks their camp at night with Kripacharya and Kritavarma. Ashwathama killed Dhrishtadyumna, Shikhandi, Upapandavas, and the remaining Pandava and Panchala army.[33] In the morning, Yudhishthira hears the news and asks Nakula to bring Draupadi from Matsya Kingdom.[57] Draupadi vows that if the Pandavas do not kill Ashwatthama, she would fast to death.[58][59] The Pandavas find Ashwatthama at Vyasa's hut. Arjuna and Ashwatthama end up firing the Brahmashirsha astra at each other. Vyasa intervenes and asks the two warriors to withdraw the destructive weapon. Not endowed with the knowledge to do so, Ashwatthama instead redirects the weapon to Uttara's womb, but Krishna protects the Pandavas' only heir with his Sudarshana Chakra. Krishna curses him for this act. Ashwatthama is caught by the Pandavas and his jewel is taken away.[58] Draupadi gives the jewel to Yudhishthira and forgives the killer of her children. Due to the power of meditation, her wrath is subdued and she speaks of Ashwathama, son of their preceptor Drona,

"I desired to only pay off our debt for the injury we have sustained. The preceptor's son is worthy of my reverence as the preceptor himself. Let the king bind this gem on his head, O Bharata!"[60]

Later life and death edit

 
Draupadi falls dead as the Pandavas proceed to heaven, a 19th century wood engraving

Draupadi and Yudhishthira performed the ashvamedha and ruled for 36 years. When her husbands retired from the world and went on their journey towards the Himalayas and heaven, she accompanied them and was the first to fall dead on the journey. When Bhima asked Yudhishthira why Draupadi had fallen, Yudhishthira replied,

"O best of men, though we were all equal unto her she had a great partiality for Dhananjaya. She obtains the fruit of that conduct today, O best of men."[61][62]

Polyandry edit

 
Draupadi (far-right) with her five husbands – the Pandavas. The central figure is Yudhishthira; the two to his left are Bhima and Arjuna . Nakula and Sahadeva, the twins, are to his right. Deogarh, Dasavatar temple.

Polyandry was not regarded without censure by the society spoken of in the epic. The Vedic texts have not discriminated between polyandry and polygamy but usually, the women of royal families were allowed to indulge in polyandry for expansion of progeny, although polygyny was more common among men of higher social ranks. Her marriage to five men was controversial for political reasons as that was an advantage for Prince Duryodhana to get the throne of Bharat Varsha. However, when questioned by Kunti to give an example of polyandry, Yudhishthira cites Gautam-clan Jatila (married to seven Saptarishi) and Hiranyaksha's sister Pracheti (married to ten brothers).[63]

There are many women of high born classes or royal class like Princess Mādhavi who had four husbands, the only daughter of King Yayati. Polyandry was in the royal class but under the strict guidance of the Vedic sages exactly like polygamous marriages of ancient Indian kings were under strict supervision and guidance of the Vedic laws and Vedic sages.[64][65]

Draupadi as a goddess edit

In Sanskrit Mahābhārata, Draupadi is described as the incarnation of different goddesses.[66] In Sambhava section of Adi Parva, she is said to be partial incarnation of Goddess Shachi (or Sachi).[67] However, in Vaivahika section of Adi Parva[68] Vyasa describes her as the celestial Sri. In Svargarohanika Parva, Yudhisthira goes to heaven and sees Draupadi seated as Goddess Sri (Or Sree).[69]

The Draupadi Amman sect (or Draupadi devotional sect) is a tradition that binds together a community of people in worshipping Draupadi Amman as a village goddess with unique rituals and mythology Fire walking or Thimithi is a popular ritual enacted at Draupadi Amman temples.[70] At the ancient religious festival of Bengaluru Pete named Bangalore Karaga, Draupadi is worshipped as an incarnation of Adishakti and Parvati in the nine-day event.[71]

 
Reclining Draupadi's head – near Auroville
 
Draupadi Amman idol in Udappu, Sri Lanka

There are over 400 temples dedicated to Draupadi in the Indian states of Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and other countries like Sri Lanka, Singapore, Malaysia, Mauritius, Réunion, South Africa.[70] In these regions, Draupadi is worshipped mainly by people of the Palli or Vanniyar Kulakshatriyar[72][73][74]

There are a few processions and festivals which are conducted for about three weeks a year. The most famous festival is in the village Durgasamudram, Tirupati of Chittoor district.[75]

As a village deity edit

The Draupadi Amman cult (or Draupadi sect) is a regional Hindu sect in which the Pallis or Vanniyar Kula Kshatriyas communities worship Draupadi Amman as main god of vanniyar as a village goddess with unique rituals and mythologies.[72][76][74][77][78]

Incarnation of Kali edit

The Pillais, Vanniyars, Mudaliyars, Konars and the Gounder community of Tamil Nadu,[77][78] and the Tigala community of Karnataka believe Draupadi Amman was an incarnation of Adi Parashakti and was the household goddess (kuladevi) of their communities. There are many temples in South Indian villages dedicated to Draupadi Amman, observing annual festivals. One of the popular temples of Sri Dharmarayaswamy- Draupadi temple is at Thigarapete, the heart of Bengaluru, Karnataka.[citation needed].

Fire Walking ritual edit

 
A father walking on fire with his child during the annual Hindu festival at the Draupadi Amman temple in Udappu, Sri Lanka

Fire walking or Thimithi is a popular ritual enacted at the Draupadi Amman temples.[79]

Location edit

There are a number of temples dedicated to Draupadi Amman in Tamil Nadu, Singapore and Sri Lanka.

In other traditions edit

In Buddhism, Kṛṣṇā Draupadī is presented in the Mahāvastu and the Lalitavistara as one among eight goddesses who reside in the western cardinal direction.[80][81]

In Digambara Jain scriptures like Harivamsa Purana, polyandry of Draupadi has been rejected and it is suggested that she was married only to Arjuna. Hemachandra, a Svetambara Jain monk, accepts the polyandry in his work Triṣaṣṭi and further suggests that Draupadi was Nagasri in one of her previous lives and had poisoned a Jain monk. Therefore, she had to suffer in hell and animal incarnations for several lives before being born a woman who later became a Jain nun. After her death, she was reborn as Draupadi and was married to five Pandavas.[82]

In popular culture edit

In folk cultures edit

  • According to a folklore, Draupadi introduced the popular Indian snack Pani Puri.[83]
  • Draupadi had only five sons in the Sanskrit epic. But, according to some folklores, the Pandavas and Draupadi had six daughters too. Based on several such tales, the names of their daughters are listed below:

Arts and dances edit

Karaga is a folk festival of Karnataka which originated as a ritual in Southern India dedicated to Draupadi as known in these parts as Droupadamma. The ritual is performed on a full moon day. The story of Draupadi is one of the central topics of Yakshagana, a traditional dance-play practised in Karnataka and Terukkuttu, a Tamil street theatre form practised in Tamil Nadu state of India and Tamil-speaking regions of Sri Lanka.[86][87][88]

