- Vala (Vedic)
Vala ("IAST|valá-"), meaning "enclosure" in
Vedic Sanskrit , is anAsura of theRigveda and theAtharvaveda , the brother ofVrtra .Historically, it has the same origin as the Vrtra myth, being derived from the same root, and from the same root also as
Varuna , "*val-/var-" (PIE "*wel-") "to cover, to enclose" (perhaps cognate to "veil "). Parallel to Vrtra "the blocker", a stone serpent slain byIndra to liberate the rivers, Vala is a stone cave, split by Indra (intoxicated and strengthened bySoma , identified withBrhaspati in 4.50 and 10.68 orTrita in 1.52, aided by theAngiras as in 2.11) , to liberate the cows andUshas , hidden there by thePanis .Indra descends from an Indo-Iranian god known as "*vrtra-g'han-" (virtually
PIE "*wltro-gwhen-") "slayer of the blocker".Triptolemos is analysed by Janda (1998) as a Greek continuation of a variant of the epithet, "*trigw-t-welumos", a "terpsimbrotos " compound "cracker of the enclosure", Greek "(w)elumos" referring to the casings of grain in Greek being descended from the same root "*wel-". On such grounds, a rock or mountain "*welos" or "*welumos" split by a heroic deity, liberating Dawn or the Sun is reconstructed forProto-Indo-European mythology (the "Sun in the rock" myth, sometime also speculated to be connected with the making of fire from flintstone).Already in 2.24, the myth is given a mystical interpretation, with warlike Indra replaced by
Brahmanaspati , the lord of prayer, who split Vala with prayer ("brahman ") rather than with the thunderbolt.Vala is mentioned 23 times in the Rigveda, Vala appears in hymns
RV 1 .11, 52, 62,RV 2 .11, 12, 14, 15, 24,RV 3 .30, 34,RV 4 , 50,RV 6 .18, 39,RV 8 .14, 24,RV 10 .67, 68, 138.Central verses of the myth (trans. Griffith)::2.12.3 "Who slew the Dragon, freed the Seven Rivers, and drove the kine forth from the cave of Vala, ":" Begat the fire between two stones, the spoiler in warriors' battle, He, O men, is Indra."
:2.15.8 "Praised by the Angirases he slaughtered Vala, and burst apart the bulwarks of the mountain.":"He tore away their deftly-built defences. These things did Indra in the
Soma 's rapture.":8.14.7 "In Soma's ecstasy Indra spread the firmament and realms of light, when he cleft Vala limb from limb." (compare to this description the
Purusha sukta ):10.68.6 "Brhaspati, when he with fiery lightnings cleft through the weapon of reviling Vala,":"Consumed him as tongues eat what teeth have compassed: he threw the prisons of the red cows open."
:1.11.5 "Lord of the thunder, thou didst burst the cave of Vala rich in cows.":"The Gods came pressing to thy side, and free from terror aided thee,"
:1.62.4 "Mid shout, loud shout, and roar, with the Navagvas, seven singers, hast thou, heavenly, rent the mountain;":"Thou hast, with speeders, with Dasagvas, Indra,
Shakra , with thunder rent obstructive Vala."References
*Janda, M., "Eleusis, das indogermanische Erbe der Mysterien" (1998).
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