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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Kurukshetra_6841.jpg]]
2
3->''"Whatever is here is found elsewhere. Whatever is not here, is nowhere else."''
4-->-- ''The Book of the Beginning''
5
6The ''Mahabharata'' is a great Indian epic, part of Myth/HinduMythology and a NarrativePoem primarily about the CivilWar between two factions, the Kauravas and the Pandavas of the Kuru dynasty who are [[CainAndAbel Royal Cousins]]. It is popularly said to be written by the sage and AuthorAvatar "Ved-Vyasa" (meaning the Arranger of the Vedas).
7
8Though based on earlier oral stories, recording did not begin until [[OlderThanFeudalism around 400 BCE]], according to the most widely accepted theories about its composition.
9
10The Epic starts with King Shantanu, the ancestor of the Kurus, falling in LoveAtFirstSight with (unknown to him) River Goddess Ganga, whose condition for marrying him is that he should [[ThePromise refrain from questioning her about anything that she does]]. Ganga, however, appears to be a {{Jerkass}}, and [[OffingtheOffspring drowns every single child that she bears as soon as they are born]]. Shantanu finally asks her to stop, only to find out that her sons are holy souls that, who, due to a crime of vandalism that they had committed, were forced to be born as mortal humans, and that [[BlueAndOrangeMorality by drowning them, she's letting them go back to the place where souls go after having transcended the cycle of rebirth]]. Ganga leaves and her son, Devavrata, becomes the apparent heir. Shantanu finds his SecondLove, a young fisherwoman named Satyavati whom he cannot marry due to ParentalMarriageVeto. TheWisePrince Devavrata promises to step away from the throne and to remain celibate for the rest of his life so that Satyavati's children can inherit the throne. Satyavati is allowed to marry Shantanu. Devavrata is hence called Bhishma or the 'one with a terrible vow'.
11
12Later on, he abducts three princesses from the kingdom of Kasi during a Svayamvara (a marriage ceremony where the princess gets to choose her husband), for his half-brother (the son of Satyavati and Shantanu) Vichitravirya to marry. Two of the princesses agree to wed his half brother. Amba, the eldest, refuses, but her lover, Salva, the king of Saubha, refuses to take her back. She is unable to persuade Bhishma to wed her (and thus gain the respect that comes with marriage) and she takes up austerity, vowing to take her revenge on Bhishma, which she eventually does.
13
14Vichitravirya dies without an heir to the throne, and as [[ThePromise Bhishma is unwilling]] to procreate, Satyavati calls on the [[AuthorAvatar sage Ved-Vyasa]] to impregnate the two widowed queens. Ved-Vyasa is the illegitimate offspring of Satyavati and Parashara, a wandering sage, before her marriage to Shantanu, who was brought up by his father. Two children result, which are deemed to be the sons of Vichitravirya. Blind Prince Dhritarashtra is the older, but due to his blindness, the right to be an emperor is passed down to the second son, Prince Pandu. Dhritarashtra marries the queen of Gandhara, Gandhari, who brings along her brother, ChessMaster Shakuni. Pandu, the second son, is sickly. He marries Princess Kunti and a second woman named Madri. Vyasa's visit also results in a son being born to a servant in the palace called Vidura. He is wise, but since his mother is not a princess, he cannot rise beyond the rank of Prime Minister.
15
16Pandu is cursed by a sage to die childless. As a result, he exiles himself to the forest and Dhritarashtra remains king. Pandu eventually begets five sons by magical means-- his wife Kunti has the power to call any God to father her children. Pandu then dies and his sons return to the kingdom. The children of Dhritarashtra are called Kauravas and the children of Pandu are called Pandavas. A rivalry quickly develops and Duryodhana, the oldest of the Kauravas, resolves to eliminate his cousins. When Duryodhana attempts to wipe out the Pandavas by tricking them into living in a palace made of lac and then burning it down, they escape and resolve to hide their identity till they are in safe territory. On the way, they marry [[EngagementChallenge Draupadi, the Princess of Panchala]]. Meanwhile, King Dhritarastra learns of the plot to kill the Pandavas and, obviously displeased with the infighting, gifts them with half the kingdom. This does not please the Kauravas, and only adds to their dislike of the Pandavas. Duryodana and his uncle, Shakuni, challenge the Pandavas to play a dice game where the Pandavas stake and lose their kingdom, wealth, themselves, and even temporarily their wife Draupadi (who is married to all five of the brothers). After being humiliated, they are exiled for thirteen years. King Dhritarashtra promises to give back their kingdom if they are not caught by the end of the exile. His sons, however, are desperate to prevent this. Peace is exhausted and a war ensues.
17
18'''The Pandavas''' are five brothers, plus Draupadi, their wife, and Krishna, [[GodInHumanForm the eighth incarnation of Vishnu]].
19-->TheLeader[=/=]BigBrotherMentor — Yuddhisthira. The hero with many flaws, who nevertheless emerges as TheHeart as he realizes the futility of war.\
20TheBigGuy — Bhima. A brutal, violent fighter who is blessed with superhuman strength. He is able to withstand any enemy and fight without surrendering.\
21TheLancer — Arjuna. Filled with doubts regarding the justness of war, he seeks guidance from Krishna in the most famous section of the ''Mahabharata'', the ''Literature/BhagavadGita''.\
22{{Tagalong Kid}}s — Nakula and Sahadeva.\
23TheSmartGuy: Krishna. Also the ManBehindTheMan and the XanatosSpeedChess [[ChessMaster Master]] of this entire epic.\
24TheHeart- Draupadi. Instead of a peacemaker however, she brings them closer to war.\
25Shikhandi, formerly Amba, the eldest princess of Kasi, in his previous life. Once Bhishma rejected her, Amba became reborn as Shikhandi to exact revenge for her humiliation.\
26
27'''The Kauravas''' consist of the numerous sons of Dhritarashtra and their allies. These are the main ones:
28-->TheBigBad — Duryodhana. The leader of the Kauravas, he refuses to return the Pandavas' rightfully owned land after their exile, and ultimately serves as the catalyst for war.\
29TheDragon — Karna. Technically the real BigBrotherMentor of the Pandavas. He is Kunti's firstborn son (but was abandoned due to his being born out of wedlock), but even after he finds out, he sticks with the Kauravas out of loyalty. The Pandavas find out only after he dies at their hands.\
30EvilGenius[=/=]EvilUncle — Shakuni. He is the one who persuades Yuddhishtira to continue the dice game, and later persuades Duryodhana to go to war with the Pandavas.\
31TheBrute — Dushasana. He attempts to humiliate Draupadi in front of the court, and remains one of the most brutal fighters in the war.\
32
33Subject to countless AlternativeCharacterInterpretation, mostly because of most characters being JerkAss or worse, or some characters being [[YouCantFightFate Screwed by Destiny]]. Countless adaptations have taken place; this epic is often compared to the works of Creator/{{Homer}}.
34
35Received a [[Series/{{Mahabharata}} 94 episode television adaptation]] on India’s state run Doordarshan channel from 1988 to 1990. This show remains the Indian TV show with the highest ever viewership. All episodes are available on Website/YouTube with English subtitles.
36
37It also received another adaptation, one year later after the Indian series, in the format of a six-hour long miniseries by British filmmaker Peter Brook. It is notable for its multi-ethnical cast, consisting of not only Indian actors, but also African, Caucasian, Middle Eastern and East Asian actors.
38
39----
40!!Provides Examples Of:
41[[foldercontrol]]
42[[folder: Tropes A-F]]
43* AbductionIsLove: Played straight with Ambika and Ambalika. Subverted with Amba, who reincarnates as Shikandi. See NoManOfWomanBorn.
44** [[SnakePeople Naga]] Princess Uloopi abducts Arjuna into her underwater kingdom. Naturally, Arjuna does complain.
45* AchillesHeel: The Big Bad Duryodhana's Achilles heel is his thighs and to hit it is to break the rules of war. [[spoiler: Not that Bhima cared anyways]]. Karna's weakness was not putting on his earrings and armor that he had and worn since birth since they made him immortal.
46* AchillesInHisTent: Bhishma was so pissed at Karna that Karna was sent to his tent and didn't participate in the war until Bhishma's death.
