Vedic origins . The section 1.8.1 of the
Shatapatha Brahmana (
Yajur veda) is the earliest extant text to mention Matsya and the
flood myth in Hinduism. It does not associate the fish Matsya with any other deity in particular. The central characters of this legend are the fish (Matsya) and
Manu. The character Manu is presented as the legislator and ancestor king. King Manu finds a little fish in the palm of his hands when performing the tarpana (water-offering) The fish states that it fears being swallowed by a larger fish and appeals to Manu to protect it. In return, the fish promises to rescue Manu from an impending flood. Manu accepts the request. He puts the fish in a pot of water where it grows. Then he prepares a ditch filled with water, and transfers it there where it can grow freely. Once the fish grows further to be big enough to be free from danger, Manu transfers it into the ocean. The fish thanks him, tells him the timing of the great flood, and asks Manu to build a ship by that day, one he can attach to its horn. On the predicted day, Manu visits the fish with his boat. The devastating floods come. Manu ties the boat to the horn. The fish carries the boat with Manu to the high grounds of the northern mountains (interpreted as the
Himalayas). The lone survivor Manu then re-establishes life by performing
austerities and
yajna (sacrifices). The goddess
Ida appears from the sacrifice and both together initiate the race of Manu, the humans. According to Bonnefoy, the Vedic story is symbolic. The little fish alludes to the Indian "law of the fishes", an equivalent to the "
law of the jungle". The small and weak would be devoured by the big and strong, and needs the
dharmic protection of the legislator and king Manu to enable it to attain its full potential and be able to help later. Manu provides the protection, the little fish grows to become big and ultimately saves all existence. The boat that Manu builds to get help from the saviour fish, states Bonnefoy, is symbolism of the means to avert complete destruction and for human salvation. The mountains represent the doorway for ultimate refuge and liberation.
Edward Washburn Hopkins suggests that the favour of Manu rescuing the fish from death, is reciprocated by the fish. Though Matsya does not appear in older scriptures, Narayan Aiyangar suggests that the ship from the Matsya legend alludes to the ship of Sacrifice referred in the
Rigveda and the
Aitareya Brahmana. In this context, the fish denotes Agni - God as well as the sacrificial flames. The legend thus signifies how man (Manu) can sail the sea of sins and troubles with the ship of sacrifice and the fish-Agni as his guide. In a prayer to
kushta plant in the
Atharvaveda, a golden ship is said to rest at a Himalayan peak, where the herb grows.
Maurice Bloomfield suggests that this may be an allusion to Manu's ship.
Saviour of Manu from the Deluge The tale of Matsya also appears in sec. 186 of Book 3 (the
Vana Parva) of the epic
Mahabharata. The legend begins with Manu (specifically
Vaivasvata Manu, the present Manu. Manu is envisioned as a title, rather than an individual) performing religious rituals on the banks of the Chirini River in Vishāla forest. A little fish comes to him and asks for his protection, promising to save him from a deluge in the future. The legend moves in the same vein as the Vedic version. Manu places him in the jar. Once it outgrows the jar, the fish asks to be put into a tank which Manu helps with. Then the fish outgrows the tank, and with Manu's help reaches the
Ganges River (Ganga), finally to the ocean. Manu is asked by the fish, as in the
Shatapatha Brahmana version, to build a ship and additionally, to be in it with
Saptarishi (seven sages) and all sorts of seeds, on the day of the expected deluge. Manu accepts the fish's advice. The deluge begins. The fish arrives to Manu's aid. He ties the ship with a rope to the horn of the fish, who then steers the ship to the Himalayas, carrying Manu through a turbulent storm. The danger passes. The fish then reveals himself as
Brahma and gives the power of creation to Manu. The key difference between the Vedic version and the
