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{{Short description|Chief wife of Lanka king Ravana in Hindu epic Ramayana}} | ||
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2016}} | {{Use dmy dates|date=January 2016}} | ||
{{Use Indian English|date=January 2016}} | {{Use Indian English|date=January 2016}} | ||
{{Infobox deity | {{Infobox deity | ||
| type = Hindu | | type = Hindu | ||
| member_of = ] | |||
| image =Ravi Varma-Lady Giving Alms at the Temple.jpg | |||
| image = File:Mandodari based on Raja Ravi Varma's painting (cropped).jpg | |||
| texts = ] and its versions | | texts = ] and its versions | ||
| caption = |
| caption = ]'s lithograph on Mandodari | ||
| affiliation = |
| affiliation = ]<br> ] | ||
| Devanagari = मंदोदरी | | Devanagari = मंदोदरी | ||
| Sanskrit_transliteration = Mandodarī | | Sanskrit_transliteration = Mandodarī | ||
| abode = ] | | abode = ] | ||
| father = ] | | father = ] | ||
| mother = Hema | | mother = ] | ||
| consort = ] | | consort = ], and later ] | ||
| children = ] |
| children = ], ] and ] (sons) | ||
⚫ | | siblings = Mayavi, Dundubhi and Vyomasura(brothers) | ||
| god_of = The pious wife of ] | |||
⚫ | | siblings =Mayavi and |
||
}} | }} | ||
'''Mandodari''' ({{ |
'''Mandodari''' ({{langx|sa|मंदोदरी}}, {{IAST|Mandodarī}}, lit. "soft-bellied";<ref></ref><!-- ]: මන්දෝදරි;]: మండోదరి(Mandodhari); ]: Montotari; ], ] and ]: Banondari; ]: Mandogiri; ]: Mandudaki; ]: Montho Thewi -->) was the ] of ], the king of ], according to the ] epic '']''. The ''Ramayana'' describes her as beautiful, pious, and righteous. She is extolled as one of the '']'', the recital of whose names is believed to dispel sin. | ||
Mandodari was the daughter of ], the King of the ]s (demons), and the '']'' (celestial nymphs) Hema. |
Mandodari was the daughter of ], the King of the ]s (demons), and the '']'' (celestial nymphs) Hema. She marries Ravana and bears three sons: Meghanada (]), ] and ]. According to some Ramayana adaptations, Mandodari is also the mother of ]'s wife ], who is infamously kidnapped by Ravana. Despite her husband's faults, Mandodari loves him and advises him to follow the path of righteousness. She repeatedly advises Ravana to return Sita to Rama, but her advice falls on deaf ears. Her love and loyalty to Rāvana are praised in the ''Rāmāyana''. | ||
In a version of Ramayana, ] tricks her into disclosing the location of a magical arrow which Rama uses to kill Ravana. | In a version of Ramayana, ] tricks her into disclosing the location of a magical arrow which Rama uses to kill Ravana. Many versions of Ramayana state that after Ravana's death, ]—Ravana's younger brother who joins forces with Rama, does so on Mandodari's advice. | ||
Different versions of the ''Ramayana'' record her ill-treatment at the hands of Rama's monkey generals. Some versions say they disturb a sacrifice by Ravana, and some that they destroy her chastity, which was the last protection for Ravana's life.{{sfn|Lutgendorf|2007|p=211}} | |||
==Birth and early life== | ==Birth and early life== | ||
⚫ | The '']'' of the '']'' mentions that ] visited ] (heaven), where the ] ] was given to him by the gods. They had two sons, Mayavi and Dundubhi, and a daughter, Mandodari. Later, Hema returned to heaven; Mandodari and her siblings were left with their father.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Manmathnath Dutt|url=https://archive.org/stream/Ramayana_201309/Ramayana-VOL-4-Uttara-Kanda#page/n15/mode/2up|title=Ramayana - Uttara Kanda|date=1891}}</ref><ref name="manushi" /><ref>{{Cite book|last1=Vālmīki|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mCtAAQAAIAAJ&q=hema+maya+mandodari|title=The Rāmāyaṇa of Vālmīki: An Epic of Ancient India|last2=Goldman|first2=Sally J. Sutherland|last3=Lefeber|first3=Rosalind|last4=Pollock|first4=Sheldon I.|date=1984|publisher=Princeton University Press|isbn=978-0-691-06663-9|language=en}}</ref> | ||
⚫ | The |
||
⚫ | There are varying accounts of Mandodari's birth. The ] text ''Uttara Ramayana'' mentions that Mayasura is married to the '']'' Hema. They have two sons, Mayavi and Dundubhi, but long for a daughter, so they start performing penances to seek the favour of the god ]. Meanwhile, an apsara named Madhura arrives at ], the abode of Shiva, to pay her respects. In absence of his wife ], Madhura makes love with the god. When Parvati returns, she finds traces of ashes from her husband’s body on the breasts of Madhura. Agitated, Parvati curses Madhura and sends her to live in a well as a frog for twelve years. Shiva told Madhura that she will become a beautiful woman and be married to a great valorous man. After twelve years, Madhura becomes a beautiful maiden again and cries out loudly from the well. Mayasura and Hema, who are performing penance nearby, answer her call and adopt her as their daughter. They bring her up as Mandodari.<ref name = "Mani476"/><ref name="George Williams 2008">George Williams (2008) , A Handbook of Hindu Mythology, Oxford University Press, {{ISBN|978-0195332612}}, pages 208-9</ref> In this version, ], the son of the demon-king ] and Mandodari, is said to originate from the seed of Shiva embedded in Mandodari's body.<ref name="manushi" /> | ||
⚫ | |||
]'', Thotsakan (Ravana), carries Montho (Mandodari) back to his kingdom.]] | |||
⚫ | ==Marriage== | ||
⚫ | Ravana comes to the house of Mayasura and falls in love with Mandodari. Mandodari and Ravana are soon married with ] rites. Mandodari bears Ravana's |
||
In the Telugu '']'', Parvati creates a doll, which is turned into a damsel by Shiva. However later, Parvati becomes worried due to the maiden's beauty; Shiva turns her into a frog, who is later turned back to a human and granted to Mayasura as a daughter.<ref name="manushi" /> In another Telugu tale and the ] dance tradition, Ravana asks Shiva for Parvati as his wife. Shiva consents; however Parvati creates a look-alike maiden from a frog and entrusts her to Ravana. Since the woman was created from a frog, she was called Mandodari.<ref> Devlok Mini with Devdutt Pattnaik Feb 16, 2018</ref> In the '']'', Vishnu creates Mandodari from sandalwood paste smeared on his body and rescues Parvati from Ravana by handing him Mandodari as the real Parvati.<ref name="manushi" /> | |||
