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{{short description|War described in the Hindu epic Mahabharata}}
{{short description|War described in the Hindu epic Mahabharata}}
{{pp-protect|small=yes}}
{{pp|small=yes}}
{{excessive detail|date=November 2017}}
{{overly detailed|date=November 2017}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2016}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2016}}
{{Use Indian English|date=August 2016}}
{{Use Indian English|date=August 2016}}
{{Infobox military conflict
{{Infobox military conflict
| conflict = Kurukshetra War<br>कुरुक्षेत्र युद्ध
| conflict = Kurukshetra War
| image = The Pandava and Kaurava armies face each other.JPG
| image = The Pandava and Kaurava armies face each other.JPG
| caption = {{circa|1700}} watercolour from [[Mewar]] depicts the Pandava and Kaurava armies arrayed against each other.
| caption = {{circa|1700}} watercolour from [[Mewar]] depicts the Pandava and Kaurava armies arrayed against each other.
| date = {{ubl|~1000 BCE (according to archeology)|~3102 BCE (according to popular astronomical study)}}
| place = [[Kurukshetra]]
| place = [[Kurukshetra]]
| territory = *Reunification of the [[Kuru Kingdom|Kuru]] states of [[Hastinapura]] and [[Indraprastha]] under the [[Pandavas]].
| territory = *Reunification of the [[Kuru kingdom|Kuru]] cities of [[Hastinapura]] and [[Indraprastha]] under the [[Pandavas]].
*Restoration of Panchala lands held by [[Drona]] to the [[Panchala]] state.
*Restoration of Panchala lands held by [[Drona]] to the [[Panchala Kingdom (Mahabharata)|Panchala Kingdom]].
*Truce and status quo ante bellum
*Truce and status quo ante bellum
| result = Glorious victory for [[Pandavas]] and allies, overthrow of the [[Kauravas]]<nowiki>}} </nowiki><!--This fixes label and data text alignment by locking it in place-->
| result = {{ubl|[[Pyrrhic victory]] for [[Pandavas]] and allies, overthrow of the [[Kauravas]]}} <!--This fixes label and data text alignment by locking it in place-->


*Fall of [[Hastinapura]]
*Fall of [[Hastinapura]]
*Abdication of the throne of [[Hastinapura]] by [[Dhritarashtra]] and ascension of [[Yudhisthira]].
*Abdication of the throne of [[Hastinapura]] by [[Dhritarashtra]] and ascension of [[Yudhisthira]].
*Vassalage of [[Indraprastha]] to [[Hastinapura]] under [[Yuyutsu]].
*Vassalage of [[Indraprastha]] to [[Hastinapura]] under [[Yuyutsu]].
*Succession crises in [[Anga]], [[Chedi Kingdom|Chedi]], [[Gandhara]], [[Kalinga (Mahabharata)|Kalinga]], [[Kosala]], [[Madra]], [[Magadha]], [[Matsya Kingdom|Matsya]], [[Panchala]], [[Sindhu]], [[Virata]].
*Succession crises in [[Anga]], [[Chedi kingdom|Chedi]], [[Gandhara kingdom|Gandhara]], [[Kalinga (Mahabharata)|Kalinga]], [[Kosala]], [[Madra kingdom|Madra]], [[Magadha (Mahajanapada)|Magadha]], [[Matsya kingdom|Matsya]], [[Panchala Kingdom (Mahabharata)|Panchala]] and [[Sindhu kingdom|Sindhu]].
*Regional hegemony shift from the [[Kuru (archaeology)|Kurus]] to the [[Panchala]]s
*Regional hegemony shift from the [[Kuru kingdom|Kurus]] to the [[Panchala Kingdom (Mahabharata)|Panchalas]]
| combatant1 = *[[Pandavas]] of [[Kuru Kingdom]]
| combatant1 = *Territory-less [[Pandavas]] of [[Kuru kingdom|Kuru]]
*[[Krishna]]
*[[Krishna]]
*[[Magadha (Mahajanapada)|Magadha]]
*[[Panchala]]
*[[Matsya Kingdom|Matsya]]
*[[Panchala Kingdom (Mahabharata)|Panchala]]
*[[Matsya kingdom|Matsya]]
*[[Magadha]]
*[[Chedi Kingdom|Chedi]]
*[[Chedi kingdom|Chedi]]
*[[Kunti Kingdom|Kunti]]
*[[Kunti kingdom|Kunti]]
Other allies
Other allies
| combatant2 = *[[Kauravas]] of [[Kuru Kingdom]]
| combatant2 = *[[Kauravas]] of [[Kuru Kingdom]]
*[[Anga]]
*[[Anga]]
*[[Gandhara]]
*[[Gandhara kingdom|Gandhara]]
*[[Sindhu]]
*[[Sindhu kingdom|Sindhu]]
*[[Madra]]
*[[Madra kingdom|Madra]]
*[[Kalinga (Mahabharata)|Kalinga]]
*[[Kambojas]]
*[[Kambojas]]
*[[Bahlikas]]
*[[Bahlika (Mahabharata)|Bahlika]]
*[[Trigarta]]
*[[Trigarta]]
*[[Pragjyotisha Kingdom|Pragjyotisha]]
*[[Pragjyotisha kingdom|Pragjyotisha]]
*Yadava Army ([[Narayana Sena]] of [[Krishna]])
*[[Yadava]] Army ([[Narayani Sena]] of [[Krishna]])
Other allies
Other allies
| commander1 = '''Overlord''' <br> [[Yudhisthira]] <br> '''Commanders-in-chief''' <br> [[Dhrishtadyumna]](day 1-18){{KIA}}<br>'''Other-Commander''' <br> [[Arjuna]]<br>[[Bhima]]<br>[[Drupada]]{{KIA}} <br> [[Virata]]{{KIA}} <br> [[Abhimanyu]]{{KIA}} <br> [[Upapandavas]]{{KIA}} <br> [[Satyaki]] <br> [[Shikhandi]]{{KIA}} <br> [[Nakula]] <br> [[Sahadeva]] <br> '''Strategist''' <br> [[Krishna]]
| commander1 = '''Overlord''' <br /> [[Yudhishthira]] <br /> '''Commander-in-chief''' <br /> [[Dhrishtadyumna]] (day 1-18){{KIA}}<br />'''Other-Commanders''' <br /> [[Bhima]] <br />[[Drupada]]{{KIA}} <br />[[Virata]]{{KIA}}
[[Chekitana]]{{KIA}} <br /> [[Satyaki]] <br />.
[[Shikhandi]]{{KIA}}
'''Strategist''' <br /> [[Krishna]]
| commander2 = '''Overlord''' <br>[[Dhritrashtra]] <br> [[Duryodhana]]{{KIA}} <br> '''Commanders-in-chief''' <br> [[Bhishma]](day 1-10){{KIA}} <br> [[Drona]](day 11-15){{KIA}} <br> [[Karna]](day 16-17){{KIA}} <br> [[Shalya]](day 18){{KIA}} <br> [[Ashwatthama]](night raid) <br> '''Other-Commanders''' [[Dushasana]]{{KIA}} <br> [[Jayadratha]]{{KIA}} <br> [[Kripa]] <br> [[Kritavarma]] <br> [[Bhurishravas]]{{KIA}} <br> [[Bahlika (Mahabharata)|Bahlika]]{{KIA}} <br> [[Bhagadatta]]{{KIA}} <br> [[Sudakshina]]{{KIA}} <br> '''Strategist''' <br> [[Shakuni]]{{KIA}}
| commander2 = '''Overlords''' <br />[[Dhritrashtra]]{{Surrender}} <br /> [[Duryodhana]]{{KIA}} <br /> '''Commanders-in-chief''' <br /> [[Bhishma]] (day 1-10){{KIA}} <br /> [[Drona]] (day 11-15){{KIA}} <br /> [[Karna]] (day 16-17){{KIA}} <br /> [[Shalya]] (day 18){{KIA}} <br /> [[Ashwatthama]] (night raid){{Surrender}} <br /> '''Other-Commanders''' [[Dushasana]]{{KIA}} <br /> [[Jayadratha]]{{KIA}} <br /> [[Kripa]]{{Surrender}} <br /> [[Kritavarma]]{{Surrender}} <br /> [[Bhurishravas]]{{KIA}} <br /> [[Bahlika (Mahabharata)|Bahlika]]{{KIA}} <br /> [[Bhagadatta]]{{KIA}} <br /> [[Sudakshina]]{{KIA}} <br /> '''Strategist''' <br /> [[Shakuni]]{{KIA}}
| strength1 = 7 [[Akshauhini]]s <br /> 153,090-100,300,000<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Mahabharata, Book 6: Bhishma Parva: Bhagavat-Gita Parva: Section L |url=https://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/m06/m06050.htm |access-date=2023-03-25 |website=www.sacred-texts.com |quote=And Nakula and Sahadeva placed themselves on the left wing. And on the joints of the wings were placed ten thousand cars and on the head a hundred thousand, and on the back a hundred millions and twenty thousand and on the neck a hundred and seventy thousand. |archive-date=25 March 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230325223145/https://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/m06/m06050.htm |url-status=live }}</ref> [[Ratha|chariots]] and chariot riders <br /> 10,000–153,090 [[War elephant|elephants]] and elephant riders <br /> 459,270–1,000,000 horses and horse riders <br /> 765,450–1,000,000,000 infantry <ref>{{Cite book |url=http://archive.org/details/mahbhrata0000unse |title=The Mahābhārata |date=2009 |location=New Delhi |publisher= Penguin |isbn=978-0-14-044681-4 |pages=291}}</ref> <br /> (total 1,530,900 soldiers-1,003,830,900)
| strength1 = 7 [[Akshauhini]]s <br> 153,090 chariots and chariot-riders <br> 153,090 elephants and elephant-riders <br> 459,270 horses and horse-riders <br> 765,450 infantry <br> (total 1,530,900 soldiers)
| strength2 = 11 [[Akshauhini]]s <br /> 240,570 chariots and chariot riders <br /> 240,570 elephants and elephant riders <br /> 721,710 horses and horse riders – 100,000,000 horses (mentioned possibly as a hyperbole)<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Mahabharata, Book 5: Udyoga Parva: Uluka Dutagamana Parva: Section CXCIX |url=https://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/m05/m05199.htm |access-date=2023-03-25 |website=www.sacred-texts.com |quote=And he was followed by Sauchitti, who steadily adhered to truth and was invincible in battle, and Srenimat, and Vasudeva and Vibhu, the son of the ruler of Kasi, with twenty thousand cars, and hundred million steeds of high mettle, each bearing scores of bells on its limbs, and twenty thousand smiting elephants with tusks as long as plough-shares, all of good breed and divided temples and all resembling moving masses of clouds. |archive-date=25 March 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230325222046/https://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/m05/m05199.htm |url-status=live }}</ref> <br /> 1,202,850 infantry <br /> 6,000,000 protecting elephants and chariots<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Mahabharata, Book 6: Bhishma Parva: Bhagavat-Gita Parvad: Section XVIII |url=https://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/m06/m06018.htm |access-date=2023-03-25 |website=www.sacred-texts.com |quote=And with a division that consisted of ten thousand active elephants, the king of Magadha followed that large car division. They that protected the wheels of the cars and they that protected the elephants, numbered full six millions. |archive-date=25 March 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230325222046/https://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/m06/m06018.htm |url-status=live }}</ref> <br /> 140,000,000 [[Pishachas]] <br /> 280,000,000 [[Rakshasa]] <br /> 420,000,000 [[Yaksha]] <br /> 100,000,000 [[Narayani Sena]]<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Mahabharata, Book 5: Udyoga Parva: Section VII |url=https://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/m05/m05007.htm |access-date=2023-03-27 |website=www.sacred-texts.com |archive-date=27 March 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230327121558/https://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/m05/m05007.htm |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=The Mahabharata, Book 3: Vana Parva: Draupadi-harana Parva: Section CCLXXIX |url=https://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/m03/m03279.htm |access-date=2023-03-26 |website=www.sacred-texts.com |quote=One hundred and forty millions of Pisachas, twice as many man-eating Rakshasa of terrible deed, and thrice as many Yaksha do my bidding! |archive-date=26 March 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230326083149/https://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/m03/m03279.htm |url-status=live }}</ref> <br /> (total 8,450,700 - 1,048,405,700 soldiers)
| strength2 = 11 [[Akshauhini]]s <br> 240,570 chariots and chariot-riders <br> 240,570 elephants and elephant-riders <br> 721,710 horses and horse-riders <br> 1,202,850 infantry <br> (total 2,405,700 soldiers)
| casualties1 = Almost total (1,530,892 soldiers) <br> only 8 known survivors - the Pandavas, Krishna, Satyaki, and Yuyutsu.
| casualties1 = Almost total (1,530,892 soldiers) <br /> only 8 known survivors - the Pandavas, Krishna, Satyaki, and Yuyutsu.
| casualties2 = Almost total (2,405,697 soldiers) <br> only 3 known survivors - Ashwatthama, Kripa, and Kritavarma
| casualties2 = Almost total (2,405,697 soldiers) <br /> only 3 known survivors - Ashwatthama, Kripa, and Kritavarma
| casualties3 = Yudhishthira gives a different number which is 1,660,020,000 dead and 24,165 missing.<ref>{{Cite book |url=http://archive.org/details/mahbhrata0000unse |title=The Mahābhārata |date=2009 |location=New Delhi |publisher= Penguin |isbn=978-0-14-044681-4 |pages=593 |quote=Dhristarashtra asks Yudhishthira the number of battle casualties: he reports that 1,660,020,000 men are dead and 24,165 missing.}}</ref>
}}
}}


The '''Kurukshetra War''' ({{lang-sa|कुरुक्षेत्र युद्ध}} ), also called the '''Mahabharata War''', is a war described in the ''[[Mahabharata]] ({{lang-sa|महाभारत}} )''. The conflict arose from a dynastic succession struggle between two groups of cousins, the [[Kaurava]]s and the [[Pandava]]s, for the throne of [[Hastinapur|Hastinapura]]. The war laid the foundation for the ''[[Bhagavad Gita]]''.
The '''Kurukshetra War''' ({{langx|sa|कुरुक्षेत्र युद्ध}}), also called the '''Mahabharata War''', is a war described in the Hindu [[Indian epic poetry|epic poem]] ''[[Mahabharata]]'', arising from a dynastic struggle between two groups of cousins, the [[Kaurava]]s and the [[Pandava]]s, for the throne of [[Hastinapur]]a. The war is used as the context for the dialogues of the ''[[Bhagavad Gita]].

