Asura
Asura are a race of celestial beings in Hinduism.
Asura may also refer to:
- Asura (Buddhism), the lowest ranks of the deities of the Kāmadhātu
- Asura (Samurai Showdown), a character in Samurai Showdown
- Asura, the main antagonist from Karmatrón
- Asura, a tribe in Tantra Online
- Asuras, the Asuran homeworld in Stargate Atlantis
- Asura, servants of the dark in Rappelz
- Asura, one of Rorona Zoro's powers in One Piece
- Asura, a race in Guild Wars
- Asura, the special attack delivered by the artifact weapon Kikuichi-monji in Golden Sun
- "Asura", a song by Deadsy from Phantasmagore
- Asura (trance ambient artists)
- Asura, a game engine developed by Rebellion
- Asura Strike (Also known as Guillotine Fist and Extremity Fist), a Monk skill in Ragnarok Online
- Asura, A server on Final Fantasy XI
See also
- Day of Ashura
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia; from the article "Asura (disambiguation)". Image Credit.
Extended Definition: Asura
Asura
In Hinduism
In Hinduism, the Asura (Sanskrit: असुर) are worshipped as deities among the Hindu dharma. Asuras were considered to be a group of power-seeking deities, sometimes referred to as devas or demi-gods. Some Asuras were corrupted while some were gods in heaven. Both are children of Kashyapa.[1]. Asuras should not be confused with Pishachas, or demons.[2]
The name Asura is cognate to Ahura – indeed, the Oxford English Dictionary recognises the use of the term in reference to Zoroastrianism, where "Ahura" would perhaps be more appropriate – and Æsir, which implies a common Proto-Indo-European origin for the Asura and the Æsir.
The negative character of the Asura in Hinduism seems to have evolved over time. In general, the earliest texts have the Asuras presiding over moral and social phenomena (e.g. Varuna, the guardian of Ṛtá, or Bhaga, the patron of marriages) and the devas presiding over natural phenomena (e.g. Ushas, whose name means "dawn", or Indra, a weather god).
Asura kingdoms existed in Kerala and possibly in other parts of India. The people of Kerala celebrate Onam in the memory of the last of the Asura kings Mahabali whom they consider themselves to be subjects of.
Mitra, Varuna and Vritra are the most well known Asuras; some others include Indra and Agni.[citation needed]
Other Asuras:
- Virocana, Sumbha and Nisumbha are kings of Asuras[citation needed]
- Mitra/Maitreya/Miroku bosatsu (The Buddha yet to come, who will reveal the true Dhamma)
- Varuna/Sui ten (Ocean deva)
In later writings, such as the Puranas and Itihasas, we find that the "devas" are the godly persons and the "asuras" the demonic. According to the Bhagavad Gita (16.6), all beings in the world partake either of the divine qualities (daivi sampad) or the demonic qualities (asuri sampad). The sixteenth chapter of the Bhagavad Gita describes the divine qualities briefly and the demonic qualities at length. In summary the Gita (16.4) says that the asuric qualities are pride, arrogance, conceit, anger, harshness and ignorance.
The Padma Purana says that the devotees of Vishnu are endowed with the divine qualities (viṣṇu-bhaktaḥ smṛto daiva) whereas the asuras are just the opposite (āsuras tad-viparyayaḥ).
In an Indo-Iranian context
The term asura is linguistically related to the ahuras of Zoroastrianism, but has in that religion a different meaning.
For one, the term applies to a very specific set of divinities, only three in number (Mazda, Mithra and Apam Napat). For another, there is no direct opposition between the ahuras and the daevas: The fundamental opposition in Zoroastrianism is not between groups of divinities, but between asha "Truth" and druj "Lie/Falsehood." The opposition between the ahuras and daevas is an expression of that opposition: the ahuras, like all the other yazatas, are defenders of asha; the daevas on the other hand are in the earliest texts divinities that are to be rejected because they are misled by "the Lie" (see daeva for details).
The notion of an "inverted morality" and the supposition that a dichotomy between ahuras/asuras and daevas/devas already existed in Indo-Iranian times is not supportable from either the Iranian or Indian perspective. Not only is such a dichotomy not evident in the earliest texts of either culture, neither the RigVeda's asuras nor the Gathas' daevas are demons. The demonization of the asuras in India and the demonization of the daevas in Iran both took place "so late that the associated terms cannot be considered a feature of Indo-Iranian religious dialectology."[3]
The idea of a prehistorical opposition between the *asurás/*devás, originally presented in the 19th century but popularized in the mid-20th century had for some time already been largely rejected by Avesta scholars when a landmark publication (Hale, 1986[4]) attracted considerable attention among Vedic scholars. Hale discussed, "as no one before him" (so Insler's review[5]), the attestations of ásura and its derivatives in chronological order of the Vedic texts, leading to new insights into how the asuras came to be the demons that they are today and why the venerated Varuna, Mithra, Indra, Rudra, Agni, Aryaman, Pusan and Parjanya are all asuras without being demonic. Although Hale's work has raised further questions - such as how the later poets could have overlooked that the RigVeda's asuras are all exalted gods - the theory of a prehistoric opposition is today conclusively rejected.
Following Hale's discoveries, Thieme's earlier proposal[6] of a single Indo-Iranian *Asura began to gain widespread support. In general (particulars may vary), the idea runs as follows: Indo-Iranian *Asura developed into Varuna in India and into Ahura Mazda in Iran. Those divinities closest related to that "asura [who] rules over the gods" (AV 1.10.1, cf. RV II.27.10) inherit the epithet, for instance, Rudra as devam asuram (V 42.11).
In Buddhism
Asuras also appear as a type of supernatural being in traditional Buddhist cosmology.
See also
- Avatars of Asuras
- Deva
- List of Asuras
- Æsir-Asura etymological connection
- Asura (trance ambient artists)
References
- Textual Sources for the Study of Hinduism (Textual Sources for the Study of Religion) ISBN 0226618471 Ch.3-4 Pg.53-71 University Of Chicago by Wendy Doniger O'Flaherty
- Textual Sources for the Study of Hinduism (Textual Sources for the Study of Religion) ISBN 0226618471 Ch.3-4 Pg.53-71 University Of Chicago by Wendy Doniger O'Flaherty
- Herrenschmidt, Clarisse & Kellens, Jean (1993), "*Daiva", Encyclopaedia Iranica, vol. 6, Cosa Mesa: Mazda, pp. 599-602
- Hale, Wash Edward (1986), ÁSURA in Early Vedic Religion, Delhi: Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass
- Insler, Stanley (1993), "Review: ÁSURA in Early Vedic Religion by Wash Edward Hale", Journal of the American Oriental Society 113 (4): 595-596
- Thieme, Paul (1960), "The 'Aryan' Gods of the Mitanni Treaties", Journal of the American Oriental Society 80 (4): 301-317
External links
- Photos related to the depiction of demons at the Angkorian temples in Cambodia.
- Photos of the depictions at Angkor Wat and Angkor Thom in Cambodia of the Devas and Asuras churning the Ocean of Milk for the elixir of immortality.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia; from the article "Asura". Image Credit.