Monday, September 30, 2019

Wikipedia Trails: From Ghaziabad to Uttar Pradesh

Start: Ghaziabad

Last week, I said that I wanted to look more into modern India, so that's why I picked Ghaziabad. It talked a lot about the different religions and people of the area and it was cool to see how unified everything seemed to be.


Next: Jawalharlal Nehru Stadium

This stadium is in Ghaziabad and was described as a 'multi-purpose stadium' so I was curious what that meant for Indian sports. I knew for America it would be a football, soccer combination. It seems in India it means a cricket and soccer combination


Next: Uttar Pradesh Cricket Team

This is the main cricket team that calls the Jawalharlal Nehru Stadium it's home. Since cricket is a less known sport here in America, I clicked on this to learn more about it.


Last: Uttar Pradesh

Uttar Pradesh seemed to be a larger state of Ghaziabad so I clicked on it to learn more about Indian geography and how that worked. It's actually the most populous state in India and in where the Taj Mahal is located, so I'm really excited to explore it more next week.


Taj Mahal from Source

Wednesday, September 25, 2019

Week 8 Progress

Looking Back:

I think I'm doing really well with my class progress. Right now I'm on track to be done before the end of the semester, and if I keep working ahead that'll be sooner. I like the flow of things I've gotten into and have gotten to do the extra credit assignments that I think work with what I'm doing. Things are going great and I really hope to keep it up.

Looking forward:

I think, considering at the moment I'm 2 weeks ahead, I don't want to make any changes as we keep moving forward. I hope to be able to keep up my pace of staying on top of the class, and being able to stay 2 weeks ahead.

Keep Going from Source

Friday, September 20, 2019

Week 8 Comments and Feedback

Reflection:

I think I've been doing a really good job of complimenting peoples stories and telling them the things I like, but I usually don't get real feedback on stories unless its for the 150 word ones. I think I overall need to get better about telling people different things they can do to take their story the extra mile. I think the feedback I'm getting back is good and also thinks the feedback strategies are helping me a lot too. I do feel like I'm getting to know people. Since I'm doing the extra comments, I've read everyone's introduction and also enjoy reading about their favorite place because it seems like a smaller way to get to know a detail about them. I think moving forward I just need to make sure I'm helping people improve and not just focusing on how great they are.

A Remainder from Source

Week 8 Reading and Writing

Reflection:

I think I'm getting better with the writing assignments as the class goes on. I'm beginning to start thinking about what I want to make my story about as I'm reading. Reading wise, I think I could do a better job of taking notes on the different readings I am doing. I really like my blog and am getting more used to the set up of my website and how to add pages to it. I'm really proud of how my rewrite for "Hetic Recess" turned out and was really happy I was able to move on from revising it to editing a new story. I really liked reading the Ramayana. I liked how it seemed to flow as a story and how it seemed to be very narrative focused. I do think my notes help me a lot and figuring out what story I want to tell while reading helps me focus.

Looking Forward:

I think I want to try and take better notes and focus a lot more of the stories that I'm reading each week.

Reflection from Source

Week 7 Story: Meet the Family

Meet the Family (Updated Version)

Hey all, my name is Parikshit, and today I’m going to introduce you to my family tree. I will warn you, it gets a little crazy, so please try your best to follow along.

First let’s start with King Vichitravirya. He had two wives, Ambika and Ambalika (they were sisters) who gave him two sons, Dhritarashtra and Pandu. Now, Once King Vichitravirya died, his mother thought of her other son, Vyasa. He terrified Ambika so much so that when she saw him, she closed her eyes. Therefore, Dhritarashtra was born blind. Ambalika was also terrified, but she went pale. Therefore Pandu was pale. Vyasa is my great-great grandfather and the father of both Dhritarashtra and Pandu.