The historicity of the war remains the subject of scholarly discussion.<ref name="Singh2006"/>{{sfn|Singh|2009|p=19}}<ref name="Insoll"/> The [[Battle of the Ten Kings]], mentioned in the ''[[Rigveda]]'', may have formed the core of the Kurukshetra war's story. The war was greatly expanded and modified in the ''Mahabharata''<nowiki/>'s account, which makes it dubious.<ref name="Murthy 2016 pp. 1–15"/> Attempts have been made to assign a historical date to the Kurukshetra war, with research suggesting {{circa|1000}} BCE.{{sfn|Singh|2009|p=19}} However, popular tradition claims that the war marks the transition to the ''[[Kali Yuga]],'' dating it to {{circa|3102}} BCE.<ref>{{Cite book|title= The Mahabharata: Volume 1, Volume 1|publisher=Penguin UK|year=2015|isbn=9788184753882}}</ref>

The war took place in [[Kurukshetra]].<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Ring|first1=Trudy|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JqHPpNaZfNwC&dq=The+location+of+the+battle+is+described+as+Kurukshetra+in+northern+India&pg=PA505|title=International Dictionary of Historic Places: Asia and Oceania|last2=Salkin|first2=Robert M.|last3=Schellinger|first3=Paul E.|last4=Boda|first4=Sharon La|last5=Watson|first5=Noelle|last6=Hudson|first6=Christopher|last7=Hast|first7=Adele|date=1994|publisher=Taylor & Francis|isbn=978-1-884964-04-6|language=en}}</ref> Despite only spanning eighteen days, the war takes more than a quarter of the ''Mahabharata''. The narrative describes individual battles, deaths of various heroes on both sides, war diplomacy, meetings and discussions among characters, military formations, and weapons used. The chapters dealing with the war are considered among the oldest in the ''Mahabharata''.


==Background==
==Background==
{{Main|Mahabharata}}
{{Main|Mahabharata}}
The ''Mahābhārata'' is an account of the life and deeds of several generations of a ruling dynasty called the [[Kuru (Hindu mythology)|Kuru]] clan.<ref name=encindlit>{{Cite book | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=zB4n3MVozbUC&pg=PA1755 | title = The Encyclopaedia of Indian Literature (Volume Two) (Devraj to Jyoti) | isbn = 978-81-260-1194-0 | last1 = Datta | first1 = Amaresh | date = 1 January 2006}}</ref> Central to the epic is an account of a war that took place between two rival families belonging to this clan.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Narayan|first=R. K.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4QcB30D3nGsC&q=what+cause+kurukshetra+war|title=The Mahabharata|date=2001-03-01|publisher=Penguin Books Limited|isbn=978-0-14-119081-5|language=en}}</ref> Kurukshetra (literally "field of the Kurus") was the battleground on which the Kurukshetra War was fought. Kurukshetra was also known as Dharmakshetra (the "field of [[Dharma]]"), or field of righteousness. The first ''Mahābhārata'' says that this site was chosen because a sin committed on this land was forgiven on account of the sanctity of the land.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Z0mhlh5pxQEC&dq=kurukshetra+meaning&pg=PA122|title=The Mystery of the Mahabharata: Vol. II: The Systems of HIndu Philosophy & Religion|publisher=India Research Press|language=en}}</ref>
The ''Mahābhārata'' is an account of the life and deeds of several generations of a ruling dynasty called the [[Kuru (Hindu mythology)|Kuru]] clan.<ref name=encindlit>{{Cite book | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=zB4n3MVozbUC&pg=PA1755 | title = The Encyclopaedia of Indian Literature (Volume Two) (Devraj to Jyoti) | isbn = 978-81-260-1194-0 | last1 = Datta | first1 = Amaresh | date = 1 January 2006| publisher = Sahitya Akademi }}</ref> Central to the epic is an account of a war that took place between two rival families belonging to this clan.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Narayan|first=R. K.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4QcB30D3nGsC&q=what+cause+kurukshetra+war|title=The Mahabharata|date=2001-03-01|publisher=Penguin Books Limited|isbn=978-0-14-119081-5|language=en}}</ref> [[Kurukshetra]] (literally "[[Kshetram|Region]] of the Kurus"), also known as Dharmakshetra (the "Region of [[Dharma]]"),<ref>https://www.learnsanskrit.cc/translate?search=region&dir=au {{Bare URL inline|date=August 2024}}</ref> was the battleground on which the Kurukshetra War was fought.<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Ring|first1=Trudy|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JqHPpNaZfNwC&dq=The+location+of+the+battle+is+described+as+Kurukshetra+in+northern+India&pg=PA505|title=International Dictionary of Historic Places: Asia and Oceania|last2=Salkin|first2=Robert M.|last3=Schellinger|first3=Paul E.|last4=Boda|first4=Sharon La|last5=Watson|first5=Noelle|last6=Hudson|first6=Christopher|last7=Hast|first7=Adele|date=1994|publisher=Taylor & Francis|isbn=978-1-884964-04-6|language=en}}</ref> The first ''Mahābhārata'' says that this site was chosen because a sin committed on land was forgiven because of the land's sanctity.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Z0mhlh5pxQEC&dq=kurukshetra+meaning&pg=PA122|title=The Mystery of the Mahabharata: Vol. II: The Systems of HIndu Philosophy & Religion|publisher=India Research Press|language=en}}</ref>

The events of the war make up more than a quarter of the ''Mahabharata''. These chapters are considered among the oldest in the ''Mahabharata''.


==Historicity and dating==
==Historicity and dating==
{{see also|Historicity of the Mahabharata}}
{{see also|Historicity of the Mahabharata}}

The historicity of the war remains the subject of scholarly discussion.<ref name="Singh2006">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KkpdLnZpm78C|title=Delhi: Ancient History|last=Singh|first=Upinder|publisher=Berghahn Books|year=2006|isbn=9788187358299|page=85}}</ref>{{sfn|Singh|2009|p=19}}<ref name="Insoll">{{cite book|title=Case Studies in Archaeology and World Religion: The Proceedings of the Cambridge Conference|first=Timothy|last=Insoll|page=166|publisher=Archaeopress}}</ref> The [[Battle of the Ten Kings]], mentioned in the ''[[Rigveda]]'', may have formed the core of the Kurukshetra war's story. The war was greatly expanded and modified in the ''Mahabharata''<nowiki/>'s account, which makes it dubious.<ref name="Murthy 2016 pp. 1–15">{{cite journal |last=Murthy |first=S. S. N. |date=8 September 2016 |title=The Questionable Historicity of the Mahabharata |url=https://crossasia-journals.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/index.php/ejvs/article/view/782 |url-status=live |journal=Electronic Journal of Vedic Studies |volume=10 |issue=5 |pages=1–15 |doi=10.11588/ejvs.2003.5.782 |issn=1084-7561 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190126164815/https://crossasia-journals.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/index.php/ejvs/article/view/782 |archive-date=26 January 2019 |access-date=26 January 2019}}</ref> Attempts have been made to assign a historical date to the Kurukshetra war, with research suggesting {{circa|1000}} BCE.{{sfn|Singh|2009|p=19}} However, popular tradition claims that the war marks the transition to the ''[[Kali Yuga]],'' dating it to {{circa|3102}} BCE.<ref>{{Cite book|title= The Mahabharata: Volume 1, Volume 1|publisher=Penguin UK|year=2015|isbn=9788184753882}}</ref>


[[File:Late Vedic Culture (1100-500 BCE).png|thumb|left|The approximate extent of ''Āryāvarta'' during the late [[Vedic period]] (ca. 1100-500 BCE). ''Aryavarta'' was limited to northwest India and the western Ganges plain, while [[Greater Magadha]] in the east was habitated by non-Vedic Indo-Aryans, who gave rise to Jainism and Buddhism.{{sfn|Bronkhorst|2017}}{{sfn|Samuel|2010}}]]
[[File:Late Vedic Culture (1100-500 BCE).png|thumb|left|The approximate extent of ''Āryāvarta'' during the late [[Vedic period]] (ca. 1100-500 BCE). ''Aryavarta'' was limited to northwest India and the western Ganges plain, while [[Greater Magadha]] in the east was habitated by non-Vedic Indo-Aryans, who gave rise to Jainism and Buddhism.{{sfn|Bronkhorst|2017}}{{sfn|Samuel|2010}}]]
[[File:Hitopadesha.jpg|thumb|left|Modern bronze sculpture of Chariot with Lord [[Krishna]] and [[Arjuna]] during the [[Kurukshetra war]].]]
[[File:Hitopadesha.jpg|thumb|left|Modern bronze sculpture of Chariot with [[Krishna]] and [[Arjuna]] during the Kurukshetra War.]]


===Literary traces===
===Literary traces===
The historicity of the Kurukshetra War is subject to scholarly discussion and dispute.<ref name="Singh2006">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KkpdLnZpm78C|title=Delhi: Ancient History|last=Singh|first=Upinder|publisher=Berghahn Books|year=2006|isbn=9788187358299|page=85}}</ref>{{sfn|Singh|2009|p=19}}<ref name="Insoll">{{cite book|title=Case Studies in Archaeology and World Religion: The Proceedings of the Cambridge Conference|first=Timothy|last=Insoll|page=166|publisher=Archaeopress}}</ref> It is possible that the [[Battle of the Ten Kings]], mentioned in the ''[[Rigveda]]'', may have "formed the 'nucleus' of the story" of the Kurukshetra war, though it was greatly expanded and modified in the ''Mahābhārata'''s account making the ''Mahābhārata''<nowiki/>'s version of very dubious historicity.<ref name="Murthy 2016 pp. 1–15">{{cite journal | last=Murthy | first=S. S. N. | title=The Questionable Historicity of the Mahabharata | journal=Electronic Journal of Vedic Studies | volume=10 | issue=5 | date=8 September 2016 | issn=1084-7561 | doi=10.11588/ejvs.2003.5.782 | pages=1–15 | url=https://crossasia-journals.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/index.php/ejvs/article/view/782 | access-date=26 January 2019}}</ref> Although the Kurukshetra War is not mentioned in Vedic literature, its prominence in later literature led British Indologist [[A. L. Basham]] to conclude that there was a great battle at Kurukshetra which, "magnified to titanic proportions, formed the basis of the story of the greatest of India's epics, the ''Mahābhārata''". Acknowledging that later "generations looked upon it as marking an end of an epoch", he suggested that rather than being a civil war it might have been "a muddled recollection of the conquest of the Kurus by a tribe of Mongol type from the hills". He saw it as useless to the historian and dates the war to the ninth century BCE based on archaeological evidence and "some evidence in the Brahmana literature itself to show that it cannot have been much earlier".{{sfn|Basham|1954|p=39-40}}{{refn|group=note|In discussing the dating question, historian A. L. Basham says: "According to the most popular later tradition the Mahabharata War took place in 3102&nbsp;BCE, which in the light of all evidence, is quite impossible. More reasonable is another tradition, placing it in the 15th century BCE, but this is also several centuries too early in the light of our archaeological knowledge. Probably the war took place around the beginning of the 9th century BCE; such a date seems to fit well with the scanty archaeological remains of the period, and there is some evidence in the Brahmana literature itself to show that it cannot have been much earlier."{{sfn|Basham|1954|p=40}} Basham cites H.C. Raychaudhuri, ''Political History of Ancient India'', pp.27ff.}}
Although the Kurukshetra War is not mentioned in Vedic literature, its prominence in later literature led British Indologist [[A. L. Basham]] to conclude that there was a great battle at Kurukshetra which, "magnified to titanic proportions, formed the basis of the story of the greatest of India's epics, the ''Mahābhārata''". Acknowledging that later "generations looked upon it as marking an end of an epoch", he suggested that rather than being a civil war it might have been "a muddled recollection of the conquest of the Kurus by a tribe of Mongol type from the hills". He saw it as useless to the historian and dates the war to the ninth century BCE based on archaeological evidence and "some evidence in the Brahmana literature itself to show that it cannot have been much earlier".{{sfn|Basham|1954|p=39-40}}{{refn|group=note|In discussing the dating question, historian A. L. Basham says: "According to the most popular later tradition the Mahabharata War took place in 3102&nbsp;BCE, which in the light of all evidence, is quite impossible. More reasonable is another tradition, placing it in the 15th century BCE, but this is also several centuries too early in the light of our archaeological knowledge. Probably the war took place around the beginning of the 9th century BCE; such a date seems to fit well with the scanty archaeological remains of the period, and there is some evidence in the Brahmana literature itself to show that it cannot have been much earlier."{{sfn|Basham|1954|p=40}} Basham cites H.C. Raychaudhuri, ''Political History of Ancient India'', pp.27ff.}}


[[Puranas|Puranic literature]] presents genealogical lists associated with the ''Mahābhārata'' narrative. There are two pieces of evidence of the Puranas: there is the direct statement{{where|date=July 2021}} that there were 1,015 (or 1,050) years between the birth of Parikshit (Arjun's grandson) and the accession of [[Mahapadma Nanda]], commonly dated to 382 BCE, which would yield an estimate of about 1400 BCE for the Bharata battle,<ref>A.D. Pusalker, ''History and Culture of the Indian People'', Vol I, Chapter XIV, p.273</ref> which would imply improbably long reigns on average for the kings listed in the genealogies.<ref>FE Pargiter, ''Ancient Indian Historical Tradition'', p.180. He shows estimates of the average as 47, 50, 31 and 35 for various versions of the lists.</ref>
[[Puranas|Puranic literature]] presents genealogical lists associated with the ''Mahābhārata'' narrative. There are two pieces of evidence of the Puranas: there is the direct statement{{where|date=July 2021}} that there were 1,015 (or 1,050) years between the birth of Parikshit (Arjun's grandson) and the accession of [[Mahapadma Nanda]], commonly dated to 382 BCE, which would yield an estimate of about 1400 BCE for the Bharata battle,<ref>A.D. Pusalker, ''History and Culture of the Indian People'', Vol I, Chapter XIV, p.273</ref> which would imply improbably long reigns on average for the kings listed in the genealogies.<ref>FE Pargiter, ''Ancient Indian Historical Tradition'', p.180. He shows estimates of the average as 47, 50, 31 and 35 for various versions of the lists.</ref>
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===Scholarly dating===
===Scholarly dating===
Despite the inconclusiveness of the data, attempts have been made to assign a historical date to the Kurukshetra War. The existing text of the ''Mahābhārata'' went through many revisions, and mostly belongs to the period between c. 500 BCE and 400 CE.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=d8sYSPhSBEAC|title=The Sauptikaparvan of the Mahabharata: The Massacre at Night|year=1998|page=13|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=9780192823618}}</ref>{{sfn|Singh|2009|p=18-21}}{{refn|group=note|Indian archeologist [[Swaraj Prakash Gupta]] and K.S. Ramachandran : "Divergence of views regarding the Mahabharata war is due to the absence of reliable history of the ancient period. This is also true of the historical period, where also there is no unanimity of opinion on innumerable issues. Dr Mirashi accepts that there has been interpolation in the Mahabharata and observes that, 'Originally it (Mahabharata) was a small poem of 8,800 verses and was known by the name Jaya (victory), then it swelled to 24,000 verses and became known as Bharata, and, finally, it reached the present stupendous size of the one [[lakh]] verses, passing under the name Mahabharata.'"<ref name="Gupta">{{cite book|author1=Swaraj Prakash Gupta|author2=K.S. Ramachandran|editor1-last=Singh|title=Delhi: Ancient History|publisher=Social Science Press|isbn=978-8187358299|page=86|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KkpdLnZpm78C&q=Kurukshetra|access-date=5 August 2016|chapter=Mahabharata: Myth and Reality|year=2006}}</ref>}} Within the [[frame story]] of the ''Mahābhārata'', the kings [[Parikshit]] and [[Janamejaya]] are featured significantly as scions of the Kuru clan,{{sfn|Witzel|1995}} and [[Michael Witzel]] concludes that the general setting of the epic has a historical precedent in the [[Vedic period]], where the [[Kuru (kingdom)|Kuru]] kingdom was the center of political power during roughly 1200 to 800 BCE.{{sfn|Witzel|1995}} According to Professor [[Alf Hiltebeitel]], the ''Mahābhārata'' is essentially mythological.{{sfn|Hiltebeitel|2005|p=5594}} Indian historian [[Upinder Singh]] wrote:
Despite the inconclusiveness of the data, attempts have been made to assign a historical date to the Kurukshetra War. The existing text of the ''Mahābhārata'' went through many revisions, and mostly belongs to the period between c. 500 BCE and 400 CE.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=d8sYSPhSBEAC|title=The Sauptikaparvan of the Mahabharata: The Massacre at Night|year=1998|page=13|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=9780192823618}}</ref>{{sfn|Singh|2009|p=18-21}}{{refn|group=note|Indian archeologist [[Swaraj Prakash Gupta]] and K.S. Ramachandran : "Divergence of views regarding the Mahabharata war is due to the absence of reliable history of the ancient period. This is also true of the historical period, where also there is no unanimity of opinion on innumerable issues. Dr Mirashi accepts that there has been interpolation in the Mahabharata and observes that, 'Originally it (Mahabharata) was a small poem of 8,800 verses and was known by the name Jaya (victory), then it swelled to 24,000 verses and became known as Bharata, and, finally, it reached the present stupendous size of the one [[lakh]] verses, passing under the name Mahabharata.'"<ref name="Gupta">{{cite book|author1=Swaraj Prakash Gupta|author2=K.S. Ramachandran|editor1-last=Singh|title=Delhi: Ancient History|publisher=Social Science Press|isbn=978-8187358299|page=86|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KkpdLnZpm78C&q=Kurukshetra|access-date=5 August 2016|chapter=Mahabharata: Myth and Reality|year=2006|archive-date=18 January 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220118183328/https://books.google.com/books?id=KkpdLnZpm78C&q=Kurukshetra|url-status=live}}</ref>}} Within the [[frame story]] of the ''Mahābhārata'', the kings [[Parikshit]] and [[Janamejaya]] are featured significantly as scions of the Kuru clan,{{sfn|Witzel|1995}} and [[Michael Witzel]] concludes that the general setting of the epic has a historical precedent in the [[Vedic period]], where the [[Kuru (kingdom)|Kuru]] kingdom was the center of political power during roughly 1200 to 800 BCE.{{sfn|Witzel|1995}} According to Professor [[Alf Hiltebeitel]], the ''Mahābhārata'' is essentially mythological.{{sfn|Hiltebeitel|2005|p=5594}} Indian historian [[Upinder Singh]] wrote:
{{blockquote|Whether a bitter war between the Pandavas and the Kauravas ever happened cannot be proved or disproved. It is possible that there was a small-scale conflict, transformed into a gigantic epic war by bards and poets. Some historians and archaeologists have argued that this conflict may have occurred in about 1000 BCE.{{sfn|Singh|2009||p=19}}}}
{{blockquote|Whether a bitter war between the Pandavas and the Kauravas ever happened cannot be proved or disproved. It is possible that there was a small-scale conflict, transformed into a gigantic epic war by bards and poets. Some historians and archaeologists have argued that this conflict may have occurred in about 1000 BCE.{{sfn|Singh|2009||p=19}}}}


