{"id":3972,"date":"2011-07-10T11:42:49","date_gmt":"2011-07-10T11:42:49","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rupanugabhajanashram.com\/?p=3972"},"modified":"2023-04-19T16:32:50","modified_gmt":"2023-04-19T11:02:50","slug":"makara-myth-or-fact","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.rupanugabhajanashram.com\/writings\/krishna-talk-articles\/srila-bhakti-gaurava-narasingha-maharaja\/makara-myth-or-fact\/","title":{"rendered":"Makara – Myth or fact?"},"content":{"rendered":"

In Sanskrit \u2018Makara\u2019 is a word that means \u2018sea dragon\u2019 or \u2018aquatic-monster,\u2019 long thought to be a mythical creature in Hindu and Buddhist traditions. Paintings and sculptures of this fantastical creature are found in India, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Burma, Thailand, Cambodia, Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam, China and Japan \u2014 practically everywhere in Asia.<\/p>\n

The Makara in India is known to be the v\u0101hana<\/em> (vehicle) of Ga\u1e45g\u0101 Dev\u012b\u2014the goddess of the river Ganges and the v\u0101hana<\/em> of the god of the sea, Varu\u1e47a. A Makara is also the insignia of K\u0101madeva (god of lust) and K\u0101madeva\u2019s flag is called makara-dhvaja<\/em>, a flag having the Makara drawn on it. In Hindu astrology the Makara is also the astrological sign of Capricorn. A little research reveals this strange mythical creature to have been very popular both in ancient times and in our present day. But is it mythical?<\/p>\n

The Makara is often depicted with the head of a crocodile, horns of a goat, the body of an antelope and a snake, the tail of a fish or peacock and the feet of a panther. Varu\u1e47a is said to be the only one who can control the Makara and does not fear them (save and except for K\u1e5b\u1e63\u1e47a, that is).<\/p>\n

In some English translations of the G\u012bt\u0101<\/em>, for simplicity of reading, \u2018makara<\/em>\u2019 has been translated as shark. But it is not a shark. The Timi\u1e45gila that is often mentioned along with the Makara in other Vedic texts is classified as a shark \u2013 a shark of monstrous proportions.<\/p>\n

Mah\u0101bh\u0101rata<\/em> mentions the Timi\u1e45gila and Makara as being deep within the ocean, along with other huge sea creatures:<\/p>\n

timi\u1e45gil\u0101\u1e25 kacchap\u0101\u015b ca tath\u0101 timi-timi\u1e45gil\u0101\u1e25<\/em>
\nmakar\u0101\u015b c\u0101tra d\u1e5b\u015byante jale magn\u0101 iv\u0101draya\u1e25<\/em><\/p>\n

\u201cThere were seen Timi\u1e45gilas, tortoises, Timi-Timi\u1e45gilas and Makaras, that were like great rocks submerged in the water.\u201d (Mah\u0101bh\u0101rata<\/em>, Vana-parva<\/em>. 168.3)<\/p>\n

The Ayurvedic text of the 6th Century BCE known as Su\u015bruta Sa\u1e41hit\u0101<\/em> also lists the Timi\u1e45gila and Makara as being amongst the formidable species of aquatic life:<\/p>\n

timi-timi\u1e45gila-kuli\u015ba-p\u0101kamatsya-nirularu<\/em>
\nnandi-v\u0101ralaka-makara-gargaraka-candraka
\nmah\u0101-m\u012bna-r\u0101j\u012bva prabh\u1e5btya samudr\u0101\u1e25<\/em><\/p>\n

\u201cThe Timi, Timi\u1e45gila, Kulisha, Paka-matsya, Nirularu, Nandi-V\u0101ralaka, Makara, Gargaraka, Candraka, Mah\u0101-m\u012bna, and R\u0101j\u012bva etc, constitute the family of marine fish.\u201d (\u015aushruta Samhita<\/em>, Chapter 45)<\/p>\n

