Shanta’s husband Rishyashringa presided over the Putrakeshai Yagna for Dasaratha. There are many references to Shanta in Valmiki Ramayan, though not explicitly as Dasaratha’s daughter. Her coming to Ayodhya is described as like she is coming home; Rishyashringa, Shanta’s husband, is referred to as like son-in-law of Dasaratha. All of these may only mean that Dasaratha and King of Anga had a very close relationship.
Further, in the Vana Parva of Mahabharata, Rishi Lomasa narrates the story of Rishyashringa to Yudhishthira. The king of Anga, Lomapada is said to have given his daughter Santa in marriage to Rishyashringa.
Some interpret these verses to say that Santa was Dasaratha’s daughter given in adoption to his dear friend, King of Anga. Prof G.B. Kanuga and Ralph T. H. Griffith both refer to Shanta as Dasaratha’s daughter in their works. This may have arisen because Lomapada was also called Dasharatha in Mahabharata and is also referred to as friend of King Dasharatha. Later on, in local versions, Santa is referred to as Rama’s sister.
In a discourse in 2002, Sathya Sai Baba in a moving story described how Shanta came to this yagya and was reunited with her parents. Even if versions of Ramayana differ and diverge, they end up bringing various regions together in a mainstream tradition of epics. Ramayana forms ‘the center of the integration’ of Indian civilization and has a great influence as the ‘network of regional cultures.’
Picture: Painting of Rishyashringa coming to Ayodhya with Shanta
Shanta’s husband Rishyashringa presided over the Putrakeshai Yagna for Dasaratha. There are many references to Shanta in Valmiki Ramayan, though not explicitly as Dasaratha’s daughter. Her coming to Ayodhya is described as like she is coming home; Rishyashringa, Shanta’s husband, is referred to as like son-in-law of Dasaratha. All of these may only mean that Dasaratha and King of Anga had a very close relationship.
Further, in the Vana Parva of Mahabharata, Rishi Lomasa narrates the story of Rishyashringa to Yudhishthira. The king of Anga, Lomapada is said to have given his daughter Santa in marriage to Rishyashringa.
Some interpret these verses to say that Santa was Dasaratha’s daughter given in adoption to his dear friend, King of Anga. Prof G.B. Kanuga and Ralph T. H. Griffith both refer to Shanta as Dasaratha’s daughter in their works. This may have arisen because Lomapada was also called Dasharatha in Mahabharata and is also referred to as friend of King Dasharatha. Later on, in local versions, Santa is referred to as Rama’s sister.
In a discourse in 2002, Sathya Sai Baba in a moving story described how Shanta came to this yagya and was reunited with her parents. Even if versions of Ramayana differ and diverge, they end up bringing various regions together in a mainstream tradition of epics. Ramayana forms ‘the center of the integration’ of Indian civilization and has a great influence as the ‘network of regional cultures.’
Picture: Painting of Rishyashringa coming to Ayodhya with Shanta