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Mausala Parva : ウィキペディア英語版 | Mausala Parva
Mausala Parva ((サンスクリット:मौसल पर्व)), or the "Book of Clubs", is the sixteenth of eighteen books of the Indian Epic Mahabharata. It has 9 chapters.〔(Mausala Parva ) The Mahabharata, Translated by Manmatha Nath Dutt (1905)〕〔(Mausala Parva ) The Mahabharata, Translated by Kisari Mohan Ganguli, Published by P.C. Roy (1893)〕 It is one of three shortest books in the Mahabharata. Mausala Parva describes the demise of Krishna in the 36th year after the Kurukshetra war had ended, the submersion of Dwaraka under sea, death of Balarama by drowning in the sea, Vasudeva's death, and an internecine fight among the race of Yadavas that kills them all. The story of complete extermination of the Yadavas becomes the reason why Yudhishthira and all the Pandava brothers renounce their kingdom and begin their failed walk towards heaven, events recited in the last two books of the Mahabharata.〔〔John Murdoch (1898), The Mahabharata - An English Abridgment, Christian Literature Society for India, London, pages 132-137〕 Mausala Parva is significant for serving as a basis of archaeological studies for the Mahabharata, as well as being one of the eight ''Parvas'' found in Hindu culture of Java and Bali, Indonesia. ==Structure and chapters== Mausala Parva (book) has 9 adhyayas (sections, chapters) and has no secondary sub-parvas (sub-books or little books).〔 Of the 80,000 verses in the critical edition of the Mahabharata - Mausala parva represents about 0.25% of all verses of the Epic. This makes it one of the smallest books of the Epic.〔
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