The frog motif also reiterated in other stories. The ] ''Dharma Purana'' narrates that the earth sends her son Maninaga to poison their cow's milk of the sages Mandar and Udar, who had denied her the share of the milk. A female frog jumps in the vessel to save the sages. Cursed by the sages for her supposed gluttony, she turns into a beautiful maiden called Vengavati. She has pre-marital coitus with ]. Ravana demands her hand in marriage from the sages, who refuse. Ravana assumes Vali's form and kidnaps Vengavati. The real Vali and Ravana pull in opposite directions, thereby tearing her apart. As a consequence, ] (generally described as ]'s son) is born. The death-god ] and wind-god ] resurrect her and is named as Mandodari, after the two sages. ] tradition narrates a similar tale where a snake poisoned the milk of a hermit; the female frog jumps in the milk and dies to rescue the sage. She is cursed by the hermit in the misbelief of her greed and turns into the beautiful Mandodari.<ref name="manushi">{{cite journal |last=Bhattacharya |first=Pradip |date=March–April 2004 |title=Five Holy Virgins, Five Sacred Myths: A Quest for Meaning (Part I) |url=http://www.manushi-india.org/pdfs_issues/PDF%20141/03%20panchakanya%204-12.pdf |journal=] |issue=141 |pages=9–10 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200928063740/http://manushi-india.org/pdfs_issues/PDF%20141/03%20panchakanya%204-12.pdf |archive-date=28 September 2020 |access-date=19 September 2020 |url-status=bot: unknown }}</ref> | |||
⚫ | ==Marriage with Ravana== | ||
⚫ | Ravana comes to the house of Mayasura and falls in love with Mandodari. Mandodari and Ravana are soon married with ] rites. Mandodari bears Ravana's three sons: ] (Indrajit), ] and ].<ref name = "Mani476"/> ], a town located 9 km north of ], is believed to be the native place of Mandodari. Ravana is treated as a son-in-law among some local ]s and has a temple dedicated to him here.<ref name="Times Of India#">{{cite news | url=http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/lucknow/Saluting-the-virtues-of-Ravan/articleshow/49344194.cms | title=Saluting the virtues of Ravan | work=Shailvee Sharda | date=14 October 2015 | agency=Times Of India | access-date=14 October 2015 | author=Times Of India | location=Lucknow}}</ref> | ||
Despite Ravana's faults, Mandodari loves him and is proud of his strength. She is aware of Ravana's weakness towards women.{{sfn|Mukherjee|1999|p=39}}{{sfn|Ayyer|2006|pp=50-51}} A righteous woman, Mandodari tries to lead Ravana to righteousness, but Ravana always ignores her advice. She advises him to not to subdue the '']'', the nine celestial beings that govern one's destiny, and not to seduce ], who would be reborn as Sita and cause the destruction of Ravana.{{sfn|Ayyer|2006|pp=50-51}} | Despite Ravana's faults, Mandodari loves him and is proud of his strength. She is aware of Ravana's weakness towards women.{{sfn|Mukherjee|1999|p=39}}{{sfn|Ayyer|2006|pp=50-51}} A righteous woman, Mandodari tries to lead Ravana to righteousness, but Ravana always ignores her advice. She advises him to not to subdue the '']'', the nine celestial beings that govern one's destiny, and not to seduce ], who would be reborn as Sita and cause the destruction of Ravana.{{sfn|Ayyer|2006|pp=50-51}} | ||
==Sita's rescue== | |||
==Saviour of Sita== | |||
Ravana kidnaps ], the wife of ], the exiled prince of ], who is an incarnation of the god ]. Mandodari advises Ravana to return Sita to Rama, but to no avail. Mandodari knows this lust will bring the downfall of Ravana.{{sfn|Mukherjee|1999|p=39}}{{sfn|Ayyer|2006|pp=50-51}} | |||
⚫ | Mandodari is described as a beautiful woman in Valmiki's Ramayana. When ], the monkey messenger of Rama, comes to Lanka in search of Sita, he is stupefied by Mandodari's beauty when he enters Ravana's bed chambers and mistakes Mandodari for Sita.<ref name = "Mani476">Mani p. 476</ref> When Hanuman finally finds Sita, he finds Ravana threatening to kill Sita unless she marries him. Ravana raises his sword to behead Sita when she refuses. Mandodari saves Sita by holding Ravana's hand. Mandodari says that the murder of a woman is a heinous sin and thus Ravana should not kill Sita. She asks Ravana to entertain himself with his other wives and give up the idea of having Sita as his wife. Ravana spares Sita's life, but does not give up his wish to marry Sita.{{sfn|Wheeler|1869|p=338}} Though Mandodari considers Sita inferior to her in beauty and ancestry, Mandodari acknowledges Sita's devotion to Rama and compares her to goddesses like ] and ].{{sfn|Mukherjee|1999|p=39}} | ||
] | ] | ||
⚫ | Mandodari is described as a beautiful woman in Valmiki's Ramayana. When ], the monkey messenger of Rama, comes to Lanka in search of Sita, he is stupefied by Mandodari's beauty when he enters Ravana's bed chambers and mistakes Mandodari for Sita.<ref name = "Mani476">Mani p. 476</ref> When Hanuman finally finds Sita, he finds Ravana threatening to kill Sita unless she marries him. Ravana raises his sword to behead Sita when she refuses. Mandodari saves Sita by holding Ravana's hand. Mandodari says that the murder of a woman is a heinous sin and thus Ravana should not kill Sita. She asks Ravana to entertain himself with his other wives and give up the idea of having Sita as his wife. Ravana spares Sita's life, but does not give up his wish to marry Sita.{{sfn|Wheeler|1869|p=338}} Though Mandodari considers Sita inferior to her in beauty and ancestry, Mandodari acknowledges Sita's devotion to Rama and compares her to goddesses like ] and ].{{sfn|Mukherjee|1999|p=39}} | ||
==During the war== | ==During the war== | ||
] steals from Mandodari the weapon that leads to |
] | ||
