Vedavyasa Srimad Bhagavata Mahapurana

Srimad Bhagavatam
12 Skandhas — Complete Summary

निगम-कल्प-तरोर्गलितं फलम्

Nigama-kalpa-taror galitam phalam

"The ripened fruit of the wish-fulfilling tree of Vedic literature — made sweet by falling from the lips of Shuka."

— Bhagavatam 1.1.3 (Prathama Skanda)

18,000+

Shlokas

12

Skandhas

335

Chapters

Vyasa

Author

The greatest of the 18 Mahapuranas — the supreme scripture of the Bhakti tradition. Contains the complete stories of Prahlada, Dhruva, Gajendra, Vamana, and Krishna's entire life.

What is the Srimad Bhagavatam?

The Srimad Bhagavata Mahapurana is considered the greatest of the 18 Mahapuranas composed by Vedavyasa. In 18,000+ shlokas and 335 chapters across 12 Skandhas, it narrates the glory of Lord Vishnu/Krishna and the path of pure devotion (Bhakti). Framed as a dialogue between King Parikshit (facing death in 7 days) and the sage Shuka, it answers the ultimate question: 'What is the highest duty for a person facing death?'

Classification

Mahapurana, Paramahansa Samhita

Skandhas

12 (Prathama to Dvadasha)

Language

Sanskrit (Puranic)

Presiding deity

Lord Vishnu / Krishna

The 12 Skandhas

Prathama to Dvadasha — the complete scope of the Srimad Bhagavatam

Skanda 1

Prathama Skandaप्रथम स्कन्ध

~210 shlokas · 19 ch.

The opening frame: King Parikshit, grandson of Arjuna, is cursed to die in seven days from a snakebite. He renounces his kingdom and sits on the banks of the Ganga to hear the Bhagavatam from the sage Shuka. Narada visits Vyasa and encourages him to compose a scripture of pure devotion — the Bhagavatam. The dialogue between Narada and Vyasa, and the appearance of Shuka as the ideal narrator, establishes the scripture's purpose: 'What is the highest duty for a person facing death?'

Skanda 2

Dvitiya Skandaद्वितीय स्कन्ध

~391 shlokas · 10 ch.

Shuka answers Parikshit's question: the highest duty at the time of death is to meditate on Lord Vishnu with a focused mind. Describes cosmic manifestation — how the universe emerges from Vishnu's body (Viraat Purusha), the various forms of Vishnu (Matsya, Kurma, Varaha, etc.), and the nature of Brahman. Contains the famous Bhagavata Mahatmya (glory of the scripture). The 'Catuh-shloki Bhagavatam' — four foundational verses dictated by Vishnu to Brahma — are found here.

Skanda 3

Tritiya Skandaतृतीय स्कन्ध

~1,386 shlokas · 33 ch.

Detailed cosmology: the creation of the material universe, the 24 elements of Sankhya philosophy, and the Kapila-Devahuti dialogue — one of the most important philosophical sections in all Vedic literature. Kapila Muni (an avatar of Vishnu born as the son of Kardama and Devahuti) teaches his mother Sankhya-Yoga, the nature of the material world (Prakriti), the soul (Purusha), and the path of devotion as the highest liberation. The Varaha avatar (cosmic boar) story and the creation of Brahma from Vishnu's navel are narrated here.

Skanda 4

Chaturtha Skandaचतुर्थ स्कन्ध

~1,441 shlokas · 31 ch.

Daksha Yajna and the story of Sati (covered here in a different version than the Shiva Purana). The story of Dhruva — the 5-year-old boy who, refused a place on his father's lap, performs severe austerities in the forest and wins a boon from Vishnu, becoming the Pole Star (Dhruva-nakshatra). The story of the Prachethas and the origin of trees. The Puranjana allegory — a philosophical narrative about the soul's embodied existence in the city of the body.

Skanda 5

Panchama Skandaपञ्चम स्कन्ध

~729 shlokas · 26 ch.

Cosmic geography: the Bhagavatam's description of the universe — the seven island-continents (Sapta-dvipas), Mount Meru at the centre, the planetary systems (Bhu-mandala), and the hellish regions (Narakas). The story of Rishabhadeva — a liberated king-sage who renounces his throne and becomes an avadhuta (completely detached sage), considered a precursor to Jain philosophy. His son Bharata (after whom India is named 'Bharata-varsha') — his story of detachment and the deer that caused his rebirth.