Mahabharata version of the allegorical legend are the latter's identification of Matsya with Brahma, a more explicit discussion of the "law of the fishes" where the weak needs the protection from the strong, and the fish asking Manu to bring along sages and grains. The
Matsya Purana identifies the fish-savior (Matsya) with Vishnu, instead of Brahma. The
Purana derives its name from Matsya and begins with the tale of Manu. King Manu renounces the world. Pleased with his austerities on
Malaya mountains (interpreted as
Kerala in Southern India), Brahma grants his wish to rescue the world at the time of the
pralaya (dissolution at end of a
kalpa). As in other versions, Manu encounters a little fish that miraculously increases in size over time and soon he transfers the fish to the Ganges and later to the ocean. Manu recognizes the fish as Vishnu. The fish warns him about the impending fiery end of
kalpa accompanied with the
pralaya as a deluge. The fish once again has a horn, but the gods gift a ship to Manu. Manu carries all types of living creatures and plant seeds to produce food for everyone after the deluge is over. When the great flood begins, Manu ties the cosmic serpent
Shesha to the fish's horn. In the journey towards the mountains, Manu asks questions to Matsya and their dialogue constitutes the rest of the Purana. The
Matsya Purana story is also symbolic. The fish is divine to begin with, and needs no protection, only recognition and devotion. It also ties the story to its cosmology, connecting two
kalpas through the cosmic symbolic residue in the form of Shesha. In this account, the ship of Manu is called the ship of the Vedas, thus signifying the rites and rituals of the Vedas. Roy further suggests that this may be an allusion to the gold ship of Manu in the
Rigveda. In the
Garuda Purana, Matsya is said to have rescued the seventh Manu, Vaivasvata Manu, from the great deluge by placing him in a boat. The
Linga Purana praises Vishnu as the one who saved various beings as a fish by tying a boat to his tail.
Saviour of the Vedas The
Bhagavata Purana adds another reason for the Matsya avatar. At the end of the
kalpa, a demon Hayagriva ("horse-necked") steals the
Vedas, which escape from the yawn of a sleepy Brahma. Vishnu discovers the theft. He descends to earth in the form of a little
saphari fish, or the Matsya avatar. One day, the king of
Dravida country (South India) named Satyavrata cups water in his hand for libation in the
Kritamala river (identified with
Vaigai River in
Tamil Nadu, South India). There he finds a little fish. The fish asks him to save him from predators and let it grow. Satyavrata is filled with compassion for the little fish. He puts the fish in a pot, from there to a well, then a tank, and when it outgrows the tank, he transfers the fish finally to the sea. The fish rapidly outgrows the sea. Satyavrata asks the supernatural fish to reveal its true identity, but soon realizes it to be Vishnu. Matsya-Vishnu informs the king of the impending flood coming in seven days. The king is asked to collect every species of animal, plant, and seeds as well as the seven sages (
Saptarshi) in a boat. The fish asks the king to tie the boat to its horn with the help of the
Shesha serpent. The deluge comes. While carrying them to safety, the fish avatar teaches the highest knowledge to the sages and Satyavrata to prepare them for the next cycle of existence. The
Bhagavata Purana states that this knowledge was compiled as a Purana, interpreted as an allusion to the
Matsya Purana. After the deluge, Matsya slays the demon and rescues the Vedas, restoring them to Brahma, who has woken from his sleep to restart creation afresh. Satyavrata becomes Vaivasvata Manu and is installed as the Manu of the current
kalpa. The
Agni Purana narrative is similar to the
Bhagavata Purana version placed around
Kritamala river and also records the rescue of Vedas from the demon Hayagriva. It mentions Vaivasvata Manu only collecting all seeds (not living beings) and assembling the seven sages similar to the
Mahabharata version. It also adds the basis of the
Matsya Purana, being the discourse of Matsya to Manu, similar to the
Bhagavata Purana version. While listing the Puranas, the
Agni Purana states that the
Matsya Purana was told by Matsya to Manu at the beginning of the
