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  2. Asura - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asura

    Asuras gradually assimilated the demons, spirits, and ghosts worshipped by the enemies of Vedic people, and this created the myths of the malevolent asuras and the rakshasa. The allusions to the disastrous wars between the asuras and the suras, found in the Puranas and the epics, may be the conflict faced by people and migrants into ancient ...

  3. Samudra Manthana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samudra_Manthana

    The Asuras took the Amrit from Dhanvantari and ran away. The devas appealed to Vishnu, who took the form of Mohini, a beautiful and enchanting damsel. She enchanted the asuras into submitting to her terms. She made the devas and the asuras sit in two separate rows and distributed the nectar among the devas, who drank it.

  4. List of Asuras - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Asuras

    In the Puranas and other texts of Hindu literature, the deity Krishna is attacked by asuras and rakshasas sent by his uncle Kamsa, as well as others he encounters and slays in his legends. Putana - A rakshasi who was sent by Kamsa to appear in the form of a beautiful woman to kill baby Krishna by breastfeeding his poison, but who was killed by ...

  5. Madhu-Kaitabha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madhu-Kaitabha

    Laughing, the boastful asuras, proud of their victories against Vishnu, said that they were willing to grant him boons instead. Vishnu cleverly asked Madhu and Kaitabha for the boon of slaying them. [4] Defeated, the asuras requested Vishnu to be slain at any location except in the water, believing that they would still be invincible upon land.

  6. Prahlada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prahlada

    Prahlada prays to Narasimha as Narasimha disembowels and kills Hiranyakashipu. Prahlada was born to Kayadhu and Hiranyakashipu, an evil asura king who had been granted a boon from Brahma that he could not be killed off by anything born from a living womb, neither by a man nor an animal, neither during the day nor at night, neither indoors nor outdoors, neither on land nor in the air nor in ...

  7. Rakshasa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rakshasa

    There are other Rakhasas from the land, such as Wibisana, who is believed to be the brother of Ravana in Sri Lankan Buddhist mythology. [22] In The Lotus-Born: The Life Story of Padmasambhava, recorded by Yeshe Tsogyal, Padmasambhava receives the nickname of "Rakshasa" during one of his wrathful conquests to subdue Buddhist heretics.

  8. Tārakāsura - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tārakāsura

    The divinities offered a number of gifts to empower him. Taraka, the king of the daityas, summoned billions of asuras to defend his realm, his forces commanded by Kalanemi. The asuras gained the upper hand, the armies of the devas falling like trees to a forest fire. Indra was struck down.

  9. Vajranga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vajranga

    Vajranga (Sanskrit: वज्राङ्ग, romanized: Vajrāṅga, lit. 'thunderbolt-limbs') is an asura in Hinduism. [1] According to the Puranas, he was born to Diti and was fathered by the sage Kashyapa.