 
Draupadi and Bhima depicted by actors in yakshagana theatre

List of popular performers edit

In films edit

Year Image Performer Title Language Director Note Ref.
1917 Jeevarathnam Keechaka Vadham Silent R. Nataraja Mudaliar
1920 Kamaladevi Sairandhri Silent Baburao Painter
1931 Ermeline Draupadi Hindi Bhagwati Prasad Mishra [89]
1933 Leela Sairandhri Hindi/Marathi V. Shantaram
1963   Savitri Nartanasala Telugu Kamalakara Kameswara Rao
1964   Sumitra Devi Veer Bhimsen Hindi Chandrakanta Gor [90][91]
1965   Padmini Mahabharat Hindi Babubhai Mistry [92]
1983 Snehalata Sampoorn Mahabharat Gujrati Babubhai Mistry [93]
1989   Mallika Sarabhai The Mahabharata English Peter Brook
1993   Neena Gupta Bhagvad Gita Sanskrit G. V. Iyer
2010   Katrina Kaif Rajneeti Hindi Prakash Jha Loosely inspired by the character [94]
2013   Roopa Ganguly Mahabharat Aur Barbareek Hindi Dharmesh Tiwari [95]
  Vidya Balan Mahabharat Hindi Voiceover [96]
2019   Sneha Kurukshetra Kannada [97]

In television edit

Year Image Performer Title Language Channel Note Ref.
1989   Roopa Ganguly Mahabharat Hindi DD National [98][99]
1993 Phalguni Parikh Shri Krishna Hindi DD National
1997   Roopa Ganguly Mahabharat Katha Hindi DD National [99]
1999   Roopa Ganguly Draupadi Bengali DD Bangla [99]
2001   Mrinal Kulkarni Draupadi Hindi
2008   Anita Hassanandani Kahaani Hamaaray Mahaabhaarat Ki Hindi
2013 Pooja Sharma Mahabharat Hindi Star Plus [100][101]
2014 Kashmira Irani Dharmakshetra Hindi
2015 Riyanka Chanda Sankat Mochan Mahabali Hanumaan Hindi
Pankhuri Awasthy. Suryaputra Karn Hindi
2018 Ishita Ganguly Radhakrishn Hindi Star Bharat

In literature edit

The fiery heroine of Mahabharata has been the topic of research and debate for centuries. There are various plays and novels based on her.

  • Yajnaseni by Pratibha Ray – This novel, originally written in Odia was the recipient of Jnanpith Award.[102] It was also translated in various languages like English, Hindi, Bengali, Tamil, Malayalam, etc.
  • The Palace of Illusions: A Novel by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni – Deviating much from the Sanskrit text,[103] Divakaruni brings up the emotions of Draupadi, re-imagining the whole epic from her perspective.[104]
  • Draupadi by Yarlagadda Lakshmi Prasad, is a Sahitya Akademi Award-winning Telugu novel that narrates Mahabharata from Draupadi's perspective.[105]
  • The Cult of Draupadi[106] by Alf Hiltebeitel – This trilogy is an exhaustive, scholarly account of the various folk traditions surrounding Draupadi in South India. Hiltebeitel travels through various parts of India, tracing and recording the lesser-known customs and tribes in Gingi Cult and much more, who extensively worship Draupadi as their deity – a status which has been attained by few Mahabharat characters. There are over 31 plays and ballads that are conducted in over 400 temples, that are dedicated to Draupadi Amman. The story of Draupadi creates great respect for women in society. Her sacrifice and her inner power defeats the evil activities performed on women
  • Nathabati Anathbat by Shaoli Mitra – This is a stage play[107] depicting the agony of Draupadi as a woman who "has five husbands, and yet none to protect her."
  • Dopdi by Mahasweta Devi in Bengali – A contemporary tale of oppression with Draupadi as the lead character.[108]
  • The Great Indian Novel by Dr. Shashi Tharoor – Written as a fictional work that is analogous to the events featured in the Mahabharata in order to describe contemporary Indian Politics, Dr.Tharoor has described the character of 'Draupadi' as 'Di Mokrasi', who is an illegitimate daughter of 'Dhritarashtra' and 'Lady Drewpad' in the novel. Tharoor likens Draupadi to the tenets of 'Democracy'. As mentioned in Veda Vyasa's epic, he ascribes her to be the wife to all five 'Pandyas', who are themselves an abbreviation of different facets of Indian politics.[109]

See also edit

Notes edit

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  8. ^ Monier-Williams 1872, p. 441.
  9. ^ Monier-Williams 1872, p. 440.
  10. ^ a b Bhattacharya 2004, p. 20.
  11. ^ Monier-Williams 1872, p. 250.
  12. ^ Gandhi 1993, p. 294.
  13. ^ Monier-Williams 1872, p. 561.
  14. ^ Hiltebeitel 2011, p. 490.
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  16. ^ a b Karve 2006, p. 81.
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  1. ^ According to the critical edition of the Mahabharata from the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute, this incident of insulting or denial of Karna is an interpolation since this event is not available in the entire Kumbakonam version of the Mahabharata (the southern text of the Mahabharata), Sharada and Bengali manuscripts. He failed to string the legendary bow.[28]

References edit

  • Bhattacharya, Pratip (2004). "She Who Must Be Obeyed, Draupadi: The ill fated one" (PDF). Manushi. Panchakanya 19–30.
  • Eminent women in the Mahabharata by Vanamala Bhawalkar.
  • Mani, Vettam (1975). Puranic Encyclopaedia: a Comprehensive Dictionary with Special Reference to the Epic and Puranic Literature. Motilal Banarsidass Publishers. ISBN 978-0-8426-0822-0.
  • Chakravarti, Bishnupada (13 November 2007). Penguin Companion to the Mahabharata. Penguin UK. ISBN 978-93-5214-170-8.
  • Chakrabarti, Arindam; Bandyopadhyay, Sibaji (19 September 2017). Mahabharata Now: Narration, Aesthetics, Ethics. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-34213-7.
  • The Critical Edition of Mahabharat(1966) published by Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute
  • Mahabharata (1999) by Krishna Dharma
  • Mahabharata of Krishna Dwaipayana Vyasa, English translation by Kisari Mohan Ganguli
  • Doniger, Wendy, ed. (1993), Purana Perennis: Reciprocity and Transformation in Hindu and Jaina Texts, State University of New York Press, ISBN 0-7914-1381-0
  • Hiltebeitel, Alf (1999). Rethinking India's Oral and Classical Epics: Draupadi among Rajputs, Muslims, and Dalits. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226340554. Retrieved 28 September 2015.
  • Gandhi, Maneka (1993). The Penguin Book of Hindu Names. Penguin Books India. ISBN 978-0-14-012841-3.
  • Karve, Irawati (2006). Yuganta: The End of an Epoch. Orient Longman. ISBN 978-81-250-1424-9.
  • 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.
  • Mahasweta Devi (6 December 2012). "Draupadi". In Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak (ed.). In Other Worlds: Essays in Cultural Politics. Routledge. p. 251. ISBN 978-1-135-07081-6.
  • Wendy Doniger (March 2014). On Hinduism. Oxford University Press. p. 533. ISBN 978-0-19-936007-9.
  • Devdutt Pattanaik (1 September 2000). The Goddess in India: The Five Faces of the Eternal Feminine. Inner Traditions / Bear & Co. p. 98. ISBN 978-1-59477-537-6.
  • Das, Gurcharan (4 October 2010). The Difficulty of Being Good: On the Subtle Art of Dharma. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-978147-8.
  • Hiltebeitel, Alf (17 August 2011). Dharma: Its Early History in Law, Religion, and Narrative. Oxford University Press, USA. ISBN 978-0-19-539423-8.

