Hey there, I'm Mike Rugnetta, and this is Crash Course Mythology. Today, we're going to tackle one of the most difficult and fascinating pantheons in all of mythology. It's got dancing dwarves, buffalo demons, and some many armed folks. Yes, sir, there is a lot going on in this pantheon. Maybe even more than in the Egyptian pantheon.
Sorry, Toad. In this episode, we'll talk about the pantheon of deities in Indian myths. Unlike myths from Egypt and the ancient Near East, there are living people for whom these stories have deep, personal religious meaning.
Remember how it got a little uncomfortable when we discussed the Bible's creation story? Well, it's gonna be a bit like that. But we're gonna try to minimize the awkwardness.
Just ask, wait, there's no god of awkwardness? Ruh-roh. Discussing the Indian pantheon is tricky for two reasons. First, because it remains a living belief system for about a billion people. And second, because Indian religious and mythic traditions are not only abundant, but also ancient.
As in Egypt, there are different sets of gods and goddesses that were worshipped at different points in time. But unlike Egypt, India was and is home to many different languages. Which means we have a lot of different stories. Each with many different variations. We are going to focus mostly on stories that have been written in Sanskrit, the sacred language of Hinduism.
Sanskrit first appears in written form around 150 CE, in a series of rock inscriptions that look a lot more complex than what I have inscribed on rocks. This probably doesn't say, Parvati was here, Vishnu plus Lakshmi, five eva. Let's remember that Sanskrit is a complex language, and its poetry may sound unusual to English ears, but we can handle it.
Just lead the way, Bragi, Norse god of poetry. In the earliest Indian traditions, Dyaus, the sky father, and Prithvi, the earth mother, were central. Hey, sky dad and earth mom, nice to see you over here too.
Do you mind if I drop off some cosmic laundry? Later, however, Surya, the sun god, Agni, the fire god, and Indra, the warrior king of the gods, took top god billing from mom and dad. who we're arguing all the time.
Sky dad, Earth mom, just knock it off. Stop the fighting. We can all get along.
Indra was the child of the sky and the Earth, and was responsible for keeping them separate, but had his own beef with another god, Varuna, who may once have been the ruler of the gods, but was supplanted by Indra. I mean, hey, even gods got beef, right? I wonder if one of them recorded a diss track.
Anyway, the most well-known myth about Indra is about his battle with Vrtra, a giant serpent or dragon whom Indra kills, thus creating the sun, the dawn, and the sky. Yeah, I know, you thought that we had sky covered, but mythology is tricky. The death of Vrtra also gave form to chaos, which is nice. So, this is our old friend the creation story, but with violence instead of sex. In a number of stories, Indra is described as battling and destroying hostile minor deities and demons.
I mean, someone has to do it, right? And so, Maybe you're thinking, yay, Indra, he fights the good fight. But he also breaks oaths, kills family members, and commits adultery with Ahalya, the wife of the sage Gautama, for which he loses his testicles.
Cherries emoji, scissors emoji, face screaming in pain emoji. But hey, wait, it's okay, in another myth, he has them replaced with those of a ram emoji. So I guess it all works out in the end.
Indra's weapon of choice is a thunderbolt, similar to Zeus, and by India's classical age, he becomes a god of rain. And this changing function over time is generally emblematic of Indian myth. Like the Egyptian pantheon, it's difficult to pin down one canonical set of myths or characters, because they appear in so many forms, often with multiple names. Here's another version of how things get going.
In the Vedas, which are the most ancient Hindu scriptures, Prajapati was the creator god. But over time, and especially in the Upanishads, another collection of important Sanskrit texts, the less anthropomorphic concept of Brahman developed. Brahman isn't a god so much as the all-encompassing essence of reality, the supreme cosmic spirit.
It's pretty cool, right Tote? It's not something you can easily represent on a sandstone relief, but then again, it's not that dissimilar from God in the monotheistic religious traditions. Brahman has sometimes been translated as the world soul and all individual souls are one with it.
Don't get too comfortable though because Brahman in later classical Hindu mythology and religion is embodied and personified as three deities. Brahma, the creator, Vishnu, the preserver, and Shiva, the destroyer. They're all distinct with their own ...stories and yet also represent aspects of the more esoteric and universal idea of Brahman. This triumvirate, the trifecta, divine hat trick, Hindus call it the trimurti. And Vishnu and Shiva loom largest in Indian myths.
So then, why is Brahma third banana? Well, once the universe is created, the work of the creator is done. True, the concept of cyclical existence is central to Hindu and Buddhist worldviews, so you'd think a creator would be considered among the most important gods. Still though, Brahma's significance declined in comparison with that of Vishnu and Shiva, perhaps because, according to John Brockington, essentially, he is a fusion of a creator deity with the impersonal Brahman propounded in the Upanishads, which see the goal of religious endeavor as some kind of union with the absolute. Whereas the popular forms of religion attested to in the epics prefer a more personal and devotional approach.
In other words, Brahma doesn't really get involved in the juicy stuff. Battles and quests and adultery. So let's turn to Vishnu, the preserver.
