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Duryodhana

Duryodhana (Sanskrit: दुर्योधन, IAST: Duryodhana), also known as Suyodhana, is the primary antagonist in the Hindu epic Mahabharata. He was the eldest of the Kauravas, the hundred sons of the king Dhritarashtra and his queen Gandhari.

Duryodhana
Duryodhana being overpowered by Bhima, Kalighat painting
Information
AliasesSuyodhana
AffiliationKaurava
WeaponGada (mace)
FamilyDhritarashtra (father)
Gandhari (mother)
Dushasana, Vikarna, and 97 more (brothers)
Dushala (sister)
Yuyutsu (half-brother)
SpousePrincess of Kalinga
ChildrenLakshmana Kumara and Lakshmanaa
RelativesPandavas (paternal half cousins)
Shakuni (maternal uncle)

Being the first-born son of the king, he was the crown prince of the Kuru Kingdom and its capital of Hastinapura, often forced into ceding the title to his cousin Yudhishthira, who was one of the Pandava brothers and older than he. Aided by his maternal uncle Shakuni, Duryodhana tricked the Pandavas into surrendering their kingdom and forced them to go into exile. Later, Duryodhana waged the Kurukshetra War against his cousins and was helped by the warriors Bhishma, Drona and Karna. On the eighteenth day of the war, he was killed by Bheema. Duryodhana used his greater skill in wielding the mace to defeat his opponents. He was also an extremely courageous warrior but his greed and arrogance were the two qualities said to have led to his downfall.

Birth edit

When Gandhari's pregnancy continued for an unusually long period of time, Her mother-in-law Ambika and Ambalika were very upset with her. Pandu and Kunti earlier bore a son whom they named Yudhishthira. So she beat her womb in frustration. This caused a hardened mass of grey-coloured flesh to issue from her womb. She implored Vyasa, the great sage who had blessed her as "Shata Putra Praptirasthu" (Sanskrit for "blessed with a hundred sons"), to redeem his words. Vyasa divided the ball of flesh into one hundred and one equal pieces and put them in pots of milk, which were sealed and buried into the earth for two years. At the end of the second year, the first pot was opened, and Duryodhana emerged.[1]

Early years edit

 
Duryodhana in Javanese Wayang

Although loved by his family, Duryodhana and most of his brothers were not seen on the same level as the Pandavas in their adherence to virtue, duty, and respect for elders. Duryodhana felt that the partiality everyone showed to the Pandavas was only due to the circumstances of their birth. Duryodhana was mentored by his maternal uncle Shakuni, who masterminded most of Duryodhana's plots to humiliate and kill the Pandavas.

Duryodhana's hatred for the Pandavas stemmed from his sincere belief that he being the son of the eldest brother should be the heir apparent to the throne of Hastinapura. Because of his father's (Dhritarashtra) blindness, his father had to renounce the throne in favour of his younger brother, Pandu. Duryodhana deeply believed that what was rightfully his was being given away to his older cousin Yudhishthira. He also felt that the Pandavas were the sons of Kunti and devas/deities, and not of Pandu. He never believed that their divine origin alone proved their superiority. On many occasions he questioned their merits and always called them 'Kaunteya' (sons of Kunti). He would never accept the Pandavas as his brothers but always did his best to restrain them. He also bore a deep hatred of Bhima, who was younger and but stronger than he and dominated his brothers in sport and skill with his immense physical power and strength. Out of anger and jealousy, he even tried to poison Bhima, but was unsuccessful.[2]

Training edit

Learning martial skills from his gurus Dronacharya, he proved to be extremely skilled with the mace. He then went to specialize in mace fighting under Balarama, so as to gain sympathy from him and went on to become his favourite pupil. Balarama described Duryodhana's body to be "lightning made flesh" and declared him to be the greatest mace fighter of his generation.

Relationship with Karna edit

At the martial exhibition where the Kaurava and Pandava princes demonstrated their skills before their elders, their guru Drona and the people of that kingdom, Karna appeared and challenged an unsuspecting Arjuna, who is considered to be the best of the princes. But Karna was stopped when Kripa asked him to ascertain his lineage, as it would be inappropriate for unequal to compete. Karna, not being a kshatriya, bowed his head in shame.[3]

Duryodhana immediately defended Karna, arguing that it is skill and bravery, and not birth, that defines a warrior. Using the boon granted to him by Dhritarashtra, Duryodhana made Karna king of Anga so that he was regarded as Arjuna's equal.[4] Karna pledged his allegiance and friendship to Duryodhana. Neither of them knew that Karna was in fact Kunti's oldest son, born to (the sun god) Surya, before her marriage to Pandu.

In the Kurukshetra War, Karna was Duryodhana's greatest champion and served as commander from the fifteenth day. Duryodhana sincerely believed that Karna was superior to Arjuna, and would defeat his four brothers. When Karna was killed, Duryodhana mourned his death intensely, even more so than the death of his own brothers and was inconsolable. When Karna's identity was revealed to him, Duryodhana's love for Karna only grew and it is said to be he, and not the Pandavas, who performed Karna's last rites. Krishna confirmed that he had the highest right over Karna, as they loved and supported each other truly.

Tendencies and schemes edit

During their childhood, Bhima used his brute strength to inflict injuries on the Kaurava brothers. As Bhima was gluttonous, Duryodhana, guided by Shakuni attempted to kill Bhima by feeding him poison, but Bhima survived the trap and emerged even stronger than before. Duryodhana then participated in a plot by Shakuni to burn the Pandavas in a house of wax at Varnavata; however, they managed to escape the trap having been warned by Vidura.

