Ocean of milk
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Ocean of Milk in Hindu mythology is the place where 13 precious treasures were lost. The gods and demons worked together for a millennium churning the sea to free them.[1] It is spoken of in the Samudra manthan chapter of the Puranas, a body of ancient sanskrit legends.
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[edit] Depiction at Angkor Wat
A bas-relief at the temple of Angkor Wat in Cambodia includes a depiction of devas and asuras working together to stir up the Ocean of Milk in an attempt to free the precious objects lost within, including the elixir of immortality called amrita. The scheme, masterminded by Vishnu, was to wrap the serpent Vasuki around Mount Mandara, and then to rotate the mountain and to churn the surrounding sea in the manner of a gigantic food processor, by alternately pulling on the serpent's head and then on his tail. [2]
[edit] Etymology
Ocean of Milk is the English translation of the Sanskrit क्षीरसागर, Ksheerasagara, whereby Ksheera, क्षीर, means milk and Sagara, सागर, means ocean.
[edit] External links
- The story of the churning as told in the epic Mahabharata, here in the online English translation by Kisari Mohan Ganguli at sacred-texts.com.
- The story of the churning as told in the epic Ramayana, here in the online English verse translation by Ralph T.H. Griffith at sacred-texts.com.
- The story of the churning as told in the Vishnu Purana, here in the online English translation by Horace Hayman Wilson at sacred-texts.com.