Stories of Vishnu often involve his consort Shri, also called Lakshmi, a goddess of prosperity and good fortune. Which is pretty terrific as far as dowries go. Vishnu protects the world from evil and he often appears in different forms called Avatars. Avatars are the human or animal form of a god on earth, and they are very, very rad. By the classical period, Vishnu had ten or so avatars.
Matsya, the fish, who we'll talk more about when we talk about floods. Kurma, the tortoise, who played a role similar to the tortoise in the earth diver myth that we saw. Varaha, the boar, who is a boar and does boar stuff. Narasimha, the man-lion, who kills the demon Hiranyakashipu.
Vamana, the dwarf, who defeats the demon Bai through trickery. Parashurama, who kills the hundred-armed Arjuna with an axe and probably has amazing biceps. Rama and Krishna, who are central to the Mahabharata, one of the great Sanskrit epics. The Buddha, who is the Buddha, you know, from Buddhism. Kalki, who is a future avatar and a millennial figure that will establish a new era.
He's not like a millennial millennial, though. Kalki is an an- Snapchat. Shiva the Destroyer had his origins in the Vedic era as a storm god who was a wrathful avenger and a herdsman of souls, which definitely sounds trickier than sheep.
Shiva is also associated with yoga, asceticism, and erotic love, which sounds contradictory. Or maybe just flexible. This erotic aspect manifests most concretely in Shiva's symbolic form as a linga, which is just, it's Self-explanatory, if you look at it, and might explain why Shiva has numerous female deities as either wives or consorts, including Sati and Parvati and sometimes Durga and Kali. Basically, Shiva got game.
One of the best-known images of Shiva is his depiction as Nataraja, the Lord of the Dance. No, definitely not. Yes.
According to one scholar, his steps are intended to relieve by enlightenment the suffrage of his devotees. Hence he balances on the back of a dwarf who symbolizes ignorance. His gestures and the attributes he is holding symbolize aspects of his divinity.
The drum on his back right hand symbolizes creation. The tongue of flame in his back left hand symbolizes destruction. The gesture of protection of his front right hand symbolizes protection.
And his raised leg symbolizes release. Has Michael Flatley ever balanced on the back of a dwarf? I rest my case.
Nope. We spent most of the episode discussing three key gods of the Trimurti and their amazing dance moves, but Indian pantheons feature goddesses, too, who usually have qualities that complement their husbands'powers. I mentioned Parvati and Uma and Sati, the wives of Shiva, and Lakshmi, who is married to Vishnu, but other traditions describe the goddess Devi, which translates to goddess, or Mahadevi, the great goddess.
who is occasionally associated with the other consorts, and sometimes seen as a world creator in her own right. In some traditions, Devi is essentially the same as Brahman. Like many of the deities we discussed, Devi can be many things to many people. We haven't seen too many female warrior goddesses yet, so let's wrap up with a story that features one. Durga, also known as Kali, who is unapproachable to her suitors, and invincible in battle.
Also, she rides a lion, so clearly no one is cool enough to date her. Thought bubble? do your thing.
One of the main stories about Durga is that of her killing the buffalo demon Mahisha. Mahisha conquered the other lesser gods, the Devas, and then the Devas went to Vishnu and Shiva for help, who listened and grew angry. And you wouldn't like Vishnu and Shiva when they're angry because their anger takes the form of Durga, who confronted Mahisha and the other demons. The demons rushed towards the goddess who killed them in hun- ...hundreds, felling some with her club, catching others in her noose, slicing others with her sword, and piercing others with her trident. Meanwhile, Mahesha himself, in buffalo form, terrorized her troops.
Then, he attacked her lion. And Durga became furious. She caught him in her noose, whereupon he quitted his buffalo shape and became a lion himself. She cut off its head and he emerged as a man, sword in hand. As she pierced the man, he became a great elephant, seizing her lion with its trunk, but she cut off his trunk with her sword as he resumed his buffalo form.
Lightly tossing aside the mountains he hurled at her, she leaped on him, pinned his neck with one foot and pierced him with her trident. Then she cut off his head with her mighty sword. Thanks, Thought Bubble.
That was... harrowing. I guess it's always the second beheading that sticks.
This episode could only scratch the surface of the complexity of Indian mythology. Not only does it come from so many sources, but for many people these are living myths, unlike the deeds of the Egyptian gods that we saw last week. These stories are complex because people associate one god with one or two attributes or phenomena, like wisdom or storms. And these gods take many forms and are often seen as versions of each other, or maybe even of a single universal god. Hinduism is a fascinating religion and a rich source of myths, but it's also quite the web.
Emoji. Thanks for watching. We'll see you next week.
Check out our Crash Course Mythology tote, tote bag, and poster available now at DFTBA.com. Crash Course Mythology is filmed in the Chad and Stacey Emigultz studio in Indianapolis, Indiana and is produced with the help of all of these nice people. Our animation team is Thought Cafe and Crash Course exists thanks to the generous support of our patrons at Patreon. Patreon is a voluntary subscription service where you can support the content that you love through a monthly donation to help keep Crash Course free for everyone, forever.
Thanks for watching and don't forget to be mythological. Oh, we're- You hunted that one, huh?