Jamadagni was one of the
Saptarishi or Seven Sages. In his early life, he studied hard and achieved erudition in his studies of the
Vedas. He is said to have acquired knowledge regarding the science of weapons without any formal instruction, with the guidance of his father. After achieving the status of a
Rishi, Jamadagni visited several holy sites and finally reached the palace of King Prasenajit of the
Solar Dynasty. He fell in love with his daughter, Princess Renuka, upon seeing her, and asked the king for her hand in marriage. Subsequently, the two were married, and Renuka took on an ascetic life. Five sons were born to them: Ṛumaṇvān, Suhotra, Vasu, Viśvāvasu, and Rama, later known as
Parshurama. Later the couple started to engage in penances or
tapasya along the banks of the river
Narmada. Jamadagni granted Renuka a boon that she would be able to bring water in unbaked clay pots, as long as her chastity was pure. According to the Brahmanda Purana, Renuka once went to the banks of the river Narmada to fetch some water. There, she observed the king of the Shalva kingdom making love with his queen in the water. She stood there, mesmerised by the beauty of the sight. But her chastity was broken and the pot cracked. By the time she reached the hermitage of her husband with the water, she was quite late. The weary Jamadagni was furious when he divined the reason for her delay, and called forth each of his sons, one after the other, to kill her. Each of them refused to kill their mother. Parashurama, however, came forth and beheaded his mother with an axe to show his obedience to his father's words. The sage exiled his four older sons to the forests due to their disobedience and cursed them either to become ash or live for eternity as
transgenders. Jamadagni was pleased by Parashurama's devotion to him, he granted his son any boon of his choice. Parashurama wisely wished for his mother to be restored to life, and this was granted. Jamadagni used his powers to fix Renuka's head to her body and she was alive again. Another legend narrates that in the hurry to see his mother alive again, he took a dark-skinned woman's head and attached it to his mother's body. That's how
Renuka was also called Yellamma. In the pictures of Yellamma, she has a darker face than her body which represents that she has another woman's head. Other legends narrate that when she was beheaded, Renuka's head multiplied by hundreds and moved to different regions in India. This inspired her transgender children to deify and worship her. The transgender children were found by their mother who accepted them as they were. From then on, Renuka alias Yellamma was known as the mother goddess of transgenders. Even today, you'll see a lot of transgenders on the temple premises. But
Parshuram left his mother and father. As he was Lord
Vishnu's sixth incarnation, he was on his divine path. Later he became a disciple of
Dattatreya. He started practising his penance and meditation with Lord
Dattatreya in the Western Ghats. Later, Jamadagni was entrusted by
Brahma to take care of the divine cow
Kamadhenu. where Jamadagni was killed by
Kartavirya Arjuna due to the latter's lust for the cow. And
Renuka committed
sati (where a woman, out of mourn, throws herself on the cremation fire of her husband). Parashurama avenged his parents' deaths by killing Kartavirya's army 21 times, to relieve the Earth of her burden. After this story, Parashurama returned to
Dattatreya to continue his penances. Parashurama is a
Chiranjeevi (immortal) being in Hindu Mythology. Parashurama is believed to be alive and does his penance in the
Himalayas. His mentor,
Dattatreya, still roams in the western ghats. ==Festivals==