The next generation is a little more complicated. So Dhritarashtra married Gandhari and she had Duryodhana, Dushasana, Dussala and 98 other sons in total. These children are usually referred to as the Kauravas. Pandu married a woman named Kunti, who already has a son named Karna. This son was Surya’s son and grew up so quickly that Kunti didn’t really raise him. Kunti had three sons: Yudhishthira, Bhima, and Arjuna while Pandu’s other wife, Madri, had two sons: Nakula and Sahadeva. Now, all these sons were actually fathered by different deities, but Pandu always claimed them as his own as we all just let him. Pandus 5he sons were typically referred to as the Pandavas.

My father was the son of Arjuna and his wife Subhadra, and he married Uttara, my mother, who had me. When I was born, I was born dead, but Krishna brought me back to life. I was eventually made king of my grandfather’s kingdom, but the story to get there is a little complicated...

There was always a big feud between the Pandavas and the Kauravas. They all grew up together after Pandu’s death, and it was a household with 105 sons, there was going to be fights. You see the Pandavas were extremely gifted and very talented, which made Dhritarashtra’s eldest son, Duryodhana extremely jealous. So jealous that Duryodhana ended up disrespecting my great-uncles’ wife, Draupadi, and then sent my great-uncles’ to exile in the forest. But after their exile, they declared war on the Kauravas. The war was bloody and many died, including my father, Abhimanyu, and every single one of my uncles and aunts, and all of the Kauravas. My family won, but at great cost. This is how I was made the heir of the throne, even though I was the grandson of Kunti’s youngest son.

So while my family maybe complicated, but who's family doesn't have a little drama in it. And I’m so grateful for my family’s hard work that ended with me on the throne. Author's Note: The most confusing part of the Mahabharata for me was the family tree. There was so many characters and so many character names and I just kept getting confused. So for my story this week, I decided to have it be from the youngest member of the Pandava family, Parikshit, and have him tell his families story. It mainly focuses on the family tree to help me straighten things out, but also give a bit of the family drama involved at the end of the Mahabharata, because who doesn't like a little bit of family drama.

Source: Mahabharata (Public Domain Version)
Family Trees from Source

Wednesday, September 18, 2019

Wikipedia Trails: From Yashodharman to Ghaziabad

First: Yashodharman

This is where I left off last week. The Wikipedia page isn't long though and I learned a lot about the King, so I decided to learn more about his dynasty.

Next: Aulikaras

Since the era is from so long ago, there's not a ton that can be learned about the Aulikaras, but there is a stone that has helped bring new information about them to life.

Next: Risthal Inscription

Since this stone seemed to have a lot of information, I decided it would be the best option for my next link. This page had a ton of information, including the full inscription of it.


Last: Ghaziabad

This was the location the Risthal Inscription was found in. While I've had a lot of time learning about ancient India, I was really curious about what modern India was like and hoped that clucking on a city name would get me close to where I wanted to be.

Portrait of Tormana from Risthal Inscription from Source

Reading Week 7: Mahabharta Part D

Bhishma Falls
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Bhishma refuses to kill anyone who's not a women, so Shikhandin is sent with Arjuna
- Arjuna doesn't want to trick him
- Arjuna kills Bhisma and weeps bitterly
- Duryodhana only gets angrier

Drona in Command
Source: Mahabharata, Epics of the Bharatas by Romesh C. Dutt

- Drona now leading the Kuru forces
- Fighting continues
- Many die

Abhimanyu and Jayadratha
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Jayadratha goes to fight Yudhishthira and they kill his charioteer
- Abhimanyu dies and is described as innocent (he's the son of Arjuna)
- Arjuna kills many the next day, but refuses to kill Drona
- Arjuna kills Jayadratha

Ghatotkacha
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Torches sent in so the battle can continue into the night
- Arjuna calls for a truce and the warriors sleep on the battlefield
- Ghatotkacha, the son of Bhima, kills many people and fights Karna
- Ghatotkacha dies at the hands of the invincible dart
- Lots of crying in the battle

Death of Drona
Source: Myths of the Hindus and Buddhists by Sister Nivedita

- Bhima kills an elephant named Ashwatthama to make Drona think his son is dead and dishearten him
- Dhrishtadyumna kills Drona is his sadness

