| Devi Mahatmya | |
|---|---|
| देवी महात्म्य | |
| Information | |
| Religion | Hinduism |
| Author | Vyasa |
| Language | Sanskrit |
| Chapters | 13 |
| Verses | 700 |
TheDevi Mahatmya orDevi Mahatmyam (Sanskrit:देवीमाहात्म्यम्,romanized: devīmāhātmyam,lit. 'Glory of theGoddess') is aHindu philosophical text describing the Goddess, known asAdi Parashakti orDurga, as the supreme divineultimate reality and creator of the universe.[1][2] It is part of theMārkanḍeya Purāna (chapters 81 to 93).[3][4][5]
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TheDevi Mahatmyam is also known as theDurgā Saptashatī (दुर्गासप्तशती),Śata Chandī (शत् चंडी)[6] andChandi Path (चंडी पाठ).[7] The text contains 700 verses that are arranged into 13 chapters.[8][6] It is one of the most important texts inShaktism, along withDevi-Bhagavata Purana andDevi Upanishad.[9] The text is also one of the earliest extant complete manuscripts from the Hindu traditions which describes reverence and worship of the feminine aspect of God.[5]
TheDevi Mahatmyam describes a storied battle between good and evil in which Devi, manifesting as goddess Durga, leads the forces of good against the demonMahishasura—the goddess is very angry and ruthless, and the forces of good win.[10][11][12] The verses of this story also outline a philosophical foundation wherein the ultimate reality,Brahman in Hinduism, is the Divine Mother.[13][14][15]
TheDevi Mahatmyam is recited duringNavaratri celebrations, theDurga Puja festival,[16][17] and in Durga temples across India.[16][18]

Devi Mahatmyam means 'Glorification of the Goddess'.[19] The text is also calledDurga Saptaśati (literally a collection of seven hundred" or something that contains seven hundreds in number), as it contains 700shlokas (verses).[8]
It is also known asCandi Patha.[20]Caṇḍī orCaṇḍika is the name by which the Supreme Goddess is referred to inDevī Māhātmyam. According to Hindu Scriptures,Caṇḍikā is "the Goddess of Truth and Justice who came to Earth for the establishment of Dharma", from the adjectivecaṇḍa, "fierce, violent, cruel for evil forces not for good forces". The epithet has no precedent in Vedic literature and is first found in a late insertion to theMahabharata, whereChaṇḍa andChaṇḍī appear as epithets."[21]

