Krishna [Sanskrit,=black], one of the most popular deities in Hinduism, the eighth avatar, or incarnation of
Vishnu. Krishna appears in the
Mahabharata epic as a prince of the Yadava tribe and the friend and counselor of the Pandava princes. His divinity is proclaimed in several places in the epic, particularly in the
Bhagavad-Gita. Krishna's childhood and youth are described in the
Harivamsa (a supplement to the
Mahabharata), the
Vishnu Purana, and the
Bhagavata Purana, the last being one of the most important texts of the Bhakti, or devotional, movement. As a young boy Krishna is the foster child of cowherds and shows his divine nature by conquering demons. As a youth he is the lover of the
gopis (milkmaids), playing his flute and dancing with them by moonlight. The play of Krishna and the
gopis is regarded in Hinduism as an image of the soul's relationship with God. The love of Krishna and Radha, his favorite
gopi, is celebrated in a great genre of Sanskrit and Bengali love poetry.
See W. G. Archer, The Loves of Krishna in Indian Painting and Poetry (1953, repr. 1960); M. Singer, ed., Krishna: Myths, Rites and Attitudes (1965); J. P. Losty, Krishna: A Hindu Vision of God (1980).
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