Marriage and children edit

In the Shanti Parva, the divine sage Narada narrated the marriage of Duryodhana with the daughter of King Chitrangada of Kalinga. The wife of Duryodhana are unnamed in the original epic, are named Bhanumati in later renditions and adaptations of the pic .[5]

Duryodhana abducted them from their swayamvara (self-choice ceremony) with the help of his friend Karna in the wake of having been rejected by them. On reaching Hastinapur, Duryodhana justified his act by giving the example of his great-grandfather Bhishma abducting three princesses of Kashi for his stepbrother.[6]

Laxman Kumara and Lakshmanā were the children of Duryodhana and Bhanumati. Little is revealed about them in the Mahabharata other than Laxman's death in the Kurukshetra War and Laxmanaa's marriage to Krishna's son Samba. According to Mahabharatha Duryodhana had only one wife and he loved her immensely.[7][8]

Usurping the Kingdom edit

After the Pandavas revealed that they had survived the wax house, with a new wife to boot, Bhishma suggested that the kingdom be divided in order to ease the obvious tension. Yudhishthira is given half the kingdom and made king of Khandavprastha, so as to avoid a clash with the Kaurava princes over the whole Kuru Kingdom. Duryodhana became the crown prince of Hastinapura, and owing to the age and blindness of his father, he accumulated much control and influence, managing the state affairs himself with a group of his advisers that included his uncle Shakuni, brother Dushasana, Bhishma, Vidura, and Karna. But Duryodhana remained jealous of Yudhishthira, especially after the Pandavas along with Krishna transformed Khandavaprastha to Indraprastha. Moreover, Yudhishthira performed the Rajasuya Yagna and gained authority over several other kingdoms; Indraprastha's prosperity and fame appeared to exceed Hastinapura's. Duryodhana was unable to contain his anger, which was intensified when Bhima, Arjuna, the twins and the servants laughed at him when he slipped into a pool of water during a visit to Indraprastha.

In popular culture, television shows and post-modern novels on Mahabharata attribute this blame to Draupadi with an added statement "the son of the blind man also is blind", but the scene in the canonical text of Vyasa's Sanskrit epic is different. As per original scripture written by Ved Vyasa Draupadi didn't taunt Duryodhana.[9][10] This enraged Duryodhana and increases his hostility towards the Pandavas.

The dice plot, and Draupadi's humiliation edit

 
Draupadi is presented to a pacheesi game.

Duryodhana's jealousy of the prosperity and fame of Indraprastha and being humiliated by the Pandavas made him furious and he wished to throw down the Pandavas. To support his will, Shakuni devised a scheme to rob Yudhishthira of his kingdom and wealth by defeating him in a Pakida or game of dice, in which Shakuni couldn't lose as he had dice which he could control.

Unable to decline the invitation, due to diplomacy, Yudhishthira gambled away his entire kingdom, his wealth, his four brothers and even his wife, in a series of gambits to retrieve one by staking another. After Yudhishthira lost Draupadi, Duryodhana encouraged his brother Dushasana to drag her into the court as she was now his property. Dushsana pulled Draupadi's hair and dragged her into the court. Duryodhana ordered Draupadi to sit on his left thigh, showing and patting it to insult her for revenge. Draupadi refused and Duryodhan ordered Dushashan to disrobe her. Following his brother's orders, Dushashan laughed and started pulling Draupadi's saree. Duryodhan, Shakuni, and the other Kauravas (except Vikarna, Vidura) also started laughing. However, by Krishna's grace, Draupadi's amount of clothing remained the same.[11]

Due to this action, Bhima pledged that he would break Duryodhana's thigh.

As an enraged Draupadi was about to curse the Kuru clan, Gandhari intervened. Fearing retribution by the Pandavas, their allies, and history, Dhritarashtra and Gandhari reversed all of Yudhishthira's losses. But then (either through Duryodhana forcing his father to command the Pandavas to play again or through Shakuni's vicious tricks) the game was repeated. For this game of dice Shakuni set the condition that upon losing, Yudhishthira and his brothers must spend thirteen years in exile in the forest and one year of Agyatavasa (remain unknown to others possibly by a disguise) before they reclaim their kingdom. The thirteenth year must be passed incognito, or else the term of exile would be repeated. The Pandavas lost and began their exile.

Virata War edit

Duryodhana was a good friend of Matsya Kingdom's commander-in-chief Kichaka. When Bhima killed him for humiliating Draupadi, Duryodhana blamed Matsya's King Virata for his friend Kichaka's death. Virata got angry and ordered Duryodhana to get out of his Kingdom after insulting him. Duryodhana took his army and attacked Matsya. He ordered his two wives cousin Susharma to attack Matsya from other side but they failed to conquer it because Arjuna and Bhima defended it.

The Kurukshetra War edit

Peace Talks and Buildup edit

At the end of the exile term, Duryodhana refused to return Yudhishthira's kingdom, despite the counsel of Bhishma, Dronacharya, and Vidura. Although Dhritarashtra openly criticized his son, he tacitly desired that Durd with the Pandavas' final proposal: the Pandavas would give up all claims to Indraprastha and Hastinapura in exchange for five villages. Scoffing, Duryodhana said he will not even give even a needlepoint of land to the Pandavas. Egged on by Krishna, Duryodhana attempted to arrest him. Krishna revealed his Vishvarupa form. The entire Kaurava court, saved for Bhishma, Drona, Vidura, Krip and Dhritarashtra (who was granted a divine vision in order to see that by supporting his son, he was going against God), was temporarily blinded by the form. This confirmed to those present that Krishna was indeed the Supreme being. Duryodhana, being vastly egoistic (in some versions of the story an outright atheist), brushed off the incident, not convinced of Krishna's divinity, and believing that strength of arms, not philosophy, would win him a war.

Gathering the army edit

With war inevitable, Duryodhana gathered support from his powerful vassals. The most powerful warriors – Bhishma, Drona, Karna,Ashwatthama, Kripa, Shalya, Bhurisravas, even those who were critical of him were forced to fight for Duryodhana due to their previous commitments. He ended up amassing a larger army than his rivals.

Shakuni also advised Duryodhana to seek Krishna's help. Duryodhana rushed to Dwarika only to find Krishna sleeping; he waited at the head of Krishna's bed when suddenly, Arjuna arrived with the same goal in mind. Arjuna waited at the foot of Krishna's bed. When Krishna woke up, both Duryodhana and Arjuna appealed for his alliance. Krishna offered a choice of himself, completely unarmed or the entire Vrishni army. Duryodhana proclaimed that because he arrived first, he should get first pick. However, Krishna said that because he saw Arjuna first and because Arjuna was younger, that Arjuna gets the first choice. Duryodhana became worried but was overjoyed when Arjuna elected to reject Krishna's army in favour of Krishna alone. Joyously, Duryodhana returned to Hastinapura with the Vrishni army in hand, only to be rebuked by Shakuni, who comments that Krishna is worth many armies by himself.

