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kṛṣṇa

kṛṣṇá mf(A/)n. black, dark, dark-blue (opposed to śvetá, śuklá, róhita, and aruṇá), [RV.]; [AV.] &c.


wicked, evil, [Vop. vii, 82]


kṛṣṇá (as), m. (with or without pakṣa) the dark half of the lunar month from full to new moon, [Mn.]; [Yājñ.]; [Bhag.]; [Suśr.]


the fourth or Kali-yuga, [L.]


(kṛ́ṣṇas), black (the colour) or dark-blue (which is often confounded with black by the Hindūs), [L.]


the antelope, [RV. x, 94, 5]; [VS.]; [TS.]; [ŚBr.]; [BhP.]


a kind of animal feeding on carrion, [AV. xi, 2, 2] (kṛṣṇá)


the Indian cuckoo or Kokila (cf. [R. ii, 52, 2]), [L.]


a crow, [L.]


Carissa Carandas, [L.]


N. of one of the poets of the [RV.] (descended from Aṅgiras), [RV. viii, 85, 3] and [4]; [ŚāṅkhBr. xxx, 9]


(a son of Devakī and pupil of Ghora Āṅgirasa), [ChUp. iii, 17, 6]


N. of a celebrated Avatār of the god Viṣṇu, or sometimes identified with Viṣṇu himself [[MBh. v, 2563]; [xiv, 1589 ff.]; [Hariv. 2359] &c.] as distinct from his ten Avatārs or incarnations (in the earlier legends he appears as a great hero and teacher [[MBh.]; [Bhag.]]; in the more recent he is deified, and is often represented as a young and amorous shepherd with flowing hair and a flute in his hand; the following are a few particulars of his birth and history as related in [Hariv. 3304 ff.] and in the Purāṇas &c.: Vasu-deva, who was a descendant of Yadu and Yayāti, had two wives, Rohiṇī and Devakī; the latter had eight sons of whom the eighth was Kṛṣṇa; Kaṃsa, king of Mathurā and cousin of Devakī, was informed by a prediction that one of these sons would kill him; he therefore kept Vasu-deva and his wife in confinement, and slew their first six children; the seventh was Balarāma who was saved by being abstracted from the womb of Devakī and transferred to that of Rohiṇī; the eighth was Kṛṣṇa who was born with black skin and a peculiar mark on his breast; his father Vasu-deva managed to escape from Mathurā with the child, and favoured by the gods found a herdsman named Nanda whose wife Yaśo-dā had just been delivered of a son which Vasu-deva conveyed to Devakī after substituting his own in its place. Nanda with his wife Yaśo-dā took the infant Kṛṣṇa and settled first in Gokula or Vraja, and afterwards in Vṛndāvana, where Kṛṣṇa and Bala-rāma grew up together, roaming in the woods and joining in the sports of the herdsmen's sons ; Kṛṣṇa as a youth contested the sovereignty of Indra, and was victorious over that god, who descended from heaven to praise Kṛṣṇa, and made him lord over the cattle [[Hariv. 3787 ff.]; [7456 ff.]; [VP.]]; Kṛṣṇa is described as sporting constantly with the Gopīs or shepherdesses [[Hariv. 4078 ff.]; [8301 ff.]; [VP.]; [Gīt.]] of whom a thousand became his wives, though only eight are specified, Rādhā being the favourite [[Hariv. 6694 ff.]; [9177 ff.]; [VP.]]; Kṛṣṇa built and fortified a city called Dvārakā in Gujarāt, and thither transported the inhabitants of Mathurā after killing Kaṃsa; Kṛṣṇa had various wives besides the Gopīs, and by Rukmiṇī had a son Pradyumna who is usually identified with Kāma-deva; with Jains, Kṛṣṇa is one of the nine black Vasu-devas; with Buddhists he is the chief of the black demons, who are the enemies of Buddha and the white demons)


N. of an attendant in Skanda's retinue, [MBh. ix, 2559]


of an Asura, [Hariv. 12936]; [Sāy.] on [RV. i, 101, 1]


of a king of the Nāgas, [MBh. ii, 360]; [Divyāv. ii]


of Arjuna (the most renowned of the Pāṇḍu princes, so named apparently from his colour as a child), [MBh. iv, 1389]


of Vyāsa, [MBh.]; [Hariv. 11089]


of Hārita See -hārita


of a son of Śuka by Pīvarī (teacher of the Yoga), [Hariv. 980 ff.]


of a pupil of Bharad-vāja, [Kathās. vii, 15]


of Havir-dhāna, [Hariv. 83]; [VP.]; [BhP. iv, 24, 8]


of a son of Arjuna, [Hariv. 1892]


of an adopted son of A-samañjas, [2039]


of a chief of the Andhras, [VP.]


of the author of a Comm. on the [MBh.]


of a poet


of the author of a Comm. on the Dayā-bhāga


of the son of Keśavārka and grandson of Jayāditya


of the father of Tāna-bhaṭṭa and uncle of Raṅga-nātha


of the father of Dāmodara and uncle of Malhaṇa


of the father of Prabhūjīka and uncle of Vidyā-dhara


of the father of Madana


of the grammarian Rāma-candra


of the son of Vāruṇendra and father of Lakṣmaṇa


of the father of Hīra-bhaṭṭa (author of the Comm. called Carakabhāṣya, and of the work Sāhitya-sudhā-samudra)


N. of a hell, [VP.]


kṛṣṇá (śs), m. pl. N. of the Śūdras in Śālmala-dvīpa, [VP.]


kṛṣṇá (ám), n. blackness, darkness, [i, 123, 1] and [9]


kṛṣṇá m. the black part of the eye, [ŚBr. x], [xii], [xiii], [xiv]; [Suśr.]


the black spots in the moon, [TBr. i, 2, 1, 2]


a kind of demon or spirit of darkness, [RV. iv, 16, 13]


black pepper, [L.]


black Agallochum, [L.]


iron, [L.]


lead, [L.]


antimony, [L.]


blue vitriol, [L.]


[cf. kā́rṣṇa, &c.; cf. also Russ. černyi, ‘black’.]


Nom. P. °ṣṇati, to behave or act like Kṛṣṇa, [Vop. xxi, 7.]