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* Vedveer Arya gives a date of 3162 BCE, by distinguishing between the [[Shaka era#History|Śaka]] and [[Saka Era|Śakanta]] eras and applying correction of 60 years to the date given in popular tradition and based on [[Aihole inscription]].<ref>The Chronology of India: From Manu to Mahabharata {{ISBN|978-8194321309}}</ref>
* Vedveer Arya gives a date of 3162 BCE, by distinguishing between the [[Shaka era#History|Śaka]] and [[Saka Era|Śakanta]] eras and applying correction of 60 years to the date given in popular tradition and based on [[Aihole inscription]].<ref>The Chronology of India: From Manu to Mahabharata {{ISBN|978-8194321309}}</ref>
* B. N. Achar used [[planetarium software]] to argue that the Mahabharata War took place in 3067 BCE.{{sfn|Singh|2010|p=Chapter 7, Pp. 202-252, 302}}
* B. N. Achar used [[planetarium software]] to argue that the Mahabharata War took place in 3067 BCE.{{sfn|Singh|2010|p=Chapter 7, Pp. 202-252, 302}}
* Dieter Koch dates the war to 1198 BCE using [[planetarium software]] on the basis super-conjunctions mentioned in the text.<ref>{{cite web| title=Astronomical Dating of the Mahābhārata War | url=http://www.gilgamesh.ch/KochMahabharata.pdf |last=Koch |first=Dieter| date=2015| page=395}}</ref>
* Dieter Koch dates the war to 1198 BCE using planetarium software on the basis super-conjunctions mentioned in the text.<ref>{{cite web | title=Astronomical Dating of the Mahābhārata War | url=http://www.gilgamesh.ch/KochMahabharata.pdf | last=Koch | first=Dieter | date=2015 | page=395 | access-date=25 July 2021 | archive-date=25 July 2021 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210725161733/http://www.gilgamesh.ch/KochMahabharata.pdf | url-status=live }}</ref>
* Kesheo Lakshman Daftari, one of the members of the Calendar Reform Committee which prepared the [[Indian national calendar]], holds that the war took place in 1197 BCE.<ref>{{cite web | url= https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.35777/page/n64/mode/1up | title=The Astronomical Method and Its Application to the Chronology of Ancient India | date=1942 | last=Daftari | first= K. L. | pages=40–45}}</ref>
* Kesheo Lakshman Daftari, one of the members of the Calendar Reform Committee which prepared the [[Indian national calendar]], holds that the war took place in 1197 BCE.<ref>{{cite web | url= https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.35777/page/n64/mode/1up | title=The Astronomical Method and Its Application to the Chronology of Ancient India | date=1942 | last=Daftari | first= K. L. | pages=40–45}}</ref>
* V. S. Dubey claims that the war happened near 950 BCE.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/patna/Mahabharata-war-goes-back-to-950BC/articleshow/46081267.cms|title=Experts dig up 950BC as epic war date|date=1 February 2015|website=Times of India|access-date=2021-01-15}}</ref>
* V. S. Dubey claims that the war happened near 950 BCE.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/patna/Mahabharata-war-goes-back-to-950BC/articleshow/46081267.cms|title=Experts dig up 950BC as epic war date|date=1 February 2015|website=Times of India|access-date=2021-01-15|archive-date=18 January 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220118185355/https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/patna/Mahabharata-war-goes-back-to-950BC/articleshow/46081267.cms|url-status=live}}</ref>


===Associations with archaeological cultures===
===Associations with archaeological cultures===
Indian archeologist [[B. B. Lal]] used the same approach with a more conservative assumption of the average reign to estimate a date of 836 BCE and correlated it with archaeological evidence from [[Painted Grey Ware]] (PGW) sites, the association being strong between PGW artifacts and places mentioned in the epic.<ref>B. B. Lal, ''Mahabharata and Archaeology'' in Gupta and Ramachandran (1976), p.57-58</ref> [[John Keay]] confirmed it and also dated the battle to have taken place in 950 BCE.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Keay |first=John |author-link=John Keay |title=India: A History |year=2000 |publisher=Grove Press |location= New York City |isbn=0-8021-3797-0 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3aeQqmcXBhoC |pages = 42}}</ref>
Indian archeologist [[B. B. Lal (archaeologist)|B. B. Lal]] used the same approach with a more conservative assumption of the average reign to estimate a date of 836 BCE and correlated it with archaeological evidence from Painted Grey Ware (PGW) sites, the association being strong between PGW artifacts and places mentioned in the epic.<ref>B. B. Lal, ''Mahabharata and Archaeology'' in Gupta and Ramachandran (1976), p.57-58</ref> [[John Keay]] confirmed it and also dated the battle to have taken place in 950 BCE.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Keay |first=John |author-link=John Keay |title=India: A History |year=2000 |publisher=Grove Press |location= New York City |isbn=0-8021-3797-0 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3aeQqmcXBhoC |pages = 42}}</ref>


According to Parpola, the war may have taken place during the later phase of the Painted Grey Ware culture, c. 750-350 BCE.{{sfn|Parpola|2015|p=299}} He noted that the Pandava heroes are not being mentioned in the Vedic literature from before the [[Grhyasutras]].{{sfn|Parpola|2015|p=299}} Parpola suggests that the Pandavas were [[Iranic]] migrants, who came to south Asia around 800 BCE.{{sfn|Parpola|2015|p=299-300}}
According to Parpola, the war may have taken place during the later phase of the Painted Grey Ware culture, c. 750-350 BCE.{{sfn|Parpola|2015|p=299}} He noted that the Pandava heroes are not being mentioned in the Vedic literature from before the [[Grhyasutras]].{{sfn|Parpola|2015|p=299}} Parpola suggests that the Pandavas were [[Iranic]] migrants, who came to [[South Asia]] around 800 BCE.{{sfn|Parpola|2015|p=299-300}}


Excavations in [[Sinauli]] unearthed burials with the remains of carts{{efn|These carts, often dubbed as "chariots", does not have any spokes on their wheels like the chariots (Sanskrit: ''[[Ratha]]'') mentioned in [[Vedic literature|Vedic]] or [[Hindu epics|epic literature]]; the wheels are solid with no spokes.}} belonging to the [[Ochre Coloured Pottery culture]] (OCP).{{sfn|Parpola|2020}} Several authors proposeed to relate the Rig Vedic culture and the war to the OCP, instead of the PGW.{{sfn|Parpola|2020|p=176}}{{sfn|Gupta|Mani|2017}} While the carts are dated to 1800–1500 BCE ({{plusminus}}150),<ref>{{cite news|url=https://m.timesofindia.com/india/indias-largest-known-burial-site-is-3800-yrs-old-confirms-carbon-dating/articleshow/74254040.cms | title=India's largest known burial site is 3,800 yrs old, confirms carbon dating | first=Rohan | last=Dua | date=22 February 2020 |website=Times of India}}</ref> Gupta and Mani state that "in the present state of archaeological evidence OCP seems to be a stronger contender for the ''Mahābhārata'' association", dating the war to the 4th millennium BCE.{{sfn|Gupta|Mani|2017|p=378}} Parpola sees the finds as ox-pulled chariots, indicating support for his proposal for a [[Indo-Aryan migrations#Multiple waves of migration into northern India|first wave of Indo-Aryan migrations]] into the Indian subcontinent at the beginning of the 2nd millennium BCE, prior to the migration of the Rig Vedic people.{{sfn|Parpola|2020}}{{refn|group=note|See also Giacomo Benedetti, [http://new-indology.blogspot.com/2019/01/mahabharata-and-archaeology-chariot-of.html ''Mahābhārata and archaeology: the chariot of Sanauli and the position of Painted Grey Ware''] and [https://www.academia.edu/7683313/The_Chronology_of_Puranic_Kings_and_Rigvedic_Rishis_in_Comparison_with_the_Phases_of_the_Sindhu_Sarasvati_Civilization ''The Chronology of Puranic Kings and Rigvedic Rishis in Comparison with the Phases of the Sindhu–Sarasvati Civilization''], dating the Mahabharata War at 1432 BCE.}}
Excavations in [[Sinauli]] unearthed burials with the remains of carts{{efn|These carts, often dubbed as "chariots", does not have any spokes on their wheels like the chariots (Sanskrit: ''[[Ratha]]'') mentioned in [[Vedic literature|Vedic]] or [[Hindu epics|epic literature]]; the wheels are solid with no spokes.}} belonging to the [[Ochre Coloured Pottery culture]] (OCP).{{sfn|Parpola|2020}} Several authors proposed to relate the Rig Vedic culture and the war to the OCP, instead of the PGW.{{sfn|Parpola|2020|p=176}}{{sfn|Gupta|Mani|2017}} While the carts are dated to 1800–1500 BCE (±150),<ref>{{cite news | url=https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/indias-largest-known-burial-site-is-3800-yrs-old-confirms-carbon-dating/articleshow/74254040.cms | title=India's largest known burial site is 3,800 yrs old, confirms carbon dating | first=Rohan | last=Dua | date=22 February 2020 | website=Times of India | access-date=26 July 2021 | archive-date=8 June 2021 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210608011133/https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/indias-largest-known-burial-site-is-3800-yrs-old-confirms-carbon-dating/articleshow/74254040.cms | url-status=live }}</ref> Gupta and Mani state that "in the present state of archaeological evidence OCP seems to be a stronger contender for the ''Mahābhārata'' association", dating the war to the 4th millennium BCE.{{sfn|Gupta|Mani|2017|p=378}} Parpola sees the finds as ox-pulled carts, indicating support for his proposal for a [[Indo-Aryan migrations#Multiple waves of migration into northern India|first wave of Indo-Aryan migrations]] into the Indian subcontinent at the beginning of the 2nd millennium BCE, prior to the migration of the Rig Vedic people.{{sfn|Parpola|2020}}{{refn|group=note|See also Giacomo Benedetti, [http://new-indology.blogspot.com/2019/01/mahabharata-and-archaeology-chariot-of.html ''Mahābhārata and archaeology: the chariot of Sanauli and the position of Painted Grey Ware''] and [https://www.academia.edu/7683313/The_Chronology_of_Puranic_Kings_and_Rigvedic_Rishis_in_Comparison_with_the_Phases_of_the_Sindhu_Sarasvati_Civilization ''The Chronology of Puranic Kings and Rigvedic Rishis in Comparison with the Phases of the Sindhu–Sarasvati Civilization''], dating the Mahabharata War at 1432 BCE.}}


==Mahabharata account of the war==
==Mahabharata account of the war==
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===Beginning===
===Beginning===
In the beginning, [[Sanjaya]] gives a description of the various continents of the Earth, the other planets, and focuses on the Indian subcontinent, then gives an elaborate list of kingdoms, tribes, provinces, cities, towns, villages, rivers, mountains, and forests of the ancient Indian subcontinent (Bharata Varsha). He also explains the military formations adopted by each side on each day, the death of each hero and the details of each war-racing.
In the beginning, [[Sanjaya]] gives a description of the various [[Dvipa|continents]] of the [[Prithvi|Earth]], the [[Navagraha|other planets]], and focuses on the Indian subcontinent, then gives an elaborate list of kingdoms, tribes, provinces, cities, towns, villages, rivers, mountains, and forests of the ancient Indian subcontinent ([[Bharata varsha|Bharata Varsha]]). He also explains the military formations adopted by each side on each day, the death of each hero and the details of each war-racing.