External links edit

  • Sacred-texts.com
  • The Kaurava race of Sri Lanka and the worship of Draupadi
  • Karaga Worship is all about Goddess Draupadi
  • Hiltebeitel, Alf (1991). The Cult Of Draupadi Mythologies:From Gingee To Kuruksetra. Vol. 1. Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 978-81-208-1000-6.
  • Pattanaik, Devadutt (2009). 7 Secrets from Hindu Calendar Art. Westland, Mumbai. ISBN 978-81-89975-67-8.
  • Draupadi Amman Shrine/ Temple - KONDAL, Mayiladuthurai, TN.

draupadi, other, uses, disambiguation, panchali, sairandhri, yajnaseni, redirect, here, other, uses, panchali, disambiguation, sairandhri, disambiguation, yajnaseni, disambiguation, sanskrit, पद, romanized, draupadī, daughter, drupada, also, referred, krishnā,. For other uses see Draupadi disambiguation Panchali Sairandhri and Yajnaseni redirect here For other uses see Panchali disambiguation Sairandhri disambiguation and Yajnaseni disambiguation Draupadi Sanskrit द र पद romanized draupadi lit Daughter of Drupada also referred to as Krishna Panchali and Yajnaseni is the main female protagonist of the Hindu epic Mahabharata and the first wife of Arjuna 1 She is noted for her beauty courage 2 DraupadiMember of PanchakanyaNepalese sculpture of DraupadiOther namesKrishnaYajnaseniPanchaliDrupadakanyaDevanagariद र पद AffiliationPanchakanyaDeviTextsMahabharataPuranasGenderFemalePersonal informationBornPanchalaDiedHimalayasParentsDrupada father Prishati mother SiblingsDhristadyumna twin brother Shikhandi transgender SpouseArjunaChildrenPrativindhyaSutasomaShrutakarmaShrutakirtiShatanikaShrutasenaDynastyKuru dynasty by marriageIn Mahabharata Draupadi and her brother Dhrishtadyumna were born from a yajna fire sacrifice organized by King Drupad of Panchal Arjuna won her hand in marriage She had five sons from Arjuna 3 The most notable incident in Draupadi s life is the game of dice at Hastinapura where Yudhishthira loses his possessions and Arjun s wife and she is humiliated by the Kaurava brothers and Karna An attempt is made by Dushasana to disrobe her but she is saved by the divine intervention of Krishna Following the subsequent episodes Draupadi and the Pandavas are exiled for 13 years Significant events during this period include an attempted kidnapping by Jayadratha and the death of Kichaka The exile is followed by the Kurukshetra War where Draupadi loses her father brothers and her five children After the war she resumes her role as the empress for 36 years after which she retires to the Himalayas along with her husband Arjuna 4 Draupadi s story has been an inspiration for various arts performances and secondary literature 5 In Hinduism she is extolled as one of the panchakanya five virgins archetypes of female chastity whose names are believed to dispel sin when recited 6 In some parts of the sub continent a sect of Draupadi exists where she is worshipped as a goddess 7 Contents 1 Etymology and epithets 2 Literary background 3 Life and Legends 3 1 Birth 3 2 Marriage and children 3 3 Draupadi as the empress 3 4 Duryodhana s insult 3 5 Game of dice and humiliation 3 6 Living in Exile 3 6 1 Durvasa s visit 3 6 2 Abduction by Jayadratha 3 6 3 Agyatvas Incognito 3 7 Kurukshetra War 3 7 1 Ashwatthama s attack 3 8 Later life and death 4 Polyandry 5 Draupadi as a goddess 5 1 As a village deity 5 2 Incarnation of Kali 5 3 Fire Walking ritual 5 4 Location 6 In other traditions 7 In popular culture 7 1 In folk cultures 7 2 Arts and dances 8 List of popular performers 8 1 In films 8 2 In television 9 In literature 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 External linksEtymology and epithets edit nbsp A painting by Raja Ravi Varma depicting the sorrow of Draupadi who is disguised as SairandhriThe word Draupadi lit daughter of Drupada is a patronymic derived from the word Drupada which means pillar 8 9 Like other epic characters she is referred to by multiple names in the Mahabharata Some of her other names and epithets are as follows Krishna Kṛṣṇa one who has a dark complexion It is the birth name of Draupadi 10 11 Panchali Pancali one from Panchala 12 13 Yajnaseni Yajnaseni another patronymic derived from Drupada s another name Yajnasena lit he whose army is sacrificial or the name can also mean one born from a Yajna sacrificial fire 14 10 Drupadakanya Drupadakanya the daughter of Drupada Sairandhri Sairandhri an expert maid This pseudonym was assumed by Draupadi during her incognito life 15 Parshati Parṣati granddaughter of Prishata or daughter of Prishati Both the names Parshati and Prishati are derived from Prishata Drupada s father 16 Nityayuvani Nityayuvani one who remains young forever and never becomes old Mahabharati the virtuous wife of great descendant of Bharata Arjuna Agnisuta Daughter of fire Kalyani One who brings fortune Yudhishthira addressed her by this name Malini Malini fragrant one who makes garlands 17 Panchavallabha Pancavallabha Beloved of the five Pandavas 18 Pandusharmila Paṇḍusarmila Daughter in law of Pandu 18 Literary background editThe story of Draupadi is told in the great indian script 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 19 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 20 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 21 Life and Legends editBirth edit nbsp A 1940s print depicting the birth of Draupadi from the fire sacrificeMost Hindu texts state that Draupadi was not born of a woman and thus she is often described as an ayonija lit one not born from a woman s womb 22 23 Her birth is narrated in the Adi Parva of the epic Drona the teacher of the Kuru princes defeats Drupada with the help of his students and takes half of Panchala Drupada seeks vengeance but realises that none of his children and allies is capable enough to slay Drona As a result he decides to perform a yajna fire sacrifice to obtain a powerful son With the sages Yaja and Upyaja serving as the head priests the yajna is conducted After completion the priests instruct Prishati the wife of Drupada to consume the sacrifice offering but she refuses and asks them to wait till she washed herself Unable to wait Yaja pours the offering into the altar of the sacrifice from which a youthful man and a woman emerge The latter s birth is followed by a divine prophecy This dark complexioned girl will be the first of all women and she will be the cause of the destruction of many Kshatriyas This slender waisted one will in time accomplish the purpose of the gods and along with her many a danger will overtake the Kauravas 24 The youth and the maiden are named Dhrishtadyumna and Krishnaa but the latter one is better known by the patronymic Draupadi They accept Drupada and Prishati as their parents and are raised in Drupada s palace 24 16 Draupadi is described to be extremely beautiful Vyasa the author of the Mahabharata describes her having a dark complexion lotus like eyes beautiful copper nails dark curly hair and an enchanting fragrance like that of a blue lotus 24 22 Mahabharata includes an exceedingly flattering description of Draupadi as she arose from the fire The fire born woman was extremely beautiful Her eyes were black and large as lotus petals her complexion was dark and her locks were blue and curly Her nails were beautifully convex and bright as burnished copper her eyebrows were fair and her bosom was deep Indeed she resembled the veritable daughter of a celestial born among men Her body gave out fragrance like that of a blue lotus perceivable from a distance of full two miles Her beauty was such that she had no equal on earth Like a celestial herself she could be desired in marriage by a celestial a Danava or a Yaksha Mahabharata Adi Parva Chapter 169 3 25 Marriage and children edit Drupada intended to wed Draupadi to Arjuna who had previously defeated him in a battle Upon hearing of the Pandavas supposed death at Varnavata he set up a Swayamvara contest for Draupadi to choose her husband from