Daashraaj
| Daashraaj | |
|---|---|
| Lua error in Module:WikidataIB at line 665: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). | |
| Other names | Matsyanaresh & Ketvatraj |
| Texts | |
| Gender | Male |
| Personal information | |
| Children | Satyavati(daughter) |
Daashraaj(Sanskrit: दाश्राज; romanized: dāsrāja) is a character in the Indian epic Mahabharata. He was described as the father of Satyavati, the queen of Hastinapur who belonged to the Kuru dynasty. Daashraaj was also the fisherman-chief of Hastinapur.
Daashraaj was also referred to as Matsyanaresh(मत्स्यनरेश) & Ketvatraj(केत्वत्रज).
A condition for Shantanu
According to the original Mahabharata written by Vyasa, when Shantanu, the king of Hastinapur, went to Daashraaj for a marriage proposal for his daughter Satyavati, Daashraaj kept a condition for Shantanu that he would allow Shantanu to marry Satyavati if and only if he would make Satyavati's son the next ruler of Hastinapur and not his first son Bhishma obtained from river goddess Ganga. Shantanu rejected this condition at first, but his separation from Satyavati had mentally damaged him.
The Oath of Bhishma
After seeing his father Shantanu in such a bad state, Bhishma went to Daashraaj in order to bring Satyavati for his father, but Daashraaj kept the same condition again. In order to fulfil his father's wish of marrying Satyavati, Bhishma took an oath that he would never rule Hastinapur as a king, he would never marry a woman, and would serve Hastinapur as a servant. After hearing this strong oath, Daashraaj instantly gave the hand of Satyavati to Shantanu.
Birth of two sons from Satyavati
After marrying Shantanu, Satyavati gave birth to two sons, Chitrāngada & Vichitravirya. The eldest son Chitrāngada died unmarried, and Vichitravirya was appointed as the next king of Hastinapur. After ruling for a very short period of time, Vichitravirya also died without impregnating his two wives, Ambika & Ambalika, who obtained their sons through Niyoga with Vyasa.
Birth, Early Life & Death
There are very few places in the Mahabharata where Daashraaj is mentioned. There isn't any mention about his early life and how he was born; in fact, he was introduced in the epic at the point where Shantanu came to him for Satyavati. Similarly, there isn't any mention about his death also.
References
This article "Daashraaj" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical and/or the page Edithistory:Daashraaj. Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.
- ↑
- BORI CE Critical edition of Mahabharat
- Bhishma(The Oath)
- Satyavati
