Vyasa Mahabharata
यतो धर्मस्ततो जयः
Yato dharmastato jayah
"Where there is Dharma, there is victory."
— Mahabharata
100,000+
Shlokas
18
Parvas
1 Mil.+
Words
Vyasa
Author
The world's longest epic poem — the Pandava-Kaurava war, the birth of the Bhagavad Gita, and the eternal quest for Dharma.
The Mahabharata is the world's longest epic poem — composed by Vyasa, with over 100,000 shlokas and more than 1 million words (10 times the combined length of the Iliad and Odyssey). It is not merely a war story — it is a complete exploration of Dharma, statecraft, philosophy, and human nature. The Bhagavad Gita — India's supreme philosophical text — is embedded within it.
Composition
~3100–400 BCE (estimated)
Language
Sanskrit (Vedic)
Embedded texts
Bhagavad Gita, Vishnusahasranama, Nala-Damayanti, Savitri
Classification
Smriti (Itihasa)
From Adi Parva to Svargarohana — the complete story of the Mahabharata
The immortal characters of the Mahabharata — whose stories remain eternally relevant
Yudhishthira
युधिष्ठिर
Eldest Pandava — embodiment of Dharma; his unwavering commitment to truth, even at great personal cost, defines the moral core of the epic.
Arjuna
अर्जुन
The supreme archer — recipient of the Bhagavad Gita; his crisis of conscience at Kurukshetra is the catalyst for Krishna's eternal teaching.
Bhima
भीम
The mighty Pandava — unmatched in physical strength; his fierce loyalty to Draupadi and commitment to avenging her honour drives the epic's emotional arc.
Krishna
श्रीकृष्ण
Avatara of Vishnu — Arjuna's charioteer and strategic guide; through the Bhagavad Gita he reveals the nature of the Self, Dharma, Karma, and the path to liberation.
Draupadi
द्रौपदी
Wife of all five Pandavas — her humiliation in the dice-game assembly and the sworn vengeance of the Pandavas are the central moral wound that makes the Kurukshetra war inevitable.
Bhishma
भीष्म
Grandfather of both sides — bound by his oath to serve the throne of Hastinapura, he fights for the Kauravas though his heart is with Dharma; his discourses on the bed of arrows remain the finest treatise on statecraft in all of Sanskrit literature.
Karna
कर्ण
The greatest warrior never recognised — born of Kunti (making him the eldest Pandava), raised as a charioteer's son, denied his rightful station, yet supremely loyal to Duryodhana out of gratitude. His is the most tragic arc in the epic.
Duryodhana
दुर्योधन
The antagonist — not purely evil but fatally consumed by envy and pride; his refusal of peace despite Krishna's counsel makes him the architect of the Kurukshetra catastrophe.
Four pillars of Mahabharata wisdom — Dharma, Karma, the Gita, and Niti
The Mahabharata teaches that Dharma (righteous conduct) is situational and complex — not a single rigid law. Yudhishthira's dilemmas, Krishna's counsel, and Bhishma's discourses all reveal that Dharma must be discerned with wisdom, not memorised.
यतो धर्मस्ततो जयः
Yato dharmastato jayah
Where there is Dharma, there is victory.
— Mahabharata
Every action has consequences that ripple across time. The Gita's teaching — do your duty without attachment to results — is the supreme expression of this principle.
कर्मण्येवाधिकारस्ते मा फलेषु कदाचन
Karmanye vadhikaraste ma phaleshu kadachana
You have the right to perform your duty, but not to the fruits of action.
— Bhagavad Gita 2.47
The Bhagavad Gita (700 shlokas, 18 chapters) is embedded within the Bhishma Parva. It is not a separate text — it is Krishna's answer to Arjuna's collapse of will at the precise moment of crisis. The Gita is the soul of the Mahabharata.
सर्वधर्मान्परित्यज्य मामेकं शरणं व्रज
Sarva dharman parityajya mam ekam sharanam vraja
Abandoning all Dharmas, take refuge in Me alone; I will liberate you from all sins.
— Bhagavad Gita 18.66
The Shanti Parva and Anushasana Parva contain Bhishma's complete discourse on Rajadharma (duties of a ruler), Dandaniti (jurisprudence), and Mokshadharma — one of the most comprehensive treatises on ethics and governance in world literature.
न च धर्मस्य सर्वत्र शक्यः कर्तुं विनिश्चयः
Na cha dharmasya sarvatra shakyah kartum vinishchayah
It is not possible to determine Dharma with certainty in every situation.
— Mahabharata, Shanti Parva
The Bhagavad Gita — the heart of the Mahabharata — read it now
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