During the night when the Pandavas were absent, Kripa, along with Ashwatthama and Kritavarma, raided their camp, burnt it and massacred the remaining Pandava army. It is believed that after fulfilling his duties, Kripa finally went to the forest for penance and lived the rest of his life.
Vyasa is bornAssured by the sage and his divine powers, Satyavati birthed him a son in the bushy hide-out without anyone's knowledge. The boy was born with divine genes of Rishi Vashishtha, his great grandfather, and so Parashar named him Vyas.
According to the Mahabharata, the sage Vyasa was the son of Satyavati and Parashara. During her youth, Satyavati was a fisherwoman who used to drive a boat. One day, sage Parashara was in a hurry to attend a Yajna. Satyavati helped him cross the river borders.
It is said that when Veda Vyasa conceived the Mahabharata in his mind he knew that it would be a very large work and that he would need a stenographer to take dictation. Lord Brahma appeared and told him to invoke Lord Ganesha, the god of knowledge, who would assist Vyasa in his work.
Vyasa also like Ravana was born to a Maharishi and thus was a Brahmin by birth. Ved vyas was Vashisht Brahmin.
Krishna intervened and revived the stillborn baby, and Ashwatthama was made to give up his source of power – the gemstone in the middle of his forehead. Due to his immortality, he was cursed to live forever till the end of time with the gaping wound on his forehead.
Vyas Gufa is a small cave in Himalayan mountain, in Mana village near Badrinath. It is believed that Maharshi Vyas had composed Mahabharata and 18 Puranas in this cave. There is also another cave, Ganesh Gufa, nearby where Lord Ganesha had written the epic Mahabharata dictated by Maharshi Vyas.
Krishna-Dwaipayan Vyasa, himself a character in the epic, composed it; as, according to tradition, he dictated the verses and Ganesha wrote them down. At 100,000 verses, it is the longest epic poem ever written, generally thought to have been composed in the 4th century BCE or earlier.
Niyoga (Sanskrit: नियोग) was an ancient Hindu practice. In this practice, a woman (whose husband is either incapable of siring or has died without siring a child) would request and appoint a revered man for helping her bear a child.
From Kurma Purana, in every Dvapara Yuga, a Veda Vyasa is born so as to divide the Vedas and disseminate their knowledge. In the present era, there have been twenty eight Dvapara Yugas and therefore been twenty eight individuals who have held the title of Veda Vyasa.
During the Kurukshetra War, Shakuni was killed by the youngest Pandava, Sahadeva.
ChitrÄngada (Sanskrit: चितà¥à¤°à¤¾à¤‚गद, citrÄngada) was a king in ancient India. In the Mahabharata, he is the elder son of Shantanu and Satyavati, who ascended the throne of Hastinapura after his father's death.
| Karna |
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| Spouses | Originally unnamed; Vrushali and Supriya in later retelling |
| Children | Sons including Vrishasena, Banasena and Vrishaketu |
| Relatives | Adhiratha (adoptive father) Radha (adoptive mother) Surya (father) Kunti (mother) Yudhishthira, Bhima, Arjuna, Nakula and Sahadeva (half-brothers) Possibly some adoptive brothers |
With the consent of the fisherman, Bhishma took Satyavati to his father on a chariot and informed him about his vows. A loving father Shantanu gave him a boon of Iccha Mrityu, the control over the time of his death. Shantanu and Satyavati soon married and two children - Chitrangada and Vichitravirya were born.