Vibhandaka, 痴颈产丑补峁囜笉补办补, 痴颈产丑腻峁囜笉补办补: 6 definitions
Introduction:
Vibhandaka means something in Hinduism, Sanskrit. If you want to know the exact meaning, history, etymology or English translation of this term then check out the descriptions on this page. Add your comment or reference to a book if you want to contribute to this summary article.
In Hinduism
Purana and Itihasa (epic history)
: archive.org: Puranic Encyclopedia痴颈产丑补峁囜笉补办补 (啶掂た啶ぃ啷嵿ぁ啶�).鈥�(VIBH膧峁嗎笇AKA). General information. A hermit, born in the family of Ka yapa. Once he happened to see Urva艣墨. When he pondered over her, seminal flow occurred to him. An antelope swallowed it and gave birth to a son. That son was known as the hermit 峁氠梗ya艣峁涐箙ga, when he grew up. (For details see under 峁氠梗ya艣峁涐箙ga). Other details.
(i) 痴颈产丑补峁囜笉补办补 stays in the palace of Indra and glorifies him. (Mah膩bh膩rata Sabh膩 Parva, Chapter 7, Stanza 18).
(ii) 痴颈产丑补峁囜笉补办补 is as radiant as Praj膩pati. (Mah膩bh膩rata Vana Parva, Chapter 110, Stanza 32). (See full article at Story of 痴颈产丑补峁囜笉补办补 from the Puranic encyclopaedia by Vettam Mani)

The Purana (啶啶班ぞ啶�, pur膩峁嘺s) refers to Sanskrit literature preserving ancient India鈥檚 vast cultural history, including historical legends, religious ceremonies, various arts and sciences. The eighteen mahapuranas total over 400,000 shlokas (metrical couplets) and date to at least several centuries BCE.
General definition (in Hinduism)
: archive.org: Vedic index of Names and Subjects痴颈产丑补峁囜笉补办补 (啶掂た啶ぃ啷嵿ぁ啶�) or 痴颈产丑补峁囜笉补办补-K膩艣yapa (K膩艣yapa=鈥榙escendant of Ka艣yapa鈥�) is the name of a teacher, a pupil of 峁氠梗ya艣峁涐箙ga in the Va峁兣沘-br膩hma峁嘺. Note: See Indische Studien, 4, 374. Cf. St I which is the more correct spelling Petersburg Dictionary, s.v. 痴颈产丑腻峁囜笉补办补 (B枚htlingk, Dictionary, s.v.).
: Apam Napat: Indian MythologyVibhandaka was a son of sage Kashyapa. Once, while at the river, he beheld the celestial nymph Urvashi and his seminal fluid came out. It impregnated a nearby female deer (who in reality was another celestial nymph, cursed to be born as a deer), who gave birth to his son Rishyashringa. He tried to bring his son up to be pure of mind, trying to keep him a celibate by making sure that he did not even knew that females existed in the world.
: WikiPedia: HinduismVibhandaka : An ascetic who retired from the world and lived in the forest with his infant son Rishyasringa.
Languages of India and abroad
Sanskrit dictionary
: Cologne Digital Sanskrit Dictionaries: Monier-Williams Sanskrit-English Dictionary1) 痴颈产丑腻峁囜笉补办补 (啶掂た啶ぞ啶`啶∴):鈥擺=惫颈-产丑腻峁囜笉补办补] [from vi] m. Name of Muni, [Mah膩bh膩rata; Hariva峁兣沘; R膩m膩ya峁嘺]
2) 痴颈产丑补峁囜笉补办补 (啶掂た啶ぃ啷嵿ぁ啶�):鈥擺wrong reading] for 惫颈-产丑腻峁囜笉补办补 (See p. 951, col. 3).
[Sanskrit to German]
Sanskrit, also spelled 啶膏啶膏啶曕啶むぎ啷� (蝉补峁僺办峁泃补尘), is an ancient language of India commonly seen as the grandmother of the Indo-European language family (even English!). Closely allied with Prakrit and Pali, Sanskrit is more exhaustive in both grammar and terms and has the most extensive collection of literature in the world, greatly surpassing its sister-languages Greek and Latin.
See also (Relevant definitions)
Partial matches: Bhandaka, Vi.
Starts with: Vibhandakasuta, Vibhandakasuta.
Full-text: Vaibhandaki, Rishyashringa, Vibhandakasuta, Vibhandika, Vaibhadi, Vipantakan, Vibhanda, Maharshi, Tumburu, Punya, Rishi, Kashyapa.
Relevant text
Search found 21 books and stories containing Vibhandaka, Vi-bhandaka, Vi-bh膩峁囜笉aka, 痴颈产丑补峁囜笉补办补, 痴颈产丑腻峁囜笉补办补; (plurals include: Vibhandakas, bhandakas, bh膩峁囜笉akas, 痴颈产丑补峁囜笉补办补s, 痴颈产丑腻峁囜笉补办补s). You can also click to the full overview containing English textual excerpts. Below are direct links for the most relevant articles:
Puranic encyclopaedia (by Vettam Mani)
A Descriptive Catalogue of the Sanskrit Manuscripts, Madras (by M. Seshagiri Sastri)
Page 23 < [Volume 1, Part 2 (1904)]
Mahabharata (English) (by Kisari Mohan Ganguli)
Section CXIII < [Tirtha-yatra Parva]
Section CXI < [Tirtha-yatra Parva]
Section CX < [Tirtha-yatra Parva]
Ramayana (by Manmatha Nath Dutt)
Ramayana of Valmiki (Shastri) (by Hari Prasad Shastri)
Chapter 10 - How Rishyasringa was brought to King Lomapada鈥檚 court < [Book 1 - Bala-kanda]
Chapter 9 - Sumantra relates a tradition that a son will be born < [Book 1 - Bala-kanda]
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A Concise Encyclopaedia of Hinduism