Origin
of Goa
The origin of Goa
or Gomantak as it is also known, is lost
in the mists of time. In the later Vedic
period (c.1000-500 BC), when the Hindu epic
Mahabharat was written, Goa has been
referred to with the Sanskrit name Gomantak,
a word with many meanings, but signifying
generally a fertile land.
Goa
Legend
The most famous legend associated with Goa,
is that of the mythical sage Parashuram
(the sixth incarnation of Lord Vishnu),
who several thousand years ago created the
entire stretch of Konkan coast by ordering
the seas to recede. The Sea God gave up
the lands on the the banks of the two main
rivers of Goa viz.
Mandovi and Zuari (then called Gomati and
Asghanasini) for the settlement of the Aryans
accompanying Parashurama.
Another legend, less well
known, states that the coastal area of Konkan
enchanted Lord Krishna, who was charmed
by the beautiful ladies bathing in the area.
The ladies in turn, were so taken up by
the melodious music coming from his flute,
that they kept dancing forgetting their
daily chores. Lord Krishna, then named the
land Govapuri after the cows (gov) belonging
to the locals.
The history of the sacred
land
of Gomantak,
'land of the Gods' is well described in
Sahyadri Khand of Skandha Purana,
the ancient text of Hindu religion. According
to this story narrated in the Chapter Shantiparva
of Mahabharat, a Brahmin from the
Saraswat family, Parashuram, annihilated
the entire community of the warrior tribe
Kshatriyas and gifted the conquered land
to a sage named Kashyapmuni.
Unfortunately, the Kshatriya
annihilation meant that the land was left
unadministered and fell into anarchy and
chaos. The worried sage Kashyapmuni, requested
Parashuram to leave the area and settle
elsewhere. Parashuram came south and reclaimed
new land by ordering the sea to recede and
give up the coastal land. This land known
as "Aparant" or "Shurparak"
is spread between the Sahyadri mountains
and Sindhusagar.
The first wave of Brahmins
to settle in Goa,
were called Saraswats because of their origins
from the banks of the River Saraswati, an
ancient river that existed in Vedic times.
The subsequent drying up of the river caused
large scale migration of Brahmins to all
corners of India.
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A group of
ninety-six families, known today as Gaud
Saraswats, settled along the Konkan coast
around 1000 BC. Of these, sixty-six families
took up residence in the southern half in
today's Salcete taluka which derives its
name from the Sanskrit word "Sassast"
meaning the number 66.
The other thirty families
settled in the northern area in today's
Tiswadi taluka which derives its name from
the Sanskrit word for the number 30. The
Saraswat Brahmins worked in partnership
with the local indigenous people, the Kunbi
tribals who still exist today. Around the
year 740 AD, the Brahmins established their
first Matha (religious centre of learning)
at Kushasthali (present day Cortalim) .
An interesting sidelight in this legendary
origin of Goa is
that Lord Parashuram is supposed to have
shot an arrow from the top of the western
ghats into the sea to command the Sea God
to withdraw till the place where the arrow
fell and claimed that land to be his kingdom.
The place where the arrow landed was called
Bannali (in Sanskrit for 'where the arrow
landed'; Bann: arrow, ali: village), or
today's Benaulim.
Parashuram arrived in the
new abode with other Saraswat Brahmins and
sages in order to perform the Yadnya
and other rituals. These Brahmin families
of Dashgotras from Panchgoudas of Trihotrapura
in northern India
came along with their family deities and
settled themselves in this land
of Gomantak
or the land of the Gods as it came to be
known thereafter.
They initially settled
at Mathagram (Margao), Kushasthal (Cortalim)
and Kardalinagar (Keloshi). The main deities
which also came along with them were Mangirish,
Mahadeo, Mahalaxmi, Mahalsa, Shantadurga,
Nagesh, Saptakoteshwar besides many others.
According to local legend, the ash found
at Harmal beach in Pernem Taluka is cited
as the ash of the Yadnya or holy ritual
performed in Goa.
Today a temple
of Parashuram
exists in Painguinim village
of Canacona Taluka
in South Goa. There
is no concrete proof to determine the exact
date of the arrival of Saraswats or Parashurama
in the area, nor is it conclusively proved
that Saraswats or other Aryans were the
first to arrive in Konkan.
Even if the legends are
considered as only myths, the residence
of Saraswat Brahmins in Goa
since ancient times along with their family
deities is an undeniable fact. And most
probably they arrived in Goa
under the leadership of a towering personality
named Parashuram. |