47* AlasPoorVillain: Many from the Kaurava side got an honorable sent-off, one way or another. Because for the Kshatriya, if the option is between [[ToBeLawfulOrGood honor and dharma]], then [[HonorBeforeReason honor is the better answer]].
48** Bhurishravas, otherwise a staunch enemy of Krishna's clan the Yadavas, proves himself more honorable than his Yadava rival Satyaki for not striking down his helpless opponent. Everyone condemns Satyaki forever and the Yadava is cursed to be annihilated by their own hands.
49** Bhishma's fall stops the war for a moment so both sides could come to his side and mourn him.
50** Karna's generosity shames Lord Indra so much in both his life and death that Indra personally praises Karna in front of other gods and never again comes to Arjuna's aid.
51** Beaten and dying, Duryodhana rants about his misfortunes and loses despite trying to uphold dharma as a Kshatriya. None of the Pandavas could retort back and the gods agree with him, showering his dying body with flowers and ascending him to heaven.
52* AllAmazonsWantHercules: Chitraganda and Arjuna
53** This is Tagore's interpretation and it stuck.
54** Another example is Hidimbi and Bhima (she's a Rakshasi, i.e. a demoness, but that's close enough to the trope to count).
55* AllClothUnravels: Used by Krishna to save Draupadi from being stripped by her own in-laws. The cloth keeps unravelling, but Draupadi remains clothed.
56* AllWomenAreLustful: During Bhishma's sermon on his deathbed, he gives a speech on how women will sleep with anything. Otherwise subverted. The epic in general is sympathetic to women and does not consider this to be true. The ''Literature/BhagavadGita'' generally is against lust in both men and women.
57* AndYourLittleDogToo: Yuddhistira refuses to enter Heaven without the dog that followed him faithfully. [[spoiler: He is rewarded for this after the dog is revealed to be his Father, Dharma (Righteousness)]]
58* AnnoyingArrows: Arrows can cut down things like a machinegun fire, but many named characters manage to intercept them, or are wrapped in magical protections, and so on. Consequently, they survive whole rains of incoming arrows.
59* AnthropomorphicPersonification: Krishna.
60* AnyoneCanDie:
61** No one is spared from a KarmicDeath! Not even [[spoiler:Krishna]].
62** In [[spoiler:Krishna]]'s case, it's complicated. In separate parts of the book, such as the ''Literature/BhagavadGita'', [[spoiler:Krishna]]'s death is portrayed as a [[FakingTheDead fakeout]], when he actually went back to his abode of Vaikuntha. Being the MasterOfIllusion he is, he has often fooled everyone including the gods as to who he is throughout the book. However, there is a difference between the death of the mortal body and the [[DeaderThanDead death of the soul]]. The mortal deaths of [[spoiler:Krishna]]'s kinsmen and himself are necessary for the fulfillment of Gandhari's promise, which does eventually occur in the Mahabharata. [[spoiler:Krishna]]'s ascension to heaven and the sinking of Dwarka lead to Arjuna's HeroicBSOD and the renunciation of the Pandavas. It also signifies the EndOfAnEra and the start of a new age.
63** Subverted with Aswatamma, who instead suffers a FateWorseThanDeath via [[{{Unperson}} becoming an unperson]] [[WhoWantsToLiveForever who must live forever]] [[NoSympathy begging passers by for sympathy to no avail]].
64* ArchEnemy: Bhima vs. Duryodhana, Arjuna vs. Karna, not to forget Pandu vs. Dhritarashtra
65* ArtificialHuman:
66** There are a lot of ArtificialHumans in the Mahabharata which might serve as a metaphor for their fierce character (as the logic goes: if they are made, not born, that explains their awesome character). The Kauravas, the sons of Queen Gandhari and King Dhritarastra were born artificially.
67** Drona was born artificially as well. Draupadi and her brother Dhristadyumna were born from a sacrificial fire.
68* ArtisticLicense
69* AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence: Yuddhistira (and everyone else) goes to Heaven.
70* AttemptedRape: Kichaka attempts to rape Draupadi in the Matsya Kingdom. Jayadratha attempts to rape Draupadi as well when she is exiled in the forest. After the dice game, Duryodhana, and Dushasana try to rape her in front of their royal court...and her husbands
71* AvengingTheVillain: [[spoiler: The Pandavas' five young children are killed in their sleep by Aswattama, Duryodhana's friend. [[InnocentBystander Those poor kids!]]]]
72* AuthorFilibuster:
73** The ''Bhaghavad Gita''. Krishna literally stops time in order to explain the nature of dharma and humanity's relationship with the gods to Arjuna. Not a bad thing of course-- it's one of the most popular parts of the epic and often treated as a stand-alone religious text in its own right.
74** As Bhishma lies on his deathbed, the Pandavas turn to him for advice. Because he can delay the time of his death, he spends weeks there waiting for the proper moment, and uses the time to stop all action and deliver many chapters' worth of parables about how to live. Many of these parables have aesops about respecting and supporting Brahmins, who of course were the people editing and compiling different versions of the text.
75* BadassAdorable: Krishna, Krishna, [[RuleOfThree Krishna!]]. In spite of being the most adorable baby and naughty CheerfulChild in the book, he really kicks some demon ass!
76** Countless supplementary texts on this show that he's had (and has) a HUGE fandom that's OlderThanFeudalism who loves him for all that he did in infancy, childhood, a teenager...and yeah, everything else he's ever done as well.
77** Balarama is also this as a child, although he doesn't get as much mention.
78* BadassBoast: Duryodhana [[FaceDeathWithDignity goes out]] with one of these, and it is ''glorious''.
79--> '''Duryodhana:''' "I have studied, made presents according to the ordinance, governed the wide Earth with her seas, and stood over the heads of my foes! Who is there so fortunate as myself?! That end again which is courted by Kshatriyas observant of the duties of their own order, death in battle, hath become mine. Who, therefore, is so fortunate as myself?! Human enjoyments such as were worthy of the very gods and such as could with difficulty be obtained by other kings, had been mine. Prosperity of the very highest kind had been attained by me! Who then is so fortunate as myself?! With all my well-wishers, my friends and my younger brothers, I am going to heaven, O thou of unfading glory! As regards yourselves, with your purposes undone and torn by grief, live ye on in this unhappy world!"
80* BigScrewedUpFamily: The Kurus are screwed up. In more ways than one.
81* BeCarefulWhatYouSay: When the Pandavas brought Draupadi home, Kunti asked them to share whoever they brought equally, thinking that they bought alms. Much confusion ensued and all the five Pandavas married Draupadi.
82* BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor:
83** Draupadi, the Pandavas' wife, in the Mahabharata yearned for a husband in her previous life. In one version of the story, she wanted her husband to be as strong as Vayu, as talented as Indra, as moral as Dharma and as beautiful as the Ashwini twins. She forgot to specify that she wanted ''one'' husband. As a result, in her next incarnation, she married five men and was the wife of five husbands simultaneously. Her qualities of an ideal husband were satisfied in that the five princes were conceived by Kunti with the aid of five different gods (Bhima from Vayu, Arjuna from Indra, Yuddhistira from Dharma, and Nakula and Sahadev from the Ashwins).
84** In another version of the story, Draupadi (in her previous incarnation) was so eager for a husband that she asked for one five times before the god she was talking to could get a word in edgewise. He then informed her that since she'd asked five times, she'd get five husbands. She protested that she only wanted one, but it was too late.
85** The young unmarried Kunthi got a mantra that would make any God fall for her, at least for procreation purposes. She was curious enough to say it and the Sun God in consequence came to her. Of course, she could not refuse him and she got pregnant. Since unmarried motherhood, especially to Princesses with precarious status never ends well, she sets adrift her son. [[spoiler: He was Karna]].
86* BecauseDestinySaysSo: Played straight in the original. Subverted in the expansion.
87* BecauseYouWereNiceToMe: This is why Karna swears fealty to Duryodhana after the latter makes him a crown prince and the Pandavas mistreat him.
88* BecomingTheMask: At first, Duryodhana only pretended to like Karna so he could use his great skills against the Pandavas. Over time, he came to genuinely love him as a brother.
