Navagunjara

Mythical creature composed of nine animals in Hinduism From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Navagunjara

Navagunjara or Nabagunjara[1] is a magical legendary creature composed of nine different animals in Hinduism.

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Navagunjara

The animal is a common motif in the Pata-Chitra style of painting, of the Eastern Indian state of Odisha. It is considered an astral form of the god Vishnu, or of Krishna, who is considered an avatar of Lord Vishnu. It is considered a variant of the virat-rupa (omnipresent or vast) form of Krishna, that he displays to Arjuna, as mentioned in the Bhagavad Gita, a part of the epic Mahabharata.[2]

Etymology

Originally the word was Nava-kunjara not Nabagunjara. It simply meant 'new animal'. In ancient times, locals of Odisha, who were not familiar with the animal, described it as an animal having a mixture of qualities found in other animals. The animal referred to was the giraffe, which was gifted by African leaders to an old king of Odisha, or then Kalinga. Later, the pronunciation changed slightly and became 'Nabagunjara', which led to the belief of an animal having the qualities of nine animals. For the word 'guna' in Sanskrit means 'quality'. But 'Nabagunjara' is not a grammatically correct word in Sanskrit.

Literature

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Jagannatha as Navagunjara

The version of the Hindu epic Mahabharata, written by the Odia poet Sarala Dasa, narrates the legend of Navagunjara; no other version has the story. Once, when Arjuna was doing penance on a hill, Krishna-Vishnu appears to him as Navagunjara. Navagunjara has the head of a rooster, and stands on three feet, those of an elephant, tiger and deer or horse; the fourth limb is a raised human arm carrying a lotus or a wheel. The beast has the neck of a peacock, the back or hump of a bull and the waist of a lion; the tail is a serpent. Initially, Arjuna was terrified as well as mesmerized by the strange creature and raises his bow to shoot it. Finally, Arjuna realizes that Navagunjara is a manifestation of Vishnu and drops his weapons, bowing before Navagunjara.[3]

Architecture

The Navagunjara-Arjuna scene is sculpted at the northern side of the Jagannath Temple, Puri.[4] Also, the Nila Chakra disc atop the Jagannath Temple has eight Navagunjaras carved on the outer circumference, with all facing towards the flagpost above.

Navagunjara is also depicted in Ganjifa playing cards as the King card and Arjuna as the minister card, in parts of Odisha, mainly in Puri District and Ath-Rangi Sara in Ganjam District, Odisha. This set is known as Navagunjara.[5][6][7]

See also

References

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