the competitive contest 26 The test 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 The news of Draupadi s svayamvara spread far and wide and numerous princes as well as the general public including brahmanas began proceeding towards Panchala It so happened that the Pandavas also began their journey toward Panchala at this time along with their mother Kunti As they were on their way toward Panchala they were met by a large group of brahmanas on their way to Panchala who invited Pandavas to join them 27 At the Swayamvara almost all the assorted monarchs were unable to complete the challenge There are some variations regarding Karna s participation Some renditions show Draupadi refusing to marry Karna on account of being a Suta while some other versions describe him failing to string the bow by the breadth of a hair 28 29 30 note 1 In the end Arjuna succeeds in the task dressed as a Brahmin The other attendees including the Kauravas and Karna protest at a Brahmin winning the competition and attack Draupadi and Arjuna Arjuna and Bhima together protect Draupadi by defeating all attendees and are able to retreat 31 3 31 32 Later Draupadi becomes a mother of five sons from Arjuna They were Prativindhya Sutasoma Shrutakarma Shrutakirti Satanika and Shrutasena 33 Ashwatthama killed the Draupadi and Arjuna s sons during his surprise raid on Pandava camp on the eighteenth day of the war to avenge the death of his father Drona 34 Draupadi as the empress edit With the Pandavas survival revealed a succession crisis was started Upon the news of Pandavas death at Varnavrat the title of the crown prince had fallen to Duryodhana Dhritrashtra invites the Pandavas to Hastinapura and proposes that the kingdom be divided The Pandavas are assigned the wasteland Khandavaprastha referred to as unreclaimed desert With the help of Krishna Pandavas rebuilt Khandavprastha into the glorious Indraprastha The crown jewel of the kingdom was built at the Khandava forest where Draupadi resided in the Palace of Illusions 35 Yudhishthira performed the rajasuya yajna with his wife Devika by his side the Pandavas gained lordship over many regions 36 Draupadi was trained in economy and was responsible for the treasury of the Empire Additionally she also ran a citizen liaison Her duties as a busy Empress are mentioned in her famous conversation with Satyabhama Krishna s third wife during their exile 37 22 Duryodhana s insult edit There is a popular myth that is believed to be the reason why Duryodhana hated Draupadi Duryodhana and his entourage were exploring the keep during their visit to Yudhishthira s Rajasuya yajna While touring the grounds an unsuspecting Duryodhana fell prey to one of the many illusions that could be seen all around the palace When he stepped on the apparently solid part of the courtyard there was a splash and Duryodhana found himself waist deep in water drenched from head to foot by the hidden pool The myth is Draupadi and her maids saw this from the balcony with amusement and joked Andhasya Putra Andhaha meaning a blind man s son is blind This famous story does not feature in Veda Vyasa s Mahabharata but is the figment of the imagination of a much later playwright It gained immense popularity gradually through repeated depictions in various screen and written adaptations of the epic across the length and breadth of the country The most popular depictions were by B R Chopra s Mahabharata series that aired on Doordarshan in 1988 and famous Telugu film Daana Veera Soora Karna starring Nandamuri Taraka Rama Rao as Duryodhana where Draupadi s laughter was singled out for dramatic effect 38 In Vyasa s Sanskrit epic the scene is quite different 39 It was Bhima Arjuna and the twin brothers alongside their retinues who had witnessed Duryodhana s fall and laughed along with their servants In the Sanskrit text Draupadi is not mentioned in the scene at all either laughing or insulting Duryodhana Nonetheless Duryodhana felt insulted by the behaviour of the four Pandavas stoking his hatred of them Later on he went back to Hastinapura and expressed his immense agony on witnessing the riches of the Pandavas to his blind father which was the root cause for inviting his cousins for the dice game His main wish was to usurp the wealth of his cousins which they had accumulated on account of the Rajasuya Yajna Known to few during this conversation Duryodhan mentions how he had observed Draupadi serving food to everyone including physically challenged citizens as the Empress He says to his father And O king Yajnaseni without having eaten herself daily seeth whether everybody including even the deformed and the dwarfs hath eaten or not 40 He then went on to express his wrath at having fallen into a pool of water and being laughed at mockingly mainly by Bhima followed by Arjun Nakul Sahadeva and other menials in the palace It is here where he fleetingly mentioned Draupadi s name who accordingly to Duryodhan had joined in the laughter with other females Whether Duryodhana was speaking an untruth or her name was a later addition into this part of the text is debatable Draupadi s laughter went on to be singled out and romanticized by writers for centuries as a cause for the dice game and the war In Vyasa s Sanskrit epic however her role in the scene is trivial compared to the exaggerated treatment it has received in popular adaptations 39 Game of dice and humiliation edit Draupadi Vastrapaharanam redirects here For other uses see Draupadi Vastrapaharanam disambiguation nbsp A painting of Krishna saving Draupadi from the humiliationThis key incident is often considered to mark a definitive moment in the story of Mahabharata It is one of the driving reasons that ultimately led to the Kurukshetra War Together with his maternal uncle Shakuni Duryodhana conspired to call on the Pandavas to Hastinapura and win their kingdoms in a game of gambling There is famous folklore that the plan s architect Shakuni had magic dice that would never disobey his will as they were made from the bones of Shakuni s father This story however is non existent in the Sanskrit epic As the game proceeds Yudhishthira loses everything at first In the second round Yudhishthira s brother Nakula is at stake and Yudhishthira loses him Yudhisthira subsequently gambles away Sahadeva Arjuna and Bhima Finally Yudhishthira puts himself at stake and loses again For Duryodhana the humiliation of the Pandavas was not complete He prods Yudhishthira that he has not lost everything yet Yudhishthira still has Arjuna s wife Draupadi with him and if he wishes he can win everything back by putting Draupadi at stake Inebriated by the game Yudhishthira to the horror of everybody present puts Draupadi up as a bet for the next round Playing the next round Shakuni wins Draupadi was horrified after hearing that she was staked in the game and now is a slave for Duryodhana Duryodhana initially sends his charioteer Pratikamin to bring Draupadi to the court Pratikamin informs Draupadi about the incidents happened during the dice game Draupadi questions Yudhishthira s right on her as he had lost himself first and she is Arjuna s wife Duryodhana angry with Draupadi s questions commands his younger brother Dushasana to bring her into the court forcefully if he must 41 42 Dushasana drags Draupadi to the court by the hair Seeing this Bhima pledges to cut off Dushasana s hands as they touched Draupadi s hair Now in an emotional appeal to the elders present in the forum Draupadi repeatedly questions the legality of the right of Yudhishthira to place her at stake 43 44 In order to provoke the Arjuna further Duryodhana bares and pats his thigh looking into Draupadi s eyes implying that she should sit on his thigh The enraged Bhima vows in front of the entire assembly that he would break Duryodhana s thighs or else accept being Duryodhana s slave for seven lifetimes At this time Vikarna a brother of Duryodhana