89* BeingGoodSucks: See "Honor Before Reason"
90* BerserkButton: Duryodhana doesn't take insults against him well, but he can cope with them through very gritted teeth. Insulting his family and friends however (especially his parents) is an absolutely suicidal venture.
91* BestFriendsInLaw: Krishna is perfectly happy for Arjun to marry his sister Subhadra. In some versions, he is said to be the mastermind behind the plan.
92* BigBad: Duryodhana, with Shakuni as the GreaterScopeVillain.
93* BlackAndWhiteMorality: ''Every character'' in the work is an incarnation of either a ''deva'' or an ''aśura'', or at least a child thereof. Even minor ones.
94* BlessedWithSuck: Bhima has super strength, Arjuna is the best archer there is, Yuddhistira is righteous, yet all these strengths amount to nothing as the Pandavas spend the majority of their lifespan escaping BigBad Duryodhana's schemes. Only in the end do they finally use their power against their cousins.
95** Bhishma, the patriarch of the Kurus, has the power to decide the time of his death. Keep in mind, this does not make him immortal and that he still experiences pain. [[spoiler: He dies in the Kurushetra War after lying on a bed of arrows for a number of days. He willed his death of course but it is a very very sucky power.]]
96** [[TheDragon Karna]] had earrings and armor that made him immortal yet it never does much for him until the Kurushetra War. [[spoiler: And before he can use it in the war, Indra/Krishna asks him to give them away as charity. He accepts, as it's in line with his vows.]] Thus, immortality proved to be useless and temporary.
97** Drapaudi is married to five men at once, because she wished for all these qualities in a man in a past life (and refused to accept Shiva's caution that it's nearly impossible to squeeze all these attributes into one guy). She becomes TheHighQueen, but she gets caught in the middle of the conflict between the Pandavas and Kauravas.
98* {{Bowdlerization}}: The [[UsefulNotes/{{Indonesia}} Javanese]] version removes some of the more {{squick}}tastic elements of the original, such as Draupadi being the wife of all five Pandavas. In it, she is Yudhisthira's (and only Yudhisthira's) wife. Probably something to do with the ancient Javanese opposition to polyandry.
99* BreakTheCutie: Draupadi refused to even consider marrying Karna because of his background as a charioteer's son. She laughed at Duryodana once calling him "a blind son of a blind father". Duryodhana pulls a WhosLaughingNow during the dice game. [[spoiler: She is later humiliated as Duryodhana orders his brother Brute Dushasana to strip her and Dragon Karna calls her a whore.]]
100** This happens to Draupadi a lot because of her legendary beauty. Kichaka, the errant brother of the queen Sudeshna of the Matsya Kingdom tries to assault her when she disguises herself as a servant and when repulsed strikes her in open court. [[spoiler: Bhima teaches him a nice lesson in manners later, by stomping him till he dies]]
101* BreakTheHaughty:
102** Drona's childhood friend King Drupad was humiliated by Drona because of his haughty demeanor and his insults towards Drona. Drupad also failed to fulfill a childhood promise to Drona and refused to recognize him as his friend.
103** Several of Arjuna's tales outside of the war have him suffer this; in one case he claims that a bridge of arrows that he builds would withstand a monkey's weight (Hanuman in disguise) and nearly burns himself when he fails.
104* CainAndAbel: Duryodhana tried to kill his cousin Bhima by poisoning him as a child.
105* CantHaveSexEver: After accidentally killing a holy man and his wife, (who were using magic to [[PowerPerversionPotential turn into deer and have sex]]), Pandu is cursed to die if he ever approaches his wives with sexual intent. The temptation eventually becomes too much and he perishes from the enchantment.
106* CassandraTruth: Sanjaya/Vidura tries to get Dhritarashtra to rein in Duryodhana, foreshadowing that he would end the dynasty.
107** After surviving Duryodhana's attempt on his life, Bhima is told by Vidura to keep it a secret as the sequence of events (getting drugged, tossed into a river, rescued by Nagas who removed the poison and gifted him with SuperStrength) would sound too contrived to be believable.
108* CelibateHero: Traditionally, abstinence matters a lot in Hinduism, but usually it's fasting in various forms (vows of indefinite prohibition are another matter entirely). Thus celibacy is defined differently in the Mahabharata than almost anywhere else. It is described most of all as [[UsefulNotes/{{Asexuality}} a lack of sexual lust]]. Thus, Arjuna, TheHero, is described to be a bramhachari ('celibate') despite marrying Draupadi and Subhadra, sleeping with Chitraganda and various other Naga Princesses [[LieBackAndThinkOfEngland because he is sleeping with them only for procreation]]. Also, warriors were not supposed to refuse any female request for sex. Highly subject to ValuesDissonance.
109%%** Played straight with Bhishma.
110* TheChainsOfCommanding: It never ends. It never ends.
111%%* ChickMagnet: Krishna.
112* ChosenConceptionPartner:
113** Pandu is cursed to [[OutWithABAng die when he has sex]], and therefore cannot have children with his wives. As they still long to have children, Pandu and his wives contrive to ask the gods to make Pandu's wives pregnant. In this way Pandu's wives Kunti and Madri eventually give birth to five sons, with Pandu himself advising his wives which god they should pray to for a child each time.
114** Vichitravirya died childless. So his widows had to go to Vyasa to conceive children, Dhritarashtra and Pandu.
115* TheCorrupter: Shakuni, also crossed with HeWhoFightsMonsters; he's the cause of everything that turns to shit in the epic, all because the Kurus destroyed his dynasty and Bhishma made his sister Gandhari marry a blind man.
116* {{Cosmic Plaything}}s: Everyone in this epic without exception.
117* CouldHaveAvoidedThisPlot: The Kurushetra War could have been avoided in several ways [[ForegoneConclusion alas...]]
118** Krishna does all that he can to prevent a war between the Pandavas and Kauravas by serving as an emissary. Even so, Gandhari points out that he could have stopped it outright by using his full powers as an avatar or his kingdom's military might which was larger than the forces of the Pandavas and Kauravas combined, and curses him for not doing that when the war is over and no one has truly won. That said, Duryodhana is absolutely obstinate in refusing to make any concessions to the Pandavas. If Krishna had directly intervened, her one hundred sons would have died to his chakra, rather than versus the Pandavas.
119** The Pandavas offer that they and their descendants will never again push for their claim for the throne if Duryodhana gives them five small villages so their sons could at least inherit something. Duryodhana rejects it, claiming that he won't part with even a needle point of land.
120** After the negotiation fails, Sahadeva consults with his omnipotent wisdom on other ways the war can be avoided. The wisdom claims that the war can be prevented by giving the throne to Karna, imprisoning Shakuni and Khrisna forever, and then exiling both the Pandavas and Duryodhana. It is rejected because a) Karna would never accept that his best friend is deprived of his rights and b) the Pandavas are too prideful to let [[DramaticIrony the son of a charioteer become king]].
121* CurbStompBattle: Karna is not that powerful for most of the story, but [[TookALevelInBadass takes many levels in badass]] by the time of the battle of Kurukshetra, where his defeat by Arjuna requires a pile of curses activating in the critical moment, direct intervention by multiple gods, and his best weapon being already expended to kill one of the most powerful enemy heroes. He also stomps into the ground the rest of the Pandavas, before battling Arjuna.
122* CursedWithAwesome: Arjuna is cursed by a miffed goddess to look like a eunuch, but his father Indra changes the curse to make it last exactly one year, to be chosen at Arjuna's behest. It comes in very handy during the year the Pandavas have to live in disguise.
123* CycleOfRevenge:
124** Arjuna's mentor Drona is insulted by his childhood friend, King Drupad so he asks Arjuna to teach the {{Jerkass}} a lesson. Drupad is humiliated in a badass manner and wants revenge. He gets a son Dhristadyuma to kill Drona and a daughter Draupadi to marry Arjuna.
125** Ashwatthama, the son of Drona and a friend of BigBad Duryodhana [[spoiler: kills the five children of the Pandavas, Draupadi's father and brother when they were sleeping in a tent at the end of the Kurushetra battle]] to avenge the unjust death of his father.
126** He also tries to kill Abhimanyu's unborn son, but (depending on version) the child is revived by Krishna or Ashwatthama got caught first.