===Krishna's peace mission===
===Krishna's peace mission===
[[File:Krishna Pleads with Dhritarashtra to Avoid War.jpg|thumb|left|Krishna Pleads with Dhritarashtra to Avoid War]]
[[File:Krishna Pleads with Dhritarashtra to Avoid War.jpg|thumb|left|Krishna Pleads with Dhritarashtra to Avoid War]]


As a last attempt at peace is called for in Rajadharma, [[Krishna]] travels to the kingdom of [[Hastinapur]] to persuade the [[Kauravas]] to see reason, avoid bloodshed of their kin, and to embark upon a peaceful path with him as the "divine" ambassador of the Pandavas. [[Duryodhana]] is insulted that Krishna turns down his invitation to accommodate himself in the royal palace. Duryodhana plots to arrest Krishna and insult, humiliate, and defame him in front of the entire royal court of Hastinapur as a challenge to the prestige of the Pandavas and declaration of an act of open war.
As a last attempt at peace is called for in Rajadharma, [[Krishna]] travels to the Kingdom of [[Hastinapur]]a to persuade the [[Kauravas]] to see reason, avoid bloodshed of their kin, and to embark upon a peaceful path with him as the "divine" ambassador of the Pandavas. [[Duryodhana]] is insulted that Krishna turns down his invitation to accommodate himself in the royal palace. Duryodhana plots to arrest Krishna and insult, humiliate, and defame him in front of the entire royal court of [[Hastinapur]]a as a challenge to the prestige of the Pandavas and declaration of an act of open war.


At the formal presentation of the peace proposal by Krishna in the Kuru Mahasabha at the court of Hastinapur, Krishna asks Duryodhana to return Indraprastha to the Pandavas and restore the status quo, or at least give five villages, one for each of the Pandavas; Duryodhana refuses. Krishna's peace proposals are ignored and dismissed, and Duryodhana publicly orders his soldiers to arrest Krishna despite warnings from the elders. Krishna laughs and displays his divine form, radiating intense light. He curses Duryodhana that his downfall was certain at the hands of the one who was sworn to tear off his thigh. His peace mission utterly insulted by Duryodhana, Krishna returns to the Pandava camp at Upaplavya to inform the Pandavas that the only course left to uphold the principles of virtue and righteousness is war. During his return, Krishna meets Karna, Kunti's firstborn (before Yudhishthira), and asks him to help his brothers and fight on the side of dharma. However, as he is being helped by Duryodhana, Karna says to Krishna that he would battle against the Pandavas as he had a debt to pay.
At the formal presentation of the peace proposal by Krishna in the Kuru Mahasabha at the court of Hastinapura, Krishna asks Duryodhana to return [[Indraprastha]] to the Pandavas and restore the status quo, or at least give five villages, one for each of the Pandavas; Duryodhana refuses. Krishna's peace proposals are ignored and dismissed, and Duryodhana publicly orders his soldiers to arrest Krishna despite warnings from the elders. Krishna laughs and displays his divine form, radiating intense light. He curses Duryodhana that his downfall was certain at the hands of the one who was sworn to tear off his thigh. His peace mission utterly insulted by Duryodhana, Krishna returns to the Pandava camp at [[Upaplavya]] to inform the Pandavas that the only course left to uphold the principles of virtue and righteousness is war. During his return, Krishna meets [[Karna]], [[Kunti]]'s firstborn (before Yudhishthira), and asks him to help his brothers and fight on the side of dharma. However, as he is being helped by Duryodhana, Karna says to Krishna that he would battle against the Pandavas as he had a debt to pay.


===War preparations===
===War preparations===
[[File:Krishna and Arjun on the chariot, Mahabharata, 18th-19th century, India.jpg|thumb|Krishna, and Arjun on the chariot, 18th-19th century painting]]
[[File:Krishna and Arjun on the chariot, Mahabharata, 18th-19th century, India.jpg|thumb|Krishna, and Arjuna on the chariot, 18th-19th century painting]]


Duryodhana and Arjuna go to Krishna at [[Dwarka]] to ask for his and his army's help. Duryodhana arrives first and finds Krishna asleep. Duryodhana chooses a seat at Krishna's head and waits for him to awaken, while Arjuna sits and waits at Krishna's feet. When Krishna woke up, he saw Arjuna first and gave him the first right to make his request. Krishna tells Arjuna and Duryodhana that he would give the Narayani Sena to one side and himself as a non-combatant to the other. Since Arjuna is given the first opportunity to choose, Duryodhana worries that Arjuna would choose the mighty army of Krishna. When given the choice of either Krishna's army or Krishna himself on their side, Arjuna chooses Krishna,. Arjuna asks Krishna to be his charioteer, who agrees. Both Duryodhana and Arjuna returned satisfied.
Duryodhana and [[Arjuna]] go to Krishna at [[Dvārakā|Dvaraka]] to ask for his and his army's help. Duryodhana arrives first and finds Krishna asleep. Duryodhana chooses a seat at Krishna's head and waits for him to awaken, while Arjuna sits and waits at Krishna's feet. When Krishna woke up, he saw Arjuna first and gave him the first right to make his request. Krishna tells Arjuna and Duryodhana that he would give the Narayani Sena to one side and himself as a non-combatant to the other. Since Arjuna is given the first opportunity to choose, Duryodhana worries that Arjuna would choose the mighty army of Krishna. When given the choice of either Krishna's army or Krishna himself on their side, Arjuna chooses Krishna. Arjuna asks Krishna to be his charioteer, who agrees. Both Duryodhana and Arjuna returned satisfied.


The Pandavas gather their armies while camping at Upaplavya in [[Virata]]'s territory. Contingents arrive from across the country.
The Pandavas gather their armies while camping at Upaplavya in [[Virata]]'s territory. Contingents arrive from across the country.


====Pandava army====
====Pandava Army====
[[File:Drishtadyumna_as_Commander_in_chief_of_Pandava's_Army.jpg|left|thumb|Drishtadyumna As Commander in Chief of Pandava's Army]]
[[File:Kurukshetra.jpg|left|thumb|A manuscript illustration of the Battle of Kurukshetra, fought between the Kauravas and the Pandavas, recorded in the ''Mahābhārata'']]
[[File:Kurukshetra.jpg|left|thumb|A manuscript illustration of the Battle of Kurukshetra, fought between the Kauravas and the Pandavas, recorded in the ''Mahābhārata'']]


[[Yudhishthira]] asks his brothers to organize their army. The Pandavas have seven [[Akshauhini|''akshauhinis'']] with the help of their allies. After consulting his commanders, the Pandavas appoint [[Dhrishtadyumna]] as the supreme commander of the Pandava army.
[[Yudhishthira]] asks his brothers to organize their army. The Pandavas have seven [[Akshauhini|''akshauhinis'']] with the help of their allies. After consulting his commanders, the Pandavas appoint [[Dhrishtadyumna]] as the [[Senapati|Major General]] of the Pandava Army.


====Kaurava army====
====Kaurava Army====
The Kaurava army is made up of 11 ''akshauhinis''. Duryodhana asks [[Bhishma]] to command the Kaurava army. Bhishma accepts on the condition that, while he would fight the battle sincerely, he would not harm the five Pandava brothers. He also says that Karna would rather not fight under him, but serve as Duryodhana's bodyguard as long as he was in the battlefield. Having little choice, Duryodhana agrees to Bhishma's conditions and makes him the supreme commander of the Kaurava army, while Karna is debarred from fighting. Karna joins the war later when Bhishma is severely wounded by Arjuna.
The Kaurava Army is made up of 11 ''akshauhinis''. This includes the Narayani Sena of Krishna, which originally included seven [[Maharathis|''maharathi''s]] (Krishna, [[Balaram]]a, [[Samba (Krishna's son)|Samba]], Ahuka, Charudeshna, Chakradeva, and [[Satyaki]]) and seven ''athirathi''s ([[Kritavarma]], Anadhrishti, Samika, Samitinjaya, Kanka, Sanku, and Kunti).{{citation needed|date=April 2022}} Duryodhana asks [[Bhishma]] to command the Kaurava Army. Bhishma accepts on the condition that, while he would fight the battle sincerely, he would not harm the five Pandava brothers. He also says that Karna would rather not fight under him, but serve as Duryodhana's bodyguard as long as he was in the battlefield. Having little choice, Duryodhana agrees to Bhishma's conditions and makes him the Major General of the Kaurava Army, while Karna is debarred from fighting. Karna joins the war later when Bhishma is severely wounded by Arjuna.


====Neutral parties====
====Neutral parties====
The kingdom of Bhojakata, [[Vidura]], and [[Balarama]] are the neutral parties in this war. [[Rukmi]], king of Bhojakata, wants to join the war, but Arjuna refuses because he had lost to Krishna during Rukmini's [[Svayamvara|''swayamvara'']] and he boasted about his war strength and army, and Duryodhana does not want Arjuna's reject. Vidura does not want to see bloodshed and is insulted by Duryodhana.[[File:Jakarta Indonesia Arjuna-Wijaya-monument-01.jpg|thumb|{{center|Arjuna Wijaya monument in [[Jakarta]], [[Indonesia]].}}]]
The [[Vidarbha kingdom|Kingdom of Vidarbha]], [[Vidura]], and [[Balarama]] are the neutral parties in this war. [[Rukmi]], King of Vidarbha, wanted to join the war, but Arjuna refuses because he had lost to Krishna during Rukmini's ''[[svayamvara]]'' and he boasted about his war strength and army, and Duryodhana does not want Arjuna's reject. Vidura does not want to see bloodshed and is insulted by Duryodhana.


===Course of the war===
===Course of the war===
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====Before the battle====
====Before the battle====
[[File:War council at Kuru.jpg|thumb|War council at Kuru]]
[[File:War council at Kuru.jpg|thumb|War council at Kuru]]
The ''Mahābhārata'' states that in the year in which the war took place, three solar [[eclipse]]s took place within a thirty-day period; eclipses are considered ill omens in [[Hindu astrology]].<ref>{{cite web| website=[[NASA]]| url=https://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/SEsaros/SEperiodicity.html | title=Periodicity of Solar Eclipses}}</ref>
The ''Mahābhārata'' states that in the year in which the war took place, three [[solar eclipse]]s took place within a thirty-day period; eclipses are considered ill omens in [[Hindu astrology]].<ref>{{cite web| website=[[NASA]]| url=https://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/SEsaros/SEperiodicity.html| title=Periodicity of Solar Eclipses| access-date=21 June 2021| archive-date=16 May 2021| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210516084953/https://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/SEsaros/SEperiodicity.html| url-status=live}}</ref>


On the first day of the war, as would be on all the following days, the [[Kaurava]] army stood facing west and the [[Pandava]] army east. The [[Pandava]] army was organised by [[Yudhishthira]] and [[Arjuna]] in the diamond or [[Vajra]] formation.
On the first day of the war, as would be on all the following days, the [[Kaurava]] Army stood facing west and the [[Pandava]] Army east. The Pandava Army was organised by [[Yudhishthira]] and [[Arjuna]] in the diamond ([[vajra]]) formation.


Ten ''akshauhinis'' of the Kaurava army were arranged in a phalanx. The eleventh was put under the immediate command of Bhishma, partly to protect him. The safety of the supreme commander Bhishma was central to Duryodhana's strategy, as he had placed all his hope on the great warrior's abilities.
Ten ''akshauhinis'' of the Kaurava Army were arranged in a [[phalanx]]. The eleventh was put under the immediate command of Bhishma, partly to protect him. The safety of the supreme commander Bhishma was central to Duryodhana's strategy, as he had placed all his hope on the great warrior's abilities.


====The ''Bhagavad Gita''====
====The ''Bhagavad Gita''====
{{Main|Bhagavad Gita}}
{{Main|Bhagavad Gita}}
[[File:Avatars of Vishnu.jpg|thumb|Krishna displays his [[Vishvarupa]] (Universal Form) to [[Arjuna]] on the battlefield of [[Kurukshetra]].]]
[[File:Avatars of Vishnu.jpg|thumb|Krishna displays his [[Vishvarupa]] (universal form) to [[Arjuna]] on the battlefield of [[Kurukshetra]].]]
When the war is declared and the two armies face each other, Arjuna realises that he would have to kill his dear granduncle Bhishma and his respected teacher Drona. Despondent and confused about what is right and what is wrong, Arjuna turns to Krishna for divine advice and teachings. Krishna, who Arjuna chose as his charioteer, advised him of his duty. Krishna instructs Arjuna not to care for the opponent's lives and to fight his kin. He also reminds him that it is a war between righteousness and unrighteousness (dharma and adharma), and it is Arjuna's duty to slay anyone who supported the cause of unrighteousness, or sin. Krishna reveals his divine form and explains that he is born on earth in each eon when evil raises its head.


When the war is declared and the two armies face each other, Arjuna realises that he would have to kill his dear granduncle Bhishma and his respected teacher Drona. Despondent and confused about what is right and what is wrong, Arjuna turns to Krishna for divine advice and teachings. Krishna, who Arjuna chose as his charioteer, advised him of his duty. Krishna instructs Arjuna not to yield to degrading impotence and to fight his kin. He also reminds him that it is a war between righteousness and unrighteousness ([[dharma]] and [[adharma]]), and it is Arjuna's duty to slay anyone who supported the cause of unrighteousness, or sin. Krishna reveals his divine form and explains that he is born on earth in each eon when evil raises its head.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Garbe |first=Richard |title=INTRODUCTION TO THE BHAGAVADGlTA |date=1918 |publisher=The University of Bombay}}</ref>
Before the battle begins, Yudhishthira drops his weapons, takes off his armor, and walks towards the Kaurava army with folded hands in prayer. He falls on Bhishma's feet to seek his blessing for success in battle, and he is blessed. Yudhishthira returned to his chariot and the battle was ready to commence.

Before the battle begins, Yudhishthira drops his weapons, takes off his armor, and walks towards the Kaurava Army with folded hands in prayer. He falls on Bhishma's feet to seek his blessing for success in battle, and he is blessed. Yudhishthira returned to his [[Ratha|chariot]] and the battle was ready to commence.


====Day 1====
====Day 1====
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====Day 2====
====Day 2====
Arjuna, realizing that something needs to be done quickly to reverse the Pandava losses, decides to kill Bhishma. Krishna locates Bhishma's chariot and steers Arjuna toward him. Arjuna tries to engage Bhishma in a duel, but the Kaurava soldiers protect him and attack Arjuna. Arjuna and Bhishma fight a fierce battle over hours. Drona and Dhrishtadyumna similarly engage in a duel, and Drona defeats Dhrishtadyumna, who is saved by [[Bhima]]. Duryodhana sends the troops of [[Kalinga (historical kingdom)|Kalinga]] to attack Bhima and most of them, including the king of Kalinga, are killed. Bhishma comes to relieve the battered Kalinga forces. [[Satyaki]], who was assisting Bhima, shoots at Bhishma's charioteer and kills him. Bhishma's horses bolt and carry Bhishma away from the battlefield.
Arjuna, realizing that something needs to be done quickly to reverse the Pandava losses, decides to kill Bhishma. Krishna locates Bhishma's chariot and steers Arjuna toward him. Arjuna tries to engage Bhishma in a duel, but the Kaurava soldiers protect him and attack Arjuna. Arjuna and Bhishma fight a fierce battle over hours. Drona and Dhrishtadyumna similarly engage in a duel, and Drona defeats Dhrishtadyumna, who is saved by [[Bhima]]. Duryodhana sends the troops of [[Kalinga (Mahabharata)|Kalinga]] to attack Bhima and most of them, including the King of Kalinga, are killed. Bhishma comes to relieve the battered Kalinga forces. [[Satyaki]], who was assisting Bhima, shoots at Bhishma's charioteer and kills him. Bhishma's horses bolt and carry Bhishma away from the battlefield.