When all attempts for a peaceful return of Sita fail, Rama declares war on Ravana's Lanka. Before the final battle against Rama, Mandodari makes a last attempt to dissuade Ravana, but to no avail.{{sfn|Wheeler|1869|p=365}} Finally, Mandodari stands by her husband in the final battle like an obedient and faithful wife,{{sfn|Mukherjee|1999|p=39}} though she advises her son Meghanada, alias Indrajit ("One who had conquered ]; the god-king of heaven"), not to fight Rama.{{sfn|Wheeler|1869|p=370}} | When all attempts for a peaceful return of Sita fail, Rama declares war on Ravana's Lanka. Before the final battle against Rama, Mandodari makes a last attempt to dissuade Ravana, but to no avail.{{sfn|Wheeler|1869|p=365}} Finally, Mandodari stands by her husband in the final battle like an obedient and faithful wife,{{sfn|Mukherjee|1999|p=39}} though she advises her son Meghanada, alias Indrajit ("One who had conquered ]; the god-king of heaven"), not to fight Rama.{{sfn|Wheeler|1869|p=370}} | ||
Several manuscripts of the ''Ramayana'' mention a story in which Angada drags Mandodari by her hair in presence of Ravana as a punishment for Ravana's treatment of Sita. Satyatirtha, a commentator on ''Ramayana'', dismisses this story as spurious.{{sfn|Goldman et al.|2009|p=1320}} According to this story: When all of Ravana's sons and warriors die, Ravana organizes a '']'' ("fire sacrifice") to assure his victory. Rama sends a troop of monkeys headed by Hanuman and the monkey prince ] to destroy this ''yajna''. The monkeys create havoc in Ravana's palace, but Ravana continues the ''yajna''. Angada drags Mandodari by her hair in front of Ravana. Mandodari pleads to her husband to save her and reminds him what Rama is doing for his wife. The enraged Ravana abandons the ''yajna'' and strikes Angada with his sword. With the ''yajna'' disturbed, Angada's purpose is served and he leaves Mandodari and escapes. Mandodari again implores Ravana to surrender Sita to Rama, but he refuses.{{sfn|Wheeler|1869|pp=373-4}} Other Ramayana adaptations present more gruesome descriptions of the incident. The '']'' narrates that the monkeys dragged Mandodari and tore off her clothes. In ''Bicitra Ramayana'', it is Hanuman who humiliates Mandodari. The Thai adaptation '']'' narrates |
Several manuscripts of the ''Ramayana'' mention a story in which Angada drags Mandodari by her hair in presence of Ravana as a punishment for Ravana's treatment of Sita. Satyatirtha, a commentator on ''Ramayana'', dismisses this story as spurious.{{sfn|Goldman et al.|2009|p=1320}} According to this story: When all of Ravana's sons and warriors die, Ravana organizes a '']'' ("fire sacrifice") to assure his victory. Rama sends a troop of monkeys headed by Hanuman and the monkey prince ] to destroy this ''yajna''. The monkeys create havoc in Ravana's palace, but Ravana continues the ''yajna''. Angada drags Mandodari by her hair in front of Ravana. Mandodari pleads to her husband to save her and reminds him what Rama is doing for his wife. The enraged Ravana abandons the ''yajna'' and strikes Angada with his sword. With the ''yajna'' disturbed, Angada's purpose is served and he leaves Mandodari and escapes. Mandodari again implores Ravana to surrender Sita to Rama, but he refuses.{{sfn|Wheeler|1869|pp=373-4}} Other Ramayana adaptations present more gruesome descriptions of the incident. The '']'' narrates that the monkeys dragged Mandodari and tore off her clothes. In ''Bicitra Ramayana'', it is Hanuman who humiliates Mandodari. The Thai adaptation '']'' narrates that Hanuman sleeps with Mandodari in the form of Ravana and destroys her chastity, which protects Ravana's life.{{sfn|Lutgendorf|2007|p=211}} | ||
Ravana fights the final duel with Rama. Rama fails to kill Ravana with his ordinary arrows, but finally kills with a magical arrow. While Valmiki's Ramayana narrates that the magical arrow was given to Rama by Indra, in other versions the magical arrow is hidden in Mandodari's bed chambers or under her bed. While Mandodari is engrossed in worshipping the goddess ] for Ravana's wellbeing, Hanuman comes to her disguised as a |
Ravana fights the final duel with Rama. Rama fails to kill Ravana with his ordinary arrows, but finally kills with a magical arrow. While Valmiki's Ramayana narrates that the magical arrow was given to Rama by Indra, in other versions the magical arrow is hidden in Mandodari's bed chambers or under her bed. While Mandodari is engrossed in worshipping the goddess ] for Ravana's wellbeing, Hanuman comes to her disguised as a hermit. After winning her confidence, he tricks her into revealing the secret location of the arrow. Hanuman seizes the arrow and gives it to Rama, leading to Ravana's end.{{sfn|Lutgendorf|2007|pp=154, 217}} Mandodari appears at the death scene of Ravana in a disarrayed state and laments his death.{{sfn|Mukherjee|1999|p=39}}{{sfn|Wheeler|1869|p=382}} In this battle, Mandodari loses her husband, her sons and her kinsmen.<ref name="Bhattacharya"/> | ||
] | |||
==Remarriage to Vibhishana== | |||
==Later life== | |||
While the Ramayana of Valmiki is silent on Mandodari's fate after Ravana's death,{{fact|date=November 2022}} many versions of Ramayana state that after the death of Ravana, Rama advises Vibhishana to take Mandodari as his wife, even though he already had a wife.{{sfn|Shashi|1998|p=222}} A theory suggests that Ravana's race may have had ] families and thus, to restore order in the kingdom after Ravana's death, it was necessary for Vibhishana to marry the reigning queen to get the right to rule.{{sfn|Shashi|1998|p=222}} Another theory suggests it may be a non-] custom to marry the reigning queen.<ref name="Bhattacharya"/> The marriage between Mandodari and Vibhishana is purely an "act of statesmanship", rather than a marriage based on their "mutual sexual interference".{{sfn|Shashi|1998|p=222}} Mandodari may have agreed to marry Vibhishana, her younger brother-in-law, as this would lead the kingdom to prosperity and stability as allies of Rama's Ayodhya, and she would continue to have a say in governance.<ref name="Bhattacharya"/> Another reason for the marriage is as an alternative to suicide for the widowed Mandodari, which is averted by Rama.{{sfn|Shashi|1998|p=222}} | |||
==Mother of Sita |
==Mother of Sita== | ||
] | ] | ||
