fbpx
Wikipedia

Samudra Manthana

The Samudra Manthana (Sanskrit: समुद्रमन्थन; lit.'churning of the ocean') is a major episode in Hinduism that is elaborated in the Vishnu Purana, a major text of Hinduism.[1] The Samudra Manthana explains the origin of the elixir of eternal life, amrita.

The asuras (left) and devas (right) churn the Ocean of Milk.
Various scenes from the Samudra Manthana episode

Nomenclature

  • Sāgara manthana (सागरमन्थन) - Sāgara is another word for Samudra, both meaning a sea or large water body.
  • Kshirasāgara manthana (क्षीरसागरमन्थन) - Kshirasāgara means the ocean of milk or milky ocean. Kshirasāgara = Kshira (milk) + Sāgara (ocean or sea).

Legend

Indra, the King of Svarga, was riding on his divine elephant when he came across the sage Durvasa, who offered him a special garland given to him by an apsara. The deity accepted the garland and placed it on the trunk (sometime the tusks or the head of the elephant in some scriptures) of Airavata (his mount) as a testament to his humility.[2] The flowers had a strong scent that attracted some bees.[3] Annoyed by the bees, the elephant threw the garland on the ground.[4] This enraged the sage, as the garland was a dwelling of Sri (fortune) and was to be treated as a prasada or a religious offering. Durvasa cursed Indra and all the devas to be bereft of all strength, energy, and fortune.[5]

In the battles following the incident, the devas were defeated and the asuras, led by Bali, gained control over the three worlds. The devas sought Vishnu's wisdom, who advised them to treat with the asuras in a diplomatic manner. The devas formed an alliance with the asuras to jointly churn the ocean for the nectar of immortality, and to share it among themselves. However, Vishnu assured the devas that he would arrange for them alone to obtain the nectar.[6]

 
Shiva drinks the kalakuta

The churning of the Ocean of Milk was an extensive process: Mount Mandara was uprooted and used as the churning rod and Vasuki, a naga who resided on Shiva's neck, became the churning rope after being promised that he would get his share. While carrying the massive mountain, several devas and asuras fell to their deaths and some perished due to sheer exhaustion. Vishnu flew upon his mount Garuda and revived them all, placing Mandara upon his mount to carry it towards its destination in the midst of the ocean. Reaching their destination, the great serpent coiled himself around Mandara, and Vishnu counselled the devas to tug from the head of the serpent. The asuras, observing this, refused to hold the tail of the serpent, perceiving it as inauspicious. The devas relented and held the tail henceforth. The churning commenced. However, Mandara was too enormous and sank to the bottom of the ocean, much to the despair of the devas and the asuras. Vishnu, in the form of his Kurma avatara (lit. turtle), came to their rescue and supported the mountain on his shell. When venomous fumes were emitted by Vasuki, the asuras were affected due to their decision to hold his head. The Samudra Manthana bequeathed a panoply of substances from the Ocean of Milk. One of them was the lethal poison known as halahala. In some variations of the story, the poison escaped from the mouth of Vasuki as the demons and gods churned. This terrified the gods and the demons because the poison was so powerful that it could destroy all of creation. The asuras were poisoned by fumes emitted by Vasuki. Despite this, the devas and the asuras pulled back and forth on the snake's body alternately, causing the mountain to rotate, which in turn churned the ocean. Shiva consumed the poison to protect the three worlds, the consumption of which gave a blue hue to his throat, offering him the epithet Neelakantha (the blue-throated one; "neela" = "blue", "kantha" = "throat" in Sanskrit).[7]

Ratnas

 
Samudra Manthana

All kinds of herbs were cast into the ocean and fourteen ratnas (gems) were produced from it, divided between the asuras and the devas. Though the ratnas are usually enumerated as 14, the list in the scriptures ranges from 9 to 14 Ratnas. According to the quality of the treasures produced, they were claimed by Shiva, Vishnu, Maharishis, the devas, and the asuras. There were three categories of goddesses who emerged from the ocean; most lists include:[8]

  • Lakshmi: the goddess of prosperity and wealth, who chose Vishnu as her eternal consort.[9]
  • Apsaras: divine damsels like Rambha, Menaka, Punjisthala, and others, who chose the Gandharvas as their companions.
  • Varuni: the goddess of wine (sura) and the virgin daughter of Varuna, accepted by the devas. (Some interpretations believe her acceptance to be the etymology of devas being termed as suras and the daityas as asuras.)[10]

Likewise, three types of supernatural animals appeared:

  • Kamadhenu or Surabhi: the wish-granting cow, taken by Brahma and given to the sages so that the ghee from her milk could be used for yajnas and similar rituals.
  • Airavata and several other elephants, taken by Indra.
  • Uchhaishravas: the divine seven-headed horse, given to Bali.

