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This article is about Vedic mythology. For the planetoid, see 20000 Varuna. For other uses, see Varuna (disambiguation).
Varuna
The God Varuna on his mount makara, 1675-1700
Made in: India, Rajasthan, Bundi placed in LACMA museum
Order (ṛta), Law, the Sky and the Ocean
Devanagari
वरुण
Sanskrit Transliteration
Varuṇa
Affiliation
Aditya, Asura but later on as a Deva,
Guardians of the directions
Abode
Celestial ocean (Rasā)
Mantra
Oṃ Vaṃ Varuṇāya Namaḥ
Weapon
Pasha (Lasso) or Varunastra
Consort
Varuni
Mount
Makara
In Vedic religion, Varuna (Sanskrit varuṇa वरुण) is a god of the sky, of water and of the celestial ocean, as well as a god of law and of the underworld. He is the most prominent Asura in the Rigveda, and lord of the heavens and the earth.
In Hindu mythology, Varuna continued to be considered the god of all forms of the water element, particularly the oceans.
Contents
1 Vedic Varuna
2 Varuna and Uranus
2.1 Varuna in the Ramayana
3 In Contemporary Hinduism
4 In Zoroastrianism
5 Notes
6 See also
//
Vedic Varuna
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Varuna: Definition from Answers.com
Varuna (South and Central Asian mythology) He is one of the oldest Hindu deities. Unlike Indra, whose birth was described as the product of a union
As chief of the Adityas, Varuna has aspects of a solar deity though, when opposed to Mitra, he is rather associated with the night, and Mitra with the daylight. As the most prominent Asura, however, he is mostly concerned with moral and societal affairs than being a deification of nature. Together with Mitra–originally 'agreement' (between tribes) personified—being master of ṛtá, he is the supreme keeper of order and god of the law.
Varuna and Mitra are the gods of the societal affairs including the oath, and are often twinned Mitra-Varuna (a dvandva compound). Varuna is also twinned with Indra in the Rigveda, as Indra-Varuna (when both cooperate at New Year in re-establishing order 1).
As a sky god, Varuna may either correspond to, or rule over, the dark half of the sky—or celestial ocean (Rasā)2—or represent the 'dark' side of the Sun as it travels back from West to East during the night 3.
The Rigveda and Atharvaveda4 portrays Varuna as omniscient, catching liars in his snares. The stars are his thousand-eyed spies, watching every movement of men.
In the Rigveda, Indra, chief of the Devas, is about six times more prominent than Varuna, who is mentioned 341 times. This may misrepresent the actual importance of Varuna in early Vedic society due to the focus of the Rigveda on fire and Soma ritual, Soma being closely associated with Indra; Varuna with his omniscience and omnipotence in the affairs of men has many aspects of a supreme deity. The daily Sandhyavandanam ritual of a dvija addresses Varuna in this aspect in its evening routine, asking him to forgive all sins, while Indra receives no mention.
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Both Mitra and Varuna are classified as Asuras in the Rigveda (e.g. RV 5.63.3), although they are also addressed to as Devas as well (e.g. RV 7.60.12), possibly indicating the beginning of the negative connotations carried by Asura in later times.
In post-Vedic texts Varuna became the god of oceans and rivers and keeper of the souls of the drowned. As such, Varuna is also a god of the dead, and can grant immortality. Varun which means wind. He is attended by the nagas. He is also one of the Guardians of the directions, representing the west.
Later art depicts Varuna as a lunar deity, as a yellow man wearing golden armor and holding a noose or lasso made from a snake. He rides the sea creature Makara.
Varuna and Uranus
Georges Dumézil made a cautious case for the identity of Varuna and the Greek god Uranus at the earliest Indo-European cultural level.5 Dumézil's identification of mythic elements shared by the two figures, relying to a great extent on linguistic interpretation, but not positing a common origin, was taken up by Robert Graves and others. The identification of the name Ouranos with the Hindu Varuna, based in part on a posited PIE root *-ŭer with a sense of "binding"— ancient king god Varuna binds the wicked, ancient king god Uranus binds the Cyclopes— is widely rejected by those who find the most probable etymology is from Proto-Greek *worsanos, from a PIE root *wers- "to moisten, to drip" (referring to the rain). Other theories identify Varuna with the Greek God Poseidon or Roman Neptune of the seas.
