Ilvala (Sanskrit: इल्वल, romanized: Ilvala) and Vatapi (Sanskrit: वातापि, romanized: Vātāpi) are asura brothers in Hindu mythology. They are featured in the Mahabharata, in which their murderous scheme is ended by the sage Agastya.[1]
^The Mahabharata: Volume 3. Penguin Books India. July 2012. p. 77. ISBN 978-0-14-310015-7.
Ilvala (Sanskrit: इल्वल, romanized: Ilvala) andVatapi (Sanskrit: वातापि, romanized: Vātāpi) are asura brothers in Hindu mythology. They are featured...
asura brothers IlvalaandVatapi of the region of Manismati. It is also said that they hailed from Badami in Karnataka, South India. Ilvala requested a learned...
the asura Vatapi would become a goat, be cooked by his brother Ilvala, and be eaten. Following this, he would recollect in the stomach and tear himself...
Brahma with IlvalaandVatapi, the Maruts and the Nivatakavacha, Kali with Shumba and Nishumba, the Rudras and the Krodavasas, and the Vasus and the Kaleyas...
Madhu (Bhāgavata Purāṇa) or Chaitra (Viṣṇu Purāṇa) ॐ Hidimba ॐ Hiḍimbī ॐ Ilvala ॐ Indrajit - One of Rāvaṇa's seven sons. Another name of Meghanāda ॐ Jambūmālin...
ingestion and digestion. Agastya, once again, stops the Vindhya mountains from growing and lowers them and he kills the demons VatapiandIlvala much the...
formerly known as Vatapi, was named after an asura king who, according to the Mahābhārata, ruled the area along with his brother Ilvala. Legend has it that...