Duryodhana also managed to win the army of Shalya, the maternal uncle of Nakula and Sahadeva. Duryodhana intercepted Shalya's army as it came to Kurukshetra and offered hospitality; Shalya accepted thinking Yudhishthira had made the offer. After Shalya had enjoyed Duryodhana's comforts, Duryodhana revealed the duplicity and indicated that Shalya is now indebted to him. He used this indebtedness to extract Shalya's army and support. Duryodhana wanted Shalya mainly so that Karna would have an equivalent charioteer to Arjuna's Krishna.

4th day edit

Bhima attacked Duryodhana, pierced him and cut off his bow. In return, Duryodhana pierced Bhima, his Charioteer and cut off his bow. Duryodhana pierced Bhima with shafts on his breast. Bhima feeling great pain fled away from the battlefield.[12]

8th day edit

On the 8th day, Rakashasaas of Ghatotkacha's army attacked Duryodhana. Duryodhana slew many rakshasas like Vegavat, Maharudra, Vidyujihva and Pramathin.[12] Later, he killed Visharada, son of Kunti-Bhoja.[13]

14th day edit

Uttamauja and Yudhamanyu (sons of Drupada)[14] attacked Duryodhana and Duryodhana defeated them in mace fighting.[14] After the death of Jayadratha, Duryodhana became very angry and he started killing the Pandava army. However, he is later defeated by Yudhishthira and flees.

During the nighttime battle between Ghatotkacha and Karna, Duryodhana urged Karna to use the Shakti against the Rakshas, due to the racial advantage during the night. Karna complied and reluctantly unleashed the great weapon, killing Ghatotkacha.

15th day edit

Nakula attacked Duryodhana. Duryodhana fought with him and defeated Nakula, forcing him to flee. On the sixteenth day, he tried to face Yudishthira and bravely withstood his onslaught. But soon, Yudishthira defeated him and destroyed his chariot. Luckily, he was rescued by Karna.[15]

17th day edit

Nakula and Sahadeva attacked Duryodhana. Duryodhana pierced them and nearly killed them. Later, Dhrishtadyumna saved them. Then many Pandava warriors, including Yudhishthira, Bhima, Dristadyumna, Satyaki, etc. all together attacked Duryodhana. However Duryodhana alone managed to resist all the Pandavas and he repelled the Pandavas' group attack single-handedly.[16]

There is an extremely popular folk tale that on the night of that day, Duryodhana was visited by his mother, Gandhari, who told him to bath and return to her naked. As Duryodhana was returning from his bath, he was intercepted by Krishna, who was aware of Gandhari's intention, and Krishna rebuked the last Kaurava for going along with her suggestion. Duryodhana took Krishna's rebuke into consideration, and covered his thigh when his mother took off the blindfold, and imbued his body with the boon of her devotion. Duryodhana's body becomes invulnerable due to the boon, except around his thigh where they were covered, in which Gandhari expressed grave concern over. It is important to clarify that there is no known source for any nude story about Duryodhan in the context of the Indian epic Mahabharata, definitely in no authentic ones. It may appear in some tribal folk tales, like the story of Draupadi’s secret nightly visitations by Vasuki for sexual gratification, a story in the Bheel Mahabharat.

18th day edit

On the 18th day, the Pandavas together had attacked Duryodhana but they were unsuccessful as Duryodhana alone resisted and defeated all of them.[17][18] Duryodhana had also killed a Yadava warrior named Chekitana on that day. Later, he tried to defeat Dhrishtadyumna who was destroying the retreating Kaurava army. However, Dhrishtadyumna killed Duryodhana's charioteer and destroyed his chariot, forcing Duryodhana to flee. He was the one of the only warriors who was able to defeat Duryodhana that day.[19]

Gada-Yuddha edit

 
Duryodana was defeated by Bhima – A scene from Razmanama

On the eighteenth day of the war, with his army reduced to himself, Ashwatthama, Kripa and Kritvarma, Duryodhana went to meditate in a lake. When the Pandavas and Krishna eventually found him, Duryodhana told them that he wanted to gift the kingdom to them and retire to the forest. Yudhishthira rejected the offer, telling him that Hastinapura is not Duryodhana's to gift. Instead, he offered that Duryodhana may pick any of the Pandava brothers to fight against one-to-one with a weapon of his choice, with the winner of the conflict being the victor of the war.

Despite his proposed advantage over Yudhishthira, Arjuna, Nakula, or Sahadeva with the gada, Duryodhana picked his nemesis Bhima. Despite Bhima's physical advantage, Duryodhana had the better technique due to his devotion to his craft. After a long and brutal battle between the two disciples of Balarama, Duryodhana began to exhaust Bhima and nearly made Bhima faint.

At this point, observing the fight, Krishna called out to Bhima and signaled him by repeatedly clapping his thigh with his hand. As intended, Bhima was reminded of an oath he had taken after the game of dice to crush Duryodhana's thighs. Bhima victoriously attacked Duryodhana with his mace and struck his thigh, mortally wounding Duryodhana. After having his face insultingly kicked by Bhima, Duryodhana moaned that he was slain by unfair means, given that it was illegal to attack below the waist in a mace fight.

Infuriated at the violation, Balarama, the brother of Krishna, raised his weapon to attack. Krishna consoled Balarama by reminding him of Duryodhana's evil deeds and reprimanded him for trying to influence a war he refused to participate in.[20]

Lying defeated, Duryodhana boasted to the Pandavas about how he would die a glorious death, about how he got to enjoy Hastinapura while the Pandavas were in exile, and about how he would now spend the afterlife in the company of his friends and relatives. He again eviscerated the Pandavas for all their chicanery during the war and decried their legacy. Venerating his character, Duryodhana proclaimed he would die happily.

Death edit

When the coast was clear, Ashwatthama, Kripacharya, and Kritvarma, having witnessed the fight and not wanting to interrupt so as to rob Duryodhana of his honor, came to Duryodhana's broken body. Ashwatthama promised Duryodhana that he would dispatch the Pandavas and their allies to the abode of Yama and requests his permission to continue the war.

After killing the Upapandavas and the last remnants of the Panchalas, Ashwatthama returns to Duryodhana. He showed Duryodhana the blood on his sword which belonged to the Upapandavas, hearing Duryodhana peacefully left his body satisfied with revenge. Concomitant with Duryodhana's death, Sanjaya loses his divine sight, which he had been using to update Duryodhana's father Dhritarashtra. This symbolizes the conclusion to the war.