asks the kings assembled in the court to answer the question of Draupadi He gives his opinion that Draupadi is not won rightfully as Yudhishthira lost himself first before staking her Besides no one has the right to put a woman on bet according to shastras not a brother father or even the gods Hearing these words Karna gets angry and says that when Yudhishthira lost all his possession he also lost Arjuna s wife Draupadi even specifically staking her 45 Karna calls Draupadi a whore adding that her being to the court is not a surprising act whether she is clothed or naked 46 He then instructs Dushasana to remove the garments of Draupadi 47 48 After her husbands fail to assist her Draupadi prays to Krishna to protect her Dushasana attempts to disrobe her but she is miraculously protected by Krishna and Dushasana finds that as he continues to unwrap the layers of her sari the amount of fabric covering her never lessens Dushasana is eventually reduced to exhaustion as the awed court observes that Draupadi is still chastely dressed At this point a furious Bhima vows to drink blood from Dushasana s chest at the pain of not seeing his ancestors entering heaven This vow unsettles the entire court nbsp Udasi fresco from Akhara Bala Nand in Amritsar Punjab depicting the scene of the disrobing of Draupadi by the Kauravas and five Pandava brothers sitting with their heads hanging in shame in depressionThe only Kauravas who object to the disrobing of Draupadi in the court are Vikarna and Yuyutsu Vidura openly calls Duryodhana a snake and demon after finding no support even from his own brother Vidura is helpless Karna further orders Dushasana to take Draupadi to the servants quarters and derisively asks her to choose another husband who unlike Arjuna would not gamble her away Just then jackals call out as a mark of evil omen Queen Gandhari enters the scene and counsels Dhritarashtra to undo her sons misdeeds Fearing the ill omens Dhritarashtra intervenes and grants Draupadi a boon Draupadi asks that her husband s brother Yudishthira be freed from bondage In order to pacify her further Dhritarashtra offers a second boon Calmly she asks for the freedom of the Pandavas along with their weapons When Dhritarashtra asks her for her third wish she reminds him that a Kshatriya woman can seek only two wishes three would be a sign of greed Dhritarashtra gives them back their wealth and grants them permission to go home 49 Amused by the sudden turn of events Karna remarks that they have never heard of such an act performed by any of the women noted in this world for their beauty He taunts the Pandavas by praising their wife as she had rescued them like a boat from their ocean of distress 50 Having restored their pride and wealth the Arjuna 66and Draupadi leave for Indraprastha only to receive another invitation for a game of dice in which the loser would be given an exile of 12 years followed by a year of Agyatavasa meaning living in incognito Yudhishtira yet again accepts the invitation and loses and goes on an exile with his brothers and wife Draupadi 51 Living in Exile edit Durvasa s visit edit nbsp Krishna saves Draupadi from the wrath of sage Durvasa by B P BanerjeeOnce Draupadi and the Pandavas had finished eating their meal cooked from the Akshay Patra Suddenly sage Durvasa and his pupils visited them They were sent by Duryodhana as he wanted the sage to curse the Pandavas The brothers welcomed the sage along with his pupils and offered them service Durvasa demanded food to eat as he was hungry However Draupadi had nothing left to feed the guests Frightened that the sage would curse them Draupadi prayed to god Krishna then came there and asked her to give him the vessel Draupadi gave the vessel to Krishna and he ate a single grain of rice left in it The sage and his pupils suddenly felt that they had eaten a grand feast and left the place with satisfaction Though a very popular tale the Critical Edition does not include this incident 30 52 53 Abduction by Jayadratha edit nbsp A Ravi Varma print depicting Jayadratha abducting DraupadiWhile the Pandavas was in the Kamyaka forest they often went hunting leaving Draupadi alone At this time Jayadratha the son of Vriddhakshatra and the husband of Duryodhana s sister Dussala passed through Kamyaka forest on the way to Salva Desa Jayadratha met Draupadi and then started beseeching her to go away with him and desert her husband Draupadi pointed out the immorality of deserting one s spouses when they were in difficulty and attempted to stall and dissuade Jayadradtha by describing how the Pandavas would punish him Failing with words Jayadratha forced her onto his chariot Meanwhile the Pandavas finished their hunt and found Draupadi missing Learning of their wife s abduction by Jayadratha they rushed to save her On seeing the Pandavas coming after him Jayadratha left Draupadi on the road though ultimately the Pandavas managed to arrest him Arjuna urged Bhima to spare Jayadratha s life for the sake of Dussala and Gandhari much to the indignation of Draupadi In some versions of the story Yudhishthira asks Draupadi to pass the sentence since it was she who was attacked and she begrudgingly counsels to spare him because of the relations they share Before freeing him the Pandavas shaved Jayadratha s head at five places in order to publicly humiliate him 54 Agyatvas Incognito edit nbsp Draupadi in Virata s palace painting by Raja Ravi VarmaOn the thirteenth year of their exile the Pandavas choose to stay in the Matsya Kingdom Draupadi becomes the maid of Sudeshna queen of Matsya and serves her One day Kichaka Sudeshna s brother and the commander of king Virata s forces happens to see Draupadi He is filled with lust by looking at her and requests her hand in marriage Draupadi refuses him saying that she is already married to Gandharvas Seeing his persistence she warns Kichaka that her husbands are very strong and that he will not be able to escape death at their hands Later he convinces his sister the queen Sudeshna to help him win Draupadi Sudeshna orders Draupadi to fetch wine from Kichaka s house overriding Draupadi s protests When Draupadi goes to get wine Kichaka tries to molest her 46 Draupadi escapes and runs into the court of Virata Kichaka kicks her in front of all the courtiers including Yudhishthira Fearful of losing his most powerful warrior even Virat does not take any action Bhima is present and only a look from Yudhishthira prevents him from attacking Kichaka Furious Draupadi asks about the duties of a king and dharma She then curses Kichaka with death by her husband s hand Laughing it off Kichaka only doubts their whereabouts and asks those present where the Gandharvas are Yudhishthira addresses Draupadi as Sairandhri and orders her to go to the temple as Kichaka would not do anything to her there in some versions he recommends she seeks refuge with the queen With this the king asks Kichaka to leave and praises Yudhishthira s reply as he himself could not think of anything nbsp A 17th illustration of Bhima fighting Kichaka centre Draupadi watches them Later that night Bhima consoles Draupadi and they hatch a plan to kill Kichaka Draupadi meets with Kichaka pretending to actually love him and agreeing to marry him on the condition that none of his friends or brothers will know about their relationship Kichaka accepts her condition Draupadi asks Kichaka to come to the dancing hall at night Bhima in the guise of Draupadi fights with Kichaka and kills him 46 Draupadi calls the members of Kichaka s family and shows them the mutilated body of Kichaka The murder is attributed to her Gandharva husbands This angers Kichaka s brothers and they decide to burn her along with Kichaka s body to take revenge After getting permission from Virata Draupadi is forcefully tied to Kichaka s pyre Upon her pleading Bhima runs for her help and kills the brothers of Kichaka thus saving her from being