Uluka

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

GenderMale
PositionWarrior, messenger
Relatives
  • Shakuni (father)
  • Unnamed successor of Shakuni (brother)
  • Subala (grand-father)
  • Achala, Vrishaka and other brothers of Shakuni (uncles)
  • Gandhari (aunt)
  • Kauravas (cousins)
OriginGandhara
Uluka
Mahabharata character
GenderMale
PositionWarrior, messenger
Relatives
  • Shakuni (father)
  • Unnamed successor of Shakuni (brother)
  • Subala (grand-father)
  • Achala, Vrishaka and other brothers of Shakuni (uncles)
  • Gandhari (aunt)
  • Kauravas (cousins)
OriginGandhara

Uluka (Sanskrit: उलूक, IAST: Ulūka, lit.'owl') is a character in the Mahabharata, one of the two principal Sanskrit epics of ancient India. He is described as the prince of the Gandhara Kingdom and the eldest son of its ruler, Shakuni, who is renowned within the epic as a cunning gambler. Uluka serves as the final emissary of his cousin, Duryodhana, on the eve of the Kurukshetra War, conveying the rejection of peace proposal to the Pandavas. Uluka participates in the Kurukshetra war from the Kaurava side and is killed by the youngest Pandava Sahadeva during the conflict, shortly before the death of his father.

The Mahabharata, one of the Sanskrit epics from the Indian subcontinent, other being the Ramayana. It mainly narrates the events and aftermath of the Kurukshetra War, a war of succession between two groups of princely cousins, the Kauravas and the Pandavas. The work is written in Classical Sanskrit and is a composite work of revisions, editing and interpolations over many centuries. The oldest parts in the surviving version of the text may date to near 400 BCE. The Mahabharata is divided into eighteen parvas or 'books'.[1]

Uluka's presence is recorded in the first book, Adi Parva, but his most prominent role unfolds in the Udyoga Parva, the fifth book. As documented by scholar J.A.B. van Buitenen, Uluka is initially introduced with the epithet Kaitava—a term meaning "son of the gambler"—a reference to Shakuni. It is in subsequent books that this identification becomes explicit.[2] Chapters 158-160 of the Udyoga Parva (Critical Edition) are dedicated to Uluka's embassy and the chapters are classified as a sub-book called Ulukadutagamana Parva.[3]

Etymology and epithets

The name Ulūka (Sanskrit: उलूक) primarily denotes "owl" and is found in several Vedic and classical texts, including the Ṛgveda (x.165.4), Atharvaveda (vi.29.1), Vājasaneyisaṃhitā, Taittirīyasaṃhitā, Mahābhārata, and Manusmṛti. The term is derived from the root √val, as explained in the Uṇādi-sūtra (iv.41). Ulūka is also the name of a country in the Mahabharata.[4]

Being the son of Shakuni, Uluka is referred to by multiple epithets in the epic, including Śākuni, Kaitaka, Saubalyasuta and Kaitavya.[5]

Biography

Assessment

References

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