Bhima and Duhshasana
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Yudhishthira and Bhima fight Karna
- Bhima kills Duhsasana and then drinks his blood
- This freaks people out

Arjuna and Karna
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Arjuna and Karna battle
- Arjuna's bow breaks and he asks Karna to wait, but Karna doesn't
- Karna's chariot gets stuck and he asks Arjuna to pause and he does
- Arjuna hears his son's name and gets angry enough that he just immediately kills Karna

Duryodhana in the Lake
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- The Kauravas retreat and it's suggested they sue for peace
- Duryodhana understands he can't, so the war must continue
- Bhima finds Duryodhana and brings Yudhishthira to him
- Bhima kills Duryodhana and declares Draupadi avenged
- Yudhishthira mad at Bhima because he broke the rules of combat
- Krishna points out the Duryodhana has played dirty frequently.

The Night Raid
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie and Mahabharata, Epics of the Bharatas by Romesh C. Dutt

- Kripa and Ashwatthaman visit the dying Durodhana
- Ashwatthaman attacks the Pandavas camp
- Drupad, Dhristadyumna, Shikhandin and Draupadi's children all killed
- Duryodhana dies happy

Ashwatthaman's Jewel
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Draupadi extremely upset
- She asks Bhima for the head of Ashwatthaman
- When told that can't happen, she asks for his jewl instead
- Arjuna gets it for her

Mourning
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Dhritarashtra mourns the death of his 100 sons
- There's great mourning
- Kunti's happy to see her 5 son but then mourns the dead
- they have a funeral for it

The Pandavas and Bhisma
Source: The Mahabharata, A Summary by John Mandeville Macfie

- the Pandavas visit Bhisma who is waiting for the sun solstice to die
- He tells them a story about the rishi Vishvamitra and the terrible drought
- Yudhishthira is put on the throne
- Bhisma dies with Krishna's permission

King Yudhishthira's Horse
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- It's suggested that Yudhishthira does a horse sacrifice because of all the carnage from the war
- Arjuna and an army follow the horse
- the horse goes many places and gives Arjuna many adventures
-

Parikshit
Source: The Mahabharata, A Summary by John Mandeville Macfie and Nine Ideal Indian Women by Sunity Devee

- Ashwatthaman killed the baby of Uttara and Krishna agrees to help her
- Parikshit is born and Uttara wants to die, but Krishna stops her
-Uttara's son becomes king
- Finally Uttara is allowed to die

Horse Sacrifice
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Yudhishthira lived a life of purity and self-restraint
- He's excited to see Arjuna again
 - The sacrifice ceremony is preformed

The Mongoose
Source: The Story of the Great War by Annie Besant

- A lot of wealth brought to the kingdom after the ceremony
- A mongoose appears before the King
- He tells a story about a poor brahmin and a greedy guest
- They gave the guest everything and were praised for it

The Forest and its Ghosts
Source:  Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Dhritarashtra mourns his firstborn and to the jungle with his queens and Kunti
- the brothers and Draupadi visit
- The ghosts from the battle are summoned by Vyasa
- Many high-born widows choose to die with their husbands that day
- 2 years later, all the elders are dead

Death of Krishna
Source:  Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Pandavas know something bad is going to happen, but don't know what
- Krishna and Balarama leave the city and die in the jungle after a great feast
- Arjuna given a message to help the women wailing for the dead and buries everyone who died

The Pandavas Depart
Source:  Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Yudhishthira divides his kingdom between Parikshit and Yuyutsu
- the Pandavas then go to the jungle and they all die because of their sins
- Yudhishthira says he can't go to heaven without his brothers and his wife
- When told he can't, he begs for the hound to come with him

The Afterlife
Source:  Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Yudhisthira dies and finds Duryodhana and the Kauravas in heaven, but none of his family
- He goes to find them in Hell, but it was all a test
- Yudhishthrina is made a celestial being and enters Swarga
- Krishna, Draupadi and his brothers are all waiting for him