====Day 3====
====Day 3====
The Kauravas concentrate their attack on Arjuna, whose chariot becomes covered with arrows and javelins. Arjuna builds a fortification around his chariot with an unending stream of arrows from his bow. [[Abhimanyu]] and Satyaki join forces to defeat [[Shakuni]]'s [[Gandhara kingdom|Gandhara]] forces. Bhima and [[Ghatotkacha]] attack Duryodhana in the rear. Bhima's arrows hit Duryodhana, who collapses in his chariot. His charioteer drives him off the battlefield, and Duryodhana's forces scatter. Bhishma restores order and Duryodhana returns to lead the army. He is angry at Bhishma for what he saw as leniency towards the five Pandava brothers, and spoke harshly of him. Bhishma, stung by this unfair charge, returns to the battlefield.
[[File:Arjuna Wijaya chariot statue in Jakarta.jpg|thumb|Arjuna Wijaya statue in Central [[Jakarta]] depicting Krishna and Arjuna riding a chariot.]]

The Kauravas concentrate their attack on Arjuna, whose chariot becomes covered with arrows and javelins. Arjuna builds a fortification around his chariot with an unending stream of arrows from his bow. [[Abhimanyu]] and Satyaki join forces to defeat [[Shakuni]]'s [[Gandhara Kingdom|Gandhara]] forces. Bhima and [[Ghatotkacha]] attack Duryodhana in the rear. Bhima's arrows hit Duryodhana, who collapses in his chariot. His charioteer drives him off the battlefield, and Duryodhana's forces scatter. Bhishma restores order and Duryodhana returns to lead the army. He is angry at Bhishma for what he saw as leniency towards the five Pandava brothers, and spoke harshly of him. Bhishma, stung by this unfair charge, returns to the battlefield.


Arjuna attacks Bhishma to restore order. Arjuna and Bhishma duel again.
Arjuna attacks Bhishma to restore order. Arjuna and Bhishma duel again.
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====Day 4====
====Day 4====
[[File:Kurukshetra war.jpg|thumb|Kurukshetra War]]
[[File:Kurukshetra war.jpg|thumb|Kurukshetra War]]
Bhishma commands the Kaurava army to move on the offensive. When the Kauravas form a chakravyuha, Abhimanyu enters it but is surrounded and attacked by Kaurava princes. Arjuna joins to help him. Bhima appears and attacks the Kauravas. Duryodhana sends a huge force of elephants at Bhima, who leaves his chariot and attacks them singlehandedly with his iron mace. The elephants scatter and stampede into the Kaurava forces. Duryodhana orders an all-out attack on Bhima, who kills eight of Duryodhana's brothers before being struck by an arrow from Dushasana, the second-eldest Kaurava, in the chest and sat down in his chariot dazed.
Bhishma commands the Kaurava Army to move on the offensive. When the Kauravas form a [[chakravyuha]], Abhimanyu enters it but is surrounded and attacked by Kaurava princes. Arjuna joins to help him. Bhima appears and attacks the Kauravas. Duryodhana sends a huge force of [[war elephant]]s at Bhima, who leaves his chariot and attacks them singlehandedly with his iron [[Gada (mace)|mace]]. The elephants scatter and stampede into the Kaurava forces. Duryodhana orders an all-out attack on Bhima, who kills eight of Duryodhana's brothers before being struck by an arrow from Dushasana, the second-eldest Kaurava, in the chest and sits down in his chariot dazed.


At the end of the fourth day, Duryodhana goes to Bhisma and asks him how could the Pandavas, facing a superior force against them, have the upper hand. Bhishma says that the Pandavas have justice on their side and advises Duryodhana to seek peace.
At the end of the fourth day, Duryodhana goes to Bhisma and asks him how could the Pandavas, facing a superior force against them, have the upper hand. Bhishma says that the Pandavas have justice on their side and advises Duryodhana to seek peace.


====Day 5====
====Day 5====
The Pandava army suffers from Bhishma's attacks. Satyaki is being beaten by Drona, but Bhima drives by and rescues him. Arjuna kills thousands of soldiers sent by Duryodhana to attack him. Bhima engages Bhishma in a duel with no clear winner. Drupada and his son Shikandi go to help Bhima, but they are stopped by Vikarna, one of Duryodhana's brothers, who attacks and injures them badly.
The Pandava Army suffers from Bhishma's attacks. Satyaki is being beaten by [[Drona]], but Bhima drives by and rescues him. Arjuna kills thousands of soldiers sent by Duryodhana to attack him. Bhima engages Bhishma in a duel with no clear winner. [[Drupada]] and his son [[Shikhandi]] go to help Bhima, but they are stopped by [[Vikarna]], one of Duryodhana's brothers, who attacks and injures them badly.


====Day 6====
====Day 6====
Drona kills many Pandava soldiers and both armies' formations are broken. Bhima penetrates the Kaurava formation and attacks Duryodhana, who is defeated but rescued. The Upapandavas (sons of Draupadi) fight against Ashwathama and destroy his chariot.
Drona kills many Pandava soldiers and both armies' formations are broken. [[Bhima]] penetrates the Kaurava formation and attacks Duryodhana, who is defeated but rescued. The [[Upapandavas]] (sons of [[Draupadi]]) fight against [[Ashwatthama]] and destroy his chariot.


====Day 7====
====Day 7====
Drona kills Shanka, one of Virata's son. Yuyuthsu is injured by Kripacharya in a sword fight. Nakula and Sahadeva fight Duryodhana's brothers but are overwhelmed by the number of them.
Drona kills Shanka, one of Virata's son. [[Yuyutsu]] is injured by Kripa in a sword fight. [[Nakula]] and [[Sahadeva]] fight Duryodhana's brothers but are overwhelmed by the number of them.


====Day 8====
====Day 8====
Bhima kills 17 of Dhritarashtra's sons. [[Iravan]], the son of Arjuna, kills five of Shakuni's brothers. Duryodhana deploys the Rakshasa fighter Alamvusha, who kills Iravan.
Bhima kills 17 of [[Dhritarashtra]]'s sons. [[Iravan]], the son of Arjuna, kills five of [[Shakuni]]'s brothers. Duryodhana deploys the [[Rakshasa]] warrior [[Alambusha]], who kills Iravan.


====Day 9====
====Day 9====
Bhishma destroys Pandava armies. Arjuna heads to Bhishma but fights him half-heartedly. Krishna, overwhelmed by anger at the apparent inability of Arjuna to kill Bhishma, rushes towards the Kaurava commander. [[Ghatotkacha]] kills the demon Alambusha.
Bhishma destroys Pandava armies. Arjuna heads to Bhishma but fights him half-heartedly. Krishna, overwhelmed by anger at the apparent inability of Arjuna to kill Bhishma, rushes towards the Kaurava commander. [[Ghatotkacha]] kills the rakshasa Alambusha.


Realising that the war could not be won as long as Bhishma was standing, Krishna suggests placing a eunuch in the field to face him.
Realising that the war could not be won as long as Bhishma was standing, Krishna suggests placing a transgender in the field to face him.


====Day 10====
====Day 10====
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The Pandavas put [[Shikhandi]], who had been a woman in a prior life, in front of Bhishma, as Bhishma has taken a vow not to attack a woman. Shikhandi's arrows fell on Bhishma without hindrance. Arjuna positions himself behind Shikhandi, protecting himself from Bhishma's attack and aimed his arrows at the weak points in Bhishma's armor and defeats him.
The Pandavas put [[Shikhandi]], who had been a woman in a prior life, in front of Bhishma, as Bhishma has taken a vow not to attack a woman. Shikhandi's arrows fell on Bhishma without hindrance. Arjuna positions himself behind Shikhandi, protecting himself from Bhishma's attack and aimed his arrows at the weak points in Bhishma's armor and defeats him.


The Kauravas and Pandavas gathered around Bhishma and at his request, Arjuna places three arrows under Bhishma's head to support it. Bhishma had promised his father, King Shantanu, that he would live until Hastinapur was secured from all directions. To keep this promise, Bhishma used the boon of ''Ichcha Mrityu'' (self-wished death) given to him by his father. After the war ended, when Hastinapura had become safe from all sides and after giving lessons on politics and [[Vishnu Sahasranama]] to the Pandavas, Bhishma dies on the first day of [[Uttarayana]].
The Kauravas and Pandavas gathered around Bhishma and at his request, Arjuna places three arrows under Bhishma's head to support it. Bhishma had promised his father, King [[Shantanu]], that he would live until Hastinapura was secured from all directions. To keep this promise, Bhishma used the boon of ''Ichcha Mrityu'' (self-wished death) given to him by his father. After the war ended, when Hastinapura had become safe from all sides and after giving lessons on politics and [[Vishnu Sahasranama]] to the Pandavas, Bhishma dies on the first day of [[Uttarayana]].


====Day 11====
====Day 11====
With Bhishma unable to continue, Karna joins the battlefield. Duryodhana makes Drona the supreme commander of the Kaurava forces according to Karna's advice. Duryodhana wants to capture Yudhishthira alive; killing Yudhishthira in battle would only enrage the Pandavas more, while holding him as a hostage would be strategically useful. Drona cuts down Yudhishthira's bow, and Arjuna stops Drona from capturing Yudhishthira.
With Bhishma unable to continue, Karna joins the battlefield. Duryodhana makes Drona the Major General of the Kaurava forces according to Karna's advice. Duryodhana wants to capture Yudhishthira alive; killing Yudhishthira in battle would only enrage the Pandavas more, while holding him as a hostage would be strategically useful. Drona cuts down Yudhishthira's bow, and Arjuna stops Drona from capturing Yudhishthira.


====Day 12====
====Day 12====
Drona tells Duryodhana that it would be difficult to capture Yudhishthira as long as Arjuna is present. He orders the Samsaptakas (the Trigarta warriors headed by Susharma, who had vowed to either conquer or die) to keep Arjuna busy in a remote part of the battlefield, an order which they readily obey on account of their old hostilities with the Pandava scion. Arjuna defeats them before the afternoon, then faces [[Bhagadatta]], who had been creating havoc among the Pandava troops, and defeated Bhima, Abhimanyu and Satyaki. Arjuna and Bhagadatta fight and the latter is killed. Drona continues his attempts to capture Yudhishthira, however his attacks were repelled by [[Upapandavas#Prativindhya|Prativindhya]] that day. The Pandavas, however, fought hard and delivered severe blows to the Kaurava army, frustrating Drona's plans.
Drona tells Duryodhana that it would be difficult to capture Yudhishthira as long as Arjuna is present. He orders the Samsaptakas (the [[Trigarta kingdom|Trigarta]] warriors headed by [[Susharma]], who had vowed to either conquer or die) to keep Arjuna busy in a remote part of the battlefield, an order which they readily obey on account of their old hostilities with the Pandava scion. Arjuna defeats them before the afternoon, then faces [[Bhagadatta]], who had been creating havoc among the Pandava troops, and defeated Bhima, Abhimanyu and Satyaki. Arjuna and Bhagadatta fight and the latter is killed. Drona continues his attempts to capture Yudhishthira, however his attacks were repelled by [[Upapandavas#Prativindhya|Prativindhya]] that day. The Pandavas, however, fought hard and delivered severe blows to the Kaurava Army, frustrating Drona's plans.


====Day 13====
====Day 13====
Drona's goal remains to capture Yudhishthira. Among the Pandavas, only Arjuna and Krishna knew how to penetrate this formation, and to prevent them from doing so, the Samsaptakas led by Susharma challenge Arjuna and keep him busy at a remote part of the battlefield the whole day.
Drona's goal remains to capture Yudhishthira. Among the Pandavas, only Arjuna and Krishna knew how to penetrate this formation, and to prevent them from doing so, the Samsaptakas led by Susharma challenge Arjuna and keep him busy at a remote part of the battlefield the whole day.


On the other side of the battlefield, the remaining four Pandavas and their allies find it impossible to break Drona's chakra formation. Yudhishthira instructed Abhimanyu to break the chakra/padma formation. Abhimanyu knows how to enter the chakra formation, but not know how to exit, so the Pandava follow to protect him from any potential danger. As soon as Abhimanyu enters the formation, [[Jayadratha]] stops them with help from a boon obtained from [[Shiva]], and defeats Bhima and Satyaki.
On the other side of the battlefield, the remaining four Pandavas and their allies find it impossible to break Drona's chakra formation. Yudhishthira instructed [[Abhimanyu]] to break the chakra/padma formation. Abhimanyu knows how to enter the chakra formation, but not know how to exit, so the Pandava follow to protect him from any potential danger. As soon as Abhimanyu enters the formation, [[Jayadratha]] stops them with help from a boon obtained from [[Shiva]], and defeats Bhima and [[Satyaki]].


Inside thechakra/kamala formation, Abhimanyu kills many warriors, including Vrihadvala (the ruler of [[Kosala]]); the ruler of [[Assaka|Asmaka]], Martikavata (the son of [[Kritavarma]]); Rukmaratha (the son of [[Shalya]]); and Shalya's younger brother, Lakshmana (the son of Duryodhana) and Dushasan's second son, Dushmanara.
Inside the chakra/kamala formation, Abhimanyu kills many warriors, including Vrihadvala (the king of [[Kosala]]); the king of [[Asmaka kingdom|Asmaka]], Martikavata (the son of [[Kritavarma]]); Rukmaratha (the son of [[Shalya]]); and Shalya's younger brother, Lakshmana (the son of Duryodhana) and Dushasana's second son, Dushmanara.


The Kaurava commanders devise a strategy to prevent Abhimanyu from causing further damage to their force. Following Drona's instructions, six warriors attacks Abhimanyu and deprived him of his chariot, bow, sword, and shield. Abhimanyu picks up a mace; smashes Ashwatthma's chariot (upon which the latter fled); and slays one of Shakuni's brothers numerous troops, and elephants before being killed by the son of Dussasana in a mace-fight.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://sacred-texts.com/hin/m07/m07046.htm|title=The Mahabharata, Book 7: Drona Parva: Abhimanyu-badha Parva: Section XLVII|website=sacred-texts.com|access-date=7 July 2017}}</ref>
The Kaurava commanders devise a strategy to prevent Abhimanyu from causing further damage to their force. Following Drona's instructions, six warriors attacks Abhimanyu and deprived him of his chariot, bow, sword, and shield. Abhimanyu picks up a mace; smashes Ashwatthma's chariot (upon which the latter fled); and slays one of Shakuni's brothers numerous troops, and elephants before being killed by the son of Dushasana in a mace-fight.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://sacred-texts.com/hin/m07/m07046.htm|title=The Mahabharata, Book 7: Drona Parva: Abhimanyu-badha Parva: Section XLVII|website=sacred-texts.com|access-date=7 July 2017|archive-date=2 August 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170802222718/http://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/m07/m07046.htm|url-status=live}}</ref>


Upon learning of the death of his son, Arjuna vows to kill Jayadratha.
Upon learning of the death of his son, Arjuna vows to kill Jayadratha.


