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The Kuru Who Never Was: Blood, Lies, and the Epic Forgery of a Dynasty

How the Mahabharata Secretly Admits That the Pandavas and Kauravas Had No Genetic Claim to the Throne—And Why Vyasa, Vidura, and the Yadava Line of Kunti and Subhadra Matter More Than Any Royal Sperm   The Mahabharata is conventionally read as a dynastic epic—the story of the Kuru clan tearing itself apart over a throne. But a close reading of its genealogies reveals a buried secret: almost none of the major characters carry Kuru blood. The Pandavas and Kauravas, whose war consumes eighteen days and hundreds of thousands of lives, are genetically unrelated to the dynasty whose name they bear. Bhishma, the last true Kuru, fights alone and dies childless. The post-war dynasty descends not from Kurus but from Vyasa (a sage of fisherwoman birth) and the Yadava clan of Kunti and Subhadra. This is not an oversight. The epic deliberately constructs bizarre births—a lump of flesh cut into a hundred pieces, divine fathers for the five Pandavas, a maid’s son as the incarnation of Dharma—...

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