127** Essentially, this is the reason of the Kurushetra War in a nutshell beside the SuccessionCrisis. Bhishma fought, defeated, and left the Gandhara dynasty to starve. This makes Shakuni fan Duryodhana's hatred for the Pandavas that started from Bhima bullying the Kauravas in their childhood, and it just escalates from there.
128* DeadpanSnarker: Karna. To quote Yuddhisthira, he was "one whose teeth are spears and arrows and whose tongue is a sword".
129* DefeatByModesty: Gandhari's last-ditch blessing to Duryodhana would have made him completely invulnerable had Krishna not shamed him into covering his thighs and privates as he claimed appearing before his mother buck-naked would have been a shameful thing to do.
130* DemotedToExtra: Nakula and Sahadeva can come across like this. Arjuna has many, many side-stories, while Bhima and Yudhisthira get leading roles and feature rather prominently in the story. Nakula and Sahadeva, said to be [[TakeOurWordForIt the best swordsmen]] and [[PrettyBoy the best-looking]] amongst the Pandava brothers, hardly get any screen time. Of course, it can also be attributed to the multiple characters the prose must cover.
131* {{Determinator}}: Abhimanyu. A killing machine on the battlefield at the age of sixteen, he had to be cornered by several of the Kaurava side's greatest warriors before he's beaten (completely against all rules of combat). Even after having all of his armor and weaponry shattered, he was still mowing down his enemies with a wheel broken off his chariot by the time he's taken down. Though that might not qualify him for this trope since the alternative was to give up and die.
132* DeusExMachina: Probably the only reason Arjuna survives the war. Justified in that his charioteer, Krishna, is...you know...God, and everyone knows it.
133* DidntThinkThisThrough: Given the ability to summon a god to father a child, Kunti tries it out before she gets married and ends up [[MosesInTheBulrushes setting the resulting child adrift on a river]].
134* DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu: Karna managed to knock back Arjuna's chariot despite [[RealityWarper the protection of two gods at once]]. Which also involved moving an Avatar against his will--thus [[AchievementsInIgnorance obliviously doing a wonder]] while just trying to get at Arjuna.
135* DiscOneFinalBoss: Bhishma, Karna, and Drona.
136* DisproportionateRetribution: Draupadi laughed at Durodhyana. So he attempts to rape her.
137* DoorStopper: '''And how!''' The Mahabharata itself lampshades this, saying it was supposedly so long that a god had to be brought in as the scribe.
138** At almost 100,000 verses, [[http://www.mahabharataonline.com/ the only complete translation of the book]] has 2,114 chapters in 18 books, with an estimated word count of over 1.8 million in the original book. And that does not consider the complexities of having it written ''entirely in Sanskrit poetry''.
139* DoubleStandardRapeFemaleOnMale: Ulupi drags Arjuna underwater and propositions him, threatening to commit suicide after his initial refusal. Even though she's a total stranger, Arjuna considers this romantic and sexy. Compare this to the scene where Durodhyana threatens to rape Draupadi, a show of cruelty so enraging that several other Kshatriyas (including Krishna, who is literally virtue incarnate) declare war on him.
140* DownerEnding: How to list the ways. [[spoiler: All the Kauravas die but they die with almost all the Pandavas' mentors, teachers, and revered patriarchs. Then the Pandavas' five children are killed during sleep due to Ashwatthama, the son of their teacher Drona, who wanted to avenge his father. Of their many children and grandchildren, only the unborn child of teenage Abhimanyu, the son of Arjuna, survives. The Pandavas' mother dies in a forest fire. After their death, they ascend to the heavens but not before being put through a crazy amount of tests. Duryodhana, the BigBad is enjoying himself in Heaven. Their last heir dies sometime after the Kurushetra War due to a snakebite because he tried to mock a meditating sage.]]
141* DyingCurse: Hunting in a forest, Pandu shoots his arrows at a mating couple of deer. However the deer are actually the sage Kindama and his wife who have [[VoluntaryShapeshifter assumed deer shape for a change]]. Dying, Kindama curses Pandu to die if he ever has sexual intercourse again. Even though Pandu evades the curse for many years by leading a life of asceticism, the curse comes true at long last.
142* EnlightenmentSuperpowers: Ekalavya, who despite being blind becomes the greatest archer in the world by listening in on Drona's lessons echoing in the mountains while he's meditating and then begins practicing with a bow, is one of the cases of this being possible for even BadassNormal characters and not just those with DivineParentage.
143* EvenBadMenLoveTheirMamas: Duryodhana loves his mother Gandhari though he never listens to her. [[spoiler: Subverted in the case of Karna though not completely as he promised Kunti that he would only try to kill Arjuna out of her five children and spare the other four.]]
144** Duryodhana accidentally sets the stage for the war when, during their childhoods, he insulted the Pandavas about how their mothers were "whores" as they had been impregnated by five different gods instead of their actual cursed father, Pandu. Yudhishthira, famed for his honesty, retaliated by calling his mother a widow. This scared Duryodhana, who believed that his father had somehow died when he wasn't looking or that he would die very soon, so he went to Bhishma for help. The following investigations caused Bhishma to imprison and torture Gandhari's family, leading to Shakuni's grudge against both clans and his schemes to exacerbate the coming conflict to catastrophic levels.
145* EverybodysDeadDave: After the 18 day long battle of Kurukshetra, involving just shy of ''four million!'' warriors, [[spoiler: only eight on the Pandavas' side and three on the Kauravas' remain alive.]]
146** The Mahabharata isn't explicit on how its calculated, but Yudhisthira tells Dhritharashtra that the official head count at the end stood at ''an astounding 1,660,020,000'', including animals. It is explained off by auxiliary books that the four million only consisted of the core army while the actual was 'way bigger'. No need to imagine the old king's response...
147*** The destruction of the Yadus has an estimated head count of ''560 million''. Which would put the full death toll at ''over two billion''.
148* ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin: Inverted... if you ask a Filipino anyway. Mainly because "Mahabarata" kinda sounds like "Mahaba ata" (or This is long) considering that this is an epic, it makes sense.
149[[/folder]]
150
151
152[[folder: Tropes F-R]]
153* FanFic: Local adapters of the Mahabharata tend to add their own spin to the legends, ranging from the subtle to the not. One of the most pronounced aspects of this is Draupadi's status; in the original version she was the wife of all the Pandavas, while in the Javanese version she is the wife of Yudhisthira alone. This fact bit her on the behind in the end; she died during the Pandava's pilgrimage to the Mahameru in the foothills of the Himalayas, because she had feelings for Arjuna throughout her marriage. In the original, she falls because she is partial to Arjuna.
154** And that doubles as an example of FanFic being OlderThanPrint; the Javanese version (named ''Kakawin Bharatayuddha'') dates back to the year 1157 CE.
155* FatalFlaw: Several of the major characters here have their own flaws.
156** Lust for power and egomania. Duryodhana was DrivenByEnvy and [[TheResenter resentment]] of the Pandavas, as this jealousy ultimately caused him to develop [[TheUnfettered an ends-justifies-the-means Machiavellian mentality]] that slowly destroyed him.
157** Dronacharya has a near-fatal flaw in his own HairTriggerTemper.
158** Yudhishtra was the eldest and wisest of the Pandavas, yet he took his righteousness and selflessness too far to the point he failed to protect his wife Draupadi in the dice game.
159** Karna made his friendship and loyalty to Duryodhana higher than anything else, even higher than his own morals.
160** Dhritarashtra's excessive love for his 100 sons made him too emotionally blind to realize which direction they were going and he frequently forgave them for their transgressions.
161** Bhishma's extreme but blind loyalty to the kingdom prevented him from criticizing his superiors, most notably when he refused to intervene in the dice game.
162* FateWorseThanDeath: Krishna curses Ashwatthama with immortality, a painfully deteriorating body, and with becoming an {{Unperson}} who is ignored by all.
163* FeudingFamilies: The Kauravas and the Pandavas.
164* FriendlyEnemy: Played straight with Bhishma and Karna. An UnbuiltTrope with Krishna who, while ever-affable, you shouldn't listen to if he's on the opposing side as no matter how good his suggestions are, he is still your enemy and everything he does is in service of his allies. Part of the leadup to the Bhagavad Gita is him delivering a deconstruction of this trope from the other side: a FriendlyEnemy is still an enemy. Just because Arjuna's friends and family are among the Kauravas doesn't mean they're not still a threat to the preservation of ''dharma'' on Earth.