After the Pandavas retired, only Yudhishthira reached heaven alive. There, he saw Duryodhana, which shocked him. When asked by Yudhishthira, Narada replied that Duryodhana fulfilled his religious duties.[21]

Evaluation edit

Duryodhana is a popular choice of analysis. His merits, flaws, symbolism, and relevance are widely discussed.[citation needed]

Urubhangam is a Sanskrit play written by Bhasa in the 2nd or 3rd century AD with Duryodhana as its primary protagonist. Written as a tragedy, the drama focuses on his point of view of the events of Mahabharata. His portrayal as a tragic hero is especially unique within the body of works in Sanskrit drama.[citation needed]

Many Hindus believe that Duryodhana was the personification of Kali with demoniac qualities such as greed, ego and lust. Many critics argue that he is not without positives; many consider Duryodhana as a fair king and there are temples dedicated to him and the Kauravas. Scholars believe that like most other characters of the Mahabharata, the true picture is not black and white. His name is often mistaken to mean bad ruler, however, his name is actually coined from the Sanskrit words "du"/"duh" which means "difficult" and "yodhana" which means "fight"/"war".[citation needed] So Duryodhana actually means someone who is extremely difficult to fight/defeat or wage war against.

Duryodhana is viewed, by some, as the product of Dhritarashtra's ambition and also in a metaphorical sense, his "blindness". He is also praised for his adherence to his duties as a Kshatriya, and even in his last combat, fights bravely. He chooses to face Bhima in combat over all the other Pandavas, with whom he has an advantage in mace fighting. His skills in the mace are also praised; many stories call him the greatest mace-fighter of the age.

Friendship with Karna edit

The friendship between Karna and Duryodhana is considered to be a great one, and is used as an example of friendship and loyalty.[4][22]

Modern Worship edit

In media edit

Television & films edit

Year Project Played by Country Language
1964 Karnan S. A. Ashokan India Tamil
1977 Daana Veera Shura Karna N. T. Rama Rao Telugu
1988 Mahabharat (1988 TV series) Puneet Issar Hindi
1989 The Mahabharata Georges Corraface Belgium Australia U.S.
Sweden Portugal
Norway Netherlands Japan
Ireland Iceland Finland
Denmark UK France
English
1993 Krishna (TV series) Kumar Hegde India Hindi
2002 Maharathi Karna Nimai Bali Hindi
2008 Kahaani Hamaaray Mahaabhaarat Ki Aryan Vaid Hindi
2013 Mahabharatham (TV series) Vetri Vel Tamil
2013 Mahabharat Arpit Ranka Hindi
2013 Mahabharat Jackie Shroff (voice) Hindi
2015 Suryaputra Karn Shaleen Bhanot Hindi
2018 Karn Sangini Paras Chhabra Hindi
2019 Kurukshetra Darshan Kannada, Malayalam, Tamil, Telugu, and Hindi
2020 RadhaKrishn Krip Suri Hindi

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "The Mahabharata, Book 1: Adi Parva: Sambhava Parva: Section CXV". Sacred-texts.com. Retrieved 15 August 2014.
  2. ^ Rao, Shanta Rameshwar (1985). The Mahabharata (Illustrated). Orient Blackswan. pp. 25–26. ISBN 9788125022800.
  3. ^ McGrath, Kevin (2004). The Sanskrit Hero: Karna in Epic Mahābhārata. Brill Academic. ISBN 90-04-13729-7. Retrieved 25 November 2013.
  4. ^ a b Vignesh, Inba. "The Greatest friends ever lived - Karna and Duriyoudan". India - The Land of Hearts. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
  5. ^ Sharma, Arvind (2007). Essays on the Mahābhārata. Motilal Banarsidass Publishers. ISBN 978-81-208-2738-7.
  6. ^ Anonymous. The Mahabharata of Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa (Complete). Library of Alexandria. ISBN 978-1-4655-2637-3.
  7. ^ Vanamali (2012). The Complete Life of Krishna: Based on the Earliest Oral Traditions and the Sacred Scriptures. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 9781594776908. Retrieved 22 May 2012.
  8. ^ "Indian Myth and Legend: Chapter XVIII. The Battle of Eighteen Days". Sacred-texts.com.
  9. ^ "The Mahabharata, Book 2: Sabha Parva: Sisupala-badha Parva: Section XLVI".
  10. ^ "Did Draupadi Insult Duryodhana during Rajasuya, Karna in Swayamvara?". myIndiamyGlory. 19 May 2020. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
  11. ^ Raya, Pratapacandra (1884). The Mahabharata. Рипол Классик. ISBN 9785875963933.
  12. ^ a b "The Mahabharata, Book 6: Bhishma Parva: Bhagavat-Gita Parva: Section LXIV". sacred-texts.com. Retrieved 12 May 2020.
  13. ^ "The Mahabharata, Book 6: Bhishma Parva: Bhagavat-Gita Parva: Section XCV". sacred-texts.com. Retrieved 12 May 2020.
  14. ^ a b "The Mahabharata, Book 7: Drona Parva: Jayadratha-Vadha Parva: Section CXXIX". sacred-texts.com. Retrieved 12 May 2020.
  15. ^ "Defeat of Nakula by Duryodhana".
  16. ^ "The Mahabharata, Book 9: Shalya Parva: Section 3". sacred-texts.com. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  17. ^ "The Mahabharata, Book 9: Shalya Parva: Section 17". sacred-texts.com. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  18. ^ "The Mahabharata, Book 9: Shalya Parva: Section 22". sacred-texts.com. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  19. ^ "The Mahabharata, Book 9: Shalya Parva: Section 12". sacred-texts.com. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  20. ^ K M Ganguly(1883-1896) Balarama curses Bhima and came to aid of Duryodhana October 2003, Retrieved 2015-03-08
  21. ^ "The Mahabharata, Book 18: Svargarohanika Parva: Section 1".
  22. ^ "Friendship". The Hindu. The Hindu. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
  23. ^ "Poruvazhy Peruviruthy Malanada | The one and only one Duryodhana Temple in South India". Malanada.com. Retrieved 15 August 2014.
  24. ^ "Shrine for Duryodhana!". The Hindu. 11 May 2017. Retrieved 12 May 2017.
  25. ^ R, Narendran. . Behindwoods.com. Archived from the original on 16 October 2015. Retrieved 18 February 2016.