In \u015ar\u012bmad<\/em> Bh\u0101gavatam<\/em>, Makaras and Timi\u1e45gila are mentioned as predators, attacking Marka\u1e47\u1e0deya \u1e5a\u1e63i:<\/p>\n

k\u1e63ut-t\u1e5b\u1e6d-par\u012bto makarais timi\u1e45gilair
\nupadruto v\u012bci-nabhasvat\u0101hata\u1e25
\ntamasy ap\u0101re patito bhraman di\u015bo
\nna veda kha\u1e41 g\u0101\u1e41 ca pari\u015brame\u1e63ita\u1e25<\/em><\/p>\n

\u201cSuffering from hunger and thirst, attacked by Makaras and Timi\u1e45gila and battered by the waves and the wind, Marka\u1e47\u1e0deya wandered through the infinite gloom that enveloped him. Overcome by exhaustion, he lost all sense of direction and could not ascertain what was the sky and what was the earth.\u201d (Bh\u0101gavatam<\/em> 12.9.16)<\/p>\n

Bhagavad-g\u012bt\u0101<\/em> mentions the Makara in Verse 31, Chapter 10 as follows:<\/p>\n

pavana\u1e25 pavat\u0101m asmi r\u0101ma\u1e25 \u015bastra-bh\u1e5bt\u0101m aham
\njha\u1e63\u0101\u1e47\u0101\u1e41 makara\u015b c\u0101smi srotas\u0101m asmi j\u0101hnav\u012b<\/em><\/p>\n

\u201cOf purifiers I am the wind. Of the wielders of weapons I am R\u0101ma. Amongst aquatics I am the Makara and of rivers I am the Ga\u1e45g\u0101.\u201d<\/p>\n

The Makara is described in Vedic texts as half animal, half aquatic and an aggressor \u2014 a true monster of the deep. Often depicted in art as having the mouth of a crocodile, the body of a fish, the tail of a peacock and the paws of a panther, the Makara has attained mythical status.<\/p>\n

Now the question arises \u2013 is the Makara a mythical creature or was it actually real? And if so, then how could it look like it has been depicted in art for centuries with so many different animal body parts? When one looks at recent scientific discoveries and takes into consideration a bit of \u2018poetic license\u2019 that the artist may have employed, the so-called mythical Makara becomes as real as life.<\/p>\n

Recent discoveries in archaeology have revealed what palaeontologists call a Pliosaur. The fossilized Pliosaur was found in Dorset, England in 2003 and took until 2008 to remove from the rock cliff in which it was found. Once excavated it revealed a sea monster in remarkable detail.<\/p>\n

Scientists suspect the Pliosaur fossil is approximately 155-million-years old and lived during the Jurassic and Cretaceous Periods during which time it was one of the top predators of the oceans.<\/p>\n

Palaeontologist Richard Forrest commented to the BBC as follows: \u201cThis is an iconic specimen \u2013 one of the most exciting we have seen in years. It was probably the most fearsome predator that ever lived. Standing in front of the skull you can imagine this enormous beast staring straight back at you, fixing you with its binocular vision, and attacking. Just thinking about it raises the hairs on the back of your neck.\u201d<\/p>\n

Dr. Forrest went on to say that the creature\u2019s bulky body, which would have been powered through the water with four paddle-like limbs, has never been found and may not have fossilized. Scientist\u2019s estimate based on the 2.4meter long skull, that the Pliosaur would have been 15 to 18 meters in length. Impressive indeed.<\/p>\n

We are herein suggesting that the Pliosaur could easily be the Makara of myth, but we are not the first to equate a mysterious ocean monster to the Makara. We have also stumbled upon the reports of a creature called the Ambulocetus, a creature that could walk as well as swim. It lived during the early Eocene Period some 50 million years ago. The fossil of Ambulocetus was found on the coast of Pakistan from a time when Pakistan and India was a single island in the Indian Ocean slowly drifting toward the continental shelf of Asia. Some crypto-zoologists speculate that the Ambulocetus is a candidate for being the Makara, yet most scientists suggest that the Ambulocetus fills the evolutionary gap between aquatics and land animals.<\/p>\n