165* GentleGiant: Ghatotkacha, Bhima's son by Hidimba who is a giant (as in the giant race) prince.
166* GodAndSatanAreBothJerks: The Pandavas have divine parentage while the Kauravas have more infernal roots. By the end of the story, each side is more-or-less as terrible as the other.
167* GreyAndGrayMorality: Some people who read this epic insist that the whole conflict was basically about nuances of interpretations of Dharma (duty). If you don't get it, don't despair--most of the participants probably didn't get it either, until they died. Also, all described characters have a specified good enough reason to be there; almost everyone on the battlefield was there out of loyalty. And {{Jerkass}}es are everywhere.
168* GuileHero:
169** Krishna is the ChessMaster behind much of the action and TheManBehindTheMan for the Pandavas.
170** Yudhisthira's ability to solve riddles and his philosophical knowledge gets all five brothers out of sticky situations more than once.
171** Vidura is able to reason with and manipulate the weak-willed Dhritarashtra on several occasions to obtain a favourable bargain for the Pandavas.
172* HalfHumanHybrid: A lot of the heroes.
173* HandicappedBadass: Ekalavya is a blind orphan somehow surviving in the mountains near where Drona gives the Pandavas lessons who can listen in on their lessons from a long distance. Just by hearing the men training and listening closely to Drona's advice, he becomes a greater archer than any of them. When Drona finds out, [[KickTheDog he gives Ekalavya an ultimatum of death for dishonoring him in accidentally teaching a lower caste, or Ekalavya cutting off the thumb on his bow hand.]]
174* HeirClubForMen: Heirs are wanted very badly by Kurus. VERY VERY BADLY.
175* HeelRealization: Losing his brothers and his friends makes Duryodhana admit to how his wickedness robbed him of all he held dear, but in the same breath he points out that that doesn't make the Pandavas "good" by any stretch of the imagination.
176* HeroicBSOD:
177** Arjuna just before the battle, when he faced the fact that it would involve killing his teachers and much of his family. Lead to a major lecture in the ''Literature/BhagavadGita''.
178** When his teenage son Abhimanyu is killed by six grown-up Kauravas, he goes crazy.
179* HeWhoFightsMonsters: Happens to all the Pandavas during the Kurushetra battle. Leads to Yudhisthira's [[spoiler: MyGodWhatHaveIDone speech]].
180* HonorBeforeReason:
181** Nearly everyone, including the BigBad, take their vows extremely seriously. So when both sides break mutually agreed rules of war during the battle of Kurukshetra it is a very big deal.
182** Karna refuses to stop supporting Duryodhana, even after learning that he will be fighting his brothers, because he swore fealty to the latter. Lampshaded by Duryodhana, who says he would have supported his best friend as king if he had known.
183** Ironically, subverted with Krishna. He is a combination of {{Chessmaster}} and GuileHero, but he is also a god, so all of the warriors' posturing is ostensibly to satisfy Him. Yet he comes off as the OnlySaneMan when he advises the Pandavas to break their oaths with his strategies.
184* {{Hypocrite}}:
185** Arjuna absolutely loses his shit after his son is killed by the strongest warriors of the Kaurava faction. Later, he gleefully shoots off Karna's son Vrishasena's arms before decapitating him with a massive smile on his face. That said, he fought Vrishasena one on one while Abhimanyu was ganged up on by many warriors breaking the code of war.
186* IGaveMyWord: Yudhishtira gave his word never to back down from a challenge; this is a doubly huge issue because he is a ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kshatriya Kshatriya]]'', for whom such promises are very much SeriousBusiness. He is challenged to a rigged game of dice and has to gamble away his brothers, his wife, and everything he possesses or rules.
187* {{Irony}}: Draupadi had wished in her past life for a husband who was strong, talented, morally upright, and good-looking, and Shiva told her it was very difficult (though not exactly impossible) to find one man with all those qualities. Karna is the one guy with all those qualities at once ... and he can't be with Draupadi [[TypeCaste because of his social status]].
188* ItsPersonal: Everything is personal.
189** More so than his own, Duryodhana feared the mortality of his parents because of their relative frailty compared to the rest of their family (Bhishma, the Pandavas, the Kauravas, etc). [[spoiler:They both outlive him and many of their "stronger" kinsmen.]]
190* IWantGrandKids: The conflict in the epic is set in motion because of the Kuru desire to have as many grandkids as possible. Queen Satyavati wants Kuru heirs really really soon and she is willing to do anything to get them. So she makes her very teenage son sleep with two adult women until he dies. Then she makes her stepson Vyasa impregnate his two widowed wives almost immediately even when Vyasa asks her to wait for a year. Of course, the sons who were born were blind and sickly. The first son conceives his sons artificially and the second son asks his wives to bear children from the gods.
191* {{Jerkass}}:
192** Arjuna, who was a RoyalBrat that could not tolerate a warrior in any other caste being superior to him. He only TookALevelInKindness after the war and suffered several BreakTheHaughty moments courtesy of Krishna.
193** Drona is this to lower-caste boys that want to be his pupils. He even orders Ekalavya to chop off his thumb when the latter surpasses Arjuna.
194** Duryodhana, though he also practices PragmaticVillainy that earns him power.
195* JerkassHasAPoint:
196** Duryodhana gets support from Karna, TheAce in combat, because the Pandavas made it a point to KickTheDog with Karna for being a charioteer's son. You don't disrespect those below you, because it may come back to haunt you later. He also raises a very valid defense in his withholding of the kingdom from the Pandavas due to the fact that because none of them were conceived by their father Pandu, none of them have any royal blood to lay claim to the throne with. However, that last point is weak since neither Dhritarashtra nor Pandu were born of royal blood to begin with, being conceived through Vyasa.
197** Yudhisthira in his NeverMyFault moment points out that Kunti should have told the brothers before the battle that Karna was her son as well and thus their half-brother, because they unknowingly committed fratricide. Though it may not have helped since when she spoke to Karna, he refused to change his allegiance and only promised to target Arjuna instead of all the Pandavas.
198** Gandhari in her WhatTheHellHero speech to Krishna points out that he [[CouldHaveAvoidedThisPlot could have routed this conflict]] if he had desired to do so, being a god. Hence Krishna accepts her curse that his family house will be torn asunder the way hers was.
199* KarmaHoudini: Following the death of [[spoiler:Duryodhana, Ashwatthama, Kripa and Kritavarma murder a bunch of the Pandavas in their sleep, [[WouldHurtAChild including the children]]]]. Although Ashwatthama and Kritavarma get their comeuppance, not only does Kripa not get punished, [[spoiler:he ends up as one of the ones who lives through the Kaliyuga]].
200** Despite all his sins [[spoiler:Duryodhana ends up in Heaven]].
201* KarmaHoudiniWarranty: Both the Pandavas and the Kauravas break the rules of combat during the war. While they don't suffer at the time, they certainly do after. [[spoiler:Aswathamma wipes out the Pandava children, ensuring no one will enjoy the spoils of war. He is then cursed with immortality and permanent outcast status.]] Meanwhile, only a handful of Kauravas survive, including Karna's youngest son.
202* KickThemWhileTheyAreDown: How Arjuna defeats Karna. Arjuna shoots Karna when his chariot is broken and he is on the ground, a violation of the rules of war.
203* LamarckWasRight: Dhritarashtra is born blind because his mother kept her eyes shut during his conception. Pandu is born sickly because his mother was pale and trembling with fear.
204* LawfulStupid: Many characters in the epic come off this way at times, due to large amounts of HonorBeforeReason. Many of the Kaurava allies love the Pandavas and end up fighting against them due to technicalities of vows they made, ultimately dying pointlessly.
205** Shalya ends up fighting for the Kauravas despite being Pandu's brother-in-law and a great lover of the Pandavas due to an egregious case of HonorBeforeReason. Duryodhana throws a great feast for Shalya, who is so grateful he promises to fight for whoever provided it. When Shalya learns that his enemy Duryodhana is the one who gave the feast, he is bound to his word, and ends up dying for it.