Three valuables were also produced:

  • Kaustubha: the most valuable ratnam (divine jewel) in the universe, claimed by Vishnu.
  • Kalpavriksha: a divine wish-fulfilling and flowering tree with blossoms that never fade or wilt, taken to Indraloka by the devas.
  • Sharanga: a powerful bow, given to Vishnu.

Additionally produced were;

  • Chandra: a crescent, claimed by Shiva.
  • Dhanvantari: the "vaidya of the devas" with amrita, the nectar of immortality. (Sometimes considered as two separate Ratnas)
  • Halahala: the poison swallowed by Shiva.

This list varies from purana to purana and is also slightly different in the Ramayana and Mahabharata. Lists are completed by adding the following ratnas:[8]

Amrita

Finally, Dhanvantari, the heavenly physician, emerged with a pot containing the amṛta, the heavenly nectar of immortality. Fierce fighting ensued between the devas and the asuras for its possession. Asuras took Amrit from Dhanvantari and ran away chased by Devas.

The devas appealed to Vishnu, who took the form of Mohini, a beautiful and enchanting damsel. She enchanted the asuras into submitting to her terms. She made the devas and the asuras to sit in two separate rows, distributing it among the devas, who drank it. An asura named Svarbhanu disguised himself as a deva and drank some nectar. Due to their luminous nature, the deities of the sun and the moon, Surya and Chandra, noticed this disguise. They informed Mohini who, cut off his head with her discus, the Sudarshana Chakra. From that day, his head was called Rahu and his body Ketu, the Hindu myth behind eclipses. When the nectar was emptied from the pot, Vishnu assumed his true form, riding on Garuda and departing to his abode. Realising that they had been deceived, the furious asuras engaged in personal combat with the devas, who had been bolstered by their consumption of amrita: Indra fought Bali, Kartikeya fought Taraka, Varuna fought Heti, Yama fought Kalanabha, Brihaspati fought Sukra, Mitra fought Praheti, Vishvakarma fought Maya, Vrishapati fought Jambha, Shani fought Naraka, Savitri fought Vilochana, Chandra fought Rahu, Vayu fought Puloman, and Aparajita fought Namuchi. There are also descriptions of duels between groups of beings: the Ashvini twins and Vrishaparva, Surya and the hundred sons of Bali, the sons of Brahma with Ilvala and Vatapi, the Maruts and the Nivatakavacha, Kali with Shumba and Nishumba, the Rudras and the Krodavasas, and the Vasus and the Kaleyas. Rejuvenated by the amrita, the devas emerged victorious and exiled the asuras to the Pataloka, regaining Svarga.[11]

Origin of the Kumbha Mela

Medieval Hindu theology extends this legend to state that while the devas were carrying the amṛta away from the asuras, some drops of the nectar fell at four different places on the Earth: Haridwar, Prayaga (Prayagraj),[12] Trimbak (Nashik), and Ujjain.[13] According to the legend, these places acquired a certain mystical power and spiritual value. A Kumbha Mela is celebrated at these four places every twelve years for this reason. People believe that after bathing there during the Kumbha mela, one can attain moksha.

While several ancient texts, including the various Puranas, mention the Samudra Manthana legend, none of them mentions the spilling of the amṛta at four places.[13][14] Neither do these texts mention the Kumbha Mela. Therefore, multiple scholars, including R. B. Bhattacharya, D. P. Dubey and Kama Maclean believe that the Samudra Manthana legend has been applied to the Kumbha Mela relatively recently, in order to show scriptural authority for the mela.[15]

Comparative study

This episode has been analyzed comparatively by Georges Dumézil, who dubiously connected it to various historical "Indo-European" facts and even the European medieval legend of the Holy Grail, reconstructing a proto-story (the "ambrosia cycle", or "cycle of the mead") about a theoretical trickster deity who steals the drink of immortality for mankind but fails in freeing humans from death. Dumézil later abandoned his theory, but the core of the idea was taken up by Jarich Oosten, who posits "similarities" with the Hymiskviða. In this Old Norse poem, beer is prepared for the gods by the Jotunn sea god Ægir, after Thor and Tyr recover a giant kettle Ægir needs to make the beer. Oosten claims the serpent Jörmungandr takes the place of Vasuki, although his role in the story is not at all similar or comparable.[16]