Yudhishthira and a dog from Source

Reading Week 7: Marhabharta Part C

Life in the Forest
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- The princes and Draupadi wander towards the forest
- Yudhishthira is worried about his fate
- Surya gives Yudhishthira food

Krishna's Visit
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Krishna visits the Pandavas in the forest
- Draupadi complains about how her husbands did nothing
- Yudhishthira tells Draupadi to stop being angry and weeping

Arjuna and Shiva
Source: Myths of the Hindus and Buddhists by Sister Nivedita

- A holy man tells the brothers that Arjuna won't be defeated if he goes to the mountains and obtains the vision of the great god
- He goes to the Himalayas
- Arjuna kills a boar in a strangely quiet forest
- He gets into a fight with a huntsmen, but his body absorbs all the arrows
- The huntsman is the great god and blesses Arjuna

Arjuna and Indra
Source:  Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Arjuna also sees Indra, Varuna, Yama, and Kubera
- Arjuna sees a vision of the celestial Swarga and is trained
- he goes to the city of demons and giants (Huranyapura)  and wrecked the place
- Indra praises him and gives him gifts

The Himalayas
Source:  Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Meanwhile the brothers are still in the forest
- Yudhishthira gets skilled in dice
- They go to Kubera and admire things
- Arjuna rejoins them

Bhima and Hanuman
Source: The Mahabharata, A Summary by John Mandeville Macfie

- Bhima finds a monkey
- He asks the monkey who he is and discovers it's Hanuman and hears about Rama
- He tells him tons of stories
- They embrace before leaving because they're half-brothers

Duryodhana and the Gandharvas
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Karna sends Duryodhana to spy on the brothers in their exile
- Some of Duryodhana's men fight the brothers and lose
- He's embarrassed by this and decides to end his life
- The gods and goddesses don't want him to die so they care him away
- Karna swears to never eat deer or wash his feet until Arjuna dies
- Spies tell the Pandavas of this

Karna and Indra
Source: Myths of the Hindus and Buddhists by Sister Nivedita

- Indra becomes worried about Arjuna
- Indra asks Karna for his tokens of invincibility
- Karna agrees for the trade of one invincible dart called Vasava

Jayadratha and Draupadi
Source:  Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Jayadratha takes Draupadi away in chariot
- Jayadratha is married to the sister of Duryodhana
- Bhima cutes off Jayadratha's hair except five locks and is declared a slave

Riddles at the Lake
Source:  Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Nakula sent to find water and he does, drinking it without answering the riddle and dies
- Arjuna, Bhima, and Sahadeva also all die
- Yudhishthira answers the riddles
- The riddles were given by Dharma, Yudhishthira's father.
- Yudhishthira has two wishes and he brings his brothesr back and asks they get power to remain unrecognized for a year

The Court of King Virata
Source:  Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- The Pandavas go to Virata and find favor in the eyes of the rajah
- They bond with the royals
- Bhima becomes a great wrestler

Bhima and Kichaka
Source: The Indian Heroes by C. A. Kincaid

- Prine Kichaka falls in love with the serving maid Sairandhri
- He tries to love her but she escapes and ends up chasing her
- She goes straight to the King and complains, but the King ignores her pleas
- Bhima promises her he'll slay him
- He tells Draupadi to tell everyone Bhima caught them together and that's why he died

The Cattle Raid
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Rajah of Trigartis plots to take over the city of Virata
- Duryodhana agrees to help
- They stop Uttara and claim that Arjuna was seen before his banishment ended
- Arjuna blows the war shell he was given
- Arjuna given Uttara as a prize

Preparations for War
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Everyone is at a wedding
- Krishna praises Yudhishthira
- They all go around arguing about Yudhishthira and his banishment

Krishna and His Army
Source: The Story of the Great War by Annie Besant

- Duryodhana visits Arjuna.
- Arjuna asks for Krishna's army
- Shri Krishna says he won't engage in battle
- Krishna agrees to be his charioteer