burnt alive 55 Kurukshetra War edit During the war Draupadi stays at Ekachakra with other women On the 16th day Bhima kills Dushasana drinking his blood and fulfilling his oath A popular myth often depicted in well known adaptations of Mahabharata depicts Draupadi washing her hair with her brother in law Dushasana s blood as a mark of her vengeance against the molestation she had suffered at the dice game Though an extremely powerful and symbolic theme this incident does not appear in Vyasa s Sanskrit Mahabharata Alf Hiltebeitel in his acclaimed research work The Cult of Draupadi explores the source of this myth as he travels through the rural areas of India He discovers that the first literary mention of the blood washing theme appeared in Venisamhara 56 or Braiding The Hair of Draupadi a Sanskrit play written in the Pallava period by eminent playwright Bhatta Narayana Since then this powerful theme of vengeance had been used in most retellings and adaptations on Mahabharat thus mistakenly attributing the authorship to Veda Vyasa Ashwatthama s attack edit Ashwathama in order to avenge his father s as well as other Kuru warriors deceitful killing by the Pandavas attacks their camp at night with Kripacharya and Kritavarma Ashwathama killed Dhrishtadyumna Shikhandi Upapandavas and the remaining Pandava and Panchala army 33 In the morning Yudhishthira hears the news and asks Nakula to bring Draupadi from Matsya Kingdom 57 Draupadi vows that if the Pandavas do not kill Ashwatthama she would fast to death 58 59 The Pandavas find Ashwatthama at Vyasa s hut Arjuna and Ashwatthama end up firing the Brahmashirsha astra at each other Vyasa intervenes and asks the two warriors to withdraw the destructive weapon Not endowed with the knowledge to do so Ashwatthama instead redirects the weapon to Uttara s womb but Krishna protects the Pandavas only heir with his Sudarshana Chakra Krishna curses him for this act Ashwatthama is caught by the Pandavas and his jewel is taken away 58 Draupadi gives the jewel to Yudhishthira and forgives the killer of her children Due to the power of meditation her wrath is subdued and she speaks of Ashwathama son of their preceptor Drona I desired to only pay off our debt for the injury we have sustained The preceptor s son is worthy of my reverence as the preceptor himself Let the king bind this gem on his head O Bharata 60 Later life and death edit nbsp Draupadi falls dead as the Pandavas proceed to heaven a 19th century wood engravingDraupadi and Yudhishthira performed the ashvamedha and ruled for 36 years When her husbands retired from the world and went on their journey towards the Himalayas and heaven she accompanied them and was the first to fall dead on the journey When Bhima asked Yudhishthira why Draupadi had fallen Yudhishthira replied O best of men though we were all equal unto her she had a great partiality for Dhananjaya She obtains the fruit of that conduct today O best of men 61 62 Polyandry edit nbsp Draupadi far right with her five husbands the Pandavas The central figure is Yudhishthira the two to his left are Bhima and Arjuna Nakula and Sahadeva the twins are to his right Deogarh Dasavatar temple Polyandry was not regarded without censure by the society spoken of in the epic The Vedic texts have not discriminated between polyandry and polygamy but usually the women of royal families were allowed to indulge in polyandry for expansion of progeny although polygyny was more common among men of higher social ranks Her marriage to five men was controversial for political reasons as that was an advantage for Prince Duryodhana to get the throne of Bharat Varsha However when questioned by Kunti to give an example of polyandry Yudhishthira cites Gautam clan Jatila married to seven Saptarishi and Hiranyaksha s sister Pracheti married to ten brothers 63 There are many women of high born classes or royal class like Princess Madhavi who had four husbands the only daughter of King Yayati Polyandry was in the royal class but under the strict guidance of the Vedic sages exactly like polygamous marriages of ancient Indian kings were under strict supervision and guidance of the Vedic laws and Vedic sages 64 65 Draupadi as a goddess editIn Sanskrit Mahabharata Draupadi is described as the incarnation of different goddesses 66 In Sambhava section of Adi Parva she is said to be partial incarnation of Goddess Shachi or Sachi 67 However in Vaivahika section of Adi Parva 68 Vyasa describes her as the celestial Sri In Svargarohanika Parva Yudhisthira goes to heaven and sees Draupadi seated as Goddess Sri Or Sree 69 The Draupadi Amman sect or Draupadi devotional sect is a tradition that binds together a community of people in worshipping Draupadi Amman as a village goddess with unique rituals and mythology Fire walking or Thimithi is a popular ritual enacted at Draupadi Amman temples 70 At the ancient religious festival of Bengaluru Pete named Bangalore Karaga Draupadi is worshipped as an incarnation of Adishakti and Parvati in the nine day event 71 nbsp Reclining Draupadi s head near Auroville nbsp Draupadi Amman idol in Udappu Sri LankaThere are over 400 temples dedicated to Draupadi in the Indian states of Andhra Pradesh Tamil Nadu Karnataka and other countries like Sri Lanka Singapore Malaysia Mauritius Reunion South Africa 70 In these regions Draupadi is worshipped mainly by people of the Palli or Vanniyar Kulakshatriyar 72 73 74 There are a few processions and festivals which are conducted for about three weeks a year The most famous festival is in the village Durgasamudram Tirupati of Chittoor district 75 As a village deity edit The Draupadi Amman cult or Draupadi sect is a regional Hindu sect in which the Pallis or Vanniyar Kula Kshatriyas communities worship Draupadi Amman as main god of vanniyar as a village goddess with unique rituals and mythologies 72 76 74 77 78 Incarnation of Kali edit The Pillais Vanniyars Mudaliyars Konars and the Gounder community of Tamil Nadu 77 78 and the Tigala community of Karnataka believe Draupadi Amman was an incarnation of Adi Parashakti and was the household goddess kuladevi of their communities There are many temples in South Indian villages dedicated to Draupadi Amman observing annual festivals One of the popular temples of Sri Dharmarayaswamy Draupadi temple is at Thigarapete the heart of Bengaluru Karnataka citation needed Fire Walking ritual edit nbsp A father walking on fire with his child during the annual Hindu festival at the Draupadi Amman temple in Udappu Sri LankaSee also Udappu Fire walking or Thimithi is a popular ritual enacted at the Draupadi Amman temples 79 Location editThere are a number of temples dedicated to Draupadi Amman in Tamil Nadu Singapore and Sri Lanka nbsp The reclining Draupadi Amman idol holding a bowl in one of her four hands nbsp View from feet of the reclining Draupadi Amman idol near Auroville nbsp Reclining Draupadi Amman idol near Auroville Tamil Nadu India nbsp Giant reclining Draupadi Amman idol near AurovilleIn other traditions editIn Buddhism Kṛṣṇa Draupadi is presented in the Mahavastu and the Lalitavistara as one among eight goddesses who reside in the western cardinal direction 80 81 In Digambara Jain scriptures like Harivamsa Purana polyandry of Draupadi has been rejected and it is suggested that she was married only to Arjuna Hemachandra a Svetambara Jain monk accepts the polyandry in his work Triṣaṣṭi and further suggests that Draupadi was Nagasri in one of her previous lives and had poisoned a Jain monk Therefore she had to suffer in hell and animal incarnations for several lives before being born a woman who later became a Jain nun After her death she was reborn as Draupadi and was married to five Pandavas 82 In popular culture editIn folk cultures edit According to a folklore Draupadi introduced the popular Indian snack Pani Puri 83 Draupadi had only five sons in the Sanskrit epic But according to some