Though Valmiki's Ramayana does not record Mandodari as being the mother of Sita, some later adaptations of the Ramayana depict Mandodari as the mother of Sita or at least the cause of the latter's birth. | Though Valmiki's Ramayana does not record Mandodari as being the mother of Sita, some later adaptations of the Ramayana depict Mandodari as the mother of Sita or at least the cause of the latter's birth. | ||
The '']'' narrates: Ravana used to store the blood of sages he killed in a large pot. The sage Gritsamada was practicing penance to acquire the goddess Lakshmi as his daughter. He stored milk from Darbha grass and purified it with ]s in a pot so that Lakshmi would inhabit it. Ravana poured the milk from this pot into his blood pot. Mandodari is frustrated seeing the evil deeds of Ravana, so she decides to commit suicide by drinking the contents of the blood-pot, which is described to be more poisonous than poison. Instead of dying, Mandodari gets pregnant with the incarnation of Lakshmi due to the power of Gritsamada's milk. Mandodari buries the foetus in ], where it is discovered by Janaka, who named her Sita.<ref name = "Mani721"/>{{sfn|Shashi|1998|pp=14-15, Sarga VIII of Adbhuta Ramayana}} | The '']'' narrates: Ravana used to store the blood of sages he killed in a large pot. The sage ] was practicing penance to acquire the goddess ] as his daughter. He stored milk from ] grass and purified it with ]s in a pot so that Lakshmi would inhabit it. Ravana poured the milk from this pot into his blood pot. Mandodari is frustrated seeing the evil deeds of Ravana, so she decides to commit suicide by drinking the contents of the blood-pot, which is described to be more poisonous than poison. Instead of dying, Mandodari gets pregnant with the incarnation of Lakshmi due to the power of Gritsamada's milk. Mandodari buries the foetus in ], where it is discovered by ], who named her Sita.<ref name = "Mani721"/>{{sfn|Shashi|1998|pp=14-15, Sarga VIII of Adbhuta Ramayana}} | ||
The '']'' says: When Ravana wants to marry Mandodari, Maya warns him that her horoscope indicated her first-born would destroy her clan and should be killed. Ignoring Maya's advice, Ravana buries his first child by Mandodari in a casket in Janaka’s city, where it is discovered and grew up as Sita.<ref name = "Mani721"/> ] adaptations of the Ramayana like ''Vasudevahindi'', ''Uttara-purana'', and others also state that Sita is the daughter of Ravana and Mandodari, and is abandoned when she is prophesied to be the cause of the end of Ravana and his family.{{sfn|Shashi|1998|p=237}} | The '']'' says: When Ravana wants to marry Mandodari, ] warns him that her horoscope indicated her first-born would destroy her clan and should be killed. Ignoring Maya's advice, Ravana buries his first child by Mandodari in a casket in Janaka’s city, where it is discovered and grew up as Sita.<ref name = "Mani721"/> ] adaptations of the Ramayana like '']'', ''Uttara-purana'', and others also state that Sita is the daughter of Ravana and Mandodari, and is abandoned when she is prophesied to be the cause of the end of Ravana and his family.{{sfn|Shashi|1998|p=237}} | ||
In the ] ''Seri Rama'' and the ]-]nese ''Rama Keling'', Ravana wants to possess Mandodari, the mother of Rama, but instead marries a pseudo-Mandodari, who looks like the real one. Rama's father has a union with this pseudo-Mandodari, resulting in the birth of Sita, who is nominally Ravana's daughter.{{sfn|Shashi|1998|p=243}} | In the ] ''Seri Rama'' and the ]-]nese ''Rama Keling'', Ravana wants to possess Mandodari, the mother of Rama, but instead marries a pseudo-Mandodari, who looks like the real one. Rama's father has a union with this pseudo-Mandodari, resulting in the birth of Sita, who is nominally Ravana's daughter.{{sfn|Shashi|1998|p=243}} | ||
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]. She brings a flower garland to lay upon her husband's body which rests on cremation wood. Bas-relief of 9th century ] temple, Java, ].]] | ]. She brings a flower garland to lay upon her husband's body which rests on cremation wood. Bas-relief of 9th century ] temple, Java, ].]] | ||
<blockquote> | <blockquote> | ||
{{IAST|Ahalyā |
{{IAST|Ahalyā draupadi sita tārā mandodari tathā <br /> | ||
pañcakanyā smarenityaṃ mahapātaka nāśanaṃ }} | pañcakanyā smarenityaṃ mahapātaka nāśanaṃ }} | ||
<br /> | <br /> | ||
Remembering ever the |
Remembering ever the five goddess-], ], ], ] and Mandodari<br /> | ||
Destroys the greatest of sins.<ref name="panchakanya">{{cite journal|last=Devika|first=V.R.|title=Women of substance: Ahalya|journal=]|date = October 29, 2006|volume = 24|issue = 48|page = 52}}</ref> | Destroys the greatest of sins.<ref name="panchakanya">{{cite journal|last=Devika|first=V.R.|title=Women of substance: Ahalya|journal=]|date = October 29, 2006|volume = 24|issue = 48|page = 52}}</ref> | ||
</blockquote> | </blockquote> | ||
Hindus remember the ''panchakanya'' - the five |
Hindus remember the ''panchakanya'' - the five maidens in this daily prayer, though none of them is considered an ideal woman who could be emulated.{{sfn|Mukherjee|1999|p=36}}{{sfn|Mukherjee|1999|pp=48-49}} Mandodari, with Ahalya, Sita and Tara, belong to the ''Ramayana'', while Draupadi is from the '']''.<ref name="Bhattacharya">{{cite web|url=http://www.boloji.com/hinduism/panchkanya/pk01.htm|title=Panchkanya: Women of Substance|last=Bhattacharya|first=Pradip|date=1999–2010|publisher=Boloji Media Inc|access-date=15 June 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100114164455/http://boloji.com/hinduism/panchkanya/pk01.htm|archive-date=14 January 2010|url-status=dead}}</ref> Among the five ], Mandodari is equated to water, "turbulent on the surface and deep in her spiritual quest".{{sfn|Ayyer|2006|pp=50-51}} The writer Dhanalakshmi Ayyer says:{{sfn|Ayyer|2006|pp=50-51}} | ||
<blockquote> | <blockquote> | ||
