Character Archive

Myths featuring Gandhari

Explore myths where Gandhari appears across cultures, conflicts, sacred places, and recurring themes.

4 myths currently featured for Gandhari.

The Final Ascent of Krishna at Bhalka Tirtha

🕉️ Hindu MythologyBhalka Tirtha, Somnath, Gujarat, IndiaKrishna • Jara • Balarama

After the destruction of the Yadava dynasty at Prabhas Patan, Lord Krishna retired to the forest to meditate under a pipal tree. A hunter named Jara mistook Krishna's left foot for the face of a deer and shot a fatal arrow, fulfilling several ancient curses and marking the end of the Dwapara Yuga. Krishna forgave the hunter and ascended to Vaikuntha, leaving the mortal world to enter the age...

The Sinking of the Golden City of Dwarka into the Ocean

🕉️ Hindu MythologyGulf of Kutch, Dwarka, IndiaKrishna • Balarama • Arjuna

Following the departure of Lord Krishna from the mortal world, the magnificent golden city of Dwarka was reclaimed by the sea. This divine metropolis, which served as the capital of the Yadava kingdom, was submerged under the waves as a direct result of ancient curses and the inevitable end of the Dvapara Yuga. The sinking remains one of the most poignant symbols of the transient nature of...

Bhima Shattering Duryodhana's Thighs in the Final Mace Duel

🕉️ Hindu MythologyBrahma Sarovar, Kurukshetra, IndiaBhima • Duryodhana • Krishna

At the conclusion of the Kurukshetra War, the final confrontation between the Pandava Bhima and the Kaurava King Duryodhana took place in a mace duel. Following a vow made years earlier to avenge the humiliation of Draupadi, Bhima struck Duryodhana's thighs, a move forbidden by the rules of combat but necessary to end the reign of unrighteousness. This act marked the definitive victory of the...

The Birth of the Five Pandavas and One Hundred Kauravas

🕉️ Hindu MythologyHastinapur, Uttar Pradesh, IndiaDhritarashtra • Pandu • Kunti

This foundational myth of the Mahabharata details the divine and miraculous origins of the two rival groups of cousins, the Pandavas and the Kauravas. Following a series of curses and divine boons, the five sons of Pandu are born from the essence of various deities, while the one hundred sons of Dhritarashtra emerge from a single mass of flesh divided into jars of ghee. Their birth marks the...