Skanda 6

Shashtha Skandaषष्ठ स्कन्ध

~807 shlokas · 19 ch.

The power of the holy name and redemption. The story of Ajamila — a fallen brahmin who accidentally calls out his son's name 'Narayana' at the moment of death and is rescued by Vishnu's attendants (Vishnudutas) from Yama's messengers (Yamadoots). The Narayana Kavacha — the protective prayer taught to Indra. The story of Chitraketu — a king who attains spiritual knowledge through grief and is transformed by Narada. Indra's sin of killing Vritra (a brahmin) and his atonement.

Skanda 7

Saptama Skandaसप्तम स्कन्ध

~748 shlokas · 15 ch.

The most beloved section for bhaktas: Prahlada Maharaja. Hiranyakashipu, the demon king, forbids worship of Vishnu — but his own 5-year-old son Prahlada is an unshakeable devotee. Despite being subjected to every torture (poison, fire, elephants, hurled from cliffs, thrown into the ocean), Prahlada remains steadfast, protected by Vishnu. When Hiranyakashipu challenges Prahlada asking 'Where is your Vishnu?' and strikes a pillar, Narasimha (man-lion avatar) erupts from the pillar and destroys him — one of the most dramatic moments in all Puranic literature.

Skanda 8

Ashtama Skandaअष्टम स्कन्ध

~921 shlokas · 24 ch.

Three landmark stories. Gajendra Moksha — the elephant king, trapped by a crocodile's jaws after a cosmic fall from grace as a proud king in his previous life, prays to Vishnu in complete surrender. Vishnu comes personally and saves him. Churning of the Cosmic Ocean (Samudra Manthan) — gods and demons churn the ocean using Mount Mandara and the serpent Vasuki, producing the divine nectar Amrita, the goddess Lakshmi, Dhanvantari (divine physician), and the poison Halahala (swallowed by Shiva). Vamana Avatar — Vishnu appears as a dwarf brahmin and requests three steps of land from the generous demon king Mahabali, then covers the three worlds in two steps.

Skanda 9

Navama Skandaनवम स्कन्ध

~838 shlokas · 24 ch.

The royal dynasties (Vamsha-varnana). Traces the lineages from Svayambhuva Manu through the solar (Surya-vamsha) and lunar (Chandra-vamsha) dynasties. The solar dynasty leads to the story of Lord Rama (a brief but complete Ramayana embedded within the Bhagavatam). The lunar dynasty leads to Krishna's lineage (Yadava-vamsha). Also contains the stories of Ambarisha (the devotee protected from Durvasa's curse) and Saubhari Muni (who falls from austerity due to temptation).

Skanda 10

Dashama Skandaदशम स्कन्ध

~3,943 shlokas · 90 ch.

The heart of the Bhagavatam — the longest and most celebrated Skanda, comprising nearly a quarter of the entire text. Complete life of Lord Krishna: divine birth in Kamsa's prison as the eighth child of Vasudeva and Devaki, Vasudeva crossing the Yamuna to safety, childhood in Vrindavan with Yashoda and Nanda (butter-stealing, the Kaliya serpent, the Govardhana mountain), the Rasa Lila with the Gopis (the supreme example of pure loving devotion), the Bhramara Gita (Uddhava's message to the Gopis), the slaying of Kamsa and liberation of the parents, the Mahabharata war (briefly), and Krishna's establishment of Dvaraka. Contains the famous Gopika-gita (song of the Gopis).

Skanda 11

Ekadasha Skandaएकादश स्कन्ध

~1,002 shlokas · 31 ch.

Uddhava Gita — the final teachings of Krishna to his closest friend and devotee Uddhava, shortly before Krishna's physical departure from the world. Krishna teaches the synthesis of Jnana (knowledge), Bhakti (devotion), and Yoga — considered by many scholars to be a complement to the Bhagavad Gita. The Avadhoota-Gita episode: the story of the avadhoota who learned wisdom from 24 gurus including the earth, water, fire, the python, and the sparrow hawk. Ends with the dissolution of the Yadava clan and Krishna's ascent.

Skanda 12

Dvadasha Skandaद्वादश स्कन्ध

~539 shlokas · 13 ch.