====Day 14====
====Day 14====
[[File:Death of Jayadratha.jpg|thumb|Arjuna kills Jayadratha|189x189px]]
[[File:Karna kills Ghatotkacha.jpg|thumb|Karna kills Ghatotkacha]]
[[File:Karna kills Ghatotkacha.jpg|thumb|Karna kills Ghatotkacha]]


While searching for Jayadratha on the battlefield, Arjuna kills seven ''akshauhinis'' of Kaurav soldiers. By Shakuni's plot, Duryodhana hides Jayadratha in their camp. Arjuna uses ''divyastra'' to carry Jayadratha's head to his father leading to his own father's death. Many ''maharathis'' including Drona and Karna try to protect Jayadratha but are defeated altogether by Arjun. Arjuna warns that everyone who supported adharma would be killed.
While searching for Jayadratha on the battlefield, Arjuna kills seven ''akshauhinis'' of Kaurava soldiers. By Shakuni's plot, Duryodhana hides Jayadratha in their camp. Arjuna uses ''divyastra'' to carry Jayadratha's head to his father leading to his own father's death. Many [[Maharathi (warrior)|''maharathis'']] including Drona and Karna try to protect Jayadratha but fail to do so. Arjuna warns that everyone who supported adharma would be killed.


While Arjuna destroys the rest of the Shakatavyuha, Vikarna, the third eldest Kaurava, challenges Arjuna to an archery fight. Arjuna asks Bhima to kill Vikarna, but Bhima refuses because Vikarna had defended the Pandavas during the Draupadi Vastrapaharanam. Bhima and Vikarna shoot arrows at each other, before Bhima kills Vikarna with his mace. Drona kills Vrihatkshatra, the ruler of [[Kekaya]], and Dhrishtakethu, the ruler of [[Chedi Kingdom|Chedi]].
While Arjuna destroys the rest of the Shakatavyuha, Vikarna, the third eldest Kaurava, challenges Arjuna to an archery fight. Arjuna asks Bhima to kill Vikarna, but Bhima refuses because Vikarna had defended the Pandavas during the Draupadi Vastrapaharanam. Bhima and Vikarna shoot arrows at each other, before Bhima kills Vikarna with his mace. Drona kills Vrihatkshatra, the King of [[Kekeya kingdom|Kekeya]], and Dhrishtakethu, the King of [[Chedi kingdom|Chedi]].


Dushasana's first son, Drumsena, is slain by Prativindya, the eldest son of Draupadi and Yudhishthira, in a duel. When the bright moon rose, Ghatotkacha killed warriors like Alambusha and Alayudha while flying in the air. Karna fights him and releases Vasava Shakti, a divine weapon given to him by [[Indra]]. Ghatotkacha grows in size and falls on the Kaurava army as he dies, killing an ''akshauhini'' of them.
Dushasana's first son, Drumsena, is slain by Prativindya, the eldest son of Draupadi and Yudhishthira, in a duel. When the bright moon rose, Ghatotkacha killed warriors like Alambusha and Alayudha while flying in the air. Karna fights him and releases ''Vasava Shakti'', a [[Astra (weapon)|divine weapon]] given to him by [[Indra]]. Ghatotkacha grows in size and falls on the Kaurava Army as he dies, killing an ''akshauhini'' of them.


====Day 15====
====Day 15====
After [[Drupada]] and Virata are killed by Drona, Bhima and Dhrishtadyumna fight him. Because Drona is difficult to conquered, Krishna tells Yudhishthira that Drona would give up his arms if his son Ashwatthama were dead. Yudhistir tells the truth only to be half of the truth to be covered by the sound of Lord Shree Krishna's conch shell
After [[Drupada]] and Virata are killed by Drona, Bhima and [[Dhrishtadyumna]] fight him. Because Drona has the [[Brahmanda astra]], Krishna tells Yudhishthira that Drona would give up his arms if his son Ashwatthama were dead. Yudhishthira lies to Drona. Which disheartens [[Dronacharya]], and he lays his weapons down before being killed by Dhrishtadyumna to avenge his father's death and satisfy his vow. [[Kunti]] secretly meets Karna and asks him to spare the Pandavas, as they were his younger brothers. Karna promises Kunti that he would spare them except for Arjuna, but also added that he would not fire the same weapon against Arjuna twice.
[[File:Ghatotkacha's_corpse_falsl_on_one_Akshauhini_of_Kaurava_Army.jpg|thumb|247x247px|Ghatotkacha's Corpse Falls on One of The Akshauhinis of The Kaurava Army]]
which disheartens Dronacharya and he lays his weapons doen before being killed by Dhrishtadyumna to avenge his father's death and satisfy his vow. [[Kunti]] secretly meets Karna and asks him to join the cause of his brothers the Pandavas, as they were his younger brothers. Karna refuses but promises Kunti that he would spare all four pandavas except for Arjuna out of jealousy.


====Day 16====
====Day 16====
[[File:Wayang Painting of Bharatayudha Battle.jpg|thumb|On the left Karna with Salya as chariot driver versus Arjuna with Krishna on the right, Cirebon [[wayang]] glass painting, Java, Indonesia.]]
[[File:Wayang Painting of Bharatayudha Battle.jpg|thumb|On the left Karna with Salya as chariot driver versus Arjuna with Krishna on the right, Cirebon [[wayang]] glass painting, Java, Indonesia.]]


Karna is made the supreme commander of the Kuru army. He attacks the pandava army but is severely defeated by first Bhima and then Arjun. Arjun inflicts heavy damage on the Kaurava army.
Karna is made the Major General of the Kaurav Army. He is surrounded and attacked by Pandava generals, who are unable to defeat him. Karna inflicts heavy damage on the Pandava Army.


====Day 17====
====Day 17====
[[File:Krishna declaring the end of Mahabharata War by blowing the Conch Shell.jpg|thumb|Krishna declaring the end of Mahabharata War by blowing Panchajanya, the Conch Shell]]
[[File:Krishna declaring the end of Mahabharata War by blowing the Conch Shell.jpg|thumb|Krishna declaring the end of Mahabharata War by blowing [[Panchajanya]], the Conch Shell.]]


[[Karna]]'s son Banasena is killed by Bhima then Bhima swings his mace and shatters Dushasana's chariot. [[Vrishasena]] defeats bhima, sahadeva and the upapandavas.
Bhima shatters Dushasana's chariot.
Bhima seizes Dushasana, rips his right arm from his shoulder, and kills him, tearing open his chest, drinking his blood, and carrying some to smear on Draupadi's untied hair, fulfilling his vow made when [[Draupadi]] was humiliated. Arjuna kills Susharma, Trigartas, and Samsaptakas and Karna's first son, Vrishasena. Karna later defeats , Satyaki, Shikhandi, the Pandava brothers Nakula, [[Sahadeva]], [[Yudhishthira]] and [[Bhima]] in battle but spares their lives. Karna kills multiple Akshounis of the pandava army and kills the Panchalas. Karna resumes dueling with Arjuna. During their duel, Karna's chariot wheel gets stuck in the mud and Karna asks for a pause. Krishna reminded Arjuna about Karna's ruthlessness on Abhimanyu while he was similarly left without chariot and weapons. Hearing his son's fate, Arjuna shoots an arrow that decapitates Karna.
Bhima seizes Dushasana, rips his right arm from his shoulder, and kills him, tearing open his chest, drinking his blood, and carrying some to smear on Draupadi's untied hair, fulfilling his vow made when [[Draupadi]] was humiliated. Arjuna kills [[Susharma]], [[Trigartas]], and Samsaptakas. Karna later defeats Satyaki, Shikhandi, the Pandava brothers [[Nakula]], [[Sahadeva]], [[Yudhishthira]] and [[Bhima]] in battle but spares their lives. Karna kills multiple [[Akshauhini|''akshauhinis'']] of the Pandava Army and kills the [[Panchala Kingdom (Mahabharata)|Panchalas]]. Karna resumes dueling with Arjuna. During their duel, Karna's chariot wheel gets stuck in the mud and Karna asks for a pause. Krishna reminded Arjuna about Karna's ruthlessness on Abhimanyu while he was similarly left without chariot and weapons. Hearing his son's fate, Arjuna shoots an arrow that decapitates Karna.


====Day 18====
====Day 18====
Shalya takes over as the commander-in-chief of the remaining Kaurava forces. Yudhishthira kills him in spear combat and [[Sahadeva]] kills Shakuni. Nakula kills Shakuni's son [[Uluka]]. Realizing that he had been defeated, [[Duryodhana]] flees the battlefield and takes refuge in the lake, where the Pandavas catch up with him. Under the supervision of the now-returned [[Balarama]], a battle between Bhima and Duryodhana begins. Bhima breaks the rules under instructions from Krishna and strikes Duryodhana below the waist, leaving him mortally wounded.
Shalya takes over as the Major General of the remaining Kaurava forces. Yudhishthira kills him in spear combat and [[Sahadeva]] kills [[Shakuni]]. Nakula kills Shakuni's son [[Uluka]]. Realizing that he had been defeated, [[Duryodhana]] flees the battlefield and takes refuge in the lake, where the Pandavas catch up with him. Under the supervision of the now-returned [[Balarama]], a battle between Bhima and Duryodhana begins. Bhima breaks the rules under instructions from Krishna and strikes Duryodhana below the waist, leaving him mortally wounded.


Ashwatthama, Kripacharya, and Kritavarma gather at Duryodhana's deathbed and promise to avenge him. With Ashwatthama as general, they attack the Pandavas' camp later that night and killed all the Pandavas' remaining army including their children.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Virodai |first1=Yashodhara |title=कुरुक्षेत्र के एक भी योद्धा का देह नहीं मिला आज तक |url=https://www.newstrend.news/81734/sanatan-dharma-historywhy-any-evidence-not-found-of-mahabharat-battle/ |website=Newstrend |publisher=Newstrend |access-date=13 August 2020 |language=hi |date=31 August 2017}}</ref>
[[Ashwatthama]], [[Kripa]], and [[Kritavarma]] gather at Duryodhana's deathbed and promise to avenge him. With Ashwatthama as general, they attack the Pandavas' camp later that night and kill all the Pandavas' remaining army including their children.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Virodai |first1=Yashodhara |title=कुरुक्षेत्र के एक भी योद्धा का देह नहीं मिला आज तक |url=https://www.newstrend.news/81734/sanatan-dharma-historywhy-any-evidence-not-found-of-mahabharat-battle/ |website=Newstrend |access-date=13 August 2020 |language=hi |date=31 August 2017 |archive-date=3 June 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210603024810/https://www.newstrend.news/81734/sanatan-dharma-historywhy-any-evidence-not-found-of-mahabharat-battle/ |url-status=live }}</ref>


====Aftermath====
====Aftermath====
[[File:Return of Heroes Slain in Battle, Kurukshetra War of Mahabharata, Aftermath.jpg|thumb|Return of heroes slain in war following chanting by Vyasa]]
[[File:Return of Heroes Slain in Battle, Kurukshetra War of Mahabharata, Aftermath.jpg|thumb|Return of heroes slain in war following chanting by [[Vyasa]].]]


Only twelve major warriors survive the war: the five Pandavas, Krishna, Satyaki, Ashwatthama, [[Kripacharya]], Yuyutsu, Vrishaketu, and Kritavarma. Yudhishthira is crowned king of [[Hastinapur]]. After ruling for 36 years, he renounces the throne and passes the title on to Arjuna's grandson [[Parikshit]]. [[Draupadi]] and four Pandavas—[[Bhima]], [[Arjuna]], [[Nakula]] and [[Sahadeva]]—die during the journey. Yudhishthira, the lone survivor and being of pious heart, is invited by [[dharma]] to enter the heavens as a mortal.
Only eleven major warriors survive the war: the five Pandavas, Krishna, Satyaki, Ashwatthama, Kripa, Yuyutsu and Kritavarma. Yudhishthira is crowned King of [[Hastinapur]]a. After ruling for 36 years, he renounces the throne and passes the title on to Arjuna's grandson [[Parikshit]]. [[Draupadi]] and four Pandavas—Bhima, Arjuna, Nakula and Sahadeva - die during the journey. Yudhishthira, the lone survivor and being of pious heart, is invited by [[Yama]] to enter the [[Svarga|heavens]] as a mortal.


==See also==
==See also==
* [[Hastinapur]]
* [[Hastinapur]]a
* [[Indraprastha]]
* [[Indraprastha]]
* [[Kaurava]]s
* [[Kaurava]]s
* [[Historicity of the Mahabharata]]
* [[Historicity of the Mahabharata|Historicity of the ''Mahabharata'']]


==Notes==
==Notes==
{{notes}}
{{notelist}}
{{reflist|group=note|35em}}
{{reflist|group=note|35em}}


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* {{Citation | last =Parpola | first =Asko | year =2015 | title =The Roots of Hinduism. The Early Aryans and the Indus Civilization | publisher =Oxford University Press}}
* {{Citation | last =Parpola | first =Asko | year =2015 | title =The Roots of Hinduism. The Early Aryans and the Indus Civilization | publisher =Oxford University Press}}
* {{Cite journal|last=Parpola|first=Asko|title=Royal "Chariot" Burials of Sanauli near Delhi and Archaeological Correlates of Prehistoric Indo-Iranian Languages|date=2020|url=https://journal.fi/store/article/view/98032/56890|journal=Studia Orientalia Electronica|volume=8|pages=176|doi=10.23993/store.98032|s2cid=226331373|via=}}
* {{Cite journal|last=Parpola|first=Asko|title=Royal "Chariot" Burials of Sanauli near Delhi and Archaeological Correlates of Prehistoric Indo-Iranian Languages|date=2020|url=https://journal.fi/store/article/view/98032/56890|journal=Studia Orientalia Electronica|volume=8|issue=1 |pages=176|doi=10.23993/store.98032|s2cid=226331373|via=|doi-access=free}}
<!-- S -->
<!-- S -->
* {{Cite book | last =Samuel | first =Geoffrey | year =2010 | title =The Origins of Yoga and Tantra. Indic Religions to the Thirteenth Century | publisher =Cambridge University Press }}
* {{Cite book | last =Samuel | first =Geoffrey | year =2010 | title =The Origins of Yoga and Tantra. Indic Religions to the Thirteenth Century | publisher =Cambridge University Press }}
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20060313192059/http://haryana-online.com/Districts/Kurukshetra.htm Kurukshetra (town)]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20060313192059/http://haryana-online.com/Districts/Kurukshetra.htm Kurukshetra (town)]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20060217125416/http://ignca.nic.in/nl002503.htm Dating the Kurukshetra War]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20060217125416/http://ignca.nic.in/nl002503.htm Dating the Kurukshetra War]
* [http://www.saraswatifilms.org/movies.php Kurukshetra War: Is it real or just a myth?]
* [http://www.saraswatifilms.org/movies.php Kurukshetra War: Is it real or just a myth?] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161103194444/http://www.saraswatifilms.org/movies.php |date=3 November 2016 }}
* [http://mahabharata-research.com/military%20academy/vyuhas%20-%20the%20strategic%20formations.html Explanation of military formations (''vyuhas'') used in the war]
* [http://mahabharata-research.com/military%20academy/vyuhas%20-%20the%20strategic%20formations.html Explanation of military formations (''vyuhas'') used in the war] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221112081041/http://mahabharata-research.com/military%20academy/vyuhas%20-%20the%20strategic%20formations.html |date=12 November 2022 }}

{{HinduMythology}}
{{Mahabharata}}
{{Mahabharata}}

{{HinduMythology}}{{Historicity}}


[[Category:Kurukshetra]]
[[Category:Kurukshetra]]

