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  2. Ashvamedhika Parva - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashvamedhika-parva

    Ashvamedhika Parva (Sanskrit: अश्वमेध पर्व), is the fourteenth of eighteen books of the Indian epic Mahabharata. It traditionally has 2 parts and 96 chapters. It traditionally has 2 parts and 96 chapters.

  3. Ashvamedha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashvamedha

    Ashvamedha yajna of Yudhisthira. The Ashvamedha (Sanskrit: अश्वमेध, romanized: aśvamedha) [1] was a horse sacrifice ritual followed by the Śrauta tradition of Vedic religion. It was used by ancient Indian kings to prove their imperial sovereignty: a horse accompanied by the king's warriors would be released to wander for a year.

  4. Chandrahasa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chandrahasa

    Chandrahasa (Sanskrit: चन्द्रहास, lit. 'laughter of the moon' [1]) is a king of the Kuntala kingdom in Hindu mythology. [2] The story of Chandrahasa is described in the Ashvamedhika Parva of the epic Mahabharata. Chandrahasa befriends Arjuna who was accompanied by Krishna guarding the ashvamedha ceremony of Yudhishthira.

  5. Drona Parva - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drona_Parva

    Clay Sanskrit Library has published a 15 volume set of the Mahabharata which includes a translation of Drona Parva by Vaughan Pilikian. This translation is modern and uses an old manuscript of the Epic. The translation does not remove verses and chapters now widely believed to be spurious and smuggled into the Epic in 1st or 2nd millennium AD. [12]

  6. Ashramavasika Parva - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashramavasika_Parva

    An illustration from the Razmnama depicting a scene of Ashramavasika Parva. Kunti leading Dhritarashtra and Gandhari as they head to Sannyasa. Ashramvasika Parva (Sanskrit: आश्रमवासिक पर्व), or the "Book of the Hermitage", is the fifteenth of the eighteen books of the Indian epic Mahabharata. It traditionally has 3 ...

  7. Lakshmisa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lakshmisa

    The Ashvamedha parva of Lakshmisha's Kannada epic Jaimini Bharata Lakshmisa (or Lakshmisha ) was a noted Kannada language writer who lived during the mid-16th or late 17th century. His most important writing, Jaimini Bharata is a version of the Hindu epic Mahabharata .

  8. Anugita - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anugita

    Anugita is an ancient Sanskrit text embedded in the Book 14 (Ashvamedhika Parva) of the Hindu epic the Mahabharata. [1] Anugita literally means an Anu ("continuation, alongside, subordinate to") of Gita. The original was likely composed between 400 BCE and 200 CE, [1] but its versions probably modified through about the 15th- or 16th-century. [2]

  9. Mahaprasthanika Parva - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahaprasthanika_Parva

    Mahaprasthanika Parva in Sanskrit by Vyasadeva with commentary by Nilakantha - Worldcat OCLC link; Mahaprasthanika Parva in Sanskrit and Hindi by Ramnarayandutt Shastri, Volume 5; PDF and eBook of Ganguli’s translation, with Sanskrit PDF. "Yudhishthira and His Dog", A4 PDF, tablet version (Ganguli’s version annotated) and Sanskrit text links.