See also

References

  1. ^ Chaturvedi, B. K. (2006). Vishnu Purana. Diamond Pocket Books (P) Ltd. ISBN 978-81-7182-673-5.
  2. ^ "Durvasa - the angry sage who cursed many a people". www.sagarworld.com. Retrieved 2021-10-14.
  3. ^ "Little things count". Deccan Herald. 2021-04-15. Retrieved 2021-10-14.
  4. ^ "Little things count". Deccan Herald. 2021-04-15. Retrieved 2021-10-14.
  5. ^ Story of Maha Kumbh Mela from Srimad Bhagvatam
  6. ^ Chaturvedi, B. K. (2006). Vishnu Purana. Diamond Pocket Books (P) Ltd. p. 25. ISBN 978-81-7182-673-5.
  7. ^ Sinha, Purnendu Narayana (1901). A Study of the Bhagavata Purana: Or, Esoteric Hinduism. Freeman & Company, Limited. p. 170.
  8. ^ a b Wilson, Horace Hayman (1840). The Vishnu Purana.
  9. ^ Shastri, J. L.; Tagare, Dr G. V. (2000-01-01). The Kurma-Purana Part 1: Ancient Indian Tradition and Mythology Volume 20. Motilal Banarsidass. p. 9. ISBN 978-81-208-3887-1.
  10. ^ Krishnan, K. S. (2019-08-12). Origin of Vedas. Notion Press. ISBN 978-1-64587-981-7.
  11. ^ Sinha, Purnendu Narayana (1901). A Study of the Bhagavata Purana: Or, Esoteric Hinduism. Freeman & Company, Limited. p. 172.
  12. ^ "Allahabad to be renamed as Prayagraj: A look at UP govt's renaming streak".
  13. ^ a b Kama MacLean (August 2003). "Making the Colonial State Work for You: The Modern Beginnings of the Ancient Kumbha Mela in Allahabad". The Journal of Asian Studies. 62 (3): 873–905. doi:10.2307/3591863. JSTOR 3591863. S2CID 162404242.
  14. ^ Arvind Krishna Mehrotra (2007). The Last Bungalow: Writings on Allahabad. Penguin. p. 289. ISBN 978-0-14-310118-5.
  15. ^ Kama Maclean (28 August 2008). Pilgrimage and Power: The Kumbh Mela in Allahabad, 1765-1954. OUP USA. pp. 88–89. ISBN 978-0-19-533894-2.
  16. ^ Mallory, J. P. (1997). "Sacred drink". In Mallory, J. P.; Adams, Douglas Q. (eds.). Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture. Taylor & Francis. p. 538.

External links

  • The story of the churning as found in the Mahabharata
  • The story of the churning as found in the Vishnu Purana
  • The story of the churning as found in the Ramayana