Her story is a reminder that the universal denigration of a group, based on the behaviour of a few, cannot cloud the greatness of the individual. Mandodari defies the stereotype of this racism. She is simple, unswerving, and self-effacing, driven by the light of knowledge which gives meaning to solid materialism in an age that is shrouded by impulse, passion, and desire. She is the instrument that awakens the mind and counsels reason when irrationality becomes the core being. That she goes unheard and unheeded does not change her path. To her, the ] part is inward-looking, while the role of the dutiful wife is the external self. Mandodari thought that her duty to her husband on issues of morals and values ended with her telling him what she thought of his actions. She neither put up any brave fight to stop him nor considered it her duty to do so. | Her story is a reminder that the universal denigration of a group, based on the behaviour of a few, cannot cloud the greatness of the individual. Mandodari defies the stereotype of this racism. She is simple, unswerving, and self-effacing, driven by the light of knowledge which gives meaning to solid materialism in an age that is shrouded by impulse, passion, and desire. She is the instrument that awakens the mind and counsels reason when irrationality becomes the core being. That she goes unheard and unheeded does not change her path. To her, the ] part is inward-looking, while the role of the dutiful wife is the external self. Mandodari thought that her duty to her husband on issues of morals and values ended with her telling him what she thought of his actions. She neither put up any brave fight to stop him nor considered it her duty to do so. | ||
</blockquote> | </blockquote> | ||
Mandodari's role is short in the Ramayana but very important. She is described as a pious and righteous royal lady.{{sfn|Mukherjee|1999|p=39}}{{sfn|Ayyer|2006|pp=50-51}} Compared to the rest of the ''panchakanya'', Mukherjee considers Mandodari's life as "less colourful and eventful". He adds: "Mandodari seldom got prominence ... Her image lacks substance and fades quickly",{{sfn|Mukherjee|1999|p=39}} though he lays stress on her love and loyalty towards her husband.{{sfn|Mukherjee|1999|pp=48-49}} Pradip Bhattacharya, author of the book ''Panchkanya: Women of Substance'' notes that "there is hardly anything special that Valmiki (Ramayana) has written about her (Mandodari) except that she warns her husband to return Sita and has enough influence to prevent |
Mandodari's role is short in the Ramayana but very important. She is described as a pious and righteous royal lady.{{sfn|Mukherjee|1999|p=39}}{{sfn|Ayyer|2006|pp=50-51}} Compared to the rest of the ''panchakanya'', Mukherjee considers Mandodari's life as "less colourful and eventful". He adds: "Mandodari seldom got prominence ... Her image lacks substance and fades quickly",{{sfn|Mukherjee|1999|p=39}} though he lays stress on her love and loyalty towards her husband.{{sfn|Mukherjee|1999|pp=48-49}} Pradip Bhattacharya, author of the book ''Panchkanya: Women of Substance'' notes that "there is hardly anything special that Valmiki (Ramayana) has written about her (Mandodari) except that she warns her husband to return Sita and has enough influence to prevent his raping her."<ref name="Bhattacharya"/> | ||
==In other cultures== | |||
Mandodari's name is used for one of the letters of the ], ''tho montho'' (ฑ มณโฑ). | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
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; Bibliography | ; Bibliography | ||
{{ |
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* {{cite journal|last=Ayyer|first=Dhanalakshmi |title=Women of substance: Mandodari : Pure as water|journal=]|year=2006|volume = 24|issue = 48|pages = 50–1 |
* {{cite journal|last=Ayyer|first=Dhanalakshmi |title=Women of substance: Mandodari : Pure as water|journal=]|year=2006|volume = 24|issue = 48|pages = 50–1 }} | ||
* {{cite book |editor1=Robert P. Goldman |editor2=Sally J. Sutherland Goldman |editor3=Barend A. van Nooten |title=The Rāmāyaṇa of Vālmīki: An Epic of Ancient India |volume=VI: Yuddhakāṇḍa |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vDibDgAAQBAJ&pg=PA1320 |year=2009 |publisher=Princeton University Press |isbn=978-1-4008-3326-9 |page=1320 |ref={{harvid|Goldman et al.|2009}}}} | * {{cite book |editor1=Robert P. Goldman |editor2=Sally J. Sutherland Goldman |editor3=Barend A. van Nooten |title=The Rāmāyaṇa of Vālmīki: An Epic of Ancient India |volume=VI: Yuddhakāṇḍa |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vDibDgAAQBAJ&pg=PA1320 |year=2009 |publisher=Princeton University Press |isbn=978-1-4008-3326-9 |page=1320 |ref={{harvid|Goldman et al.|2009}}}} | ||
* {{cite book|last=Lutgendorf|first=Philip|title=Hanuman's tale: the messages of a divine monkey|year=2007|publisher=Oxford University Press |location=US |
* {{cite book|last=Lutgendorf|first=Philip|title=Hanuman's tale: the messages of a divine monkey|year=2007|publisher=Oxford University Press |location=US }} | ||
*{{cite book|author = Mani, Vettam|title = Puranic Encyclopaedia: A Comprehensive Dictionary With Special Reference to the Epic and Puranic Literature|url = https://archive.org/details/puranicencyclopa00maniuoft|publisher = Motilal Banarsidass|year = 1975|location = Delhi|isbn = 0-8426-0822-2}} | *{{cite book|author = Mani, Vettam|title = Puranic Encyclopaedia: A Comprehensive Dictionary With Special Reference to the Epic and Puranic Literature|url = https://archive.org/details/puranicencyclopa00maniuoft|publisher = Motilal Banarsidass|year = 1975|location = Delhi|isbn = 0-8426-0822-2}} | ||
* {{cite book|last=Mukherjee|first=Prabhati|title=Hindu Women: Normative Models |year=1999|publisher=Orient Blackswan|location=Calcutta|isbn=81-250-1699-6 |
* {{cite book|last=Mukherjee|first=Prabhati|title=Hindu Women: Normative Models |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6ovdvq7mjpUC&q=Hindu+Women%3A+Normative+Models.+Calcutta%3A+Orient+Blackswan|year=1999|publisher=Orient Blackswan|location=Calcutta|isbn=81-250-1699-6}} | ||
* {{cite book|last=Shashi|first=S. S.|title=Encyclopaedia Indica: India, Pakistan, Bangladesh|series=Encyclopaedia Indica|volume=21-35|year=1998|publisher=Anmol |
* {{cite book|last=Shashi|first=S. S.|title=Encyclopaedia Indica: India, Pakistan, Bangladesh|series=Encyclopaedia Indica|volume=21-35|year=1998|publisher=Anmol }} | ||