Krishna's Mission to the Kauravas
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Sanjaya sent to the Pandavas and is impressed by their army
- Krishna goes to the Kauravas to try and make peace
- They, instead, want to harm him
- An earthquake shakes the palace

Krishna and Karna
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Krishna meets with Karna
- Karna talks about how bad this war is going to be
- Vidura asks Kunti for peace
- Kunti refuses
- Kunti tells Karna she's his mother
- Karna agrees he will only attack Arjuna, but either way one will die

The Armies at Kurukshetra
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- The battle begins
- Dhrishtadyumna leads the Pandavas army
- Duryodhana's army is larger
- Yuyutsu joins Yudhishthira

Bhagavad-Gita
Source: The Song Celestial; Or, Bhagavad-Gita by Edwin Arnold

- Arjuna and Krishna prepare for battle

The Battle Begins
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- The war shells and drums start the war
- Kauravas have the first advantage
- Fighting goes on for days
- By day five, the Pandavas are winning
- By day eight, the battle turns towards the Pandavas


Ghatotkacha from Source

Tuesday, September 17, 2019

Wikipedia Trails: From History of India to Yashodharman

Start: History of India 

Last week, I finished off on History of India because I liked the different places it could take me. I got to read about the general history of India and figure out what periods of history are the greatest and most important to it.


Next: Gupta Empire

I chose the Gupta Empire because many historians refer to it as the "Golden Empire of India". Many cultural developments happened in this period along with science and political developments. It was a cool era to read about, especially since the era was roughly 319 CE to 543 CE.

Next: Huna People

The Gupta Empire died out because of the invasion of the Huna people so I decided to learn more about those people. They were a Mongolian-Tibetan tribe and they were a great mix of people.


Finish: Yashodharman

The last page was the Indian King who allegedly stopped the Huna people. He was part of the Aulikara Dynasty. There are three inscriptions of Yadshodharman found in The Mandsaur

Gupta India 375 CE


Monday, September 16, 2019

Week 6: Story Laboratory

This week for my story laboratory I chose to look at the Writer's Write blog for different ideas of what to do to make writing better.

Here's my notes of what I found:

One of the articles I looked at was the puff or fluff article. The reason I chose it is because sometimes, when writing pieces with a word count, it's easy to try and add fluff into the story to make it longer and meet the goals. However, the article actually didn't say yes cut fluff, it said use it wisely. I liked that it was still an option on the table, you just have to use it when the mood is right.

The next article was about setting the mood for a story, which I think is very important when writing short stories. You don't have a lot of time so you have to try and set the mood quickly but effectively. It included a list of 140 words to describe the mood in fiction. I think that if I pick one of the words before writing a story and then work to set the tone based on that word, I will be able to effectively set the tone for my short stories.

Another article I read and liked was about a plot. In my opinion, you can't have a good story without a good plot. I just don't get hooked and interested without it. So I think it's always a great idea to consider the overall plot of your story. It talked about how characters need to have a worthy story goal and how it's important to know all the parts of your plot (Inciting Incident, Climax, Rising Action, etc.) so I think for future stories I'm going to give that a little more thought.

Writing Meme from Source

Reading Posts: Mahabharata Part B

The House of Fire
Source: The Indian Heroes by C. A. Kincaid

- Prince Vidura guessed Durodhana's plot
- His mother was a slave
- Prince Yudhishthira sees everything is coated in oil and warns his mother and brothers
- The mother and brothers escape and Bhima goes back to get revenge on the man planning to set the house on fire
- The neighboring house caught flame and the mother and 5 sons that the princes had let stay there died
- The people saw the bodies and assumed it was the Pandavas
- King Dhritarashtra and them rejoice

Bhima and Hidimba
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Bhima carries them all through the forest
- A rakshasa women falls for Bhima
- Bhima defeats his angry brother

Bhima and Hidimbi
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- the Pandavas awake up
- Arjuna offers to help but Bhima turns it down
- The brothers debate killing the rakshasa
- Kunti convinces Bhima to take her as his bride
- the women has a son named Ghatotkacha, who grows fast

