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Ashvins

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The Ashvins (Sanskrit: अिश्वन,् romanized: Aśvin, lit. ‘horse possessors’), also known as the Ashvini Kumaras and Asvinau,[3] are Hindu twin gods associated with

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Etymology and epithets Origin and equivalents Literature and legends

Vedic texts

Post-Vedic text Associations See also
Notes References

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medicine, health, dawn, and the sciences.

[4]

In the Rigveda, they are described as

youthful divine twin horsemen, travelling in a chariot drawn by horses that are never

weary, and portrayed as guardian deities that safeguard and rescue people by

[2][5]

There are varying accounts, but Ashvins are generally mentioned as the sons of the sun god Surya and his wife Sanjna. In the epic Mahabharata, the Pandava twins Nakula and Sahadeva were the children of the Ashvins.

Etymologyandepithets [edit] The Sanskrit name Aśvín (अिश्वन)् derives from the Indo-Iranian stem *Haćwa- (cf.

Avestan aspā), itself from the Indo-European word for the horse, *H1éḱwos, from

[6]

In the Rigveda, the Ashvins are always referred to in the dual, without individual

names,[5] although Vedic texts differentiate between the two Ashvins: “one of you is

respected as the victorious lord of Sumakha, and the other as the fortunate son of

heaven” (RV 1.181.4). They are called several times divó nápātā, that is ‘grandsons

of Dyaús (the sky-god)’. This formula is comparable with the Lithuanian Dievo

sūneliai, ‘sons of Dievas (the sky-god’), attached to the Ašvieniai; the Latvian Dieva

Dēli, the ‘sons of Dievs (the sky-god)’; and the Greek Diós-kouroi, the ‘boys of Zeus’,

[7][8]

aiding them in various situations.

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which also descends the Lithuanian name Ašvieniai.

designating Castor and Pollux.
The twin gods are also referred to as Nāsatyā (possibly ‘saviours’; a derivative of

́

[8] epithet probably derives from the Proto-Indo-European root *nes- (‘to return home

nasatí, ‘safe return home’), a name that appears 99 times in the Rigveda. ̊

The [safely]’), with cognates in the Avestan Nāŋhaiθya, the name of a demon – as a

result of a Zoroastrian religious reformation that changed the status of prior deities –,

[9][10]

and also in the Greek hero Nestor and in the Gothic verb nasjan (‘save, heal’).
In the later Mahabharata, the Ashvins are often called the Nasatyas or Dasras. Sometimes one of them is referred to as Nasatya

[11]

and one as Dasra. Originandequivalents [edit]

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[12][13][5] the Lithuanian Ašvieniai, the Latvian Dieva Dēli, the Greek Castor and Pollux; and possibly the English Hengist and Horsa, and

[12][7] Suppiluliuma and Shattiwaza, respectively kings of the Hittites and the Mitanni.

Literatureandlegends [edit] Vedic texts [ edit ]

The Ashvins are mentioned 398 times in the Rigveda,[3] with more than 50 hymns specifically

dedicated to them: 1.3, 1.22, 1.34, 1.46–47, 1.112, 1.116–120, 1.157–158, 1.180–184, 2.20, 3.58,

4.43–45, 5.73–78, 6.62–63, 7.67–74, 8.5, 8.8–10, 8.22, 8.26, 8.35, 8.57, 8.73, 8.85–87, 10.24,

[5]

Your chariot, o Aśvins, swifter than mind, drawn by good horses, comes to the clans. By which (chariot) you go to the home of the good ritual performer, by that, o men, travel your course to us.
You free Atri, the seer of the five peoples, from narrow straits, from the earth cleft along with his band, o men—confounding the wiles of the merciless Dasyu, driving them out, one after another, o bulls.

O Aśvins—you men, you bulls—by the wondrous powers you draw back together the seer Rebha, who bobbed away in the waters, like a horse hidden by those of evil ways. Your ancient deeds do not grow old.