* {{cite book|last=Wheeler|first=James Talboys |title=The History of India from the Earliest Ages: The Rámáyana and the Brahmanic period|volume=II|year=1869|publisher=N. Trübner|location=London|url = https://books.google.com/books?id=C1DRAAAAMAAJ& |
* {{cite book|last=Wheeler|first=James Talboys |title=The History of India from the Earliest Ages: The Rámáyana and the Brahmanic period|volume=II|year=1869|publisher=N. Trübner|location=London|url = https://books.google.com/books?id=C1DRAAAAMAAJ&q=mandodari+&pg=PA373 }} | ||
*{{Cite book|last=Dutt|first=Manmathnath|url=https://archive.org/stream/Ramayana_201309/Ramayana-VOL-4-Uttara-Kanda#page/n15/mode/2up|title=Ramayana - Uttara Kanda|date=1891}} | *{{Cite book|last=Dutt|first=Manmathnath|url=https://archive.org/stream/Ramayana_201309/Ramayana-VOL-4-Uttara-Kanda#page/n15/mode/2up|title=Ramayana - Uttara Kanda|date=1891}} | ||
{{ |
{{Refend}} | ||
==External links== | |||
{{Wikiquote}} | |||
*{{commonscat-inline}} | |||
*{{wikiquote-inline}} | |||
{{Ramayana}} | {{Ramayana}} | ||
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{{Good article}} | {{Good article}} | ||
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Latest revision as of 08:11, 26 December 2024
Chief wife of Lanka king Ravana in Hindu epic Ramayana
Mandodari | |
---|---|
Member of Panchakanya | |
Raja Ravi Varma's lithograph on Mandodari | |
Devanagari | मंदोदरी |
Sanskrit transliteration | Mandodarī |
Affiliation | Rakshasi Panchakanya |
Abode | Lanka |
Texts | Ramayana and its versions |
Genealogy | |
Parents | |
Siblings | Mayavi, Dundubhi and Vyomasura(brothers) |
Consort | Ravana, and later Vibhishana |
Children | Meghanada, Atikaya and Akshayakumara (sons) |
Mandodari (Sanskrit: मंदोदरी, Mandodarī, lit. "soft-bellied";) was the queen consort of Ravana, the king of Lanka, according to the Hindu epic Ramayana. The Ramayana describes her as beautiful, pious, and righteous. She is extolled as one of the Panchakanya, the recital of whose names is believed to dispel sin.
Mandodari was the daughter of Mayasura, the King of the Asuras (demons), and the apsara (celestial nymphs) Hema. She marries Ravana and bears three sons: Meghanada (Indrajit), Atikaya and Akshayakumara. According to some Ramayana adaptations, Mandodari is also the mother of Rama's wife Sita, who is infamously kidnapped by Ravana. Despite her husband's faults, Mandodari loves him and advises him to follow the path of righteousness. She repeatedly advises Ravana to return Sita to Rama, but her advice falls on deaf ears. Her love and loyalty to Rāvana are praised in the Rāmāyana.
In a version of Ramayana, Hanuman tricks her into disclosing the location of a magical arrow which Rama uses to kill Ravana. Many versions of Ramayana state that after Ravana's death, Vibhishana—Ravana's younger brother who joins forces with Rama, does so on Mandodari's advice.
Birth and early life
The Uttara Kanda of the Ramayana mentions that Mayasura visited Svarga (heaven), where the apsara Hema was given to him by the gods. They had two sons, Mayavi and Dundubhi, and a daughter, Mandodari. Later, Hema returned to heaven; Mandodari and her siblings were left with their father.
There are varying accounts of Mandodari's birth. The Telugu text Uttara Ramayana mentions that Mayasura is married to the apsara Hema. They have two sons, Mayavi and Dundubhi, but long for a daughter, so they start performing penances to seek the favour of the god Shiva. Meanwhile, an apsara named Madhura arrives at Mount Kailash, the abode of Shiva, to pay her respects. In absence of his wife Parvati, Madhura makes love with the god. When Parvati returns, she finds traces of ashes from her husband’s body on the breasts of Madhura. Agitated, Parvati curses Madhura and sends her to live in a well as a frog for twelve years. Shiva told Madhura that she will become a beautiful woman and be married to a great valorous man. After twelve years, Madhura becomes a beautiful maiden again and cries out loudly from the well. Mayasura and Hema, who are performing penance nearby, answer her call and adopt her as their daughter. They bring her up as Mandodari. In this version, Meghanada, the son of the demon-king Ravana and Mandodari, is said to originate from the seed of Shiva embedded in Mandodari's body.
In the Telugu Ranganatha Ramayana, Parvati creates a doll, which is turned into a damsel by Shiva. However later, Parvati becomes worried due to the maiden's beauty; Shiva turns her into a frog, who is later turned back to a human and granted to Mayasura as a daughter. In another Telugu tale and the Kuchipudi dance tradition, Ravana asks Shiva for Parvati as his wife. Shiva consents; however Parvati creates a look-alike maiden from a frog and entrusts her to Ravana. Since the woman was created from a frog, she was called Mandodari. In the Ananda Ramayana, Vishnu creates Mandodari from sandalwood paste smeared on his body and rescues Parvati from Ravana by handing him Mandodari as the real Parvati.
The frog motif also reiterated in other stories. The Odia Dharma Purana narrates that the earth sends her son Maninaga to poison their cow's milk of the sages Mandar and Udar, who had denied her the share of the milk. A female frog jumps in the vessel to save the sages. Cursed by the sages for her supposed gluttony, she turns into a beautiful maiden called Vengavati. She has pre-marital coitus with Vali. Ravana demands her hand in marriage from the sages, who refuse. Ravana assumes Vali's form and kidnaps Vengavati. The real Vali and Ravana pull in opposite directions, thereby tearing her apart. As a consequence, Angada (generally described as Tara's son) is born. The death-god Yama and wind-god Vayu resurrect her and is named as Mandodari, after the two sages. Mahari dance tradition narrates a similar tale where a snake poisoned the milk of a hermit; the female frog jumps in the milk and dies to rescue the sage. She is cursed by the hermit in the misbelief of her greed and turns into the beautiful Mandodari.
