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Wars of Hindu Mythology

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The Wars of Hindu mythology depict great heroes and demons in battles of celestial proportions, filled with the awesome force of celestial weapons, religious mysticism, magic, celestial and supernatural beings.

Overriding the awesome battles and wonderous features is a deep driving purpose of religion and fate.

War in Religion and Myth

While no Hindu epic or scripture fails to describe the horrors of war and its fallout, major wars are fought with a religious purpose: often to eliminate demonic beings, or lords and rulers who pursue war wantonly for ambition and domination.

The most destructive wars in Hindu myth are driven with the mission of good triumphing over evil.

Hindu teachings prescribe war as the final option, to be employed only after all peaceful methods are exhausted. But when this time comes, war is taught to be a matter of great personal and religious importance, where every man must do his duty as a warrior, exemplify courage, honor and fearsome prowess even against all the odds, and even at high cost of life.

The Bhagavad Gita places duty above all gain and loss, triumph and destruction, no matter how terrible or personal it becomes. Fate is the driving force of all Hindu actions, and the awaiting fate of death and ascent to heaven is the most important object for ordinary human beings, thus making the destructiveness of wars irrelevant so long as honor and courage are exhibited, and a righteous purpose is served.

The Avataras of

Vishnu, the Inconceivable Supreme, periodically takes birth, an Avatara upon earth to destroy evil and deliver the pious. He is also the refuge of the Devas in their battles against Asuras.

The most martial Avataras include Narasimha, Parashurama, Rama and Lakshmana.

  • Narayanastra: the personal missile weapon of Vishnu in his Narayana form, this astra lets loose a powerful tirade of millions of deadly missiles simultaneously. The intensity of the shower increases with resistance. The only solution is total submission before the missile, given which it will stop.
  • Vaishnavastra: the personal missile weapon of Vishnu, once fired it cannot be thwarted by any means, save by the will of Vishnu Himself.
  • Kaumodaki: the divine mace weapon of Vishnu; invincible and without parallel.
  • Sudarshana Chakra: the magical chakra, a spinning discus with sharp outer spears. The Sudarshan flies at the command of Vishnu, spinning away to tear off the heads of His opponents, or to perform any function desired by Vishnu. It was most famously used by His Avatara Krishna in the Mahabharata.

Siva

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The Lord Destroyer, Sarvaripati Siva is the most fearsome manifestation of the Supreme God. Assigned with destroying all of the universe at the end of time, Siva is the most fearsome warrior, unconquerable by any and all.

Siva employs his power to kill the Asura Tripura, destroying the flying three cities of Tripura. He is restrained and not involved in the wars of the worlds prior to dissolution.

The

War Sacrifices

  • Ashwamedha: the famous horse-sacrifice was conducted by allowing a pony to roam freely for a slated period of time, with the king performing the sacrifice laying claim to all the lands it touched. The king whose authority is contested must prove himself in battle or accept the imperial supremacy of the challenging king. When the horse returns safely after the period of time, the main sacrifice is performed, and the king, if successful in obtaining dominance over other kings, is crowned Emperor of the World.
The Ashwamedha allows the opportunity to maintain peace if the kings do not choose to contest the sacrificial horse

  • Rajasuya: considered the ultimate sacrifice, the king performing the sacrifice must openly challenge every king in the world to accept his supremacy or defeat him in battle. If and when the king returns successfully, having beaten all other known rulers, the performance of the sacrifice will send him to the highest abode of Lord Indra. It was performed by the Pandava hero Yudhisthira in the Mahabharata epic.
  • Vaishnava: akin to the conduct of the Rajasuya, save only that the entire sacrifice is to please Lord Vishnu, who is the Supreme God.
Levels of Warrior Excellence
  • Atiratha: a warrior capable of fighting 60,000 warriors simultaneously; circumspect in his mastery of all forms of weapons and combat skills.
  • Maharatha: a warrior capable of contending with 10,000 warriors simultaneously.

Strategic Formations: the Vyuha

  • Krauncha Vyuha: the crow-shaped formation of an army; forces are distributed to form spanning wing-sides, with a formidable, penetrating center depicting the crow's head and break.
  • Chakra Vyuha: a winding, ever-rotating circular formation; considered impenetrable during the Mahabharata age by all warriors save Arjuna, Krishna and Abhimanyu. Abhimanyu, had learnt how to break into the formation (in the womb of Subhadra) but not how to break out of it and is trapped inside in the Mahabharata war.
  • Sarpa Vyuha: winding snake formation.

Devastras

An Astra is a missile-type weapon which is to be hurled at an enemy. Examples include arrows from bows. A Shastra is a personal weapon, like swords and maces, that must be constantly operated by the warrior.

Modern speculation has equated its destructive potential to a nuclear weapon.

The Devas and Asuras

The perennial battle between the Devas and Asuras is undertaken over the dominion of the three worlds: Swarga, Bhumi and Patala, or Heaven, Earth and the Nether worlds. Both races are technically equal, possessor of great religious and martial powers, but the Devas are committed to the worship of the Supreme Lord and practice of virtue. The Asuras have atheistic and devious tendencies that grow over time. The divide is the greatest in the Kali Yuga, the final age.

The Ramayana

The Mahabharata

It is felt by many contemporary scholars and Hindus that Karna in fact was the superior of Arjuna, and was done in only by the curse of Parashurama owing to his deceit, and Krishna, due to his support of the evil Duryodhana and the horrible slaying of Abhimanyu. However, as in all other Vedic/Hindu mythological stories, superiority over another was never by means of mere physical prowess; it always meant a superiority in virtue (and hence a combination of both) as well. It is also depicted in the epic that Karna's soul is in fact that of Narakasura, the terrible demon slain by Vishnu in a previous age.

The End of the World

The end of the world, all creation and illusion is prophesized to happen at the end of the Kali Yuga.

Lord Siva Nataraja, the Destroyer kills the paramount demon of the time and performs the Tandava Nritya (The Dance of Tandava) on his back.

The mystical dance is the penultimate martial art, destroying all forms of matter and energy, materials, beings and illusions, which are absorbed within the Supreme Brahman.

Kalki, the final Avatara of Vishnu is also prophesized to appear the end of the Kali yuga, to wage the final battle between good and evil. It is not clear how to reconcile this prophesy with Siva's role as the Destroyer, but Kalki will appear upon a white horse, amassing an army of the few pious remaining, and incarnations of all of Hindu God-head, to destroy the demons and sin manifest in the world.

  1. redirect [[Template:Hindu Deities and Texts]]

 


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