Once, when discussing with Pu\u1e63\u1e6da-K\u1e5b\u1e63\u1e47a, \u015ar\u012bla Prabhup\u0101da commented that there is no discussion of dinosaurs in the Vedas<\/em>, therefore he did not believe that they existed. Then again, Sad\u0101p\u016bta recounts that when Prabhup\u0101da was asked about the dinosaurs he replied that they were not extinct. So which is it? Is there really no mention of dinosaurs in the Vedas<\/em>, or was Prabhup\u0101da just denying scientific knowledge and discoveries because most scientists of his time were denying the Vedic knowledge? We think so.<\/p>\n

In any case, we do find a reference to what easily could be understood to be dinosaurs in \u015ar\u012bmad<\/em> Bh\u0101gavatam <\/em>when demons and demigods rode strange creatures into battle.<\/p>\n

g\u1e5bdhrai\u1e25 ka\u1e45kair bakair anye \u015byena-bh\u0101sais timi\u1e45gilai\u1e25
\n\u015barabhair mahi\u1e63ai\u1e25 kha\u1e0dgair go-v\u1e5b\u1e63air gavay\u0101ru\u1e47ai\u1e25
\n\u015biv\u0101bhir \u0101khubhi\u1e25 kecit k\u1e5bkal\u0101sai\u1e25 \u015ba\u015bair narai\u1e25
\nbastair eke k\u1e5b\u1e63\u1e47a-s\u0101rair ha\u1e41sair anye ca s\u016bkarai\u1e25
\nanye jala-sthala-khagai\u1e25 sattvair vik\u1e5bta-vigrahai\u1e25
\nsenayor ubhayo r\u0101jan vivi\u015bus te\u2019grato\u2019grata\u1e25<\/em><\/p>\n

\u201c<\/em>O King, some soldiers fought on the backs of vultures, eagles, ducks, hawks and bh\u0101sa<\/em> birds. Some fought on the backs of Timi\u1e45gilas<\/em>, which can devour huge whales, some on the backs of \u015a<\/em>arabhas<\/em>, and some on buffalo, rhinoceroses, cows, bulls, gavay\u0101<\/em> (jungle cows) and aru\u1e47as<\/em>. Others fought on the backs of jackals, rats, k\u1e5bkal\u0101sa<\/em>, rabbits, human beings, goats, black deer, swans and boars. In this way, mounted on animals of the water, land and sky, including animals with deformed bodies (vik\u1e5bta-vigraha<\/em>), both armies faced each other and went forward.\u201d (Bh\u0101gavatam<\/em> 8.10.10-12)<\/p>\n

Here we find a fantastical description of the v\u0101hanas<\/em> used in a great battle in horary antiquity, but some of the creatures described have no English or Indo-Aryan equivalent such as bhasa<\/em>, sharabhas<\/em>, Timi\u1e45gila<\/em>, gavay\u0101<\/em>, aru\u1e47as<\/em>, k\u1e5bk\u0101lasa<\/em> and vik\u1e5bta-vigraha<\/em>. So what are these creatures and why do they have no equivalent names in modern languages? Could they be extinct? Could any of these have been what we now call dinosaurs? We think so. The mere fact that the Timi\u1e45gila is mentioned is proof enough that some of these creatures are going to be formidable predators \u2013 which ones?<\/p>\n

Vik\u1e5bta-vigraha<\/em> translates as \u2018animals with deformed bodies\u2019 and k\u1e5bk\u0101lasa<\/em> translates as \u2018big lizard\u2019. So when one\u2019s opponent is riding a vicious animal like a rhinoceros or a Timi\u1e45gila \u2014 then is riding an ordinary lizard into battle a good idea, even a big one? K\u1e5bk\u0101lasa<\/em> is a \u2018big lizard\u2019 \u2014 think dinosaur! And vik\u1e5bta-vigraha<\/em> are \u2018animals with deformed bodies\u2019 \u2014 think dinosaur! In any case, no v\u0101hana<\/em> mentioned here could have been ordinary, \u2013 even the human v\u0101hanas<\/em> must have been giants. So it is intelligent to think that if one takes these narratives to be true in the first place, then what we think of today as dinosaurs could surely be among the v\u0101hanas<\/em> mentioned in \u015a<\/em>r\u012bmad Bh\u0101gavatam.<\/em><\/p>\n

