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  2. Mahabali - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahabali

    After many wars, the invincible Bali had conquered heaven and earth. The suras (devas) approached Vishnu to save them from complete obliteration. Vishnu refused to join the devas in violence against Mahabali, because Mahabali is a benevolent king and his own devotee. To restore the natural order, he incarnated as the dwarf Brahmin avatar, Vamana.

  3. Vamana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vamana

    A simpler form of this legend, one without Mahabali, is found in the Rigveda and the Vedic text Shatapatha Brahmana where a solar deity is described with powers of Vishnu. This story likely grew over time, and is in part allegorical, where Bali is a metaphor for thanksgiving offering after a bounty of rice harvest during monsoon, and Vishnu is ...

  4. Mithranandapuram Vamanamoorthy Temple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mithranandapuram_Vamana...

    Lord Vamana has blessed king Sri Mahabali on his request for three feet of mud; the mood of the deity in the temple is that of blessing the king Mahabali. Vishnu was immensely pleased with the goodness of Mahabali. He educated Bali about the demerits of pride and arrogance, which forbids man from optimum progress.

  5. Onam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onam

    For the third pace, Mahabali offered his head for Vishnu to step on, an act that Vishnu accepted as evidence of Mahabali's devotion. [13] Vishnu granted him a boon, by which Mahabali could visit again, once every year, the lands and people he previously ruled. This revisit marks the festival of Onam, as a reminder of the virtuous rule and his ...

  6. Seven Pagodas of Mahabalipuram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_Pagodas_of_Mahabalipuram

    When Prahlada stated that Vishnu was present everywhere, including in the walls of their home, his father kicked a pillar. Vishnu emerged from the pillar in the form of a man with a lion's head, and slayed Hiranyakasipu. Prahlada eventually became king, and had a grandson named Bali (also called Mahabali). Bali founded Mahabalipuram on this ...

  7. Namasu (Hinduism) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Namasu_(Hinduism)

    Namuchi (Sanskrit: नमुचि, romanized: Namuchi), also known as Namasu [1] is the son of the asura king Mahabali [2] and the great-grandson of Prahlada in Hindu mythology. Among the 100 children of Mahabali, he is recognized as an exemplary devotee of Vishnu. [3] Namasu was known as Upendra and Atheendhra. [4]

  8. 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 ...

  9. Mullaippāṭṭu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mullaippāṭṭu

    Sculpture of Vishnu Measuring the Earth in Mahabalipuram Dating 7th Century CE.. The short poem mentions the Hindu god Vishnu through an elaborate simile. [7] [8] [9] The text mentions that The clouds resemble Vishnu in three points: (1) the clouds are black like the dark god, (2) they encompass the hills even as Vishnu encompasses the earth; (3) they pour rain as the water dripped from the ...