samudra, manthana, sanskrit, सम, रमन, थन, churning, ocean, major, episode, hinduism, that, elaborated, vishnu, purana, major, text, hinduism, explains, origin, elixir, eternal, life, amrita, asuras, left, devas, right, churn, ocean, milk, various, scenes, from. The Samudra Manthana Sanskrit सम द रमन थन lit churning of the ocean is a major episode in Hinduism that is elaborated in the Vishnu Purana a major text of Hinduism 1 The Samudra Manthana explains the origin of the elixir of eternal life amrita The asuras left and devas right churn the Ocean of Milk Various scenes from the Samudra Manthana episode Contents 1 Nomenclature 2 Legend 2 1 Ratnas 2 2 Amrita 2 2 1 Origin of the Kumbha Mela 3 Comparative study 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksNomenclature EditSagara manthana स गरमन थन Sagara is another word for Samudra both meaning a sea or large water body Kshirasagara manthana क ष रस गरमन थन Kshirasagara means the ocean of milk or milky ocean Kshirasagara Kshira milk Sagara ocean or sea Legend EditIndra the King of Svarga was riding on his divine elephant when he came across the sage Durvasa who offered him a special garland given to him by an apsara The deity accepted the garland and placed it on the trunk sometime the tusks or the head of the elephant in some scriptures of Airavata his mount as a testament to his humility 2 The flowers had a strong scent that attracted some bees 3 Annoyed by the bees the elephant threw the garland on the ground 4 This enraged the sage as the garland was a dwelling of Sri fortune and was to be treated as a prasada or a religious offering Durvasa cursed Indra and all the devas to be bereft of all strength energy and fortune 5 In the battles following the incident the devas were defeated and the asuras led by Bali gained control over the three worlds The devas sought Vishnu s wisdom who advised them to treat with the asuras in a diplomatic manner The devas formed an alliance with the asuras to jointly churn the ocean for the nectar of immortality and to share it among themselves However Vishnu assured the devas that he would arrange for them alone to obtain the nectar 6 Shiva drinks the kalakuta The churning of the Ocean of Milk was an extensive process Mount Mandara was uprooted and used as the churning rod and Vasuki a naga who resided on Shiva s neck became the churning rope after being promised that he would get his share While carrying the massive mountain several devas and asuras fell to their deaths and some perished due to sheer exhaustion Vishnu flew upon his mount Garuda and revived them all placing Mandara upon his mount to carry it towards its destination in the midst of the ocean Reaching their destination the great serpent coiled himself around Mandara and Vishnu counselled the devas to tug from the head of the serpent The asuras observing this refused to hold the tail of the serpent perceiving it as inauspicious The devas relented and held the tail henceforth The churning commenced However Mandara was too enormous and sank to the bottom of the ocean much to the despair of the devas and the asuras Vishnu in the form of his Kurma avatara lit turtle came to their rescue and supported the mountain on his shell When venomous fumes were emitted by Vasuki the asuras were affected due to their decision to hold his head The Samudra Manthana bequeathed a panoply of substances from the Ocean of Milk One of them was the lethal poison known as halahala In some variations of the story the poison escaped from the mouth of Vasuki as the demons and gods churned This terrified the gods and the demons because the poison was so powerful that it could destroy all of creation The asuras were poisoned by fumes emitted by Vasuki Despite this the devas and the asuras pulled back and forth on the snake s body alternately causing the mountain to rotate which in turn churned the ocean Shiva consumed the poison to protect the three worlds the consumption of which gave a blue hue to his throat offering him the epithet Neelakantha the blue throated one neela blue kantha throat in Sanskrit 7 Ratnas Edit Samudra Manthana All kinds of herbs were cast into the ocean and fourteen ratnas gems were produced from it divided between the asuras and the devas Though the ratnas are usually enumerated as 14 the list in the scriptures ranges from 9 to 14 Ratnas According to the quality of the treasures produced they were claimed by Shiva Vishnu Maharishis the devas and the asuras There were three categories of goddesses who emerged from the ocean most lists include 8 Lakshmi the goddess of prosperity and wealth who chose Vishnu as her eternal consort 9 Apsaras divine damsels like Rambha Menaka Punjisthala and others who chose the Gandharvas as their companions Varuni the goddess of wine sura and the virgin daughter of Varuna accepted by the devas Some interpretations believe her acceptance to be the etymology of devas being termed as suras and the daityas as asuras 10 Likewise three types of supernatural animals appeared Kamadhenu or Surabhi the wish granting cow taken by Brahma and given to the sages so that the ghee from her milk could be used for yajnas and similar rituals Airavata and several other elephants taken by Indra Uchhaishravas the divine seven headed horse given to Bali Three valuables were also produced Kaustubha the most valuable ratnam divine jewel in the universe claimed by Vishnu Kalpavriksha a divine wish fulfilling and flowering tree with blossoms that never fade or wilt taken to Indraloka by the devas Sharanga a powerful bow given to Vishnu Additionally produced were Chandra a crescent claimed by Shiva Dhanvantari the vaidya of the devas with amrita the nectar of immortality Sometimes considered as two separate Ratnas Halahala the poison swallowed by Shiva This list varies from purana to purana and is also slightly different in the Ramayana and Mahabharata Lists are completed by