Regions
Africa North America South America Asia Australia Caribbean Europe View all regions
Categories
Travel Agents Cruises Tours Hotels View all categories
Essentials
Trip Tips - NEW!
Share Your Trip
Trip Blogs - NEW! Video Gallery - NEW! Photo Gallery - NEW!
By Topic
Europe Canada United States South America Caribbean Australia Africa Asia View all articles
The Best Of
Most Popular - NEW! Highest Rated - NEW!
Member Login
Pandava
About Pandava
(Redirected from Pandavas):''This article is about mythohistorical figures of India. For the spider genus known as ''Pandava'', see Titanoecidae.''
In the Hindu epic Mahabharata, the 'Pandava' (or Pandawa) brothers (Sanskrit: рдкрд╛рдгреНтАНрдбрд╡ ) are the five acknowledged sons of Pandu, by his two wives Kunti and Madri. Their names are Yudhishtira, Bhima, Arjuna, Nakula and Sahadeva. All five brothers were married to one woman, Draupadi. Together, they fought and prevailed in a war against the party of their cousins the Kauravas, the climax of which was the Battle of Kurukshetra. Their alienated half-brother Karna fought against them and was eventually slain by Arjuna.
| Contents |
| Parents of the Pandavas |
| Draupadi's description of her husbands to Jayadratha |
| References |
| External Links |
Parents of the Pandavas
The first three of the Pandavas were the sons of Kunti, and the younger two were sons of Madri. Since Pandu had been cursed to die if ever he had intercourse with his wives, the actual fatherhood of the children is traditionally attributed to various gods, in virtue of a boon that Kunti had received from Durvasa and had transferred to Madri. Thus, Yudhishthira was the son of Dharma the god of righteousness, Bhima the son of Vayu the wind-god, Arjuna the son of Indra the sky-god, and Nakula and Sahadeva the sons of the Ashwini Gods.
Draupadi's description of her husbands to Jayadratha
The Pandava brothers were collectively married to Draupadi. On one occasion, Draupadi was kidnapped and abducted from a hermitage in the forest by the wicked king Jayadratha. When her husbands learned of the crime, they came in hot pursuit. Seeing them approach, Jayadratha asked Draupadi to describe them. Angrily, Draupadi told the king his time was up, and that the knowledge would do him no good. She then proceeded to give the description. (Mahabharata, Book III: Varna Parva, Section 268.)
★ According to Draupadi, Yudhishthira possessed a "complexion like that of pure gold, possessed of a prominent nose and large eyes, and endued with a slender make." He was just, had a correct sense of morality, and was merciful to surrendering foes. Draupadi counselled Jayadratha to run to Yudhishthira and to beg for forgiveness.
★ Draupadi described Bhima as tall and long-armed. In a display of ferocity, he was "biting his lips, and contracting his forehead so as to bring the two eye-brows together." His superhuman feats had earned him great renown. "They that offend him are never suffered to live. He never forgets a foe. On some pretext or other he wreaks his vengeance."
★ Arjuna she praised as the greatest of archers, intelligent, "with senses under complete control." Neither lust nor fear nor anger could make him forsake virtue. Though capable of withstanding any foeman, he would never commit an act of cruelty.
★ Nakula, said Draupadi, was "the handsomest person in the whole world." An accomplished swordsman, he was also "versed in every question of morality and profit" and "endued with high wisdom." He was unflinchingly devoted to his brothers, who in turn regarded him as more valuable than their own lives.
★ Finally, Sahadeva was the youngest of the brothers, and like the others formidable in war and observant of morality. "Heroic, intelligent, wise and ever wrathful, there is not another man equal unto him in intelligence or in eloquence amid assemblies of the wise."
References
★ Chakravarti V. Narasimhan; The Mahabharata. Columbia University Press, 1965.
External Links
The Mahabharata of Vyasa, translated from Sanskrit into English by Kisari Mohan Ganguli and published online at sacred-texts.com.
This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.
Travel Articles
Recent Blogs
Did you know?
- "Brooklyn" in New York City translates to "broken valley" in Dutch but was named after Breukelen in the Netherlands.
- South Korea's capital is Seoul, which means "the capital" in Korean.
- Mauna Loa in Hawaii is the largest volcano in the world, is 4000+ meters high, and has been dormant since 1984.
Travel News
- Expedia eyes more media monetisation - Travolution
- City leaders slam tourist boards plan - Edinburgh Evening News
- Beyond the Waikiki tourist trap - BCLocalNews
- From Tuesday's Globe and Mail - Globe and Mail
- BITE 'brings the world to Bahrain' - Gulf Daily News
- It's the Only Way to go - the Essex Way! - The Gazette
- Gold Medal plans to expand its Travel TV - TTG live
- Memorial Day weekend I-75 traffic could face Zilwaukee Bridge closure - MLive.com
- Big turnout for key travel expo - Gulf Daily News
- New air services into Rimini and Naples - Travel Daily News International