20000 Varuna - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
20000 Varuna is a large classical Kuiper belt object (KBO) and a potential dwarf planet. ... Varuna received the minor planet number 20000 because it was the ...
Uranus is associated with the night sky as his name literally means "Sky", and Varuna is a god of the sky and the celestial ocean which is the milky way or Kshira (क्षीर, milk) sagar. Laksmi is said to have arisen from the ocean of milk and therefore be the daughter of Varuna. Aphrodite is said to have been born from the falling of the testicles of Uranus in the ocean after his castration. Both Laksmi and Aphrodite are associated with the planet Venus. This shared nature of the two deities also leads to their identity being linked together.
Varuna in the Ramayana
Raja Ravi Varma Painting - 'Rama Conquers Varuna'
Faced with the dilemma of how to cross the ocean to Lanka, where his abducted wife Sita is held captive by the demon king Ravana, Rama (an Avatar of Vishnu) performs a penance (tapasya) to Varuna, the Lord of Oceans, fasting and meditating in perfect dhyana for three days and three nights. Varuna does not respond, and Rama arises on the fourth morning, enraged by the God's arrogance. With his bow and arrow, he angrily begins attacking the oceans with celestial weapons—burning up the waters and killing its life and creatures. The Vanaras (Monkeys) are dazzled and fearful at witnessing the enraged Rama demolish the oceans, and his brother, Lakshmana, prays to calm Rama's mind. Just as Rama invokes the brahmastra, considered the most powerful weapon capable of destroying all creation, Varuna arises out of the oceans. He bows to Rama, explaining that he himself was at a loss to answer Rama's question. Begging him not to destroy the oceans with the missile, he suggests that Rama re-direct the weapon at a demonic race that lives in the heart of the ocean. Rama's arrows destroys the demons, and establishes a purer, liberated environment there. Varuna promises that he would keep the oceans still for all of Rama's army to pass, and Nala constructs a bridge (Rama's Bridge) across to Lanka. Rama justifies his angry assault on the oceans as he followed the correct process of petitioning and worshipping Varuna, but obtaining the result by force for the greater good.6
In Contemporary Hinduism
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Lucknow, Jan 15 : At least 13 people were killed and over 20 others were injured when the bus they were travelling in spun out of control and fell into a river in Uttar Pradesh's Varanasi district Saturday, police said.
Varuna
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Worship of Varuna is an integral part of the evening ritual of the Sandhyavandanam, of a dvija Hindu. However, popular worship is primarily limited to Hindus of Sindhi origin. (See Jhulelal)
In Zoroastrianism
Varuna is not attested in the texts of the Avesta or in the Zoroastrian Pahlavi literature. The nearest homonym is Varena, the four-cornered fourteenth region of the world (Vendidad 1.17) and populated by "fiends" and "savage, non-Aryan natives" (Vd 7.10). In Yasht 15, Haoshyangha begs for a boon that he might smite "two-thirds of the daevas of Mazana and of the fiends of Varena". (Yt 15.2.6) An individual who does not follow daena "[the good] religion" is an anya-varena. (Yasna 16.2; Vd 12.21, 15.2)
Dumezil (Tarpeia 1947:33-113) sees Varuna represented as the Amesha Spenta Asha Vahishta "Best Righteousness", an opinion—with extensions—that Widengren (Die Religionen Irans, 1965:12-13) and Nyberg (Die Religionen des alten Iran, 1938:282ff) also follow.
Kuiper (IIJ I, 1957) proposes that none less than Ahura Mazda is a development from an earlier deity *vouruna-mitra. The basis of Kuiper's proposal is that the equivalent of Avestan mazda "wisdom" is Vedic medhira, described in Rigveda 8.6.10 as the "(revealed) insight into the cosmic order" that Varuna grants his devotees. In Kuiper's view, Ahura Mazda is then a compound divinity in which the propitious characteristics of *mitra negate the unfavorable qualities of *vouruna.