— 1.117.2–4, in The Rigveda, translated by Stephanie W. Jamison (2014)[15] According to the text, the Ashvins were born after the sun god Vivasvat and his wife Saranyu (Sanjna) engaged in love making in

[16] At one mention, the Indus (Sindhu) River is stated to be their mother.

The Ashvins are an instance of the Indo-European divine horse twins.

the Welsh Bran and Manawydan.

Reflexes in other Indo-European religions include The first mention of the Nasatya twins is from a Mitanni treaty (c.1350 BCE), between

forest and tried to seduce her. They asked her to choose one of them as her new husband, but she refused and remained faithful

to Chyavana. The twins were impressed by her chastity and asked her to wish anything. Upon their request, she told them to

restore the youth and sight of Chyavana. Ashvins agreed but they had a condition. After curing Chyavana, they would also take

similar form and she would have to identify Chyavana. Sukanya showed her consent after getting permission from her husband.

Ashvins took Chyavana into a lake and cured him. When a young Chyavana emerged from the lake, Ashvins also took forms

[27][28]

The Mahabharata also narrates about the birth of Nakula and Sahadeva, who were the “spiritual sons” of the Ashvins. According

to the epic, a king named Pandu was unable to make love due to a curse and didn’t have any heir. However, he advised his wives,

Kunti and Madri, to invoke various gods and ask for sons. Ashvins Nasatya and Darsa blessed Madri with Nakula and Sahadeva

[21][29]

Associations [edit] The Ashvins are often associated with rescuing mortals and bringing them back to

[30][b]

(úd…aírayataṃ svàr dṛśé, 1.112.5).

The Ashvins are associated with honey, which was likely offered to them in a sacrifice.

They are the chief deities in the Pravargya rite, in which they are offered hot milk. They

are also associated with the morning pressing of Soma, because they are dual deities,

along with Indra-Vāyu and Mitra-Varuṇa. They also are the last deities to receive Soma in

[32]

similar to him and Sukanya successfully identified her husband.

respectively.

[14]

Ashvins

Gods of Health and Medicine

Other Ashvini Kumaras, Ashvinau, names Nasatya, Dasra

Affiliation Devas

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Texts

Parents Siblings

Consort Children

Greek equivalent

Baltic equivalent

Rigveda, Mahabharata, Puranas Personal information

Surya (father) Sanjna (mother)

Revanta, Yami, Yama, Shraddhadeva Manu, Shani, Karna, Tapati and Savarni Manu
Sūryā[1][2]

Nakula (spiritual son) Sahadeva (spiritual son)

Equivalents

Dioskuri
Ašvieniai, Dieva Dēli

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10.39–41, 10.143.

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the form of a stallion and a mare respectively.

The Ashvins are also called “divó nápātā”, which is variously translated as either

“sons” or “grandsons” of Dyaush.

[7][8][17][18]
[19]

Ashvins were

the close companions of the Vedic mother goddess Ushas (dawn) and sometimes they are even mentioned as her sons.

[20]

The

marriage of the Ashvin brothers is narrated in the Sukta 117 of Rigveda. According to the legend, the sun god, Surya-Savitra, had

a daughter named Sūryā (with a long ā) and arranged a horse-race to choose her bridegroom. The Ashvins won the race and

thus, both of them married Suryā.

[21][2][a] [17][22] Pushan is also stated to have chosen the Ashvins to be his fathers.

The Ashvins are depicted as the helpers of mortals in various suktas of Rigveda. The sukta 112 describes that when the sage Dirghashravas prayed to Ashvins for rain, the twins poured sweet water from the sky. According to sukta 16, they also helped the sage Gotama, who was lost in a desert and begged for water. It is described that the gods dug a water well and helped the sage. [21] According to another account, Rebha was bound, stabbed, and cast into the waters for nine days and ten nights before being saved by the twins. He was explicitly described as “dead” when the twins “raised (him) up” to save him (RV 10.39.9). Similarly, Bhujyu was saved after his father or evil companions abandoned him at sea when the twins brought him home from the dead

[9]

The Ashvins also raised Vandana, rescued Atri from a fissure in the earth and its heat, found Vishnapu and returned him to his

father, restored the youth of Kali, brought Kamadyū as a wife for Vimada, gave a son to Vadhrimatī (whose husband was a steer),

restored the eyesight of Rijrashva, replaced the foot of Vishpala with a metal one, made the cow Śayu give milk, gave a horse to

[2]

ancestors (RV, 1.119.4).