folklores the Pandavas and Draupadi had six daughters too Based on several such tales the names of their daughters are listed below Suthanu from Yudhishthira Samyukthana from Bheema Pragati and Pragya Prathigya twins from Arjuna Printha from Nakula Sumithra from Sahadeva 84 85 Arts and dances edit Karaga is a folk festival of Karnataka which originated as a ritual in Southern India dedicated to Draupadi as known in these parts as Droupadamma The ritual is performed on a full moon day The story of Draupadi is one of the central topics of Yakshagana a traditional dance play practised in Karnataka and Terukkuttu a Tamil street theatre form practised in Tamil Nadu state of India and Tamil speaking regions of Sri Lanka 86 87 88 nbsp Draupadi and Bhima depicted by actors in yakshagana theatreList of popular performers editIn films edit Year Image Performer Title Language Director Note Ref 1917 Jeevarathnam Keechaka Vadham Silent R Nataraja Mudaliar1920 Kamaladevi Sairandhri Silent Baburao Painter1931 Ermeline Draupadi Hindi Bhagwati Prasad Mishra 89 1933 Leela Sairandhri Hindi Marathi V Shantaram1963 nbsp Savitri Nartanasala Telugu Kamalakara Kameswara Rao1964 nbsp Sumitra Devi Veer Bhimsen Hindi Chandrakanta Gor 90 91 1965 nbsp Padmini Mahabharat Hindi Babubhai Mistry 92 1983 Snehalata Sampoorn Mahabharat Gujrati Babubhai Mistry 93 1989 nbsp Mallika Sarabhai The Mahabharata English Peter Brook1993 nbsp Neena Gupta Bhagvad Gita Sanskrit G V Iyer2010 nbsp Katrina Kaif Rajneeti Hindi Prakash Jha Loosely inspired by the character 94 2013 nbsp Roopa Ganguly Mahabharat Aur Barbareek Hindi Dharmesh Tiwari 95 nbsp Vidya Balan Mahabharat Hindi Voiceover 96 2019 nbsp Sneha Kurukshetra Kannada 97 In television edit Year Image Performer Title Language Channel Note Ref 1989 nbsp Roopa Ganguly Mahabharat Hindi DD National 98 99 1993 Phalguni Parikh Shri Krishna Hindi DD National1997 nbsp Roopa Ganguly Mahabharat Katha Hindi DD National 99 1999 nbsp Roopa Ganguly Draupadi Bengali DD Bangla 99 2001 nbsp Mrinal Kulkarni Draupadi Hindi2008 nbsp Anita Hassanandani Kahaani Hamaaray Mahaabhaarat Ki Hindi2013 Pooja Sharma Mahabharat Hindi Star Plus 100 101 2014 Kashmira Irani Dharmakshetra Hindi2015 Riyanka Chanda Sankat Mochan Mahabali Hanumaan HindiPankhuri Awasthy Suryaputra Karn Hindi2018 Ishita Ganguly Radhakrishn Hindi Star BharatIn literature editThe fiery heroine of Mahabharata has been the topic of research and debate for centuries There are various plays and novels based on her Yajnaseni by Pratibha Ray This novel originally written in Odia was the recipient of Jnanpith Award 102 It was also translated in various languages like English Hindi Bengali Tamil Malayalam etc The Palace of Illusions A Novel by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni Deviating much from the Sanskrit text 103 Divakaruni brings up the emotions of Draupadi re imagining the whole epic from her perspective 104 Draupadi by Yarlagadda Lakshmi Prasad is a Sahitya Akademi Award winning Telugu novel that narrates Mahabharata from Draupadi s perspective 105 The Cult of Draupadi 106 by Alf Hiltebeitel This trilogy is an exhaustive scholarly account of the various folk traditions surrounding Draupadi in South India Hiltebeitel travels through various parts of India tracing and recording the lesser known customs and tribes in Gingi Cult and much more who extensively worship Draupadi as their deity a status which has been attained by few Mahabharat characters There are over 31 plays and ballads that are conducted in over 400 temples that are dedicated to Draupadi Amman The story of Draupadi creates great respect for women in society Her sacrifice and her inner power defeats the evil activities performed on women Nathabati Anathbat by Shaoli Mitra This is a stage play 107 depicting the agony of Draupadi as a woman who has five husbands and yet none to protect her Dopdi by Mahasweta Devi in Bengali A contemporary tale of oppression with Draupadi as the lead character 108 The Great Indian Novel by Dr Shashi Tharoor Written as a fictional work that is analogous to the events featured in the Mahabharata in order to describe contemporary Indian Politics Dr Tharoor has described the character of Draupadi as Di Mokrasi who is an illegitimate daughter of Dhritarashtra and Lady Drewpad in the novel Tharoor likens Draupadi to the tenets of Democracy As mentioned in Veda Vyasa s epic he ascribes her to be the wife to all five Pandyas who are themselves an abbreviation of different facets of Indian politics 109 See also editAgnivansha Draupati Amman Yajnaseni a novel by Pratibha Ray Yajnaseni a play by Suman Pokhrel Historicity of the MahabharataNotes edit The Mahabharata Book 1 Adi Parva Vaivahika Parva Section CLXLIX Archived from the original on 25 March 2022 Retrieved 20 June 2020 Patra Avinash 2012 Draupadi A Woman of Rare Love The Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 16 August 2023 Retrieved 11 March 2022 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b Johnson W J 2009 Draupadi A Dictionary of Hinduism Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780198610250 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19861 025 0 Bhawalkar Vanamala 2002 Eminent Women in the Mahabharata ISBN 9788185616803 Archived from the original on 16 August 2023 Retrieved 11 March 2022 Relooking Retelling And Rereading Women in the Epics Outlook 1 October 2021 Archived from the original on 6 March 2022 Retrieved 6 March 2022 Bhattacharya Pradip March April 2004 Five Holy Virgins Five Sacred Myths A Quest for Meaning Part I PDF Manushi 141 Archived PDF from the original on 13 March 2012 Retrieved 12 January 2013 Alf Hiltebeitel 1 January 1991 The cult of Draupadi Mythologies From Gingee to Kurukserta Motilal Banarsidass p ii ISBN 978 81 208 1000 6 Monier Williams 1872 p 441 Monier Williams 1872 p 440 a b Bhattacharya 2004 p 20 Monier Williams 1872 p 250 Gandhi 1993 p 294 Monier Williams 1872 p 561 Hiltebeitel 2011 p 490 Mani 1975 p 551 a b Karve 2006 p 81 Gandhi 1993 p 245 a b Gandhi 1993 p 295 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 Archived from the original on 16 April 2023 Retrieved 6 March 2022 McGrath Kevin 2004 The Sanskrit Hero Karna in Epic Mahabharata Brill Academic pp 19 26 ISBN 978 9 00413 729 5 Archived from the original on 16 April 2023 Retrieved 6 March 2022 a b c Bhattacharya 2004 Chakrabarti amp Bandyopadhyay 2017 a b c Ganguli 1889 Adi Parva Chaitraratha Parva Section CLXIX Archived 7 May 2021 at the Wayback Machine The Mahabharata Book 1 Adi Parva Chaitraratha Parva Section CLXIX Archived from the original on 7 May 2021 Retrieved 12 June 2021 Jones Constance Ryan James D 2006 Encyclopedia of Hinduism Infobase Publishing pp 136 137 ISBN 9780816075645 Archived from the original on 20 October 2022 Retrieved 27 April 2016 The Mahabharata Book 1 Adi Parva Swayamvara Parva Section CLXXXVI Archived from the original on 21 September 2021 Retrieved 21 September 2021 a b VISHNU S SUKTHANKAR 11 March 2018 THE MAHABHARATHA BHANDARKAR ORIENTAL RESEARCH INSTITUTE POONA via Internet Archive The Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute Mahabharata Project bori ac in Archived from the original on 20 December 2017 Retrieved 3 December 2017 a b M A Mehendale 1 January 2001 Interpolations in the Mahabharata via Internet Archive a b Williams George M 2008 Arjuna Handbook of Hindu Mythology Oxford University Press p 61 ISBN 978 0 19533 261 2 Johnson W J 2009 Arjuna A Dictionary of Hinduism Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780198610250 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19861 025 0 a b K M Ganguly 1883 1896 The Mahabharatha Book 10 Sauptika Parva section 9 Archived 25 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine Ashwatthama killing Dhrishtadyumna October 2003 Retrieved 2015 04 17 Das Gurucharan 2010 The Difficulty of Being Good Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199754410 