Durdhara

Durdhara
Empress consort of the Maurya Empire
Tenure 4th century BCE
Died Pataliputra
Spouse Chandragupta Maurya
Issue Bindusara
Dynasty Maurya

According to Jain tradition, Durdhara was the consort of Chandragupta Maurya, the founder of the Maurya Empire of India. She was the mother of her husband's successor and the second Mauryan emperor, Bindusara.

Biography

According to Jain texts, she was the wife of Chandragupta Maurya and the mother of Bindusara.[1]

Lineage

Burmese legends do not mention the name, but assign to the mother of Chandragupta's successor a Maurya lineage and the chief place among the queens.[2] According to the Mahavamsa-tika, Chandragupta had married his first-cousin, the daughter of the eldest of the maternal uncles who accompanied his mother to Pataliputra and raised her to the dignity of queen-consort. This daughter is surmised to have been Durdhara.[3][4]

Bindusara's birth

According to a legend mentioned in Jain texts, Chandragupta's advisor Chanakya, used to feed the emperor with small doses of poison to build his immunity against possible poisoning attempts by enemies.[5] One day, Chandragupta not knowing about the poison, shared his food with the pregnant Durdhara who was just seven days away from delivery. The empress, not immune to the poison, collapsed, and died within a few minutes. Chanakya entered the room the very time she collapsed, and in order to save the child in the womb, he immediately cut open the dead empress' belly and took the baby out, by that time a drop of poison had already reached the baby and touched its head due to which the child got a permanent blueish spot (a "bindu") on his forehead. Thus, the newborn child was named Bindusara.[6]

In popular culture

References

  1. Mookerji 1988, p. 234.
  2. Sastri, ed. by K. A. Nilakanta (1988). Age of the Nandas and Mauryas (2. ed., reprint. ed.). Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass. p. 159. ISBN 9788120804661.
  3. Chattopadhyaya, Sudhakar (1977). Bimbisāra to Aśoka: With an Appendix on the Later Mauryas. Roy and Chowdhury. pp. 91, 92.
  4. Dantinne, Etienne Lamotte ; translated from the French by Sara Webb-Boin under the supervision of Jean (1988). History of Indian Buddhism : from the origins to the Saka era. Louvain-la-Neuve: Université catholique de Louvain, Institut orientaliste. p. 243. ISBN 9789068311006.
  5. Wilhelm Geiger (1908). The Dipavamsa and Mahavamsa and their historical development in Ceylon. Translated by Ethel M. Coomaraswamy. H. C. Cottle, Government Printer, Ceylon. p. 40. OCLC 559688590.
  6. M. Srinivasachariar (1989). History of classical Sanskrit literature (3rd ed.). Motilal Banarsidass. p. 550. ISBN 978-81-208-0284-1.

References


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