Indrajit : during Rāvana’s assault on Swarga, his eldest son Meghanāda captured Indra. Brahma gave him the title Indra-jeet (defeater of Indra) when he released Indra.
... Greek annalist - Page 336 the republican Lichchhavi clan into which Chandragupta I married had held sway over Pātaliputra, as shown by an inscription pubished by Pandit Bhagwanlal Indrajit in The Indian Antiquary (XI, p. 7). Down to 490 B.C. from 802 the Āndhras were, in the eyes of the Purānas, masters of Magadha, the province whose capital was this city. But can we accept such... names, Sātakarni and Pulumāvi, are never known to have been borne by a single individual". 1 Finally, we have independent evidence of Gautamīputra Sātakarni at war with the Kārdamakas: Bhagwanlal Indrajit 2 found a coin of his that had been executed in the style of Rudradāman's father Jayadaman whom he must have defeated, a style which was never imitated by any other Sātavāhana king. Everything ...
... (New York), October 1960 Huntington, M., "The Legend of Prithu", Purāna (Varanasi), II, 1-2, July 1960 Indian Culture, II, V, VI Indo-Asian Culture, April 1960 Indrajit, Pandit Bhagwanlal, In The Indian Antiquary, IX Jackson, A. V. William, "The Persian Dominions in Northern India down to the Time of Alexander's Invasion", The Cambridge... Bhagavat, see Krishna Page 623 Bhāgavata Purāna, 10, 11, 105, 106, 107 Bhāgavatas/Vaishnavites, 242, 400-02 Bhagwanlal Indrajit, Pandit, 113, 199, 337, 472 'bhakti' in Pānini, 395-6 Bhandarkar, D. R., i, 95, 113, 265, 270, 273, 284, 287, 292-7, 304-6, 427, 425fn., 459, 496, 500, 502, 518, 587 Bhandarkar, ...
... title Mahārājadhirāja ("Supreme King of Great Kings") which none of his ancestors had borne and which he took on the strength of his conquests; (3) an inscription published by Pandit Bhagwanlal Indrajit' clearly shows the Lichchhavis ruling at Pātaliputra in the period preceding that of the Guptas. From this trio of facts we may reasonably infer that Chandragupta I came into possession of Pātaliputra ...
... he accosted by Kumbhanda, the goblin, or is he slain by Vritra, the terrible Enemy? Is it not true that the potency of the Yajna is exploited even by the Asuras to battle against the Gods? Did not Indrajit, the son of the demon king Ravan, hide himself in a 41 Savitri, p. 279. Page 121 secret cave and initiate the fearsome sacrifice to obtain weapons and get a swift-wheeled ...
... first among the Guptas to enjoy. In D.R. Bhandarkar's view, 2 it is clear not only from the tradition of the Lichchhavis but also from one of the Nepāl inscriptions published by Pandit Bhagwanlal Indrajit 3 that the Lichchhavis used to rule at 1. Op. cit . p. 73. 2. Carmichael Lectures. 1921, p. 10. 3. The Indian Antiquary. IX, p. 7. Page 113 ...
... Silent is the lion roar. Into these ears used to be poured A torrent of delight, the trumpet call of victory, The wild war-cry, the leonine yell of my brother Kumbhakarna. But O Aksha, O Indrajit, why are you silent at this hour of peril! Why does not your ever victorious voice delight our ears anymore! O my children, is the embrace of Death so fast, so sweet! Pardon me, Titans ...
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