Devi Mahatmyam is a text extracted fromMarkandeya Purana, and constitutes the latter's chapters 81 through 93.[23] The Purana is dated to the ~3rd century CE,[10] and theDevi Mahatmyam was added to theMarkandeya Purana either in the 5th or 6th century.[3][4][5]
TheDadhimati Mata inscription (608 CE) quotes a portion from theDevi Mahatmyam. Thus, it can be concluded that the text was composed before the 7th century CE.[24] It is generally dated between 400–600 CE.[25]Wendy Doniger O'Flaherty dates theDevi Mahatmya toc. 550 CE, and the rest of theMarkandeya Purana toc. 250 CE.[26]
Hymns to goddesses are in the ancient Hindu epicMahabharata, particularly in the later (100 to 300 CE) addedHarivamsa section.[27] Thomas Coburn states that the archaeological and textual evidence implies that the Goddess had become as much a part of the Hindu tradition as God by about the third or fourth century.[28]
C. Mackenzie Brown states that theDevi Mahatmyam is both a culmination of centuries of Indian ideas about the divine feminine, as well as a foundation for the literature and spirituality focused on the feminine transcendence in centuries that followed.[27]
TheDevi Mahatmya is a devotional text, and Thomas Coburn states that its aim is not to analyze divine forms or abstract ideas, but to praise.[29] It accomplishes this with a philosophical foundation, wherein the female is the primordial being; she is also theTridevi as the creator, the sustainer, and destroyer.[29] She is described in the text as the one who dwells in all creatures, as the soul, as the power to know, will and act.[29] She is further described as the consciousness of all living beings, intelligence, matter, and all that is form or emotion.[29]
The text includes hymns tosaguna (manifest, incarnated) form of the Goddess, as well asnirguna (unmanifest, abstract) form of her.[30] Thesaguna hymns appear in chapters 1, 4 and 11 of theDevi Mahatmya, while chapter 5 praises thenirguna concept of Goddess. Thesaguna forms of her, asserts the text, areMahakali (destroyer, desire principle of mother,Tamasika),Mahalakshmi (sustainer, evolution principle of mother,Trigunatmika and thenRajasika) andMahasaraswati (creator, action principle of mother,Sattvika),[30] which as a collective are calledTridevi. TheNirguna concept (Avyakta, transcendent) is also referred to as Mahalakshmi.[30] This structure is not accidental, but embeds theSamkhya philosophy idea of threeGunas that is central in Hindu scriptures such as theBhagavad Gita.[30]
The Samkhya philosophical premise asserts that all life and matter has all three co-existent innate tendencies or attributes (Guṇa), whose equilibrium or disequilibrium drives the nature of a living being or thing.[31][32] Tamasic is darkness and destructiveness, Sattvic is light and creative pursuit, and Rajasic is dynamic energy qua energy without any intent of being creative or destructive.[30] The unmanifest, in this philosophy, has all these three innate attributes and qualities, as potent principle within, as unrealized power, and this unrealized Goddess dwells in every individual, according toDevi Mahatmya.[29] This acknowledgment of Samkhya dualistic foundation is then integrated into a monistic (non-dualistic,Advaita) spirituality inDevi Mahatmya, just like the Upanishads, theBhagavad Gita, theBhagavata Purana and other important texts of Hinduism.[33][34]
The Goddess in Indian traditions
TheDevi-Mahatmya is not the earliest literary fragment attesting to the existence of devotion to a goddess figure, but it is surely the earliest in which the object of worship is conceptualized as Goddess, with a capital G.
TheDevi Mahatmya consists of chapters 81–93 of theMārkandeya Purana, one of the early Sanskrit Puranas, where the sageMarkandeya is narrating a story aboutSavarni Manu, or the eighth Manu.[36] The thirteen chapters ofDevi Mahatmya are divided into three unequal parts.[37]
The framing narrative ofDevi Mahatmya presents a dispossessed king Suratha, who has lost his kingdom and a merchant named Samadhi, who is betrayed by his family. Disturbed by these events, both men decide to renounce the world and escape to the forested ashram of sage Medhas to find peace. Medhas' teachings lead them both beyond existential suffering.[38] The sage tells them aboutMahamaya, an epithet of the goddess, who is the cause of world's delusion and creation and who manifests in different ways.[36] Most famous is the story ofMahishasura Mardini – Devi as "Slayer of the Buffalo Demon" – one of the most ubiquitous images in Hindu art and sculpture, and a tale known almost universally in India. Among the important goddess forms theDevi Mahatmyam introduced into the Sanskritic mainstream areKali and theSapta-Matrika ("Seven Mothers").[39]

The first episode (chapter 1) of the Devi Mahatmyam depicts Devi in her form as Maha-Maya.[38] Here, Devi is central and key to the creation as Maha-Maya, or, the great illusion/power that induces Vishnu's deep slumber on the waters of the cosmic ocean prior to the manifestation of the Universe which is a continuous cycle of manifestation, destruction and re-manifestation.[40] Two demons,Madhu-Kaitabha, arise from Vishnu's earwax.[41] The demons endeavour to vanquishBrahma who is preparing to create the next cycle of the Universe. Brahma sings to the Great Goddess, asking her to withdraw from Vishnu so he may awaken and slay the demons.[40] Devi agrees to withdraw and Vishnu awakens, fights the demons for five thousand years and vanquishes them.[41] Here Devi is praised as the agent who allows both the cosmic order to be upset and restored.[40]
The middle episode (chapters 2–4) presents the goddess in her avatar asDurga. The episode stages a world under attack by the shape-shiftingMahishasura, an evil demon who uses deception to disarm his opponents, ultimately taking the form of a buffalo demon. Mahishasura is able to use his powers to defeat the male gods because he had been granted a boon that he could only be defeated by a woman. Feeling angered and helpless, the gods release energy which combines into a singular mass of light and strength which takes the form of a goddess, Durga.[42] The gods then bestow her with various weapons.Vishnu gives her his discus,Vayu gives her his bow and arrows andHimalaya provides her with a lion for a vehicle.[43] Durga rides the lion into battle and captures and slays the buffalo demon by cutting off its head. She then destroys the inner essence of the demon when it emerges from the buffalo's severed neck, thereby establishing order in the world.[44][45][46]

In the final episode (chapters 5–13) the demonsShumbha and Nishumbha conquer heaven and the gods go to the Himalayas to pray to Devi. Soon, Parvati arrives and asks them to whom they are praying. She then reveals to them that it is her.[36] Thereafter,Ambika, or Kaushiki, appears from the sheath (kosha) ofParvati’s body.[47]
Devi engages in a fierce battle withChanda and Munda, servants of Sumbha and Nisumbha. Chanda and Munda are eventually killed byKali who emerges from Devi's forehead. The battle continues and the seven mothers, or thesaptamatrika, are produced from the seven male gods.[36]
The demonRaktabīja also appears and is killed by Kali. Nisumbha and his army is defeated by the goddess with the help of the seven mothers.[36]

