Hinduism: Details about 'Kaurava'

Index / Hinduism / Vyasa / Kaurava /

Navigation

Home
One level up
Back
Index of contents
Links
Hinduism-Shop

Useful Links


Hinduism Portal
History Hindu deities Denominations Mythology Reincarnation Karma
Nirvana Dharma Ayurveda Scriptures Festivals By country

The term Kaurava is a Sanskrit term, that means the descendants of Kuru, a legendary king who is the ancestor of many of the characters of the Mahabharata. It is often written as Kauravas in English; technically this plural form is incorrect since the Sanskrit form is plural already. The singular term, for a single descendant of Kuru, is Kaura.

The term is used in the Mahabharata with two meanings;

1. the wider meaning, to represent all the descendants of Kuru. This meaning, which includes the Pandava brothers, is sometimes used in the Mahabharata, especially in some of the earlier parts.

2. the



commoner and narrower meaning, to represent the elder line of the descendants of King Kuru. This restricts it to the children of King Dhritarashtra, as his line is the elder line of descent from Kuru. It excludes the children of the younger brother Pandu, who founds his own line, the Pandava.

The rest of this article deals with the Kaurava in the narrower sense, that is the children of Dhritarashtra, by Queen Gandhari.

According to the standard texts, Gandhari wanted a hundred sons, and Vyasa granted her a boon that she would have these. She became pregnant, but did not deliver for two years, after which she gave birth to a lump of flesh. Vyasa cut this lump into a hundred and one pieces, and these eventually developed into a hundred boys and one girl.

This story



should be read in view of the dispute over the succession to the throne of the kingdom. It attributes a late birth to Duryodhana, the eldest son of Dhritarashtra, despite his father's early marriage. This legitimises the case for his cousin Yudhisthira to claim the throne, since he could claim to be the eldest of his generation.

Although all hundred sons have been named, only the first few are normally mentioned in the Mahabharata. The first five are;

Other named sons include Vikarna. Another important son was Chitra.

Sons of Kauravas fought in the Great War. Duryodhana had 29 sons of which few survived. ON death of Dushasan, the second kaurava, Purujit was made Kaurava Yuvaraja. After his death, Sudarsha was created Yuvaraj. After defeat of all, Ashwathhama crowned Durmukha, young son of Duryodhana as next King and continued struggle. They migrated to the west and formed the Kathi tribe now living in Kathiawar, Gujarat.

The daughter is named Dusshalaa.

All the male Kauravas were killed in the great battle at Kurukshetra.


See also

  • The Kurus


Hinduism | Hindu mythology | Itihasa
Male Deities: Brahma | Vishnu | Shiva | Rama | Krishna | Ganesha | Indra | Lakshman | Hanuman | Surya | more..
Female Deities: Gayatri | Lakshmi | Saraswati | Durga | Devi | Sita | Radha | Kali | Parvati | Shakti | more..
Texts: Vedas | Upanishads | Puranas | Ramayana | Mahabharata
Кауравы

ta:கௌரவர்


Visitors who viewed this also viewed:

Hinduism: Lal Bahadur Shastri
Hinduism: Operation Shakti
Hinduism: Sun Temple
New Age: Hunter Thompson
Buddhism: Mahavairocana
Christianity: Metrical Psalter


 


Click here for our Hinduism-Shop





This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Kaurava". A list of the wikipedia authors can be found here.