External links edit

duryodhana, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, 2023, learn, wh. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Duryodhana news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Duryodhana Sanskrit द र य धन IAST Duryodhana also known as Suyodhana is the primary antagonist in the Hindu epic Mahabharata He was the eldest of the Kauravas the hundred sons of the king Dhritarashtra and his queen Gandhari DuryodhanaDuryodhana being overpowered by Bhima Kalighat paintingInformationAliasesSuyodhanaAffiliationKauravaWeaponGada mace FamilyDhritarashtra father Gandhari mother Dushasana Vikarna and 97 more brothers Dushala sister Yuyutsu half brother SpousePrincess of KalingaChildrenLakshmana Kumara and LakshmanaaRelativesPandavas paternal half cousins Shakuni maternal uncle Being the first born son of the king he was the crown prince of the Kuru Kingdom and its capital of Hastinapura often forced into ceding the title to his cousin Yudhishthira who was one of the Pandava brothers and older than he Aided by his maternal uncle Shakuni Duryodhana tricked the Pandavas into surrendering their kingdom and forced them to go into exile Later Duryodhana waged the Kurukshetra War against his cousins and was helped by the warriors Bhishma Drona and Karna On the eighteenth day of the war he was killed by Bheema Duryodhana used his greater skill in wielding the mace to defeat his opponents He was also an extremely courageous warrior but his greed and arrogance were the two qualities said to have led to his downfall Contents 1 Birth 2 Early years 2 1 Training 2 2 Relationship with Karna 2 3 Tendencies and schemes 3 Marriage and children 4 Usurping the Kingdom 4 1 The dice plot and Draupadi s humiliation 5 Virata War 6 The Kurukshetra War 6 1 Peace Talks and Buildup 6 2 Gathering the army 6 3 4th day 6 4 8th day 6 5 14th day 6 6 15th day 6 7 17th day 6 8 18th day 7 Gada Yuddha 8 Death 9 Evaluation 9 1 Friendship with Karna 9 2 Modern Worship 10 In media 10 1 Television amp films 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksBirth editWhen Gandhari s pregnancy continued for an unusually long period of time Her mother in law Ambika and Ambalika were very upset with her Pandu and Kunti earlier bore a son whom they named Yudhishthira So she beat her womb in frustration This caused a hardened mass of grey coloured flesh to issue from her womb She implored Vyasa the great sage who had blessed her as Shata Putra Praptirasthu Sanskrit for blessed with a hundred sons to redeem his words Vyasa divided the ball of flesh into one hundred and one equal pieces and put them in pots of milk which were sealed and buried into the earth for two years At the end of the second year the first pot was opened and Duryodhana emerged 1 Early years edit nbsp Duryodhana in Javanese Wayang Although loved by his family Duryodhana and most of his brothers were not seen on the same level as the Pandavas in their adherence to virtue duty and respect for elders Duryodhana felt that the partiality everyone showed to the Pandavas was only due to the circumstances of their birth Duryodhana was mentored by his maternal uncle Shakuni who masterminded most of Duryodhana s plots to humiliate and kill the Pandavas Duryodhana s hatred for the Pandavas stemmed from his sincere belief that he being the son of the eldest brother should be the heir apparent to the throne of Hastinapura Because of his father s Dhritarashtra blindness his father had to renounce the throne in favour of his younger brother Pandu Duryodhana deeply believed that what was rightfully his was being given away to his older cousin Yudhishthira He also felt that the Pandavas were the sons of Kunti and devas deities and not of Pandu He never believed that their divine origin alone proved their superiority On many occasions he questioned their merits and always called them Kaunteya sons of Kunti He would never accept the Pandavas as his brothers but always did his best to restrain them He also bore a deep hatred of Bhima who was younger and but stronger than he and dominated his brothers in sport and skill with his immense physical power and strength Out of anger and jealousy he even tried to poison Bhima but was unsuccessful 2 Training edit Learning martial skills from his gurus Dronacharya he proved to be extremely skilled with the mace He then went to specialize in mace fighting under Balarama so as to gain sympathy from him and went on to become his favourite pupil Balarama described Duryodhana s body to be lightning made flesh and declared him to be the greatest mace fighter of his generation Relationship with Karna edit At the martial exhibition where the Kaurava and Pandava princes demonstrated their skills before their elders their guru Drona and the people of that kingdom Karna appeared and challenged an unsuspecting Arjuna who is considered to be the best of the princes But Karna was stopped when Kripa asked him to ascertain his lineage as it would be inappropriate for unequal to compete Karna not being a kshatriya bowed his head in shame 3 Duryodhana immediately defended Karna arguing that it is skill and bravery and not birth that defines a warrior Using the boon granted to him by Dhritarashtra Duryodhana made Karna king of Anga so that he was regarded as Arjuna s equal 4 Karna pledged his allegiance and friendship to Duryodhana Neither of them knew that Karna was in fact Kunti s oldest son born to the sun god Surya before her marriage to Pandu In the Kurukshetra War Karna was Duryodhana s greatest champion and served as commander from the fifteenth day Duryodhana sincerely believed that Karna was superior to Arjuna and would defeat his four brothers When Karna was killed Duryodhana mourned his death intensely even more so than the death of his own brothers and was inconsolable When Karna s identity was revealed to him Duryodhana s love for Karna only grew and it is said to be he and not the Pandavas who performed Karna s last rites Krishna confirmed that he had the highest right over Karna as they loved and supported each other truly Tendencies and schemes edit During their childhood Bhima used his brute strength to inflict injuries on the Kaurava brothers As Bhima was gluttonous Duryodhana guided by Shakuni attempted to kill Bhima by feeding him poison but Bhima survived the trap and emerged even stronger than before Duryodhana then participated in a plot by Shakuni to burn the Pandavas in a house of wax at Varnavata however they managed to escape the trap having been warned by Vidura Marriage and children editIn the Shanti Parva the divine sage Narada narrated the marriage of Duryodhana with the daughter of King Chitrangada of Kalinga The wife of Duryodhana are unnamed in the original epic are named Bhanumati in later renditions and adaptations of the pic 5 Duryodhana