-
Mleccha (Sanskrit: म्लेच्छ, romanized: mlecchá) is a
Sanskrit term
referring to
those of an
incomprehensible speech,
foreigners or
invaders deemed distinct...
- been
equated to
Mlechchas in
later Sanskrit literature.
There is a
distinct prophetic statement in the
Mahabharata that the
mlechcha kings of the Sakas...
- Mahabharata, its inhabitants,
known as the Tusharas, are
depicted as
mlechchas ("barbarians") and
fierce warriors.
Modern scholars generally see Tushara...
- that
Pratihara emperor Nagabhata "crushed the
large army of the
powerful Mlechcha king." This
large army
consisted of cavalry, infantry,
siege artillery...
- Khasas, Hunas, Shakas, Kambojas, Yavanas, Pahlavas, Kiratas, Sinhalas,
Mlechchas etc. were
created by sage
Vashistha through the
divine powers of cow Sabala...
- of
their noble Kshatriyahood and
demoted them to the
barbaric caste of
Mlechchas, due to
their non-observance of
sacred Brahmanical codes and
neglect of...
- well-known Pānca-gana of
their Kshatriyahood and
turned them into the
Mlechchas.
Before their defeat at the
hands of king Sagara,
these five-hordes were...
- in
Western ****am and
Northern Bengal and
later disguised themselves as
Mlechchas. This
process of
hinduisation was much
slower in the
lower strata of the...
-
hills Nakula, the son of Pandu, then
reduced to
subjection the
fierce Mlechchas residing on the sea
coast (in
Karachi area), as also the wild
tribes of...
-
Mahabharata groups the
Yavanas with the
Kambojas and the
Chinas and
calls them "
Mlechchas" (Barbarians). In the
Shanti Parva section, the
Yavanas are
grouped with...