Bhima and Baka
Source: The Indian Heroes by C. A. Kincaid

- The group leaves Bhima and goes to Ekachakra
- Family they are staying with arguing over who is going to leave
- Baka is ruining the town
- Bhima comes to help
- Bhima kills Baka

Birth of Draupadi
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- The Pandavas study the Vedas
- The story of Drupada's son being born
- The Queen wasn't ready for the sacrificial rite for children so asked the to stall
- When they couldn't, a son was burst from the flames and was fully clad in armor and then a beautiful daughter
- Draupadi is the daughter, Dhristadyumna is the son
- The Pandavas go to try and win her

Draupadi's Swayamwara
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Drupada wants Arjuna to be her husband
- he sets up a competition rigged so that Arjuna would win
- Arjuna wins and wins Draupadi

Wife of the Five Pandavas
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Kunti makes the boys share their winnings, even though it is the girl
- everyone allows her to be shared

The Story of Nalayani
Source: Notes of a Study of the Preliminary Chapters of the Mahabharata by V. Bentatachellum

- Drupada is concerned with his daughter having five husbands
- Vyasa explains that she was made to have five husbands

Indraprastha
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Duryodhana finds out about alliance with Drupada
- He demands war, the elders demand peace and the elders win
- Dhritarashtra splits kingdom between his sons and nephews
- The princes make a city called Indraprastha

Arjuna and Ulupi
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Arjuna breaks compact between them to get his weapons to stop a cattle robber
- Because of his he says he needs to be exiled for 12 years, even though Yudhishtra says its okay
- He wanders, finds a wife, and they have a child

Arjuna and the Apsaras
Source: The Indian Heroes by C. A. Kincaid

- A gator bit his leg and he began to drown
- He takes the gator to shore and presses his hands into it's eyes
- It turns out to be a nymph
- She tells the story of her curse and Arjuna and her go and free all of them


Arjuna and Chitra
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie and Chitra by Rabindranath Tagore

- Arjuna finds another girl, marries her, gives her a son so her father can have an heir and then leaves

Arjuna and Subhadra
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Subhadra is another girl he marries but abducting her
- This upsets Balarama, her father, because she was going to be given to Duryodhana
- Balarama is calmed and invites them back for a real wedding
- Subhadra and Draupadi make friends

The Burning of the Forest
Source: The Mahabharata, A Summary by John Mandeville Macfie

- The wives get drunk and give things away
- Agni approaches the princes and asks them for the forest
- They agree in exchange for celestial weapons
- There's a big war with Indra, which Indra loses and the forest burns and few animals escape

Maya's Palace
Source: The Mahabharata, A Summary by John Mandeville Macfie and Vyasa's Mahabharata translated by Kisari Mohan Ganguli

- Maya is so thankful to Arjuna for saving his life he builds him a beautiful palace that would make the gods jealous

The Pandavas Victorious
Source:  Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- The Pandavas become more powerful and eventually the over taken Yudhishtra
-Kishna kills Sishupala
- they all swear to peace

The Gambling Match
Source:  Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

-Duryodhana jealous again
- He defeats Yudhishtra in dice
- Draupadi won by Duryodhana in the dice match
- Vidura is extremely upset

Draupadi Lost
Source: Mahabharata, Epic of the Bharatas by Romesh C. Dutt

- Draupadi is upset that she was gambled and refuses to be gambled away
- This upsets him
- Doyradhana scares her

Draupadi in the Assembly Hall
Source:  Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Draupadi begs for protection
- Her husbands get vengeful
- Duhshasana wants to strip her naked in front of everyone
- The brothers all rally together to get their revenge and protect their wife

The Second Match
Source: Indian Myth and Legend by Donald A. Mackenzie

- Draupadi's father is angered
- The Kauravas worried the Pandavas will wage war because they are so upset
- Draupadi sent away and swears to not touch her hair until Bhima brings his revenge

Duryodhana in the Palace from Source