Pedu, and put a horse’s head on Dadhyañc.

According to the Shatapatha Brahmana, Ashvins once tried to seduce Sukanya, the

daughter of king Saryati and wife of an old sage named Chyavana. However, she refused and claimed that the twins were

imperfect and told them to restore the youth of Chyavana. Desperate to know the reason for her words, they fulfilled her condition

and the sage finally revealed that Ashvins were excluded from a yajna (fire sacrifice) performed by the gods, and thus, they were

incomplete. Ashvins went to the sacrifice but the gods don’t accept, claiming that the Ashvins were spending too much time with

[23]

In the post-Vedic texts of Hinduism, the Ashvins remain significant, and in these texts, one of them is referred as Nasatya and the other one is known as Darsa. Many of their legends are rewritten in various texts like the epic Mahabharata, Harivamsha, and the Puranas.

According to these texts, Sanjna, daughter of Vishvakarma, was married to Surya, but she was unable to bear his heat and

decided to abandon him. She ran away and roamed in the forest of northern Kuru kingdom in the form of a mare. The Vishnu

Purana adds that she performed austerities in the forest to gain control over Surya’s heat. After Surya discovered Sanjna’s

[24] [24]

the mortals. After many attempts of explanation, they were finally accepted.
deities. In the sukta 117, they even destroyed an asura Vishvaka as well as his dynasty.

Post-Vedic text [ edit ]

disappearance, he located her and had sex with her in the form of a stallion. Sanjna gave birth to the twins.

[25] These texts also elaborate the story of Chyavana, which was first narrated in Brahmanas.

Rarely, in some

Puranas, Ashvins are mentioned as the sons (creation) of the god Brahma.
beautiful daughter of the king Saryati— accidentally blinded the old Chyavana, who was performing austerities. She married him

to save her kingdom from his wrath and served him dutifully.

While traveling on their chariot, the Ashvins saw Sukanya in a

Birth of the Ashvins, a folio from the text Harivamsha

The Ashvins are sometimes presented as fierce

[21]
[26]

In this version, Sukanya—the

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The Rigveda also describes the Ashvins as “bringing light”: they gave “light- ́

life.
bringing help” (svàrvatīr…ūtīr, 1.119.8) to Bhujyu, and “raised (Rebha) up to see the sun”

the Atirātra, or Overnight Soma Ritual.

[31][5]

The Ashvins are invoked at dawn, the time of their principal sacrifice, and have a close connection with the dawn goddess, Uṣas: she is bidden to awaken them (8.9.17), they follow her in their chariot (8.5.2), she is born when they hitch their steeds (10.39.12), and their chariot is once said to arrive before her (1.34.10). They are consequently associated with the “return from darkness”: the twins are called “darkness slayers” (tamohánā, 3.39.3), they are invoked with the formula “you who have made light for mankind” (yāv… jyótir jánāya cakráthuḥ, 1.92.17), and their horses and chariot are described as

́ [33] “uncovering the covered darkness” (aporṇuvántas táma ā párīvṛtam, 4.45.2).

The chariot of the Ashvins is repeatedly mentioned in the Rigveda. Their chariot has three chariot-boxes, three wheels, three turnings, and three wheel rims. The emphasis on the number 3 is symbolized in the sacrifice with its three soma pressings. The chariot is pulled by bulls, buffaloes, horses, birds, geese, and falcons. The chariot allows the Ashvins to be quick and mobile and travel to a number of places, which is necessary to fulfill their role of rescuing people. Sūryā, the daughter of the Sun, is

[2] It is also believed that the Ashvins were the first one to prepare the Chyawanprash formulation for Rishi Chyavana at his Ashram

[34]

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