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Shishupala (, ; sometimes spelt Sisupala) was the king of the Chedi kingdom, and an antagonist in the . He was the son of King Damaghosha and Srutashrava, the sister of , as well as the cousin of Nanda. He was slain by , his cousin and an avatar of , at the great coronation ceremony of , as a punishment for his opprobrious abuse made against him. He is also referred to as Chaidya ("King of Chedi"). Shishupala is considered to be the third and last birth of Vishnu's gatekeeper .


Mahabharata
The states that Shishupala was born with three eyes and four arms. His parents were inclined to cast him out but were warned by a voice from heaven ( ākāśavāṇī) not to do so, as his time had not come. It also foretold that his superfluous body parts would disappear when a certain person took the child into his lap and that he would eventually die at the hands of that same person. Coming to visit his cousin, placed the child on his lap and the extra eye and arms disappeared, thus indicating Shishupala's death was destined at the hands of Krishna. In the Mahabharata, Shishupala's mother Shrutasrava persuaded her nephew, Krishna, that he would pardon his cousin Shishupala for a hundred offences.

, the prince of , was very close to Shishupala. He wanted his sister to marry Shishupala. But before the ceremony could take place, Rukmini chose to elope with Krishna. This made Shishupala hate Krishna.

When undertook the Yajna, he sent to obtain the fealty of Shishupala, now king after his father's death. Shishupala accepted Yudhishthira's supremacy with no protest and was invited to the final ceremony at .

At that event, the decided that Krishna would be the special honoured guest of the sacrificial ceremony. This angered Shishupala and he started insulting Krishna, calling him a mere cowherd and worthless to be honoured as a king. He also started insulting , calling his vow to remain a throughout life as an act of cowardice. Bhishma became furious and threatened Shishupala, but Krishna calmed him down. Through this act, he committed his 100th sin and was pardoned by Krishna. When he insulted Krishna again, he committed his 101st sin. Krishna then released his Sudarshana Chakra on Shishupala, killing him on the spot. Shishupala's soul was liberated and attained salvation by merging into Krishna's body.

The is a work of classical ( kāvya) composed by Māgha in the 7th or 8th century. It is an consisting of 20 sargas () of about 1800 highly ornate stanzas and is considered one of the six Sanskrit mahakavyas, or "great epics". It is also known as the Māgha-kāvya after its author. Like other ''kavya's, it is admired more for its exquisite descriptions and lyrical quality than for any dramatic development of the plot. His sons were killed in the .


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