Marriage with Ravana
Ravana comes to the house of Mayasura and falls in love with Mandodari. Mandodari and Ravana are soon married with Vedic rites. Mandodari bears Ravana's three sons: Meghanada (Indrajit), Atikaya and Akshayakumara. Mandore, a town located 9 km north of Jodhpur, is believed to be the native place of Mandodari. Ravana is treated as a son-in-law among some local Brahmins and has a temple dedicated to him here.
Despite Ravana's faults, Mandodari loves him and is proud of his strength. She is aware of Ravana's weakness towards women. A righteous woman, Mandodari tries to lead Ravana to righteousness, but Ravana always ignores her advice. She advises him to not to subdue the Navagraha, the nine celestial beings that govern one's destiny, and not to seduce Vedavati, who would be reborn as Sita and cause the destruction of Ravana.
Saviour of Sita
Mandodari is described as a beautiful woman in Valmiki's Ramayana. When Hanuman, the monkey messenger of Rama, comes to Lanka in search of Sita, he is stupefied by Mandodari's beauty when he enters Ravana's bed chambers and mistakes Mandodari for Sita. When Hanuman finally finds Sita, he finds Ravana threatening to kill Sita unless she marries him. Ravana raises his sword to behead Sita when she refuses. Mandodari saves Sita by holding Ravana's hand. Mandodari says that the murder of a woman is a heinous sin and thus Ravana should not kill Sita. She asks Ravana to entertain himself with his other wives and give up the idea of having Sita as his wife. Ravana spares Sita's life, but does not give up his wish to marry Sita. Though Mandodari considers Sita inferior to her in beauty and ancestry, Mandodari acknowledges Sita's devotion to Rama and compares her to goddesses like Sachi and Rohini.
During the war
When all attempts for a peaceful return of Sita fail, Rama declares war on Ravana's Lanka. Before the final battle against Rama, Mandodari makes a last attempt to dissuade Ravana, but to no avail. Finally, Mandodari stands by her husband in the final battle like an obedient and faithful wife, though she advises her son Meghanada, alias Indrajit ("One who had conquered Indra; the god-king of heaven"), not to fight Rama.
Several manuscripts of the Ramayana mention a story in which Angada drags Mandodari by her hair in presence of Ravana as a punishment for Ravana's treatment of Sita. Satyatirtha, a commentator on Ramayana, dismisses this story as spurious. According to this story: When all of Ravana's sons and warriors die, Ravana organizes a yajna ("fire sacrifice") to assure his victory. Rama sends a troop of monkeys headed by Hanuman and the monkey prince Angada to destroy this yajna. The monkeys create havoc in Ravana's palace, but Ravana continues the yajna. Angada drags Mandodari by her hair in front of Ravana. Mandodari pleads to her husband to save her and reminds him what Rama is doing for his wife. The enraged Ravana abandons the yajna and strikes Angada with his sword. With the yajna disturbed, Angada's purpose is served and he leaves Mandodari and escapes. Mandodari again implores Ravana to surrender Sita to Rama, but he refuses. Other Ramayana adaptations present more gruesome descriptions of the incident. The Krittivasi Ramayan narrates that the monkeys dragged Mandodari and tore off her clothes. In Bicitra Ramayana, it is Hanuman who humiliates Mandodari. The Thai adaptation Ramakien narrates that Hanuman sleeps with Mandodari in the form of Ravana and destroys her chastity, which protects Ravana's life.
Ravana fights the final duel with Rama. Rama fails to kill Ravana with his ordinary arrows, but finally kills with a magical arrow. While Valmiki's Ramayana narrates that the magical arrow was given to Rama by Indra, in other versions the magical arrow is hidden in Mandodari's bed chambers or under her bed. While Mandodari is engrossed in worshipping the goddess Parvati for Ravana's wellbeing, Hanuman comes to her disguised as a hermit. After winning her confidence, he tricks her into revealing the secret location of the arrow. Hanuman seizes the arrow and gives it to Rama, leading to Ravana's end. Mandodari appears at the death scene of Ravana in a disarrayed state and laments his death. In this battle, Mandodari loses her husband, her sons and her kinsmen.
Remarriage to Vibhishana
While the Ramayana of Valmiki is silent on Mandodari's fate after Ravana's death, many versions of Ramayana state that after the death of Ravana, Rama advises Vibhishana to take Mandodari as his wife, even though he already had a wife. A theory suggests that Ravana's race may have had matrilineal families and thus, to restore order in the kingdom after Ravana's death, it was necessary for Vibhishana to marry the reigning queen to get the right to rule. Another theory suggests it may be a non-Aryan custom to marry the reigning queen. The marriage between Mandodari and Vibhishana is purely an "act of statesmanship", rather than a marriage based on their "mutual sexual interference". Mandodari may have agreed to marry Vibhishana, her younger brother-in-law, as this would lead the kingdom to prosperity and stability as allies of Rama's Ayodhya, and she would continue to have a say in governance. Another reason for the marriage is as an alternative to suicide for the widowed Mandodari, which is averted by Rama.
Mother of Sita
Though Valmiki's Ramayana does not record Mandodari as being the mother of Sita, some later adaptations of the Ramayana depict Mandodari as the mother of Sita or at least the cause of the latter's birth.
The Adbhuta Ramayana narrates: Ravana used to store the blood of sages he killed in a large pot. The sage Gritsamada was practicing penance to acquire the goddess Lakshmi as his daughter. He stored milk from Darbha grass and purified it with mantras in a pot so that Lakshmi would inhabit it. Ravana poured the milk from this pot into his blood pot. Mandodari is frustrated seeing the evil deeds of Ravana, so she decides to commit suicide by drinking the contents of the blood-pot, which is described to be more poisonous than poison. Instead of dying, Mandodari gets pregnant with the incarnation of Lakshmi due to the power of Gritsamada's milk. Mandodari buries the foetus in Kurukshetra, where it is discovered by Janaka, who named her Sita.
The Devi Bhagavata Purana says: When Ravana wants to marry Mandodari, Maya warns him that her horoscope indicated her first-born would destroy her clan and should be killed. Ignoring Maya's advice, Ravana buries his first child by Mandodari in a casket in Janaka’s city, where it is discovered and grew up as Sita. Jain adaptations of the Ramayana like Vasudevahindi, Uttara-purana, and others also state that Sita is the daughter of Ravana and Mandodari, and is abandoned when she is prophesied to be the cause of the end of Ravana and his family.
