Vyasa

Yudhishthira and Dhritarashtra

26 substories where their stories intersect

26 shared moments across the Mahabharata.

Major

Chapter 131

Dhritarashtra Invites the Pandavas to Varanavata Festival

Duryodhana and his brothers begin to win over the people of Hastinapura with gifts and honors. Then, Dhritarashtra’s ministers start describing the wonders of the distant city of Varanavata and its great festival, sparking the Pandavas' curiosity. When Dhritarashtra himself invites them to go and enjoy themselves, Yudhisthira understands the true nature of the request and agrees.

Major

Chapter 133

The Pandavas Depart Hastinapura for Varanavata

Ordered to Varanavata, the Pandavas prepare to leave Hastinapura. They pay their respects to the elders and bid a painful farewell to the citizens. A group of Brahmanas, outraged by the injustice, declare they will abandon the city to follow Yudhishthira into exile.

Supporting

Chapter 199

Dhritarashtra Grants Khandavaprastha to the Pandavas

To prevent further strife in the Kuru court, the blind king Dhritarashtra summons the Pandavas. He offers them a solution: half the kingdom, to be ruled from the distant and wild territory of Khandavaprastha, where their safety will be assured by Arjuna's might.

Supporting

Chapter 199

The Pandavas Return to Hastinapura with Drupada's Blessing

After years in exile, the Pandavas travel towards Hastinapura. Dhritarashtra sends his sons and their old teachers to receive them, and the city erupts in joy at their return. But the welcome is brief; they are soon summoned and told to leave again.

Pivotal

Chapter 255

Invitations are Sent and the Rajasuya is Inaugurated

Invitations fly to every corner of society and every kingdom. At the appointed time, Yudhishthira is instated in the Rajasuya and proceeds to the sacrificial ground at the heart of a vast, joyous multitude. The sacrifice begins in a roar of generosity, and then a final, crucial invitation is sent north.

Pivotal

Chapter 256

Kings from All Directions Arrive for Yudhishthira's Rajasuya

Nakula's successful missions and invitations ripple across Bharatavarsha, drawing royalty from every corner of the known world to Yudhishthira's rajasuya. The Kuru elders, rival cousins, allied kings, and even distant, rarely-seen monarchs all make the journey, bringing tribute and converging on the Pandava capital. The stage is set not for a simple sacrifice, but for an unprecedented assembly of power.

Major

Chapter 257

Yudhishthira Appoints Officials for His Sacrifice

Yudhishthira, instated in a great sacrifice, knows its success depends on more than wealth. He gathers his elders and kin, declares all his riches are theirs, and appoints each to a specific office of responsibility. The result is a spectacle of perfect order, where every guest is a master, every duty is in trusted hands, and the entire world assembles to see a king rival the gods in prosperity.

Pivotal

Chapter 267

Kings depart after the completed Rajasuya sacrifice

The Rajasuya sacrifice, protected by Krishna, is complete. The kshatriya kings who attended now seek Yudhishthira's leave to return home. Yudhishthira honors them and orders his brothers and allies to conduct each king and his retinue safely to the borders of his kingdom.

Major

Chapter 269

Shakuni advises Duryodhana against jealousy and proposes dice game

Duryodhana, consumed by jealousy after seeing the Pandavas' new hall and prosperity, laments his own fate. His uncle Shakuni first counsels him to abandon envy, listing the Pandavas' formidable allies and achievements, then reveals his true plan: to defeat Yudhishthira not in battle, but at the dice game he loves but cannot master.

Supporting

Chapter 270

Shakuni and Duryodhana Incite Dhritarashtra to Gamble

Duryodhana, sick with envy after witnessing Yudhishthira's limitless wealth at the Rajasuya, is pale and wasting away. His uncle Shakuni brings him before the blind king Dhritarashtra and prompts the king to ask the cause of his son's misery. Duryodhana describes the unbearable spectacle of the Pandava's prosperity, and Shakuni proposes a solution: a dice game.

Pivotal

Chapter 271

Duryodhana Confesses His Envy and Humiliation at Indraprastha

Pressed by his father, Duryodhana confesses that his misery comes from seeing Yudhishthira's supreme prosperity. He recounts, in raw detail, the humiliations he suffered at the Pandava palace: mistaking crystal for water, falling into a pond, and hitting his head on a door, all while their laughter echoed around him.