206** A crowning moment of this comes when Arjuna swears to kill anyone who criticizes his martial prowess. After Yudhisthira gives him a stern talking-to after a day's battle, Arjuna becomes enraged and tries to kill Yudhisthira, his own beloved brother, because of this vow. Krishna has to talk him down and explain that no, you shouldn't always follow through on promises like that.
207* LetMeTellYouAStory: While on his deathbed, Bhishma delivers lots of advice and wisdom to Yudhisthira and his brothers in the form of parables that all end in AnAesop. Many of the Mahabharata side stories are part of this segment.
208* LetThemDieHappy: Karna goes into the war knowing that either Duryodhana wins or Yudhisthira does, and either way it will be a bloodbath. Then he has to waste a celestial weapon on a victory, and senses that it was his last chance to kill Arjuna. The night before he dies, Parashurama comes to him in a dream. Karna bitterly calls him out for cursing him, since he didn't even know he was a Kshatriya when serving as the man's student, but Parashurama had an explanation for the cruelty. He says that if Karna weren't cursed, then Duryodhana would win and the world would fall into chaos. This allowed Karna to go into battle, knowing that he wouldn't return alive.
209* LightIsNotGood: Krishna and the Pandavas are divine creatures of great beauty and strength. In the end, they wind up being less honorable and just slightly better than the vaguely demonic and less sightly Kauravas.
210* LongLostRelative: Karna, the Pandavas' oldest brother. He was informed only in a context of the possibility to overtake the whole mess from the Pandavas as the first child of Kunti, rendering the whole conflict moot and from this position resolve it as he see fit. Being a HotBlooded warrior as opposed to a MagnificentBastard, he met such news without any enthusiasm and chose to stick with his feudal obligations, friends, and his stables-bound foster family.
211* LoopholeAbuse: Gandhari was fated to have her first husband die prematurely. To circumvent this, her family had her marry a goat and kill it to have this destiny harmlessly play out. Unfortunately, to maintain her viability as a bride of high-standing, they withheld that information from her horoscope and when Bhishma found out about the deception, he had them imprisoned and slowly starved them to death with Shakuni as the only (and very vengeful) survivor.
212* LostHimInACardGame: The infamous dice game; see IGaveMyWord. Earlier, Vinata loses herself to her sister Kadru betting on the color of the tail of a horse [[SchmuckBait whose fur Kadru had replaced]].
213* MailOrderBride: Madri. Her brother is given a bride price for her marriage to Pandu. Ironically, she becomes the favorite wife of Pandu.
214* ManipulativeBastard: Shakuni, who manages to play on everyone else's flaws to push the kingdom into CivilWar. Significantly, he takes advantage of Yuddhisthira's [[TheGamblingAddict gambling addiction]] to convince him to raise the stakes during the dice game and bet the entire kingdom, which ends up forcing the Pandavas into exile, and later uses Duryodhana's resentment of the Pandavas to instigate the Kurukshetra War.
215* MassivelyNumberedSiblings: Duryodhana and his 99 brothers, plus a lone sister and a half-brother.
216* MeaningfulName - Pandu means "pale". He was a sickly child. Bhishma means "terrible vowed". Draupadi "daughter of Drupad" is called Yagnyaseni which means "born of a sacrifice" and "Ayonija" which means that "one is not born of a woman". Naturally she is a fearsome character to behold.
217** Duryodhana's name was originally Suyodhana (He who is beneficient/good in war) but he seemed to be such an antithesis of his name that he was mockingly called Duryodhana (He who is bad to fight against). The name stuck.
218** Kind of a bilingual subversion is "Arjuna" - you could think it means "Archer", since the words are so close. Nope, it's "bright", "shining" or such.
219* MenAreTheExpendableGender - Played absolutely straight. Typical of almost all Hindu mythology.
220* MrExposition - Sanjaya, with divine assistance.
221* MyGirlIsNotASlut: AuthorAvatar Vyasa is sympathetic to women in the epic who have to transgress monogamy or have had children out of wedlock. His mother Satyavati gave birth to him before marriage. Kunti was pregnant before marriage and she was absolved of any wrongdoing by Vyasa. Similarly when Kunti consults the scriptures on whether having three sons with various gods could lead to a bad reputation, he states that as long as the number of gods she summoned were less than four, she would not have a problem with her reputation. Draupadi is insulted by Karna for having five husbands and is condemned in the eyes of the Kaurava audience because of this though she is considered holy by the Brahmins (who refused to work for a day because of the insult to her honor) and worshiped as part of the five virgins. According to the philosophy advocated in the Mahabharata, virginity is a state of mind.
222* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: Most of the Pandava brothers after they learn that Karna was their brother, especially [[JerkAss Arjuna]] who murdered Karna. Arjuna subsequently TookALevelInKindness to take care of Karna's only living son and offer him the crown.
223* MyRulesAreNotYourRules: Since Krishna's a living god, any treachery perpetrated by the Pandavas, no matter how objectively heinous, is made honorable by his divine right. These include, but are not limited to, shooting your enemy in the back, hitting below the belt, and outright flagrant deception.
224* MySisterIsOffLimits: {{Inverted}}. Krishna is perfectly happy to have Arjuna fall in love with his sister Subhadra. He goes out of his way to encourage Arjuna to [[AbductionIsLove abduct]] her, as the quickest way to put an end to all arguments with his brother Balarama about whether Subhadra should be married to some other prince. Balarama is annoyed by this.
225* NestedStory: The entire Mahabharata is presented as Ugrasrava Sauti reciting how Vaishampayana recited the story to Emperor Janamejaya (great-grandson of the Pandavas).
226* NeverMyFault: Yudhisthira after learning that Karna was his brother curses his mother for keeping it a secret. He curses all women to be unable to keep secrets, though you can say that he failed.
227* NiceJobBreakingItHero:
228** Dronacharya's doting over his pet apprentice, even against the Pandavas' own long-term interests. Eklavaya is a potential rival to our star? Let's cripple him! The guy can be taken into the ranks effortlessly instead? Never mind, the championship is what's important. Karna wants to lock horns with our buffalo among the men? Let's tell him off in the worst way possible. It sounds like an invitation for anyone with land to spare, a grudge against the Pandavas, and half a brain to get an alliance or feudal obligations from the lad who (Drona suspects) has a good chance to wipe the floor with Arjuna. Oh, Suyodhana-Duryodhana is here too? Never mind, it's all about the sport. Never mind what can happen in the ''next'' tournament, too.
229** Kunti attempts to get Karna to reveal himself as her oldest son to prevent the battle. This only makes Karna promise not to kill four of his brothers, which leads to his death in turn as he faces Arjuna and Krishna. What's more, Arjuna is horrified when he learns that he committed fratricide.
230* NoHeroToHisValet: To his subjects, Duryodhana was a wonderful prince and a promising scion of the throne. Sadly, while they still loved him, his parents and Bhishma were always dogged by the knowledge that the boy's nobility hung on a very thin thread and when it came time to name a successor to the kinghood, they couldn't bring themselves to make it him.
231* NobleTopEnforcer: Karna
232* NoManOfWomanBorn: Amba died and was reincarnated as Shikhandini/Shikandi just to pull a variant of this on Bhishma.
233* NonIndicativeName: Both Kunti and Draupadi are lauded as holy virgins, both in and out of universe. Neither one of them are ''actually'' virgins.
234* OffingTheOffspring: The goddess Ganga does this by killing her children. She later explains that she did this because the children were souls of cursed saints who wanted to be liberated from this birth.
235* OOCIsSeriousBUsiness: Duryodhana is motivated by a desire to claim the throne. He refuses to share even a small portion. Then he finds out after Karna's death that Karna was actually the rightful heir and refused to tell anyone because he promised to serve Duryodhana. In fact, this revelation would have made the Pandavas stand down since they would give the throne to their oldest brother. The man tearfully says that if Karna had told him, Duryodhana would have ceded his claim and supported his best friend as the king.
236* OutWithABang: Having been cursed by the sage Kindama to die in the act of intercourse, Pandu abdicates the throne and leads a life of asceticism in a forest. Years later Pandu is walking in the forest with his wife Madri, when he is overwhelmed by desire for Madri and has sex with her; true to the curse, he dies immediately afterwards.
