The Nagarajas

Family

The Serpent Beings of

The Underworld

Nagaraja

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nagaraja 

A Nagaraja (Sanskrit: नागराज nāgarāja, lit. 'king of the nagas') is a king of the various races of the nāga, the divine or semi-divine, half-human, half-serpent beings that reside in the netherworld (Patala), and can occasionally take human form. Rituals devoted to these supernatural beings have been taking place throughout South Asia for at least two thousand years.

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Hinduism

Hindu texts refer to three main beings by this title: Shesha, Takshaka, and Vasuki. All of them are the children of the rishi Kashyapa and Kadru.

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  1. Shesha

Shesha, also sometimes known as Ananta, is the eldest brother, and the first serpent king of all serpents. A devotee and a mount of Vishnu, he serves as the deity's bed and is named as the noblest of all nagas. He is the being that supports the earth, on the behest of the creator god, Brahma, obtaining the boon to stand ever firmly on the concept of dharma.

Read More Shesha Naag The Serpent King of The Nagas click

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2. Vasuki

Vasuki is the second serpent king in Indian religions. He is a devotee of Shiva, who always wears the nāga around his neck.

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3. Takshaka

Takshaka is the third, and the present serpent king. In the Mahabharata, he ruled the Khandava forest, which was then burnt by the Pandava Arjuna. Later, Takshaka slew Parikshit, the grandson of Arjuna.

These serpents are a group of a thousand brothers, and they also have a sister, whose name is Manasa.

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Temples

A temple of the Nagaraja Vasuki is present in Gujarat's district of Thangadh.

At Nagercoil, in Kanyakumari district's of Tamil Nadu, a temple dedicated to Nagaraja exists.

There is another famous temple named Mannarasala in Alleppey district of Kerala. The deity in this temple embodies both Anantha and Vasuki into one. A temple devoted to nagraja exists in kaippattoor of Ernakulam district in Kerala, India. It is known as thekkanattil nagaraja kshetram.

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A temple devoted to Nagaraja exists in Poojappura of the Thiruvananthapuram District in Kerala, India. It is known as the Poojappura Nagarukavu Temple. The uniqueness of this temple is that here the family of the Nagaraja, including Nagaramma (queen of nagas), and Naga Kanya (princess of the naga kingdom) are placed inside a single temple.

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Buddhism

There are many Nagarajas mentioned throughout various Buddhist texts. There are four major royal races of Nagarajas in Buddhism as the Virupakkhas, the Erapathas, the Chabyaputtas and the Kanhagotamakas. Nāga Kings appears in the audience for many of Gautama Buddha's sermons in Buddhist scriptures. The duties of the Nāga Kings included leading the nagas in protecting the Buddha, other enlightened beings, as well as protecting the Buddha Sasana.

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Some of the most notable Nagarajas occurring in Buddhist scriptures are Virupaksa, Mucalinda, Dhrtarastra, Takshaka, Vasuki, Nanda, Upananda, Sagara, Balavan, Anavatapta, Varuna and Utpala.

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  1. Virupaksa

Virūpākṣa (Sanskrit; Pali: Virūpakkha) is a major deity in Buddhism. He is one of the Four Heavenly Kings and a dharmapala. He lives on the western part of Sumeru. He is leader of the nāgas.

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2. Mucalinda

It is said that four weeks after Gautama Buddha began meditating under the Bodhi Tree, the heavens darkened for seven days, and a prodigious rain descended. However, the mighty King of Serpents, Mucalinda, came from beneath the earth and protected with his hood the one who is the source of all protection. The subject of Buddha meditating under the protection of Mucalinda, also known as naga Prok attitude is very common in Southeast Asian Buddhist art.

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3. Dhrtarastra

Buddhist literature features a Nāga King named Dhṛtarāṣṭra(Sanskrit; Pali: Dhataraṭṭha). He was the father of Gautama Buddha in a past life when the latter was a bodhisattva named Bhūridatta. He is mentioned in several Buddhist texts such as the Bhūridatta Jātaka, the Mahāmāyūrī Vidyārājñī Sūtra and the Mahāmegha Sūtra.

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4. Apalala

Apalāla (Pali, Sanskrit) is a water-dwelling Nāga-king in Buddhist mythology.[8] He story of conversion to Buddhism by the Buddha (Pali: Apalāladamana) can be found in Buddhist texts such as Samantapāsādikā and Divyāvadāna; this is one of the most popular legends in Buddhist lore and art.

