Aruna – The Charioteer of Surya

Aruna

Aruna is the charioteer of Surya (the sun god) in Hinduism. He is the elder brother of Garuda.

Aruna and Garuda are the sons of Vedic sage Kashyapa and his wife Vinata, daughter of Prajapati Daksha. His children were the mighty vultures Sampati and Jatayu.

He is also found in Buddhism and Jainism literature and arts.

Legends of Aruna:

Mahabharata: Kashyapa Prajapati’s two wives Vinata and Kadru wanted to have children. Kashyapa granted them a boon. Kadru asked for one thousand ‘Dirghadeha’ (meaning long bodied) Nāga (serpent) sons, while Vinata wanted only two yet extremely strong ‘Divyadeha’ (meaning emitting golden aura from body), who would excel the thousand sons of Kadru. Kashyapa blessed them, and then went away to a forest. Later, Kadru gave birth to one thousand eggs, while Vinata gave birth to two eggs. These incubated for five hundred years, upon which Kadru broke the eggs open and out came her 1,000 sons.
Vinata eager for her sons, broke one of the eggs from which emerged the partially formed Aruna. Since Aruna was born prematurely, only the upper half of his body had developed. Enraged by his mother’s haste, he cursed her to become a slave of Kadru for 500 years, upon which her second egg would break and his brother would emancipate her. Having cursed his mother, Aruna rose to the skies, and was bestowed the position of charioteer to Surya by his father, Prajapati Kasyapa. Accordingly, Vinata waited, and later the fully developed mighty eagle, her second born named Garuda (the vehicle of Lord Vishnu) was born.

The epic narrates that in another tale that Surya began burning intensely, angered by the attacks of Rahu (Rahu swallowing Surya is described to cause solar eclipses in Hindu mythology). The heat was so intense that it started destroying all living beings. Then, the creator Brahma asked Aruna to become the charioteer of Surya, to shield all living beings from his terrible heat.

Surya God
Surya God with Aruna

Ramayana: According to the Ramayana, Aruna was married to Shyeni with whom he had two sons – Jatayu and Sampati. Both of them would play a very important role in the epic.

Aruna, once became a woman named Aruni and entered an assembly of Apsara (celestial nymphs), where no man except Indra (the king of heaven) was allowed. Indra fell in love with Aruni and fathered a son named Vali from her. The next day, at Surya’s request, Aruna again assumed female form, and Surya fathered a son named Sugriva. Both children were given to Ahalya for rearing, but her husband, the sage Gautama cursed them, causing them to turn into monkeys, as he did not like them.

Related temples

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Related Sculptures
Surya at Indian Museum of Kolkata
Nepalese stone sculpture depicting Surya
Pala-Sena Period Stone Carving of Surya (ACM)
Surya on chariot at Virupaksha Temple (Pattadakal, Karnataka)
Related Deity / Character
Surya – The Sun God