In the final battle against Shumbha, Devi absorbs Kali and the seven mothers and stands alone for the final battle.[44]
After the battle, the gods praise Devi. The hymn is known asNarayani Stuti which affirms her role as the creator, preserver and destroyer of the universe.[36] Devi, pleased with the devas, grants them a boon that she will always destroy the demons and bring peace to earth. She mentions her future incarnations and their respective acts (Chapter 11). Then Devi mentions the benefits, accrual of peace, bliss of worshipping her and disappears (Chapter 12).[48]
The sage finishes the tale. He tells the king and the merchant to take refuge in Devi to rid themselves of their delusion. Both the king and the merchant undertake penance and Devi grants them her vision. The king asks Devi for his lost kingdom and Devi grants it to him. The merchants asks Devi for wisdom and she grants it to him (Chapter 13).[49]
Who is this Goddess?
Devadatta Kali states that the three tales are "allegories of outer and inner experience".[50] Kali states that the evil adversaries of the Goddess symbolize the all-too-human impulses, such as pursuit of power, or possessions, or delusions such as arrogance.[50] The Goddess wages war against this.[50] Like the philosophical and symbolic battlefield of theBhagavad Gita, theDevi Mahatmya symbolic killing grounds target human frailties, according to Kali, and the Goddess targets the demons of ego and dispels our mistaken idea of who we are.[50]
Thomas Coburn states that most hymns present the Goddess's martial exploits, but these are "surpassed by verses of another genre, viz., the hymns to the Goddess".[51] The hymnic portion of the text balances the verses that present the spiritual liberation power of the Goddess.[52] These hymns describe the nature and character of the Goddess in spiritual terms:

As an independent text, Devī Māhātmya has acquired a number of "limbs" or "subsidiary texts" or "appendages" (angas) over the years "fore and aft". According to Coburn "artistic evidence suggests that the angas have been associated with the text since the fourteenth century." The angas are chiefly concerned with the ritual use of Devī Māhātmya and based on the assumption that the text will be recited aloud in the presence of images.[57]
The number and order of these depend on theSampradaya (tradition).[62][63]
The Devi Mahatmya was considered significant among the Puranas byIndologists. This is indicated by the early dates when it was translated into European languages. It was translated into English in 1823, followed by an analysis with excerpts in French in 1824. It was translated into Latin in 1831 and Greek in 1853.[64]
Devi Māhātmyam has been called the Testament ofShakta philosophy.[65] It is the base and root of Shakta doctrine.[66] It appears as the centre of the greatShakti tradition of Hinduism.[67]
It is inDevi Mahatmya, states C Mackenzie Brown, that "the various mythic, cultic and theological elements relating to diverse female divinities were brought together in what has been called the 'crystallization of the Goddess tradition."[68]
The unique feature ofDevi Māhātmyam is the oral tradition. Though it is part of the devotional tradition, it is in the rites of the Hindus that it plays an important role. The entire text is considered as one singleMantra and a collection of 700 Mantras.
TheDevi Māhātmyam is treated in the cultic context as if it were a Vedic hymn or verse with sage (ṛṣi), meter, pradhnadevata, andviniyoga (forjapa). It has been approached, by Hindus and Western scholars, as scripture in and by itself, where its significance is intrinsic, not derived from its Puranic context.[69]
According to Damara Tantra "Like Aswamedha in Yagnas, Hari in Devas, Sapthsati is in hymns." "Like the Vedas; Saptasati is eternal" says Bhuvaneshwari Samhita.[70]
There are many commentaries onDevi Māhātmya.
The significance of Devi Māhātmya has been explained in many Tantric and Puranic texts like Katyayani Tantra, Gataka Tantra, Krodha Tantra, Meru Tantram, Marisa Kalpam, Rudra Yamala, and Chidambara Rahasya.[71]
Devi Mahatmya continues to inspire people. In 2025, US based music composer Raleigh Rajan created a musical form for Ya Devi hymn by incorporating percussion instruments from various Indian states to highlight the presence ofShakta philosophy andShakti worshipping across the breadth and width of the country.[72]

The recitation of Devi Mahatmya is done during the SharadNavaratri (October – November) inIndia. It is recited during Navaratri celebrations, theDurga Puja festival and in Durga temples of India.[16]
In the theological practices of the goddess tradition of Hinduism, the middle episode is the most important. If a community or individual cannot recite the entireDevi Mahatmyam composition, the middle episode alone is recited at a puja or festival.[73] Further, when the recital begins, the tradition is to complete the reading of the middle episode completely as a partial reading is considered to create a spiritualchidra or "chink in the armor".[73]