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5. Duo-luo-shi-qi

In some Buddhist traditions a figure called Duo-luo-shi-qi or Talasikhin is described as a Dragon King who dwells in a palace within a pond outside the legendary kingdom of Ketumati and drizzles in it during midnight.

Lotus of Darkness - Wrath of The Nagas (Lyric Video)

Southeast Asia Metal. Country: Thailand

Meditation Naga Stuti

By Nachaya Campbell-Allen. Naga Kanya

Pictures Videos Music and Additional Reading

Ravana descends into the watery regions or rasatala, the hell situated at the bottom of the ocean. Vasuki, the god of water and the Nagas are depicted with hands joined being subjugated by Ravana in his chariot that is surrounded by demons. Ramayana. Udaipur, 1653. Source: Add. 15297(2), f.43. Language: Sanskrit.

Music

Krishna dancing with Nagas on snake demon – Hindu art

Source: https://artismortis.com/downloads/krishna-dancing-with-nagas-on-snake-demon-hindu-art/ 

Naga Hindu Mythology

Source: https://www.britannica.com/topic/naga-Hindu-mythology 

Naga, (Sanskrit: “serpent”) in Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism, a member of a class of mythical semidivine beings, half human and half cobra. They are a strong, handsome species who can assume either wholly human or wholly serpentine form and are potentially dangerous but often beneficial to humans.

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They live in an underground kingdom called Naga-loka, or Patala-loka, which is filled with resplendent palaces, beautifully ornamented with precious gems. The creator deity Brahma relegated the nagas to the nether regions when they became too populous on earth and commanded them to bite only the truly evil or those destined to die prematurely. They are also associated with waters—rivers, lakes, seas, and wells—and are guardians of treasure.

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Three notable nagas are Shesha (or Ananta), who in the Hindu myth of creation supports Narayana (Vishnu) as he lies on the cosmic ocean and on whom the created world rests; Vasuki, who was used as a churning rope to churn the cosmic ocean of milk; and Takshaka, the tribal chief of the snakes. In modern Hinduism the birth of the serpents is celebrated on Naga-panchami in the month of Shravana (July–August).

Read More Shesha Naag The Serpent King of The Nagas click

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The female nagas (naginis or nagis) are serpent princesses of striking beauty. The dynasties of Manipur in northeastern India, the Pallavas in southern India, and the ruling family of Funan (ancient Indochina) each claimed an origin in the union of a human being and a nagi.

Hortus Animae - The Poison of the Naga

Lyrics

From the dynasty of the waters

Rising from the depths with ascetic discordance

Floods of destruction after rains of fertility

A liquid taste of slaughter

Deity of virulent poison, prowess and endurance

From the water tree giving His offering

And that was not the apple of sin

Holding storms in one hand, whipping away mortality

The revered elixir of life of the great laconic trinity

Supreme Keeper of Knowledge

On the shoulders of the Destroyer

Crowning the head of the Ubiquitous

The shelter of gods, which from nether dimensions He lauds

Nagaraja – Serpent King

Spirits dance along subterranean streams

The entrance is subtle, the trail is so steep

Spirits dance along subterranean streams

The breaths are humid, the realm is so deep

Recover Amrita from the Ocean of Milk

Bending the mountains, churning the seas

Gods and demons, the lockings to bind Him

The greatest of efforts and yielded the King

The last weary breath becomes the strongest of venoms

Wryly the Destroyer becoming the plenum

The essence of immortality is safely back

The threat of doomsday is delayed once again

Nagaraja – Serpent King

Spirits dance along subterranean streams

The entrance is subtle, the trail is so steep

Spirits dance along subterranean streams

The breaths are humid, the realm is so deep

Spirits dance along subterranean streams

With a slow pace they cautiously creep

Spirits dance along subterranean streams

The entrance is subtle, in a well that’s so deep

Nagaraja – Serpent King

The Mother of Snakes unleashed Her children on trees

To offer the humans all the wisdom they need

The fork-tongued creatures spoke the words of relief

And no that was not the bloody apple of sin

The Mother of Snakes unleashed Her children on trees

To offer the humans all the knowledge they need

Wisdom is tempting, ignorance is bliss

And no that was not the bloody apple of sin

Nagaraja – Serpent King.