The gavay\u0101<\/em> mentioned in the above verse translates as \u2018jungle cow\u2019 and interestingly enough these \u2018jungle cows\u2019 (also known in modern Hindi as n\u012blg\u0101ya<\/em>, blue cows) still exist in and around V\u1e5bnd\u0101vana, India and, like the Makara, they have the distinct characteristic of three animals \u2014 a cow, a horse and a deer. Once seeing these strange animals there is no argument that they are a \u2018three in one\u2019 creature. So why not a Makara with a mouth of a crocodile, a body of a fish, and a tail of a peacock? You just haven\u2019t seen one yet. But it looks like the archaeologists in England are on to something with their recent discovery of the Pliosaur.<\/p>\n

It is true that the k\u1e5bk\u0101lasa<\/em> and bh\u0101sa<\/em> are not easily equated with Tyrannosaurus Rex and Pterodactyl, but then again, why not? It seems to be a matter of putting one and one together and moving on.<\/p>\n

Yes \u2013 there were dinosaurs mentioned in \u015a<\/em>r\u012bmad Bh\u0101gavatam<\/em> and possibly other places in the vast Vedic literature. Unfortunately, it has been the thinking of some theists that the scientists have falsified dinosaur remains (\u201cThe Devil put them there\u201d) simply to give credit to the evolutionary theory. But I think it is safe to say that such does not stand against the repeated discoveries of dinosaurs in different parts of the world and even in India.<\/p>\n

Yes, dinosaur remains and even dinosaur eggs have been discovered in Gujarat, India. However, when the fossilized eggs were first discovered, villagers took them home and began worshiping them as \u015biva-li\u1e45gams<\/em>.<\/p>\n

When it is obvious that scientists are not running around falsifying dinosaur fossils and that dinosaurs did indeed exist in India, then it is reasonable to conclude that dinosaurs are indeed mentioned in Vedic literature and that archaeologists may have recently found the Makara in the fossil record in England.<\/p>\n

Admittedly, the case for the Megalodon fossil being the Timi\u1e45gila as discussed in our previous article may be more convincing than that of the Pliosaur fossil being the Makara, but the later is certainly probable. Thus, it is worth reiterating a previous point regarding the age of man.<\/p>\n

According to scientific evidence, it is estimated that the last of the Pliosaur and Megalodons lived on this planet around 1.5 million years ago or before. That is a long time ago, especially considering that the estimated age (according to science) of the first human being was only 250,000 years ago. That would mean that the Pliosaur and Megalodon became extinct 1,250,000 years before the first human being spoke a coherent language, kept records or attempted to write anything.<\/p>\n

The Pliosaur and the Megalodon appear to be the same creatures as the Makara and the Timi\u1e45gila mentioned in Vedic texts. But what is so amazing or interesting about that, and what is our point?<\/p>\n

Our point is that western scholars assert that the Bh\u0101gavatam<\/em> was only written in the 9th Century CE, the Ramayana<\/em> in the 4th Century BCE, and the Mah\u0101bh\u0101rata<\/em> between the 8th and 4th centuries BCE. But if this were a fact, then how did the writers of these books know about ocean-dwelling creatures, their size, their vicious aggression and their diets if those creatures had already been extinct for 1.5 million years? Bh\u0101gavatam, R\u0101m\u0101ya\u1e47a<\/em> and Mah\u0101bh\u0101rata<\/em> all mention the existence of the Makara\/Pliosaur and the Timi\u1e45gila\/Megalodon, but where did the authors get their information?<\/p>\n

When (by scientific estimation) human beings have only been on this planet since 1,250,000 years after the Megalodon\/Timi\u1e45gila became extinct \u2014 who told the Vedic authors about these creatures? If there were no humans present on this planet between the period when the Pliosaur and Megalodon became extinct and 250,000 years ago, how could the writers of the Vedic texts have known such things? And it is obvious that they did.<\/p>\n

Scientists and scholars will have to ponder this question, but for us it is simple \u2014 there have always been human beings on this planet from its earliest beginnings and the knowledge of all such things has been passed down thru the ages via the disciplic succession of gurus and disciples.<\/p>\n<\/div><\/div><\/div>

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