kalpa. The
Varaha Purana equates Narayana (identified with Vishnu) as the creator-god, instead of Brahma. Narayana creates the universe. At the start of a new
kalpa, Narayana wakes from his slumber and thinks about the Vedas. He realizes that they are in the
cosmic waters. He takes the form of a gigantic fish and rescues the Vedas and other scriptures. In another instance, Narayana retrieves the Vedas from the
Rasatala (netherworld) and grants them to Brahma. The Purana also extols Narayana as the primordial fish who also bore the earth. PPL The
Garuda Purana states that Matsya slew Hayagriva and rescued the Vedas as well as the Manu. In another instance, it states that Vishnu as Matsya killed the demon Pralamba in the reign of the third Manu - Uttama. The
Narada Purana states that the demon Hayagriva (son of Kashyapa and Diti) seized the Vedas of the mouth of Brahma. Vishnu then takes the Matsya form and kills the demon, retrieving the Vedas. The incident is said to have happened in the
Badari forest. The deluge and Manu are dropped in the narrative. The
Shiva Purana praises Vishnu as Matsya who rescued the Vedas via king Satyavrata and swam through the ocean of
pralaya. The
Padma Purana replaces Manu with the sage
Kashyapa, who finds the little fish who expands miraculously. Another major divergence is the absence of the deluge. Vishnu as Matsya slays the demon Shankha. Matsya-Vishnu then orders the sages to gather the Vedas from the waters and then presents the same to Brahma in
Prayag. This Purana does not reveal how the scriptures drowned in the waters. Vishnu then resides in the Badari forest with other deities. The
Karttikamsa-Mahatmya in the
Skanda Purana narrates that slaying of the
asura (demon) Shankha by Matsya.
Shankha (lit. "conch"), the son of
Sagara (the ocean), snatches the powers of various gods. Shankha, wishing to acquire more power, steals the Vedas from Brahma, while Vishnu was sleeping. The Vedas escape from his clutches and hide in the ocean. Implored by the gods, Vishnu wakes on
Prabodhini Ekadashi and takes the form of a
saphari fish and annihilates the demon. Similar to the
Padma Purana, the sages re-compile the scattered Vedas from the oceans. The Badari forest and Prayag also appear in this version, though the tale of growing fish and Manu is missing. Another account in the
Padma Purana mentions that a demon son called Makara steals the Vedas from Brahma and hides them in the cosmic ocean. Beseeched by Brahma and the gods, Vishnu takes the Matsya-form and enters the waters, then turns into a crocodile and destroys the demon. The sage
Vyasa is credited with re-compilation of the Vedas in this version. The Vedas are then returned to Brahma. The
Brahma Purana states that Vishnu took the form of a
rohita fish when the earth was in the
netherland to rescue the Vedas. The
Krishna-centric
Brahmavaivarta Purana states that Matsya is an avatar of Krishna (identified with Supreme Being) and in a hymn to Krishna praises Matsya as the protector of the Vedas and Brahmins (the sages), who imparted knowledge to the king. The
Purusottama-Ksetra-Mahatmya of
Skanda Purana in relationship of the origin of the herb
Damanaka states that a
daitya (demon) named Damanaka tormented people and wandered in the waters. On the request of Brahma, Vishnu takes the Matsya form, pulls the demon from the waters and crushes him on land. The demon transforms into a fragrant herb called Damanaka, which Vishnu wears in his
flower garland.
In avatar lists , 1820 Matsya is generally enlisted as the first avatar of Vishnu, especially in Dashavatara (ten major avatars of Vishnu) lists. However, that was not always the case. Some lists do not list Matsya as first, and only later texts start the trend of Matsya as the first avatar.
Other scriptural references The
Vishnu Purana narrative of Vishnu's boar avatar
Varaha alludes to the Matsya and
Kurma avatars, saying that Brahma (identified with Narayana, an epithet transferred to Vishnu) took these forms in previous
kalpas. The
Agni Purana, the
Brahma Purana and the
Vishnu Purana suggests that Vishnu resides as Matsya in Kuru-varsha, one of the regions outside the mountains surrounding
Mount Meru. ==Iconography==