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Thread: Uchchaihshravas: Divine Seven-Headed Flying Horse

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    Uchchaihshravas: Divine Seven-Headed Flying Horse

    There is a wonderful, snow white horse, in Hindu mythology, which is known as Uchchaihshravas.

    Uchchaihshravas is considered the best of horses, archetype and king of horses. This divine horse became ‘Vahana’ of Indra, the Hindu god, known as King of the Gods and Heaven, God of Lightning, Thunder and Rains.


    Uchchaihshravas seven-headed horse in Hindu mythology



    Interestingly, in the folklore of Bali people, the same horse is the king of demons.

    Uchchaihshravas (“long-ears” (or “neighing aloud”) is a seven-headed flying horse, that emerged from “churning of the milk ocean” (in Sanskrit: ‘Samudra manthan’) along with other treasures such as goddess Lakshmi – the goddess of fortune, taken by god Vishnu as his consort and the ‘amrita’ – the drink of immortality, which both the devas (gods) and asuras (demons) wanted to possess.

    The famous story of “Churning of the Ocean of Milk” explains the origin of ‘amrita’, and is mentioned in the Bhagavata Purana, the Vishnu Purana, and in the epic Mahabharata. Engaged in continuous war with each other, the devas (gods) and asuras (demons) decided to work together for a millennium to churn the ocean and release Amrita, the nectar of immortal life.

    According to Hindu cosmology, the Ocean of Milk is the fifth from the center of the seven oceans. It surrounds the continent known as Krauncha, which according to the Puranas, is the fifth of the seven islands (dwipas), which makes up the world.


    Various treasures (ratnas) emerged from the ocean of milk. These were Sura, goddess and
    creator of alcohol, Apsarases, various divine nymphs like Rambha, Menaka, Kaustubha, the
    most valuable jewel in the world, Kalpavriksha, the wish-granting tree, Kamadhenu, the first
    cow and mother of all other cows, Airavata, the elephant of Indra, Lakshmi, the Goddess of
    Fortune and Wealth, Parijat, the divine tree, Halahala the deadly poison, Chandra, the moon
    and the wonderful divine Uchhaishravas, the divine 7-headed horse.



    Bhagavad Gita, which is a 700-verse Hindu scripture in Sanskrit and part of the Hindu epic Mahabharataalso mentions Uchchaihshravas. The creature is involved in a discourse between god Krishna (Vishnu’s eighth avatar) and Arjuna, the son of Indra and the king of the celestials. When Krishna declares to be the source of the universe, he declares that among all horses, he is Uchchaihshravas – who is born from the amrita, sacred potion.

    In the 12th century Indian text, the Hariharacaturanga, there is a story that one day, the creator-god, Brahma, performed a sacrifice, which resulted in a creation of a winged white horse called Uchchaihshravas. Then, the horse once again appeared out of the milk ocean and was taken by the king of the demons (Asura) Bali, who used the horse’s supernatural powers.

    The divine Uchchaihshravas is very similar to Odin’s horse Sleipnir i Norse mythology.




    Source: http://www.ancientpages.com/2017/05/...-of-god-indra/


    peace...

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    Senior Member Aianawa's Avatar
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    We find the exact middle of thirteen much, we see a quarter or 52 often, 0 to seven allows two circles to begin, 8.

    Love the India mysteries, thankyou

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    How interesting. Could perhaps the 'seven heads' refer to aspects/dimensions/senses et cetera????? Sometimes I look at the ancient texts and artwork and wonder whether the words and depictions of art are not merely Literal. Perhaps the reference to 'seven heads' is not a Literal Translation but an artful depiction of seven as a concept or abstract theory or a mathematical/science based application????

    Much Respect - Amanda

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