10 killed in Uttar Pradesh bus accident
Lucknow, Jan 15 : At least 10 people were killed and several injured when the bus they were travelling in fell into a river in Uttar Pradesh's Varanasi district Saturday, police said.
Varuna - New World Encyclopedia
As time progressed, other members of the Vedic pantheon, the subordinate devas such as Indra, Agni and Soma, would eventually eclipse Varuna in importance. ...
It has also been observed that Varuna has the byname Bhaga, as Baga attested in the Avesta. (e.g. Zimmer, Münchner Studien 1984:187-215) This would then be a cult epithet, the proper name having been forgotten—a not uncommon occurrence. This may be seen to be reflected in Artaxerxes III's invocation of ahuramazda ura mithra baga "Ahura Mazda, Mithra, and the Baga" (Boyce, Acta Iranica 21, 1981:59-73).
Many scholars believe that Ahuras were considered to be defenders of Asha (true) and that they are similar to the Asuras of Hinduism. Julius Pokorny reconstructs the common Indo-European origin as *ansu (Old Norse Aesir) which developed the Indo-Iranian *Asura. In the Gathas, the hymns considered to have been composed by Zoroaster himself, the poet does not specify which of the divinities (aside from Ahura Mazda) he considers to be ahuras. While Ahura Mazda is uniformly "the mightiest Ahura" (e.g. Yasna 33.11), in the only two occurrences of the term where the word does not refer to Ahura Mazda, the poet uses the expression mazdasca ahurano (Yasna 30.9, 31.4). This phrase, generally understood to mean "the Wise [Mazda] One and the (other) Ahuras", is in "common opinion" (so Boyce 1984:159) recognized as being archaic and in which the other Ahuras are *mitra and *varouna. Boyce (Mithra the King and Varuna the Master, 2001) sees this supported by the younger Avestan dvandvah expression mithra ahura berezanta "Mithra and the High Lord", the latter being unambiguously Apam Napat, the third member of the Ahuric triad. (Gray, Foundations, 1929:15)
Notes
^ FBJ Kuiper, Ancient Idian Cosmopony, Beombay 1983
^ According to Dumezil, Varuna is the god of "masses of water", while falling rain is rather related to Mitra
^ Sieg, Der Nachtweg der Sonne 1923
^ Shaunakiya Atharvaveda 4.16, corresponding to Paippalada 5.32.
^ Dumézil, Ouranós-Váruna: Étude de mythologie comparée indo-européenne (Paris:Maisonneuve 1934).
^ R. Menon, The Ramayana, pp. 376-81
See also
Rigvedic deities
Mitra (Vedic)
Adityas
Guardians of the directions
The king and the god
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Varuna
Though he only has about a dozen hymns addressed to him in the Rig Veda, Varuna seems to be one of the most important of the Vedic gods. In pre-Vedic times, he was ...
UP: 13 killed as bus plunges into river
Thirteen people were killed on Saturday and eight others injured when a bus fell into a river near Kalikadham village near Varanasi, said the police. The bus carrying 21 passengers plunged into Varuna River after hitting the railing along the river, District Collector Ravindra said.Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati has announced an ex-gratia of Rs one lakh to the kin of each of those killed ...
Stonewall Jackson identified in one contemporary print as the General Breckinridge The fatally damaged Varuna s gun crews continued firing on the enemy until their ship sank The Last Broadside of the Varuna Line engraving published circa the 1860s depicting USS Varuna continuing to fire at Confederate forces as she sank during the battle off Forts
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Varuna - definition of Varuna by the Free Online Dictionary ...
Translations of Varuna. Varuna synonyms, Varuna antonyms. Information about Varuna in the free online English dictionary and encyclopedia. 20000 varuna ...
10 killed in Uttar Pradesh bus accident
At least 10 people were killed and several injured when the bus they were travelling in fell into a river in Uttar Pradesh's Varanasi district Saturday, police said.
Varuna: Information from Answers.com
Varuna supreme cosmic deity; god of natural and moral law; ancient sky god
13 killed as bus falls into river
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Bus falls into UP river, 13 dead
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