abducted them from their swayamvara self choice ceremony with the help of his friend Karna in the wake of having been rejected by them On reaching Hastinapur Duryodhana justified his act by giving the example of his great grandfather Bhishma abducting three princesses of Kashi for his stepbrother 6 Laxman Kumara and Lakshmana were the children of Duryodhana and Bhanumati Little is revealed about them in the Mahabharata other than Laxman s death in the Kurukshetra War and Laxmanaa s marriage to Krishna s son Samba According to Mahabharatha Duryodhana had only one wife and he loved her immensely 7 8 Usurping the Kingdom editAfter the Pandavas revealed that they had survived the wax house with a new wife to boot Bhishma suggested that the kingdom be divided in order to ease the obvious tension Yudhishthira is given half the kingdom and made king of Khandavprastha so as to avoid a clash with the Kaurava princes over the whole Kuru Kingdom Duryodhana became the crown prince of Hastinapura and owing to the age and blindness of his father he accumulated much control and influence managing the state affairs himself with a group of his advisers that included his uncle Shakuni brother Dushasana Bhishma Vidura and Karna But Duryodhana remained jealous of Yudhishthira especially after the Pandavas along with Krishna transformed Khandavaprastha to Indraprastha Moreover Yudhishthira performed the Rajasuya Yagna and gained authority over several other kingdoms Indraprastha s prosperity and fame appeared to exceed Hastinapura s Duryodhana was unable to contain his anger which was intensified when Bhima Arjuna the twins and the servants laughed at him when he slipped into a pool of water during a visit to Indraprastha In popular culture television shows and post modern novels on Mahabharata attribute this blame to Draupadi with an added statement the son of the blind man also is blind but the scene in the canonical text of Vyasa s Sanskrit epic is different As per original scripture written by Ved Vyasa Draupadi didn t taunt Duryodhana 9 10 This enraged Duryodhana and increases his hostility towards the Pandavas The dice plot and Draupadi s humiliation edit nbsp Draupadi is presented to a pacheesi game Duryodhana s jealousy of the prosperity and fame of Indraprastha and being humiliated by the Pandavas made him furious and he wished to throw down the Pandavas To support his will Shakuni devised a scheme to rob Yudhishthira of his kingdom and wealth by defeating him in a Pakida or game of dice in which Shakuni couldn t lose as he had dice which he could control Unable to decline the invitation due to diplomacy Yudhishthira gambled away his entire kingdom his wealth his four brothers and even his wife in a series of gambits to retrieve one by staking another After Yudhishthira lost Draupadi Duryodhana encouraged his brother Dushasana to drag her into the court as she was now his property Dushsana pulled Draupadi s hair and dragged her into the court Duryodhana ordered Draupadi to sit on his left thigh showing and patting it to insult her for revenge Draupadi refused and Duryodhan ordered Dushashan to disrobe her Following his brother s orders Dushashan laughed and started pulling Draupadi s saree Duryodhan Shakuni and the other Kauravas except Vikarna Vidura also started laughing However by Krishna s grace Draupadi s amount of clothing remained the same 11 Due to this action Bhima pledged that he would break Duryodhana s thigh As an enraged Draupadi was about to curse the Kuru clan Gandhari intervened Fearing retribution by the Pandavas their allies and history Dhritarashtra and Gandhari reversed all of Yudhishthira s losses But then either through Duryodhana forcing his father to command the Pandavas to play again or through Shakuni s vicious tricks the game was repeated For this game of dice Shakuni set the condition that upon losing Yudhishthira and his brothers must spend thirteen years in exile in the forest and one year of Agyatavasa remain unknown to others possibly by a disguise before they reclaim their kingdom The thirteenth year must be passed incognito or else the term of exile would be repeated The Pandavas lost and began their exile Virata War editDuryodhana was a good friend of Matsya Kingdom s commander in chief Kichaka When Bhima killed him for humiliating Draupadi Duryodhana blamed Matsya s King Virata for his friend Kichaka s death Virata got angry and ordered Duryodhana to get out of his Kingdom after insulting him Duryodhana took his army and attacked Matsya He ordered his two wives cousin Susharma to attack Matsya from other side but they failed to conquer it because Arjuna and Bhima defended it The Kurukshetra War editPeace Talks and Buildup edit At the end of the exile term Duryodhana refused to return Yudhishthira s kingdom despite the counsel of Bhishma Dronacharya and Vidura Although Dhritarashtra openly criticized his son he tacitly desired that Durd with the Pandavas final proposal the Pandavas would give up all claims to Indraprastha and Hastinapura in exchange for five villages Scoffing Duryodhana said he will not even give even a needlepoint of land to the Pandavas Egged on by Krishna Duryodhana attempted to arrest him Krishna revealed his Vishvarupa form The entire Kaurava court saved for Bhishma Drona Vidura Krip and Dhritarashtra who was granted a divine vision in order to see that by supporting his son he was going against God was temporarily blinded by the form This confirmed to those present that Krishna was indeed the Supreme being Duryodhana being vastly egoistic in some versions of the story an outright atheist brushed off the incident not convinced of Krishna s divinity and believing that strength of arms not philosophy would win him a war Gathering the army edit With war inevitable Duryodhana gathered support from his powerful vassals The most powerful warriors Bhishma Drona Karna Ashwatthama Kripa Shalya Bhurisravas even those who were critical of him were forced to fight for Duryodhana due to their previous commitments He ended up amassing a larger army than his rivals Shakuni also advised Duryodhana to seek Krishna s help Duryodhana rushed to Dwarika only to find Krishna sleeping he waited at the head of Krishna s bed when suddenly Arjuna arrived with the same goal in mind Arjuna waited at the foot of Krishna s bed When Krishna woke up both Duryodhana and Arjuna appealed for his alliance Krishna offered a choice of himself completely unarmed or the entire Vrishni army Duryodhana proclaimed that because he arrived first he should get first pick However Krishna said that because he saw Arjuna first and because Arjuna was younger that Arjuna gets the first choice Duryodhana became worried but was overjoyed when Arjuna elected to reject Krishna s army in favour of Krishna alone Joyously Duryodhana returned to