词条 | Indra |
释义 | Indra Indian deity in Hindu (Hinduism) mythology, the king of the gods. He is one of the main gods of the archaic Sanskrit collection of hymns, the Rigveda, and is the Indo-European cousin of the German Wotan, Norse Odin, Greek Zeus, and Roman Jupiter. In early religious texts Indra plays a variety of roles. As king, he leads cattle raids against the dasas or dasyus, native inhabitants of the lands over which his people range. He brings rain as god of the thunderbolt, and he is the great warrior who conquers the antigods ( asuras). He also defeats innumerable human and superhuman enemies, most famously Vritra, a dragon and a leader of the dasa. Vritra is accused in his dragon form of holding back the waters and the rains, as a dasa of stealing cows, and as an antigod of hiding the Sun. Indra is strengthened for these feats by drinks of the elixir of immortality, the soma, which priests offer to him in the sacrifice. Among his allies are the Rudras (Rudra) (or Maruts), who ride the clouds and direct storms. Indra is sometimes referred to as “the thousand-eyed.” ![]() In painting and sculpture, Indra is often depicted riding his white elephant, Airavata. Indra also plays a part in the Jain (Jainism) and Buddhist (Buddhism) mythology of India. When Mahavira, the Jain saviour and reformer, cut off his hair to signify his renunciation of the world, Indra, as king of the gods, received the hair into his hands. In Buddhist mythology, Indra is sometimes mocked and is sometimes portrayed as a mere figurehead. |
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