Latest revision as of 06:38, 19 November 2024

Kurukshetra War

c. 1700 watercolour from Mewar depicts the Pandava and Kaurava armies arrayed against each other.
Location
Result
Territorial
changes
  • Reunification of the Kuru cities of Hastinapura and Indraprastha under the Pandavas.
  • Restoration of Panchala lands held by Drona to the Panchala Kingdom.
  • Truce and status quo ante bellum
  • Belligerents
  • Territory-less Pandavas of Kuru
  • Krishna
  • Magadha
  • Panchala
  • Matsya
  • Chedi
  • Kunti
  • Other allies
    Other allies
    Commanders and leaders

    Overlord
    Yudhishthira
    Commander-in-chief
    Dhrishtadyumna (day 1-18) 
    Other-Commanders
    Bhima
    Drupada 
    Virata 

    Chekitana 
    Satyaki
    . Shikhandi 

    Strategist
    Krishna
    Overlords
    Dhritrashtra Surrendered
    Duryodhana 
    Commanders-in-chief
    Bhishma (day 1-10) 
    Drona (day 11-15) 
    Karna (day 16-17) 
    Shalya (day 18) 
    Ashwatthama (night raid) Surrendered
    Other-Commanders Dushasana 
    Jayadratha 
    Kripa Surrendered
    Kritavarma Surrendered
    Bhurishravas 
    Bahlika 
    Bhagadatta 
    Sudakshina 
    Strategist
    Shakuni 
    Strength
    7 Akshauhinis
    153,090-100,300,000[1] chariots and chariot riders
    10,000–153,090 elephants and elephant riders
    459,270–1,000,000 horses and horse riders
    765,450–1,000,000,000 infantry [2]
    (total 1,530,900 soldiers-1,003,830,900)
    11 Akshauhinis
    240,570 chariots and chariot riders
    240,570 elephants and elephant riders
    721,710 horses and horse riders – 100,000,000 horses (mentioned possibly as a hyperbole)[3]
    1,202,850 infantry
    6,000,000 protecting elephants and chariots[4]
    140,000,000 Pishachas
    280,000,000 Rakshasa
    420,000,000 Yaksha
    100,000,000 Narayani Sena[5][6]
    (total 8,450,700 - 1,048,405,700 soldiers)
    Casualties and losses
    Almost total (1,530,892 soldiers)
    only 8 known survivors - the Pandavas, Krishna, Satyaki, and Yuyutsu.
    Almost total (2,405,697 soldiers)
    only 3 known survivors - Ashwatthama, Kripa, and Kritavarma
    Yudhishthira gives a different number which is 1,660,020,000 dead and 24,165 missing.[7]

    The Kurukshetra War (Sanskrit: कुरुक्षेत्र युद्ध), also called the Mahabharata War, is a war described in the Hindu epic poem Mahabharata, arising from a dynastic struggle between two groups of cousins, the Kauravas and the Pandavas, for the throne of Hastinapura. The war is used as the context for the dialogues of the Bhagavad Gita.

    Background

    The Mahābhārata is an account of the life and deeds of several generations of a ruling dynasty called the Kuru clan.[8] Central to the epic is an account of a war that took place between two rival families belonging to this clan.[9] Kurukshetra (literally "Region of the Kurus"), also known as Dharmakshetra (the "Region of Dharma"),[10] was the battleground on which the Kurukshetra War was fought.[11] The first Mahābhārata says that this site was chosen because a sin committed on land was forgiven because of the land's sanctity.[12]

    The events of the war make up more than a quarter of the Mahabharata. These chapters are considered among the oldest in the Mahabharata.

    Historicity and dating

    The historicity of the war remains the subject of scholarly discussion.[13][14][15] The Battle of the Ten Kings, mentioned in the Rigveda, may have formed the core of the Kurukshetra war's story. The war was greatly expanded and modified in the Mahabharata's account, which makes it dubious.[16] Attempts have been made to assign a historical date to the Kurukshetra war, with research suggesting c. 1000 BCE.[14] However, popular tradition claims that the war marks the transition to the Kali Yuga, dating it to c. 3102 BCE.[17]

    The approximate extent of Āryāvarta during the late Vedic period (ca. 1100-500 BCE). Aryavarta was limited to northwest India and the western Ganges plain, while Greater Magadha in the east was habitated by non-Vedic Indo-Aryans, who gave rise to Jainism and Buddhism.[18][19]
    Modern bronze sculpture of Chariot with Krishna and Arjuna during the Kurukshetra War.

    Literary traces

    Although the Kurukshetra War is not mentioned in Vedic literature, its prominence in later literature led British Indologist A. L. Basham to conclude that there was a great battle at Kurukshetra which, "magnified to titanic proportions, formed the basis of the story of the greatest of India's epics, the Mahābhārata". Acknowledging that later "generations looked upon it as marking an end of an epoch", he suggested that rather than being a civil war it might have been "a muddled recollection of the conquest of the Kurus by a tribe of Mongol type from the hills". He saw it as useless to the historian and dates the war to the ninth century BCE based on archaeological evidence and "some evidence in the Brahmana literature itself to show that it cannot have been much earlier".[20][note 1]

    Puranic literature presents genealogical lists associated with the Mahābhārata narrative. There are two pieces of evidence of the Puranas: there is the direct statement[where?] that there were 1,015 (or 1,050) years between the birth of Parikshit (Arjun's grandson) and the accession of Mahapadma Nanda, commonly dated to 382 BCE, which would yield an estimate of about 1400 BCE for the Bharata battle,[22] which would imply improbably long reigns on average for the kings listed in the genealogies.[23]

    There are also analyses of parallel genealogies in the Puranas between the times of Adhisimakrishna (Parikshit's great-grandson) and Mahapadma Nanda. Pargiter estimated 26 generations by averaging 10 different dynastic lists and assuming 18 years for the average duration of a reign, arrived at an estimate of 850 BCE for Adhisimakrishna and approximately 950 BCE for the Bharata battle.[24]

    Scholarly dating

    Despite the inconclusiveness of the data, attempts have been made to assign a historical date to the Kurukshetra War. The existing text of the Mahābhārata went through many revisions, and mostly belongs to the period between c. 500 BCE and 400 CE.[25][26][note 2] Within the frame story of the Mahābhārata, the kings Parikshit and Janamejaya are featured significantly as scions of the Kuru clan,[28] and Michael Witzel concludes that the general setting of the epic has a historical precedent in the Vedic period, where the Kuru kingdom was the center of political power during roughly 1200 to 800 BCE.[28] According to Professor Alf Hiltebeitel, the Mahābhārata is essentially mythological.[29] Indian historian Upinder Singh wrote:

    Whether a bitter war between the Pandavas and the Kauravas ever happened cannot be proved or disproved. It is possible that there was a small-scale conflict, transformed into a gigantic epic war by bards and poets. Some historians and archaeologists have argued that this conflict may have occurred in about 1000 BCE.[14]

    According to Finnish Sindhologist Asko Parpola, the war may have taken place during the later phase of the Painted Grey Ware, c/ 750–350 BCE.[30]

    Popular tradition holds that the war marks the transition to Kali Yuga and dates it to 3102 BCE. A number of other proposals have been put forward:

    • Vedveer Arya gives a date of 3162 BCE, by distinguishing between the Śaka and Śakanta eras and applying correction of 60 years to the date given in popular tradition and based on Aihole inscription.[31]
    • B. N. Achar used planetarium software to argue that the Mahabharata War took place in 3067 BCE.[32]
    • Dieter Koch dates the war to 1198 BCE using planetarium software on the basis super-conjunctions mentioned in the text.[33]
    • Kesheo Lakshman Daftari, one of the members of the Calendar Reform Committee which prepared the Indian national calendar, holds that the war took place in 1197 BCE.[34]
    • V. S. Dubey claims that the war happened near 950 BCE.[35]

    Associations with archaeological cultures

    Indian archeologist B. B. Lal used the same approach with a more conservative assumption of the average reign to estimate a date of 836 BCE and correlated it with archaeological evidence from Painted Grey Ware (PGW) sites, the association being strong between PGW artifacts and places mentioned in the epic.[36] John Keay confirmed it and also dated the battle to have taken place in 950 BCE.[37]

    According to Parpola, the war may have taken place during the later phase of the Painted Grey Ware culture, c. 750-350 BCE.[30] He noted that the Pandava heroes are not being mentioned in the Vedic literature from before the Grhyasutras.[30] Parpola suggests that the Pandavas were Iranic migrants, who came to South Asia around 800 BCE.[38]

    Excavations in Sinauli unearthed burials with the remains of carts[a] belonging to the Ochre Coloured Pottery culture (OCP).[39] Several authors proposed to relate the Rig Vedic culture and the war to the OCP, instead of the PGW.[40][41] While the carts are dated to 1800–1500 BCE (±150),[42] Gupta and Mani state that "in the present state of archaeological evidence OCP seems to be a stronger contender for the Mahābhārata association", dating the war to the 4th millennium BCE.[43] Parpola sees the finds as ox-pulled carts, indicating support for his proposal for a first wave of Indo-Aryan migrations into the Indian subcontinent at the beginning of the 2nd millennium BCE, prior to the migration of the Rig Vedic people.[39][note 3]

    Mahabharata account of the war

    Beginning

    In the beginning, Sanjaya gives a description of the various continents of the Earth, the other planets, and focuses on the Indian subcontinent, then gives an elaborate list of kingdoms, tribes, provinces, cities, towns, villages, rivers, mountains, and forests of the ancient Indian subcontinent (Bharata Varsha). He also explains the military formations adopted by each side on each day, the death of each hero and the details of each war-racing.

    Krishna's peace mission

    Krishna Pleads with Dhritarashtra to Avoid War

    As a last attempt at peace is called for in Rajadharma, Krishna travels to the Kingdom of Hastinapura to persuade the Kauravas to see reason, avoid bloodshed of their kin, and to embark upon a peaceful path with him as the "divine" ambassador of the Pandavas. Duryodhana is insulted that Krishna turns down his invitation to accommodate himself in the royal palace. Duryodhana plots to arrest Krishna and insult, humiliate, and defame him in front of the entire royal court of Hastinapura as a challenge to the prestige of the Pandavas and declaration of an act of open war.

    At the formal presentation of the peace proposal by Krishna in the Kuru Mahasabha at the court of Hastinapura, Krishna asks Duryodhana to return Indraprastha to the Pandavas and restore the status quo, or at least give five villages, one for each of the Pandavas; Duryodhana refuses. Krishna's peace proposals are ignored and dismissed, and Duryodhana publicly orders his soldiers to arrest Krishna despite warnings from the elders. Krishna laughs and displays his divine form, radiating intense light. He curses Duryodhana that his downfall was certain at the hands of the one who was sworn to tear off his thigh. His peace mission utterly insulted by Duryodhana, Krishna returns to the Pandava camp at Upaplavya to inform the Pandavas that the only course left to uphold the principles of virtue and righteousness is war. During his return, Krishna meets Karna, Kunti's firstborn (before Yudhishthira), and asks him to help his brothers and fight on the side of dharma. However, as he is being helped by Duryodhana, Karna says to Krishna that he would battle against the Pandavas as he had a debt to pay.

    War preparations

    Krishna, and Arjuna on the chariot, 18th-19th century painting

    Duryodhana and Arjuna go to Krishna at Dvaraka to ask for his and his army's help. Duryodhana arrives first and finds Krishna asleep. Duryodhana chooses a seat at Krishna's head and waits for him to awaken, while Arjuna sits and waits at Krishna's feet. When Krishna woke up, he saw Arjuna first and gave him the first right to make his request. Krishna tells Arjuna and Duryodhana that he would give the Narayani Sena to one side and himself as a non-combatant to the other. Since Arjuna is given the first opportunity to choose, Duryodhana worries that Arjuna would choose the mighty army of Krishna. When given the choice of either Krishna's army or Krishna himself on their side, Arjuna chooses Krishna. Arjuna asks Krishna to be his charioteer, who agrees. Both Duryodhana and Arjuna returned satisfied.

    The Pandavas gather their armies while camping at Upaplavya in Virata's territory. Contingents arrive from across the country.

    Pandava Army

    A manuscript illustration of the Battle of Kurukshetra, fought between the Kauravas and the Pandavas, recorded in the Mahābhārata

    Yudhishthira asks his brothers to organize their army. The Pandavas have seven akshauhinis with the help of their allies. After consulting his commanders, the Pandavas appoint Dhrishtadyumna as the Major General of the Pandava Army.

    Kaurava Army

    The Kaurava Army is made up of 11 akshauhinis. This includes the Narayani Sena of Krishna, which originally included seven maharathis (Krishna, Balarama, Samba, Ahuka, Charudeshna, Chakradeva, and Satyaki) and seven athirathis (Kritavarma, Anadhrishti, Samika, Samitinjaya, Kanka, Sanku, and Kunti).[citation needed] Duryodhana asks Bhishma to command the Kaurava Army. Bhishma accepts on the condition that, while he would fight the battle sincerely, he would not harm the five Pandava brothers. He also says that Karna would rather not fight under him, but serve as Duryodhana's bodyguard as long as he was in the battlefield. Having little choice, Duryodhana agrees to Bhishma's conditions and makes him the Major General of the Kaurava Army, while Karna is debarred from fighting. Karna joins the war later when Bhishma is severely wounded by Arjuna.

    Neutral parties

    The Kingdom of Vidarbha, Vidura, and Balarama are the neutral parties in this war. Rukmi, King of Vidarbha, wanted to join the war, but Arjuna refuses because he had lost to Krishna during Rukmini's svayamvara and he boasted about his war strength and army, and Duryodhana does not want Arjuna's reject. Vidura does not want to see bloodshed and is insulted by Duryodhana.

    Course of the war

    Before the battle

    War council at Kuru

    The Mahābhārata states that in the year in which the war took place, three solar eclipses took place within a thirty-day period; eclipses are considered ill omens in Hindu astrology.[44]

    On the first day of the war, as would be on all the following days, the Kaurava Army stood facing west and the Pandava Army east. The Pandava Army was organised by Yudhishthira and Arjuna in the diamond (vajra) formation.

    Ten akshauhinis of the Kaurava Army were arranged in a phalanx. The eleventh was put under the immediate command of Bhishma, partly to protect him. The safety of the supreme commander Bhishma was central to Duryodhana's strategy, as he had placed all his hope on the great warrior's abilities.

    The Bhagavad Gita

    Krishna displays his Vishvarupa (universal form) to Arjuna on the battlefield of Kurukshetra.

    When the war is declared and the two armies face each other, Arjuna realises that he would have to kill his dear granduncle Bhishma and his respected teacher Drona. Despondent and confused about what is right and what is wrong, Arjuna turns to Krishna for divine advice and teachings. Krishna, who Arjuna chose as his charioteer, advised him of his duty. Krishna instructs Arjuna not to yield to degrading impotence and to fight his kin. He also reminds him that it is a war between righteousness and unrighteousness (dharma and adharma), and it is Arjuna's duty to slay anyone who supported the cause of unrighteousness, or sin. Krishna reveals his divine form and explains that he is born on earth in each eon when evil raises its head.[45]

    Before the battle begins, Yudhishthira drops his weapons, takes off his armor, and walks towards the Kaurava Army with folded hands in prayer. He falls on Bhishma's feet to seek his blessing for success in battle, and he is blessed. Yudhishthira returned to his chariot and the battle was ready to commence.