The conclusion: King Parikshit's liberation — having heard the entire Bhagavatam from Shuka, Parikshit is ready for death. The snake Takshaka comes, and Parikshit accepts his death with complete equanimity, attaining liberation. Kali Yuga characteristics: the Bhagavatam predicts the decline of dharma, truthfulness, and human lifespan in the Kali age, and prescribes the remedy — 'Harer nama eva kevalam' (only the holy name of Hari). The Bhagavatam's own glory (Phala-shruti) is proclaimed: hearing even one verse destroys sins; completing it grants liberation.

Key Stories

The stories of the Bhagavatam that have kept the Sanatana Dharma alive across millennia

Dhruva — The Boy Who Became a Star

Five-year-old Dhruva, denied a place on his royal father's lap in favour of a step-brother, is sent away by his step-mother with the words 'Go find another father.' His own mother tells him: if you want the best seat, pray to Lord Vishnu. Dhruva retreats into the Madhuvana forest and performs extreme tapasya — standing on one leg, fasting for months. Vishnu, pleased, appears and grants him a boon. Dhruva asks for an imperishable realm — Vishnu places him in the heavens as the Pole Star (Dhruva-nakshatra), around which all other stars revolve forever.

Prahlada & the Narasimha Avatar

Hiranyakashipu, the demon king, has won a boon making him nearly invincible and forbids the worship of Vishnu throughout his kingdom — but his own son Prahlada is an unwavering devotee. Every attempt to kill Prahlada fails: poison, thrown from a cliff, trampled by elephants, cast into the sea, set on fire. Finally Hiranyakashipu asks 'Is your Vishnu in this pillar?' and strikes it. Narasimha (the man-lion avatar) bursts from the pillar at twilight — neither day nor night, neither inside nor outside, using neither weapon nor animal — and destroys Hiranyakashipu across his thighs, satisfying every condition of the boon.

Gajendra Moksha — The Elephant's Prayer

Gajendra, the king of elephants, was once a proud human king who insulted a sage and was cursed to be reborn as an elephant. While drinking at a lake, his leg is seized by a crocodile (who was also a cursed gandharva). For a thousand years the elephant and crocodile struggle. Finally exhausted, Gajendra plucks a lotus with his trunk and raises it in offering, praying: 'O Adi-Deva, protector of those who have no protector, I seek refuge in you.' Vishnu immediately descends from Vaikuntha, kills the crocodile with his Sudarshana Chakra, and liberates both — Gajendra returns to his human form as the sage Indradyumna, and the crocodile is freed. The prayer (Gajendra Stuti) is one of the most beautiful in Sanskrit literature.

Vamana Avatar & Mahabali

Mahabali, the demon king, is so generous and dharmic that he has conquered the three worlds. The gods approach Vishnu for help. Vishnu takes birth as Vamana — a tiny brahmin boy. He approaches Mahabali and requests only three steps of land. Mahabali's guru Shukracharya warns him that this is Vishnu, but Mahabali, bound by his vow of generosity, agrees. Vamana then expands into his cosmic form: the first step covers the earth, the second step covers the heavens — there is nowhere left for the third step. Mahabali, with true humility, offers his own head. Vishnu places his foot upon it and sends Mahabali to Sutala (the finest nether realm), promising to personally guard his palace as Dvara-pala (doorkeeper).

Krishna's Birth in Kamsa's Prison

Devaki and Vasudeva, imprisoned by the demon king Kamsa, have seen six of their children killed at birth. A divine voice had told Kamsa that the eighth child of Devaki would kill him. When the eighth child — Krishna — is born at midnight, the prison cells unlock miraculously and the guards fall asleep. Vasudeva carries the newborn Krishna across the flooded Yamuna river (which parts to let them through, her waters touching Krishna's feet), to the home of Nanda and Yashoda in Vrindavan. There he exchanges Krishna for Yashoda's newborn daughter. When Kamsa tries to kill the girl, she escapes and becomes the goddess Yogamaya, declaring that his killer is already born elsewhere.

Govardhan Puja — Lifting the Mountain

The Vrindavan villagers prepare to worship Indra (god of rain), as was traditional, for good rains. Young Krishna challenges this: why worship Indra? We depend on Govardhan mountain and the cows. Let us worship Govardhan instead. When they do, Indra is furious and sends torrential rains and thunderstorms for seven days. Krishna lifts the entire Govardhan mountain on his little finger and holds it aloft like an umbrella for all the villagers and cattle to shelter beneath — for seven days without moving. Indra finally surrenders, admits Krishna is Vishnu incarnate, and bathes him with waters from the Akasha Ganga as an act of worship.