Archived from the original on 16 August 2023 Retrieved 14 September 2020 Dalal Roshen 2010 Hinduism An Alphabetical Guide Penguin Books p 166 Parmeshwarananad Swami 2001 Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Puranas New Delhi Sarup and Sons p 524 Vana Parva Sacred texts com Archived from the original on 25 October 2017 Retrieved 10 November 2017 Did Draupadi Insult Duryodhana during Rajasuya Karna in Swayamvara myIndiamyGlory 19 May 2020 Archived from the original on 17 September 2020 Retrieved 9 September 2020 a b Sabha parva Sacred texts com Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 13 July 2015 Sabha parva Sacred texts com Archived from the original on 23 October 2017 Retrieved 10 November 2017 Hudson Emily 2012 Disorienting Dharma Ethics and the Aesthetics of 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the Mahabharata Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199860784 Archived from the original on 16 August 2023 Retrieved 14 September 2020 The Mahabharata Book 2 Sabha Parva Shishupala badha Parva Section LXVII Sacred texts com Archived from the original on 17 July 2019 Retrieved 24 July 2015 Mahabharata with the Commentary of Nilakantha June 2013 Retrieved 24 July 2015 The Mahabharata Book 2 Sabha Parva Shishupala badha Parva Section LXVII Sacred texts com Archived from the original on 23 October 2017 Retrieved 10 November 2017 Johnson W J 2009 Mahabharata A Dictionary of Hinduism Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780198610250 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19861 025 0 Mahabharata story Durvasa Muni and cooking pot of Draupadi Bhagavatam katha Archived from the original on 1 September 2020 Retrieved 6 September 2020 Durvasa muni visits the Pandavas Archived from the original on 16 November 2020 Retrieved 6 September 2020 Stories of Mahabharatha the Abduction of Draupadi Archived from the original on 13 May 2021 Retrieved 26 August 2020 Kulkarni Shripad Dattatraya 1992 The Epics Ramayana and Mahabharata Shri Bhagavan Vedavyasa Itihasa Samsodhana Mandira Bhishma ISBN 978 81 900113 6 5 Archived from the original on 16 August 2023 Retrieved 3 May 2021 Portessor of Sanskrit Elphinstone College Bombay 11 March 2018 The Venisamhara of Bhatta Narayana via Internet Archive K M Ganguly 1883 1896 The Mahabharatha Book 10 Sauptika Parva section 10 permanent dead link Yudhishthira crying over the death of Upapandavas October 2003 Retrieved 2015 04 17 a b The Mahabharata Book 10 Sauptika Parva Section 11 Sacred texts com Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 24 July 2015 Asvathama and Kripa are born immortals and unslayable by any kind of weapons Archived from the original on 11 May 2015 Retrieved 28 June 2015 K M Ganguly 1883 1896 The Mahabharatha Book 10 Sauptika Parva section 16 Archived 8 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine Draupadi forgiving Ashwathama 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a b c Why a quarter century after it went on air BR Chopra s Mahabharat remains Indian television s most remarkable show The Caravan Archived from the original on 27 March 2020 Retrieved 7 March 2020 Playing Draupadi made me strong Pooja Sharma Times of India The Times of India 11 June 2020 Archived from the original on 22 June 2020 Retrieved 8 September 2020 From Roopa Ganguly to Pooja Sharma these actresses have played the role of Draupadi on TV timesnownews com Archived from the original on 3 June 2020 Retrieved 8 September 2020 Odia writer Pratibha Ray named for Jnanpith Award India Today 27 December 2012 Archived from the original on 27 December 2012 Retrieved 3 December 2017 The Palace of Illusions An alternate interpretation of an ever relevant Indian epic The New Indian Express 3 December 2018 Archived from the original on 3 March 2022 Retrieved 3 March 2022 The Palace of Illusions by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni The Guardian 26 September 2009 Archived from the original on 3 March 2022 Retrieved 3 March 2022 Looking into the heart of an enigmatic woman The Telegraph India 26 June 2015 Archived from the original on 3 March 2022 Retrieved 3 March 2022 The Cult of Draupadi Volume 1 University of Chicago Press Archived from the original on 4 December 2017 Retrieved 3 December 2017 Abhimonyu Deb 31 August 2016 Nathabati Anathbat in Hindi Shaoli Mitra Archived from the original on 7 November 2021 via YouTube The context and import of Mahasweta Devi s Draupadi The Hindu 27 August 2021 Archived from the original on 20 October 2021 Retrieved 3 March 2022 Why Shashi Tharoor s Great Indian Novel still appeals BBC News 16 October 2014 Archived from the original on 3 March 2022 Retrieved 3 March 2022 According to the critical edition of the Mahabharata from the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute this incident of insulting or denial of Karna is an interpolation since this event is not available in the entire Kumbakonam version of the Mahabharata the southern text of the Mahabharata Sharada and Bengali manuscripts He failed to string the legendary bow 28 References editBhattacharya Pratip 2004 She Who Must Be Obeyed Draupadi The ill fated one PDF Manushi Panchakanya 19 30 Eminent women in the Mahabharata by Vanamala Bhawalkar Mani Vettam 1975 Puranic Encyclopaedia a Comprehensive Dictionary with Special Reference to the Epic and Puranic Literature Motilal Banarsidass Publishers ISBN 978 0 8426 0822 0 Chakravarti Bishnupada 13 November 2007 Penguin Companion to the Mahabharata Penguin UK ISBN 978 93 5214 170 8 Chakrabarti Arindam Bandyopadhyay Sibaji 19 September 2017 Mahabharata Now Narration Aesthetics Ethics Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 34213 7 The Critical Edition of Mahabharat 1966 published by Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute Mahabharata 1999 by Krishna Dharma Mahabharata of Krishna Dwaipayana Vyasa English translation by Kisari Mohan Ganguli Doniger Wendy ed 1993 Purana Perennis Reciprocity and Transformation in Hindu and Jaina Texts State University of New York Press ISBN 0 7914 1381 0 Hiltebeitel Alf 1999 Rethinking India s Oral and Classical Epics Draupadi among Rajputs Muslims and Dalits Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 0226340554 Retrieved 28 September 2015 Gandhi Maneka 1993 The Penguin Book of Hindu Names Penguin Books India ISBN 978 0 14 012841 3 Karve Irawati 2006 Yuganta The End of an Epoch Orient Longman ISBN 978 81 250 1424 9 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 Mahasweta Devi 6 December 2012 Draupadi In Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak ed In Other Worlds Essays in Cultural Politics Routledge p 251 ISBN 978 1 135 07081 6 Wendy Doniger March 2014 On Hinduism Oxford University Press p 533 ISBN 978 0 19 936007 9 Devdutt Pattanaik 1 September 2000 The Goddess in India The Five Faces of the Eternal Feminine Inner Traditions Bear amp Co p 98 ISBN 978 1 59477 537 6 Das Gurcharan 4 October 2010 The Difficulty of Being Good On the Subtle Art of Dharma Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 978147 8 Hiltebeitel Alf 17 August 2011 Dharma Its Early History in Law Religion and Narrative Oxford University Press USA ISBN 978 0 19 539423 8 External links editDraupadi at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote Sacred texts com The Kaurava race of Sri Lanka and the worship of Draupadi Karaga Worship is all about Goddess Draupadi Hiltebeitel Alf 1991 The Cult Of Draupadi Mythologies From Gingee To Kuruksetra Vol 1 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 1000 6 Pattanaik Devadutt 2009 7 Secrets from Hindu Calendar Art Westland Mumbai ISBN 978 81 89975 67 8 Draupadi Amman Shrine Temple KONDAL Mayiladuthurai TN Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Draupadi amp oldid 1213543274, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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