Hastinapura with the Vrishni army in hand only to be rebuked by Shakuni who comments that Krishna is worth many armies by himself Duryodhana also managed to win the army of Shalya the maternal uncle of Nakula and Sahadeva Duryodhana intercepted Shalya s army as it came to Kurukshetra and offered hospitality Shalya accepted thinking Yudhishthira had made the offer After Shalya had enjoyed Duryodhana s comforts Duryodhana revealed the duplicity and indicated that Shalya is now indebted to him He used this indebtedness to extract Shalya s army and support Duryodhana wanted Shalya mainly so that Karna would have an equivalent charioteer to Arjuna s Krishna 4th day edit Bhima attacked Duryodhana pierced him and cut off his bow In return Duryodhana pierced Bhima his Charioteer and cut off his bow Duryodhana pierced Bhima with shafts on his breast Bhima feeling great pain fled away from the battlefield 12 8th day edit On the 8th day Rakashasaas of Ghatotkacha s army attacked Duryodhana Duryodhana slew many rakshasas like Vegavat Maharudra Vidyujihva and Pramathin 12 Later he killed Visharada son of Kunti Bhoja 13 14th day edit Uttamauja and Yudhamanyu sons of Drupada 14 attacked Duryodhana and Duryodhana defeated them in mace fighting 14 After the death of Jayadratha Duryodhana became very angry and he started killing the Pandava army However he is later defeated by Yudhishthira and flees During the nighttime battle between Ghatotkacha and Karna Duryodhana urged Karna to use the Shakti against the Rakshas due to the racial advantage during the night Karna complied and reluctantly unleashed the great weapon killing Ghatotkacha 15th day edit Nakula attacked Duryodhana Duryodhana fought with him and defeated Nakula forcing him to flee On the sixteenth day he tried to face Yudishthira and bravely withstood his onslaught But soon Yudishthira defeated him and destroyed his chariot Luckily he was rescued by Karna 15 17th day edit Nakula and Sahadeva attacked Duryodhana Duryodhana pierced them and nearly killed them Later Dhrishtadyumna saved them Then many Pandava warriors including Yudhishthira Bhima Dristadyumna Satyaki etc all together attacked Duryodhana However Duryodhana alone managed to resist all the Pandavas and he repelled the Pandavas group attack single handedly 16 There is an extremely popular folk tale that on the night of that day Duryodhana was visited by his mother Gandhari who told him to bath and return to her naked As Duryodhana was returning from his bath he was intercepted by Krishna who was aware of Gandhari s intention and Krishna rebuked the last Kaurava for going along with her suggestion Duryodhana took Krishna s rebuke into consideration and covered his thigh when his mother took off the blindfold and imbued his body with the boon of her devotion Duryodhana s body becomes invulnerable due to the boon except around his thigh where they were covered in which Gandhari expressed grave concern over It is important to clarify that there is no known source for any nude story about Duryodhan in the context of the Indian epic Mahabharata definitely in no authentic ones It may appear in some tribal folk tales like the story of Draupadi s secret nightly visitations by Vasuki for sexual gratification a story in the Bheel Mahabharat 18th day edit On the 18th day the Pandavas together had attacked Duryodhana but they were unsuccessful as Duryodhana alone resisted and defeated all of them 17 18 Duryodhana had also killed a Yadava warrior named Chekitana on that day Later he tried to defeat Dhrishtadyumna who was destroying the retreating Kaurava army However Dhrishtadyumna killed Duryodhana s charioteer and destroyed his chariot forcing Duryodhana to flee He was the one of the only warriors who was able to defeat Duryodhana that day 19 Gada Yuddha edit nbsp Duryodana was defeated by Bhima A scene from Razmanama On the eighteenth day of the war with his army reduced to himself Ashwatthama Kripa and Kritvarma Duryodhana went to meditate in a lake When the Pandavas and Krishna eventually found him Duryodhana told them that he wanted to gift the kingdom to them and retire to the forest Yudhishthira rejected the offer telling him that Hastinapura is not Duryodhana s to gift Instead he offered that Duryodhana may pick any of the Pandava brothers to fight against one to one with a weapon of his choice with the winner of the conflict being the victor of the war Despite his proposed advantage over Yudhishthira Arjuna Nakula or Sahadeva with the gada Duryodhana picked his nemesis Bhima Despite Bhima s physical advantage Duryodhana had the better technique due to his devotion to his craft After a long and brutal battle between the two disciples of Balarama Duryodhana began to exhaust Bhima and nearly made Bhima faint At this point observing the fight Krishna called out to Bhima and signaled him by repeatedly clapping his thigh with his hand As intended Bhima was reminded of an oath he had taken after the game of dice to crush Duryodhana s thighs Bhima victoriously attacked Duryodhana with his mace and struck his thigh mortally wounding Duryodhana After having his face insultingly kicked by Bhima Duryodhana moaned that he was slain by unfair means given that it was illegal to attack below the waist in a mace fight Infuriated at the violation Balarama the brother of Krishna raised his weapon to attack Krishna consoled Balarama by reminding him of Duryodhana s evil deeds and reprimanded him for trying to influence a war he refused to participate in 20 Lying defeated Duryodhana boasted to the Pandavas about how he would die a glorious death about how he got to enjoy Hastinapura while the Pandavas were in exile and about how he would now spend the afterlife in the company of his friends and relatives He again eviscerated the Pandavas for all their chicanery during the war and decried their legacy Venerating his character Duryodhana proclaimed he would die happily Death editWhen the coast was clear Ashwatthama Kripacharya and Kritvarma having witnessed the fight and not wanting to interrupt so as to rob Duryodhana of his honor came to Duryodhana s broken body Ashwatthama promised Duryodhana that he would dispatch the Pandavas and their allies to the abode of Yama and requests his permission to continue the war After killing the Upapandavas and the last remnants of the Panchalas Ashwatthama returns to Duryodhana He showed Duryodhana the blood on his sword which belonged to the Upapandavas hearing Duryodhana peacefully left his body satisfied with revenge Concomitant with Duryodhana s death Sanjaya loses his divine sight which he had been using to update Duryodhana s father Dhritarashtra This symbolizes the conclusion to the war After the Pandavas retired only Yudhishthira reached heaven alive There he saw Duryodhana which shocked him When asked by Yudhishthira