In the Malay Seri Rama and the Indonesian-Javanese Rama Keling, Ravana wants to possess Mandodari, the mother of Rama, but instead marries a pseudo-Mandodari, who looks like the real one. Rama's father has a union with this pseudo-Mandodari, resulting in the birth of Sita, who is nominally Ravana's daughter.
According to the Ananda Ramayana, king Padmaksha had a daughter named Padma - an incarnate of the goddess Lakshmi. When her marriage is organized, Rakshasas (demons) kill the king. The grief-stricken Padma jumps into fire. Ravana discovers her body, which had turned into five jewels, in the fire and takes it to Lanka sealed in a box. Mandodari opens the box and finds Padma inside it. She advises Ravana to cast off the box containing the ill-fated Padma, who led to the doom of her father. When the lid of the box is closed, Padma curses Ravana that she will return to Lanka and cause his doom. Ravana buries the box in the city of Janaka, who discovers Padma and brings her up as Sita.
Assessment
Ahalyā draupadi sita tārā mandodari tathā
pañcakanyā smarenityaṃ mahapātaka nāśanaṃ
Remembering ever the five goddess-Ahalya, Draupadi, Sita, Tara and Mandodari
Destroys the greatest of sins.
Hindus remember the panchakanya - the five maidens in this daily prayer, though none of them is considered an ideal woman who could be emulated. Mandodari, with Ahalya, Sita and Tara, belong to the Ramayana, while Draupadi is from the Mahabharata. Among the five elements, Mandodari is equated to water, "turbulent on the surface and deep in her spiritual quest". The writer Dhanalakshmi Ayyer says:
Her story is a reminder that the universal denigration of a group, based on the behaviour of a few, cannot cloud the greatness of the individual. Mandodari defies the stereotype of this racism. She is simple, unswerving, and self-effacing, driven by the light of knowledge which gives meaning to solid materialism in an age that is shrouded by impulse, passion, and desire. She is the instrument that awakens the mind and counsels reason when irrationality becomes the core being. That she goes unheard and unheeded does not change her path. To her, the dharmic part is inward-looking, while the role of the dutiful wife is the external self. Mandodari thought that her duty to her husband on issues of morals and values ended with her telling him what she thought of his actions. She neither put up any brave fight to stop him nor considered it her duty to do so.
Mandodari's role is short in the Ramayana but very important. She is described as a pious and righteous royal lady. Compared to the rest of the panchakanya, Mukherjee considers Mandodari's life as "less colourful and eventful". He adds: "Mandodari seldom got prominence ... Her image lacks substance and fades quickly", though he lays stress on her love and loyalty towards her husband. Pradip Bhattacharya, author of the book Panchkanya: Women of Substance notes that "there is hardly anything special that Valmiki (Ramayana) has written about her (Mandodari) except that she warns her husband to return Sita and has enough influence to prevent his raping her."
References
- Notes
- Rāmopākhyāna: the story of Rāma in the Mahābhārata p.429
- Manmathnath Dutt (1891). Ramayana - Uttara Kanda.
- ^ Bhattacharya, Pradip (March–April 2004). "Five Holy Virgins, Five Sacred Myths: A Quest for Meaning (Part I)" (PDF). Manushi (141): 9–10. Archived from the original on 28 September 2020. Retrieved 19 September 2020.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - Vālmīki; Goldman, Sally J. Sutherland; Lefeber, Rosalind; Pollock, Sheldon I. (1984). The Rāmāyaṇa of Vālmīki: An Epic of Ancient India. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-06663-9.
- ^ Mani p. 476
- George Williams (2008) , A Handbook of Hindu Mythology, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0195332612, pages 208-9
- Mandodari - Born of a Frog Devlok Mini with Devdutt Pattnaik Feb 16, 2018
- Times Of India (14 October 2015). "Saluting the virtues of Ravan". Shailvee Sharda. Lucknow. Times Of India. Retrieved 14 October 2015.
- ^ Mukherjee 1999, p. 39.
- ^ Ayyer 2006, pp. 50–51.
- Wheeler 1869, p. 338.
- Wheeler 1869, p. 365.
- Wheeler 1869, p. 370.
- Goldman et al. 2009, p. 1320.
- Wheeler 1869, pp. 373–4.
- Lutgendorf 2007, p. 211.
- Lutgendorf 2007, pp. 154, 217.
- Wheeler 1869, p. 382.
- ^ Bhattacharya, Pradip (1999–2010). "Panchkanya: Women of Substance". Boloji Media Inc. Archived from the original on 14 January 2010. Retrieved 15 June 2010.
- ^ Shashi 1998, p. 222.
- ^ Mani p. 721
- Shashi 1998, pp. 14–15, Sarga VIII of Adbhuta Ramayana.
- Shashi 1998, p. 237.
- Shashi 1998, p. 243.
- Devika, V.R. (29 October 2006). "Women of substance: Ahalya". The Week. 24 (48): 52.
- Mukherjee 1999, p. 36.
- ^ Mukherjee 1999, pp. 48–49.
- Bibliography
- Ayyer, Dhanalakshmi (2006). "Women of substance: Mandodari : Pure as water". The Week. 24 (48): 50–1.
- Robert P. Goldman; Sally J. Sutherland Goldman; Barend A. van Nooten, eds. (2009). The Rāmāyaṇa of Vālmīki: An Epic of Ancient India. Vol. VI: Yuddhakāṇḍa. Princeton University Press. p. 1320. ISBN 978-1-4008-3326-9.
- Lutgendorf, Philip (2007). Hanuman's tale: the messages of a divine monkey. US: Oxford University Press.
- Mani, Vettam (1975). Puranic Encyclopaedia: A Comprehensive Dictionary With Special Reference to the Epic and Puranic Literature. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 0-8426-0822-2.
- Mukherjee, Prabhati (1999). Hindu Women: Normative Models. Calcutta: Orient Blackswan. ISBN 81-250-1699-6.
- Shashi, S. S. (1998). Encyclopaedia Indica: India, Pakistan, Bangladesh. Encyclopaedia Indica. Vol. 21–35. Anmol.
- Wheeler, James Talboys (1869). The History of India from the Earliest Ages: The Rámáyana and the Brahmanic period. Vol. II. London: N. Trübner.
- Dutt, Manmathnath (1891). Ramayana - Uttara Kanda.
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