237* ParentalAbandonment: [[TheDragon Karna's]] and the Pandavas' mother Kunti abandoned him as she was unwed. Kunti herself was given in adoption by her real father to his close friend and was thus abandoned.
238* ParentsAsPeople: Kunti tries to reason with Karna and ask him to reveal himself, to atone for abandoning him and to stop the war before it begins. She means well in wanting none of her sons to die, but as Karna points out, his "brothers" haven't exactly been brotherly or kind and they want this fight. Plus, if she truly cared, she wouldn't have abandoned him in the first place. The most she can do afterward is ensure that he gets a proper funeral.
239* PragmaticHero: Krishna. The work is filled with irony in that the HonorBeforeReason warrior code that the Kshatriyas built is regularly subverted and outright broken by the god it's meant to honor. He came to Earth to do good and defeat evil, by any means necessary. Once war becomes inevitable, he exhorts Arjuna to fight sincerely, even against beloved family, for the greater good of all mankind.
240* PrincessinRags: Draupadi, after her husbands lost the kingdom of Hastinapur.
241* PyrrhicVictory:
242** It's not "returned with a triumph" as much as "limped out of the blood bath".
243** Duryodhana says as he lay dying,''"I have studied, given charity, governed the wide Earth with her seas, and stood over the heads of my foes! With all my well-wishers, and my younger brothers, I am going to heaven. As regards yourselves, with your purposes unachieved and torn by grief, live in this unhappy world!"''
244* RealityWarper: A possible interpretation: Arjuna got too excited about how cool he is--his salvo knocked Karna's chariot 10 steps back, Karna's attack moved his only 2 steps back! Krishna asks him to remove Hanuman's flag from the chariot, walk away a little and look back. When Arjuna returned and asked why he saw only a pile of kindling there, Krishna explained that's what should have happened, but the direct protection of gods offset the result.
245* ResetButton: Although Draupadi has (and sleeps with) five husbands, her virginity is restored whenever she takes a bath. Thus she is worshipped as one of the Five Holy Virgins.
246* RevengeBeforeReason: On the 18th Day, Duryodhana is completely defeated and knows it. He surrenders to the Pandavas when they corner him, saying that he'll peacefully retire to live in the wilds of the kingdom after he gives dominion of it over to them. The wrathful brothers reject his offer and challenge him to a DuelToTheDeath to make his loss official. Duryodhana is a good sport about it, even picking Bhima as his opponent to settle their old grievances despite having a huge advantage over any other Pandava brother, but they cheat to win and leave him to die from his injuries.
247* RoyalBastard: The epic has a rather unusual by modern standards conception of what counts as legitimacy due to all the DivineParentage and [[VowOfCelibacy Vows of Celibacy]] going on. Many characters, such as the Pandavas, are not actually the biological sons of their official father but are nevertheless considered legitimate because they are descended from their official father's wives. However, Vidura was born to a servant woman who swapped in for one of Bhishma's wives, so he is not considered legitimate, and serves as an advisor to the other royals rather than ruling as a king like Bhishma's other sons Pandu and Dhritarashtra.
248%%* RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething: All of them!
249* RevengeByProxy: Ashwatthama
250[[/folder]]
251
252[[folder: Tropes S-Z]]
253* ScrewTheRulesTheyBrokeThemFirst: The Pandavas justify their increasing deviation from the rules of warfare with the way Abimanyu was unlawfully overwhelmed by Kaurava warriors. By the time the war's over, every side has broken the rules so many times you'd be surprised there were any in the first place.
254* SeriousBusiness: Curses from the truly wronged and just.
255* ShesAManInJapan: In the Javanese version, Shikhandi's known as Srikandi, a full-blown warrior who just traded her femininity to become Shikhandi instead of a girl who literally changed her sex into a man.
256* SoBeautifulItsACurse:
257** Played straight with Draupadi and the younger Kunti.
258** Another beautiful woman is Satyavati who used her beauty to her advantage (she became a queen and had a learned illegitimate son who could give her offspring.).
259* SomeoneToRememberHimBy: Arjuna's teenage son Abhimanyu's wife was pregnant when he died. The child was the only heir of the Pandavas who happened to be alive after the Kurushetra War.
260* StoryBreakerPower: Karna, which is part of why he was AchillesInHisTent'd for the first eleven days of the war. He's so strong and skilled that he can match Arjuna and Krishna simultaneously with seemingly ease even after losing his armor, and Krishna claims that even if all the world's men, Devas and Asuras were to battle him at once, they would be defeated. Some versions of the epic even illustrate Karna as a [[MemeticBadass Mahamaharathi]], a title of combat prowess otherwise reserved for Vishnu and Shiva.
261* StrangeMindsThinkAlike: While they loathed one another, both Duryodhana and Arjuna thought to sneak into Krishna's kingdom (and bedroom) to curry his favor for the upcoming war once he woke up. On the same night. They also agreed not to come to blows for fear of waking him prematurely.
262* StrongerWithAge: To the point where the epic might be one of the originators of the OldMaster trope. Chances are, if there's an old man on the battlefield at the Kurukshetra War, he's there to ''[[MookHorrorShow fuck everyone in his immediate vicinity up]]''.
263** Bhishma is one of the best examples in Hindu mythology. He was absolutely invincible on the battlefield and the Pandavas had to ask ''him'' for advice on how to defeat him. (He promised them that they could always meet him for advice after sunset, and he kept his promises.) Even after being impaled on a bed of arrows, he had the grace to choose the time of his death, and he lay there for days to wait for a time which was considered holy (the start of the period when the length of nights start reducing and the length of days start increasing i.e around middle of January) before he finally decided to leave the world.
264** Bahlika, who counts by being of fighting capability despite being Bhishma's uncle, i.e, the older brother of Bhishma's father.
265** Brihadatta, who is so old that he had to tie a headband to keep his skin folds from obscuring his vision, yet while riding his elephant (itself basically a fierce {{Kaiju}} [[WarElephants War Elephant]] that [[HorrifyingTheHorror makes Bhima, who kills elephants for sport and his giant son Ghatotkacha run for their lives]]) he nearly killed Arjuna if not for [[NighInvulnerable Krishna]] [[TakingTheBullet taking the arrow aimed at Arjuna for him]]).
266* SuccessionCrisis: Upon the return of the Pandavas, Dhritharashtra is pressured by Bhishma into making Yuddhishthira the crown prince due to the fear that Duryodhana's darker nature would one day overtake his attempts to overcome it. This actually causes Duryodhana to try and assassinate his cousins and to try and remedy that issue, Dhritharasthra decides to just give the Pandavas only half of the kingdom instead. A brief period of peace followed, but it was such a fragile tranquility that all it took was a few pithy insults and petty schemes to bring it all toppling down into outright war.
267* SuperPowerfulGenetics: The sons of Kunti inherited aspects of their real fathers, gods. The Pandavas got superhuman amounts of all the qualities [[BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor Draupadi]] wished for. Karna was so magnamimous that he is described to be exactly like his father, the Sun God Surya.
268* SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome: Despite divine intervention occurring left and right, there is still a whole lot of reality-biting people in the posterior.
269** Sage Kidamba and his wife decide to transform into tigers, then go really close to Pandu’s vacation home for their tryst. Did it not occur to him that humans might see and hear a pair of tigers prowlin’ and growlin’ and not retaliate violently to protect themselves?
270** Pandu fires off an arrow into the wild, at a noise he imagines to be a wild animal, without checking if it is indeed what he thinks. He ends up killing Rishi Kindam and his wife.
271** Karna, frustrated at receiving Parashuram’s curse, just fires off an arrow into the wild, not caring whether it might hit something. Ends up biting him on the ass in the worst way possible, when his arrow strikes and kills a calf - which is one of the worst transgressions one can commit according to Hindu rules. He receives the curse which will bring about his doom.
272** Krishna admonishes the Pandavas to play dirty when necessary to win. This leads the other side to play dirty to win too, hence their slaying of Abhimanyu, their commando raid at night etc.
273** The Pandavas sneak into Jarasandha’s court pretending to be poor supplicant Brahmins. However, all the saffron robes can’t disguise the calluses in Arjuna’s hands from all that archery. No wonder they get found out.