Narada replied that Duryodhana fulfilled his religious duties 21 Evaluation editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Duryodhana is a popular choice of analysis His merits flaws symbolism and relevance are widely discussed citation needed Urubhangam is a Sanskrit play written by Bhasa in the 2nd or 3rd century AD with Duryodhana as its primary protagonist Written as a tragedy the drama focuses on his point of view of the events of Mahabharata His portrayal as a tragic hero is especially unique within the body of works in Sanskrit drama citation needed Many Hindus believe that Duryodhana was the personification of Kali with demoniac qualities such as greed ego and lust Many critics argue that he is not without positives many consider Duryodhana as a fair king and there are temples dedicated to him and the Kauravas Scholars believe that like most other characters of the Mahabharata the true picture is not black and white His name is often mistaken to mean bad ruler however his name is actually coined from the Sanskrit words du duh which means difficult and yodhana which means fight war citation needed So Duryodhana actually means someone who is extremely difficult to fight defeat or wage war against Duryodhana is viewed by some as the product of Dhritarashtra s ambition and also in a metaphorical sense his blindness He is also praised for his adherence to his duties as a Kshatriya and even in his last combat fights bravely He chooses to face Bhima in combat over all the other Pandavas with whom he has an advantage in mace fighting His skills in the mace are also praised many stories call him the greatest mace fighter of the age Friendship with Karna edit The friendship between Karna and Duryodhana is considered to be a great one and is used as an example of friendship and loyalty 4 22 Modern Worship edit At Poruvazhy Peruviruthy Malanada Temple in Kerala s Kollam district Duryodhana is worshipped as the main deity It is the only temple in South India where a Kaurava is considered a God 23 In the Kumaon region of Uttarakhand several beautifully carved temples are dedicated to Duryodhana and he is worshipped as the deity The mountain tribes of Kumaon fought along with Duryodhana in the Mahabharata war he was venerated as a capable and generous administrator There is a temple in Osla Garhwal division of Uttarakhand This was built by the inhabitants of Saur People believe he stayed here with the blessings of Lord Mahasu to care for the people 24 In media editKrishnavatara Hindi क ष णअवत र a series of seven novels written by Dr K M Munshi Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan Duryodhana by Viswanathan Raghunathan 2014 HarperCollins Television amp films edit Puneet Issar played a Duryodhana role in the epic TV series Mahabharat 1988 1990 which brought him mainstream popularity Mammootty played a character based on Duryodhana in the 1991 Kollywood film Thalapathi The theme of the film is based on the friendship between Karna and Duryodhana 25 Manoj Bajpayee played a character based on Duryodhana in the 2010 Bollywood film Raajneeti citation needed Year Project Played by Country Language 1964 Karnan S A Ashokan India Tamil 1977 Daana Veera Shura Karna N T Rama Rao Telugu 1988 Mahabharat 1988 TV series Puneet Issar Hindi 1989 The Mahabharata Georges Corraface Belgium Australia U S Sweden PortugalNorway Netherlands JapanIreland Iceland FinlandDenmark UK France English 1993 Krishna TV series Kumar Hegde India Hindi 2002 Maharathi Karna Nimai Bali Hindi 2008 Kahaani Hamaaray Mahaabhaarat Ki Aryan Vaid Hindi 2013 Mahabharatham TV series Vetri Vel Tamil 2013 Mahabharat Arpit Ranka Hindi 2013 Mahabharat Jackie Shroff voice Hindi 2015 Suryaputra Karn Shaleen Bhanot Hindi 2018 Karn Sangini Paras Chhabra Hindi 2019 Kurukshetra Darshan Kannada Malayalam Tamil Telugu and Hindi 2020 RadhaKrishn Krip Suri HindiSee also editKaurava Kali demon MahabharataReferences edit The Mahabharata Book 1 Adi Parva Sambhava Parva Section CXV Sacred texts com Retrieved 15 August 2014 Rao Shanta Rameshwar 1985 The Mahabharata Illustrated Orient Blackswan pp 25 26 ISBN 9788125022800 McGrath Kevin 2004 The Sanskrit Hero Karna in Epic Mahabharata Brill Academic ISBN 90 04 13729 7 Retrieved 25 November 2013 a b Vignesh Inba The Greatest friends ever lived Karna and Duriyoudan India The Land of Hearts Retrieved 15 June 2017 Sharma Arvind 2007 Essays on the Mahabharata Motilal Banarsidass Publishers ISBN 978 81 208 2738 7 Anonymous The Mahabharata of Krishna Dwaipayana Vyasa Complete Library of Alexandria ISBN 978 1 4655 2637 3 Vanamali 2012 The Complete Life of Krishna Based on the Earliest Oral Traditions and the Sacred Scriptures Simon and Schuster ISBN 9781594776908 Retrieved 22 May 2012 Indian Myth and Legend Chapter XVIII The Battle of Eighteen Days Sacred texts com The Mahabharata Book 2 Sabha Parva Sisupala badha Parva Section XLVI Did Draupadi Insult Duryodhana during Rajasuya Karna in Swayamvara myIndiamyGlory 19 May 2020 Retrieved 9 September 2020 Raya Pratapacandra 1884 The Mahabharata Ripol Klassik ISBN 9785875963933 a b The Mahabharata Book 6 Bhishma Parva Bhagavat Gita Parva Section LXIV sacred texts com Retrieved 12 May 2020 The Mahabharata Book 6 Bhishma Parva Bhagavat Gita Parva Section XCV sacred texts com Retrieved 12 May 2020 a b The Mahabharata Book 7 Drona Parva Jayadratha Vadha Parva Section CXXIX sacred texts com Retrieved 12 May 2020 Defeat of Nakula by Duryodhana The Mahabharata Book 9 Shalya Parva Section 3 sacred texts com Retrieved 4 June 2020 The Mahabharata Book 9 Shalya Parva Section 17 sacred texts com Retrieved 4 June 2020 The Mahabharata Book 9 Shalya Parva Section 22 sacred texts com Retrieved 4 June 2020 The Mahabharata Book 9 Shalya Parva Section 12 sacred texts com Retrieved 4 June 2020 K M Ganguly 1883 1896 Balarama curses Bhima and came to aid of Duryodhana October 2003 Retrieved 2015 03 08 The Mahabharata Book 18 Svargarohanika Parva Section 1 Friendship The Hindu The Hindu Retrieved 15 June 2017 Poruvazhy Peruviruthy Malanada The one and only one Duryodhana Temple in South India Malanada com Retrieved 15 August 2014 Shrine for Duryodhana The Hindu 11 May 2017 Retrieved 12 May 2017 R Narendran Vintage Movie Review A Review on Thalapathi Behindwoods com Archived from the original on 16 October 2015 Retrieved 18 February 2016 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Duryodhana nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Duryodhana Duryodhana Temples and Lineage karna great personalities THE RELEVANCE OF KARNA AND DURYODHANA S FRIENDSHIP IN THE MODERN INDIAN SOCIETY From Duryodhana s perspective Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Duryodhana amp oldid 1219354656, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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