Who is satyaki in mahabharat




















Drona gets so frustrated by Satyaki, that he even uses divine weapons, which Satyaki counters using his knowledge of divine weapons from his education under Arjuna. When Shri Krishna went to Duryodhana for one final attempt to maintain peace, Satyaki accompanied him.

It was then when Duryodhana ordered him to be imprisoned, Satyaki draws his sword to fight. But Shri Krishna holds him back. Satyaki dies when the curse of Gandhari came to its fulfillment. Satyaki in anger said that he would kill Kritavarma for slaying the warriors of the Pandava army while they were asleep.

Having said this he rushed towards Kritavarma and severed his head with a sword. Krishna then ran to stop Satyaki. The Bhojas and the Andhakas incensed at Satyaki surrounded him.

Krishna knowing the character of the hour stood there unmoved. The Bhojas and Andhakas started striking Satyaki with the pots in which they had been eating. Bhagdatta was a fierce warrior who fought from the side of Duryodhana. He used Vaishnavastra on Arjuna, but as Lord Krishna was there, it fell upon him as a garland. Shri Krishna then advised Arjuna to first cut the support to his eyelids, as Bhagdatta was old and his eyelids were blocking the vision.

He used to tie them up so that he could see properly. Duly, Arjuna cut the ropes holding his eyelids. This made him virtually blind, and then Arjuna killed him. There were few times in Mahabharata, when even Bhima was helpless.

One was a great lesson of humbleness with Lord Hanumana. Another is presented here. What happened that there was a king named Nahusha, who became the gods of devtas. He became arrogant and wanted to marry Shachi. Shachi convinced him to come in palanquin, which should be shouldered by great sages.

Nahusha did the same and even went one step further by kicking Sage Agastya. By doing this, he lost all his virtue and also became a python by the curse of Sage Agastya. But he was told that when Yudhishthira explained him the virtues of good king, he will become a man again. Sahadeva, the youngest Pandava was a great astrologer. Once, on the request of Duryodhana, he advises Duryodan the most auspecious time for stating the war will be the amavasya day. Lord Krishna overheard this and plans to do what next.

Krishna performs amaysya tarpan one day earlier to the scheduled data and seeing Krishna performing tarpan one day earlier everybody starts doing the same. Seeing this, moon god and sun god comes down and ask Krisna why he is performing tarpan one day earlier. Recognizing his shame, Bhurisravas lays out his weapons and sits down in meditation.

Satyaki then emerges from his swoon and swiftly decapitates his enemy. He is condemned for this rash act, but Satyaki states that the moment Bhurisravas struck his semiconscious body, he had sworn that he would kill Bhurisravas. With the day's battle nearly over and Jayadratha still far away, the debate of the morality of Satyaki's actions is shelved. On the fifteenth day of battle, Satyaki kills Bhurisravas's father Somadatta and helps Bhima slay Somadatta's father, Bahlika. In the Kurukshetra war, Satyaki and Kritavarma were two important Yadava heroes who fought on the opposing sides.

Satyaki fought on the side of the Pandavas, whereas Kritavarma joined the Kauravas. After the Kurukshetra war, Gandhari curses Krishna that his clan will be destroyed 36 years later in a fratricidal massacre.

Inebriated, Satyaki laughs at and taunts Kritavarma for his actions on the night of the 18th day of battle. As others agree with Satyaki, Kritavarma becomes enraged and lambasts Satyaki for slaying Bhu r ishravas in cold blood. Countering this, Satyaki narrates the story of Kritavarma plotting to kill Devaki 's father. Warriors start taking sides depending on who their clans had fought for during the war; wine flows and tempers flare. Enraged, Satayki gets up from the ground, and to his shock he discovers that the grass he pulls up from his clenched hands has turned into weapons thanks to a rishi 's curse.

Red-faced, Satyaki decapitates Kritavarma and begins assaulting the warriors who are on Kritavarma's side.

The Bhojas and the Andhakas, incensed and drunk, surround Satyaki as Krishna comes to his aid. However, knowing the character of the hour, Krishna stands aside.

The Bhojas and Andhakas pull their own weapons from the ground and advance towards Satyaki. Satyaki's allies, like Pradyumna rush to his defense. In the end, Satyaki lies dead, as do all the Vrishini warriors. Satyaki has ten interpolated sons, all who die in battle against Bhurisravas. In other versions, Satyaki has a single son Asanga with one mentioned grandson Yugandhara. Yugandhara later became the ruler of the territory near the Sarasvati River.

There is also mention of two granddaughters Satyaki hoped to marry into the Pandava family. The brothers Kshemadhurti and Brihanta mangled Satyaki of the Satwata race with their keen arrows, as the latter proceeded against Drona. The battle between those two on one side and Satyaki on the other became exceedingly wonderful to behold, like that between a lion and two mighty elephants with rent temples in the forest. Home Entry Satyaki. Sah Sam San Sar Sat.



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