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Devi Mahatmya

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The Devī Māhātmya or Durgā Saptashatī is a Hindu scripture in Sanskrit containing 700 (sapta=7, shata=100) verses, arranged into 13 chapters. It extols goddess Devi or Durga and her manifestations like Kali (devi=goddess, māhātmya=grandeur). The Devī Māhātmya has been drawn from the 3400 odd verses of the Mārkandeya Purana, which is a set of stories being related by the sage Markandeyato Jaimini and his students (who are in the form of birds). The stories go through the different incarnations of Manu, called manvantaras. In the eighth manvantara, the tale of Durga appears, and the verses in Devi Mahatmya are drawn from this. This text is also known as ChanDI (another name for Durga) or Chandi-Patha (pATha=reading; this may refer also to the act of (ritual) reading).

Devi Mahatmya:The oldest surviving manuscript of the Devi Māhātmya, on palm-leaf, in an early Bhujimol script, Bihar or Nepal, 11th century.
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The oldest surviving manuscript of the Devi Māhātmya, on palm-leaf, in an early Bhujimol script, Bihar or Nepal, 11th century.

The seven hundred verses narrate various exploits of Durga, along with passages that extol the virtues of praying to her. The stories are told with great violence and detail, building up the great powers of her adversaries, and mounting suspense though in the end Devi always comes out as the winner. They state the background of her emergence, where each of the gods contribute their principal weapons and powers on the goddess.

Note that the word asura in the Indian canon is not quite the same as demon, asuras have many virtues, and often live in great austerity and are beneficiaries of many blessings from the gods. Then some of them may become invincible, and it is possibly this immense power that corrupts them.


Contents

The thirteen chapters

A rough breakdown of the chapters is as follows:

Ya devi sarvabhuteshu <shakti>rUpeNa saMasthita
O goddess of all forms now you appear as <energy>
The hymn is repeated many times, with the quantity <xxx> being substituted with some of the many other characteristics of devi such as shAnti (peace), bhakti (devotion), etc.

The Devi Māhātmya is believed to have crystallized in its present form during the 9th-10th century, and is believed to be originally authored by rishi Markandeya. However, the original Markandeya Purana text is much older, and one of the verses in the Devi Mahatmya appears in an inscription (dated 608) on the Dadhimatimata temple in the former kingdom of Jodhpur.

Prefatory Matter and Appendices

As a ritual text, there are many versions, maintaining the 700 verses at the core, but often prefaced by other important hymns such as the Argala-stotra in which the famous prayer to Chandi is repeated:

rUpaM dehi jayaM dehi Jasho dehi dviSho jehi
(grant us beauty, grant us victory, grant us fame, and vanquish our enemies)

Also prefatory is a collection of 50 verses called devi-kavacha (kavacha = protection amulet); this verse invokes the devi in all her incarnations to protect an equally long list of directions from which danger can come, parts of the body that may be endangered, etc. Singing the devikavacha is supposed to protect one from misfortunes.

At the end of a traditional pATha or recitation of the text (often executed with great dramatic flourish, especially in the section where asuras are being killed), one invokes the aparAdha-kShama-paNa-stotra (crime-forgiveness-chant):

JadakSharam paribhraShTam mAtrAhInan~cha Jadbhavet
pUrNam bhavatu tatsarvam tvatprasAdAn mahesvarI

Any words mispronounced or left out, however small, please complete these all with your own grace, o goddess!

See also

Reference

http://www.authenticbooksindia.com/devimahatmyam.html

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