274** Krishna tells Karna that Kunti is his real mother, in an attempt to get him to end the war. The thing is that she abandoned him and raised his younger brothers so that he was raised by charioteers; while Karna is respectful towards her, he in turn points out that they haven't been the nicest towards him and that the only mother he knows is the one who took him in and showed him love. He says that no one must know because Duryodhana has his loyalty, and says he'll only kill Arjuna. Kunti understandably is devastated that she made things worse.
275* TheWisePrince: Bhishma but he could not be the heir because of ThePromise. Yuddhishthira of the Pandavas also qualifies.
276* ToHellAndBack: Yuddhishthira finds that his enemies are enjoying themselves in Heaven. He decides to visit Hell as he could not find his family in heaven and finds his brothers and Draupadi in hell. He refuses to leave Hell until he finds out that this is another test and goes back to Heaven with the rest of his family.
277* TogetherInDeath: Combined with AscendedToAHigherPlaneOfExistence, it's the ultimate fate of the feuding Pandavas and Kauravas; stuck together in paradise for eternity.
278* ToxicFriendInfluence: Combined, oddly enough, with MoralityPet. While Karna's friendship with Duryodhana makes him crueler, it in turn makes Duryodhana a better man.
279* UnicornsPreferVirgins: In English translations, the wilderness ascetic Ekaśṛṅga is often translated as Unicorn (one-horn), because he has a single horn on his head. Ascetics can make any wish of theirs come true if they are doing well with their asceticism, which can include taking the gods' place. As Unicorn becomes a successful ascetic, the gods send a drought as punishment and a local king decides to end Unicorn's asceticism by sending his daughter to seduce him. As Unicorn had never seen a woman before the princess arrives, he is fascinated and gets tamed by her. This is the UrExample for the trope. It's not the first reference to a one-horned beast, but it's the first case of a one-horned character who can be tamed by virgins and the medieval legend can be traced back to the Indian prototype (which appears first in iconography and not the Mahabharata but the Mahabharata is the oldest text).
280* UnstoppableRage: Happened several times.
281** Arjuna goes berserk after the Kauravas ganged up and killed his teenage son Abhimanyu.
282** Krishna goes temporarily berserk when he learns that Arjuna was fighting the patriarch Bhishma half-heartedly.
283** Bhima goes berserk almost continuously in the epic, especially when someone insults Draupadi's honor.
284* UrExample: Had this poem been better known in the Western World, it very well could have been the originator and namer of several tropes. Those being
285** AbsurdlyHighStakesGame - the dice game in which the stakes are simple items, then a king’s chariot, then a thousand maidservants, then the entire treasury, then the kingdom and finally the freedom of the Pandavas and Draupadi. It is also quite possibly the first ever example of LostHimInACardGame and WagerSlave
286** AchillesHeel - could have been called Duryodhan’s Thighs, as both served as a [[AttackItsWeakPoint weak point to be attacked]].
287** AchillesInHisTent - could have been called Karna in his Tent, as long before Achilles stewed in his tent, Karna stewed in his tent for similar reasons - and as a result, his side was militarily weakened too.
288** BadassDriver - long before any badass got behind the wheel of a car, Krishna sat behind the reins of a chariot that carried Arjuna into battle.
289** BewilderingPunishment - Parashuram’s curse on Karna to forget all his knowledge when he needs it the most, just for displaying a great deal of pain tolerance, is quite possibly the first ever instance of this trope.
290** EvilUncle - could have been called The Shakuni and in India, this phrase is still in usage.
291** TheGamblingAddict - may as well be called The Yudhistir
292** Long before a GodzillaThreshold required an army to deploy its most destructive weapon, Ghattotgaj required Karna to waste his single use Shakti weapon on the young demon.
293** InadequateInheritor - could have been called The Dhritharashtra.
294** IncompletelyTrained - could have been called The Abhimanyu
295** Bhishma could have become the trope namer and trope builder for IGaveMyWord, MyCountryRightOrWrong, MyMasterRightOrWrong and HonorBeforeReason
296** MetaphoricallyTrue - Yudhishtara’s infamous lie about Ashwatama having died, when it was actually an elephant named Ashwatama who was dead.
297** RulesOfEngagement - this is the first ever work in which parties to a conflict actually sit down and agree to various rules that govern the war that is to be fought.
298** WarIsHell - As stated below, the Kurukshetra War was one of the first that showed just how much suffering and misery war can bring - even to the victorious side.
299* VillainousBSOD:
300** Duryodhana on [[EvenEvilHasLovedOnes Karna's death]]. His whole body is wet with crying.
301** Dhritharashtra suffers breakdown after breakdown as the war unfolds which culminates in making an [[TearsOfRemorse epic lamentation]] over all the mistakes the Kauravas had done. It concludes in an epic depression from which he never recovers.
302* VillainousValor: The Kauravas demonstrate this, which means that Krishna has to encourage the Pandavas to break several rules of combat and honor.
303* WhatMeasureIsAMook - Over 1.5 million soldiers are said to have taken part (not counting support, the baggage train, etc). As said above, only eleven survive. Most of these mooks are there just to show how badass or evil a character is.
304* WhatTheHellHero: [[spoiler: Krishna receives this from Gandhari after Karna dies. She curses him that, just as her house was destroyed by strife, so too will his house. He accepts his fate with grace.]]
305* WarIsHell: Probably the oldest known example. The battle between the Pandavas and the Kauravas not only ends up in a horrible bloodbath of mutual annihilation, many previously honorable characters are so consumed by hatred and desperation, that they betray their principles. Even Karna (who, mind you, gave up the gift of immortality and invulnerability before the battle, to live in accordance with his vows), stains his honor when he participates in dogpiling Abhimanyu; Yuddhisthira who was basically defined by his honesty, resorted to participating in cruel deception, as described below.
306* WarriorPrince: All the Pandavas and Kauravas.
307* WholesomeCrossdresser: Arjuna dresses as a female in his thirteenth year in disguise. This is not treated as something unnatural mostly because Arjuna is badass. He also picks this year as the year he must spend as an eunuch.
308* WillNotTellALie: Yuddhisthira was renowned for his honesty and his resolve in never telling a lie. Krishna figures out that the only way to kill Drona, their teacher, who was fighting on Duryodhana's side, was to state falsely that his son Ashwathamma had died. Bhima kills an elephant named Ashwathamma and proclaims loudly that he has killed Ashwathamma. Not believing him, Drona turns to Yuddhisthira to confirm it. Yuddhisthira lies, saying that Ashwathamma is dead, adding "The man or the elephant" in a whisper. This led to Drona losing heart and his subsequent death. Because of this, Yuddhishthira's chariot that floated an inch above the ground as a sign of his godly nature falls back to earth.
309** Interestingly he lies because Krishna (i.e. God) tells him to, so he still ends up following the laws of God anyway.
310* WomanScorned: Amba. She avenges herself by reincarnating as Shikandi whose only purpose is to kill Bhishma.
311** Draupadi as well.
312* YearOutsideHourInside: The Mahabharata mentions king Kakudmi a.k.a. Raivata, who went to Brahma to ask for advice on to whom he should marry his daughter. After waiting a short time, Kakudmi was able to plead his request to Brahma. Brahma laughed, informing him that while he had waited, 108 ''yugas'' had passed on earth, and all the candidates that Raivata had considered suitable son-in-laws had died long ago.
313* YouCantFightFate: Poor Karna! [[spoiler:He was rejected by the royals for being a commoner. Since he disguised himself as a Brahmin in order to learn from his teacher, his teacher, who refused to teach Kshatriyas, curses him, saying that he would forget all his learning at the time of his most critical need. Later on, he accidentally kills a Brahmin's cow. The Brahmin curses him saying that he too would be killed when he was as helpless as the cow. If that was not enough, taking advantage of his generosity, Indra asks him for his armor and earrings that made him immortal. His mother finally confesses he was her child and extracts ThePromise from him that he would not kill any of his brothers save Arjuna. Then his charioteer flees when the wheel of his chariot is stuck in mud. All these mindscrews by fate changes him from an AntiHero to a TragicHero.]]
314[[/folder]]

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