Origin The previous birth of Naraka is described in the
Bhagavata Purana. It is stated that there once lived a king with 16,000 daughters.
Vishnu visited the palace of this king in the guise of a hermit, and all of these damsels surrounded the man. Their father, the king, grew angry with them, and issued a curse upon them all. When his daughters wept and begged their father to be relieved from the curse, he relented and allowed them the prospect of being the wives of the deity in their next birth. It was this king who would become Narakasura in his next birth, and the 16,000 daughters would be the princesses he abducted.
Birth The birth of Naraka is narrated in various texts. In Kalika Purana and other texts,
Varaha is mentioned as Naraka's father. The pious Naraka became evil due to his association with an
asura named
Banasura of
Śoṇitapura, and hence the suffix 'asura' (demon) was added to his name.
Conquest Drunk with power, as he considered himself to be unrivaled in prowess, he brought all the kingdoms on earth under his control. Next, he turned his eyes towards
Svargaloka. Even the mighty
Indra could not withstand the assault of this son of
Vishnu, and had to flee the heavens. Narakasura had become the overlord of both the heavens and earth. Addicted to power, he stole the earrings of
Aditi, the heavenly mother goddess, and usurped some of her territories, while also kidnapping
16000 women. All the
devas, led by
Indra, went to Vishnu to ask him to deliver them from Narakasura. Vishnu promised them that he would attend to this matter, when he would be incarnated as
Krishna.
Death As promised to the earth goddess, Naraka was allowed to enjoy a long reign. At last, Vishnu was born as Krishna. Aditi, who was a relative of Krishna's wife
Satyabhama (believed to be an avatar of
Bhudevi - Narakasura's foster mother), approached Satyabhama for help. When Satyabhama heard of the Narakasura's ill-treatment of women and his behaviour with Aditi, she was enraged. Satyabhama approached Krishna for permission to wage a war against Narakasura. As promised to the devas and Aditi, Krishna attacked the great fortress of Narakasura, riding his mount
Garuda with wife Satyabhama. Krishna used the Narayanastra and the Agneyastra against the army of Narakasura. The battle was furiously fought. Narakasura possessed 11
Akshauhinis that he unleashed on Krishna. However, the deity slew them all with little effort. Krishna also killed
Mura, Narakasura's general. Thus, Krishna is called 'Murāri' (the killer of Mura). Narakasura used several
divine weapons against Krishna, but the latter easily countered all those weapons. Narakasura employed the Brahmastra against Krishna, but Krishna neutralised it with his own Brahmastra. Narakasura used the Agneyastra against Krishna, but Krishna nullified it with the Varunastra, dismaying Narakasura. Narakasura hurled the Nagapasha against Krishna, but Krishna negated it with the Garudastra. In desperation, Narakasura launched the Vaishnavastra on Krishna, but Krishna met it with another Vaishnavastra. At last, when Narakasura tried to kill Krishna with a trident, Krishna pretended to swoon, because of a boon that Narakasura could be killed only by the one who gave birth to him. Outraged, Satyabhama attacked Narakasura and Krishna killed him with his
Sudarshana Chakra (discus) by splitting Narakasura into two halves.
Staircase story In Assamese tradition, Naraka, motivated by his desire, wanted to marry the goddess
Kamakhya. When he proposed, the goddess playfully placed a condition before him that if he would be able to build a staircase from the bottom of the Nilachal Hill to the temple within one night before the cock crows to indicate dawn, then She would surely marry him. Naraka took it as a challenge and tried all with his might to do this huge task. He was almost about to accomplish the job before it was dawn. When Kamakhya received this news, She created a cock and made it crow untimely to give the impression of dawn to Naraka. Duped by the trick, Naraka thought that it was a futile job and left it halfway through. Later, he chased the cock and killed it. According to regional tradition, this site is identified with the village of Kukurakata. == In popular culture ==