Rasa Lila — The Dance of Divine Love

On the full moon night of the autumn, Krishna plays his flute in the forest of Vrindavan. The Gopis (cowherd women), drawn irresistibly by the sound, abandon everything — husbands, children, household duties — and come to him. When some of them feel pride in being chosen by Krishna, he disappears. They search for him, singing the Gopika-gita — one of the supreme examples of pure longing for the divine in all Sanskrit literature. When they are completely surrendered and free of ego, Krishna reappears and dances the Rasa dance, multiplying himself so each Gopi dances only with him. The Bhagavatam presents this not as ordinary love but as the highest form of pure devotion (madhura-bhakti).

Bhagavata Philosophy — Core Teachings

Four philosophical pillars of the Srimad Bhagavatam

Nava-Vidha Bhakti — 9 Forms of Devotion

Taught by Prahlada in Skanda 7 as the complete path of devotion: (1) Shravanam — listening to Vishnu's glories; (2) Kirtanam — singing his names; (3) Smaranam — constant remembrance; (4) Pada-sevanam — service to his feet; (5) Archanam — worship; (6) Vandanam — offering prayers; (7) Dasyam — servitude; (8) Sakhyam — friendship; (9) Atma-nivedanam — complete self-surrender. Any one of these, practised sincerely, is sufficient for liberation.

श्रवणं कीर्तनं विष्णोः स्मरणं पाद-सेवनम् / अर्चनं वन्दनं दास्यं सख्यं आत्म-निवेदनम्

Shravanam kirtanam vishnoh smaranam pada-sevanam / Archanam vandanam dasyam sakhyam atma-nivedanam

Saptama Skanda 5.23, Srimad Bhagavatam

Nigama-Kalpa-Taru — The Ripened Fruit

The Bhagavatam's own self-description (1.1.3): 'This Bhagavatam is the ripened fruit of the wish-fulfilling tree of Vedic literature (Nigama-kalpa-taru), made even sweeter by having fallen from the lips of Shuka (the parrot-sage).' The image: the Veda is the wish-fulfilling tree; the Bhagavatam is its ripest fruit; Shuka (whose name means 'parrot') narrated it — making it doubly sweet, as fruit eaten by a parrot becomes even sweeter.

निगम-कल्प-तरोर्गलितं फलम् / शुक-मुखाद् अमृत-द्रव-संयुतम्

Nigama-kalpa-taror galitam phalam / Shuka-mukhad amrita-drava-samyutam

Prathama Skanda 1.3, Srimad Bhagavatam

Harer Nama — The Kali Yuga Remedy

The Bhagavatam's prescription for the age of Kali (Dvadasha Skanda): 'In the age of Kali, the only way — the only way — the only way — is the holy name of Hari (Vishnu/Krishna). There is no other path, no other path, no other path.' The triple repetition (nasty eva, nasty eva, nasty eva) is the Bhagavatam's emphatic rejection of all alternatives in this age when tapasya, yajna, and meditation are difficult.

हरेर् नाम हरेर् नाम हरेर् नामैव केवलम् / कलौ नास्त्येव नास्त्येव नास्त्येव गतिर् अन्यथा

Harer nama harer nama harer namaiva kevalam / Kalau nasty eva nasty eva nasty eva gatir anyatha

Dvadasha Skanda, Srimad Bhagavatam

Parikshit — Perfect Death through Hearing

The Bhagavatam's central teaching through Parikshit's frame story: a king facing certain death in seven days uses that time to hear the entire Bhagavatam — and attains Vishnu's abode at the moment of death. This demonstrates the scripture's core thesis: hearing the Bhagavatam with a focused mind, even once, purifies all sins and grants liberation. The ideal death (Uttama Marana) is not death in battle or at a pilgrimage site — it is death while hearing Hari-katha (narratives of Vishnu).

तन्-नाम-ग्रहण-स्मरण-कीर्तन... सर्व-पाप-प्रशमनम्

Tan-nama-grahana-smarana-keertana... sarva-papa-prashamanam

Dvadasha Skanda 12.6, Srimad Bhagavatam

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