Major

Chapter 273

Duryodhana Describes the Lavish Tribute at Yudhishthira's Sacrifice

Duryodhana reports back to his blind father, Dhritarashtra, on the Rajasuya sacrifice of his cousin Yudhishthira. He describes not a ritual, but an empire — a torrent of tribute from every corner of the earth, armies of servants, and a court so opulent it humiliates him with every detail. He concludes with the bitterest fact of all: only their closest allies were exempt from paying.

Supporting

Chapter 275

Dhritarashtra Advises Duryodhana to Abandon Hatred

Dhritarashtra sees the hatred and covetousness consuming his son Duryodhana. He delivers a long, weary speech urging him to abandon this destructive path, be content with his own kingdom, and find peace in his own prosperity.

Supporting

Chapter 275

Duryodhana Rejects His Father's Pacifist Advice

Duryodhana listens to his father's plea for peace and finds it not just weak, but dangerously confused. He delivers a fierce counter-doctrine, arguing that a king's dharma is victory, discontent is the engine of prosperity, and he will seize his cousins' wealth or die in the attempt.

Supporting

Chapter 277

The Pandavas Travel to Hastinapura and Pay Respects

Yudhishthira orders the journey to Hastinapura. The Pandavas travel with Draupadi and their retinue, their regal prosperity blazing. In Hastinapura, Yudhishthira respectfully meets Dhritarashtra, Gandhari, and all the elders and Kuru princes. Their visible success stirs no delight in Dhritarashtra's daughters-in-law.

Supporting

Chapter 277

Vidura Summons Yudhishthira to Hastinapura for Dice Game

King Dhritarashtra commands Vidura to summon Yudhishthira to Hastinapura to see the new sabha and play dice. Vidura delivers the summons, warning that gambling is the root of misery. Yudhishthira knows skilled rogues like Shakuni await, but feels bound by his father's command and his own vow never to refuse a challenge in the assembly.

Pivotal

Chapter 283

Yudhishthira Gambles Away His Riches, Brothers, Self, and Draupadi

Shakuni has already won Yudhishthira's wealth. He asks if the Pandava has anything left to gamble. Compelled by the game, Yudhishthira begins to stake what remains: his kingdom, his brothers, himself, and finally his wife Draupadi. Each time, Shakuni casts the dice and declares victory.

Supporting

Chapter 285

Duryodhana orders Draupadi dragged to the sabha

Duryodhana, insolent with victory, sends an attendant to fetch Draupadi, claiming Yudhishthira lost her at dice. Draupadi sends back a question that freezes the sabha: whose wife was she when she was staked? Yudhishthira sits silent, and Duryodhana insists she come to ask it herself.

Major

Chapter 288

Dhritarashtra intervenes and grants Draupadi two boons

Ominous sounds portend disaster. Warned by Vidura and Gandhari, Dhritarashtra rebukes Duryodhana and offers Draupadi boons to pacify the crisis. She asks first for Yudhishthira's freedom, then for the freedom of the other four Pandavas with their weapons, refusing a third boon as a matter of dharma.

Minor

Chapter 289

Bhima, enraged by Karna's words, is pacified by Yudhishthira

Bhima hears Karna's praise of Draupadi as the Pandavas' "boat" and feels his honor has been permanently darkened. He declares he will kill every enemy in the hall immediately, his body manifesting physical signs of apocalyptic fury.

Supporting

Chapter 290

Yudhishthira Takes Leave and Returns to Indraprastha

After the humiliation of the gambling hall and the exile, Yudhishthira stands before the blind king Dhritarashtra and asks for his command. Dhritarashtra gives him permission to depart, blessing him to rule his own kingdom righteously and advising him to ignore Duryodhana's harshness and pursue peace.

Supporting

Chapter 293

Duhshasana Mocks the Defeated Pandavas and Draupadi

As the defeated Pandavas dress in deerskins for exile, Duhshasana publicly taunts them for their poverty and urges Draupadi to abandon her impotent husbands and choose a new one from among the prosperous Kurus.

Supporting

Chapter 296

Vidura describes the Pandavas' departure for exile

Dhritarashtra, blind and anxious, asks Vidura to describe how the Pandavas are leaving for the forest. Vidura details each brother's and Draupadi's symbolic gesture, translating their silent actions into a forecast of future war and vengeance.