Vyasa

Dhundhu

Indra among the danavasson of Madhu and Kaitabha
Major

Appears in 5 substories

Substory Timeline

Showing all 5 substories

Supporting

Ch. 489

Markandeya Narrates Utanka's Boon from Vishnu

In the desert, the maharshi Utanka performs severe austerities for years to worship Vishnu. When Vishnu appears and offers him a boon, Utanka asks only for devotion to dharma and truth. But Vishnu has more to reveal — a great asura named Dhundhu is performing terrible austerities for the destruction of the worlds, and a king will be needed to stop him.

Minor

Ch. 490

Utanka Restrains Brihadashva from Retiring to the Forest

King Brihadashva, having installed his son on the throne, walks away from his kingdom to pursue austerities in the forest. The sage Utanka intercepts him and argues that protecting the subjects is the highest dharma — greater than any hermitage. Then he reveals why he needs the king to stay: an asura named Dhundhu sleeps beneath a desert of sand, breathing destruction once a year, and only a king empowered by Vishnu can stop him.

Minor

Ch. 492

Dhundhu Obtains Boon from Brahma

Dhundhu, son of the slain asuras Madhu and Kaitabha, stands on one leg in the wilderness until he is nothing but skin and veins. Brahma appears, pleased by the austerity. Dhundhu asks for a boon — but he asks for the wrong kind of protection.

Minor

Ch. 492

Kuvalashva Slays Dhundhu with Brahmastra

King Kuvalashva marches to the ocean of sand with twenty-one thousand sons. Vishnu pours his own energy into the king. For seven days they dig. When they find Dhundhu, the asura awakens — and burns every son alive. Kuvalashva faces him alone.

Minor

Ch. 492

Dhundhu Oppresses Gods and Hides in Sand

Armed with his boon, Dhundhu remembers his fathers and attacks Vishnu himself, defeating all the gods. Then he retreats to an ocean of sand, buries himself in the earth, and begins to breathe fire — threatening the hermitage of the sage Utanka and the world itself.