adding the following ratnas 8 Panchajanya Vishnu s conch Jyestha Alakshmi the goddess of misfortune The umbrella taken by Varuna The earrings given to Aditi by her son Indra Nidradevi goddess of sleepAmrita Edit Finally Dhanvantari the heavenly physician emerged with a pot containing the amṛta the heavenly nectar of immortality Fierce fighting ensued between the devas and the asuras for its possession Asuras took Amrit from Dhanvantari and ran away chased by Devas The devas appealed to Vishnu who took the form of Mohini a beautiful and enchanting damsel She enchanted the asuras into submitting to her terms She made the devas and the asuras to sit in two separate rows distributing it among the devas who drank it An asura named Svarbhanu disguised himself as a deva and drank some nectar Due to their luminous nature the deities of the sun and the moon Surya and Chandra noticed this disguise They informed Mohini who cut off his head with her discus the Sudarshana Chakra From that day his head was called Rahu and his body Ketu the Hindu myth behind eclipses When the nectar was emptied from the pot Vishnu assumed his true form riding on Garuda and departing to his abode Realising that they had been deceived the furious asuras engaged in personal combat with the devas who had been bolstered by their consumption of amrita Indra fought Bali Kartikeya fought Taraka Varuna fought Heti Yama fought Kalanabha Brihaspati fought Sukra Mitra fought Praheti Vishvakarma fought Maya Vrishapati fought Jambha Shani fought Naraka Savitri fought Vilochana Chandra fought Rahu Vayu fought Puloman and Aparajita fought Namuchi There are also descriptions of duels between groups of beings the Ashvini twins and Vrishaparva Surya and the hundred sons of Bali the sons of Brahma with Ilvala and Vatapi the Maruts and the Nivatakavacha Kali with Shumba and Nishumba the Rudras and the Krodavasas and the Vasus and the Kaleyas Rejuvenated by the amrita the devas emerged victorious and exiled the asuras to the Pataloka regaining Svarga 11 Origin of the Kumbha Mela Edit Medieval Hindu theology extends this legend to state that while the devas were carrying the amṛta away from the asuras some drops of the nectar fell at four different places on the Earth Haridwar Prayaga Prayagraj 12 Trimbak Nashik and Ujjain 13 According to the legend these places acquired a certain mystical power and spiritual value A Kumbha Mela is celebrated at these four places every twelve years for this reason People believe that after bathing there during the Kumbha mela one can attain moksha While several ancient texts including the various Puranas mention the Samudra Manthana legend none of them mentions the spilling of the amṛta at four places 13 14 Neither do these texts mention the Kumbha Mela Therefore multiple scholars including R B Bhattacharya D P Dubey and Kama Maclean believe that the Samudra Manthana legend has been applied to the Kumbha Mela relatively recently in order to show scriptural authority for the mela 15 Comparative study EditThis episode has been analyzed comparatively by Georges Dumezil who dubiously connected it to various historical Indo European facts and even the European medieval legend of the Holy Grail reconstructing a proto story the ambrosia cycle or cycle of the mead about a theoretical trickster deity who steals the drink of immortality for mankind but fails in freeing humans from death Dumezil later abandoned his theory but the core of the idea was taken up by Jarich Oosten who posits similarities with the Hymiskvida In this Old Norse poem beer is prepared for the gods by the Jotunn sea god AEgir after Thor and Tyr recover a giant kettle AEgir needs to make the beer Oosten claims the serpent Jormungandr takes the place of Vasuki although his role in the story is not at all similar or comparable 16 See also Edit Hinduism portalDashavatara Hindu mythological wars Tarakamaya WarReferences Edit Chaturvedi B K 2006 Vishnu Purana Diamond Pocket Books P Ltd ISBN 978 81 7182 673 5 Durvasa the angry sage who cursed many a people www sagarworld com Retrieved 2021 10 14 Little things count Deccan Herald 2021 04 15 Retrieved 2021 10 14 Little things count Deccan Herald 2021 04 15 Retrieved 2021 10 14 Story of Maha Kumbh Mela from Srimad Bhagvatam Chaturvedi B K 2006 Vishnu Purana Diamond Pocket Books P Ltd p 25 ISBN 978 81 7182 673 5 Sinha Purnendu Narayana 1901 A Study of the Bhagavata Purana Or Esoteric Hinduism Freeman amp Company Limited p 170 a b Wilson Horace Hayman 1840 The Vishnu Purana Shastri J L Tagare Dr G V 2000 01 01 The Kurma Purana Part 1 Ancient Indian Tradition and Mythology Volume 20 Motilal Banarsidass p 9 ISBN 978 81 208 3887 1 Krishnan K S 2019 08 12 Origin of Vedas Notion Press ISBN 978 1 64587 981 7 Sinha Purnendu Narayana 1901 A Study of the Bhagavata Purana Or Esoteric Hinduism Freeman amp Company Limited p 172 Allahabad to be renamed as Prayagraj A look at UP govt s renaming streak a b Kama MacLean August 2003 Making the Colonial State Work for You The Modern Beginnings of the Ancient Kumbha Mela in Allahabad The Journal of Asian Studies 62 3 873 905 doi 10 2307 3591863 JSTOR 3591863 S2CID 162404242 Arvind Krishna Mehrotra 2007 The Last Bungalow Writings on Allahabad Penguin p 289 ISBN 978 0 14 310118 5 Kama Maclean 28 August 2008 Pilgrimage and Power The Kumbh Mela in Allahabad 1765 1954 OUP USA pp 88 89 ISBN 978 0 19 533894 2 Mallory J P 1997 Sacred drink In Mallory J P Adams Douglas Q eds Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture Taylor amp Francis p 538 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Samudra manthan The story of the churning as found in the Mahabharata The story of the churning as found in the Vishnu Purana The story of the churning as found in the Ramayana Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Samudra Manthana amp oldid 1142562657, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.