    Day 1

    The Pandavas suffered heavy losses and are defeated at the end of the first day. Virata's sons, Uttara and Sweta, are slain by Shalya and Bhishma. Krishna consoles Yudhishthira saying that eventually, victory would be his.

    Day 2

    Arjuna, realizing that something needs to be done quickly to reverse the Pandava losses, decides to kill Bhishma. Krishna locates Bhishma's chariot and steers Arjuna toward him. Arjuna tries to engage Bhishma in a duel, but the Kaurava soldiers protect him and attack Arjuna. Arjuna and Bhishma fight a fierce battle over hours. Drona and Dhrishtadyumna similarly engage in a duel, and Drona defeats Dhrishtadyumna, who is saved by Bhima. Duryodhana sends the troops of Kalinga to attack Bhima and most of them, including the King of Kalinga, are killed. Bhishma comes to relieve the battered Kalinga forces. Satyaki, who was assisting Bhima, shoots at Bhishma's charioteer and kills him. Bhishma's horses bolt and carry Bhishma away from the battlefield.

    Day 3

    The Kauravas concentrate their attack on Arjuna, whose chariot becomes covered with arrows and javelins. Arjuna builds a fortification around his chariot with an unending stream of arrows from his bow. Abhimanyu and Satyaki join forces to defeat Shakuni's Gandhara forces. Bhima and Ghatotkacha attack Duryodhana in the rear. Bhima's arrows hit Duryodhana, who collapses in his chariot. His charioteer drives him off the battlefield, and Duryodhana's forces scatter. Bhishma restores order and Duryodhana returns to lead the army. He is angry at Bhishma for what he saw as leniency towards the five Pandava brothers, and spoke harshly of him. Bhishma, stung by this unfair charge, returns to the battlefield.

    Arjuna attacks Bhishma to restore order. Arjuna and Bhishma duel again.

    Day 4

    Kurukshetra War

    Bhishma commands the Kaurava Army to move on the offensive. When the Kauravas form a chakravyuha, Abhimanyu enters it but is surrounded and attacked by Kaurava princes. Arjuna joins to help him. Bhima appears and attacks the Kauravas. Duryodhana sends a huge force of war elephants at Bhima, who leaves his chariot and attacks them singlehandedly with his iron mace. The elephants scatter and stampede into the Kaurava forces. Duryodhana orders an all-out attack on Bhima, who kills eight of Duryodhana's brothers before being struck by an arrow from Dushasana, the second-eldest Kaurava, in the chest and sits down in his chariot dazed.

    At the end of the fourth day, Duryodhana goes to Bhisma and asks him how could the Pandavas, facing a superior force against them, have the upper hand. Bhishma says that the Pandavas have justice on their side and advises Duryodhana to seek peace.

    Day 5

    The Pandava Army suffers from Bhishma's attacks. Satyaki is being beaten by Drona, but Bhima drives by and rescues him. Arjuna kills thousands of soldiers sent by Duryodhana to attack him. Bhima engages Bhishma in a duel with no clear winner. Drupada and his son Shikhandi go to help Bhima, but they are stopped by Vikarna, one of Duryodhana's brothers, who attacks and injures them badly.

    Day 6

    Drona kills many Pandava soldiers and both armies' formations are broken. Bhima penetrates the Kaurava formation and attacks Duryodhana, who is defeated but rescued. The Upapandavas (sons of Draupadi) fight against Ashwatthama and destroy his chariot.

    Day 7

    Drona kills Shanka, one of Virata's son. Yuyutsu is injured by Kripa in a sword fight. Nakula and Sahadeva fight Duryodhana's brothers but are overwhelmed by the number of them.

    Day 8

    Bhima kills 17 of Dhritarashtra's sons. Iravan, the son of Arjuna, kills five of Shakuni's brothers. Duryodhana deploys the Rakshasa warrior Alambusha, who kills Iravan.

    Day 9

    Bhishma destroys Pandava armies. Arjuna heads to Bhishma but fights him half-heartedly. Krishna, overwhelmed by anger at the apparent inability of Arjuna to kill Bhishma, rushes towards the Kaurava commander. Ghatotkacha kills the rakshasa Alambusha.

    Realising that the war could not be won as long as Bhishma was standing, Krishna suggests placing a transgender in the field to face him.

    Day 10

    Bhishma on a deathbed of arrows, from a collection of the Smithsonian Institution

    The Pandavas put Shikhandi, who had been a woman in a prior life, in front of Bhishma, as Bhishma has taken a vow not to attack a woman. Shikhandi's arrows fell on Bhishma without hindrance. Arjuna positions himself behind Shikhandi, protecting himself from Bhishma's attack and aimed his arrows at the weak points in Bhishma's armor and defeats him.

    The Kauravas and Pandavas gathered around Bhishma and at his request, Arjuna places three arrows under Bhishma's head to support it. Bhishma had promised his father, King Shantanu, that he would live until Hastinapura was secured from all directions. To keep this promise, Bhishma used the boon of Ichcha Mrityu (self-wished death) given to him by his father. After the war ended, when Hastinapura had become safe from all sides and after giving lessons on politics and Vishnu Sahasranama to the Pandavas, Bhishma dies on the first day of Uttarayana.

    Day 11

    With Bhishma unable to continue, Karna joins the battlefield. Duryodhana makes Drona the Major General of the Kaurava forces according to Karna's advice. Duryodhana wants to capture Yudhishthira alive; killing Yudhishthira in battle would only enrage the Pandavas more, while holding him as a hostage would be strategically useful. Drona cuts down Yudhishthira's bow, and Arjuna stops Drona from capturing Yudhishthira.

    Day 12

    Drona tells Duryodhana that it would be difficult to capture Yudhishthira as long as Arjuna is present. He orders the Samsaptakas (the Trigarta warriors headed by Susharma, who had vowed to either conquer or die) to keep Arjuna busy in a remote part of the battlefield, an order which they readily obey on account of their old hostilities with the Pandava scion. Arjuna defeats them before the afternoon, then faces Bhagadatta, who had been creating havoc among the Pandava troops, and defeated Bhima, Abhimanyu and Satyaki. Arjuna and Bhagadatta fight and the latter is killed. Drona continues his attempts to capture Yudhishthira, however his attacks were repelled by Prativindhya that day. The Pandavas, however, fought hard and delivered severe blows to the Kaurava Army, frustrating Drona's plans.

    Day 13

    Drona's goal remains to capture Yudhishthira. Among the Pandavas, only Arjuna and Krishna knew how to penetrate this formation, and to prevent them from doing so, the Samsaptakas led by Susharma challenge Arjuna and keep him busy at a remote part of the battlefield the whole day.

    On the other side of the battlefield, the remaining four Pandavas and their allies find it impossible to break Drona's chakra formation. Yudhishthira instructed Abhimanyu to break the chakra/padma formation. Abhimanyu knows how to enter the chakra formation, but not know how to exit, so the Pandava follow to protect him from any potential danger. As soon as Abhimanyu enters the formation, Jayadratha stops them with help from a boon obtained from Shiva, and defeats Bhima and Satyaki.

    Inside the chakra/kamala formation, Abhimanyu kills many warriors, including Vrihadvala (the king of Kosala); the king of Asmaka, Martikavata (the son of Kritavarma); Rukmaratha (the son of Shalya); and Shalya's younger brother, Lakshmana (the son of Duryodhana) and Dushasana's second son, Dushmanara.

    The Kaurava commanders devise a strategy to prevent Abhimanyu from causing further damage to their force. Following Drona's instructions, six warriors attacks Abhimanyu and deprived him of his chariot, bow, sword, and shield. Abhimanyu picks up a mace; smashes Ashwatthma's chariot (upon which the latter fled); and slays one of Shakuni's brothers numerous troops, and elephants before being killed by the son of Dushasana in a mace-fight.[46]

    Upon learning of the death of his son, Arjuna vows to kill Jayadratha.

    Day 14

    Karna kills Ghatotkacha

    While searching for Jayadratha on the battlefield, Arjuna kills seven akshauhinis of Kaurava soldiers. By Shakuni's plot, Duryodhana hides Jayadratha in their camp. Arjuna uses divyastra to carry Jayadratha's head to his father leading to his own father's death. Many maharathis including Drona and Karna try to protect Jayadratha but fail to do so. Arjuna warns that everyone who supported adharma would be killed.

    While Arjuna destroys the rest of the Shakatavyuha, Vikarna, the third eldest Kaurava, challenges Arjuna to an archery fight. Arjuna asks Bhima to kill Vikarna, but Bhima refuses because Vikarna had defended the Pandavas during the Draupadi Vastrapaharanam. Bhima and Vikarna shoot arrows at each other, before Bhima kills Vikarna with his mace. Drona kills Vrihatkshatra, the King of Kekeya, and Dhrishtakethu, the King of Chedi.

    Dushasana's first son, Drumsena, is slain by Prativindya, the eldest son of Draupadi and Yudhishthira, in a duel. When the bright moon rose, Ghatotkacha killed warriors like Alambusha and Alayudha while flying in the air. Karna fights him and releases Vasava Shakti, a divine weapon given to him by Indra. Ghatotkacha grows in size and falls on the Kaurava Army as he dies, killing an akshauhini of them.

    Day 15

    After Drupada and Virata are killed by Drona, Bhima and Dhrishtadyumna fight him. Because Drona has the Brahmanda astra, Krishna tells Yudhishthira that Drona would give up his arms if his son Ashwatthama were dead. Yudhishthira lies to Drona. Which disheartens Dronacharya, and he lays his weapons down before being killed by Dhrishtadyumna to avenge his father's death and satisfy his vow. Kunti secretly meets Karna and asks him to spare the Pandavas, as they were his younger brothers. Karna promises Kunti that he would spare them except for Arjuna, but also added that he would not fire the same weapon against Arjuna twice.

    Day 16

    On the left Karna with Salya as chariot driver versus Arjuna with Krishna on the right, Cirebon wayang glass painting, Java, Indonesia.

    Karna is made the Major General of the Kaurav Army. He is surrounded and attacked by Pandava generals, who are unable to defeat him. Karna inflicts heavy damage on the Pandava Army.

    Day 17

    Krishna declaring the end of Mahabharata War by blowing Panchajanya, the Conch Shell.

    Bhima shatters Dushasana's chariot. Bhima seizes Dushasana, rips his right arm from his shoulder, and kills him, tearing open his chest, drinking his blood, and carrying some to smear on Draupadi's untied hair, fulfilling his vow made when Draupadi was humiliated. Arjuna kills Susharma, Trigartas, and Samsaptakas. Karna later defeats Satyaki, Shikhandi, the Pandava brothers Nakula, Sahadeva, Yudhishthira and Bhima in battle but spares their lives. Karna kills multiple akshauhinis of the Pandava Army and kills the Panchalas. Karna resumes dueling with Arjuna. During their duel, Karna's chariot wheel gets stuck in the mud and Karna asks for a pause. Krishna reminded Arjuna about Karna's ruthlessness on Abhimanyu while he was similarly left without chariot and weapons. Hearing his son's fate, Arjuna shoots an arrow that decapitates Karna.

    Day 18

    Shalya takes over as the Major General of the remaining Kaurava forces. Yudhishthira kills him in spear combat and Sahadeva kills Shakuni. Nakula kills Shakuni's son Uluka. Realizing that he had been defeated, Duryodhana flees the battlefield and takes refuge in the lake, where the Pandavas catch up with him. Under the supervision of the now-returned Balarama, a battle between Bhima and Duryodhana begins. Bhima breaks the rules under instructions from Krishna and strikes Duryodhana below the waist, leaving him mortally wounded.

    Ashwatthama, Kripa, and Kritavarma gather at Duryodhana's deathbed and promise to avenge him. With Ashwatthama as general, they attack the Pandavas' camp later that night and kill all the Pandavas' remaining army including their children.[47]

    Aftermath

    Return of heroes slain in war following chanting by Vyasa.

    Only eleven major warriors survive the war: the five Pandavas, Krishna, Satyaki, Ashwatthama, Kripa, Yuyutsu and Kritavarma. Yudhishthira is crowned King of Hastinapura. After ruling for 36 years, he renounces the throne and passes the title on to Arjuna's grandson Parikshit. Draupadi and four Pandavas—Bhima, Arjuna, Nakula and Sahadeva - die during the journey. Yudhishthira, the lone survivor and being of pious heart, is invited by Yama to enter the heavens as a mortal.

    See also

    Notes

    1. ^ These carts, often dubbed as "chariots", does not have any spokes on their wheels like the chariots (Sanskrit: Ratha) mentioned in Vedic or epic literature; the wheels are solid with no spokes.
    1. ^ In discussing the dating question, historian A. L. Basham says: "According to the most popular later tradition the Mahabharata War took place in 3102 BCE, which in the light of all evidence, is quite impossible. More reasonable is another tradition, placing it in the 15th century BCE, but this is also several centuries too early in the light of our archaeological knowledge. Probably the war took place around the beginning of the 9th century BCE; such a date seems to fit well with the scanty archaeological remains of the period, and there is some evidence in the Brahmana literature itself to show that it cannot have been much earlier."[21] Basham cites H.C. Raychaudhuri, Political History of Ancient India, pp.27ff.
    2. ^ Indian archeologist Swaraj Prakash Gupta and K.S. Ramachandran : "Divergence of views regarding the Mahabharata war is due to the absence of reliable history of the ancient period. This is also true of the historical period, where also there is no unanimity of opinion on innumerable issues. Dr Mirashi accepts that there has been interpolation in the Mahabharata and observes that, 'Originally it (Mahabharata) was a small poem of 8,800 verses and was known by the name Jaya (victory), then it swelled to 24,000 verses and became known as Bharata, and, finally, it reached the present stupendous size of the one lakh verses, passing under the name Mahabharata.'"[27]
    3. ^ See also Giacomo Benedetti, Mahābhārata and archaeology: the chariot of Sanauli and the position of Painted Grey Ware and The Chronology of Puranic Kings and Rigvedic Rishis in Comparison with the Phases of the Sindhu–Sarasvati Civilization, dating the Mahabharata War at 1432 BCE.

    References

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    2. ^ The Mahābhārata. New Delhi: Penguin. 2009. p. 291. ISBN 978-0-14-044681-4.
    3. ^ "The Mahabharata, Book 5: Udyoga Parva: Uluka Dutagamana Parva: Section CXCIX". www.sacred-texts.com. Archived from the original on 25 March 2023. Retrieved 25 March 2023. And he was followed by Sauchitti, who steadily adhered to truth and was invincible in battle, and Srenimat, and Vasudeva and Vibhu, the son of the ruler of Kasi, with twenty thousand cars, and hundred million steeds of high mettle, each bearing scores of bells on its limbs, and twenty thousand smiting elephants with tusks as long as plough-shares, all of good breed and divided temples and all resembling moving masses of clouds.
    4. ^ "The Mahabharata, Book 6: Bhishma Parva: Bhagavat-Gita Parvad: Section XVIII". www.sacred-texts.com. Archived from the original on 25 March 2023. Retrieved 25 March 2023. And with a division that consisted of ten thousand active elephants, the king of Magadha followed that large car division. They that protected the wheels of the cars and they that protected the elephants, numbered full six millions.
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    30. ^ a b c Parpola 2015, p. 299.
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    Sources

    Media related to Kurukshetra War at Wikimedia Commons