Sharvara

Sharvara (Dog of Yama) (शर्वर) is an ancient Hindu mythological dog belonging to Yama. It is one of the two dogs that guard the netherworld. Sharvara is identified with the constellation Canis Major, the other dog with Canis Minor, together they guard the gates of the netherworld, known as pitriloka or vaivasvataloka, which is the domain of Yama.[1]

Etymology

The word sharvara means variegated or spotted.[2] In older Sanskrit, शर्वर is written as कर्वर (karvara).[3]

In Mythology

Sharvara can be compared with the Greek Cerberus, the mythological dog of the Greeks with similar characteristics. However, there is no description of Cerberus having a companion, and he is usually depicted with three heads.[4] Scholars have concluded that the three heads were a Greek addition to the underlying Indo-Aryan myth.[5][6]

Shavara can also be compared to Odin's wolves in Norse mythology.[7] Odin (the all-father) just like Yama (the progenitor of all humans) sits on a chair guarded by two dogs.[8] Although, Odin (Woden), the hunter, the wanderer, god of storm and winter, is more comparable to the Vedic Rudra.[9]

Tilak dates the Vedic antiquity using the assertion that the Milky Way (path of the dead) used to be guarded by Sharvara and a new year started upon the crossing of Milky Way by the sun. Using internal evidence he dated the timeframe of Vedic antiquity (taittriya samhita) to the time when at the vernal equinox the sun rose in the asterism of Orion (Mrigashiras).[10]

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References

  1. Tilak, Bal Gangadhar (1893). The Orion, or, Researches into the Antiquity of the Vedas. Pune: Mrs. Radhabai Atmaram Sagoon. p. 42.
  2. Tilak 1893, p. 108
  3. Monier Williams Dictionary
  4. Apolodorus and others indicate that he had three heads, but Hesiod with poetical hyperbole gives him fifty. Elton, Charles Abraham (1812). Hesiod, translated from the Greek into English verse, with a Preliminary Dissertation on the Writings, Life, and Æra of Hesiod. London: Lackington, Allen and Company. p. 267.
  5. Elton 1812, p. 267
  6. Bryant, Jacob (1809). A new system: or, An analysis of antient mythology. 2 (3rd ed.). J. Walker. pp. view=image, q1=Cerberus, start=1, size=100, page=root, seq=132, num=118 118–119.
  7. Geri and Freki, "Greedy" and "Voracious" Bloomfield, Maurice (1905). Cerberus, the Dog of Hades: The History of an Idea. Open Court Publishing. pp. https://books.google.com/books?id=W79ZAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA26 26–27.
  8. Bloomfield 1905, p. 27
  9. Tilak 1893, pp. 138140
  10. Tilak 1893, pp. 4160
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