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Takshaka are also known in
Chinese and Japanese mythology as being one of the "eight Great Dragon Kings" (八大龍王 Hachi-dai Ryuu-ou), they are the only snakes which can fly and also mentioned as the most venomous snakes, amongst Nanda (Nagaraja), Upananda, Sagara (Shakara), Vasuki, Balavan, Anavatapta
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king, which was directed at its full force, towards
Takshaka and the Naga race. Janamejaya started a campaign at Takshasila where he massacred the Nagas, with the intent of exterminating the Naga race (1,52). Takshaka left his territory and escaped to the Deva territory where he sought protection
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When
Parikshit was cursed by a sage's son to die by a snake bite for insulting his father, Takshaka came to fulfil the curse. Takshaka did the deed by approaching in disguise (1,50) and biting Parikshit, the grandson of Arjuna and thus slaying him, while he was meditating on Lord
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king
Janamejaya, the great-grandson of Arjuna. Uttanka then waited upon King Janamejaya who had some time before returned victorious from Takshashila. Uttanka reminded the king of his father Parikshit's death, at the hands of Takshaka (1,3).
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from Deva king Indra (1,53). But
Janamejaya's men traced him and brought him as a prisoner in order to execute him along with the other Naga chiefs (1,56). At that time, a learned sage named
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was burned (1,230) though some stories portray him as coming out to bow before
Krishna and then guiding the Pandavas to a cave where an ancient treasure horde that also had the
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Utanka soon became another victim while he was passing through the domain of
Takshaka. By visiting Janamejaya, Utanka invoked the ire of that
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In the chapters (14-53 to 58) Uttanka's history is repeated where the ear-rings were mentioned to be of queen
Madayanti, the wife of king
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Kashyapa alive tree what is burnt by
Takshak (near Pond) and parikshit bitten by Takshak, folio from Birla razmnama
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Takshaka is mentioned as the friend of Indra, the king of gods, at (1-225,227,230). Takshaka, formerly dwelt in
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burned that forest at the behest of Agni. At that time the Naga chief
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542:(an Ikshwaku king) (14,57). A Naga in the race of Airavata is said to steal away the ear-rings (14,58).
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managed to get it back with the help of others. He wished to revenge on Takshaka and proceeded towards
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Takshaka lived in the Khandava forest (1,225). Nagas lived there with other tribes like the
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is mentioned as escaping from the abode of Takshaka when
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who came there after Shiva warned him of the fall of
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is compared in prowess to Naga Takshaka at (6,108).
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517:king's queen, which she had given as a gift to a
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576:languages.
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479:Janamejaya
451:Janamejaya
397:(clans of
368:Brihadbala
269:at (1,3).
156:Devanagari
80:newspapers
69:"Takshaka"
625:17 August
387:Rakshasas
372:Abhimanyu
289:citations
189:Indrapuri
619:Archived
574:Sanskrit
423:Mayasura
419:Airavata
383:Pisachas
336:Khandava
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200:Sanskrit
196:Takshaka
166:Sanskrit
135:Takshaka
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435:gandiva
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395:Danavas
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344:Kamyaka
212:) is a
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171:Takṣaka
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495:Astika
460:Vishnu
403:Arjuna
399:Asuras
376:Arjuna
350:Legend
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652:Nāgas
570:Hindi
415:Karna
340:Delhi
267:Nagas
246:Kadru
242:Nagas
228:epic
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204:तक्षक
186:Abode
160:तक्षक
101:JSTOR
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627:2014
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